—Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees,...

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This Week One Section 14 Pages COVERING TOWNSHIPS OF ' IIOLMDEL, MADISON MARLnOOO, MATAWAN AND MATAWAN UOllOUGII 89th YEAR —T 29th WEEK Member National Editorial Association^ . New Jersey Press. Association MATAWAN, N. J., THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1958 Member County I'reM Aaioelatlon Single Copy Ten Cents Matawan Borough Council Approves Keough Variance To Construct Pool Follow Recommendation Of Zoning Board Of ! 'Adjustment; Special Policemen Are Named * Variance of ; the municipal • zoning ordinance, to p e r m i t construction of . a swimming pool In a\ section of land-now designated as ClassJ‘AM resl- dential, was approved unanl- mously Tuesday night by the ' Matawan Borough Council, . The yarlance, issued to John. W. and Irene Keough, repre- , sented by John A. Applegate, r Matawan attorney, is for the northerly eight acres of a 22- acre r, tract of land owned by the Keoughs, The tract to be ‘ developed Is located between Route 34 and the right-of-way = pf the Central Railroad.of New - i Jersey... ;.: In his application to tlie zon- ing board of adjustment which recommended council approv- ' al of the variance, Mr. Keough said Jie plans to sell the eight- acre', tract to Mrs. D o r o t h y Rainaud who will develop tho Bwimmtng pool; Limited Membership Plan ' Both Mr. $nd Mrs. Rainaud, t - who. plan the $150,000. p o o 1 conmuctioii project, have' giV- 1 en asturances that the p o o l . will-be. operated on a limited ^membership development cluh ; pHn^4K^rlnvolving the molse;. ’- parKing jarhs and general nul - " sances which may have been "characteristic of commercially * operated pools. ' ... .'.-The application for variance - of the zoning ordinance points out that the area to be devel- oped Is almost entirely s u r- rounded by commercial estab- lishments and Is protected on ~ ' tw&" sldefl by B wooded area and .the railrpad_.roadbed. ' Mayor Spafford W. Schanck, recommending approval of the - variance, Indicated co u n c i l would: consider establishment of regulations - governing the operation of swimming _pools In the borough at a later date. Second Variance Approval < c $ second variance, also reo- Oopntlnued on: page, .two) • —Annual Of Local Banks Officers, Directors . ; All Renamed For 1958 Office rs and directors of the farm ers and Merchants Niv . tional Bank, Matawan, and The Matawan Bank, were re- elected Tuesday nt the annual ...: stockholders meeting of the re- spectlye banking houses. Renamed directors of tire Farmers and, Merchants Na- tional Bank were Jacob Wy- ckoff, Charles C. Schock, sr., Fred M. Burlew, William O. Fitzpatrick, Joseph A/ Dcrn- berger, Charles C. Bchock, Jr., . Boss W. Maghan and Joseph ’ Baler. Officers re-elected were Mr. Schock, sr.. chairman of the board of directors; Mr. Baler, ; president; Mr. Schock, jr., vice 1 " prc3ldent;.:-I- Donald M i l l e r , vice president and cashier, and LaVerne W. Loop, assistant !: cashier. ’ 1 ; - ■’ . Directors renamed by stock- holders of The Matawan Bank are Erwin E. Augensteln, John A. Bauer, John B. Becker, ’ John O. Bennett. Charles W. Mandevlllc, Peter J. R o l l o , Spafford W. Schanck, F r a n k Seldler, Adic D. Shultz and Milton F, Stevenson. Officers re-elected by the di - rectors for 1958 are Mr. Seld- ler, chairman of the board; Mr. Stevenson, president, and Mr. Mandevllle, vice president - and cashier. $44,000 More State Aid Given Matawan School Tax Rise Now $179,527 A protest registered success- fully with the State Depart- ment . of Education by the Matawan Township . Board of Education has resulted, in tho allotment of $5000 more in state aid for 1958-59 than was allowed for ..the current year, Harry Troller, board secre- tary, stated yesterday; T h e first figure from the s t a t e showed a cut In state ‘ aid for the coming, year of about $39,- 000. The strong .protest of tlie Matawan Board gained recon- sideration-far the district on the basis of anticipated in- crease in enrollment from 2469 to 2635 and supplementary state aid for new pupils was granted in the amount of about $44,000. • - • - r • ; - As a result of this allowance, the 'board has been able to re- duce the fotal amount sought by. taxation from an originally .estimated $635,000 foH$5Q7,31^ A few budgetary' cuts also* were made/ As the. amount raised by taxation for the cur- rent, year was $388,784, tho In- crease In t^e amount, to be raised by taxation now be- comes $179,527 Instead of an amount well in excess of $200,- 00Q as first anticipated. _ ’ The Increase .in taxation' for current' oxpcmscs tho coming year will be from $36^,551.78 to $530,311; for repairs and re placements from $20,000 to $22,000 and for capital outlay from $2232 to $15,000, _.zThe board_wlll have, a spe- cial meeting tonight to receive bids on the erection of . a 20- room two-story school on the Cllffwood School lot.- The bids received probably wllh; be held over for study and a report made at the board’s regular meeting Monday. - Tlie hearing on the budget will be Jan. .23 at the Mata- wan High School building. Stress Bicycle Hazard On Moist Pavement ...... The kick-off of the 1958 safe - ty campaign by the safety committee of thc'M a t a w a n First Aid and Rescue Squad was launched with a word of advice. The committee wishes to call attention to everyone of the additional hazards cre- ated when children use their bicycles on the streets w i t h snow and ice on them. Several near accidents have been re- ported by members of th e squad. Parents are requested to lm press the importance of t h i s fact upon, their children, plus the fact that automobiles are not as dontrollablc as wh e n the pavement is dry. Attorney For Hoek Edward W. Currie, M a t a - wan, was retained this week by Floyd Q. Hock, secretary of the Asbury Park Board of Education, as attorney when Ahraham Frankel, A s b u r y Park, withdrew. Mr. Hoek is scheduled to stand hearing aft- er Feb. 1 on dismissal charges involving his conflict with Har- ry S. Hill, Asbury Park Super- intendent of.Schools. Mr. Cur- rie 1 b a former president of the Matawan Townshjp Board of Education. - <5pen Easter Seal Drive •-•t New Jener Secretary of .State Edward I, Patton, Perth jOnboy, pnrchAsea Easter Seals to open the annoal crippled children's fond-rataing-drive sponsored by Elks lodges through- .ohI1 the country. Hr. Patton, left,., is presenting bis check to Beniamin Klelnberg, Exalted Euler of ihe Keyport Elks. Lodge. ' Matawan Rotary Club Honors MHS Football Squad . . - 5? I i , - Tlie Matawan Rotary Club entertained 42 members of tfielMalawan High gridiron squad m l their coaches at a dinner Thursday, Alter the robust appetites of tho footballers had been satisfied, Rotarlan Theodore A. Fhelan cave a first showing of the movies lie'had taken of Matawan victory over Keyport on Thanksgiving Day. Highlight; of the affair was tho present- ation of the football used In tills game by tlie players to their coach, Uurry Itlito. Co-Captain Frank Banafato Is Making the presentation for the players aalCo-CaptsTn'FIirvIs Feeler (loft) and Robert Hardle,-president of tho Rotary club (right), look on. Tri-P-TA Meeting Discusses Budget . Members Urged ' To Attend Hearing The proposed budget for the Matawan Township Board, of Education was presented In itemized form by the school board members to the execu- tive committees of the Cllff- wood, Matawan Grammar arid Matawan-High-School paront- Teacher Associations Monday evening at a meeting of the Trl-Parent-Teacher A s s o c i - ation held in the high school library. . AIK-F-TA members w e r e urged to familiarize themselves with ihe-budget by attending a public hearing on It on Thursday, Jan, 23,rat- 8 p.m. • . V \ V ; / •: : Upon- defining the reasons for the over-all increase in the-budget over 1957, the com - mittee members believed't h e Increase Is justified s i n c e school authorities are faced with demanding problems of Increased enrollment, new con- struction and rehabilitating an old building. William S. McGraw, b o a r d president, pointed out that teachers' salaries had been In- creased to be on a par with those of other school districts. In order to attract b e t t e r teachers with bachelor’s de- grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal- ary to $4000 per year. Empha- sizing the fact that the over-all lack of facilities still remains tho paramount problem, the in- crease in the school taxes can be oxpected. He said that the new Cllffwood School probably would be ready for use by spring of 1959, but tlie prob- lem of a new high school still Is to be faced. Need 14 More Teachers Robert Bentley, f i n a n c e chairman, declared it w as necessary to Increase th e teaching staff by 14 new teach- ers due to increased enroll- ment. He staled operations of the schools are carried out sat- isfactorily by peven Janitors and one maintenance engineer and show a decided improve- ment over the previous year’s maintenance by outside c o n - tractors, The neglect of the physical facilities over the past flvc-to-10-years is an a d d e d burden that, must not be over- looked, Mr. Bentley'said. He cited the leaking condition of the roof of the old Matawan Grammar School Is one reason for the increase In repairs and replacements. , Q u e s t i o n s pertaining to (continued on page thirteen) "Block Of Dimes" Nets $45 For Polio Drive Proceeds from the “block of dimes" for..the benefit of the March of Dimes campaign, held Saturday in Matawan; un- der the supervision of Mr s . Genevieve Donnell, amounted to (45 In coins. These coins had been placed end-to-ond on a painted white line and reach cd halfway between Little 61 . and Ravine Dr. Young people of Matawan who gave their time to patrol the line were Ruth Ann Cara- bines, Betty Ann -BonlmegPsi, Barbara Henderson, Margaret McDonald, Linda W i l k i n s . Muriel Wilkins. Judith Man- ning and William Ralc’ ffte Gels New Post J. Franklin D o m i n i c k Tuesday nlght was appoint- ed by M&tawun Mayor SpaN ford W, Sclmnok as a - con - sulting assistant to Borough Clerk Arthur C.JIalV "jmtll such time as liis^scryioes will no longer bo required;*/ The appointment of Mr, Domlnlok, who retired Dcc» 31 of last year after serving 13 yekra as borough b t e f k was confirmed unanimously by members-of tho M atfi- wan Borough - Cpuncll; . .The position pays $100 a month, and Is established on a pari-, time basis. . ’ Mr. Domlnlok will attend council meetings and In oth- er ways assist Mr. If all?.who took offloe Jan. i, with the complexities concerning mu- nlolpat business. At of ltls reUrement>~Mr. bbmj* nlok was lauded by Mayor Selianck as ono of the finest clcrks -ln New Jersey.— ------- Holmdel Revenue To Go Up $42,000 New Ratables Source Of More Tax Receipts Holmdel Township can antic- ipate (42,000 additional tax revenue this year as a result of Increased assessments, Dan- iel S. Ely, clerk, told tho town- ship committee Thursday nfter reading a report from John II. Mount, assessor, which show- ed tho ratables rising frpm (1,- 083,000 to $2,236,018 from 1057 to 1958. An Indication' of the trend to younger persons as home owners was shown In tho rise of veterans* exemptions Horn (55,150 in 1B57 to (121.075 In 1958. . . Mr,, .Ely reported application had been made to tho State Highway Department for (12.- 500 for widening and putting In gutters on Bethany Rd. The al- lotment for maintenance and repair of township roads of (3100 was received from tho state. Tho municipality m u s t add (1040 to tho funds. The township committee con- tracted with tho Monmouth County Society for the Preven- tion of Cruelty to Animals for (continued on page twoi Nolle. If you are looking for a good deal on a 1557 Dodge or Ply- mouth doll R. Gormley, Mata- wan 1-3047 or Freehold 8-0570. wjfp—»dv tf , , Revoke license Of Driver Going 100 MPH Donald L. Plerco, 32, ol 430 Ocean Blvd., Cllffwood Beach, was fouAd guilty Monday of reckless driving, speeding and falling lo have fl registration In his possession. Kearny Mngis* lrnte-6aul -Gi'fichultcr f i n e d liim.$220 and revoked his driv- er’s license for one year. Pierce, who pleaded guilty to driving 100 miles per hour Doc lffC L957, pn the N. J. Turnpiko and falling to have Ills regis- tration pleaded not guilty to the reckless driving charge. Trooper Richard Alexunder testified, however, he chasod Pierce 20 miles to Woodbridge and during the chaso Pierce weaved in nnd out of jtrfifile at 100 m.p.b. . — a } In imposing sentence, Judge Scliulter set Aside a plea by Pierce that ho was 'married nnd had tv.® children and need; ed his license to.ki'CP his Job “ At that speed you were not drlvlng^your car, you w e r e aiming It," Uie Judge aald. Marlboro School Budget $274,858 Amount Railed " Locally To Drop" Tlie Marlboro T o w n s h i p Board of Education has npprov- od a proposed budget of $274,- 858 for the school year of 1958- 88. A liubllo hearing was set for tho evening of,Jan. 23 at the Central School, Wlckhtunk. Tile 1958-GQ -Marlboro -budget will show a decrease of $11,- 3M:(rom last. year. Tho amount to be raised by local taxation will drop from (180,487.28 last ycur to $152,350 this yonr, Current exponseo and ropalr and replacements show no slg- fclfioant change, the former ■XbiSm:s .lightly-'! rom •; $214,209 last year to (222,963 this year, while the latter remains at $4000. The lorgodt changes are In capital outlay and lh debt service. Capital Outlay-Down Capital outlay shrank from (27,000 to $11,650, a decrease of nearly 60 per cent, In this category, Blte-lmprovomont was reduced from $8500 to (160, reflecting tho completion of work on the newlCenlral School In Wlckatunk. Appropri- ation for new furniture also was' reduced by almost half, from (22,400 to $11,BOB. Debt sorvico costs fell -from $40,488 to $36,248, V In revenue- ,; the’ reduction of the amount to be raised by- lo - cal taxation was offeet partly by reduction of expenditures and partly by Increases In rev- enue from state aid and sur- plus. . ' ■The state aid figure rose from $0^160,35 to $103.2277 Tho amount apfmdprlated from sur- plus inoreawd from $ 11,000 to (10,276, - -V In the -.current expanse ac - count/ the. largest single change was an Incroase of $10,- 000 In Instructional, salaries, from $128,000 to $136,000. Since tlie overall current cxpbnso ac- count Showed an Incrcano of only $8604, tho teachers’ salnry rise was offset partially by economics elso who re. Birdsall Engineer Of Marlboro Twp. Succeeds Seaman; Lanzaro Co-Chairman Claude W. BIrdsnll, Belmnr. municipal engineer for. a num- ber of shore municipalities, wns appointed township engi- neer of.MurlbDrq Township nt n special meeting Tuesdny, The appointment wns held over at t h o organization .meeting Jan. 3. Mr. Htrdsnll succeeds Otis Seaman, Long B r a n c h , who has been township engi- neer for a number of yenrs. T h c township commlttco Thursday settled tho I rsuo of a bank depository, also held over from the Jnn. 3 organization neetlng, At that tlmo Conmili- leeman Joseph A, Lanzaro lunl rceoimqondcri the uuo of tho Freehold Trust Co. ns I h 0 bnhk for.. deposits nnd with- drawal 111 npprcclntlon of aid given the municipality In times of difficult financing. T h e r o was discussion about rotnlnlng some of tho nccounts with tho First Nntlonnl Bank of TYeo- hold und Wayne B. Harnley, township 'treasurer, asked Tho Matawan Bank bo retained ns Ills bank of withdrawal. On Thursday Mr. Lnnznro moved tlio Froohold 'Trust. Co. be used as a depository by tlio collector and also lor n (73,000 bond -, accoimt-fundundthat Mr. Harnley bo pormittod to use The Matawan Bank' fo r withdrawals to accommodato his. oonvonlonoo, Tlio motion passed unanimously. Seniority Rule* Mayor Charles McCuo ap- pointed Committeeman Frank Ratcliffe as co-chairman, to iict In" the mayor’a absence. This drew objection fropt.Conv mltteemiih Lanzaro who "claim- ed It violated tlio established rulo of seniority. Mr, Lnnznro (continuod on pago thirteen) Two Chanje Pleas To Marlboro Theft Charge Joscpn A. Phllben, Hudson St., and' Richard F,. B r o w n , Dutch Lane ltd., both of Free hold, Tuesday entered pie a a of no. defense In ; Monmouth County Court to nn Indictment charging them with entry and theft at n Marlboro Township atore, - Phllben and Drown both arc charged with brcnklng Into c h,a r 1 e a_ McCue’s grocery store, MnFtodrcf Town'fllltoVO'dtr 6, 1357, and taking $100 and four watches valued at $47.05, County Judge Elvln R. 81m- mlll schcdulod a Jan. 31' ccn tenclng date for both defend onto. New Vork Turnpike Rxprett $1.73 plus tax r o u n d trip Frequent service, convenient economical. For time ichodulf rail Keyport 7-C3GO. , Approved Again Middle BtaU-s'Association of Colleges onii S e c o n d n r y Schools haa served notice on Luthor A, Fostjr^ principal of Mfltawnn. lllflli acliool, that tlie school han been credited by the A/moilatlon to Deo>- 31, 1058, In its letter the Aosocla- tlon Included it« annual admo- nition about (ho need of pro- gress In a school building cum paien. R, f). Matthews, chair- man of the Arrsocjutlon’tt com- mission on secondary schools warns that a report must be filed before May 1 on changes and Improvements which th o principal and his staff' h a v o , carried out, . . Inaugurate Dimes Campaign ' Inaugurating Mutnwan Township March of Dimes Cam- paign with the help or Cllffwood Reach polio girl, Marla Holier* or, arc left to right) Mr*. -John Hunger j llolnml J. iltncx, Mon- ineulli County Chairman) Mr*, Ethel lleyle, Mutuwnn Town* ■hip Chairman of the campaign. ^ \ '' ........ , , , Four Grammar School Sites Do Not Require Bus Service In Midlown To Be Donated With Buildings To Madison; Knollcroft Tabled; Also Trailer Park Sec Return Match For ABG Charges Jersey Joe Walcott :— Appears In Court ------- A return matqh will be" tho main event In Madlsoa Town- Blilp Muiilclpnl Court tonight When Alcohollo Hevorago Con- trol agent Clarence E. John- son,-'presses s Illegal ..sale of b o o r churgoo against Othn Brgnd on, Tloetown Bd„ Browntown, No School” Days Found Haphazard High School Pupils Loft WithouHhjset Inconalatonny lit cancelling school between the Matawan Township Boliool -District and tho high school rccclvlmt dls- tvlcto with v-hom tv Is aligned was deplored Tn a letter froip a paront road, alr’tlto'Madison Township Uonrd of ICdnouLlnri inootlngXhuradnT. At nn earllar hearing of tho cauo, Mr. Johnson Tind Jersey Joo Wnlcott, formot_li.o ivy- weight boxing champion of tho world, In his corner, Joreey Joo attendod a hearing with Mr, Johnson Monday n ig li t, Tlio'formo> ohumpsald ho had "Just taken tlio ride"'with tho ABC InvcBtlgfltor. .......... Mr. Binndon Is chargod with the Illegal sale of boor nt Tils homo to_th6 ADC agent Tn S t Deo, 7TM r. Johnson said ho rcoolvcd the con of boor In Brandon’s' kltolion, At the tlmo tlio ARC agent was served, an- other man was nerved too, the agont reported. ....... Another Man Horved * . Tho beor, ho said Was In a one-pint can Urnndou had tak - en from a rofrlgorator. Ho added Brandon also served an- other, man who lind ontored at Ino same tlmo ho did. (continued on page thrlteon) Trunk Sower St art $ -Effluent from tlm chlorina - tion plant of tho Middlesex County trunk, ncwrr emptied out Into Rnritun liny for tlio first tlmo at 7 a.m. Tuesduy, —uncording tn Clir»ler Lydeek- cr, tliulrinun of the sower- -nge authority thut erected the 130,000,009 system. Tl i o flow eas frultl the I'UlllMi-ld areii. , 1 .. ' ■ All towns iiml cities und Induslrlnl plunls purlliffpftt- lllg In the sewer under taking "*'Koiiiii"i>e"iflTr tiw ajiw ' hi - en- other week, aeeoriilng to Mr,. Lydceker, when tho plant will bn operutlng nt normal 35,000,000 gallons, of sewage and Industrial wastrs dully capacity. F r e d e r i c k Xurmuhlen, health offic er of llic Clly of New York, lias refused lo ao- ccpi assurance of tbe N. J. Hlatc Department of Health llmt Iho effluent of (lie sew- er nyslem will bn purer limn that of tlie water of IlieJiay and bus drdafrd lie will test Hlutrn Island waters for any Increase In pollution Isupi d- nflcr the sewer start* oper- ating. Tests also are lo bp made In the Houth ttlvrr and liar- flat) lllvers by New Jersey agencies to determine If tho operation of tbe sewer Is bringing about the promised reduction of pollution and of- fensive odors from those rlv- ers. ' . ■ A bill for $6 aoeompunled the letter. 7'hls, It wns oxplatnnd, was for taking a Rt'oup of pu- pils, Including tho son of tlio lottor wrltev, Jdi's. Clulro _D. Nenl, a Madison Fork resl- dont, to the aftornoolt session at Matftwan High Sohool poo. 13. sohool had boon oaUod off In township schools that day, Tito buses whloinolntly~o(tfvjr tho grammar and tho Mata- wan High pupils, had; bean.ex- cused from service as long as Uioy woro not needed for tho grammar school transporta- tion, sho notod. - . .Thin slio bollavod unfair lo tlio high solidiil inlplls, giving them nn absent murk that wns not thelr own faiiUruiid fth. unwarranted nxduslng of tlm sohool bus oontrltiilor for ful- filling nil tho requirements of his contract. Mrs, Neal accord- ingly dnoldod sho should bo compensated f u r - providing transportation. , - Consults Wltli 1‘olloe . Charles—Moglll, , suporlnton- dent, commented on tlio letter to- pny Unit when he consulted with township pollao in tlie ourly morning hours on days of bad weather rand. reotilvod Ihelr rooommondutlon t h a t (continued on pugo tliiTlocn | School Budgot For ...... Holmdel Showi Hike Marked by an Incruaso of (40,230, the 1068-69 nchool bud- get, totalling (314,026, was In- troduced Frhlny night at a special mooting ofjlm llolimlnl Township Hoard of IIMiioutlon, Flguren were...rclSnsod by- Uio office of County Huperlnton- dent of Schools, Fnrl I), Gnrrl- son. HuJgct Iternu Include current, expensen, (177;77fn repairs am) rcpluci menlft, (3300; capital outlayv^I600r-and-debt onrvleo, (32,250. Tlm amount to ho rain ed by local district taxes In untlulpntod ut (11)2,008, Mr. Oarrlnon'n office reported, 'Major increases wero shown lb ciirrcnt expo sen and In the debt (lervleoJleinB oI-LIm bud- get, Tho latter Is duo primar- ily to the bonding for a now elementary school In tlm ilnz- lr;t firea of Holmdel Township, A '(Into for a publio liourlnu will hfpsot by tlm board. . Entors Ploa -------- Mrs. Nora Haines, 40, of 100 Orchard Avo,, Lnurcneo llni- bor tins entered a plea of no defense to ai-charge that she embezzled (227.63 In tux num- ey from tho Mudlson Township Tax Collector's officii on Den. 20, 1050, Him was employed us a clerk In tho office at tlm time. Tho plea wn»'accepted by Middlesex County Judgo Klammer Kaltelxson. Madison Township Planning Board Inst night ratified tJ) o school layout plnn-for Mid - town, U flBOO-homea rtevolop- men|;, »»' snnetioncd by the ,Madison. Township. Board, of Education. -7 ....... ' ' JoHoph Brunettl, Maywood, dovclopnr of Mldtown, 1ms agreed to provldo four sites for schools, one of 20 acres, on which would go' a Junior ldgh schiiol, according ib prosont lilana; ■ and throo raore,"-ot -90, 14 und 12 acres as- kites for g6onmar oohoolf, In no ease would school bus transports* tkm- for-gramtnsr sohool pur* poses^bo neoesHary h|“ M l a* town us no house will be erect- ed more than 2200 feel from a school, Mr,'. Brunettl also w|ll donate throb noros tn the pros- cut. Urowntown School Ini to provldo a‘plnygroiihd urcn, . On-ltls’ own-solioollotn ho Will have to erect sohools nnd dolinto them - to the town-. shlpTnllou-oMiayliig-tlOl-piiiL hduso sold. Applleatlan Tabled Application by the Wllentz law firm of Perth Amboy for final approval of n five-lot «tjo- tlon of tlm 100-homeslto. lCnoll- oroft rievolopmentTn Cllffwood Ilcnoh, of which Jack I) o n- halts,-New York,- tholr-elleiit,- lB-the-developer,-wns— talilodr; Joseph II. Edgar, Illghlimd Park, township attorney, found the original application - faulty ns.lt was not complete In Its Information, nspeolnlly as lo wlirtuf all pernmin" having nil In- tniest- In tho --development Xniimfc-lio. * Vtohem if, Jiitlor, Mllitown, towtishlp Vnglnoer, doolnred Its' Imd hot ileuelved any profile (continuod on pago two) Commltdoner Ruloi Board Must Pay Smith— Holing wnn enlored by Fred- ei'lek lln.ihlnger, fildln Coin- mlHHloner of Education, .1 a it. 8 lor AinoS Bmlth, Matawan. and ngalnst 'the- Matawan Township Hoard or Education, who employed him ns -Janitor from November 1063, to JUnd 1064,:mid again from-Jtily—), 1066, lu June 30, 106(1, Vincent'- C—tJoAtali).-Muluwun. -ax—a t - torney for Mr. Hinlth, conteiul- ed llmt whim iho hoard dl«- miiised Mr. Hiiillli In 1050 and jotoliicd llin New llrun,swing- Wiiidirtv' Cleanhig Co, for l|n, Tmrltorlnl service, It rwitn ' not' ledueliiK Its Htulf of-'Tanllors from lack ot work hut mlrtely, rnplaclrig ono Janitor with- an - other, , ' o ' . Thin was hot pnrmlB.slblii tin-' dor the Jnnltor n Temirb Act,-1 In Mr, DeMnlo'n opinion, In that Mr. Hmltli liiill heeTi hired by tho honrd wlthuut u limit nn to Ida term. The board ful- tlior showed tlio rn-ed of Mr, Hmllli's services ’by robbing him for this nchool year when Itn lino of Iho New Hiunswlrk Window Qleatilng Horvlca end- ed-last Julm 30 T'lm-emninis* idonor agreed and dliecled lbs hoard to pay Mr, Hiiillli dm (21108 nalaiy ho lost for the year ho was deprived of em- ployment an Janitor front July f, 18116, to Juno 30, 1057. Notice Teddy’s Hnrher Ilhon 64 Main fit,, Mnluwnn, will lie closed ur,III further notice due to III- ncss, Jfp— »dv 16

Transcript of —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees,...

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This Week

One Section

14 Pages

COVERINGTOWNSHIPS OF '

IIO LM DEL , MADISON MARLnOOO, MATAWAN

ANDMATAWAN UO llO UG II

89th YEAR —T 29th W EEK Member National E d ito ria l Association^ . New Je rsey Press . Association M A T A W A N , N . J . , T H U R S D A Y , J A N U A R Y 1 6 , 1 9 5 8 Member County I'reM Aaioelatlon S in g le C o p y T e n C e n ts

Matawan Borough Council Approves Keough Variance To Construct Pool

Follow Recommendation O f Zoning Board O f ! 'Adjustment; Special Policemen Are Named* Variance o f ; the municipal

■ • zoning ordinance, to p e r m i t construction of . a swimming pool In a\ section o f land-now designated as C la ss J ‘A M resl- dential, was approved unanl- mously Tuesday night by the

' Matawan Borough Council, .The yarlance, issued to John.

W . and Irene Keough, repre- , sented by John A. Applegate, r Matawan attorney, is fo r the

northerly eight acres o f a 22- acre r, tract of land owned by the Keoughs, The trac t to be

‘ developed Is located between Route 34 and the right-of-way

= pf the Central R a ilroad .o f New - i Jersey... ;.:

In h is application to tlie zon­ing board o f adjustment which

■ recommended council approv- ' a l of the variance, M r. Keough

said Jie plans to se ll the eight- acre', tract to M rs. D o r o t h y Rainaud who w ill develop tho Bwimmtng pool;

Limited Membership P lan ' Both M r. $nd M rs. Rainaud, ■t - who. plan the $150,000. p o o 1 conmuctioii pro ject, have' giV- 1 en asturances that the p o o l . wi l l -be. operated on a limited ^m em bersh ip development cluh ; pHn^4K^r lnvolving the molse;.

—’- parKing jarhs and general nul­" sances which may have been "characteristic of commercially

* operated pools. '. . . .'.-The application fo r variance- o f the zoning ordinance points

out that the area to be devel­oped Is almost entire ly s u r-

• rounded by commercia l estab­lishments and Is protected on

~ ' tw&" sldefl by B wooded area — and .the railrpad_.roadbed. 'Mayor Spafford W . Schanck,

recommending approval o f the- variance, Indicated c o u n c i l

would: consider establishment o f regulations - governing the operation o f swimming _pools In the borough a t a la te r date.Second Variance Approval

< c $ second variance, a lso reo- Oopntlnued on: page, .two) •

—Annual Of Local Banks

Officers, Directors .; All Renamed For 1958

Office rs and d irectors o f thefa rm e r s and Merchants Niv

. tional Bank, Matawan, a n d The Matawan Bank, were re ­elected Tuesday nt the annual

...: stockholders meeting o f the re- spectlye banking houses.Renamed directors o f t i r e F a rm ers and, Merchants Na­tional Bank were Jacob Wy- ckoff, Charles C. Schock, s r.,

F red M. Burlew , W illiam O.Fitzpatrick, Joseph A/ Dcrn- berger, Charles C. Bchock, Jr.,

. Boss W. Maghan and Joseph ’ B a le r.

O fficers re-elected were Mr. Schock, sr.. chairman of t h e board o f directors; M r. Ba ler,

; president; M r. Schock, jr . , vice 1 " prc3ldent;.:-I- Donald M i l l e r ,

vice president and cashier, and LaVerne W . Loop, assistant

! : cashier. ’ 1 ; - ■ ’. D irectors renamed by stock­

holders of The Matawan Bank a re E rw in E . Augensteln, John A. Bauer, John B . Becker,

’ John O. Bennett. Charles W. Mandevlllc, Peter J . R o l l o , Spafford W. Schanck, F r a n k Seldler, Adic D. Shultz a n d Milton F , Stevenson.

Officers re-elected by the di­rectors for 1958 are M r. Seld- le r , chairman of the board; M r. Stevenson, president, and Mr. Mandevllle, vice president

- and cashier.

$44,000 More State Aid Given

Matawan School Tax Rise Now $179 ,527

A protest registered success­fu lly with the State Depart­ment . o f Education by the Matawan Township . Board of Education has resulted, in tho allotment of $5000 more in state aid fo r 1958-59 than was allowed fo r ..the current year, H arry T ro lle r, board secre­tary, stated yesterday; T h e firs t figure from the s t a t e showed a cut In state ‘ aid fo r the coming, year o f about $39,­000. The strong .protest o f tlie Matawan Board gained recon­sideration-far the district on the basis of anticipated in­crease in enrollment from 2469 to 2635 and supplementary state aid fo r new pupils was granted in the amount o f about $44,000. • - • - r • ; -

As a result o f this allowance, the 'board has been able to re­duce the fotal amount sought by. taxation from an orig inally .estimated $635,000 fo H$5Q7,31^ A few budgetary' cuts also* were made/ As the. amount raised by taxation fo r the cur­rent, year was $388,784, tho In­crease In t^e amount, to be raised by taxation now be­comes $179,527 Instead of an amount well in excess o f $200,- 00Q as firs t anticipated. _’ The Increase .in taxation' fo r cu rren t' oxpcmscs tho coming year will be from $36^,551.78 to $530,311; fo r repairs and re placements from $20,000 to $22,000 and fo r capital outlay from $2232 to $15,000,_.zThe board_w lll have, a spe­cial meeting tonight to receive bids on the erection o f . a 20- room two-story school on the Cllffwood School lot.- The bids received probably wllh; be held over fo r study and a report made at the board ’s regu lar meeting Monday. -

T lie hearing on the budget w ill be Jan. .23 at the Mata­wan High School building.Stress Bicycle Hazard On Moist Pavement......

The kick-off o f the 1958 safe­ty campaign by the safety committee o f thc'M a t a w a n F irs t Aid and Rescue Squad was launched with a word of advice. The committee wishes to ca ll attention to everyone of the additional hazards cre­ated when children use their bicycles on the streets w i t h snow and ice on them. Severa l near accidents have been re­ported by members o f t h e squad.

Parents are requested to lm press the importance o f t h i s fact upon, their children, plus the fact that automobiles are not as dontrollablc as w h e n the pavement is dry.

Attorney For HoekEdward W. Currie, M a t a ­

wan, was retained this week by F loyd Q. Hock, secretary of the Asbury P a rk Board of Education, as attorney when Ahraham Franke l, A s b u r y P a rk , withdrew. M r. Hoek is scheduled to stand hearing aft­er Feb. 1 on dism issal charges involving his conflict with H ar­ry S. H ill, Asbury P a rk Super­intendent of.Schools. M r. Cur­rie 1b a fo rm er president o f the Matawan Townshjp Board o f Education. -

<5pen Easter Seal Drive

• -•t

New Jen e r Secretary o f .State Edward I, Patton, Perth jOnboy, pnrchAsea Easter Seals to open the annoal crippled children's fond-rataing-drive sponsored by Elks lodg es through- .ohI1 the country. H r . Patton, left,., i s presenting bis check to Beniamin Klelnberg, Exalted Euler o f ih e Keyport Elks. Lodge. • '

Matawan Rotary Club Honors M H S Football Squad

. . - 5? I i , -Tlie Matawan Rotary Club entertained 42 members o f tfielMalawan High gridiron squad m l their coaches at a dinner Thursday, A lte r the robust appetites o f tho footballers had been satisfied, Rota rlan Theodore A. Fhelan cave a firs t showing o f the movies lie'had taken of Matawan victory over Keyport on Thanksgiving Day. Highlight; of the a ffa ir was tho present­ation o f the football used In tills game by tlie p layers to their coach, Uurry It lito . Co-Captain F rank Banafato Is Making the presentation fo r the p layers aalCo-CaptsTn'FIirvIs Fee le r (lo ft) and Robert Hardle,-president o f tho Rotary club (righ t), look on.

Tri-P-TA Meeting Discusses Budget. Members Urged

' To Attend HearingThe proposed budget fo r the

Matawan Township Board, o f Education was presented In itemized form by the school board members to the execu­tive committees o f the C llff- wood, Matawan G ram m ar arid Matawan-High-School paront- Teacher Associations Monday evening at a meeting of the Trl-Parent-Teacher A s s o c i ­ation held in the high school lib ra ry . . A IK-F-TA members w e r e urged to fam iliarize themselves with ihe-budget by attending a public hearing on It on Thursday, Jan , 2 3 ,rat- 8 p.m . • . V \ V ; / •: :■ Upon- defining the reasons fo r the over-a ll increase in the-budget over 1957, the com­mittee members believed't h e Increase Is justified s i n c e school authorities are faced with demanding problems of Increased enrollment, new con­struction and rehabilitating an old building.

W illiam S. McGraw, b o a r d president, pointed out that teachers' salaries had been In­creased to be on a par with those o f other school districts. In o rder to attract b e t t e r teachers with bachelor’s de­grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sa l­a ry to $4000 per year. Empha­sizing the fact that the over-all lack of facilities still remains tho paramount problem , the in­crease in the school taxes can be oxpected. He said that the new Cllffwood School probably would be ready fo r use by spring o f 1959, but tlie prob­lem of a new high school still Is to be faced.„ Need 14 More Teachers

R obert Bentley, f i n a n c e chairman, declared it w a s necessary to Increase t h e teaching sta ff by 14 new teach­ers due to increased en ro ll­ment. He staled operations of the schools are carried out sat­isfactorily by peven Janitors and one maintenance engineer and show a decided improve­ment over the previous y e a r ’s maintenance by outside c o n ­tractors, The neglect o f the physical facilities over the past flvc-to-10-years is an a d d e d burden that, must not be over­looked, M r. Bentley'said . He cited the leaking condition of the roof of the old Matawan G ram m ar School Is one reason fo r the increase In repairs and replacements. ,

Q u e s t i o n s pertaining to(continued on page thirteen)

"Block O f Dimes" Nets $45 For Polio Drive

Proceeds from the “ block o f dimes" for..the benefit o f the March of Dimes campaign, held Saturday in Matawan; un­der the supervision of M r s . Genevieve Donnell, amounted to (45 In coins. These coins had been placed end-to-ond on a painted white line and reach cd halfway between L ittle 61. and Ravine D r.

Young people o f Matawan who gave their time to patrol the line were Ruth Ann C a ra ­bines, Betty Ann -BonlmegPsi, Barbara Henderson, Margaret McDonald, Linda W i l k i n s . Muriel W ilkins. Judith Man­ning and W illiam Ra lc ’ ffte

Gels N ew Post •J . Franklin D o m i n i c k

Tuesday nlght was appoint­ed by M&tawun Mayor SpaN fo rd W, Sclmnok as a - con­sulting assistant to Borough C lerk Arthur C .J Ia lV " jm t ll such time as liis^scryioes w ill no longer bo required;*/

The appointment o f M r, Dom lnlok, who retired Dcc» 31 o f last year a fte r serving 13 yekra as borough b t e f k was confirmed unanimously by m em bers-o f tho M a t f i - wan Borough - Cpuncll; . .The position pays $100 a month, and Is established on a pari-, time basis. . ’

M r. Dom lnlok w ill attend council meetings and In oth­er ways assist M r. I f all? .who took offloe Jan. i , with the complexities concerning mu- n lo lpat business. At o f lt ls reUrement>~Mr. bbm j* n lok was lauded by M ayor Selianck as ono o f the finest c lcrks -ln New Jersey .— -------

Holmdel Revenue To Go Up $42,000

New Ratables Source O f More Tax Receipts

Holmdel Township can antic­ipate (42,000 additional tax revenue this year as a result o f Increased assessments, Dan­iel S. E ly , c lerk , told tho town­ship committee Thursday nfter reading a report from John II. Mount, assessor, which show­ed tho ratables rising frpm (1 ,­083,000 to $2,236,018 from 1057 to 1958. An Indication' o f the trend to younger persons as home owners was shown In tho rise o f veterans* exemptions Horn (55,150 in 1B57 to (121.075 In 1958. . .

Mr,, .E ly reported application had been made to tho State Highway Department fo r (12.­500 fo r widening and putting In gutters on Bethany Rd. The al­lotment fo r maintenance and repa ir of township roads of (3100 was received from tho state. Tho municipality m u s t add (1040 to tho funds.

The township committee con­tracted with tho Monmouth County Society fo r the Preven­tion o f Cruelty to Animals for

(continued on page twoi

N o lle .I f you a re looking fo r a good

deal on a 1557 Dodge or P ly ­mouth doll R . Gorm ley , M ata­wan 1-3047 or Freeho ld 8-0570. w jfp—»dv t f , ,

Revoke license O f Driver Going 100 MPH

Donald L . P lerco , 32, o l 430 Ocean B lvd., C llffwood Beach, was fouAd guilty Monday of reckless driving, speeding and fa lling lo have fl registration In his possession. Kearny Mngis* lrn te -6au l -G i'fichultcr f i n e d liim.$220 and revoked his driv­e r ’ s license fo r one year.P ierce , who pleaded guilty to driving 100 m iles per hour Doc lffC L957, pn the N. J . Turnpiko and falling to have Ills regis­tration pleaded not guilty to the reckless driving charge.

T roope r R icha rd A lexunder testified , however, he chasod Pierce 20 m iles to Woodbridge and during the chaso Pierce weaved in nnd out o f jt r fi fi le at 100 m .p .b . . —a }

In imposing sentence, Judge Scliulter set Aside a plea by Pierce that ho was 'm a rried nnd had tv.® children and need; ed his license to.ki'CP his Job “ At that speed you were not drlvlng^your car, you w e r e aiming It ," Uie Judge aald.

Marlboro School Budget $274,858

Amount Railed " Locally To Drop"

Tlie Marlboro T o w n s h i p Board of Education has npprov- od a proposed budget o f $274,­858 fo r the school year o f 1958­88. A liubllo hearing was set fo r tho evening o f,J a n . 23 at the Central School, W lckhtunk.

Tile 1958-GQ -Marlboro -budget will show a decrease o f $11,- 3M :(rom last. year. Tho amount to be raised by loca l taxation w ill drop from (180,487.28 last ycur to $152,350 this yonr,

Current exponseo and ropa lr and replacements show no slg- fclfioant change, the fo rm er ■XbiSm:s . lig h t ly - '! rom •; $214,209 las t yea r to (222,963 this year, while the la tte r remains at $4000. The lorgodt changes are In capital outlay and lh debt service. ’

Capital Outlay-Down Capital outlay shrank from (27,000 to $11,650, a decrease

of nearly 60 per cent, In this category, Blte-lmprovomont was reduced from $8500 to (160, reflecting tho completion of work on the n ew lC en lra l School In W lckatunk. Appropri­ation fo r new furniture also was' reduced by almost ha lf, from (22,400 to $11,BOB. Debt sorvico costs fe l l -from $40,488 to $36,248, V

In revenue-,; the’ reduction o f the amount to be raised by- lo ­cal taxation was offeet partly by reduction o f expenditures and pa rt ly by Increases In rev­enue from state aid and sur­plus. . '

■The state aid figure rose from $0^160,35 to $103.2277 Tho amount apfmdprlated from sur­plus inoreawd from $11,000 to (10,276, - -V —

In the-.current expanse ac­count/ th e . la rgest single change was an Incroase of $10,­000 In Instructional, salaries, from $128,000 to $136,000. Since tlie overa ll current cxpbnso ac­count Showed an Incrcano o f only $8604, tho teachers’ saln ry rise was o ffset partia lly by economics elso who re.

Birdsall Engineer Of Marlboro Twp.

Succeeds Seaman; Lanzaro Co-Chairman

Claude W. B Irdsn ll, Belmnr. municipal engineer for. a num­ber of shore municipalities, wns appointed township engi­neer of.MurlbDrq Township nt n special meeting Tuesdny, The appointment wns held over at t h o organization .meeting Jan. 3. M r. Htrdsnll succeeds Otis Seaman, Long B r a n c h , who has been township engi­neer fo r a number of yenrs.

T h c township commlttco Thursday settled tho I rsuo o f a bank depository, also held over from the Jnn. 3 organization neetlng, At that tlmo Conmili- leeman Joseph A, Lanzaro lunl rceoimqondcri the uuo of tho Freehold Trust Co. ns I h 0 bnhk fo r.. deposits nnd with­drawal 111 npprcclntlon of aid given the municipality In times o f difficult financing. T h e r o was discussion about rotnlnlng some of tho nccounts with tho F irs t Nntlonnl Bank of TYeo- hold und Wayne B . Harnley, township 'treasurer, asked Tho Matawan Bank bo retained ns Ills bank o f withdrawal.

On Thursday Mr. Lnnznro moved tlio Froohold 'Trust. Co. be used as a depository by tlio collector and also lo r n (73,000 bond - , a c c o im t- fu n d u n d th a t M r. Harnley bo pormittod to use The Matawan Bank' f o r withdrawals to accommodato his. oonvonlonoo, Tlio motion passed unanimously.

Seniority Rule*Mayor Charles McCuo ap­

pointed Committeeman F rank Ratc liffe as co-chairman, to iict In" the m ayor’a absence. This drew objection fropt.Conv mltteemiih Lanzaro who "claim­ed It violated tlio established ru lo of seniority. M r, Lnnznro (continuod on pago thirteen)

Two Chan je Pleas To Marlboro Theft Charge

Joscpn A. Ph llben , Hudson St., and' R ichard F ,. B r o w n , Dutch Lane ltd ., both o f Free hold, Tuesday entered pie a a of no. defense In ; Monmouth County Court to nn Indictment charging them with entry and theft at n M arlboro Township atore, -

Phllben and Drown both arc charged with brcnklng I n t o c h,a r 1 e a_ McCue’s grocery store, MnFtodrcf Town'fllltoVO'dtr 6, 1357, and taking $100 and fou r watches valued at $47.05,

County Judge E lv ln R . 81m- m lll schcdulod a Jan . 31' ccn tenclng date fo r both defend onto.

New Vork Turnpike Rxprett $1.73 plus tax r o u n d trip Frequent service, convenient

economical. F o r time ichodulf rail Keyport 7-C3GO. ,

Approved AgainMiddle BtaU-s'Association o f

Colleges onii S e c o n d n r y Schools haa served notice on Luthor A, Fostjr^ principal o f Mfltawnn. l l l f l l i ac lioo l, that tlie school han been credited by the A/moilatlon to Deo>- 31, 1058, In its letter the Aosocla- tlon Included it« annual admo­nition about (ho need o f p ro­gress In a school building cum paien. R , f) . Matthews, chair­man o f the Arrsocjutlon’ tt com ­mission on secondary schools warns that a report must be filed before May 1 on changes and Improvements which t h o principal and his sta ff' h a v o , carried out, . .

Inaugurate Dimes Campaign '

Inaugurating Mutnwan Township March of Dimes Cam­paign with the help or Cllffwood Reach polio g irl, Marla Holier* or, arc le ft to right) Mr*. -John Hunger j llo lnm l J . iltncx, Mon- ineulli County Chairman) Mr*, Ethel lley le , Mutuwnn Town* ■hip Chairman o f the campaign. \ '' ........ , , ,

Four Grammar School Sites Do Not Require Bus Service In Midlown

To Be Donated With Buildings To Madison; Knollcroft Tabled; Also Trailer Park

Sec Return MatchFor ABG Charges

Jersey Joe Walcott :— Appears In Court-------

A return matqh will be" tho main event In Madlsoa Town- Blilp Muiilclpnl Court tonight When Alcohollo Hevorago Con­tro l agent Clarence E . John- son,-'presses s Illegal ..sa le of b o o r churgoo against Othn B r g n d on , Tloetown B d „ Browntown,

“No School” Days

Found HaphazardHigh School Pupils Loft W ithouHhjset

Inconalatonny lit cancelling school between the Matawan Township Boliool -District and tho high school rccclvlm t dls- tvlcto with v-hom tv Is aligned was deplored Tn a letter froip a paront road, alr’ tlto'Madison Township Uonrd o f ICdnouLlnri inootlngXhuradnT.

A t nn ea rlla r hearing of tho cauo, M r. Johnson Tind Jersey Joo Wnlcott, fo rm o t_ li.o i v y - weight boxing champion of tho world, In his corner, Joreey Joo attendod a hearing with M r, Johnson Monday n i g li t, Tlio'formo> ohumpsald ho had "Just taken tlio ride"'w ith thoABC InvcBtlgfltor. ..........

M r. Binndon Is chargod with the Illegal sale o f boor nt Tils homo to_th6 ADC agent T n S t Deo, 7T M r. Johnson said ho rcoolvcd the con of boor In Brandon’s' kltolion, At the tlmo tlio ARC agent was served, an­other man was nerved too, theagont reported. .......

Another Man Horved *. Tho beor, ho said Was In a one-pint can Urnndou had tak­en from a ro frlgo rato r. Ho added Brandon also served an­other, man who lind ontored at Ino same tlmo ho did. (continued on page thrlteon)

Trunk Sower St art $-E ffluent from tlm chlorina­

tion plant o f tho Middlesex County trunk, ncwrr emptied out Into Rnritun liny fo r tlio firs t tlmo at 7 a.m . Tuesduy,

—uncording tn C lir» ler Lydeek- cr, tliu lrinun of the sower-

-nge authority thut erected the 130,000,009 system. T l i o flow eas fru ltl the I'UlllMi-ld areii. , 1 .. ' ■

All towns iiml cities und Induslrlnl plunls purlliffpftt- lllg In the sewer under taking

"* 'K o iiiii"i> e"iflT r t iw a j iw ' h i - en- other week, aeeoriilng to Mr,. Lydceker, when tho plant will bn operutlng nt normal 35,000,000 gallons, of sewage and Industrial wastrs dully capacity.

F r e d e r i c k Xurmuhlen, health offic er of llic Clly of New York, lias refused lo ao- ccpi assurance of tbe N. J. Hlatc Department of Health llmt Iho effluent of (lie sew­er nyslem will bn purer limn that of tlie water of IlieJiay and bus d rd a frd lie will test Hlutrn Island waters for any Increase In pollution I s u p i d- nflcr the sewer start* oper­ating.Tests also are lo bp made In the Houth ttlvrr and liar- flat) lllvers by New Jersey agencies to determine If tho operation of tbe sewer Is bringing about the promised reduction of pollution and of­fensive odors from those rlv- ers. ' . ■

A bill fo r $6 aoeompunled the letter. 7'hls, It wns oxplatnnd, was fo r taking a Rt'oup of pu­pils, Including tho son of tlio lottor wrltev, Jdi's. C lulro _D. Nenl, a Madison F o rk r e s l - dont, to the aftornoolt session at Matftwan High Sohool poo . 13. sohool had boon oaUod off In township schools that day, Tito buses wh lo ino ln tly~o(tfv jr tho g ram mar and tho Mata­wan High pupils, had; bean.ex­cused from service as long as Uioy woro not needed fo r tho grammar school transporta­tion, sho notod. - ..Thin slio bollavod unfair lo tlio high solidiil in lp lls, giving

them nn absent murk that wns not thelr own fa iiU ru iid fth.unwarranted nxduslng of tlm sohool bus oontrltiilor fo r fu l­filling nil tho requirements of his contract. M rs, Neal accord­ingly dnoldod sho should bo compensated f u r - providing transportation. ,- Consults W ltli 1‘ olloe .

Charles—M og lll, , suporlnton- dent, commented on tlio letter to- pny Unit when he consulted with township pollao in t l i e ourly morning hours on days of bad weather ra n d . reotilvod Ihelr rooommondutlon t h a t(continued on pugo tliiTlocn |

School Budgot For......Holmdel Show i Hike

Marked by an Incruaso of (40,230, the 1068-69 nchool bud­get, totalling (314,026, was In­troduced Frh lny night at a special mooting o f j lm llo lim ln l Township Hoard of IIMiioutlon, Flguren were...rclSnsod by- Uio office of County Huperlnton- dent o f Schools, F n rl I), Gnrrl- son.

HuJgct Iternu Include current, expensen, (177;77fn repairs am) rcpluci menlft, (3300; capital outlayv^I600r-and-debt onrvleo, (32,250. Tlm amount to ho rain ed by local district taxes In untlulpntod ut (11)2,008, Mr. Oarrlnon'n office reported,

'Major increases wero shown lb ciirrcnt expo sen and In the debt (lervleoJleinB oI-LIm bud­get, Tho latter Is duo p rim ar­ily to the bonding for a now elementary school In tlm ilnz- lr;t firea o f Holmdel Township, A '(Into fo r a publio liourlnu will hfpsot by tlm board.

. Entors Ploa --------Mrs. Nora Haines, 40, o f 100

Orchard Avo,, Lnurcneo lln i- bor tins entered a plea of no defense to ai-charge that she embezzled (227.63 In tux num- ey from tho Mudlson Township Tax Collector's officii on Den. 20, 1050, Him was employed us a clerk In tho office at tlm time. Tho plea wn»'accepted by Middlesex County Judgo K lammer Kaltelxson.

Madison Township Planning Board Inst night ratified tJ ) o school layout p ln n - fo r Mid­town, U flBOO-homea rtevolop- men|;, »»' snnetioncd by the ,Madison. Township. B oard , ofEducation. -7 ■ ....... ' '

JoHoph Brunettl, Maywood, dovclopnr of Mldtown, 1ms agreed to provldo fou r sites fo r schools, one o f 20 acres, on which would go' a Junior ldgh schiiol, according ib prosont lilana; ■ and throo raore,"-ot -90, 14 und 12 acres as- kites fo r g6onm ar oohoolf, In no ease would school bus transports* tkm- fo r -g ram tn s r sohool pur* poses^bo neoesHary h|“ M l a*town us no house will be erect­ed more than 2200 fee l from a school, Mr,'. Brunettl also w |ll donate throb noros tn the pros­cut. Urowntown School Ini to provldo a ‘ plnygroiihd urcn, .

O n -lt ls ’ ow n -so lioo llo tn ho Will have to erect sohools nnd dolinto them - to the town-. sh lpTn llou -oM iay liig -tlO l-p iiiL hduso sold.

Applleatlan Tabled Application by the W llentz

law firm of Perth Amboy fo r final approval of n five-lot «tjo- tlon of tlm 100-homeslto. lCnoll- oroft rievolopmentTn CllffwoodIlcnoh, of which J a c k I) o n-halts,-New York,- tho lr-e lle iit,- lB -the-developer,-wns— ta lilodr; Joseph II . Edgar, Illghlimd Pa rk , township attorney, found the original application - faulty n s .lt was not complete In Its Information, nspeolnlly as lo w lirtuf a ll pernmin" having nil In- tniest - In tho --development Xniimfc-lio. *V toh em if, Jiitlor, Mllitown,

towtishlp Vnglnoer, doolnred Its' Imd hot ileuelved any profile

(continuod on pago two)

Comm ltdoner Ruloi Board Must Pay Smith—

Holing wnn enlored by Fred- ei'lek lln .ih lnger, fildln Co i n - mlHHloner o f Education, .1 a it.8 lo r AinoS Bmlth, Matawan. and ngalnst 'the- Matawan Township Hoard or Education, who employed him ns -Janitor from November 1063, to JUnd 1064,:m id again from -J tily—), 1066, lu June 30, 106(1, Vincent'- C—tJoAtali).-Muluwun. -ax— a t ­torney fo r Mr. Hinlth, conteiul- ed llm t whim iho hoard dl«- miiised Mr. Hiiillli In 1050 and

jo to liicd llin New llrun,swing- Wiiidirtv' Cleanhig Co, fo r l|n, Tmrltorlnl service, It rwitn ' not' ledueliiK Its Htulf o f-'Tan llo rs from lack ot work hut m lrtely, rnplaclrig ono Janitor with- an­other, , ' o ' ■ .

Thin was hot pnrmlB.slblii tin-' dor the Jnnltor n Temirb Act,-1 In M r, DeMnlo'n opinion, In that M r. Hmltli liiill heeTi hired by tho honrd wlthuut u lim it nn to Ida term . The board fu l- tlior showed tlio rn-ed of Mr, Hmllli's services ’by robbing him fo r this nchool year when Itn lino o f Iho New Hiunsw lrk Window Qleatilng Horvlca end- ed -last Julm 30 T'lm-emninis* idonor agreed and dliecled lbs hoard to pay Mr, Hiiillli dm (21108 nalaiy ho lost fo r the year ho was deprived of em ­ployment an Janitor front Ju ly f, 18116, to Juno 30, 1057.

NoticeTeddy’s Hnrher Ilhon 64 Main

fit,, Mnluwnn, will lie closed ur,III further notice due to III- ncss,Jfp— »dv 16

Page 2: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

;/ THE .

M A T A W M K H W N M’

Paite Two Ian . 18, 1958

Guadalcanal Post Home Nearing Completion

Auto Skids On Ice, Hits Train

Among eight accidents r e ­ported to Matawan Township Police this past week, w h e n Icy roads and drenching rains prevailed, was one In which a m an nearly was killed by a tra in and another In which a child sustained a broken leg."■ At 11:47 a.m . Friday, P a t ­rick Kerz ic , 22, Manville, was' going south on County Rd ., Cllffwood, near the New Y o rk & Long Branch R .R . crossing. E rn es t A. C la rk , 60, J e r s e y City, engineer o f a northbound Jersey Central train , " related that he had sounded his whis­tle 600 feet from the Intersec­tion and had taken note o f the oncoming red car. Then it be­came apparent the car would not stop as the train, came In­to the lnterseptlon, Mr. C la rk said he applied the train's em­ergency brakes and brought the train to a halt Just after the. engine-passed the intersec­tion.— M r. Kerzic ,adm itted he had leaped from the car fo r his life rwhcn" the brakes failed to take^hold op Uie icy surface o f Cdunty Rd . The- car crashed In­to Uie train , damaging the ventilator and steps o f car 1073 and-the steps o f cars.4Q$ and 429, according to the report o f Fa tro lih an Ralph W a l l a c e , township police. The right fron t, o f the .Kerzic car was damaged"severely. M r. ke rz ic reported no in juries, according to the o fficer. No charges will be^made against M r. C la rk nq r against John A .'K c 1 i y , train .conductor, Patro lm an Wallace stated. M r. Kerzic'a liability . jo r^ d am ag e . to* i h e train will be determined p ri­vately. ... 1

On Monday, Mrs. Charles Brlxtus, 29, o f 15 Roosevelt Ave., Laurence Harbor, w a s driving south on Amboy ■ Rd.. when, she told Capt. J . Edgar Wilkinson,* township p o l i c e ,

.the .car ahead of her pulled up quickly and she applied h e r brakes to the Icy pavement to try to stop. The Brixtus. car spun around in the road', ac­cording to Capt. Wilkinson, hit­ting a utility pole arid.then the parked car o L E a r l Lewis, 59 8t. P e te r P I., Keyport, parked on the other aide of the Btrcet, T hC L ew ia c a r was In . t u r n forced into the wire fence p f the Keyport Gas Co. by the Impact0, completely demolish­ing a section of it. ’'M rs , Brlxtus and W illiam

Corlmer, a t\vo-and-one-h a 1 f- year-old child riding with her, were taken to a Keyport phy­sician by Albert Nelson, a K ey ­port taxi driver, who happen* ed rtto be passing, according to Capt. Wilkinson. The child was determined to have a fractured leg and Mrs. Brlxtus was suf­fering from shock. The B rix - tus car liad to be towed away, but M r. " Lewis managed to move/bis car despite its being battered In on both sides and the rear, . .

M rs. Florence Patterson, 40, North Shrewsbury, was driv­ing south on Route 34 Thurs­day when her car went into a skid as. she applied the brakes on the Icy pavement nearing L loyd Rd . Her car skidded In­to a utility pole, acoording to Patro lm an John K l n n a n e township police. The car o f John. T , Sfriith, Jr., 25. Spring Lake Heights, coming up be­hind, rammed the rear of the Patterson car as ‘it bounoed OR the pole. Both cars- .were damaged so badly they had to be towed from the scene.

> Another accident occurred on Route *34, this one on F ri day when M rs. Jennie Mcnzel, 60, m is t Orange, applied her brakes near the Lloyd. Rd . In* Ursection and skidded o ff the road. She’ smashed over state highway sign and h e r car was damaged extensively, according to Patro lm an W all­ace. '

Extensive damage was done When a truck driven by Thom- OS Iac lno, 35, Avon, crashed in­to a car operated by Harold A Dolan, 18. .o f 63 Atlantlo St.

. -Keyport, on Amboy Rd.— F r i­day 8:30 p.m. M r. Dolan was making a turn into Prospect St. 1 Sam Canzano. 13 O a r d o n

’ P I.. R ive r Oardens. was re ­ported to have struck a school busropcratod by Mrs. V i o l a Kop f, CUffwood, at Matawan 'Ave. - and Cllffwood Avo. In . Tuesday’s heavy ra lu . Damago to tho-Canzano car was cstl

_n jntcd as sm a ll by police and therei was no rcnd lly observ­able damogo to the bus.

Pa tro lm an F rank cherney, township police, has undor In vestlgaLlon a report from Kuo boll H am or, 28, Garden State T e rr ., Hazlet, that ho skidded

- on the lco and ' struck “S car While ’ attempting a. turn at Low er Main St.- and Gerard Ave. at noontime Friday.

On Thursday cars driven by VjvAn S.- Orabow , 24, of 131 L>a u r o 1 h u r s t D r ., C liff- wood Beach, and V a le fle E lm s , 40, o f 118 ta u re lh u rs t D r., C llffwood,-Beach, collided. P a trobnan Cherney reported the E lm s ’ ; c a r apparently skidded on • the Ice m aking a , tu rn to M b take sK o re O r, Intersection and h it a ia lOther'? aUtoi. Dam -' nfce-Tvaa cjctem tvo. ■ • -» y

Veterans belonging to Gnadalcanal Post 4743. Veterans ot Foreign' W ars, have completed work on the roo f o f the new post home, and report it won’ t be long before the building U fin ish , ed. Members have volunteered their services to erect the new building, and In spite o f incle­ment and f r e e l i n g weather, progress has been rem arkab le . ______ _____________

Seek To Develop Better Auto Plan

Monmouth County Prosecu to r Vincent P . Keuper said re­cently lie is trying to develop a more effective program fo r enforcement o f .traffic a n d highway safety laws. Prosecu­to r Keuper said he and Traffic Co-ordinator W . Robert W a r ­wick are making an analysts o f factors which contributed to the 62 auto fatalities in 1957 In an e ffo rt to come up with d e f I n 1 1 e proposnlsV "'Tight­e r law enforcement,” he add­ed, "w ill be the key.” .

M r. Keuper said the fact that Connecticut experienced no tra ffic fatalities during a critica l period in the recent holiday season is proof o f the effectiveness o f its strict po­lice program .

“ I cannot help' but be . im­pressed by the fact that t h e Connecticut program , w h i c h now Is well known to virtua lly a ll drivers In the east, is pay­ing dividends. We in New Jer­sey have a lot to loam on this score. With tha__help o f Mr. Warw ick, I hope to develop a set o f facts which w ill show a pattern and .be the baste fo r a number o f recommendations.”

M r. Keuper said he is striv­ing to "produce a concise re­port o f troub le'areas w h i c h can be dramatized emphatical­ly fo r a ll drivers. " I t t h e n shou ld - fo llow that violations which fa l l into these areas, or categories, should require se­vere attention from police and judicial officials.'*

M r. Keuper said he will bring his completed program U f the" attention o f the Superior CourtA fis lfcnm tqJh ‘ JU089 to Monmouth C o u n j y , county Judges; ‘nttmteipal magistrate^, state and local police, a n d grand Juries which m ay be considering crim inal aspects o f accidents.

"O u r problem in Monmouth County is critica l, p e r h a p s more' so than In any other county o f the state. Our death to ll in recent months has been s t a g g e r i n g . Notwithstand­ing the fact that/Monmouth County Is growing in popula-. tion and activity, the situation with respect to highway safety Ib out of hand.

"There is no suggestion on my part that any one o f the recent deaths could have been prevented by a particu lar po­lice agency o r other official. We ean expect to save lives, I think, only a fter developing sensible but unwavering-pollcy of maximum enforcement, and Impressing the policy on every­one.”

M r. Keuper said he expect* ed that this analysis would he completed In the near future Recommendations w i l l be made soon afterwards.

E. J. Seber Dies In Perth Amboy Hospital

Etbelbert John Seber. 58, ol 312 Broadway, Union Beach, died suddenly - Tuesday, Jan. 14. 1958, In Perth Amboy Hos­pital, Born In Marlboro Town­ship, he was the son of tlie lato John B. ond Roseanna (C rlne) S e b e r . , -He had lived in Union Beach fo r tlie past 23 years. He was

communicant o f Holy Fam - lly Church, Union Beach, and

Savings BondsMany groups In addition to

Individual Investors now ore eligible to buy Series E and II United States S a v 1 n r s Bonds. As o f Jan. 1 .any Inves­tor, other than commercia l banks, could purchase savings bonds.-

Philip M. Light, s a v i n g s _____ ________ bond director fo r the north-

was employed by Syncro M a-,-eaS region, which Includeschincry Co., Perth Amboy. He was au exempt fireman o f the Morganvllle Volunteer F ire Co.

Surviving- ave his-^wifc, Mrs. Mary E . (Higgins) Seber; one son. John R ., at home; two brothers, Henry, Newark, and Robert V ., Morganvllle.

Funera l1 services will be held Saturday at 8 a.m . a t the Day Funera l Home, Keyport. At 9 a .m . a high requiem m a s s will be celebrated, by the Rev. Joseph G. Fox , pastor, at the Holy Fam ily Church, U n I o n Beach. Interment w ill be in St. Joseph's Cemetery, Keyport.

Stubborn Blaze Routs Families In Madison

Members o f five fire com­panies colled from three com­munities battled a stubborn fire in a fou r-fam ily apart­ment building on Route 34, Cheesequake. fo r almost four hours before it was cxtlngulsh- cd^.fiunday afternoon. Tlie blaze at the7 house, reportedly owned by F red Applegate, E a s t Brunswick, was discover­ed shortly a fte r noon.

Firemen reported the blazo started In a bedroom In the re a r o f ono o f tho dbwnstalrs •apartments, then crept_along between partitions to other parts o f the structure. The back bedroom whcro the firo started ^wns badly charred along with Its contents, and heavy smoke and water dam­ago was reported by tho- fire­men.. The firs t a la rm camo to tho

Cheesequake Volunteer F iro Company, and when Chief A1 Hanson and. other members o f the company arrived , and found tbo blaze already mak­ing rapid headway, with huge clouds o f smoke arising from the building, ho called fo r as* siBtnncc. Tho South O ld Bridge, Laurence H a rb o r Fro - heau, C llffwoodiSoach and Ma* tnwan firemen Joined tlie fight. Also stahdlng by w e re ' Laur* cnco Harbor F irs t Aid Squad and the Madison Township Emergency Squad, Inc., '

New Cancer Gains Look Good In ’58

Recent developments a n d newly-acquired knowledge f o r cancer control portend a great year o f achievement in" 1958 fo r the American Cancer . Society, W. Daniel W illiam s, M o n- mouth County cancer- crusade chairmen, said recently. ;

T he , chairman said he Is hopeful that gains o f the las t few weeks w ill encourage a ll crusade workers o f past years to help " In* the drive fo r funds in lO W .H e said he .a l3o bopep to greet many new workers whose interest has been whet­ted by tlie advances being made on cancer. „

“ Tho American Cancer So ­ciety bos but one purpose,” he aaid. " I t is to stamp out can­cer. And to be successful, it is inevitable that funds must bo sought.”

M r. W illiam s, wlio Is v i c e president o f the New, Jersey Natura l Gas Company, s~& 1 d the society uses threo fie lds to c a rry out its work. They aro service, education, and re* search. Its service program provides the necessary -diag­nostic and treatment facilities and provides medication a n d volunteer aid to ease suffering and to assist the fam ilies of the afflicted.

The education p r o g r a m teaches the public the seven danger signals o f cancer and t h e importance o f periodic physical examinations, I t also strives to combat tho lack of knowledge among laymen and physicians on tho subject in general, or on particu lar fac ­ets.*The research p rogram aims to provide scholarships to as­sure a growing number of tra in ­ed scientists and to support long range attack on the caus­es o f cancer through aid to the medical and scientific worlds.

Supplies o f several canned vegetables arc plentiful und specials may be'expected on some Items, such as g r o e n peas, snap.beans ang canned com . Watci^ fo r , th e ^ ; )n , the months ahead, advises Mon* m outh C ou n ty .iH dm t?U ffcn t •Mrs. Lo ina K . .WiiUo*>'........

Army Drafting School Accepts Matawan Youth

The U . S. Army Recruiting Station, Red Bank, h a s an- nounoed-that Robert Zielinski, son of M r. and-Mrs. Fe lix Zie­linski, 27 New Brunswick Ave.!, Matawan, has received his le t­ter o f acceptance to attend the general drafting course, F o r t Bc lvo lr. Va.. w lUfTIio course beginning on Mny^O. T ills let­ter o f acceptance was fo rw ard ­ed from Uio Department o f the Army. He will enlist In the J t f.S , Army fo r tills course on J t t n , ~ 3 0 . . . , ~ _. . .

During the nitic-wcck entry course, Robert, a 1057 gradu­ate o f Matawan H igh School, w ill become proficient iu a va­riety o f general drafting dc t a i l s to include diagrams, graphs, charts and. assist In cartographies, model making and related art. His academic subjects w ill lnciudo b a s i c drafting, mathematics review, projected, drawings part I and I I , advanced general drafting, and statistical drafting. After completion of tho course, he .w lll.be selected to.attend, one o f soven advanced specialized drafting courses. After their completion, he w ill bo desig­nated as u drafting specialist

Robert is enlisting under tho U. S. Army's "Reserved fo r Y o u ” program , that guaran­tees Uio high nchool graduate,' Jn writing, tho coureo of hischoice ,11 prior to enlistment; There a ro 'ovc r 150 courses to select from . -

Keyport PositionFred Rozell, manager o f -the

J . J . Newberry Co. Store, Wept F ron t St., Keyport, fo r the past seven years leaves tom or­row to accept the post o f man­ager o f Newberry's Param us store, one of the la rgest units o f the junior department store chain on the east coast.

While M r. Rozell served as manager, . Uie Keyport store was doubled in .size to.become the largest retail outlet in K ey ­port. Sale^ volume was trip led, M r. Rozell reported.

Mr.' Rozell was a member o l the Keyport Businessmen’s As­sociation. now the K c y'p o r t Chamber o f Commerce, a n d' served fo r many years on the trade association’s re ta il stand­ards committee. In 1955, he was elected to a three-year term as director o f the B o r­ough Savings and Loan Associ­ation. 1S d r . .Rozell has been a resi­

dent o f Monmouth County fo r

New York , New Je rsey and the New England States, ex­plained that the U .S . T reasury now has made it .possible fo r groups such os lab o r unions, churches, fra te rna l, c i v i c , service, patriotic! and veteran organizations, charitab le insti­tutions, state and loca l govern­ments, estates, trusts, corpora­tions, unincorporated associa­tions and partnerships, to pur­chase Series E ahd H Bonds up to $10,000 maturity va lue per yc&r fo r each sories.

The new policy to* broaden the base o f savings bonds own­ership w ill f i l l a gap w h l f h was creatod ln^. April 1957, when sa le , o f Scries J and K Bonds was, discontinued; M r. Light declared. Since t h a t t i m e , irujtiy sm&U1 investor groups have not had availab le uTthem any government secur­ities that o ffe r guaranteed prb- tectlonagainst m arke t fluctua­tion. This need is being m et by making. Series E and H Bonds available to such groups.. M r. Light said that commer­cial banks w ill accept o rders fo r E and H Bonds from insti­tutional investors and forw ard them to the Federa l Reserve Bank fo r Issuance o f t h e bonds. Ownership of Series E anti H Savings Bonds now opt* ’standing is a t ani a ll-time high. With 40,000,000 people ho lding more than $41,000,000,000 m both, scries.

Series E Bonds earn, three- and-one-quarter per cent inter­est compounded sem i-annually when held to m aturity , eight years and 11 months. Cost prices a re $18.75 $37.50; $75; $150; $375: $750 and $7500 and corresponding m atu rity values are $25; $50:^100; $200; $500; iJlOQO and $10,1)00. r -

Series H Bonds earn three- and-one-quarter per cent inter­est when held to.- maturity which is 10 years, in te rest Is paid by treasury-check every six months, They are sold bt par and redeemable at pa r-In denomination o f $500; $1000; $5000 and $10,000. "7

Four In Family Are Hurt In Auto Crash.

Four of six passengers, a ll members of the sam e-fam ily , were_ injured when the Car in which they were riding skid­ded on the icy pavement and slid into a pole while traveling west on Route 18 near Route 9, Madison Township Po lice re­ported Sunday,

Bishop Brown, 2 Orchard St., Cllffwood, the d rive rK pf tho car, and two-year-old Dorothy, his daughter, wcro tbe only passengers who apparently suf­fered no injuries.

The in jured wero M rs. Eva May Brown, 34, his wife, who suffered a possible fractu ro o f tho right foot; two sons, John, 15, back bruise and possible spinal fracture, and Walter,- 13. possible head injuries. Tlie three were admitted to the Perth Amboy General Hospit* a l while Betty Jean, ntne- years-old, another daughter, was treated fo r a bruised back and released by the hospital The Old Bridge F irs t A i 3 Squad took the fam ily to tho hospital. -

Two Madison Township Youths Aro • Sontonced

Tw o j1 M A d l s o u Township youths, W lillo • », Whito, 18, Texas R d ., Morganvllle s e c ? tlon, nnd Arthur B lnko. 19, Texas Rd ., Old Bridge, were placed on probation fo r tw o years cach_for breaking, enter­ing and larceny. Both had pleaded non vult Dec. 6, 1057, to ntcalln a tiro and rim worth $45 from the Ru ra l Body Works on Route 34 lu Madi­son.

They appeared for scntcno Ing in Middlesex County C rim ­inal Court before Judge K lem ^tier *-----

U. b. . , c . havo' beentesting tlie new automatic car­rier landing system w h i c h makes It possible* to l a n d planes aboard carrie rs with­out touching the controls in woathfir so bad that a convent }!orinI landfng would be Iratios-'Bible. i *:

Rozell To Leave JeeePfi®n; Pinne ToHonor NJ CongressmenThe annual congressional re ­

ception and dinner of the New Jersey State Chamber o f Com­merce w ill be held Jan . 30 at the Mayflower Hotel, Wash­ington D . C., P res . B. L . Eng­land o f the s^ate chamber an­nounced today. This w ill be the 21st year that the state cham­ber has conducted the event In Washington to honor New Je rsey ’s Congressional delega­tion. j : .

Members and guests will trave l to the nation's- capital city aboard an 18-car special Pennsylvania Ra ilroad train . More than 500 are expected to participate. The reception will be" at 6 p.m . and the d i n n e r w ill begin one hour la ter.

The special train w ill origin­ate a t Pennsylvania Station, New Y o rk , and w ill stop at Newark, New Brunswick, T ren­ton, North Philadelphia, 30th St., Philadelphia, and Wilming­ton. D e l. I t w ill reach Wash­ington approximately one hour before the reception begins.

F R E D ROZELL28 years. He lives in- Apple- hrook Fa rm s, Middletown Township, arid has been asso­ciated with the J . J* Newberry Co. chain fo r the past 18 years.

He is m arried to the fo rm er Miss Virginia Lee and has, two sons, F red , Jr., and Edward Lee.

Three Monmouth School Press Projects Chosen

Judges in the school press project, conducted as part of the 1957 Christmas seal drive, have selected the school pub­lications o f Manasquan and At­lantic Township- E lem entary Schools and Red Bank Catholic High Bchool, as county win­ners, M rs. Edward M . Crane, Middletown, county Christmas seal* chairman, announced - to­day. * ..

The three Monmouth County papers have'been submitted.to the State Tuberculosis a n d Health Association fo r judging and selection o f nine s c h o o l papers to be entered from New Jersey in the nation-wide p ro­jec t sponsored by the National Tuberculosis Association a n d the Columbia Scholastic Press Association.

M rs. Crane also announced today ..that receipts from the Christmas seat sale totaled $37,759 at the end o f e i g h t weeks, running $3241 short o f the $41,000 goal fo r funds to help fight tuberculosis in Mon­mouth County's 52 communi- tles. M rs. Crane 6aid that con­tributions to the 1957 drive w ill be received until M ar. 31, at the sea l sale headquarters, 141 Bo dm an F l. , R ed Bank.

New Assignment In Rehabilitation Office

Miss Elc&nor Hawke, T ren­ton , has been assigned to the N e w Jersey. Rehabilitation Commission Trenton office to provide physical restoration, Vocational guidance, training, and Job placement services to Uie disabled residents o f Mon­mouth and Ocean Counties. The office Is located at 38 South Clinton Ave.

The appointment o f additlon- al counselors hns been neces­s a ry because o f tbe growing number o f handicapped men and women in this a rea . The state vocational rehabilitation program assists physically and m entally 'handicapped R e s i ­dents to prepare fo r employ- Tnenfcr

Holmdel Revenue. (continued from page one) dogTemoval service at $25 per month.Contract F o r F ire HydrantsM ichael Nero, an* o ffic ia l of

the West Keansburg Water Co. presented a contract fo r eight fire hydrants a t $50 pe r year per hydrant. One Is in H ar­mony P o rk and seven a re In O ld M anor Estates. M a y o r James H. Ackerson wanted to see a map o f hydrant loca­tions. This Uie water company agreed to produce but M r. Nero pointed out threo hy­drants In Raritan Township were close to the Holmdel line, ono only 15 feet Inside it, so tho township gained a greater equivalent o f firo protection.

Kenneth 8 . W illey, a specta­to r, suggested the township buy a sand sp rayer to pqt on tho back o f Uio township truck to use In snow clearance. He believed it would resu lt In much bcttor u s o j) f sand to .P r.OT Vido road safety in snowy/icy. Conditions. '

M ayor Ackerson said tho Globo Petroleum Co., Red B ank , the supplier of gasoline fo r tho township, should be asked to put in a tank where the school buses are kept the township board o f educa­tion ’s account fo r gasoline could bo kept separate from the township's— —

Latest figures compiled by the, American Cancer Society revea l that .now ono In every three, who have cancer, is be­ing saved Instead of one In fou r. Support-Uie fight to con­quer cancer. <,* *

About 150,000 Americans now a re being saVed from cancer each year, the American Can- cejr Society reports,,About 73,- OOO^morb1 could bo,:s^vcd ««-an-ntfd\!y* tt' the £lsehsc; lis detect: ed and treiftcd in twto

Four Grammar(continued from page one)

maps of the subdivision until 6 p .m . last night, so could not, know if the grades o f water and sewer, street and storm sewer and catohbasln s 'l t o 8 were correct. Stanley Kordzln- ski. president o f the board o f education!'recalled no under­standing on contributions to building v&chool3 had b e e n made. M h B a le r said a letter from the township sewerage authorIty^aptfrovhig the-7 tem ­po ra ry use o f septic tanks was needed and a more explicit re­po rt on the plan whereby wa­te r io r the subdivision would be obtained through an agree­ment with Matawan Township.

John Conover, building in­spector, reported the z o n i n g board of adjustment was de­clining to act on a variance whereby Pau l Lafayette could get a perm it fo r extending tra ile r pa rk projected fo r his property on Route 9 and Run­yon Rd . fo r 300 feet .'Into an a r e a zoned residential. M r. Conover explained that tlie o r­dinance Of 1950 limited the lo ­cation o f tra ile r parks in the township to commercial zones and that to comply. with the ordinance. and/^locate his 45 tra ile r sites on 40-by-100*f o o t lo ts , M r. Lafayette would have to use 300 fee t o f his land ex­tending ,ln lo the residential zone in addition to 300 fee t In & business zone.

Refused Building Perm itsM r. Conover said that Mr.

Lafayette had considered re ­stricting the tra ile r lots to 20- by-50-feet to keep a ll tho tra il­e r park within the business zone. M r. Conover reported th&t he had refused to Issue building permits on either the 20-by*S0*foot lo t sizes o r the extension Into the residential zone. _ - "

Mayor Chamberlain f o u n d the tra ile r ordinance o f 1950 called fo r comnlunal w a s h rooms and laundries, p l a y * ground areas, septic tank leeching areas and other fix ­tures that would make it un* economical fo r anyone, to at­tempt to locate a tra ile r park on a lo t even 600 feet long. The m ayor fran k ly admitted the tra ile r ordinance o f 1950 was antiquated by p r e s e n t day tra ile r construction a n d state sanitary codes and said it had been subject_to revision fo r some time. James Tortor- icc found a tra ile r park pre* seated the same problems as n lm a jo r subdivision and should bp -subjected - to -the same re- qulrerhents. M r. Ko rdz insk f be-*llevcd this* should Include , acontribution toward building schools, M r..Edgar noted there was no provision fo r locating tra ile r parks made under the zoning ordinance adbpted in 1956, so It was obvious-no zon­ing perm it fo r ono could be is­sued.

Tho board then moved to tab le the matter - and- turn - the antiquated tra ile r ordinance oyer to Community Planning Associates,. Princeton, the firm m aking a Master P lan fo r the township. Mr. Kordzinskl said Uio zoning ordinance could be revised to make provision fo r both tra ile r camps and motels In the township and designate sites fo r them as determined from the Master P lan . Mr^ Conover was advised he could issuo no building perm it to r a tra ile r park until such . parks find beeh‘ Incorporated into the zoning ordinance and the Ordin­

ance governing them-had been revised to make* it4 applicable to present day conditions.

Gas Station Lim itationsMr* Edgar reported on his

proposals o f last month fo r the lim itation of gas stations, road­side refreshments stands, b ill­boards and fences in the town­ship. He recommended adop­tion o f the provision o f the Newark ordinance on gas' sta­tions which w ill prohibit them from being locatedi within 200 feet o f any public building, lim ­it the number to be located witbtn a given distance, and restrict the placing of pumps and fixtures within the area o f adjoining property lines.

M r. Edgar noted that sjgns and billboards could be con­tro lled under a separate ordln ance by which perm its would be needed fo r erecting them Mrs. M ary Brown, township c lerk , asked if they s till could be taxed if a perm it were to be paid fo r to erect them, M r; Edgar said they could be tax­ed as personal property.

The board preferred to fo re ­go the revenue from perm its fo r signs and'billboards to hav­ing them included under,N the general headings of structures in a revision ofMtoe buUaing code. No signs buts^m^lr pnes fo r professional m e j t r e a l es­tate men advertising a proper­ty fo r 's a le , o r signs designat­ing public buildings w ill be perm itted In a residential area. Signs o f somewhat la rg e r size will be permitted at a place o f business but only fo r the busi­ness’ concerned and there shall be no more than three signs at a business site. In the indus­tr ia l zone, full-sized, billboards w ill be permitted.Classify Fences As Structnres

Fences w ill be classified as structures and so regulated In accordance with the percent­age by which they a re solid. This will perm it latitude in the erection of steelwire fences seven feet ta ll fo r Industrial and property purposes. C o in * munity P lanners w ill be asked lo go Into the roadside re fresh ­m en t‘ stand matter j i s more involved and requiring ‘ minute defining so staple business w ill not be affected.

The building code w ill he re ­vised under the terms o f the national building code with tae exception that masonry chim­neys w ill })e required, metal stirrups; wall s ills and vapor barriers w i 11 be demanded. Term ite blocks on foundations are set up - and foundations must h&ve eight-inch concrete on 16*lnch widths w l t h ' f o u r - lnch concrete reinforcing a t the ground level.. Carelessness in the na ilin g . o f sbe&ting to studs to mass housing has caused the barrlng o f a ll types but one-h&lf-inch plywood on walls and five-eighlhs-of-an* inch plywood OTwoofs.

The Gale Gas Co., Keyport, was reported willing to reach on agreement with the town­ship on the use o f their sa lt meadow on Route 35. near the Matawan Township line, f o r the sanitary lapdfill required fo r garbage and waste dispos­al after Ju ly -1 o f this year. M ayor Chamberlain reported an initial quotation by which the gas firm would have charg­ed $1.50 per ton fo r the dump­ing was turned down, but that negotiations still, would c o n ­tinue, Other sites fo r the land fi l l o f garbage w ill be inspect­ed.

A m inor subdivision was bp proved fo r Tucker and Pa lley , Philadelphia, present develops ers o f the Dollar-A-Day homes on Englishtown Rd . whereby they w ill acquire 18 more acres. But fo r emergency ac­tion by the board, the develop­ers would have lost a $10,000 deposit on the land.

Another m inor subdivision approved. permitted convey­ance of a triangular strip at Morristown School Rd . by Jo­seph Kenvul to an adjoining owner named Phillips.

Matawan Borough(continued from page ^Jne) .

ommended by the adjustment board, perm itting an advertls- ing sign, to be painted on the railroad overpass across Route 34 was approved by the coun­cil. The sign Is planned to ad­vertise the Fa rm ers and Mer­chants National Bank, Mata­wan. 7 *

Mayor Schanck appointed a 1 1 v e-man citizens’ advisory committee to probe plans by the Pennsylvania Ra ilroad ’ and - the Centra l Ra ilroad o f New 7 Jersey fo r decreases In serv­ices and increases in f a r e s . Both carriers serve commuters ' in the borough. ......

Those. named to thie commit­tee include George Doubller, Elraor«~Kattaer, E . Story Hal- lock, Clarence Stultz and E . M urray Todd. The committee also w ill attempt to seek meet­ings with the ra ilroad officials to advance whatever commut­er objections that m ay be rats- . ed. 'Special Po lice

Special police named fo r 1958 were James B e n n e r ,Charles F . Hockenbary, Her-...bert Hahn, F rank F ie rro . F ran ­cis Anson, W illiam H u l . s a r t f -. and Marshall Longstreet. .

Councilman Cyrus K . B row n^In his annual report* o f water . department activities, dlsclos- ed that 4700 feet o f new water transmission lines were install- . ed • and 2U 6 fee t o! waiter mains were replaced in.-1957,^A-T— total of 259,660,160 gallons o f water was pumped during the . year.Council referred to the police committee a request by Vas­sily Koban, Keyport ta x i oper­ator, fo r permission to meet ■ tlie last three trains at the * Matawan Station to pick up ‘ passengers. He said .he serv--;— ices the hew developments in Raritan Township and there |s no bus service a fter 10 p jn . Three trains a rrive in M ata-' wan a fte r that-time, M r, KOr^j ■ ban reported. He sought jeer- . mission to meet the 10:30 11:37 p.m. and the 1:40 am * trains. . .

D rive rs , designated by t h e three borough fire companies were approved by council. The Hook and Ladder F ire Co. des­ignated C|ro Nappl. C liffo rd B row er/ W illiam F o r m a n , : F te d -F o rm an , S ay le r Hughes and Robert Hathaway. D rive rsfo r Midway Hose Co. appoint*....ed were Pau l Egan , A lfred Ad­le r , Vincent Burlew , G e o r g e Petrosky , Michael E o v l n o , . Lawrence Bachman and W all- . .. ace Laursen. M . E . Haley Hose Co. designated Pa trick LongOi F rank G ray, Jr., Bam "BOBA-7 " fato , R o le r t G ray, A n g e l o Scaizo and Jerem iah Houri- han.'" . 7 ’- ,7 '77,'

1001 SAFE SLIIPSomfhex'Taken aa directed

NO BarbituratesNO BromidesNO Narcotics

NDN-HABIT- FORMING *

'A MEDIUM-s i z r

27 W. Front St.* Keyport (Next |fo Peoples N t l' l- Bab* )Rollo & Marathao Bosqp Pass Our boor <

EATONTOWN*

''V ilM /e -Ill THEATRE 'Rt. 35- st Circle + E4 3-9160

Shows Start a t 7- p.m . (Box Office Opens 6:30) Wed. . Thurs,. J an . 15-16 Jeff Chandler in"RED* BALL EXPRESS'*

—- Pius-!- - ,A. Murphy - D. Duryea .

“ R IDE CLEAR OF DIABLO”• In Technicolor *

Fri. - Sat. Jan. 17-18 , Pat Boone In “ APRIL LOVE**In Cinemascope and Color— Pius—

J . McCrea - M . Stevens In "V “ KUNSIGUT B ID G E ”

— Also— ■Lato H orror Show. Friday and SaturdaySunday, Jan. 19th

(One Day Only)Early Show Son. a t 6 P .M . Box Office Opens 5 :30 . Kirk Douglas In “ TH E INDIAN FIGHTER** -

In Clsexnaseope and Color— P lq S -r . ^

J . Stewart - J . AUyson.

“ STRATEGIC A IR COMMAND**. In Technicolor , r—Also— '

Cartoon Carnival Sun. N ightH on . - Toes. Jan, 20-81

“ SLAUGHTER ON _ _TENTH AV E .”With Richard Egan and Jean Sterling

,n ii-Also—- .Ilal March In - “ HEAR -M F COOPT "-7

Starts Wed. Jan. $**»d “ PA L JOEY** .....— Plus—

' “ SPO ILERS O F THE FOREST”

KEYPORT 7-2841A NUMBER TO REMEMBER

HAIR CUTTING BY APPOINTMENT ONLY, LARRY VECCHIO, SR.

Specializing In Men and Ladies ' 7 Hair Cutting '

: 219 Brtfiithvay ; Keyport

Page 3: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

Morganville First Aid Squad Holds Installation Of Officers; Items

Insta lla tion o f 1958 officers ol the Morganvllle' F i r s t Aid Squad was held Jon. B at Ju lia ’ s D rive-In , Route 9, ' A regular meeting also was held. Officers installed w e e Ed O ’Connor, re-elected p r e s l - , dent; M illard Lamberson, vice president:. Arthur Phelan, re ­elected treasurer, Joseph L an ­zaro, Jr'., re elected secretary*. '

Also Chester Jam ison, re­elected captain; Donald-M iller, first lieutenant; W llm er K ll- comins, second lieutenant; M r. Lamberson, sergeant: W illiam L. M orris, trustee: M i c h a e 1 Costura, purchasing -.- a g e n t; Martin Smith, Jr., chaplain.

Twenty-one members attend-; ed tbe dinner, at which time Ted Po llchak was sworn in as an active member. Also-attend­ing were Spec McCue, Leon ard JJivlson, P rank -Ratcliffe, L lnse Lemonoe, Joseph- b i n - zaro, s r., F l o y d wyckoff. Charles ° Witkowskl, R ichard

_ R iopel, president o f the- M a rl­boro F ire Department; H arry Sickles, chief of Marlboro F ire Co.; H a r o l d Quackenhush, president Morganvllle Inde­pendent F ire Co.; F rank Rat- c llffe.' chie f o f the Morganvllle F ire Company; Bem le Pries,, president Morganvllle Volun-

. teex_ F ire Co., and _ Martin Smith, Jr., chief o f . Morgan- v ille Volunteer F ire Co. .

?—;—M rs,-Raym ond Brown w a s hostess to the Harmony Club*

;-V. Jan. 7. Those present w e r e " M rs. Martin Smith, s r ., Mrs. V TlU le Jam ison,-M rs. C a r r i e ....Fo rm an , M rs. Joseph LaM ura, s r. M rs. Joseph Lanzaro, s r .,

and M rs; F ran k F re l l became; F re l j 1 i l le / Vc

members.The M o rg an v llle / Volunteer

' F ire Co. bowling team won two - ’ games end. lost one.'Score fo r

the week was 717-725; 751-688 . and 853-699. - ..

M rs. Raymond Brown tenter­. talned recently at canasta.

P resent were M rs, Joseph. La- ~’ :''Murav'snv’ Mrsr'Tl]lle'damlson,-

M rs^Leon Brown, M rs. Rob­e rt Seber; s r.,'and Miss Sarah . Ann Seber. . '

’M r. and Mrs. J , Bu.’ lew and daughter, Beverly , spent Mon­day afternoon visiting ' M r s ,

.. Raymond Brown,- ' St. Gabriel's Church. B rad ‘..‘ ­— velt, iield a communion brenk- , fast Sifndsy morning. There

were about 50 attending. Recent afternoon guests o f

?M rs . Edward O ’Connor were M rs. F rank L . Ratc liffe and * daughter, G erry , Mr;,. H arry

, Konowalow a n d daughters,- K a thy and Patti. Mrs. B e s s Crine, Mrs. Edward Becker,

M ts. Charles L . Holme3 and children, Charlene and Robert. MorgnnYlllo. ond Mrs, Sidney 'E verson , Matawan. .........

- — M r. — nd • M rs. F rank Rat- _ _ c li i fe , ' Mr* and Mrs. H arryRatc liffe , Mr. a n d M r s .

- Charles L . Holmes, M r. ' a n d M rs. R obe rt W. K ilcom lns. M rs. Harvey-Johnstoiir Mr.-and

. M rs. Raymond-Wenzel, M r s . Garre'.t Woolley, M r. and M rs. Charles Sellick, attended t h e wedding o f Ronald Woolley to M iss-Beverly Hans at the Win- frcd Scott Hotel,'Elizabeth. M r.

. and- Mrs. Charles Holmes and , fam ily-rem n lped fo r the week­

end , at the home of Mr. and . M rs. .Clinton Woolley. Rahway.

' M r. and Mrs. Robert Jesscn have moved Into their n e w heme on W ilson Ave. Tbe_jfes- sens fo rm erly are of Perth Am-

■: .boy. ' .V * " -

M ichael Costura, son of M r. nnd M rs. M ichael Costura wns one o f the winners on a debat­ing team fo r his Forensic Club. Michael attends Red B a n k Catholic High School. .'.

The new fire chief reception held at the Midway H ose .F lre Co. was attended by peorgS Pheasant. Gordon SWanson, and Waiter Johansen. They provided the musical entertain? ment fo r the evening’s festivi­ties. The money-received fo r this -was donated to the newly- formed Morganvllle Boy11 Scout Troop 93. ~

M r' and M rs. Thomas Ko- covsky were guests o f M r. and .M rs. H arry Christie, Southard, Saturday evening.

M r. and M rs. Thomas Ko- covsky were Jan. 8 evening guests o f M r. nnd M rs. Thom­as Antisell. .

Mrs. Lesion F isher, M r s . Thomas Kocovsky and M r s . Charles L ew d e r enjoyed sleigh riding Thursday evening.

Mrs. Gteorge Pheasant enter­tained with a late supper Sat­urday evening. Attending were M rs. Eugene O. Gall and Mrs. W illiam Cosgrove.-

Jlrfi P o rte r , Tottenvllle, S .I., is a visitor at the home of his sister, M rs. Eugene Ov Go ll. He will spend - a week with M rs. G a ll. '

Lynn Schroeder. celebrated her eighth birthday ot a party at her home. Guests were Dor­othy Faust’, Sharon Baldwin, Sa lly M artin . Denise and Dru- silla Bing. ■

The Monday Canasta C l u b met in the home, of M rs. Mi­chael Costura,.Attending were M rs. Virginia .Kellogg, M rs. A1 Frenchmen, Keansburg; M r s . Donald P o rte r, •'■keyport. The prize was wop by.M rs. French­men. • -.7 ■• The Evejry Other’ Wednesday Card Club vheld their meeting this week at the home* o l Mrs. -Michael Costura^ ' Attending were * M rs. A rt' Wellbrooke, M rs. A rthur Bumpus, M r s . .Theodore Phelan an d -JA .r s. Donaild P o rte r,

Dance For Junior Drum, Bugle Corps Members

■ Sixty members and friends o f the Junior Drum and Buffle Corps sponsored by the Guadal­canal.Post 4745,-Veterans o f Foreign. Wars, C llffw ood and Matawan, were .entertained , at ;» dance Friday evening by the Corps Molher* Association at the Oak Shades Fire House. Muslo was furnished by the MeUo Tones. The door prize was won by Miss Lynuda Wallace, C llff-wood . <■- • ‘M rs. Joseph G . Loe ffle r was chairman and she was assisted by a ll tho Corps Mothers and Junior D rum and Bugle Corps committee members from the Post. '

Heart Qroup Sponsors Family Meeting, Series

The Monmouth County Heart Association announced through W illiam Herbert, M. D „ Avon, chairman of tiic public educa­tion committee, that it will sponsor another In a series of “ Pa ren t’s Meetings." Intended fo r parents o f both congenital and rheum atic patients, t h e program w ill be held In Class­room I I , second floor o f Mou­rn o u t h Memorial , Hospital, Monday at 8:30 p.m. Because o f the increased attendance by fa thers , the name was chang­ed from the... fo rm er designa­tion, “ M other’s Meetings.”

M i l t o n K . Haul, M. D , Farm lngdale , vice president of the Pa ren t ’s Meeting commit­tee lists the panels o f speakers as fo llow s: Joseph F . Rsrfctto . M. D „ Asbury P a rk , pediatric­ian; Edward Dengrove, M. D ,P Asbury P a r! ;, psychiatrist; Al­fred R . Henderson, M . ,D.. As­bury P a rk , chest surgeon: D o r­othea K llem ,- R._,N:, O-c e a n G r o v e, public health nurse with D r . Hapt representing genera l practice., V. .

Iny ltatlons have been sent to parents—, o f -clinic patients known to have heart disease.

P-TA Donation To Purchase Books

The . Morganvllle P a r e n t - Teacher Association held Its January meeting, Monday eve­ning, In t h e Morganvllle School. Miss E llen Crlne read the P-TA prayer. M rs. F rank Cullens. Jr., president,.. Intro­duced M rs. Catherine Dimeo who was In charge o f the pro­gram . M rs. Dlmeo- Introduced

, "Mrs. E rnest Thom who had prepared, a sk it showing tho, value o f good nutrition. P a rt ic ­ipating were Susan Quacken- bush, Charlene Holmes, a n d Michele Ryniewicz. •

Ted Phelan,-M atawan. show­ed a" film on the Morganvllle lunchroom at Its Inception. As some additional entertainment, M r. Phelan ran fi lm he had taken at the .New Y o rk I c e , Show. Robert Herbert an- houncod that the book fa ir will be held lp the Centra l School, Jan . 27, at 7 :30 p .m . Parents grg Invited to a 11 e n d. The P-TA voted to donate $40 to Marlboro Township fo r the pur­chase o f books. M rs. W illiam Barker was . appointed ’ chalr-man of .the, p ro ject. ......* Robert A? Sena, p rlac lpa l of the M i r l b o r e Township Schobls, spoke b rie fly oh the' economic and nutritional as­pects o f serving children In the lunchrooms. M rs. Cu llens se- Elected committees to serve tho night o f Jan. 25, when the mu­sical '.'Fcudln lN' Fussln 'l will be presented. M rs. E d w a r d Preston-and M rs. B a rke r w ill have charge o f the checkroom;, refreshment committee-. . M rs, H a rry Konowalow. M rs. Rob­ert Seber and M rs . P , Buc il; Mrs. John Rogers, collecting tickets .a t the door.

Refreshments were - served by the second grade mothers.

Mrs. Eugcno O. G a ll an­nounced to. the membership .at tho meeting that the Morgan? v llle Mothers’ Club, ol which she is president,, w ill donate, the programs necessary fo r the P-TA sponsored musical. Mem­bers of tho club who have been working toward accomplishing this goal arc M rs. G e o r g e Pheasant, Mrs. .W alter B i n g , M rs. Michael Costura, M r s . M ichael Ryniewicz, M ts. Les- ton F isher, M rs. W illiam Cos­grove, M rs. Gordon Swanson and M rs;-Cbnrles Lcandcr.

.The performarice which t h e c a s t o f—’-Fcudtn ’N ’ F iiss ln ” Intended to present nt M a rl­boro State Hospital wns called o ff dpc to Inclement weather.

Catholic Youth Group Plans Saturday Dance. T jg* Monmouth County Cath- olic^Poimg Adult Club w i l l sponsor a dance Saturday at 9 p.m. at the Ridgewood I n n , fo rm erly the Leonardo F ie ld Club. Muslo w ill be furnished by the Buzzy B a rb e r Band, .

I t alscVwas announced a t the la r i meeting of the group that a communion breakfast w i l l be held Feb, 18 at St. Joseph ’s Church, K e y p o rt . , B reakfast w ill be served at the S h o r e Point Inn, R a ritan Township, T ian s alao were made to. hold ice skating Parties’, ski trips, bowling, and bus trlp9. --,j

The next meetloB w ill be held Feb. 4 at St. M a r y ’s Church, P o rt Monmouth;

The oame of Beniamin Franklin baa long been associated with the sturdy virtue of thrift. How better, then, can you observe bis birthday (Jan. ; 17) than fe make Ibfa yogr saving? Open a savings account now! -

FARMERS and MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK

, - M alaw an , ,Oldest And H ost Modern Bank In Monmouth County Established 1830 Member Federal Reserve System Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation *

4-H C M Holds

Meeting MoiidayThe Browntown Peda l Push­

ers 4-H Club business meeting was held Monday a t tho Brown­town School. A meeting time and place was set fo r tho va r­ious new projects which ln : elude cooking, home Improve­ment; gardening, forestry^and child care .iA note of thanks was sent to Chamberlain it Ba rc lay , C ranford , sponsors of the 4-II calendars each year.

M d r 1 a Mnccla and Anno Chamberlain were appointed to seek a window fo r the' M a rc li d-H achievement window dis­p lay. A letter wns sent to tli6‘ Middlesex County. 4-H C 1 li t ) agent asking for a list of film s fo r fu ture meetings. Tentative plans were made fo r a. moth­er and daughter supper. .. ."- F irst-year cooking class will hold Its meeting a t 4 p.m . to­ddy at the home o f M rs. B . C. Mnccla, Cedar G rove; llilrd - year class meets every other Thursday at 7 p .m . at ih e home o f their leader, Miss Sylvia Molnar. Browntown,

Those attending tho club meeting wcro Anno Chamber­lain, Julie and Sandra Burlcw, Brenda Donaldson, Virginia Rizzo, Suzanne W alker, ■ F a t K az im ir, Janet Tesch, - Maria Maccla. Leaders present were Mrs. 11. H; K r lm m e l, M r s. John L ..Cham berla in ,^ M l s a M olnar, M rs. Maccla. 7 _

Hold Round Tabic Meeting At MHS

The round table meeting o f Scout'ers o f Clilngarora D istrict was held Monday at the Mata­wan High School. The Cub sec­tion, directed by Charles B la and Roy Forsberg, neighbor­hood' commissioners, partici­pated in games and demonstra­tions o f place cards and invi­tations suitable for. lisp sit the blue and gold dinner to be held In February. -

M r. and Mrs. Oeorgo Resot- e r were winners In noveib lngo games .and ITed Longo was wlnncr . ln . the humming , con? test. Jack Bolce, oubmaster of Pack 130, Hazlet, led, the sa-' lute to tlie flag, ■ ’ .

Philip Cummings, assistant commissioner o f D istrict III , was the co-ordinator In the ox- -plorers’ section; H and llng -the explorer activities were Jack Olsen, advisor o f Post 101, Clllfwood; Herbert B m l th , neighborhood commissioner Of Cllffwood; WUUnrn Mnddock, neighborhood commissioner o f Troop 105, Keansburg; Michael Rosko, nolgliborhood.-commis­sioner of Post 133, Keansburg, and ‘W ililam .. Fa rley , commit­teeman of Exp lo ror Pest 105, 'Keansburg. ..

Plnns were made fo r a ro ll c r skating party In Marcii and the forming 01 a bowling lea­gue fo r explorers o f D istrict I I I . T lie boy scout section was directed by “ Charles Vreciond and’ ymltajli^^'Wteln\raubvii*lgh- befhooa* cdmmlssloncrs, a h d Everett H ns le ttrcha lrm nn ‘

Winter Weather, Trouble To Autos

Cold-weather drlv lng .JB.is.vcs more than usually troublesome to motorists who leave their cars parked outdoors tlie clock, month and year 'round, says Keystone Automobile C l u b . "Snow is much mora destruc­tive tlinli rn ln ," according to Samuel T. M iiliken, Keystone’s service mapagcr. "Snow gpts up Into undcr-chnssls s p o t s , clings tlicro long enough lo rust parts and fittings, Snow's e f­fects.on cliromo nnd pnlnt also a ro much more Injurious than rain*. And the strong salts used on. Icy roads by some highway departments,tend to be quite corrosive.

"Best thing, o f course, is to garage the car, or nt least pro vido somo sort o f shelter , such as a car-port. Lacking these the next best thing Is to havo the car lubricated rather often during tho winter. And wash­ed, too, m ore regu larly than during the warmor months. Cleaning nnd rinsing the un- dersldo of the car offsets much o f the corrosive action o f salts.

I ’ n rklng continually o u t- doors also lakes its lo ll on gns- bltno, oil and engines. Obvious­ly , more continuous e n g i n e power Is required when oil Is cold and heavy. And fuel burns less ovcnly add moio expen­sively when motoi-B arc col(l. Motors actually can bo dam­aged, loo, when cold s t a r t s forco unlubrlcated parts lo rub together, cutting loose tiny pnr- tlclos of metal which act ns abrasives.. Matcrlnls corrupt­ing lubricating oil aro m u o j i more in evidence during win­te r, f o r , lnslnncpT Inefficiently burned fuel which blows past piston rings Into o il Itself.

"R egu la r and rcpcatod' o 11' changes, lubrications and other w interizing. aids -will do muelv to overdbmo' tliose Jiazards o f the cold months, But tlio bOBt solution Is n garage o r other haven fo r tlio fam ily car. Aft­e r a ll, v irtua lly evory oar to­day reprcsoAts a slzeablo In­vestment and should bo given every bit o f he lp 'to insure Its payment o f pleasure, trouble free , dividends,'-’ M r. M llllken concluded. , - - - -

Many Farmers Plan Sod Rest In Rotation Plan

Many good fa rm e rs who a l­ready arc following a definite crol> rotation; plan .to include In the rotation n soil o r sod- rcstlng crop with every three to four-year rotation. This will mean that one o f the crops will have to he elim inated or tho a c r e a g e of the remaining crops reduced to include this one year of resting. The same crops m ay be grown in rota­tion with the cut only in tho size o f the acreage.

L ittle Is knOwn experimen­ta lly regarding the e f f e c t which certain vegetable crops have on the crops which follow them In tho rotation We do know that cabbage, caullflow-“ e r . jm d J jro c c o ll w ill not pro­duce high yields on -fields which grew these crops t h e previous season. The s a m e thing is true with some o f the vine- crops and experience has proved that asparagus immedi­a te ly following asparagus will not p r o d u c e *?cst possible yields. . „In converting to this sod rota­tion, the firs t, second and pos­sibly the third year, fa rm ers may experience a sm a ll reduc­tion in the yie ld . Th is neecj not be true if concentration is made on fertilizer and, irrig a ­tion, water, better c a r e , andi^attentlon given to t h e sm a lle r acreage. In so doln^r, a la rg e r yield o f a high Quality product will be produced. In ­sects and soil-borne diseases usually are less destructive In a well planned rotation.

An overnight fam ily “gather* Inig was held New Year's Eve. at the homo of M r, and Mrs. B. C. Maccla, C e d a r .O ro 'v e , Mr. and M rs. F red Rathsan, Old B iidgc and M r. and Mrs. L. W . Blanken, Cedar Grove, were among 22 who attended.

Smaller Sweet Potato Crop Produced In '57

The sm a lle r sweet p o t a t o crop produced in 10Q7 In New Jersey and Louisiana should mean higher prices to the fa rm er this spring. That's tho prospect as John M. . Hunter, extension agricu ltu ra l econom­ics specialist at Rutgers Uni­versity, necs it. ..

These states are important producers, he points out, but In addition no rm a lly tlusy store and hold their crop fo r late winter and spring sale. B o t h are heavy suppliers o f— t h e. northern m arkets. *. •

Now Jersey's crop 1h 18 peT cent below that o f - 1036 a n d Louisiana's is eight pe r-cen t below. -

Youth Subject O f Wide Search, Returni

F o r centuries cancer was considered incurable. T o d a y one in three Americans is bo Ing saved. This is progress but many more lives can be saved, says the American Cancer So clety. i f cancer ^ detected and treated in Ume.s

Farmers Offered New ' Tax Guide By Agent

M. A. C la ik , M o n i l l o u t li County Agricu ltural Agent, o f­fers a now free "F o rm e rs ’ T o x GUiae.'” Ho hns a copy fo r any fa rm e r who wants it. This b u l­letin, w ritten especia lly f o r fa rm ers , explains in plain non­technical language most o f the Income 'tax rules that concern them. It is ln'.eridon fo r uso in preparing federa l lncomo tax returns fo r tlio calendar year 1957 and fiscal years ending In 1958. Many examples nro used to show liow the rules apply In actual situations.

Soino suniulo records nnd a fllled-ln tax return fo rm , Illus­trating whcro lncomo nnd de­ductions from "various sources should be listed nre r h o w n . Tlioro also is a checklist of fa rm income.and. expenses.

This bulletin Is not designed to roplaco t h e Instructions funne ls received wltli their re ­turn form s, but to supplement thorn. Therefore, many o f tho rules explained In the Instruc­tions nro mentioned o iiiy jn lo f- ly In tho bulletin. ‘

Stray Dogs Kill Small Pigs; News

Three small pigs, the proper­ty o f A. 8. Morn, Throckmor­ton Lnno, Browntown, ivcro killed by stray dogs last week. Two other plga wore Injured so sovorely that they had to bo kljled by mombors o f tho Madison Township Po llco De­partment. ; .............

Bayvicw Church Plans Renovation

Tho eighth annual congroga tional meeting o f D a y v i e w Frcshytorltth 'c li u r c It, .C llff­wood Boacli, was hold Sunday: evening In the sunotunry o f the cliuroh. Annual reports o f a ll organlzatlonB and hoards of the

THE . - , | MATAWAN JOUItNAL!

Jan. 18, 1958 Fage Three

M r, nnd Mrs. Thomas No vack, Mnplewood, visited M r, and M rs. BnrUr Gaub, -Brown­town, on Monday’, ' -

M r. and Mrs, F ran k Sahli. Hazlet, were Saturday guests o f M r . a n d Mrel Pau l IilaliotnJiv' -. - ■ •M rs..Jacob Onub entortalnbd hor son and dapghtor-ln-l a w, Mr.. and Mra, Otto Gaub, Over­h ill Rd.. Matawan, at dlnnor and cards, Friday night,T lie 4-11 and adult sowingclasses hold through the E x ­tension Service o f tlib ’ COllego o f Agriculture, wcro held Mon­day afternoon and evening intho Browntown B e lio o l........

M rs. Benjam in Horbort, Old Bridge, visited M rs. Nicholas A racbr Monday-afteriiooni">'--- - * Charleno and 'B illy Wnllapo,Keypoit. Vpent Monday a n dTuesday with thole grandmoth­er, Mrs. Herbort Cottre ll, sr.

Miss Suznmio-Pitney, N e w York , spent Ihe weekend with her parents, M r , and M rs. W il­liam P ltnoy, -

Rutgers To Offer Personnel Course

Fo llow b j Its successful In- troductiou In Newark In 1057,Iho Rutgors Burcnu o f Govern­ment Research w ill reo ffo r, In ;, Now Brunswick this spring, Its special evening course In pub- - lie-'personnel adm inistration. . This tou rso , which oTnpliasIz* •es tho important rolo o f publio employees In cffcctlvo loca l government, w ill iuoct on Mon­day evenings from 7 :3 0 to 0,30 p.m. beginning Feb. 3 In Van- Meat l la l l on tlio New Bruns­wick campus.

Tlio subject matter,' "accord­ing-lo D r .J lrn n o tt R lph o f the Bureau o f aovornn icn t ' Ro- searcli, lias been designed to assist thosb who ndm lnlslor.Jlio ’ personnel policies of local gov- crnmontal .agencies. Both the fundamentals of-personnel ad­ministration nnd llio lr applica­tion under current New Jorsoy statutes nro Included. "

Whtlo tho course la o f parti- cu ln ivin lcrest to adm inistra­tors of civil servlco omployoos, it nlso w ill bo o f groat value to offic ia ls In a ll o tlio r looal communities, uccoidlng to D r, Rich. Among tlio particu la r Items covorcd w ill bo reoru lt- ment, oxnmliintlon, eertlfloa- tlon, olnHslfleutlon, salary." .. plnuning, record keeping, eon- dltlons o f warkri'etlrom ant, ap­peals, niid^mmnii relations,F W illiam Druz, nsslstnnt oh ls f eXnmliior nnd secretary in the Now Jersey ’ Dopnrtmont o f ClvlNBervloc, w lll-h o : the'. o la s t - co-ordlnator, On oooas lo tl' ho w ill .ho a tjls ted by spoclal loo- turors, »' - - - ; ■

Cq-bper.atlng lq llie^aponsor- ship of this now odurso are the.. Council o f atato “*Employoeai the .New Jersey - O lv ll Borvlce- ' Assoolntlon; tlio New Jersey Department o f Civil Serv loo, and Urn New Jersey State- L e a - - tfuo of Municipalities.

Applications lo r till's course, may bo made to tlio Un lyer- sity Extension Division, Rut-ttCMv’iTio.Blnto...University.--3I1__College Avo;, Now Brunswick

. o fthe district leadership a n d tralftl|ig'comrnItt'eel“. Scoutmasters worked' w 11 li tlie lr key boy leaders who aro lo direct tho Junior I o n d o rtra in ing . course. They w i l l meet again to fu rthor the plans for the course ln"the St. John’s Methodist Church cducallounl building, Raritan Towiishlp, on Saturday. Feb, 22.

In a combined, session o f all groups, F ra n k Foss, h e a l t h and safety chairman, spoke on the importance o f sa fe ly , Mr. Foss urged a ll leaders -to set u! a program and participate in at- le a s t-t lu eo -sa fe ty pro­jects. h . . - -

A pledge o f co-operation and participation was distributed Jo a ll 'scoutmasters. Tlio pledge reads; "We w ill toko part in the 1968 safety good turn kick of' event o f our council o r dis­trict during Boy Scout Week, Feb. 7 to 18, Wo w ill put on nnd partic ipa te - In nt least throe- s a f e t y pro jects tills year— (1 ) tru ffle safety In tho spring (2) outdoor safety In tlio summer- and (3 ) homo safetyIn tho fa l l , " __

M r. Foss urged, a ll to do their best c a rry out the. pur- poso o f 1958 Safety aood Turn, lfe ulso suggested that nil boys .having a scout uniform wear It to church, school, and publio places during Iho Boy Scout Week,.'„;A J jlf ll ld n y cako honoring the

-til anniversary o f tlio found1 ing o f scouts, mado by Mrs. Korshorg, .ila z lo t , was served tr the group by the re fresh­ment committee from C u b Pack 130, Ila z lo t. .

Labor Deparl’ment Head Report* Law Violation

Regional D irector F rank J Muench o f tho U, S.' Dopart- meiit o f Labor's Wage a n d Hour and Public Contracts D i­visions announced that during the 1957 calendar year, 8102 es­tablishments were Investigated in the States o f Now Y o rk and

„ , , . . , , , New Jersey under the Federa lFourteen-ycar-old A l b e r t wago and Hour Law and "tiio Shave, son o f M r. and Mrs. Walsh-Healey Public Contracts ? e0rgc^„f, ve; 21 ?"r0EPl ct Act, a. rise o f over 1660 cases Avo., C llffwood Beach, who of f | rm a investigated las t year, wos subiect o f a missing per- I t W(t9 f(Jund lhftt i ^ sorts a la rm Issued by MataWan t a b 1 1 s 1- m c n t s Investigate Township Police Thursday re- e„ , 8ome cmploycc8 engBged turned home F riday , police )n interstate commerce o r In

1 . ._the „preducUon. o f - goods-for“ T i ls djsappearance Thursday commerce were not paid In resulted In a .search by riicm- conform ity with tho minimum bers o f the police dcp .rlm cnt, wBgo and overtlm o' provisions Clllfwood F ire Co. and tho 0f tho law. Back wages total- Matawan Township F irst Aid jnig »1.421,057 wcro round duo Squad, who combcd-Jhc water- during tho year to 15,287 cm front and T reasure Lake areas j ployccs.fo r ihe youth | In his onnuol report Mi.

T lie boy told Ida parents he | Muench ixp lrlned U lot t h e was worried over ills report; high percentago o f undarpay card which was to have been, inontn uncovered in thin region issued by school a u lh o illlc s ! of comparatlvtdy-Kooc* wages 7hu rsdn j, J lc spent tlie night was Uie result o i the carefu l in an abandoned house o n , selection o f the Industries and I ’ ln rhurst Dr., police reported ., arcos fnvccilgatcd. . .

church wero received a n d plans fo r 1958 ;,5)er6' dlaoiiBatedRSpld gruWth o f'the dhiiroli school-Ims so crowdod existltig facilities that sp ill sessions now a ro ' TihcTor. ddjisTdoriillbii. Tho board o f trusteoa plana tohccompllsli tlio ' renovation o fUn.'-cImi'clrbMdmi.-iit this year in order to make add lllonaf room for-mootings avullnblo.

d ia rie s Mottlng Hiid Howard Condlt wcro ro-olooted to tlio session fu r n term of-th reo years. Mrs. Hannah S tnT t i l ; Jr.mca Caroy, RobCrrt' Hori'y, Jr., and H a rry Ko rn wcro oloot- od fo r threc-yonr torms to tlio board of dencons. Wusil lllob - a ro ff and Robort Hayes worn elected to thrcc'-yoar torins on tlio board o f trusteos.

Following tlio mooting, re ­freshments were served by tlio ladles undor Uio direction o f Mrs, Hei'bcrb..8niitfi." The con- grogntlon then enjoyed t h e new movio produced .by tho National Council o f Churohes entitled, "T lie B roken M ask."

The evening .waS conoluded with tlio singing o f "B loa t Bo T lio'TIo That Binds Our Hearts In Christian Lovo." .

Gardening Courie To Bo Held At Rutgers —

AiVHilom' Kfti'dcnors Avho like lo two" tlio bleak part o f winter to lncrouso t lie lr knowledge nt

Skating Party, Dlnnor M a r k s l 2 f h ^

Linds Jnsklowlcz, Mntawan, entortiilnod—gevorn I— i h l r o r friends .Sunday nt tile Velvet Arena R o lle r Sknllng R i n k , Keansburg, ln--colobrnUou 'o f “hsF n th blrthijuy, and Inter at dlnnor at luyyhpiiic,__

GueNts wero Hoiuilo Jain lo- son, Susan Crawford, Normnu- dy BoUysUtr Mnlawniu Corlnno D lllln rd , Kon llw orlh , N .Y .- M r. and M rs. C lyde' J . -Dullard, Kenilworth, and Mr-,, and Mia;- Cliostor Zeliu, Irvington, also woro dinner guests,

Grand Union Appoint* Preiident'* A itlitan t -

Cliarlus G. Rodman lias been appointed Assistant to t l i o President o f Tlio Grand Union Compuny, It was announced recently by Lansing P . Shield, president of tho 381-Btora oast- ern food. chuln, .....

Mr. Rodman has been on special assignment fo r t h e president slnco Juno -19*7, P r i ­o r to thut he had been oxequ- tlvo vice president o f Food F a ir Super Mnrkols. one o f Clrand Uijlon ’s right decentral­ized divisions, with’ operations In ""Washington.. p.C „ M ary ; land and Virginia, atdcp Do- cembcr 1059. r-— ......

Mr. Rodman's prior position with Grand Union was as rea l cstalo m anager. fo r the com­pany, a post lie filled from October 1952, until Docoinber 1955. E a rlie r, lio had worked fo r tho chain us a c lork during summer vacations while In school and as a field auditor fo r two summers' while In co l­lege. .......... <( .......... ■ '

Holding degrees from ' 7 U10 Wharton Bchool of Finance and Commerce at tho Un ivorslly o f Pennsylvania and from tlio Harvard Law Bchool. M r’. Rod- mii'b was associated with ths Jaw .firm of fJiilllvan 5i C rom ­well, N°w York , prior to Join­ing the Grand Union organlza- tlon, Ho- spent three years on active d li l* lh tho Pacific with the U.B, Navy us a lleultuiant

’ during Worbl War H and Is a member of (lie lia r o f tlio /Hate of New Y o lk ,

Leurn und lu-ed the seven (lunger signals of cancer and help save lives. Tlmo lil'gen Die 1 American Cancer Society In Its plea fo r support In Its annual

I April 'Crusade.

Welders molted moro than 3(00 m iles df woldlng rod I11L0 th o . UBB naiiger's seams to hold together 63,000 tons of. stool that fo rm .the hull a n d dock. ' .

Slow ing Unworn' can do So un­do r iho Instvuctlon o f ’ Rutgors university horticulturists dilN ing h - one-woek eour«er; Fob. ' 24 to 28. ‘— More~tlinn““ u ''d i)Zcirpi'o fos- anrs and- reseurrli specialists w ill leach principles o f s o i l mnimgempmrnsaurfei'tiliirai's,'. p lant liroiiTiTfntlim, Inooot and dlsuusn.control and other gar­den subjects, Three olio-hour sessions will lie devoted to gur- deu planning.

Westorvelt O r lffln , assistant (1 int 11 of the College o f Agrloul- t i l le r urges ea rly registration, En ru llm ou l w ill bn lim ited to 40 persons. - F jjr ih o r luforma- tlon about -t io flowor garden­ing course) can lie obtained by writing tlio O ffleo of tfto Doan, College o f Aurlouhuro, N e w Ilrimuwluk. The b r o c h u r e which will bo sent contains nn application fo r admission, —

* *Dry Cleaning'In at 10 A.M . — Out at 5 P.M.* EVERY DAY ¥

Excopt Sunday ■

MATAWAN BRANCH131 Main St. Opp . Boll Boef M alawan

k e y p o rT ’c lea n er sTolophono KE 7 -0102 >

PLANT AND VAULT Dlvliion and Third Sti. Koyport Branch Ea*t Front Stroot, Storo Hour* 8 to 6 Daily-* B to 8 Friday

Page 4: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

m m................................. E STA BU JJ9ED ;UI«* . ....................

• M q t n l KEyport T-I03> — J . M A BEL BBOITH . P P B tJ l jp lKB. Published every Thursday at K eypo rt, Moamouth C o u n ty ,^ . J .

B y BROW M : P U B U S llT N a AND PB IN T INO COMPANV1 . Mabel Brown, E d ito r - O era ld lne V. B rown. A eeod ite E d ito r

Six Month* Xhres Montha

Subscription nates P ayab le In Advanc*One Yesr (within state), 4.5012.50 Ona Y ea r (outside s ta te ly• - ‘• f l ’M One Y e s r (outside U. S .)—lb # M stawan Jou raa l ti a newspaper 'o l the people, b y the pc and lo r the people.” Its aim is to se rve the best Interests o f M attw tp vicinity: to present a ll of the oews of the week without bins o r preju In a clean, ■ sane, conservative manner, respecting the Inalienab le n o f our citizens, and thereby making ltseu worthy o f the ir confidence.Responsibility fo r typographies! e r ro rs la Umlted to the cost

' space occupied by such e rro r. 'Entered aa second-class m atter a t . the post o ffice a t Matawan, N.

under the act of-M arch 3j 1879. • -Page Four THURSDAY , JAN. 16,

record

— Record School CostsSchool costs, not unlike charges for services and hot

hoMcommodities, are showing a universal increase this y« The spotlight was focused this week on the rise in educatio costs when bayshore school districts introduced propo financial schedules fo r thh 1958-59 school year,

In most every instance, budget figures reached new highs. In every instance, they represent

minimum needs required to operate adequately the resp tive school districts.

These proposed schedules are not thrown together ii hodge-podge manner. They reflect many weeks of prepar ation, paring and cbmpronuse_bet\vecn the finest educational

-facilities and the individual taxpayer's ability to pay jjiis share of the cost. “ . ;

Almost without exception, school budget increases are reflecting the rapid and heavy increases in enrollment, pre­valent in the bayshore area as they are throughout the state and nation. "Budget appropriations must be made fo r |d - ditional-facilities and the teachers that are required dodirect the activities of the new youngsters. - ................... ;j' In Keyport, a great portion of the school costs Is repaid through tuition charges levied against surrounding school (districts fo)r pupils who attend Key jio rt High School. On- the other Side o f the ledger, Keyport - must maintain and equip the high school and furnish the necessary teaching personnel -■ ■ • •J • . • • . . . *' '/ . O ther.school districts, without ih e lr own" high school7 faciBtieSj must irieit the higher tuition and transportation costs as well as the expense o f providing adequate primary schools fo r their younger pupils. .Many school districts, in­cluding Raritan Township, Holmdel7 Township, Matawan Township and Madison Township, must face the burden of Increased current school expenses as well as the cost of a school expansion program. ' - ; .

_ In nUbases, the proposed budgets are prepared by Boardsof Education whose members, like yourself, pay their equal share of taxes. They do not dream of castles in the air they are fundamentalists when It comes to budgets and taxes.

I f you have some serious doubt o l the need of some appropriation Included in the budget prepared in your own

" school ' district,' be sure' to find .out therrieed fo r yourself, by attending a public..,Iiearing ,,which a ll districts haye

- g e h e d u l . d . - - - . - . - - — —* ~~ - .r - No doubt you wtrlll find (hat every budget item is based

T O J RG A PBy' Y ou r Rutgers Garden Reporter

on fact and necessity, not fiction and fancy. Y ou r Bpard o f Education will welcome your Interest. If" needs your

. support and approval.

■CSchool Days .

One enthusiastic gardener I know has been reminding me to le t he r know fo r sure when the flower gardening s h o r t course w ill be held this year.

She has been duly reminded,' but. when I mailed her a copy o f the announcement I thought I should do the same fo r other green tbumbers whotm lght be interested, especially those of you who , have written me let­te rs o r cards about gardening subjects.

The course is among t h e most popular offered at tbe College o f Agriculture a n d evejry year attracts a l a r g e number—o f men and women eager to turn their thumbs fllitt le g reener/ _ _ .....

This is the kind o f knowledge that goes beyond what you cao get from studying books or bulletins by yourself because you can ask questions in the classroom and do. laboratory work with men who want to teach and help.

Old Friends -Among the-instructors w i l l

be specialists whom I frequent­ly go to to get answers to ques­tions you send in.

The course w ill be held Feb. 24*28 from 9 a.m . until 4 p.m : with an hour, o r maybe less, out fo r lunch. There is no tui­tion charge, but only a snjal> registration fee fo r state resi­dents, and' funds fo r lecture notes and other supplies. Many students in other years have carried sandwiches .to s a v etime. ' ' !

I f you'd like a copy o f the fo rm a l announcement, which includes an application fo r ad­mission. Just write to Garden Repo rte r/ College of Agricul­tu re . Rutgers ‘University. A card w ill do with your name,- address and -‘Garden S h o r tCourse.” ; ;....................

, Answering The M all ' Mrs. R .W .G ., Morristown,

"M y . husband moved/bur bird feeder- from a tree to the end o f a piece o f plpev and even rubbed the pipe with wax (to m ake it s lippery ). I reg ret to Bay tlie squ irre ls go' up and down as easily -aa they did the tree trunk atfa stay pub until the last bit o f bread has been eaten. „ _

“ Would you have any • other suggestions as to what we m ight do to keep these glutton­ous creatures from eating the food we put out fo r the b 1 rd 3 ? ” The New Jersey Division o f F ish b Qame in Trentori has a m lraqpgraphed discussion o f g ray squirre l control. I t sug­gests fastening metal bands at the bottom of a bird f e e d e r .

- . ./ - SerendipityWe'ye a ll heard much o f “ accident-prone" Individuals,

people Who just keep on having one mishap after another j for~no discernible reason. These - unf ortunates are eonsid- j ered liabilities, when it comes to d o ing . the work o f 1,he ; world. But, as an article in the Journal o f the American

Medical Association points out, there are some “ happy (jc- cident-prone" people who are pretty important. They're Ihe researchers, scientists, and doctors whtraccidentally discovet some big thing while looking fo r something else.

V A classic example was when D r, Fleming accidentally le ft a dish uncovered, and discovered penicillin as a result. And there are many more. Long ago, van Leeuwenhoek focused a magnifying glass on a drop uf water instead of on a fly's leg as he intended—bacteria thus was discovered and the whole science of medicine revolutionized. 7

Edward Jenner hoard a form er milkmaid boast that ijhe was immune to smallpox because she had had cowpox and cowppx became the agent fo r mass immunity against smljdl-

-.pox/ A Paris physician saw children tapping messngesi to- eaph-other-along opposite ends o f a plank, and from tills devised the principle of the stethoscope. |

A chemist, who had been working with.a strange chem­ical, forgot to wash his hands before lunch. He wondered about the sugary taste of his beef sandwich and the |nd result was saccharine. , li .

.There is a word for the ability to make spine valuable

And the feeder should never be n ea r a tree within lumping distance, no r under a low-hang­ing limb,

I f any reader has a better answer to squirre l banditry, please send It to the Garden Repprter, and I ' l l ' pass it along. - ' ■' :

M rs, Burlington, " Ishardwood sawdust a g o o d mulch fo r- rhododendrons if it is fresh ra ther than rotted?'

Donald Lacey, home grounds specialist, says wood chips and shavings are better fo r mulch­ing than sawdust. S a w d u s t , either rotted o r fresh, tends to tic up nutrients In the soil.

However, If you have a sup­p ly o f sawdust, you "can use it as a mulch about fou r Inches , deep, but take It away n'C x t spring.

or, pleasant discovery without deliberately looking for serendipity. But luck doesn’t explain tlie whole story any means. The AMA article quotes a doctor as say this: • "Discoveries 111 otic by accident are never pure li They come about only because tlie men_w!io_mnke tl nre alert enough to fathom their usefulness.”

Killing High

• . „<■— 1 . ' . O r ■ ■Looking”BackwardItem s A bent Fo lks And Things We. Knew In The Lens Ago

Forty-F ive Yea rs ;Ago (Issue Thursday, Jan . 16/1913)

Ir a Warne, J r . , o f Morgan- v ille and Thomas W oodruff .of near B radcve lt in a five-pass­enger touring c a r were over­turned near the west end o f the C llffwood drawbridge ' on Tuesday evening' The ca r turn­ed tu rtle into the ditch, but the occupants e s c a p e d in ju ry through the c a r being held by a stake and .allow ing them to craw l out.

That the Centra l R a ilroad of New Jersey w ill have tube fa ­cilities between Coramunlpaw and Manhattan, a l l is g o o d time, is the expressed belief o f W illiam G . B es le r, v . l c e president and g en c ra f manager- o f the road . • ' '

T h e introduction o f on amendment to the constitution providing fo r woman suffrage constituted thq. f i rs t o ffic ia l act o f Senator B lanchard W h i t e , o f Burlington, in the New Je r­sey Senate on Tuesday.

A lbert Smith, who has carr rled the mail between the ra i l­road station and the Red B&lilc postotfice severa l years has re­signed the 'hosltton'- becaitiao‘ *bt tlie' increased loads he 'thinks he w ill be fo i ced to cdrry With the parcel post in operation.. ^A _p roposltlon ls_ now on f o o t to construct a road , o r rather a parkway, extending In aii a l­most straight line from Asbury P o rk to F reeho ld , • starting from Asbury Avenue. The Idea

to have separate driveways fo r ' automobiles and horses, and possibly a brid le p a t h , these being separated by rows o f trees and shrubs. U ltim ate­ly It wcftild lead to the straight­ening o f the road between Freehold, and Trenton, a n d would make one o f the finest thoroughfares in the country.

F o r the third time within five months and two w e e k s , tho L ittle S ilve r postoffice was broken into by robbers l a s t F rid ay morning between 2 and 3 o ’clock. A very heavy charge o f nitro-glyccrine was used to blow open the Inner compart­ment o f the safe. -

O e& m T U m t/ ta ft v u g x f r fC A A T PZ ew *

Q—My husband died in 1952 and I received n sm all lump­sum payment. The social se­curity offico told mo nt tho time that I also could get monthly payments when I was 05. Recently I read that t h e law was changed and widows now can gfet checks at age 62. I f tills is ligh t, what do I need to bring with me? 1*11 bo 62 next month.

A—You aro right. T lio law was changed to perm it a wid­ow who has not rem arried to get^nonth ly payments begin­ning with uge 63. You should bring somo proof of\ago with you when you ca ll a t tho so­c ia l security o ffice r A—b i r t li certificate is ono kind o f proof that is acceptable. Others arc baptismal certificates, census records, insurance policies, or fam ily Bibles. Bring tho best proof you have. I t w ill bo nec­essary,' InaddT lIonP to 'fu rn ish a copy, o f your mnrriago cer? jtiflcato. Also bring Your hus­band's social security card or accountrm im berrccard - lf- y o u havo it, This w ill help tho so­c ia l security offico: to locate the filo and speed up tho hand­ling Of your c laim . •

Q—I'm going to retire from rhy Job when I reach 69 next month. What should I bring fr ith me when I apply fo r so­c ia l socurity?— ...

A^-You should bring proof of fige Ifo r yourself, *nd also for you r wife, if Blie'Is 62 o r over and wishes to npply. A birth certificate is not nbsolutcly re* quircd but somo good, accept­ab le ovidenca is - .necessary, such as insuranco policies, un­ion records, o r a baptismal qertificato. I f you havo a child under IB o r a disabled c h 11 4 oyer 18, yob should bring hl9‘ b irth certificate also.

Q—I am employed fo r $120 a month throughout the y e a r . The social security representa­tive told me that I would ,.be entitled to receive checks fo r nine months during tbe. year. How did he a rrive at the nuhi- ber o f checks which I can be paid?

A—When your earnings are m ore than (1200 a year, o n e month's check is withheld , fo r each $80 or frnctlon o f $80 over the $1200. Since you w o r k throughout the year and your earnings arc annually $1440, you would not be entitled to checks fo r three months.

Q—Household w a g e s ,/ ll .K e other wages, must be reportea by tho employers. How often arc they reportod?

A—Household wnges aro re­ported on n quarterly basis. The quarters end Mar. 3 J sk 'Jund“ 30th7'8ept. 30th and Dec. 3 1 s t . :. ........■........../ ........ .

Q—How much time docs the employer o f a household work- c r have to filo iho social secur­ity liuc- report? ' t

A—Tlie employer has tlie en­tire month following the close o f tho quarter to file tho tax report. F o r example, fo r the quarter ending Dec. 31st, the employer has until Jan. 31st to filo tho social security tax re­turn.----------------------, ___ _______

Q—Ordinarily ; wages a r e reported by employers regard­less of the nmoupt of earnings paid them lri. a quartcrrTs lliis also true o f household work­ers? ■ ••

A—No, :t is not. A household worker Is reported only if 'h e o r she is paid at least $50 In ensh wages during a quarter.. Tin?. Value, .of room and board 1b, not reported. ;

Twenty-Five Years Ago —(Issue F riday , Jan , 20, 1933)

The “ Roya l G r i l l ," a palace lunch wagon on Route No. 4, at Middlesex arid Jackson Streets, Matawan, Is one o f the 51 places against which U n i t e d States -D istrict Attorney H ar­lan Bessoif Instituted padlock proceedings la s t F riday , fo r v i ­olation o f the prohibition U&W8.

While on its way from South Jersey to B rook lyn , recently/ with a. load o f pulverized sand, one o f the trucks o f Halle ran fr Crine, got o ff tbe roadway at Graham 's Inn, b e t w e e n Matawan arid Freehold , tcar- Jrjg oUt fourteen panels o f the guard1 ra i l and bringing up In the gully. The motor t r u c k wa.s to ta lly destroyed.

A p lan by Charles E . Smith; tax collector.- providing fo r the payment' of 1933 t a x e s in monthly installments in Uaion Township was announced re ­cently. ’-. Statements issued by t h e banking institutions o f Mon­mouth Co^nto1. In ''Cornp'Uonce Tyith a ca ll 'made by the Compi tro lle r o f Currency ad o f Dc^ cember 31, 1932, revealed the fact that there is a steady and normal^lncibasein~)rioriey“ bri deposit despite the depression. Banks in this area show the follow ing: Fa rm ers & Mer­chants, Matawan, deposits $1,­874,377.73—loan and discounts $990.739.18—total resources $2,­093,928.31; K eypo rt Banking Co. deposits $1,360,105.75—loans aiid discounts $912,432.73—tota l resources $1,757,577,70; Peo­ples National Bank, Keyport, depostts $1,307,455.97—1 o n n s and discounts $756,845.97—total resources $1,516,336.55: Kcans- hurff National deposits $648,­615.90— 1 o a n s and discounts $501,296.58—t o t a 1 resources $864,765.03; Matawan* Bank de­posits $631,347.93—loans a n d discounts $632,571.44—total re ­sources, $846,810.03.

Ten Yea rs Ago .(Issue Thursday, Jan . 15, 1948)

Shareholders o f the fou r Keypo rt and Matawan banks held election o f officers Tues day with only one Institution, tho F a rm ers and Merchants National Bank' o f Matawan, reporting a change in officers. In t h a t bank, Charles C. Schock, sr.s was narricd presi­dent, succeeding W. O liver Dlggin.

Matawan H igh ’s f o o t b a 11 team w ill play an eight game schedule next season, as rec­ommended fo r Group I schools by the New Jersey State In ter- 6cholastlc Athletic Association.

Despite the scarcity of mn^ tcria ls and abnorm a lly h f g h construction costs, Matawan enjoyed a substantial building boom In 1947, according to the annual report filed by Ra lph Dennis, buildin^-lnspcctor. Ac­cording to the report, M r, Qen- nis, through his o ffice, issued perm its fo r the construction o f 31 new dwellings in 1947.

N e a r l y ail o f Monmouth County's employees w ill re- ceive .a .flat-lO per cent-pay. in­crease this year* and many of the workers~wlU also Tcccive a $480 bonus, the same given in 1947. .— The - M a-t-a-W-a n JTownshlp Board o f Education a t its reg ­u la r January meeting Monday night, approved fo r publication the 1648-49 tentative s c h o o l budget w h ich /revea ls a total o f (272,180 with the amount of $102,94$ to be raised by taxa^ tffen in tlio borough-township d istrict. - •.

C laim ing that an emergency exists, tlie Sayrev ille Borough Council, a t its la s f m e e t i n g passed n resolution which w ill cut o ff water service to the Laurence Harbor Water Co, on and nftcr Mar. 4. '

Matawan High's basketball team went down to tlie lr third stra ight defeat.In Shore Con­ference play F riday when they were subdued by Leonardo 40­27. • .

W OOLLEY AS .......STATE CHAIRMAN (Asbury P a rk P ress) ,

I f tbe Republican party Is considering a new state cha ir­man In New Jersey it could hard ly do better than to o ffe r thevpost to J . Russe ll Woolley. As Monmouth. County Repub li­can chairm an fo r the past sev­e ra l years, M r. W oolley h a s demonstrated a ta len t f o r bringing hostile factions togeth­e r and fy r unifying the p a rty so a s to score a lm ost uninter­rupted victories at the po lls. How much influence he h a s wielded In tbe choice o f-candi­dates Is not known here, but under his leadership the coun­ty organization' has obviously picked candidates whose qua li­fications appealed to the e lec­torate. ’ ,- A heavy influx o f new res i­dents, ... many o f whom had come from urban centers with strong Democratic m a jo ritie s , has made M r. Woolley’s' as­signment particu la rly d ifficu lt in the las t few years, but his capacity fo r organization h a s enabled his pqrty to maintain its position in -the^county—O n m a n y occasions Monmouth County has withstood a Demo­cratic trend that ’ asserted it ­self elsewhere in the state and eVen in the landslide that re ­elected Governor R obe rt B . ‘Meyner, a . Democrat, last No­vember the Monmouth Repub­lican organization held t h e governor's m ajority here to a few. hundred votes./ .

T h e intelligent leadership demonstrated by M r. W oolley In Monmouth has not bpen ap­parent in the party's state o r­ganization. There have b e e n signs of confusion in establish­ing policies and promoting can­didates and the' point is. fast being reached .where New Je r­sey can no_ longer be classified as a n o r m a 11 y Republican state. I t would appear that thq. type o f le&dershtai M r. W oolley has supplied in the county would strengthen the Repub li­can pa rty on the state leve l. Certain ly If success a t the po lls is the measure o f party leader­ship he meets the require­ments o f the state chairm an­ship. ' .

’ UN JUST TAXES - ( Asbury P a rk P re s s )

Members o f the stote Senate are Justifiably concerned ove r the $20,000,000 paid in state In­come taxes, to New Y o rk , Pennsylvania, and Delaw are by 155,000 New Jersey r e s i ­dents who work in these states. There is a manifest injustice in the payment o f these Im ­posts . by New Jersey Lreatdents \yhlle" thl8 state .collects .nptb-1 itjff.from out-of-state residents who work in New Jersey.

So tbe Senate adopted a b ill memorializing Congress to- apr prove a * Constitutional amend­ment * prohibiting any state from levying income taxes on non-residents. But even w e r e this measure to be approved by the Assembly and signed by the governor it would p robab ­ly prove an idle gesture. R a t i­fication , ot a Constitutional amendment by 36 states, m ost of which impose the non-resi­dent tax the amendment would prohibit, seems unlikely.

Members of the Senate sug­gested o t h e r methods' to achieve the objective but none of tlie recommendations w a s promising. In fac t, the o n l y persunslve manner fo r dealing with this subject lies in the adoptton o f an Income tax by New Jersey and a subsequent agreement with neighboring states that It would not app ly to their residents we're they to discontinue soaking New Je r­sey residents with their In­come.taxes.New Jersey , howeverr does not want an income tax and it would hard ly consider adopting ono^Just to -square accounts with Its neighbors. I t thus ap­pears that the present injustice will continue. And it Is a g rave Injustice because New Jersey residents pay exceedingly high property taxes in lieu o f an in rome tax in tlie lr own state while those who work across the Hudson o r tlie Delaware m ust’ also pay an income taxto hold down propefty taxes in neighboring states. •

The situation needs correct­ing, and the state Senate is not qlone in its fa ilu re to find propitious method fo r attaining this goal. Suggestions arc In­vited.

DENTAL CARE FLAN(Asbury P a rk Press)

Prepayment medical a n d hospital care is fa ir ly , common throughout the country, but dental " card has defied such planning until recently. Credit fo r the breakthrough must be given the United Nations, which plorieered in the protcc* tlon o f Its 3500 employees.

Next to the common c o l d dental Uls are tho m ost wide­spread. A health plan t h a t leaves out dental care is. only a h a lf a plan. Ilowcvcr, insur­ance organizations were s l o w to assay the deatal rlskb. Fin- ^ lly ,-th e United Nations - s ta ff became the gulncn’p lg. and an experience chart was i^telvcd They now. get dprital coverage at (l.G&van Individual or (6 month fo r the fam ily.

Now that thc( base has been established, dental ca re insur­ance should soon be genera lly availab le. I t rounds out t h e fam ily health prcpnymcnt plan on which thousands of fam ilies re ly .- '- ''' ............ '

ODDS AND ENDS . . . The female green-wing teal, which weighs about 12 ounces is Jhe smallest of North American ducks . . . The picket hne at the Stork Club niarchcd into its second year last week. Striking waiters, bus boys and kitchen workers have been picketing-on an around-the-clock basis since last. Jan. 9 . . . The Carpet Beetle Forum, sitting in New York , was informed that the carpet of Park Avenue Beetle, so called because it thrives on the luxury o f wall-to-wall carpeting, has become New York ’s No. 1 residential pest . . . A bartender in Madrid has come up with a Spanish-Ameriean Friendship cocktail. . Uses one •part o f fino, (Spain's national drink).,, .to six parts o f gin, (which both countries lik e ), stir and chill well with ice. Serve with stuffed green-olive,- (the olive represents the peaceful relations between the two countries), Enough of those though and you’re liable ta,start a war ... . Quote of the year, 1957, “Many wives have lost the appeal that makes men look on them as .women,” Rev. Donald Harring- . ton, N -Y . Wanna Bet? *SOME PAST PA RT IC IPLES we may have forgotten in our roundup fo r 1957 . . . D id you know that fewer Maine sardines went into cans this year? And speaking o f fish, sprats are small members o f the herring species found in B ritish and Norwegian waters. Anyone for a Sprat-Sardine sandwich? Beer consumption in the U . S. was s ligh tly - lower than last year although card playing showed a de­cided increase. Let’s keep our minds off the game, boys. Spealdng-of-beverages, .the Poles -spent more money on— Vodka than on any other single item in the household budget, according to official statistics published in Warsaw. Can ’t really blame them, can'you? . . . . Among items going at auction Monday fo r the benefit of the National Founda­tion fo r Infantile Paralysis'is_ the" lace-trimmed corset that L illian Russell ware in “ Lady Teazle.” Dad, where areyou going? ..... ' ......................... .

A LL ABOUT TOWN . . . Ted Lester, well-known Key- port musician and novelty specialist, last week was with a W OR floo r show which cruised the Caribbean aboard thp. S.S. New Amsterdam. Ports of call included Haiti,'H a­vana and Port au Prince among others . ' . . Speaking” of", musicians, another Keyporter, Walt Bowne, is readying for another tour with -Mantpvani, mosljy through the eastern and southern states . . Choice of Rev. D r. Charles S.Webster, pastor of the F irst Presbyterian Church, Red Bank, . as principal speaker at the winter meeting of the Keyport merchants was nrf exce llen tone . . . Snow clearance ‘ on ; borough streets once again rates praise ... ..Hope the-Kay- . port Parking Authority, incorporated fo r the post two’yearav' • 'Witt get council support this_ year and take step's to ease the dilemma of the merchants . , . p a rty leaders starting to burn, the midnight oil in quest of • candidates. - Primary election is not, too fa r o ff . . . That reminds us, time is even shorter to annual school elections. , • ' -ONE FO R THE ROAD . . . We build six-lahe highways in Lisbon, provide free transportation to'Arabs visiting Mecca, buy dress suits*- fo r Grecian undertakers, bring South American traffic cops fo r observation and traffic study* in ‘ our country, send crooners and jazz players around tlie« world at salaries exceeding that of the President o f the United States, build roads that lead nowhere, dam rivers without water fo r the purpose o f irrigating infertile soil, send medical supplies and equipment to fa r-aw ay' places where no on e ‘knows how to use these expensive drugs, send tools and tractors to lands where the skill to lise them is lacking, send distilled water to the Philippine Islands _ where the Filipinos have more than they need, and in countless other ways expend and waste the resources of our people that could have- been ,u?ed ;fq v research and .other pufpdsesright-here at hoihe.-; And-yet .they’re still-wonder­ing how tlie Russians launched their Sputnik first! ,

FOR THOSE W ITH an inquisitive turn' of miitd, there's nothing more" fascinating tliafTthe "personal notices usually- carried in the metropolitan dailies. One, fo r instance, ad­vertises that you now may purchase a $20 Confederate bill " dated Feb. 17, 18G4 and signed by Percival and Lasits . . . Then there’s the mysterious type, like so: “ J . I ’m your man. Charles.” Now there’s a d illy . Could mean almost .any­thing. Maybe the fellow ’s answering a want ad fo r a kfeen salesman. ? Then again the. “ J ” could stand for the initial of some svelte something, making it much more interesting. Thing to do. is watch the personals fo r more of the same. Perhaps tomorrow we’l l find “ In you hat. 1 am. Herman.” Or perhaps the answer w ill be “ You're too late. (M rs.) J .” Then we have the assortment o f lost bankbooks, missing wives and passport books. Usually in that order. Best of a ll are those seeking to return someone to Siberia announc­ing if he doesn’t return voluntarily he w ill lose his Siberian citizenship. Tsk Tsk. ' ' _

A STORY FOR

By Margaret A LeavyAndy Carries The Mail

Andy Airplane heard two mechanics talking.

"Andy ’s n o t getting any younger, is he?" said one.

"N o ," answered the other. “ This is his last trip . I heard the Chief was putting a ll Jets on the m a ll run ."

"Too .b ad ." the firs t man suid. *‘I hate to sec Andy go to the scrap heap.” *

Andy fe lt yery oid arid sad ns he. taxied out o f the hangar to pick up the pilot, J im , and the co-pilot, Bucky. But he, didn’t - h a v e — much time to think.- Soon he was fly ing into the c lea r, blue sky. /

I t was a nice day fo r fly ing , but Andy didn’t like the way those clouds were piling up. They delivi»rcd the m ail as us­ual, loaded up fo r the return trip , and "started o ff.

"The weather report said we m l f f h t -un into a bit o ftroub le ," J im said. ___ ■_

" I f those blnck clouds mean anything, they’re p r o b a b l yrigh t,” Buqky “answered.0 .......I The c l o u d s grew da rke r every minute. Andy fe lt some-, th ing .so ft and wet touch his righ t wing. I t was starting to snow! •

A n d y Airplane shook his wings n little nnd .went on. Night camo on nnd the snow1 flew thick and fast. Soon Andy could s4<£,nothing bufejdancing snowflakes. .

The snow piled up on Andy s ' wings, lie sank lower and low­er. " I f only a mountain doesn’ t

I get in tli2 w ay," *ic hoped.| Then J im pulled some con ,t ro ls and Audy's wings turned straight up. The trqow s lid ,o ff .

! Andy fe lt ligh* ngaln. Quickly I hc.clirobed'ftigher into the sky

Then the snow changed to rain , and froze as it fe ll. A thick coating of ice covered Andy A irplane from nose to ta il. Andy was so tired he dropped fa rthe r down every minute. .

lie was tired of fighting the biting wind* and the freezing ra in . What did lb m atter if he crashed on a mountainside? Tomorrow h e . would go-to the scrap heap anyway, s - . Then he..remembered J im and Buck^. They were ■ count­ing on him to get1 them back safe ly and to deliver the mail on time.

Ho gave a burst o f strength and nosed up Into the sky. Just in tim e!'A white-coatcd moun­tain penk slid by beneath him.

Slower and slower An d y * flew , Then suddenly, the lights of the landing fie ld twinkled up at lilm . He; was back 1 ,

Andy settled tirediy onto the fie ld and came to n stop. The Chief dashed up to the plnnc.

-He shook handa wlth J im and, Bucky os they stepped out.

.*... “ Don’t congratulate u s ," J im smiled, " i t was , A n d y who brought us back sa fe ly .”

“ Yes.” H ucky gTlnrtcd. “ An­dy Just wouldn’t give u p !"

-, ; " I guess r i l'h n v e to change my mind about sending Andy to the scrap heap ," ^he Chief said, "W e ’ l l always have a place fo r a plucky litt le plane like 'A ndy ." .

Andy A lrp ln ilc ’'was too tired and happy to say anything Just then. He didn’t even m i n d when they wheeled him into Ue dark hangar fo r the night- because tomorrow he w o u l d be climbing up Into the sky again! < ■

Page 5: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

Trinity Church Annual Meeting

j, . Tlie annual” parish meeting and election o f vestrymen of T rin ity Episcopal Church fo l­lowed a covered dish supper

' Monday evening In the Pa rish H a ll. The Rev . Bernard McK.

’ -Garlick, reo to r, opened t b e program with a p raye r after which the minutes o f the last meeting were read and ap­proved. M rs. A lfred A d 1 it r ,

. treasurer,, gave the flnanola l report.

The following parishioners were re-elected as f o l l o w s : C liffo rd Chapmarj as s e n i o r warden; F ran k M arz and Wil- 1 1 a m Ratc liffe , three-year terms as vestrymen. Robert Malkmus was elected delegate to tbe Diocesan Convention In Trenton and his alternate w ill be A J v In McDonald. Mrs. F rank Marz and flames Mer- shon were elected delegates to the Monmouth Convention.

Organization annual reports were, heard from Stockton Hop­kins, Superintendent o f “ the

, Sunday 8chool: Mrs, Herbert S teer representing tbe Altnr Guild ; M r. Mersbon, Acolytes; M rs. Stockton Hopkins, choir; M rs. K e n n e t h Henderson, Ladles' Guild ; Miss L y n d a

— Tuttle, Young Peoples Fe llow ­s h 1 p; M r. Mershon,- Men's Club.

Mrs. Henderson gave a re­port of the annual bazaar.In the absence o f M rs. John

Baker, there was no report fo r- the, G irls ’ F riend ly Society.

W illiam Chatman was ap­pointed chairman of the an­

'. nua l, bazaar In 1958, conclud- \lng the buslness session. .

The Rev . W illiam J . White , was Introduced' and s p o k e ; b rie fly , expressing his apprecl- ation fo r the worm welcome

he:received and fo r the co-op- ...e ra t lon and assistance o f the

7' church members. • j r ■ Mr;- Chapman' spoke on the "' expansion fund p rogram n ji d

Introduced the fte v r Charles ’ R iley , Who w ill conduct the drive. The Rev .' M r. R i l e y

, continued the discussion on tbe . prpgTam which started o v e r the weekend. The homes he had vlaiterPhad welcomed him with such co-operatloa and ln- terest he believed success was assured.” , ,

Keyport Legion Ladies Host County Auxiliary. The Lad les AuXlUary o f the

R a ritan Unit 23, American L e ­g io n Auxilia ry , Keyport. enter­.. talned the Monmouth' County Association o f Ladles Auxlllnr- le s a t the post home, Keyport, F riday evening. M rs. P r i m Schneider, B rad ley B e n e h ,

. President, conducted the meet­Ing a id read her repo rt from tbd state executive committee.

Mrs. Schneider urged a l l units to participate In the polio

_d rlve . I t was decided to pur­chase a trapeze and t o u r wheelchairs fo r the polio pa­tients a t Moninouttv Memorial Hospital from the proceeds le ft from the magazine pro ject sponsored by the county auxU: la r y .

Donation was requested from each unit toward the purchase o f,new desks fo r New Jersey Boys Town, K ea rn y . The Pan- American country to be stu­died this yea r w ill be Hondur­as; •: ; ■ ■ ' ' ' . ..

To Review B ook s ..’ The regu lar meeting o f the

_ Woman’s Club or M a t a w a n ~ w ill be held Monday In t h e

parish h a ll o f the T r i n i t y Episcopal Church, Matawan, a t.2 p .4 i. M rs. W rW , W leland, a club member, w ill present a bock review o f "The S m a l l W om an," by A lan Burgess and "The B ib le a8 H isto ry ,” by Werner K e lle r . . •P

G A S - T O O N S

By BILL O W E N

“ M other. • . Daddy's looking a t that sparkplug calendar •- again.” iI f you're Interested in fig­ures . . you’l l appreciate our LOW PR ICES !

O KSALES & SERVICEFree Pick-Up & Delivery 21 .Hour Wrecker- Bcrvlce : PhoiWC MA 1-1770 ‘ Route 34 S. ftlaln

M a taw a n P e r s o n a l I tem sNews 01 goo And tfoui Fam ily ! • Appreciated At Any

Teddy D a lo la , 54 Main S t., I o u te r o f Teddy's Barber Shop, Is a patient in M o n m o u t h Memorial Hospital. .

The Ladles' Guild o f Trinity Episcopal Cburch w ill sponsor a rummage sale in the parish hall from 9 a.m . to 6 p.m . on Tuesday, Wednesday. Thurs­day and F riday o f next week.

M r. and M rs. W . C. Nod- dings entertained at a fam ily dinner Jan . 8. Guests were M r and M rs. Jam es Noddlngs and children, Lau ra , James, Nan­cy and W illiam Clayton, H , and M r. and M rs. Thomas Noddlngs and children. Doug­las and Thomas and Sarah E l­len Noddlngs.

M r. and M rs. Pau l Johnson, H , and ohlldren, D ieter, Pau l m , Chrlstel, P a tric ia a n d Thomas, returned horde Thurs­day evening from a visit over the holidays with M r. and Mrs. Martin Nad ler, St. Petersburg. F la . While there, Thomas' firs t birthday was celebrated.

Mrs. Joseph Dietrich enter­tained at luncheon on Friday when her guests were Mrs. Ed­win Laudano, Hazlet; _Mrs, A t lan J . Morrison, M rs. J. F red Robinson, M rs. B irger Helge- sen. and M rs. Stephen C. Thompson. •

M rs. Arthur H a ll entertained at bridge Thursday evening. P rize winners were M rs. John­son Cartan and M rs. Arne R a i­ma. Other guests were Mrs. Charles Conover, Vandenburg; Mrg, H a rry P itcher, Holmdel; Mrs. Bayard T . Lamborn, Mrs Vincent Fatten and Mrs. Ross W .'Maghan. . , .

M r. and M rs, F . H o rn e r Leontlne, New B r u n s w i c k Ave. entertained Jan .;7 In cele­bration o f the fifth birthday of their daughter, Ann. G u e s t s were1 Cafo l HOspador, A m y Lusebrlnk, Beth Ann M iller, K im Beeman, R ichard and Sus­an' Carlson, Connie and Karen McMullen, Kenneth M iller and W illiam Leontlne. . - , '

M rs. Em m a Gombert, New Brunswick, is spending several months In St. Petersburg," F la .

M r. and M rs. F rank La- Mura, Freehold , recently- mov­ed Into the home fo rm erly oc-. cupled by M r. and M rs. W il­liam Wasmuth on M iriam D r.

W illiam Hostetter, Reading, Pa ., spent the weekend with his parents, M r. and M rs. Jay P . Hostetter. . .

M r. and M rs. C. Randolph Heuser were Sunday guests of M r. and Mrs. W illiam Stratton, Pennaauken. M rs. Stratton Is the fo rm er Miss ConstanceHeuser. ■ .............

M r. and M rs. E rnest Hard­ing and M r, and M rs. George Harding, Bayonne, were Satur­day evening dinner guests o f M r. nnd M rs. H a rry Walling and M r. and M rs. Wesley Ol­sen:------- :------ :------ :------ -------------

M rs. F . Howard- L loyd . Jr.. entertained at bridge Jan . It. P rize winners were M rs. Ralph C. -Bedle, M rs. O arre tt J . Mc­Keen. Jr., and Mrs. R o b e r t Bentley. Other guests w e r e Mrs. Jac A. Cushman, M rs. John Renwlck, M rs. Kenneth P ike and M rs. Charles Mande- ville . - *• M r.. and M rs. Joseph Die­

trich ond Mr. and M rs. Edwin Laudano, Hazlet. were Sunday dinner guests o f M r. and Mrs. F rank Pe llech la , Newark.

M rs. Agnes Tansey. San. Franclsco. C a l i f . , le ft fo r borne Saturday, a lte r a visit of Beveral weeks with relatives In Matawan.

M r. and M rs. A. E d g a r P a lm were Saturday evening dinner and bridge guests of Mr. and M rs. John Galbraith, Metuchen. ■ .

M rs. Alice Boyce and _M rs. V e r n o n Stateslr, Freehold, were recent luncheon guests of Mrs. Spafford W. Schanck.

M rs. John Renwlck enter­tained her -bridge club Friday evening when prize winners were M rs. Donald Hug and M r s . Victor Fredda, Other guests were M rs. George R it­ter, M rs. Martin B e ll, Mrs. George Barre tt, M rs. . Robert Hardlc nnd M rs. Jac A. Cush man.

M r s , Calvin Pearce enter­tained her. bridge club Jan. 8. P rize winners w e ro . M rs, M il­ton Gunkle and M rs, Roliin Richards. ' ' ,

M rs. Marguerite R . L a i r d entertajped at dinner and sam­ba, Jan. . 7. in celebration of M rs. Conrad Johannsen's birth­day. Other guests were Mrs. W. O liver Dlggln, M rs. Frede­rick K ; Dederlck. ' .

Mrs. Spafford W. Schanck at­tended tbe concert Wednesday evening of "The Rab lnofs," vi­olin and piano duo presented by the Monmouth Artists Foun­dation, Inc., Civic Music-Asso­ciation a t the Carlton Theatre, Red Bonk. ‘ ‘ i

M r. and M rs. George H a lla r- ln , M r. and Airs. Milton Bawls and M r. and Mins. B s y n a r d Smith were F rid ay evening dinne r guests o f M r. and M rs. Herbert Cottre ll, Browntown.

Sandra, Pearce was a recent guest o f M r. and M rs. Angus F . Davis. P ltts fo rd , N. Y .

M rs. Bayard T . Lamborn, Mra. W illiam C. Ludi and M rs. Charles E . Sprlnghorn attend­ed the matinee performance yesterday o f “ The Chairs" and "The Lesson" at the Pboentx Theatre, New Y o rk .

M r. and M rs. W illiam J , M6- O raw entertained at a co-oper­ative dinner Saturday evening when their guests were Mr. and M rs. Frederick M a u e r , M r. and M rs. R ichard Bauer, M r. and M rs. Duncan B lack and M r. and Mrs. Milton Guh- kle.

M rs. K a r l Heuser, M rs. War- ren -A , Vreelahd, M rs. Gerard Devlin , M rs. Rensselaer LI Cartan, M rs. Pau l Egan, M rs. Howard Erdmann, Miss Esth­e r B laii and Mrs. Louts Fazlen- za attended the Saturday m at­inee performance of “ Miss Is - obe l" at the Roya ls Theatre. New Y o rk . "

M rs. W. Rulon Smith, M rs. W. C. Noddlngs and, Mrs. Jo ­seph Dietrich were Tuesday luncheon guests of. Mrs. H arry Wells. ; ,

M rs. W. O liver Dlggln enter­tained her bridge club Friday evehlrig. - P rize winners were Mrs. W illiam J. Rabcl, M rs. George Barbanc ll and M r s . Marguerite Laird .

M r. and M rs. George Egner, F ie rro Ave.. entertained Satur­day evening when their guests were Mr. and M rs. R o b e r t C arter, Nutley; M r. and Mrs. Edward R leth , M r. and Mrs. W ilbur F ied ler, Mrs, J o h n F ied ler, M r.'tB id Mrs. James Noddlngs, Cllffwood B e a c h ; M r. and M rs. W, C. Noddlngs and M r. and ’ M rs. Thomas Noddlngs.

Glenn Harrison , M f d l a n d P a rk , Is visiting his grandpar­ents, M r, and M rs, Rensselaer L . Cartan . “

M r. apd M rs. Myron B . D lg­gln, Rumson.- and Mr. and M rs. A ..D . Squltero, Little S il­v e r , were Saturday evening dinner guests o f M r. and M rs. Eve re tt E . Carlson.

M rs. Douglas Ward enter­tained her bridge club Thurs­day evening. The prize win­ners were M rs. John H. .K in ­ney, H o l m d e l , and Mrs, C h a r l e s Lockwood. Other guesta w e r e M rs. Howard Woolley, M rs. W illiam J . M ill­e r, Jr., M rs. Evere tt Carlson, M rs. W illiam W ilkins, Mata­wan, and M rs, August M . Schmellng, Craw ford's Corner.'

M r. and M rs. Jac A. Cush­man and Edward G a rrlty at­tended a buffet supper Satur-day evening as the guests of M r. and Mrs7. Robert H. Cush­man, Princeton Junction

-M ERCURYNEW AND USEb CARS

On Monmouth Street Opposite Carlton Theatre • Bed Bank ,

Shadyside 7 -4545 — 1-6000

Orthonologist To Address MHS Club

A newly-formed biology and science club In Matawan High School w ill be addressed at Its □ext meeting by one o f Mon mouth County’s foremost or- thonologlsts, W illiam Sanford, Matawan, M rs. M ary Onkley, faculty advisor, to the club, an­nounces. -

M r. Sanford conducts a na­ture and b lrd llfe column In newspapers In addition to his field work In ortbonology. I l ls scientific work Is an avocation with him as he regu larly Is employed In newspaper work

At Its firs t meeting the club was addressed by K a r 1 R . Schneck. C llffwood, vico presi­dent o f the Matawan Township Board of Education and assist­ant d irector of safety, services fo r the American Red - Cross: With the assistance o f J o h n Conover, a club member, M r. Schneck Illustrated firs t old and emergency measures to bo applied In situations o f a va­riety o f accident nnd sudden Illness.

O fficers o f tho new 30-mem­ber club a re M arcl Mayo, G a ll Eastman, Lucy Tomnscllo nnd Ethel Leperopolos. It meets at 11:30 a.m . the second F riday each month.

Public Health

fclaUwan Pub lio Health A ^ U U u D hjeld it* '{neattnjr Tye§day evening cegter. x jie nurse ’a uspprt Wfl* submitted by M rs. D p r o t h y Pinnetti, public health nurse* as fo llow si Matawan T o w n ­ship statistical repo rt fo r '57 showed a total o f 1929 home and office visits made! C llff­wood baby clinic attended by 241, when 113 toxold,J73 Balk and 18 sm allpox vaccinations were glveri> transportation tt>- ta led 201.

Matawan Borough home and office visits were 1303; attend­ance mt Matawan baby olinlc. 155, where 50 toxoid, 28 Salk and 28 sm a ll pox vaccinations, and transportation. 26. 1

The report showed there was a to ta l o f 3132 visits or an in­crease o f 638 visits over 1056! transportation increased 41, and baby clinic increase was 78, . ‘ VReport was given on Christ­mas activities by M rs. W i l ­liam W idman,,. social service chairm an, which showed that 10 fam ilies were suppHejd^wUhfood and toys, fo r a total num­ber o f .56 children; 21 f o o d baskets were distributed a n d 55 e lderly persons were given candy and gifts. M rs. Widman wishes to thank tho township, and borough residents fo r their support fo r the Christmas pro­gram , She also thanked the o r­ganizations and merchants fo r their support,.and Sid Spinks fo r donating his time and ef­fo r t 'to help Mrs. P ltmettl de­liv e r the gifts. 1

New Secretary For „ Cliffwood P-TA

Miss Sheila Mulligan., firs t grade teacher In the Clttt'inod G ram m ar School lias been ap­pointed recording secretary o f the Cliffwood Parent-Teaolior Association,to f i l l the vacancy created by the resignation o f M rs. Samuel D llks . The ap­pointment was made at an In­fo rm a l meeting lie ld Jan . 8, due to the absence o f la quor­um . .

M rs. Weldon Sams, presi­dent; M rs. Thomas Vena, Mys, Robe rt Grohe a n d Anthony Nucclo, principal, attended the meeting o f the executive com­mittees o f t h e T rl-Farent- -Teacher Associations held in the Matawan High School- LI b ra ry Monday evening. Mem h o rs o f the Matawan Township "Hoard o f Education, hoaded by Robert Bentley, finance cha ir man, gave an In form al report ori the proposed budget fo r the coming year. ,

The next executive b o a r cl meeting o f the djlffwood P-TA w ill be held Jan . 28th-and tho regu lar meeting o f the assocl atlon Is scheduled lo r Feb. 8. both to be held In the C llff­wood G ram m ar School.

Matawan P-TA To Meet After Budget Hearing..

The Matawan Township High School Parcnt-Teacher Associ­ation meeting will be held Thursday evening. Jan. 23, In the high school auditorium im ­mediately. following TGe public hearing dn the’* school budgetat 8 p.m; — .............—! M j$, Vernon E llison , chair­man of the program commit­tee, announced that in addition lo this opportunity to question the members o f the board of education regarding b u d g c t lUm fl, a ll candidates seeking election to the Board o f Edu­cation will be invited to attend bo that the membership c a n meet' them , and lear^ . some­thing of their qualifications.George W. Sorenson, D irec­tor o f Public Relations f o r Monmouth "College. Wefit ’ Lbng Branch, also w ill be present to te ll about college education- a opportunities available In Monmouth County.-

Mrs. Biagio Maccla. chair­man of the refreshment com , mittce. has issued nn Invlta- lion to. everyone to have re-’ freshments in the cafeteria following the meeting.

Haley Hose Company Elects 1958 Officers

The M. E . Haley Hose Co. 1 elected new officers fo r 1058 at Its . recent meeting. Elected were Joseph Vaceare lla , third assistant chief; John Whelan, captain; Emanuel Valles, first lieutenant; Joseph L IPe ra , sec­ond lieutenant; George V la lor, engineer; R obert Bucco, first assistant engineer; Julius Kay, second assistant engineer.

Company officers are Law­rence Bucco, president; Frank G ray , s r., vice president; Dol­ton G raham , treasurer, a n d P a tr ic k Longo, sec re ta ry .

This year w ill find tho com­pany maintaining Its high hon­o r as a well learned and. ex­perienced fire fighting unit un­der tho capable hands o f Its new captain, M r , Whelan, a proven man in flrcm atlcs.- A committee was-f o r m e d w i t h Joseph Vaccarclln as

chairm an, to work out details and expenses fo r the construc­tion o f a new building to houso the company’s new fire truck.

Arabian Art H ‘ Topic O f Meeting

Tlie a rt group o f tho Wom­an ’s Club of Matawan met Mqndny Ultcrnoon at tho home o f M rs. Bayard T . Lamborn. M rs. R . L . Cartan, speaker of the afternoon, presented a talk oe. "A rab ian A rt"-and showed slides taken In Saudi Arabia by her son-in-law, James Ilu r- rlson.

Others attending were Mrs. Allan J . Morrison, Mrs, John­son Cnrlan , M rs , M l o h a e 1 B row n ,' M rs. Q. J , Sterling Thom psoii,-sr., Mrs, Herbert Stncr,_i_sr., M rs, Donuld W. Robinson,” and Mrs, F F ft - rA , Read., J h e next meeting will be held at the home of M rs. Mor­rison on Feb. 10, nt w h I c h tlmp the'toplc w ill be "Encruv- lngs ond Etchings ”

F lr jt Cburch of Chrl*t.—.j——... Scientist ___

U Brood St.. KeyportSunday service H La .o i. Wed­

nesday testimonial'Tneetlng 8 p.m . Reading room open Wed­nesday 2 to 4 p.m.

How spiritual understanding of God, divine L ife , Increases happiness and longevity w i l l be brought out at Christian Science services Sunday.

Readings from the Bible lq the lessbri-sermon on “ L ife ” w ill Include the following (P ro ­verbs 3:13, 16): "Happy la the man that flndeth wisdom, and the man that gettcth Under­standing— Length ot days la In her right hand, and In her left hand riches and liongur."

Correlative passages f r o m "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" by M a r y Baker Eddy w ill Include the following (487:27); "T i ltu n d e r­standing that L ife Is God, Spir­it, lengthens our d a y s by strengthening our trust In tho deathless rea lity of L ife , I t s olmlghtlncss ond Im m orta lity ."

The Golden Text Is 1 r p m Psa lm s- (2 7 :1 ) : -” Thp; L o rd - is my light and my salvation; whom-shall I fea r? tho Lord Is the strength o f itiy 11 f e ; of whom shall I be a fra id ?”St. Mary's Episcopal Cburob

Kasl Front St., Keyport Rev Henry A Male. Reotor Scout Troop 64 meots a t 7p.m. tonight. ............F r I d a y, Junior Y o u n g

Churchmen w ill meet at 7)30 p.m. —— • ­Holy Communion Sunday Is

at 8 a.m .: ohurch school and f a m i l y service,. 9:30 a .m .; Choral Eucharist and sermon. 17 a.m .; morning prayer and sermon. U a .m .; C o u p i e s Club d i n n e r meeting, 4:45 p .m .; cvqpiQjr prayer (Cheese- quake), 7 p.m. ‘ :

Tuesday, the Junior G 1 r l a' F riendly Society, .will pmot at 3:30 p.m. ,

Wodnosday, -Holy - Commun­ion is at 9 a .m .: senior oholr rehearsal, 8 p .m .; Alcoholics Anonymous, 9 p.m.

Keyport Reformed Churob . Warren St., Keyport Rev. Roderick N, DeYoung,

P a s to r ' . ’ ,Sunday School Is hold at 8:30

a.m . under the supervision o f O arrett Po tt and Warren Bern ­hardt, A nursery la held at 10:30 aim . fo r ohildron whose parents wish to attend tlie 10:45 a.m. worship s e 1'v l o o, J lnuor Youth .Fellowship meots at 7 p.m .; senior youth, 8 p.m.

The Martha and Mary Circle w ill meet Monday at 0:15 p.m , «.t„,t±us home, .of- M rs, Riohard Dlsbrow, 81 Chlngarorp. Avo.,Keyport, ...... : -

Wednesday, n meeting o f the bayshoi'e ministers w ill be held at the~ church'house nt 8 p.m. to discuss u Council o f Churches fo r 'the bayshore area, The sanctuary choir w ill rehearse In the churoh at 8:15 p.m,Bayvlew Presbyterian Cburob : Cllffwood Beacb

Rev Franclr Oaterstook The Catherine Closo Circle

w lll meet on F rldny at 1' p.m.Covenant o f P ra y e r is Satur­

day nt 9 p.m.- The Sacrament o f I n f a n t

Baptism w ill be celebrated at the Sunday morning worship, servlco nt 11 o'clock, nnd the e rd lnallon and Installation of newly-elected o fficers of t h o . church w ill be held., Tho'Ser­mon subject w ill bb "Two Pos­sib ilities." Church schqol class­es bogln nt 9:45 a'.m. T lio sos- slon w ill meet at 3 p.nr; Ip .tJw church. ■

Birthday PartyM r, and M rs. J , Donald Mill-

i e r.-B road fet,, Matawan. enter­tained Saturday .afternoon !n celebration o f the ninth day o f their daughter. Ellen

■Guest« were Susart C;irh.on, Gwen H arris . Loult> f3 m 1 1 h, Patric ia n ilte r . Stacy Ogcnn, i Peggy Hurrla , Kathy L e w i u, Elfxjne Charl«r*n, Sheri lei and Jeffrey M iller., ' Help Whnten ' aa* i p t fh f pa per te)t you about the gooc ‘obs opto .

Cejfitewane Lutheran Churcb Mnpls F l. , K e yp o rt---------Rey. .Frederick Boos, Pastor There are two services on

Sunday; Matins at 8:30 a.m. and the regular service at 11 o ’clock. Sunday School begins at 9:45 a.m.

St. Joseph's Church- Maple 1'1„ Keyport

Rev . Cornelius J . Kane, Pastor Masses w ill be hold Sunday

morning at 7, 8, 9, 10 and U o ’clock. .

First Presbyterian Cburob Mala St., Malswao

Rev. Chester A Qslloway.Paqtor ”

"A F a lt li To Live B y ” w ill be tbe pastor's sermon toplo Sunday nt the 0:30 n.m. and I I a.m . services. Thoro w ill be a baby-sitting program at 0:30 a.m . fo r tots whose par­ents desire to attend church. Sunday School Is at 0 :3 0 .a.m . Junior ll lg h Westm lnstor F e l­lowship Group will meet at 5:30 p .m . In the " Y " building fo r n box supper. At 7 p.m . tho Senior High Westminster Fe l- low s ljlp -a roup -w lll-m ect—Tho Denn of B loom field C o 11 o g o w ill speak to the group on "The Church-Related College."St. John's Methodist Church

- South; Main St.,Rarltnn TownshipRev.'Novman R. R iley, Pnslov

Sunrtny m o r n i n g worship services aro held nt D:30 nnd 11 a .m .; church school classes fo r nil ngca also nro nt 0:30 end I I a .m .; evening worship services at 7:30 p.m.

First Methodist Cburob 810 Main St., Matawan

Rev. Albert L Curry Pasto f Sunday School session" is nt

9:45 a.m . and inornlng worship services avo at -8:46 a,lit.' and l l a.m . The pnstor's sermon subjoqt Is to be ."B y The Met'- oies O f Gbd." During the 11 O'clock sorv loe a nursoi-y is provided.

Legion Auxiliary Reports

ion Hears

. P ra y e r mooting Is held In the ohuroh eaoh Wodnosday evening at '7;39 o'oloek.- r First Baptist (Jburob

131 Malp bt.. Matawan Rev. Lawronoe R Bailey

' • P a s t o r -' T h e Unseen Companion­ship” w lll bo the sermon toplo

at b o th 'th e 10 and. 11 a.m . services on Sundny.-D h u r o h Sohool moots at 10 a.m . wllh olasses fo r each age g r o u p . The mon's class is held In the parsonage..- Baptist Y o u t h a roup s w ill meot as fo llows: Juniors at 4 p.m ., and. .Junior High and Senior High at 7 p .m .. "

Mid-week, p raye r and Bible etudy Is held on Thursday at 7:30 p.m .

Cllffwood Community - Methodist. Churob »

Mrs. Jam es I I . Martm con-* duoted jiie regu lar meotlng o l tlio Ladles- Auxiliary o f --1 h e Unit 176 Monday evening at the home o l M ra. W illiam Don- nenworth, Aberdeen Rd.

Reports ot chairmen Includ­ed the announcement by M ib . A 11 o e W alling, membership chairman, that 40 members havo paid their dues to date and only f i v e moro aro qccd- ed to meet llio quota. Coupon olm lrman M rs, Margaret Mc­Donald reported sho had sent about 100 coupons to tho coun­ty chairman, and poppy phalr- mno Mrs. McDonald had o r­dered 1600 popples te r tho an­nua l-drive In May. Mrs. M ar­tin, child welfare and rehabili­tation'chairman, road acknow­ledgments from the veterans organizations, Mnrlboro State Hospital a n d tho Matawan Publio Health Association, fo r the remombrancos at Christ­mas. A total o f $88.60 ,waa spent on Chrlstmns welfare progra'ms. "

Mrs. Martin will entertain tho club members at tliolv noxt mooting oil Fob , lD lli ut l;o r home In Loclisloa H e i g h t s . MstaWnn.

Attending the meeting of tlie Monmouth County Ladles Aux­ilia ry In Keyport Friday eve­ning were M rs. May Q ll'ls . M rs. McDonald, M rs. Walling, Mrs. O. Robert Bmlth, Mrs. Johq Thaler nnd Mrs. Marlin

Card Parly Planned By' Contemporary Leaguo

Mrs. Martin Be ll, president, prcsldud at tho regular m oo t­ing o f tho Mntnwnn Contom- pornry Leaguo held Jan. 0, Finns wore made fo r n ^nrd party, proceods, o f” whlo)| -Will bo used fo r tlio olub pro joot at Now Jorsey Boys Town, Konr- n y .M rs .E d w m -O 'lIn n lo n w lll be ohalrman- of tlio a ffa ir which w ill bo hold Fob, 0 at tliochU ijOh liOU iS ’ O ftV IOKoy- port.R efo rm ed Church, 8 li 0 ‘ Will be assisted by Mrs. Atig- ust Bchmollng and M rs, F ran k O razlano. “

Mrs. John K lnnoy, Mrs. Ar­thur IClatt nnd Mrs, B011 at­tended Federation Night nt tha Long Branoh Club M o n d a y evening. Miss Edith . Davison and Mrs, K la tt w ill attend tho Evening Mombarshlp Confer­ence ot Uie New Jorsoy State Fodoratlon- of Women's Clubs to bo hold at tho Hotel MoAl pin, Now York ,ifla tu rday, Fob,8. : .

Mrs, K lnnoy showed trnvo l slidos that woro taken during hor trip to Ca lifo rn ia . Refresh- nionts werq served by Mr* VIotor Fredda and Mra, Boil.!-

. . the :MATAWAN; JOURNAL;Jon . 16, 1958_______ P a ic F ive

Mrs. Craig Has i Luncheon, Bridge

M r s . W illiam R C r a 1 g. Matawan, entortalned nt lunch- con nnd -brldgo at Fctm son ’a . Buttonwood Mnnor, Matawan, Thursday, whon -Uis prlzo win­ners were Mrs. Joseph B n lo r, M rs. Frederick K . Dederlck, Mrs, W illiam C. Lild l, M r js. G erard A. Dovllp , M rs, W il­liam II,.-Pongel, Mrs, Loroy- Blokpls, M rs. W llltam J . Kabo l and M rs. Marguerite It . La ird .

othov gucBts wove M rs, Jack Tansey, sa il Frnnclsco, C a lif.; Mrs. Frederick J . Noble, Holm- del; Mra, George L.- VanDou- son, F a ir llavcn ; Mrs, Rudolph Chvnl, Hazlet; Mrs. James G . Nell, Mrs, Philip L. Noldllng- ev, M rs. Peter A. Read, M rs. P.rul A .'Egau . Mro, J . F rank -" Un Dom ln lck j Mrs. Rensselaer L. Cartan. , ■

Also Mr*. Conrad Johannsen, M rs. Joseph A. Dernberger, Mrs. Edward W, Currlo, Mrs. Charles E , Bpi-lngliorn, M r s , ' W. O llvo r Dlggln, Mrs. John C. Eggleston, Mrs. lllohu rd E rd ­mann. Mrs, BaYuiil T , Lam ­born, M rs. J . Raymond Ketoh- ol, Mrs. F lunk II . B liss, M rs. Bpafford W. Bobanok, M rs. Robert Erdinnnn, .M rs, Harold Doyto and Mrs. EUnuvo Katt- nor, .-' .' / •

Rev. Dean Jeanblano, Pastor . Worship service'Sunday Is at 9 a.m . when the pastor will bo­gln a new series o f sormon top­ics. Topic' this week will be "P i lla rs o f tho Church." Sun­day School ie held at 10 a.m .

Methodist Youth Fellowship meets Monday at 0:30 p.m.

Wednesday ovenlng prayer meeting Is held a t 8 p.m .

T r ln lt j Ep lioopa l ChurOh * Main St., M itawan . . -

Rev .'Bernard McK dn rlio kReotor .

Tlie Second Sunday a fto r Uie Epiphany, I f o 1 y communion will be at B a.m . and Fam ily Eucharist and ohurch sohool at 9 a.m , with the sermon to bo delivered by the R e v , Charlos R i le y ,. .

Tho Ladles’ bu ild w ill meet on Monday at 8 p .m , - • .

Marlboro Grange Holds Spelling Bee Monday-A -s p e i l ln g bee r sponsored by Monmouth Pomona Grango, consisting of 12 grangCB In Monmouth County, was h e l d rccontly a t various granges. Chlldron o f sixth, seventh and eighth grades In various com­munities compoted.

L iberty Grange, Marlboro, held Its spelling heo Monday. Winner In tlio g ir ls ’ g r o u p w a s J o r ry Byrnes, eighth grade student In tho Mnrlboro C o n t r n 1 School, Wlckntunk, representing the L i b e r t y Orange: boys’ group, Charles Gunderson, sixth grader In Wail Township Centra l School, representing tho ( l l o n d o l u Grange,

Second high honors went to Karen Morton, W all Township Cc-nlraTBchool, nnd B ill Mer­cer, nluo o f tlm t school, both of Olcndoln Qrnnnc. AH w i l l spell In the state-wide spelling bee In -Trenton,-- Jan. 29. ------

Mrs, Ketchel Hostess AtLuncheon-Bridge

M rs, J . Raymond Ketchel entertained a t luneheon-brtdge on Tuesday. Prizes w e r e awarded: to M rs ..W illiam C. LiTdl, M rs. 'W illiam It . Craig ’ Mrs. Fi-unk H. J!lb,0. M r s . M nim ierlle rt. Laird a s lf M rs, James G . fJolh"

Other guests were Mrs, Con rad Johannsen, Mrs. W illiam II . Pengc), M rs. Harold Doyle, M r*; W illiam J . -rtnbel, Mrs. F-'dward W . Currie, Mrs. Jo ­seph B a le r and .M rs. John a . Eggleston,

Morganvllle Resident Dies Unexpectedly L ou inW .L on in n o ,'0 3 ,T exH iRd., Morgunvlllc, died unex­pectedly about' ono. mliq from his home while enroutc from work Tuosday evonlng, Jan . 14, 1068. lie- was born In Qulnoy, Mass., and bad lived In Rah­way p rior to moving to li I * present address a b o i f t lO months ago. He was a voterun o f World War I, and wa» em­ployed by the Roynolds Metals Inc,, Harrison. . -

Surviving are. his w lfo, M rs. Marguret (O'Connell) Lo lllunc ; two daughters, Hhlrley n n d Sondru.'and one non, Wayne, a ll ut home; two bruthars, F red, Keypo rl: A lfred, Iloslon, Moss,; tw o . sisters, M i-n. " A 1- benn Rigby;-’ HOStoib 'lilid ’ M l S, Nora Dillon, Keyport,__ Funeral services will hi: held Saturday at li~ lT jn ’. at tin? IJuy Funeral Home, Keypo rl, with the Rev. Henry- A. Male rco- ior. o f HI M ury ’n EpRcopal Cluux-b, -Keyport, officiating, lutonm-iu will be in Clovr-rleuf P a rk cemetery, Woodbrldge

To Discuss "Sputnik"_ M iititlc't? f l lu n k u n , pjufc/i.^or n l Gla'fj.'ilxito

Ojllf*«<t, w ill Uutr>r T tim lay ' (ivonintf ** dt

t lx - m r e l l i iK o f t lx ; U ro w n ^ jw n J'ni t jit Tvtirlu'r A n n a c I n- Uf-n. A 'lilch w il l / . t o i l a t H j> xi. Ht llx*. 1U> w i l l fllHCMJftB* /ijrultilk.” of t h oW h it fx l Jliown P-TA, L%*oji(xquake, havo hcen invited at-: U'Hd und hold a joint mcHtlnif.

Ladles Aid Plant Meat Loaf Luhcheon Feb. 1 8 . '

Tlio LaUlcs Aid Soolety o f the F irs t Uaptlat C lm roh.'M a t as wan, held IU regu lar monthly moeting.’Tiiosday’ K r te fa o W '^ ' tlie home of M rs, David . M ar­tin, M rs, Martin and her., daughter, Mrs, Esther ‘R lheac, wore co-hoAtsgsoB, M rs. H a rry M. Munson, prosldent, presid­ed, M rs, Lawroiioo R , B a iley led "devotions, - ': P lans wero .made fo r a Val- entlne foodlcss lood 'sale, and nlso fo r a- moat loa f luncheon Fob. 18, The firs t table w ill b o - servod at 11:45 a;m , 111 t h e churoh loctur'o room . T lokeU niuy bo obtained R om a n y member of the soc ie ty .— .-..........Tho next meriting w ill be held Fob , 11 whon.a-ValontlnB- oovornd dish luncheon w ill pr«- oodo thn meeting, Secret pale will exchange trlfts nt t h l * time.1 > •' ■ ;

Taylors Have Daughter' A daughter Was” born “ F r i ­day, Jan . .0, 1968, In B 0 u t Ir

Amboy Hospital, to M r , ' and Mrs, Thomua-J,---Taylor, 140 Jaokson B t„. M ataw an ,. T l i e baby watghod six pbundt, eightoimoes and has - boon ~ namedCheryl Lynn, The; eouple have three other ah lldroii, D f a n e, Denna and Thomnt, Jr, ’

, _Flr»t Child ‘M i, and . M rs, John Rod-

zlnka, Perth Amboy, are tbe parents o f their firs t child, a daughter, b o rn -Tuesday, -J a n ’, 14, 1968, In P e rt li Amboy'tlos- p ltal, M rs. Rodzlnka I s ' t h e fo rm or -Miss Jean W arw ick, Matawan, .

Recent Guests 1Coir HolliiTEewl»“Tvn!r"Mr«rLewis,and fam ily , F o rt . 0 1 X,

woro recent’ dinner guost* ot M r,-and Mrs. Herbert Cottroll, l r „ Browntown, ’

NITE OWLSMUSIC SPOT Mutlc Lenont '

- Oulla i - Accordion Trumpet - Drum*Sax • Plano ■ K id . ’ , ■31 E-Front $t,Opp, l ’ oat Office

7-5998

Where does Your Money Go?

. t . a check ing accoun t tc iis Y ou !It Jielpi you-.to got... ahead -fln»n«jelly~ty- —showing you areas where you can ipend,- leis, and savo regularly. - •

IN IMATAWAN

ba n kMATAWAN, NIW H IIIV

' # ' ■’wtiuiiHiuuitminiui ,

Mwurmmtvetit . miLua utrvubM

Page 6: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

' " ” :t h e S S- 1 . -r - * . . , * . ,m j k m JOURNAL,

Marine Biology Conference DcadlinclNearillgFor Alien Report

Page S I* Jan . 10. 1958

Work Progressing On OES Home

Work on the Eastern Sta r Home-for-lhe-Aged current­ly under construction on Find- erne Ave., Flnderne. opposite the Flnderne School, Is .pro­gressing according to sched~ uie. The contractor, DeCristo- fe r Construction Co., Bound Brook, expects to continue

- work through the winter as weather permits! lodge offi­cers said recently. Occupancy Is scheduled fo r this fa ll.

The home will ho f° r East­ern Star members of the state. The first, unit under construc­

t i o n will provide fo r 32 resi­dents. Construction in future years wiil be made as finan­ces are available, with ac­commodations fo r 120 resi­dents the aim within the next 10 years. ,“ M ost-of the $400.000 fund fo r

the firs t construction is avail­able at the'present'time,»with the balance fo r construction, equipping and furnishing ’ the ho.mei anticipated through a current state-wide campaign fo r funds. • .

P lans fo r the home'w^re ap proved by the New Jersey State Department o f -Ijtstitu- tions and Agencies after its . {suggestions fo r rearrangement o f certain fac ilities and substh tution of ramps fo r steps was followed. The’ architect is E rn ­est Brown.

M rs. E leanor. W. Coogan, Philadelphia, is district chair­man o f the local, area cam­paign fo r funds. Mrs. Peg Robertson Is Worthy Matron and John Robertson, Worthy Patron , Of Golden Chapter 120, Keyport. M rs: Lydia Walling, Matawan;. is Grand Represen- ta t lv e to Scotland and ,.-M rs . Bernice Lauterw ald ,' W orthy Matron, and Martin Lautcr- wald,. Worthy Patron of Sirius Chapter 123, Matawan..

There are .256 chapters in New Jersey with a membcr-t ship o f more than 60,000, sup­porting the home project.

t u A conference in (he marine biology laboratory at Rutgers •'‘ ^brings together D r. Harold 11. Haskln, (center), and two young, assistants. D r. John J , McDermott, (le ft), Is on assistant re ­search specialist in oyster Investigations on the staff at Blvalye. David D e in , (righ t), teaching assistant in zoology, did research in Raritan Bay last.summer.

Hebrew Unitsjonsor

Over 110 persons , attended the first' annual New Year's party sponsored by the Men's Club of the Keyport U n 11 o d Hebrew Congregation and the Hebrew Women's Leastue hfftd recently a t : the R o llo ' P o s t House. .S l i t T : *Prizes , which: were awarded during the:evenlng'a. e n.t’ e r - tntnment, -were donated by Sav-on D r u g s . B iy Drug,' Pete's, Inc., Westrelch's, Pelg- enson Shoes, LaZare ’ s, M u r- le l’s, Keyport Jewelers a n d Opticians, P a rk Service S t a- tlon, Walling's Service Station, Kapushy Sprvlco Station, K ey ­port Esso Servjeenter, Holly­wood Oil Co., Schanck, I n c., Montagna's Service . Station, Regan’s Service Station, Louis Stultz J r ., Inc., Curtis Furn i­ture, West Furniture, Surprise Store, Keyport Greenhouses, Dave Lemberg, Snm Korobow, and Straub Motors, Inc.'

Also: Buhler and B i t t e r Inc., Washington's Auto Serv­ice, J . J . Newberry Co., H, B Thomns-Store, Creative Hair Stylists,. Keyport W i n e and l iquor, Coher’s Liquor Store, S ta r Beef Co., Keyport Hard­ware, W. S, Wallace, Village Television and the Atlantic Ap­pliance Co, .

The next regular meeting of the Men's Club will be h e 1 d Monday, Jan . 27, at 8:10 p.m

' when an amendment to t li e constitution sh a ir be voted. All members are urged to attend. Refreshments w ill be served.

Polio Drive "Ktckoff"In Raritan Township

The 1958 March of D i m e s Campaign fo r Raritan Town­ship had Its "k icko ff" on Tues­day, when a committee'organ­ization dinner meeting w a s held a t the home o f Fred Nice. K no ll Terr., llaz le t. Mr. Nice, 19581 Campaign Chairman, fo r Raritan,-announced the follow­ing committeemen to aid him In implementing the drive: Township F ire Chief J a m e s

■ Cullen : Howard Moyer, JamesRedmond nnd W illiam M. Ph ll- lips, a ll o f Hazlet, and Michael Clormley, West Keansburg,

~ -~~M ayor H arry Pv Seamen has been named honorary o h o 1 r- man o f the drive, the firs t to

‘ be conducted exclusively In Raritan Township, In o o m­

- mentlng on the campaign Mny- o r Seamen said, " In spite o f

- the outstanding advances In the fight against polio through the uso of> Balk shots, thorc s t i l l is a very definlto n e o d to r funds in our area. There n re over 100 people; most ot

' t h o r n children, confined, to w ljeel choirs With polio in Mon­

.:. mouth -County, and many o f these polio victims aro s till re-

(Coivihg aid from tho P o l i o ■■ ■ Foundntlon .'TnS my hopo that i-c it iz e n s o f R a ritan Township

w ill fend, a .helping hand by contributing ds generously as

• they can to tho 1058 Mar.ch o f• D im es Campaign.’ ’

T lie drlvo w ill run through 1 th e 'firs fi w e e k "o f i'F ob ru a ry , and wJlLbe highlighted by the "M othersM tfarch on; P o J l o ’ ’

On. a houseboat in Barnegat Bay almost a quartcr-ccntury- ago. D r. Thurlow C. Nelson. Rutgers professor of zoology and world authority In oyster research, Introduced the fas­cinating world o f marine bio­logy to Harold H, Haskln, own­e r o f the best academic aver­age in_the Rutgers student bo­dy o f that day. Many promis­ing marine biologists w e r e brought to that floating labor­a tory each summer as . D r. Nelson sought the man w h o would someday succeed him a s head o f the university's fa r- flung operations In marlne.bio- log lcal research. -

Today, 42-year-old D r. Has­kln unmistakably Is that man. D r. Haskln mado-hls -m ark on the Rutgers scene nt a tondor age. He was graduated.In 1936 from the difficu lt biological sci­ences curriculum with a 1.000 average, the first Rutgers man to achieve a perfect four-year ftcademlc, average since the Institution of the present grad­ing system In 1890. Three oth­ers!' Including one of D r. Ilas- k ln 's students, since have coni- piled the perfect “ 1.’ '. Study at Harvard University brought D r, i Haskln his Master's De­gree In 1938 and Ills doctorate In 1941. ;

An A rmy commission was next and fo r five years Infan­trym an Haskln saw few shell­fish , dead o r alive. Discharg­ed as a niaJOy In 1946, he took a podltloh' a t ' Woods Hole Oeeshb'grdtlhlh Institute, Mas­sachusetts, djntll September 1946. when'he joined the Rut­gers. facu lty as assistant pro­fessor of zoology. D r. Haskln now Is a^fuJL professor of. zoo­logy in the College of Arts and Sciences and a research spec­ia list In oyster Investigation fo r the College o f Agriculture.

Though ihe summers at the seashore each year, D r. Haskln has not had a fo rm a l vacation In 11 years. The summers are spent at Bivalve In the New Jersey Oyster, Research Labor­atory located on the Maurice R iver, Cumberland County, and nt tho hew laboratory: on the hore o f Delaware Bay at Pierces, Cape May County. F o r D r . Haskln, the summers en­able him to carry on a Rut­gers, and Nelson, tradition.

Scientific research was In­troduced into New Jersey ’s oy­ster industry 70 years ago by the late D r. Julius Nelson, professor o f zoology at Rut­gers, who established the firs t oyster experimental laborato­ry in 1388 at the request o f the New Je rseyJ lg rlcu ltu ra l E x ­perimental Station. When D r. Nelson-dlcd In 1918, his son, D r, Thurlow C1 Nelson,1 took over end expanded the studies that have helped New Jersey's

oyster crop reach an annual value of more than $4,000,000.

A lew years ago, when D r. Nelson's work with the State Water Policy Commission made great demands on his time, lia turned over the reins of Ru lgers. oyster research to the young man he had inspir­ed to become a marine biolo­gist. '

In those few years, spurred by a need lo r more detailed ond exte .slve knowledge Of Delaware Bay, tbe. Rutgers oyster research operation has nioyed ahead at a rapid pace. The new laboratory at Pterces tvaS built, d 40-foot research vessel was acquired and the staff expanded. The expansion reached Its peak’ durlhg a re­cent two-year hydrographic study of the approaches to the Philadelphia harbor fo r the U. S. Navy, when the customary two-man force grew to 14 men working under D r: ; Hnskln’s direction. h it£

An annual state appropria­tion, through the Department of Conservation and Economic Development, begun In 1952 at the behest a t worried mem­bers o l the oyster Industry, en­abled Rutgers to keep an en­larged s ta ff fa r the extensive field operations as Haskln k Co. turned sights: on the reha­bilitation o f the natural oyster seed beds -located near . t h e bead o t the Delaware Bay . This Is a huge lob , the resu lts ot which vjiU -bear heavily -on the,, M u re , o f Jersey oysters and; 35.000' 'acres o f underwat­e r "fa rm land .'’

As a resu lt of-the.decllne_o£ the seed beds, Delaware Bay planters now obtain , only one- third o f: the seed oysters need­ed ..Rutgers scientists h a v e traced the decline to a reduc­tion of the stocks o f parent oysters. Now they have set out to deterlnlne th e ’ size o f the breeding population that must be maintained fo r an optimum yield o f seed oysters and ways to build up tbe population to this level. This Is tho sort o f challenge that kept the Nel­sons of Rutgers busy fo r more than ha lf a century, '

D r. Haskln Is sure oysters ngajn w ill abound In Delaware B ay . His chief concern is to keep the Industry supplied wltb seed while the seed heds are building to higher levels. This application o f scientifically-de­veloped Information to the oys­ter Industry Is the same pat­tern that has proved so suc­cessful In almost a century o f service to agriculture tn Now Jersoy , I t has enabled oyster farm ing to" survive ea rlie r threats, both natural and mnn- mado, to its survival. And that's precisely what Rutgers scientists hope to see happen once again.

Seven MC Distributors Given "Seal" License

The firs t licenses to use the new "State Seal of Quality" on cartons ot eggs have been In­sured to 43 egg distributors In New Jersey J>y the State De­partment o f Agriculture, W.W, O ley, director, Dtvlslon of Mar­kets, has announced. The vo l­ume of eggs handled by tho 43 co operatives and privately- owned firm s amounts to moro than J ,590,0DO Horens monthly. IK S following MonmouthC o u n t y distributors > wero among those to whom tho lic­enses have been Issued: Elgen- rnuch Farm s, Red Bank: Gould Farm s, Red Bank: Joy K a y Farm s, Farm lngdalo: Jcrsey Joy, Fram lngdalo; Morganvlllo Pou ltry Farm , Matawan: Mulberry Farm s,Be lm ar, and T. K . Farm s, Freehold.

A ll o f the distributors licens­ed are operating under tho de­partment's official grades pro­gram and tho m arket eggs they handlo arc Inspected rcg- u lo r ly by department person­nel. The gpal, distributed by. stato Inspectors, may be a ffix­ed on ly be cartons ol eggs pro­duced In Now Jersey and meet­ing the high standards o f Con­sumer Grades A and A A. L l- cehscs to use tho seal w ill be

, issued-annually,

NJ Natural G at Report Shows 1957 Increases

The New Jersey Natural Gas Company added 6231 heating customers during the M a c a l year ended Sept. 30,. 1967,. fo r a 20 per cent gain. This Is dis­closed in the company’s nn- nual report, which Bhows a 13.4 per cent gain in the volume of gas sales. During tho f I s o a I year, the company sold 6,962,. 000,000 cublo feet ot gas as compared to 6,131,000,000 t h c previous year. . ...

In a lettor lo shareholders, James S, Abrams, Jr., chair­man o f the board, and Dale B. Otto, presldont, said tho com­pany "established new highs In the number of customers, volume ol gas sold, gross rev cnuc and net Income. Gross revenue -for the period was $12,480,741, an increase of eight pci- cent over tho previous fis­cal year. Net lncomq was $1,­093,674, an Increase of nine per cent over tho previous year."

T i l# company repotted a record expenditure o f S.TOfiD, 151, an Increase ot 18.2 per cent, to r now construction to provide service fo r new cus; ton e rs , and “ keep abreast ot anticipated growth” ot Its serv­lco area. Tho report also points out that tho average customer last year used 470 therms,,which is moro than twice as much as he consum­ed, eight years ago.

Thq U. S. Immigration and Naturalization Service rem ind­ed nj! aliens In New J e r s ey_ t o d t h a t on ly ^vd weeks re ­main In \vhlclt non-citizens must tile their annual address report as required by law.

E . P . Bouchard, New Jersey District Director ot the Im m i­gration a n d Naturalization Service, pointed out that ad dress report form s are avail ab le af. a ll U. S. Post Offices forMhe convenience o f non-clti- zens required to report their address to the government each January under a p rov i­sion o f the Immigration and Nationality Act o f 1952.

Mr. Bouchard sold the only non-citizens not required to re ­port their addresses are per­sons In diplomatic status, fo r­eign representatives of certain I n t e r n a t i o n a l organiza­tions, and- persons admitted temporarily as agricu ltural laborers. - _

Mr. Bouchard stated: ‘ ‘ I t Is hoped that all persons subject to this law will go to the nea r­est post office and fi ll out an address report fo rm before the Jan, 31 deadline, to avoid pos­sible serious penalties.” , Ho further explained that petfspns found guilty to a w illfu l v io la ­tion would be subject to a pos­sible fine, Jail sentence, and deportation. ■

The Imm igration — offic ia l said that 03,000'allens_.JnJ4ew Jersey filed reports during tbe first two w^eics^rfl^be January reporting period wntch-ls be­low the number o f filings dur­ing this same period In 1957..

v o w dim ! sc o r e s a g o a l ?SURVIVAL JS NOT ENOUGH. LET'S REHABILITATE

THE V ICTIM S.

bq JOE PALOOKA®

Miss Peseux Is

Feted At ShowerMiss Edna Wanda Peseux,

Hazlet, was guest o f honor "at a shower at her home, F riday night givqn by her Bridal par­ty, Miss Angela-P lsc lte lll and Miss B arbara Wilson. A decor­ated umbrella o f green a n d white crepe paper and stream ­ers extended over a t a b l e which contained the gifts. Fav ors were sm a ll green baskets with umbrellas. A buffet Jiinch: eon was served by the bridal party. - •

Those attending were ,M r s. W illiam Stevenson, Holmdel; M r s . M a rg a re t. McCormick, Holmdel Heights; M rs."Dan ie l 8. Welgand, L ittle S ilve r; Mrs, John L, Hendrickson, Jr., Mid­dletown; M rs. Clyde V . Mon-, son, Mrs. Daniel Brewer, Mrs. Daniel Brewer, -Jr., Mrs. Rus-- sell Ott, M rs. John MaseUo, M rs. Ronald Gale , Morgan-' v ll le : M rs. Ted Oalpowltz. F re- n iau i M rs. .R o b e r t ' S m i t m Matawan: M rs ,‘Charles P lroz- z l, New Monmoutli; M rs , Pet- er_0._W elgand, Jr.,_ ii:eyportL M rs. Leon Wallace, M rs , How­ard Porter, M rs. Clarence Pedee, Mrs, Joseph P lsc lte lll, M rs. Frank, A, Cerra tl, Mrs. Joseph R . Peseux, M rs. John Llmbnch, M rs. Malcolm W. Pe­seux, M Iss'P lscite lll, Miss WJ1- scn and M is. Ernest E ; . Pe­seux, Hazlet.. Gifta-were sent by M rs- Ten- Eyck Ronson, Mrs. Donald W .' Peseux, Mrs. Howard Walling, M rs., J . F rank Welgand and Miss Margaret E , Welgand, .

Tile Council Elects ' Alexander As Leader

Richard B. Alexander h a s been elected president- o f—the- T ile Council of America, thetrade association of 26 manu­facturers who produce m o r e than 90 per cent o f ceramic w a ll and floor tile made in this country, It was announced Tuesday. M r. Alexander, who: is president and general man­age r o l the National Tile, b Manufacturing Co., Anderson, In d ., succeeds E .D . M a n n , treasurer of the Mosaic ’ Tile Co., , Zanesville, Ohio, Mr. •Mann will continue to serve as vice president and a member o f the board o f directors.

During 1958, Mr. Alexander w ill preside over the-14th an­nual promotion and technical research program o f the Tile Council. Previously ho served as a member of the board o f directors. He Is a graduate o f New York University and a member of the Young --P resi­dents Organization.,

The council recently opened a new research laboratory near Princeton, where techni­cal research aimed at discov­ering new uses fo r ccram lo tile and improved methods ofInstallation „:W lllbo.„.expdnded,Previous research activities, which were carried on ot Rut­gers University, New Bruns­wick, led to such discoveries qs dry-curing, thln-setttng mor­tars, prefabricated tilo panels and stn lnprdof material f o r filling joints between counter­top tiles, -

Cliffwood Firemen Elect Delegates

Alfred Pouzenc, president, conducted the regular meeting of tho Cllffwood Fire C o m ­pany Monday evening In tho Cllffwood F ire House. D c l e- gntos to the Monmouth County FUemon’s Association w e r e elected. Nnmcd were C h i e f Willinm Smith, Ml-. Pouzenc, Charles Stringer and J o h n Nicholson.

F ire calls fo r Uie month to, dftto nre throe house fiies j,one garage fire and one search fo r a. boy,, . , , ... . •*,

BOB CONSID1NE, National Sports Chairman fo r the Twentieth Anniversary March of Dimes in January, has appealed to sports editors, sportscasters, athletic directors and promoters.for their help to raise funds fo r the care and rehabilitation o f the thousands

;o f victims o f infantile paralysis. A ll local campaign directors are urged to assist the sports world in the coming drive.

Social Club Marks Eighth Anniversary

M rs. Joseph Lanzaro, sr^ Morganvllle, was hostess to the Social Club on Jan. 8 when the group storted its e i ff h t h year. At the business pa rt of the meeting, plans v e re made to have a Christmas club, also the meeting places were de­cided. Mrs. Garrett D e h 18 e, who was unoble to attend.’ was sent a birthday present from her secret, pair"Present at the meeting were Mrs. Martin Smith, s r ., Mrs. Edward Becker, M rs. H a r r y Konowalow , M rs .„ R o b e r t Owens, Mrs, Doriald M 1 1 1 e r, Mrs. August BoJdt, M rs. M ar­tin Smith, j r . , M rs. L e r e y VanPelt. Mrs. JoJm_Wilson, Jr., Mrs. Louis Becker, M rs. Rob­ert Seber, the Misses Ba rba ra Lynn and Christine A n n e Smith. . • - ’ ■— - ■' ■­The next meeting w ill be held at the home o f M rs. Van­P e lt . .

Blair Academy Alumni To Award Scholarships

The B la ir Alumni Associa­tion once again w ill award three new Alumni Association Scholarships Tor the school year 1958-59. The maximum grant of $1400 w ill cover ap­proximately two-thirds o f the boys’ expenses fo r a year at B la ir Academy, Blairstown.

These are the qualifications which an applicant must meet: He must be sponsored by an a lumna o r ap alumnus of B la ir;, must meet the regular entrance requirements fo r the seventh through 11th - grades, and be must give satisfactory evidence-of need fo r financial assistance. \

Applications should he re­ceived by James Howard, Headmaster, not la ter - than Apr. 1. A l l questions in regard to these, scholarships should be dlreoted to - the headmaster—

Holmdel GOP Holds Meeting

New members o f the execu­tive board, as welJ as mem Hprg tit .comm ittees fo r t h e year, were appointed Monday night at the . regular monthly meeting o f the Regu lar Re­publican Organization o f Holm­dei Township at the Farm ers and Gardeners H a ll; Holmdel.Vincent M a n e r i , Charles Roesch and Harold Cantrell wero named to the executive board fo r terms ranging from one-to-three-years respectiveiiy.

H a rry Pitcher was selected as chairman of a p r o g r a m committee and w ill be assisted by. Mrs. Cantrell andvMrs. Wil­liam Cross. A-sunshine com­mittee comprised of M rs. I r a Coons, Mrs. P e te r1 Genovese and M rs. F lorence Burke, also was named.-Andrew Beck, M r. Cantre ll,

Peter Genovese, W illiam Pot­ter and Harold Holmes ’ were appointed to the organization’s annual program committee In charge o f special a ffa irs . J. ,

George Kinkade, president of the organization, urged mem­bers to study the proposed bud­get, submitted by the Holmdel Township Board o f Education. He' suggested that anyone with questions concerning the n pro­posed . appropriations attend the public hearing when it is called by the board ..

.Entertainment- was provided by M r. Holmes who,, showed colored slides o f scenes at. Y e l­lowstone P a rk , Grand Canyon, Yosemito National P a rk , Lake Louise and Banff. R e f r e s la­ments were served. The next meeting w ill be held Monday. Feb. 10. . ' . “ •

On Petit-JuryTwelve area residents n o w

serving a two-week term on the Monmouth County p o u r t petit Jury are', as f o l l o w s ' : George C. Barrett, Matawan: T h o m a s F . Burke, Union Beach; George P . C r a m e r , Holjndel Township: Miss Ag­nes Fanning, Keansburg; C lif­ford P , H lldebrant, Matawan Township: John B . Jones, Key­port; - F rank F . Lapa, Jr., Matawan; John R . S h a f t o , Matawan; A l o i s S lefringer, Keansburg; M rs. M ary J a n e S m i t h Matawan Township; Kenneth B . Wharton, Keyport, and Mrs. M argeret Whitehead, Keyport. ‘ ~

Evening School jSef For Hcune Gardeners

The CoUege of.Agriculture at Rutgers University, in co-oper­ation with the Monmouth Coun­ty Extension Service and the Board of Education o i the Bor­ough o f Shrewsbury, w ill d ffer a gardening short rCourse school fo r horne^ownerG\in the near future. Prefim inaryfp lans, announced by Monmouth Coun­ty Agricultural Agent, M. A. C la rk , include evening sessions fo r six successive .Wednesdays beginning Feb . 26.

The Shrewsbury School Audi- - torium , Obre P I., w ill be the meeting place and members o f tlie Rutgers faculty w ill be the Instructors. Such topics as “ Planning the Landscape,'* “ Chosing Better P lan ts fo r the Home Grounds," “ C a r e of Shade Trees,” “ Insect and Dis­ease Control,” “ Care and Man­agement o f Lawns,” “ P roduc­ing A n n u a l and Perennial F low ers,” and other related topics will be in the curricu­lum . t ‘ .

Fo rm al announcements and registration blanks w ill be. available from the County Ex­tension Service in the near fu ­ture. Attendance w ill be lim it­ed to the size of the room , but tlicro is no geographical te rrlr to ry restriction. The C o u n t y Agent suggests that Interested people who want to be sure of a place may send post .cards to his office, *20 Court St.. F reehold , a n d reservation blanks w ill be mailed to them on a first-come, first-s e r v e d basis.

NJ Grange To Meet :Subordinate and P o m o n a

Grange officers ln five Central J e r s e y conntfes. Including, Monmouth and Middlesex, wlU meet In the Hlghtstown High School, Hlghtstown, on F riday evening1 a t 7 p.m . to partici­pate in an instruction session ccnducted by state grqrige of-, fleers and committee o h a I r- men. In. addition to officers, a ll grange members who wish, to attend are welcome, according to an announcement by F rank­lin c , Nixon, Vlncentown, mas­te r of the state grailge. A ssist-' ing Mr. Nbcori w ill be State Lecturer Andre Mallegol, Old B r i d g e , who w ill instruct Grange lecturers.

10 years from today,, things w ill look rcs ie r‘11 you p lan fo r them througb Investment In U . S. Savings Bonds NOW.

s i

r.ATO} m m•w7* * •**' n,CT I If! v f r i n

Planning A Wedding?- Visit the office of The Keyport Weekly and

The Matawan Journal, 52 W. Front St., Keyport.-T'Si'rlnc—T i T j - ' i / " v V- -S'". S' ............... - " • , : * . ' . • - ;.‘ - There you' will find the finest and latest style ’

r Wedding Invitations anywhere in the country .. r—

v .; . also the greatest selection to choose from for

. your individual choice. . . , " “

All Invitations jure packed with double envelopes and tissues. : . ; :

To be socially correct order respond cards and reception cards In your order. . . ‘ ■ . ■ '• ' ■: ■ . • .■ ■

- Write name, of person invited'on each lnzlde envelope.

_ Fold all invitations inside and place tissue upon printed page.

. As a Free Gift Offer you will receive with your order a Gold Keep-stake (your invitation made In gold-mounted In an album), also a booklet "How To Make Your Wedding Run Smoothly"; and if your older Is 100 or more invitations you will receive 100 free white lnformals and

. 100 envelopes with your name beautifully thermographed.

Also affine assortment of:

• Engagement Announcements

• Birth Announcements

• Book Matches

• Napkins A- “■o'At Ih e

Brown Publishing and Printing Co.Publishers O f i

T he K eyport W eekly - T he M a t a w a n J ournal52 W. FRO ffT ST. K E Y P O R T 7-3030

t‘MS t« V th •fid-

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Page 7: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

Foul- Held For

, Two men and two women, In. eluding a bayshore area fcouple, have been ordered held fo r the Monmouth County Grand Ju ry on charges o f robbery and atrocious assault and battery on an Atlantic Highlands man In Middletown Township Jan . 7. . ,

James T . Saundefs, Perth Amboy, and John T . D i x o n , Holly H ill T ra ile r P a rk , West Keansburg, Ra ritan Township, were committed to Monmouth County Jail. F reehold , Middle­town F riday by Magistrate W. G ilbert Manson after t h e y were unable to meet ball , o f 12500 each. •" Their alleged accomplices, M rs. Beatrice M ille r, P e r t h Amboy, and M rs. Alice T. D ix­on, Lincoln Ave., Matawan, were released Thursday in $1000 ball each to await action o l the grand Jury, ,

Detective ,Sgt. Joseph Mc- ' Carthy- satd M rs. Dixon is tbe sister-in-law o f Dixon and the sister o f Saunders,

: The fou r -allegedly robbedand a s s a u l t e d Vanderbilt Boyce, F irs t Ave., Atlantic Highlands, In the Chapel H ill section o f the township, Jan. 7,

..police said..., - ........- Sgt. McCarthy said M rs. D ixon and M rs. M ille r lured M r. Boyce Into their car after meeting him In an Atlantic Highlands tavern . -

Sgt. McCarthy said the wom- „ en drove M r. Boyce to a dark

spot In the Chapel H ill section where they parked. Saunders and D ixon , who bad been bid­ing In the back seat o f the car. then popped up and assaulted M r. Boyce, said Sgt._ McCar­thy.. The policeman said one o f the men struck M r. Boyce over

...the bead with a revo lver and took about $73 from him . _

Sgt. McCarthy said the case was .solved when Saunders was

"arrested In connection with an entry o f a P o rt Monmouth

..home Jan. 7 ... Sgt. 'McCarthy said a fter the break-in Saun- d e fs . was seen leaving t h e home by neighbors in a car la t­

t e r . Identified as tho same one used. In the assau lt and rob- be ry tac lden t.

‘ Po lice Capt. W illiam W o o d- ward and Detective J o h n B , K e lly worked with Sgt. McCar- thy .on the case ."-” 7 ' ' '

Detective K e lly said Saun­ders w ill not be charged at this time on the breaking and

’ entry and? larceny o f the P o rt ! Monmouth home.

Science has learned m o r e about" can te r since W orld W ar I I than In a ll history, accord­ing to the Amerlqan Cancer Society. Thanks to the support o f thF Amefnsan people, scleht- . ls t s , working, under g r a n t s,

, .come, up with new knowledge ■of the dlsease-qlP-building ' to Ithe day when cancer w ill, no lon g e r be considered as a th reat to life .

Belford Man Promoted By Atco

Martin E . Knndsen ,' Be lfo rd , new sta ff m em ber..at the Architectural T iling Company* Keyport. Is shown above at hla work, as pilot p lant technician, to which post he recently was prom oted^ His duties consist o f layout and operation o f the new pilot plant and follow-up o f new processes In production.M r. Knudsen was a supervisor at ATCO from 1917-1950 at which time he le ft the p lant tem porarily . Ue rejoined the plant In Decemher 1957.* He received his education a t B rooklyn Technical Iligh School and studied e lectrica l and mechanical engineering at Cooper Union, New Y o rk . ' •During World War 11, M r. Knudsen served with the "F irs t Special Service Forces” in the Mediterranean Theater o f O r­ations. lie was discharged in 1915; , _M r. Knudsen Is the captain and, p ast7 president o f the In­dependent F ire Company, Be lfo rd :'

NOTESAbonl Area Men and Women

• in the'

Armed Services

Wants Courts To

Mull Expulsions

Phelan Promoted.Pfc.' Theodore A. Phelan , jr . ,

son o f M r. and M rs, -Theodore A, Phelan , 44: Middlesex St.', Matawan, who ls .^ iile f switch-, "board operator at F o rt Bragg , N .-C ., recently wns promotedto his.p resent rn iik ., ..............„,.„P fc . Phelan 'febfc'-his” , -basic' training at F o rt Bennlng, Ga., and attended the Southeastern Signal School,' F o rt G o r d o n, Ga. He entered-the A rm y inMarch 1957. . -: -

He Is a graduate o! St. M ary ’s H igh school, South Am­boy, Class of. 1951, and fo rm er­ly was employed by the Gen­era l Ceram ics Corp., Keasbey. He Is secretory o f the Mata­wan F irs t Aid Squad,-. In c .; a delegate member o f the 11th District,. New Jersey: F irs t Aid Council; a member o f the Washington Engine.C o.. Mata­wan, andw as a representative o f the 11th district on t b e "G o ld C ross," the state l lr s t aid magarinff;- ‘ — *— **•

P fc . Phelan spent the Christ­mas holiday visiting his par­ents. .

Auto Insurance that is Saving Money for Careful Motorists .

P r e m i u m P a y a b l e i nE A S Y I N S T A L L M E N T S .......

JtossW. Maghan Agency Real Estate—InsuranceMATAWAN 138 Main S t _ MA 1-0003

Auriemma Participates In “ Exercise Snowdrift*'

U . S. A rmy Specialist Third Class Louis R . A u 'r 1 e in m a, whose wife, Carol, lives at 280 Washington, S t., Keyport, pa r­ticipated ln "E x b rc ls e S n o w-drlft,"- .a recent state-widecommunications test In 'A ri­zona, .

Specialist Aurtemma, a pole lineman In Company JB of the 16th Signal Battalion" at Fo rt Hauchuca.. A rlz ., was f a c e d with the problems o f working In Inclement weather and as­sisting In the mission o f install- lng,:and operating communica­tion equipment under adverse coiidltions. . ‘

The 24-year-old soldier, son o f M r. and M rs. F r a n k Auriemma, .316 Broadway, Keyport, entered the A rmy In Ju ly 1956. and completed basic tra ln ln g r 'a t . F o rt Hood, Tex. .While a ’civilian, he worked fo r the New Y o rk & L o n g Branch -R ailroad , Red Bimk,— F e rm Graduates __

U . 8 . A rm y P fc . Kenneth Ferm .-son-of-M rs.-M -l-c h;we-l R iordnn, Un ion -Beach , a n d Evan Fe rm , Koyport, recently graduated from Medic School. F o rt Sam Houston, Texas, '

A graduate o f Keyport High School, P fc . F e rm enlisted In tho A rm y In March-1957. He now Is stationed a t tho F o rt D lx Hospital, where he is a medic. .

Ilou lday In Korea U . 8 . A rm y P fc . A lbert H.

Houlday, whose wife, G loria , Uvfis at 19 Shadynook S t., Key­port, Is a member o f the F irs t C ava lry Division In K o rea , -

P fc ., Houlday, a riflem an. In Company B o f the division's Fourth Cava lry , entered t h e A rmy In 1951.

Monmouth County Prosecu­to r Vincent P . Keuper recom ­mended la s t week that youths expelled from hltfh school fo r misconduct be prosecuted as Juvenile delinquents. Such ac­tion . Is urged, lie said,- as a crime'prevention m easure ’ and to help rehabilitate tho child.

Tlie prosecutor, who h a s stressed preventive crim ino lo­gy In his relations with police departments and with the pub­lic , sa ljl children ousted from school often a re free to I d l e their tim e fo r extended periods and a re like ly to fa l l Into a life o f crime.By subjecting expelled chil­d ren to Jurisdiction ■ o f t h e county juvenile court, o r to. a municipal juvenile conference c im m lttee ,’ M r. Keuper s a i d , some fo rm o f control by an es­tablished authority w ill be as­sured. '- -The prosecutor so ld bis view oil how to deal w ith expelled children!-was asked by a sh o re superintendent ol schools. This source pointed out, the prose­cutor- said, that ono state law requires children to a t t e n d school until they a re 16-yedrs- o ld , while another law provides fo r expulsion of lncprrlg lb les at any age.Conduct bad enough to w ar­ra n t expulsion, M r. Keuper said, a lso would constitute' Ju­venile delinquency In - m o s t cases. Juvenile delinquency, according to state law Is any act’ . by someone under 18 which. If committed by an, old­e r person, would be a c rlm ej o r violate a penal law o r mu­nicipal ordinance.

The prosecutor said he Is w riting to a ll superintendents having charge of high schools In Monmouth County outlining his recommendation. Ho w i l l advise, lie said, that tlie super­intendent or another school o f­fic ia l, sign the necessary .com­plaints to bring e x p U 1 s t o n cases before appropriate Juven­ile authorities. • •

Some offenders, he conceded, m ay require commitment to a state Institution, Qtbefa m a y be placed on probation and re­turned to--school,- or may bo placed In , private sc lioo ls- -or public vocational schools out­side the eounty. ,

M r. Keuper said he realized that many children become problems In general h i g h schools because availab le stu­dy/courses do not suit t li e I r special needs. M r. K e u p e r said lie had discussed his rec­ommendation with Jack Wein- heim er, chief -county proba­tion o fficer, and that M r. Wetn- helm er was In fu ll accord.

Tho prosecutor said that oc­casionally— parents com p la in that their children havo becrt expelled unfairly . By bringing expulsion cases before a Juven­ile confcrencojcomm lttee, o r a judge, he saidj the ouster auto? Tfvatlcnlly would bo reviewed and. If it nppears to-hnvo-been Im proper, can bo re-opened.

Euneral Services. Joseph Soheoker / \Funera l services wcro held

Friday ,at 2 p .m . at tho—John J . R yan , Home' fo r Funera ls, Keansburg, with tlio ,R ev . Rob ­ert B lackman, pastor o f t h e F irs t Methodist Church, Bel- fo rd , officiating, fo r J o s e p h Schecker, 59, o f 40 C a rr Avo., Keansburg, who died Monday, Jan . 6, 195B, of a heart attack, ut the Fredericks Photogelatlne Press, Inc., New York , where he was employed as a press­man, Cremation was In. Rose H ill Crematory, Linden.

M r,“ Schecker was born in New York . He lived in Keans­burg fo r three years. t

There are no survivors,M rs. Helen Gorey

A high requiem mass ytaa celebrated Saturday at 9 a .m . in St. Ann’s Church, K e a n s - burg, with tlio Rev. Stanley Levandeskl, pastor, officiating, fo r M rs. Helen Oorey, 179 Sea Breeze Way, Keansburg, who died Wednesday, Jan. 8, 1958, at the home o f her daughtor. Mrs. G e r t r u d e McLoone, Keansburg. Interment was In Holy Cross Cemetery, Brook­lyn, under the direction of tho John J . Ryan Home fo r Funor- tils, Keansburg r ’

Bom In Brooklyn, M rs. Gor* cy was the dnughtor o f tlio late H u g h Macalcer nnd Anna (Thomas) Macaleer. She was a communicant of St. A n n’s Church, Keansburg, and was a retired legal secretary.

Surviving nre one son, ‘Wil­liam ; three other daughters, M rs. M argaret Mullen, Levlb* town; M rs. Regina H u r l e y , Pceksk lll, N. Y-tl and -M rs,-Hel­en T lmpcrt, Keansburg.

A gravy stain on your best tablecloth? Sponge It with cold or lukewarm water to remove the starch, says Monmouth County Home Agent M rs. Lo r- na K , White. Never use h o t water as It sets the stain. I f grease remains, wash stain with warm , soapy water o r sponge with carbon tetrachlor­ide. ’ .

EACH FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTFor Your Entertainment

FRIDAY .

Peter MilanoAnd His Electric Spanish Guitar

VSATURDAY

Ray DaneAt The Piano

Bill Hohesstein„ At The Piano

James Rapollo.- At The Drums

Keyport 7-1164 • Ample Parking

And Cocktail BcrfTU P BUILD ING 1VITU THE A EBO PLhN K ON TOP

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Although science has not yet found the answer to the csncor prob lem , the American Can­cer Society states that Inten­sive research has produced, new and sa fe r surgical proced­ure and more powerful nnd m ore effective radiation which have resu lted In a higher curs ra te .

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Page 8: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

Page Eight Ia n . 16, 1958

B i r t h sFarley

M r. and Mra. CharleB Fa r­ley, 46 Wilson AVe., Matawan, aye the parents o f a daughter, - born Wednesday, Jan, 8, 1958, In Monmouth Memorial Hospl- t<tl, The baby weighed seven

. . jiounds, 13 ounces, and has■ been named Debra Ann, M rs.

F a rley Is the fo rm er Joan. Galosk, Matawan,

SicaA d a u g h t e r was born

Wednesday, Jan . B, 1958, in Monmouth Memorial Hospital, to M r. and Mrs. R ez le r l Sica, Route 34, Matawan.

Mitchell M r. and M rs. Robert L .

, Mitchell, '192A Cottrell Rd., Cheesequake, are the parents

• of a daughter, horn In P e r t h . Amboy Hospital.

. Muller: M r. and M rs. Robert ( fu lle r .

B ox 29, Matawan, are the par­ents o f a don, born Tuesday,

— Jan .._6 , .1958,. In Monmouth M emorial Hospital.

- GuUirle A son was born T u e s d a y,

Jan . 6 , 1958, In R lvervlew Hos­pital, to M r. and Mrs. Edward Guthrie, 91 Shore B lvd ., Keans-

• burg. . .. - ■ " ' - .......... E b s u . ...........v A daughter wns born Tues­

day, Jan . 8.' 1958, in R lvervlew I’ Hospital,' to M r. and Mrs. Wll-

11am Esau , 6 Amhurst L a n e , Hazlet'.

HannonMr. and M rs. Robert Han­

non. 16 Raccoon D r., Hazlet. a re the parents o f n son, born

..Thursday,' Jan . D, -1958, in ' . Monmouth M em oria l Hosp.ltal.

- : - - W alling ' , :_ Stttff/Sgt. F rank Walling and

M rs. W alling, Main St., Key­. port, are the parents o f -a ---daughter,- 'born Wednesday,

Doc. 25, 1957, In F o rt M o n ­mouth. Hospital. ^ •

Mehienbeck M r. and M rs. John Mehlen-

beck-, Route 38, Hazlet, are the■ parents o f a son, born Thurs-

‘ day, Jan, 9, 1958rto-Perth Am­boy Hospital... This la the cou- pie’s firs t child. \' .B en e s ta

. A son was born In Pe rth Am­boy Hospital, io-Mc. and Mrs. M ichael Benesta, County Rd ., Cllffwood. ; ’ '

_ _ ~ - . Caparlsi _ ;__. ” M r. and' S frs. 'V ilo CaparlB,

16 Cottage R d „ Keansburg, are tbe parents^)! a'son, bom Snt-

.. urday, Jan ; l l , 1968,. to, Blvor- view Hospital, ._ ................ _.G o ld

Couple Wed At St. Joseph’s

MB., MBS. FRANCIS CAHILL

A daughter was born Satur­day; Jan. 11, ‘ 1958, in R lver-

__vlew Hospital to M r. and M rs. .A ip a~ ^ O o !d^ 55 rt lb e rty -8 tr ,- W est Keansburg. ,. ' ,Guth - . ' '' A son was born Sunday, Jan .12/ 1958, in F ltk ln MemorialHospital, to M r. and Mrs. Richard Outh, E D I, Matawan., Dugan - .

M r, , and M ra. F rank J . Du- Ban, 441 Atlantlo Ave., Mata­

- wan, are the parents of a son, born Sunday, Jan . 12, 1958, in Monmouth Memorial Hospital.

. ; M illerA daughter was born Sun­

day, Jan . 12, 1958, In M o n ­mouth Memorial Hospital, to M r. and M rs, W alter W, MI1I- er, 9 Church St., Keansburg,

Ilun lcy -. M r. and M rs. Francis Hun-

ley , Matawan Township, a r e the parents o f n daughter, born Saturday. Jan , 11, 1958, in Monmouth M em oria l Hospital.

, Somenza A son was born Saturday,

Jan . "11, 1958, In Monmouth M em oria l Hospital, to M r. and M rs. Carmen Semenza, Brook- side T ra ile r P a rk , R o u t e 36, Keyport.

" "" ........ 1 FoxMr. ond M rs. Thomas Fox,

84 Washington P I., Kennshurg, are the parents o f a son, born Sunday, Jan . 12, 195B, In R lye r- vlew Hospital.

1 B a rre ttA daughter was born .Satu r­

day, J a n . 11, 1958, In Mon-

Miss Margaret, Auriemma, daughter o f M r. and M r s F ra n k Auriemma, 316 Broad­way, Keyport, become the bride o f F rancis Cahill, son of M rs. John J . Cahill, 416 Lorll- la rd Ave,, Union Beach,, and the late M r. Cahill, Saturday, Jan . 11, 1058, a t 10 a.m . In St. Joseph’s Church, Keyport. The Rev.1 John Hendrlcka officiated nt the double ring ceremony and celebrated the nuptial mass which fpllowed. M r s . M ichael ,Cox, soloist, was ac­companied on the organ by Miss Loretta Durante.

Given hi marriage by her fa ther, the-bride" w o reT r fu ll- length gown of lace trimmed with nylon tulle. The fitted bod­ice had a boat neckline, long tapering sleeves and the skirt term inated In a chnpel-length tra in . H er fingertip-length veil o f Illusion lo l l from n crown of penrllzed orange blossoms and she carried a p rayer book adorned with white orchids.

Miss Nancy Auriemma was her sister’ s maid o f honor. Her waltz-lengtb gown o f red velvet had a snbrlna neckline, three- quarter length sleeves and a dropped waist. Sho wore a matching hat with a nose veil and carried a cascade bouquet o f , red and white carnations.—

The .bridesmaids were Miss M urie l CaUUl, Union Beach, sister, o f the brldc-£r:ooin; Miss Alice Tierney, The B r o n x , cousin o f the bridegroom, and Mlsn N lchollna S trnn le ro ,.K ey­port. They wore the same en­

semble as the honor attendnnt and carried sim ilar bouquets.

Eugene Ca lilll, Portsmouth, V a „ brother o f tho b r 1 d e­groom, was best man. Usher­ing were John J , Cahill, Union Beach, brother of the bride­groom; Dominick Fcrrnnte, Koyport, nephew of tho bride, and John Droughton, Keyport.

F o r hendaughter’s wedding, M rs. Auriemma chose a rose velvet afternoon gown with a matching hat and accessories and an orchid-corsage. T l i e bridegroom's mother selected an aqua afternoon gown styled with n lace bodice and crepe skirt with- a white bat and ac­cessories and. an orchid cor­sage. . ’ •

A, reception followed at Buck­S m 11 h ’s R estau ran t,1 E ast Keansburg, a fter which t h e couple le ft fp r F lorida. F o r traveling, .the , bride wore a charcoal wool suit with a b lack hat and accessories and a Cor­sage of white orchids.

The bride attended Matawan High School and Is employed by Ganshlre Manufacturing Co., Keyport, She 1b a member o f Our Lady of Mt. C a r m e l Society,,

The -bridegroom graduated from Keyport High School and served two years with the U , 8. Army, He Is employed at the Hazlet Lunch, and Is a mem ­ber' o f1' St. -Joseph's Council 3402, Knights'-' o f ' Columbus;K eypo rt.-................ - - ----- The_couple_wlll_reslde-at..204F irs t St., Keyport.

EngagementsTufts-W ltzel

. M r. and M rs. George A. W lt- ze l,. 123 Ocean B lvd ., C l i f f - wood Beaoh,, announce tbs en­gagement o f tbe lr daughter, Lynda, to Eugene H. Tufts, son o f M r. and M rs. Clinton R . Tufts. H iram , Me.

Miss W ltzel Is a graduate of Sayrev ille High School and is employed by McCarter, Eng­lish and Studer, Newark. M r. Tufts attended Fryeburg/Acad­emy, F ryeburg . Me., ami serv­ed three years In the \S. S . M a­rine Corps. He Is employed by the Jersey Central Power & Light Co. .

A June wedding Is planned.Kolodile j-Rohde

M r. and M rs. George Rohde, 6 Mason D r ., R a ritan T o w n ­ship, announce the e n g a g e ­ment o f their daugher, P risc i l­la , to Joseph G. KolodzleJ, son o f M r. and M rs. Joseph A. K o - lpdzle], 108 P a rk Ave., Union Beach.

Miss Rohde Is a senior at Keyport High School. M r. K o - lodztej attended Middlesex Coupty Vocational and Teohnl- ca l High School, Perth Amboy,

No date has been set- fo r the wedding. ; —

mouth Memorial Hospital, to M rrn nd M rs, John Barrett,. 32 Wcidon Rd., Matawan.

• \ Lucttchau ", Aerographer’s M a t e F irs t C lass Edward J t Luettcbau, and M rs. Luettcliau are the parents o f tho lr firs t child, n daughter, born Sunday, Dec. 15, 1057, In St. Jude’s Hospital, Fu lle rton , Calii. The baby.has been named Deborah Linn. M ra. Luetlchau is the fo rm er Miss Marie Relslnger, Hazlet. She Is' the niece of M r, and M rs. Theodore Bailey, Haz­le t ,' " _ ”

Castellano A daughter was born In

Perth Amboy Hospital, to M r. and Mrs. Salvatore Castellano, 11 Ta llen P r „ Hazlet.

RosatoM r. and M rs. Justin Rosato,

Blondl Ave,, Cllffwood, are tho parents o l a daughter, born In South Amboy Hospital,

• Ward A daughter was b o r n In

South Amboy Hospital, to M r. and Mrs. Frank- Ward, 7 Brown Court, Madison Pa rk ,

Regan 'Mr, and M rs. W alter Regan,

151 Princeton Rd., Madison Pa rk , are tlie parents of a son, born In South Amboy Hospital.

- P a r r i s h Mr, and Mi's. Stanley P a r ­

rish, 27 Atlantlo Avo., Mata­wan, nro tlio parents ot a daughter, born Tuesday, J_a n.

1,4, 1958, In Monmouth Memor­ia l Hospital. -

' Montefusco _ A daughter was born Tues­day, Jan . 14, 1958, In R lve r- vlow Hospital, to M r. and M rs. John Montefusco, 14 Plnevlew Ave., Keansburg,

s K lrchhe lm cr Mr, and Mrs.- Hans K lrchhel-

mer, 122 Southwood D r., Old Brldgo, arc the parents o f a son, born Sunday, Jan. 12, 1958,-In Perth Amboy Hospital.

- Cuoccl. , . .A daughter was born In

South Amboy Hospital, to M r. and M rs, .Maurice CUoccl, 73 West F ron t St., Keyport.

Baker -M r, and M rs. W illiam Bakor,

Beacon H ill Rd ., Matawan, are the parents o f a son, bom In South Amboy Hospital.

Sourda „ : . • ­A son was born in South Am­

boy Hospital, to M r, and M rs. Charles Sourda, 289 A l p i n e Way, Laurence Harbor.

- DolleyMr. and M rs. John Dolley,

82 , Pacific B lvd., Cllffwood, nro the parents of a son, born In South Amboy Hospital.

Planning A Vacation ?- .. by ... . '

Steamship Or Plane Prompt Reservations

BROWN TRAVEL BUREAUDay Gails: Valley 6*4141 . 214 3inut>- sc:'. Pe fih Amboy *

7 Brqadwoj, Keyport Night Calls: Keyport 7-5031

On And After January 15th' The Following Stores Will .Close On Wed. At 1 P.M.Prager's35 IV. F ron t St.,

K eypo rt

K E Y P O R TJEWELERS & OPTICIANS

49 W. F ron t Nt., Keyport

Will FiledEm ma T. Kuppcs

Em ma T . Kappes, Holmdel Township, who died Aug. 11, 1951, etated In her w ill that her estate ls_to_be shared equally by a brother, Grove L, Thnck er, and a nephew, W i l l i a m Grovo Thacker. Mrs. Kappes’ brother was named~cxceutor,

B a p t ism B rian David IluleJ

Brian David HuloJ, Infant son o f M r. and Mrs. Raymond HuleJ, Union Bcacli, was bap­tized at tho regu lar Sunday servlco, Jan . 12, 1958, In the Keyport Reformed Church, by tlio Rov. Roderick N.- Do- Young, pastor.

Letwcnskl-VopatM r.. and M rs. Charles Vonat

41 Lake Ave., Metuchen, an­nounce t h e engagement ot their daughter, Pa tric ia , to Louis Letwenskl, Jr., son of M r. and M rs. Louis Letwenskl, 1223 F lorence Ave., U n 1 o n Beach. ,

Miss Vopat was graduated from Metuchen High School, Class o f 1955, and Is employ­ed as a stenographer by Bo- cony Pain t Products Co., Me­tuchen. M r. Letwenskl g ra d u a l ed from Keyport H lgh-School, C la ss ' o f 1953, and'attended Rutgers University. He Is em­ployed by Gulton Industries,Metuchen. . . . . ,. -.....

No date has been set fo r . thewedding.

Protsm an-T Ice .Mr. and M rs. Theodore Tice,

30 Main St., Keyport, announce the engagement o f t h o l r daughter,"Joan Ann, to T e rry E . Protarnan, son o f M r, and Mrs. E lm e r C. Protsm an, 1107 Moore St., Lacrosse , W ls.

Miss ‘Tice Is a graduate o f Keyport High School, C lass - o f 1956. M r. Protsm an attended Logan High School, LaCrosse. He now is serving with the U . 6 . Navy at Quonset Point, R . I .

No date has bocn set fo r thowedding1;"- -*•*■ - - -

Rosato-Kutschman M r. 1 and M rs. W i l l i a m

Kutschman, Tampa," F la „ an­nounce the engagement of their daughter, Carol, 377 Lee Ave., Laurence Harbor, to V in­cent Rosato, son o f M r, and; M rs. Samuel Rosato,1 Blondl S t., Cllffwood,

Miss Kutschman attended SayfeVille1 High School and Is employed by the New Jersey B e ll Telephone Co.. to the Key­port exchange. Her fiance at­tended Matawan High School, served two years in tho U. S. A rmy, and Is employed by Jus­tin Rosatb, e lectrical contract­or, Laurence Harbor.

. Kutscbman-Vroom M r. and M rs. Harold Vroom ,

776 Greenwood Ave., L a u - r - once-Harbor, announce the en­gagement o f .their daughter, G race Louise, to Robert T. Kutschman, 377 Lee A _v e „ Laurence Harbor, son o f Mr, and M rs. W illiam Kutschman, Tam pa ,'F la . '

Miss- Vroom Is a graduate of Sayreville High School ond Is employed by Western Electric Co., Kearny . Her fiance Is a graduate o f Sayreville H i g h Sohool and Is In the construc­tion business..

No date has been set fo r the wedding.VanDevcnter-ninds

M r, and M rs. Albert Hinds, Texas Rd., Matawan, announce tho engagement of their daugh­ter, Dorothy Joan, to R a l p h VanDevcnter. Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph VanDeventer, sr., Edison.

Miss Hinds attended Mata­wan High School and now Is employed by Food Fa ir, Inc.. Sayreville . Her llnnce attended Vocational and Technical High School, Forth Ainboy, nnd Is employed by Food Fa ir, Inc., Sayreville , as’ a manager-trato- ee. "

No dnto bns been set fo r tho wedding.1 Minlcr-Wcslerdalil M r. nnd Mrs. Robert Wester

dnlil, Holland Rd., Holmdel, announce the engagement of tlie lr daughter, Marjorie Ann, to Robert H. Minton; son of Mr; nnd Mrs. Russoll H. .Min­ton , 01 Church St., F a ir Hnven.

Miss-Westerdahl,-a-graduate of Koyport High School, is a student nurse to tlio Perth Am­boy Qcnernl Hospital’s School o f Nursing. M r, Minton w a s graduated from Rumson High S c h o o l , attended Monmouth College, West Long D r n n p h, nnd was graduated from New

«!*<•

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Open Da lly to 6 P.M Keyport■ Thursday Evening ’il l 9 r .M .

Area Engagements Announced

.1— J, f-ft, u-rvt* ssL.

MISS LYNDA WETZEL M IS8 PR ISC ILLA ROHDE M ISS PATR IC IA VOPAT

Yo rk University. He served to the U . S. Marine Corps and-Is employed by Ingerso ll R a n d Co., New Y o rk . _____ _

Dudley-Meyer .M r. and M rs. Henry Meyer,

680 State Highway, Laurence Harbor, announce the engage­ment of their daughter, M ary Ann, to Herbert John Dudley, son o f M r. and M rs. A lbert Dudley,—13-West-SL>-Rumson.-

Mlss Meyer Is a graduate of St. M a ry ’s High School, South Amboy, and the F e lt ahd T a r­rant School o f Comptomctry, Newark. Her fiance was grad­uated from Rumson H i g h School. Both are employed by the Western E lec tric Co., Un­ion.A spring wedding Is planned.

. Kutschmon-tVllson M r. -and M rs. Charles W il­son, 48 Charles S t., Roselle

P a rk , announce the e n g a g e ­ment o f their daughter, Joyce, to W illiam Kutschman, Jr., 377 Lee 'A ve ., Laurence Harbor, son o f M r; and M rs. W illiam Kutschman, Tampa, F la .

Miss W ilson was graduated from Roselle P a rk High School ond the Newark Presbyterian' Hospital School o f Nursing. She to employed In the operat­ing room -at the hospital. M r, Kutschman . w a s graduated Irom Sayreville High S c h o o l ond served two years to the U. S. Army. He is employed by the Jersey Centra l Power & Light Co., Lakewood, •

A fa ll wedding Is planned. .. Rook-O livcr -

M r. and M rs. Ro land L . O li­ver, 830 Fo res t Ave., Laurence Harbor, announce tbe engage­ment of their daughter, K a th ­leen Jeanne, to A lfred L a w- rence Rock, son o f M r, and M rs. A lfred J . Rock, 5 St. JohnAve,, P lottsbure, N .Y . -

Miss O liver Is a graduate o f Sayreville High School, C lass of 1055, and is .employed a t the Social Sccurlty. Adm lnlstratlon office, Perth Amboy, Her fl- ancc was graduated f r o m Plattsburg High School, Class of 1953, and now Is serving In the U . 8 . Navy aboard the U .S.S. Toledo, stationed' at Long Boach, Calif.

A fa l l1 wedding Is planned.Burcknrd-Conovcr

M rs. Maude Sickles, School St., M arlboro, announces t h e engagement o f he r daughter, Miss L illian Ba rba ra Conover, to James Ph illip Burckard , son o f M r. and M rs, Ph illip J . Burckard , 1002 Hcck St., As­bury P a rk .

Mlqs Conover Is a graduate of Freeho ld High School and Is employed by A S M Knragheu- s lan , Inc ., F r e e h o l d . Mr. Burckard Is a graduate o f As­bury P a rk High School and at­tended Monmouth College, West Long Branch, He served two years to the U , s . Air Force , and now Is an engineer­ing student at Georgia Insti­tute o f Technology, Atlanta,Ga. _____

A September wedding Is Jplanned. - ‘

- ObituariesM rs. A lbert Etranbel

M rs. Rosa Stroubel, 87, o f 620 Cambridge Ave., U n i o n Beach, died Sunday, J an , 12, 1958, at her home following a long illness. She was bom to Germany.

M rs. Straubel had lived to Union-Beach fo r the post 40 years. She was the wife o f thela to-A lbcrt-Straube l, -----

Surviving nre one son, F red , Irv ington ; one daughter. Mrs*. A lbert A. P la th , with whonu- she resided: fo u r grandchil^ dren, and fou r great-grandchil­dren. .

F une ra l services were held Wedhesday at I p.m . at the Day Fa iie ra l Home, Keyport, with the R ev . H a rry Dutt, pas­to r o f the F irs t Congregational Church, Union Beach, offic iat­ing. Interm ent was to Cedar- wood Cemetery, Keyport.'

- John W illiam Witz, Sr, John W illiam -W itz , s r.. 112

’ ’L " S t „ .Seaside Parkgsojitod Satu rday/ Jan . 11; -1958, lri Po in t P leasant Hospital; fo llow ­ing a short illness. M r. Witz was born In Newark, the son of the late Henry and M argar­et (W oodruff) W itz. -

M r. W itz resided to SeasideP a rk fo r the past fou r years. , , ____H i " fo rm e rly was. o f E a s -U ^

Niece O f Matawan Residents Married

M rs. C. M e rrill Brown, W ll llam sv llle , N. Y ., announces the m arriage o f her daughter, C aro l Ann, to D r . David M ill­e r, New Y o rk , on M o n d a y , Dec, 23, 1957, in St. Louis, Mo. Miss Brown also is the daugh­ter o f the late C. M e r r i l l Brown, fo rm e rly o f M ataw an,! and the nleqc o f Miss J . Mabel Brown and M rs. Ra lph W. Her­rick , Matawan.

T lie bride is a member o f the facu lty o f tho Un iversity o f Ca lifo rn ia at Berkeley. D r. M ille r Is a resident physician at Barnes Hospital, St. Louis, and w ill continue tbero n e x t year with a fellowship from the Am erica^ Cancer. Society, fp r research in hermctologyl ‘ -At-Uio conclusion o f t h i s school term , M rs. M ille r will Join her husband In St. Louis, where they w ill m ake t h o l r home a fter Feb. 1. .

This week why don’t you look through your church win dows . . * F rom the inside.

Orange. He was a member of. the Brotlierhpod of Ra ilroad Trainmen. •

Surviving nre bis wife, M rs. Marie (B erg ) W itz; a son, J ., W illiam , Jr., Holmdel; a sister, Mrs.. M a r g a r e t Stevenson, H illsboro, C a lif., and a grand­son. ’

Funo ra l services were held Wednesday at 2 p:m. at the Robert C. N ary Funera l Home, Manasquan. Interm ent was in Greenwood Cemetery,. B rie lle .

Ihobcrt Ziessler ' Robert ziessier, 77, o f 3 Itno ll T e rr ., Hazlet, died F r i ­day, Jan . 10, 1058,'in*' R ivcr-Vie'w Hospital, ^ .pancq r* .;feorn in Ba ltim ore , M d .,-h e lidd lived most o f his life in South Orange and Irvington p rio r to moving~to Hazlet a year ago. He_was a construc­tion engineer fo r the McCrory Department Store chain 20 years before his retirement. 12years'agoT- ’ .....................-----------

Mr.' Ziessler h a d . taught mathematics and construction s te e r at night : fo r 37 years at the Newark School o f F ine nnd Industria l Arta. He was a grad­uate o f Newark College o f En ­gineering and a member o f Irvington Lodge of E lks .

Surviving are his wife, Mrs;. Helen (Yenger) Z iessler; a son, Robert, Jr., Minneapolis, Minn.; a daughter, M rsr L o r­raine Parker* Holmdel; f i v e grandchildren and three great­grandchildren. '

Funera l services were held Tuesday at 9:15 a .m .-a t t h e George Abr Funera l H o m e , Irvington. At 10 a.m . a high requiem mass was celebrated in the Church o f St. Pau l the Apostle, Irvington. Interment was In Holy Sepulcher Ceme­te ry , Irvington.

Clarence W. Michel C larence W. Michel, 74, a re­

tired vice president o f the St, Louls-San Francisco Railw ay Co., died F rid ay , Jan. 10, 1958, in Memorial Hospital, New York . He was bom in New Y o rk . •

M r. Michel was employed by the railway company during a l­most his entire business ca­reer. He was a member of the Manhassct Bay Yacht C l u b and a vestryman of St. Thom­as' Episcopal Church, BeUe- rose, L , I . He was a frequent visitor to Keyport.

Surviving are-h is-w ifo , Mrs. Matilda (Moore) Michel; a son, C liffo rd ; a sister, Mrs. Joseph­ine Bedle, Keyport, and three grandchildren. .

Mrs, Jules Ilcydcggcr . M rsr v Ruth>. M , - Heydegger, 119 RaHtnri' B lvd ., 'Cllffwood

Shoreland Memorial Gardens Cemetery

Assn. KE 7-3C30

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Beach, died suddenly Monday, Jan . 13, 1958, a t her home. She had been a- resident o f C llff­wood BeAch fo r the past 10 years, She was horn to New­a rk , and was a fo rm e r resi­dent o f B loom field . -

M rs. Heydegger was a mem­ber o f the West Presbyterian Church, Newark, and Brook- dale Chapter 275, O rder o f the Easte rn S tar. - ~ S f l l ’V iy f f l r " s m re r husband. Ju les ; a sister, M rs. C 1 a 1 r e H errlger, B rie lle , and a broth­er, Herman Kop lln , Newark.

Funera l services were held Wednesday at 8 :30 p.m . with the Rev. D r. Andrew M. Seb- ben pffic lattog .-Pr’lvatc inter­ment w ill be held today. The F lynn arid Son Funera l Home, Pe rth Amboy, was in charge o f arrangements. ,

_ Harold E . Smock -. -Harold E . Smock, 68, o f Con­over Rd ., W ickatunk, died F r i­day, Jan. 10, 1958; in the H lll- tog Nursing Home, M i d d l e ­town, .after a long Illness. He was the son o f the late DeWittC. and Cornelia (R ye r) Smock.

He Is survived by his, wife,Mrs. V 1 r g 1 n 1 a (Conover) Smock, and a brother, ArthurD ., Freehold. __' Funera l services wore heldFunera l Home, Matawan, with the Rev. Andrew Burkhardt, pastor, o f the Holmdel Federat­ed Church, officiating. ; In ter­ment-was In Holmdel Ceme­tery. ’ ..

- M rs. Charles Gulnan M rs. Mary (Mulligan) Gul­

nan, 74, died Wednesday,. Jan 8,- 1858, at her home, 513-12th S t., Unloq City. She was the widow o f tbe la te C h a r l e s Gulnan. She was a resident of Keansburg fo r a number of years. ' ■

Surviving are Uvo daughters, M rs, E thel Dalton, Keansburg; M rs. M argaret (IcCarthy,^ Se- cnucusrifour brothers. J o h n M1 u 11 i-g-a n,-—Chicagor1'—Ilfc j- Charles M u llig an ," Hoboken; Joseph Mulligan, Keansburg; Harold Mulligan, Laurelton,and six.grandchildren. .......... .

Funera l arrangements were, under the direction o f the Otto Mack Funera l Home, Secau- cus. ..; _________ :_____

Stanley Holffh iah . .' Stanley Hoffman, CO P ren ­tice Ave., South R ive r, died Monday morning, Jan . 13, 1958, In Perth Amboy Hospital, fo l­lowing a brief Illness, Born to South Amboy, he was the son o f the late F rank and Helen Hoffman. .

He had been employed "for the past 30 years in the F&F division o f E . I . duPont Co.,' P a rlin , wliore he wns an as­sistant foreman. He was— a- communlcant o f St. M i r y ’s Church, South R ive r, and a member o f the church’s Holy Name and St. Valentine’s So­cieties. ,

Surviving are his -wife, M rs. Anna (P rusnrczyk) Hoffmnu; two sons, Raymond,- S o u t h R ive r; Second L t. T h o m a s , Laredo A ir Force Base, L a re ­do, Tex .;, fou r sisters, M r s . H e l e n Carney, Keansburg;

M r s r J e n n 1 e- Quinlan,- M rs. C lara Conroy, both o f S o u t h Am boy;'M rs.. Anna Ko lb , Say­rev ille ; fou r brothers, J o h n , South R ive r ; F ran k , Perth Am­boy; Archie, Sayreville and Raymond. South Amboy,, and two grandchildren. ■

Funera l .services w ill be held F riday at 8:30 a.m . at tbe Ma- llszewskl Furieral Home, South' R ive r. At 9 a.m . a solemn high requiem mass w ill be celebrat­ed to St. M ary ’s Cburch, South R ive r, Interment w ill be to S tfc M ary ’s Cemetery. South R ive r,

M rs. M argu lrlte D r iv e r M rs. M arguirlte D rive r, 57;

o f 407 Second Ave., A s b u r y P a rk , died Saturday. J an , 11, 1958, la F ltk ln M em oria l-Hos­p ital, Neptune. She wed the daughter o f the late H a rry L . and Franees (T reat) Ogden,- - Surviving a re seven cousins,

M rs. H . Seabrook S c h a n c k , M rs. Wallace. Mercready, M rs.C. Leon Garrison, R . O. W a ll­ing, a ll o f K eyport; M rs. E ve r- r lt t Waters, New B e d f o r d , Mass.; M rs. Thomas W, . B ry -1 ant, Torrlngton, Conn.; - M r s . L a w r e n c e McAtee,’ E a s t ; Orange, and an aunt, .M rs, Grace Minnlng, Los Angeles, Calif. • .Funera l services were held Tuesday at 2 p.m . a t the E ly Funera l Home. Asbury P a rk , with the R ev .-D r . Charles A. Sayre, pastor o f the F i r s t Methodist Church, A s b u r y^ P a rk , officiating. Interment was to Mt. Prospect Cemetery, Neptune. --------

Mrs. Alice Schwendeman Mrs, Alice Schwendeman, 83,

died Sunday, Jan. 12, 1958. a ft­e r a long Illness at the hom e, o f her niece, M rs. Lilna J B a l-„ bach, l i t Beacon B lvd ., Keans- burg. M rs. Schwendeman was born In Nova Scotia aria had, -lived - in-' Keansburg fo r one year. -

Also surviving a re t h r o e nephews and five nieces to Massachusetts. -“

Funera l services were held ? Wednesday a t. 2 p .ir i;-at' the Thpmns Brady Funera l Honlp, Forest H ills, Mass. Interment' was-in Blue .Hills Cemetery, Braintree, Mass. Local a r­rangements were In charge o f. the John J . Ryan Home fob Funera ls, Keansburg.- ..

M rs. Edward George ’ Mrs. Anna Louise i George,

67, o f 403 C a rr Ave., Keans1 burg, died Sunday, Jan. 12iv-; 1958, in Monmouth. M em oria l.- Hospital, a fte r a long Illness. '

She had lived In Keansburg fo r 11 years and was a com­municant of St. Ann’s Church,Keansburg. -: : — r ‘. She Is survived by hef hus­band, Edward, arid a n 1 e c e, M rs. E leanor Cotte, Pars lp - pany. • . .

A solemn high T e q u l c m mass" was "celebrated". Wednes­day at; 9 " a.m ;- to " St; "Ann’s" Church, Keansburg, with t h e Rev. James J ,.C orbett ofdclatrfag. Interment! was .to, S t „ Jot. seph’s Cemetery, Keyport. The John J . Ryan Horae fo r Funer­a ls, Keansburg, was to charge, o l arrangements. .

Name Omitted- The- name ~ o f ~ M rsr—Mary* (VanGleson) Snyder, wife, o f- the late Thomas W. Snyder, West Pa lm Beach, F la . , was omitted from the name of sur­vivors in Mr. Snyder’s obituv a ry printed in the Jan. 9. 1958, issue of this newspaper. ; :

Are Vou b u y I n g Defense Bonds? -7

FUNERAL DECISIONS m 4i In *4.v«ne* of n**4 . . . Lev* Mpi4 mtny 4* ttlaln p«*e* of mind • . . Secart protodir* funtrol fac+t from to.

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Page 9: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

Pillsbury Heads Bar Association

John M. P lllsbu ry , . Atlantic Highlands. was I n s t a l l e d Thursday nigbt a s president o l tlie Monmouth County B a r As­sociation. M r. P lllsbu ry . f o r ­mer assistant count; prosecut- i or. succeeds Solomon L&ut- man. Mayor o t Deal. Insta lla- tlon ceremonies were held In Joseph's .Restaurant, W e s t Long Branch. .. .

Also installed were F i r s t Vice President R ichard R . Stout, who is Monmouth Coun­ty State Senator; Second Vice President Edmund J . Canzona;

: T hd r d Vice President Leo -W einstein ; Secretary MUton

Arthur Stein. - • (Louis R . AUdns and M .-Rayi

mond McGowan were installed as three-year trustees a n d •County Judges John C- G ior­dano and Edward J . Ascher.

■ Mr^Lautman, E z ra W. Karkus, Arnold Tulp; and Edward F , Juska were Installed 'a s one­

: year trustees o f the associa­tion. .M r. Juska 'was toastmaster

at the dinner-meeting. Superior Court Judge C. Thomas Schet- tlno : welcomed the new offi­cers.. ' - ---------- _Ju.

. A fter six years ofi ments, U . 8 . Navy scientists successfully have bounced rn- .d a r . beams .off the moon, indi­cating the moon can be used a a a radio re lay station.

O p e n s Office |

DU . HARRY M. SWARTZH arry M. Swartz, M. D ., an­

nounces-the opening of his o f­fice ,fo r the general practice o f medicine at 138 Cherry T r e e F a rm ’ Rd.,— Middletown- D r. Swartz was graduated f r o m Middletown Township H i g h School, Class o l 1918. nnd U r- slnus College, Collegevllle , Pa ., In 1952, He was g r a d u a t e d from ' the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, In 1956 where he was elected to the Alpha Omega Alpha Honorary " led lca l Fratern ity,

lit Swartz took his p o i t - grdduate training at Bellevue Hospital. New York . He bus been a resident o f this area most o f his life.

Sales Increases Reported By GU

The Grand Union Company had a 17.44 per cent Increase in earnings during the f l i s t nine months o f the company's current fisca l year which end­ed Nov. 39. 1957, Lansing P . Shield, president o f the 3B1- srore eastern food chain, re­ported recently.

Net earnings fo r the n I n e- month period, a fter a ll taxes and depredation, reached an all-time h i g h o f *4.141,274, equal to 31.86 per common shr.re on the 2,126,713 shares outstanding. This was 17.44 per cent greater than earnings In the same period o f 1956 o f 33,­526,213, o r 31.69 per share, on the 1,974,432 shares.of common stock then outstanding.

The earnings were based on record sales o f 3314,283,495 fo r the 39-week period endqd Nov. 30. 'a 13.7 per cent Increase over sales o f 3276.453,273 dur­ing the comparable period In 1956. . -

G rand Union earnings fo r the. 13-week period ended Noy. 30 totaled 31,375,292, a record fo r s third quarter and equal to 62 cents per share. - T h i s was an Increase o f 12.93 per cent over earnings o f 31.217,­807, o r 59 cents per common share, based on .» lesser num­ber o f shares then-outstanding, In the like period o f 1956. Sales fo r the 13-week period ended Nov. 30, totaled 3106,931,594, an Increase o f 12.10 pe r cent over sales o l 305,309,863 during the same period ln tl956.

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Page 10: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

THEfJtATAWAS .JOURNAL

Red Ball Goes Up On Matawan’s “Third” Lake

F a re Ten Jan. 10, 1050

JH,ree Teams Pull Away In HN Race

St. Joseph’s, Keyport;'. St. ’ Agnes, Atlantlo Highlands, and

Our Lady o f Perpetual Help, Highlands, widened the gap among themselves and the oth­e r fou r teams In tho northern division o f t h e Monmouth County Junior Holy Name Lea gue Sunday. St. Joseph's Set back St. James, Bed Bank, 54­38; the Highlands five spilled Bt. Ann's, Keansburg, 57-39. and St. Agnes> repelled St. Catherine’s, East Keansburg. 56-40.The young St,1* James team, "playing its firs t game .In the league this season, w a s no match fo r the Keyport-M a t a- wan . f i v e , the defending champs. Ron Kennedy_ and Dave Smith led Uie, victors drive. F rankie Slover, a St. Jo­seph’s School p layer last sea­son,-was one of the starters in the Red Bank lineup.-. Our Lady ■ o f Perpetual Help five produced tlie scoring sen­sation o f theBay.ln B ill Naugh- ton, fo rm er Red Bank Catholic

- p layer, who racked up 29 points in leading his mates to a conquest o f St. Ann’s.

St. _ Catherine’s showed a scoring punch heretofore. miss­ing against the league-leading St. A g n e s five. The East Keansburg team will take on St. Joseph's next Sunday in one o f the games of the trip le­header a t Keansburg School.' .... .' St. JosephSacco, f

! MoCue, f Robedoe, f ,

' R . Kehnedjl, o v'ja#Srisoeser’ ev!''*rf l . Smith, g

St.. Jam es (38)-WeseJ.JE_____Nugent, f McKinney, f

. Hollywood, o , F . S lover, g Davis, g .

St. Ann’s (39)Rupy, f

__ M ie le , . . tConvery, o V Qiesler, a ■ ‘ SUlllvnn,* g ........

G F P3 1 -72 0 43 0 •68 3 19

-.1 .-2 . 4-.7 9 1424 6 54G F P

_4 .2 .103 1 71 0 28 1 132 2 69 0 0

16 6 38G F P2 0 43 8 93 0 64 6 13

-3 -1 715 9 39

Our Lady O f Perpetual Help- - -T Z = r -~ t5 7 >

■Gross, f ...VFoWft. t — . a . Redmond, f G ill, o .McGough, o W. Naughton, g H enevy .g -

- 2 i23112

- 0 -

0 40 4 5 11 0 25 29 i z l

- 1 ■ , 22 13.57Nun-scor|pg players fo r St.

Ann’s were Carmen, L o p e s , Kellogg, Jennings, K e.e 1 e n, O ’Brien, DeCastro, a n d lo r Our Lady o f Perpetual Help, Dahno, Moore, K e lly and Mc­Connell. .

The league standings,-as re ­leased a fter Sunday's games by Ed Quigley, 1 Keansburg, league commissioner, were as follows:

. STANDINGST .iun W L P U .St Agnes * 0 1.000. St. Joseph's 3 1 .750.Our Lady o f Forpetua l Help 3 1 ,750St. M ary'a l 2 .333St. Aiir.a . 1 3 .230St. Jamea . . 0 1 .000St, Catherine's 0 4 .000

i -GjtMBSfflMtiiiWBaB

Despite an overlayer o f snow, skating enthusiasts got their firs t chance o f the winter last week to enjoy their sport on the well frozen surface o f the lake on the south side o f New Brunswick Ave. Some sections o f Lake Lefferts also were frozen* hut the look ot a m ore solid freeze made the authorities leery about permitting use o f It except In the back cove near New Brunswick Ave. shown above. ' '

■'Wooden s h i p s nnd. iron m en" is not entirely a thing of the past. The U. S. Navy's-new ship, USS B ittern (MHC 43) is constructed o f wood to reduce id^gnetism, a vital necessity In perform ing he r mission of hunting mines. '

NORTH JERSEY

SHORE PAROCHIAL

GRAMMAR LEAGUE

St. Joseph's.Bchool t e a m , Keyport, showed a dramatlo Improvement In play Saturday In the tripleheader. at Keans­burg School even though they still a re looking fo r their In­itia l win. Coach Don Czok’s P layers lost, only- 29-20, to St. M ary ’s, New Monmouth, t h edefending champs. This wasaccomplished by the players I r o m the Keyport-Matawan parish with their star, E d Wel- stead, out of.the game.

Indeed*, had It not been fo r a trick play devised by St. M ary's obaches J im O'Shaugh- nessy, Jr.. and.A1 MacDonald and applied early in the game, St. Joseph’s five could h a v e won out. The small but fast St. M ary ’s players uncorked a fast break on their riva ls that put the New Monmouth aggrega­tion" ahead 14-4 near the end of the firs t quarter, so that their coaches declded.lt would be a good chance to give the subs a workout. ..*:A St. Joseph's p layer by the name o f Joe C leslelskl had oth­e r Ideas and went to work to m a k e the New Monmouth coaches rush the regulars back Into action. By the end o l tho h a lf St. Mary's was ahead, on­ly 21-19. The New Monmouth p layers showed their steadi­ness under pressure In the sec­ond ha lf . when thoy grim ly hung onto their lead. The work o f Garden Sutherland and Ray Medolla on the backboards slowed down their scoring ace, Gene Behme. On the" 0 th .e r side", R ay Riddell*'and B i l l y Davidson, teamed up on Cle­sle lsk l to slow him down.

St. Ann’s, Keansburg team, was another aggregation to s h o w Improvement, though again a loser. T h e ' Keansburg boys trailed only 19-18 w i t h three minutes to go, but then the Our Lady of ■ Perpetual Help p layers, Highlands, push­ed In three more baskets to make It safe at 26-19, Buddy Auer and Bob Schwlng again led the Keansburg forces.

St. Ann's will take on t h e league-leaders; St". Agnes, At­lantic Highlands, In a game to­night at the Leonardo G ram ­m ar Bchool gym. Then on Sat­urday,. St, M ary ’a w ill, tackle St. Catherine’s, E ast K e a n s * burg, and St. J a m e s , Red Bank, w ill combat St. Agnes. The Bed Bonk team went down 30-22 Lcforc Holy Cross, Rum­son, In the third gamo o l Inst Saturday ’s doublo bill. St. Ag­nes w ill tie w ith -S t. Mary's and Holy Cross lo r the leaguo lead at 4-0 If they win tonight.

St. Joseph’s (26)' ' G F PJ. Medolla, f 0 0

I (continuod In eighth col,)

Tigers Win On MHS Faults, 5945

Matawan let a game against Atlantlo Highlands get a w a y from them a* St. Josoph's Hall F riday, the Maroon and Steel basketbnllers ldsing, 69-45, aft­e r they had played their favo r­ed foes to a 29-all standstill by halftime.

Despite a height disadvan­tage to help the visitors, Coach B ruce MacCutcheon’s players were holding their own nicely to the halfway m ark. The Tig­ers 6 ft, 5 In. Greg Heath was not doubje-.teamett o r g I v e fl any other*attention of a special order defensively^ yet h 1 s high scoring potential was re­duced to fou r fie ld goals dur­ing the firs t ha lf. Matawan’s center, T lm Magee, had out­played h lm at the pivot Job. Nell Scully was the ace p layer on the court In those firs t, two periods, driving nicely fo r the baskets to send the -" halftime score to a tie. • ...............

Came" the third quarter and the Maroon and Steel forces became suddenly Inept on the offensive. Coach MacCiitcheon attributed It a fter the game to the recurrence o f the f 0 0 t- fau lts that have plagued MHS court play this year.,and last. The MHS mentor counted 12 losses of the ball because ' Of overstepping o r palming t h e ba ll on dribbles. The Matawan defense still was so good the Tigers gained only 11 points out of this free handling over to them ot the ba ll, but as Mata­wan was killing o ff their own scoring, i t was enough to de­cide the game.

In the fina l quarter Heath r e l i e d more on lilg -holght advantagS under the basket to score five times and make the game safe fo r his team against

sm a lle r and tiring MHS team , In Matawan’s strong de­fensive showing, Fu rv ls P ee le r was a ll over the court In the second ha lf to check T iger run£ Ins to the basket, ^j The Matawan Jayvees g a v a the homo fans something about Which t t rc h e e r j! i_ a 40-23 tri­umph over The Atlantlo High­lands Jayvees. This game was an even one a ll the w a y through to the fina l quarter when the pressing tactics o f the Maroon and Steel forces woro down their foes and turn­ed the game Into a rout, poach George Deltz, MHS, also has schooled his charges well on fou l shooting fo r they made 22 In 34 tries, the deciding m ar­gin In the b a ll game,

Matawan (45)

Keyport Youth

Athletic League

League p lay resumed "M o n- day a fter a week’s la y o ff with the Lakers taking the measure o f the Kn lcks, 39-29, and the Nats checking the Hawks, 25 15. The games were played at Keyport High court,

Hank DuBols under the bas­ket and R ay Preston from the outside proved the winning scoring combination fp r t h e Lakers; J im m y Stultz continu­ed to lead the scoring scheme of the Knickb, but Dave Opato- sky and Jack D oe rr broke into the scoring column to give It variation. •, The Nats concentrated on holding the scoring ace o f the Hawks, R ick W ilson, In check and putting on a more varied offensive t h a n fo rm e rly on their own account. F ive p lay­ers, L a rry Dimeck, Pote-Roth- enberg, Dave Siegel, J a c k French and D ick Lewis, broke Into the scoring fo r the vic­tors. . . '-’ "A ' •League standings s till await unscrambling becauso o f t h e game o f uncertain outcome be­tween the Nats and the Celtics a week ago. When the ru les committee Issues Its r u l i n g , John Hnnsen, Keypo rt H I g h scorer, w ill go over the rec­ords and bring the standings up to date.

Lakers (39) ■ 1- - - o r ?

B, DuBols, f F a llo n , f . Caxhart, I Wise,1 f SUcox, 0 Preston, 0 — . Bohnsack, g ' Goldstein, g - Roman, g 1 Stateflr" g _ :Jcrkow itz, g 1 Eh rllch , g

Johnson, 1 Scully, f Stephens, f Magee, 0 Bennett, -g Pee ler, g (continued

G F2 0

In seventh

3 13 1 64 191 72

col.)

.9 16f t' 1 - 41 ?0 19f t0 . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Rumson Rolls Over KHS, 80-56

Keyport High’s'Shore Confer­ence " B ’ ’ basketball fortunes failed to Improve any F riday when the Red Raiders suc­cumbed. 80-58, to the Rumson Purple Bulldogs, on the victors’ court. I t was the' sixth setback o f the season fo r the Keys. I t was the first game won by a Rumson cage team over Key­port in three years.Rumson put up more o f a de­fensive game than was expect­ed o f them, but their offensive,, a slam-bang ‘ 1:eep-on-the-pres­sure,” took its to ll o f the sm aller Keyport squad as the night wore on. Tony Cantallce led the Bulldog drive, racking up 39 points to ta)ce away the scoring leadership in the Con­ference . o f Lakewood's Jack Ardon. J . C. W illiams a n d John Romandetti set up a double post fo r Cantallce on drlve-lns. . . 'Coach ' JOe Rosatl, o f the Purple Bulldogs, used t h r e e ta ll men, Fred Tharln , Bob Austin and Tom C la rke to Check the drlve-lns o f Key- port'a Bob Kennedy. E a c h wound up the gjimo with fou r personals on him but Ken­nedy’s point output was kept ot 25, within the bounds fo r a Rumson trium ph ."

Keyport bouncdd out to, an early lead with Kennedy draw­ing fouls on his drlve-lns and the other Red and White play­ers well-diversifying the a t­tack. I t took desperate pres­sure by Cantallce to draw bis team even beforo tbe quarter ended. In the second quarter Cantallce started to hit from the backcourt and Tharln was put In close to give the Bu ll­dogs cofilrol o f the rebounds. With Kennedy muifled, ' t h e Keys dropped behind, 34-25, at halftime.

Kennedy resumed driving to draw fouls in the third quar­ter, but with fou r foiils on one of his ta ll men, C oach 'Rosa tl would send In another f o r Rumson. The Keys were stay­ing away from their bigger riv ­als as much as possible, so as not to foul, but nothing t h e y could do Could check.Cantallce o r J . C. W illiams ton feed-lns. In the las t quarter. C o a c h F rank Zampello, o f the Keys, let the Bulldogs ro ll It up as he tried out new men.

The Keyport Jayvees w e n t down to their second defeat o f tho year, 66-48. Their exper­ience was -the reverse o f the varsity; they fouled 26 times and the Rumson Jayvees made 18 tries good, the difference in the ball-game. W ally Kennedy and T e rry Ackerson matched the e florts o f the Rumson J.V . stars, Lou DeQeorge and Davo Stender, from tbe floor, but the KHS J .V . made on ly-s lx of 18 foul tries , "Keyport (56)

K n lok t (29)Opatosky, f Campbell, f P a rce lls , f , J . Stultz, 0 Pieper, g McAnehy, g Do0rrT g

Nats (24).

: * ★ ★

$ ■ 0 0

— Hurry ★ ★ ★

D A Y SS ta rts Thu rsday 9 A.M. For L im ited Time

AT FEIGENSON'SValues™ $10.9 5 now $3.002»» PAIR ONLY $LQO

All You Need To Remember Is’

FEIGENSON'S SHOES4 3 West Front Street, Keyport

' Open Monday And Friday Niles ’Til 9 P.M.

Hr

Mullaney, f Getgerv f - ~ Fekete, 1D lm lck , f. RoU ienberg .i Sbhanck, o . Seigel, g French, g Lewis, g Nuas, g Satoro, g Buokman, g Semenza, g

Hawks (15)P iazza , f Rich pison, f Wilson, f ; Rob Olson, I Ferrante , c VanPelt, o M. Stultz, g Testlno, g J . D"uB q” >- g Hughes, g Dunham, g

/ . ■

17 6 39• -!G F p2 0, 60 . 0 90 O’ 67 3

- . 0 0 i0 0 03 013 3 29

O F p. 0_ 0 09 0 0

0 0 02 0 43 0 fl0 0 0

•’ 2 0 43 0 82 0 40 0 00 ,0 00 0 00 0 ^0

^12 0 24

o r 1p0 0 00 0 ■41 0 2

, 0 p 02 1 53 0 60 0 00 0 - o1 0 20 0 00 0 0

u p p p u ieu u uuu euuu—L O O K IN G IT O V E R j

- ' . 7 1 15Tho keel for"the U.~"8. Navy's

sixth .supercarrlcr, tho Constel­lation, has been laid. Tho .car-, r le r bears th'o name of tho,first vessel ever built spocilically fo r the Navy over 160 years ago, ,

, .: -v .r ;- - ... 6 1 rNaughton, f 1 0 2Ku rdy la , f 4 1 9P . O ’Neil, t 2 0 4Blckham , c 0 0 0Ackerson, g .“ ~ “ 1 0^ 2Ochlnegro, g - 2 1 8Jackson, g ■ - 0 1 - 1McLean, g • 0 0 . 0O ’B rien , g 8 1 7Archer, g 0 1 1R , Kennedy, v . , 7 11:25

20 16 66' Bnmaon (80)- . , •.' o r p

W illiam s, f . * 4 1 9Cantallce, f 18 3 39Austin, f - 1 0 2Romandetti, c . 4 2 10Tharln ,- o .4 0 8Y ffla rd l, g - . . 0 0 0Callahan, g — - . If 0 0P e r l, g ...... 0 0 ALeo, g ..“ .v."1" " 1 0 2Love, g 1 0 2Desperaux, g ->.■ 1 0 2Nichols, g ............ 3 0 6’ . - ‘ 37 6 80

Score by quarters:Keypo rt 17 8 20 11—56Rumson ....... 17 17 23 23—80

Refe ree : Phipps, Um pire :Lowenborg,

Keyport J. V :1"(48)G F P

W. Kennedy, I ' 7 0 14Tay lo r, f 3 3 8Chapman, f 0 0 0Wenzel, c 1 0 2Burke, o — . 0 2 2Ackerson, g , 7 1 15P e rry , g ■ . 2 0 4Wilson, g 0 0 \ 0F . Rothenberg, g 1 0 2ViTalsh, g . 0 0 0Zimmer, g * 0 0 0

~ . . . ^ 21 6 48Rumson J . V, ((6 )‘ - ......“ ■;........... G F P

Kidwell,' t ..........— " 1 0 2P e r l, f . 6 , 2 14Leo, t . ., 2 0 4^Nichols, 0 - 1 5 7De George, g 10-4T24Stender, g ------- , 4 7 14

24 18 68

FOOTBALL RU LE S COM­M ITTEE has taken another step toward making the Inter­collegiate g am e ' increasingly dull compared with profession­a l football. I t is the new ru le whereby two points w ill be awarded i f a team rushes o r posses over the goal from two yards out on the try fo r a “ point” a fter scoring Instead of kicking It. Coach T e rry -B ren ­nan, Notre Dame, aptly ex­presses our sentiments when he states that he Is “ mysti­fied ” by the ; new ru le . Why should rushing the • ball fo r three yards get a team two points when rushlhg It 90 yards can get them nothing, o r only six points If they do score? Not on ly that, th e . p layB . that a re made out in the open fie ld a re those worked with a va ri­ety o f sk illfu l offehslve and de­fensive formations. T h o s e made down at the goal line a re In fe rio r, due to the lack o f apace fo r operating. Likewise the spectator can see what is going on In the open fie ld In fron t o f him . He ra re ly ever sees what Is going ton In the scrimmages down at the goal line b"y the end o f the fie ld . The only-thing he gets a good view o f there Is kicking a fie ld goal o r pqlnt-after-tbuchdown. But that Is to be tnkenaw ay from him .

'• • • > .SCORING B Y K ICK IN G Is, o l course, practically elim in­ated by the new rule. The goal-posts a re too fa r back from the goal line fo r ffeld goal kicking,—so . that-the spectator at the c o l l e g e game does not have the In­teresting option o l kicking fo r three points o r running fo r s ix that la ever present" in the pro contest as soon as ’ the b a ll moves to the 25-yard l i n e . The kicking scoring p lay o ffers a variant from the everlasting monotony of lushing the ball that makes ■ footba ll a game that easily , can -grow tiresome. I t Is a debatable point whether the polnt-after-touchdown p l a y has any place In football at a ll. There is no reason fo r a game - to be decided by one p lay bearing no relationship to any other p lay In t h e game. But now the colleges have" gone to the extrem ity o f exaggerating the Import­ance nnd scoring va lue" o f this one p lay that bears no relationship to any o t h e r play. Before, the p lay f o r - whlch one gained a point at least was earned on the bas­is o f a special and different Skill, that o f kicking. Now there Is nothing more Involv­ed than a bonus fo r making one p lay no different charac­teristic than any one o f 40

, pther plays o f the sqme pr- ;d e r in the gamD, Only iome- body with a college educa­tion could have figured this tone out. '

Score by quarters: Koyport J .V . 13 7 15 13—48 Rumson J .V . — 14 16 22 14—68

4 DANCE *Sponsored By

American Legion Matawan Post 176

Saturday, Jan. 25,1958d r

Legion Hall, Main St., Matawan0 Until?

Waft Staeger's Orchestra Donation $1 .00

■ m M t e ub a ll duty in February as he Is now. ,-as Mike Haber, a tran sfe r from Brooklyn P S ­AL play, w ill become ava il­able a t the sta rt of tbe new te rm to give Matawan a needed additional ta ll man.' . • • ’ *' "N EXT SUNDAY, II t h e

weatherman only "spares the ice on the Naveslnk R ive r, the eastern championships in t h e Ice yacht racing world w ill be held at Red Bank. Each year, as the rive r freezes over, the word Is passed along to a ll Ice boat racing enthusiasts Id the eastern p a rt o f the country to head fo r Red Bank the next weekend. Come the next week­end, and,—a thaw, no Ice. Red Bank with its Naveslnk R ive r Is the best Bpot fo r Ice yacht racing in that It o ile rs the com­bination o f. an uninterrupted run o l Ice fo r some mlleB coup­led with a lack o f snow. Ice boat racing m ight be consider­ed to be a sport fo r northern New York State and New Eng­land, because o f tbe season long prevalence Ot Ice on tbe. la rge lakes and rivers o f these a reas but such Is not tbe case. The Ice formed there becomes quickly covered with, fa lls o l snow, dangerous fo r the high speeds o f ice yachts, At Red Bank, the sa lt a ir cuts down the fa l l of snow and perm its refreezes to give a "b a ld " Ice area suitable for' the Ice yachts. Homer Selder, a formed Keyporter, is one o f those wfco may be In action on the Nnve sink Sunday. ' .. '

Conference Planned - ‘ On Atlantic Flyway

Technicians'of the Atlantlo Waterfow l Council from t h e northeastern states w ill vh o l d their anhual conference in New. Jersey o& Feb , 4 and 5,~the S t a t e Division o l F ish and Game, Department o f Conser­vation and Economic Develop­ment, announced today.' T h e meeting w ill get underway In the new clubhouse of the Quak- er.town Recreation Club, Quak- ertown, Hunterdon County. ;

Persons actively engaged In the techniques o f wateffow l management from West V I r- g ln la to Maine w ill assemble Co- discuss projects o f wetland ac- qulsltioh; waterfowl habitat development; waterfowl re- - search; preservation o f va lu­able marshlands; m e t h o d ^ techniques and effects of ha r­vest, and nany other subjects dealing wJth m igratory water­fow l which are o f m a jo r inter­est to the Atlantic F lyway. u

North Jersey(continued from second col.).

ve-

Tigers Win-.continued from third col.)

E . Jones, g 9 0 0. IT 11 45

AUantlo Highland! (59)t i e ' ' . ' "M u rray , r H ea th ,'o . Motley, g Morgan, g O ’Keefe,‘ g

O F 5 3 1

10 4 3

-3

P 13

0 - 2 3 23 1 9 0 6 0 6

26 7_- Score by quarters:

At. Highlands 16 13 11 19—59 Matawan 13 16- 4.12—45

(40). G F P

9 J l 1 1

ST IL L WONDERING" w h 7 the Dodgers and the Giants le f t New York . I f so, take note o f the 64.10 per 3100 o f assess­ed valuation taiT raKPthe“ Clty o f New York Is advancing. I f b a ll parks bring in gross reve­nues up In the m illions, the elty has to assess them at va l­uations which make the ball clubs liab le lo r hundred of thousands In rea l estate taxes, Gents like W alter O ’M alley and Horace Stoneham are acutely aware that with an ever In­creasing number o f properties In the.city being abandoned by their owners as hopelessly un­profitable and the city becom­ing more enmeshed In public bousing projects, the burden on those remaining to pay tax­es in New Y o rk Is going to be­come more and more onerous. I t follows that i f New 'Y ork tru ly wants, that second big league ba ll club, the city w ill have , to supply. the stadium either’ by erecting one w i t h public funds and leasing" It o r putting some sort of a hocus- pocus rea l estate valuation on the ba ll parks now In the city that effectually would reduco the taxation on them to nil. Re­duced to the extrem ity of p lay­ing In 22,000-seat W r 1 g 1 c y F ie ld , M r. O ’Malley l i k e l y would come hopping back to B rook lyn tomorrow at the sug­gestion o f any such.deal. Just a " little matter o f getting around the rea l estate' tax laws.

. * * * -NO 'INDOOR TRACK "this

m onth. Coach John Caroo- clolo. Matawan-Hlgh, has de­cided despite the" flock o f In­vitations that have been com­ing In fo r his athletes to ap­pear at New Yo rk meets. The weather- is one factor Involved. Had it been an open winter so that practice could havo been held on tho .outdoor track, tho Matawan montor could have d o n e something about It. As It Is, a i r his athletes can do Is Jog around the sm a ll Matawan gym. T ills is no,way to pick up running fo rm . The MHS track coach also wants to sco how everybody will fa re aca­dem ically at the end of th is* term . Tho new Jerm starts Fob. 1. I f he can find two other , performers to team., up with Purvis Pee ler a n d Dave Jones In a r q l a y Team, therp will be some­thing doing during February on the Indoor side. The state and national Inlcrpcholastlcs aro not held until early March, so there Is plenty, o f tlmo yet. Pee le r w ill not be

. heeded so v ita lly fo r basket- J : ; - .u .: ' ; ’ ; I ! K : ...'

. Matawan JayveeiPeterson, f ' 1Ham ilton, f •1 0Carothers, f " 0 0 0O regory , f -0 0 0Kuzma, o " , v. 4 7 15Condlt, o > - 0 0 0A. Edmond, o 0 - 0 0W allace, g _ - 0 . 1_ 1Tomasello, g 0 3M errill, g._ 0 . l . , lR ank l, g - 1 0 2D . Jones; g . , . 8 0. . . . . f .U., . . . _ , 40,

A tlantlo Highlands Jayvees <.. ' 1 (23) ; ''. O F FEchemedes. f " ........Anthony, f

H ill, f , 0 0 0Clesielski. o 7 5 19Sutherland, g - 0 1 1Yduncofski , g 6 0 0R . Medolia, g 2 2 8 -■

. ■ i , 9 8.26St. M ary ’a (29) "

■ >0 F PRiddell, f . - ■■ 2 0 4J. Brown, 1------- 0 0 0 -J . Bremekamp, I 0 0 _0_.Davison, to • a 0 6Murphy, c ■ 0 D 0Richardson, o 0 0 0Behme, g-....... - * 8 1 13Korpon, g ................. Q 0 0O ’Hea, 8 / 0 S 'SGeary, g / : ------- 0 o - o —Young,, j f Pennell, g .. . . . .

1 1 30 0 0

12 -5 20. , . , St,. Ann’s (19) • \G F P

B . F a rre l l, f 2 0 4T . F a rre ll, f- - - 0 0 OO ’Neil, t ' 0 0 - 0 lj .*B leh ler, c- 1 ' 0 0 OC. Higgins, 6 0 1 , 1Stover.-o ---r-'--- - - “ 0 0 -O--Sohwing, g 3 0 6Auer, g - ...... - - 3 2 - B ■•s.

* 8 3 19Our Lady O f Perpetual Help

(26)• .t . ;• ■ .-• ‘ : ■■ . - G t PO ’Connor, ' f ■ - 2 .0 4O ’Keefe, f 2 0 4 :Buckley, I 3 1 7Scharig,*“ d ' 2 1 IT.Cummins, g , , - 1 1 3Beatty, g^ , 1 1 3

- . 11 4 26. ii ■ -•■Help Wanted” ads- in ;thls^

paper te ll you about the good lobs open, .

McGoulden, J. Seeley, f "Gawlor, o Gerlook, o - R a lke , g Schanck. g . Carlstrom , g

WHKDA I - S O P IN 6 .3 0 — M OV IES AT 7 XX, SUHOAtSOWr -OWE S:3Q'-» MDVntS AS MOO CAITOOU-A-EAMA - EVEIY It,, UT. owl SUN. • MUST SHOW ONtV - put HOP* Of CaMOQMSRITA HAYWORTH FRANK SINATRA

KIM NOVAK.

9 - 5 23

WATCHFo r Our

20th ANNIVERSARY SALEK E 7 - 2 0 0 0

i Q x i a E E S i

I HARDWARE CO.SB W, FRONT STREET

-GUN BATTLE AT MONTEREY" ■

sun:anTUES.

mbertM I T M curt JURGENS

In CINEMASCOPE «nd COLOR -• - ■ 4*4 ■■ M i . -“ H IDDEN FEAR”

JOHN PAYNE .Anne NEYLAMO

Today - Tomorrow - Saturday Jan. 16-17-18

Plus Selected Short Subjects Special — K IDD IE SHOW — Special

Saturday Afternoon — Starting 1:45 p .M ."THE LAND OF tHE UNKNOWN"

Phis "IT'S A DOG'S LIFE"Sunday • Monday - Tuesday Jan. 19-20-21

Contlnous Sunday Starting 1:45 P .M .Robert MITCHUM CURT JURGENS

Pics-Selected Short SubjectsTuesday - Wednesday 4

N O W T H E S K IE S R O A R A S N E V E R B E F O R E L

B o m b e r sJan. 22-23,

•WuKnCeiM»WMBi 0mmM W ? WOOD K A R LM W M- ■ . - Plus Selected 'Short Subjects

Page 11: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

KHS Winnet 65-37 Over Jamesburg

Keyport took It easy on an u n d e r m a n n e d J a m e s - burg squad Tuesday, t ie Red and White scoring Its firs t v ic­tory o f the season 65-37 with K BS coach F rank Zampello u$r. Ing his. regulars on a part-time basis. Bob Kennedy, the Keys big scorer, was used sparing­ly , as he was being saVetkfor the Atlantic Highlands game tomorrow night.

T h e Keyport Jayvees also had a jov ia l evening, scoring 69-60, with V ln Tay lo r and T e r­ry Ackerson leading tlie lr charge.

With Kennedy la rge ly out o f action, Ed pickham , a t a l l sub, came Into his own, scor­ing seven out of eight fouls In ro lling up 15 points. The Keys made 23 o l 3ft foul ti le s In the game. ......

The R e d ' and White never trailed, ro lling to a big early lead, then coasting the rest of the 'way, - -

’ Keyport (65)Ku rdy la , f O ’Brien, f ' Naughton, f Archer, o Blcfcham, c :Bob Kennedy,' g

. Dcblnegro, g . P . O ’Neil, g •B. Jackson, g MacLean, g - . Ackerson, g

o f r2 0 4 2 0 4 2 . 0 4 0 . 2 2 4 7 15 &. 0 IB1 1 3 0 0 02 3 7 2 2 0 0 2 2

Jamesburg (37) '21 23 65

'Conatantlno, X T ippero , fc Yaros , f . . ;iLewls, f Cerequas, c ,:Hlucby, e -.........Handy, g . -

O F F 5 , 0 10

-0 2 1 -3 4 - 8 ■ 1 3’ 1 5 4 -8 .

' ■ 13 11 37.S c a re by q u a r t e r s : . ..

Keypo rt 10 10 14 18—65Jamesburg. 7^ -9 .12 -9—37

"Keyjfiirfc’ j f r v e e s ,(69). •• Q -F P_W. Kennedy” r ’ -----------4'” 2 loT ay lor, f ■ : . 3 6 12Chapman, 1 ---- ' ---- 3 0 6Wenzel, c . 1 : 0 2Burke, c .................... 3 2 8Ackerson, g • • # 4 22

• P e rry , g . icM .. 2 . 0 4Wilson, g . . , , 0 1 1P . Rothenberg, g - 0 :0 0Walsh, g , 0 . 0 0.Zimmer. g — .0 Jo "oRedo, g - . '2 “ 0 '4

G /over—C rysta l ___ 161 • 1Monmouth County Lions

Keyport (3) , 844 899 . 90S .F a ir Haven. (0) 785 '857 .794Keansburg (3) , ...........- - 839 825 717'Middletown J 0 ) , : . . .749 - 775 740 -Union Beach (2) . 777 900 ' 760Highland^ (1) 763 784’ 779

' StandingsTeam . W SiUnion Beach . 32 13Keyport " ' , 28 17.. Keansburg o : ., 27 18Atlantic Highlands ■ ’ 19 23' F a ir Haven : -16 26 'Middletown : : 13 29Igdtvldaial High Average. McCoy-rUnlon Beach -J77 - -.— Wyckoff—Keyport . ..H I

, Lohsen—Keansburg , ‘ - JM -----U r lck—Union Beach -v — -174 '

- ’ „ 27 16 69Jamesburg Jayvees (50)

. , ^ y eO leg e rt .'f , . 0 1 1H n e d a k .jf . -------- 8 - 2 19Toth, f - - - , , 0 4 - 4Yaros , o ' „ 0 2, 14, 2 ♦ 8,

-P h lll ip s rg :Davison," g' ' ’ "'sX / 17 is, i

Tigers; Next; For Keyit, MHS At South Amboy

Keyport and Matawan w i l l -ta ke :tu rn s a t entertaining the

home fans during the next sev­en days. Tomorrow night the

-K eys w ill be hosts to Atlantic Highlands : while'Ntbe Maroon

■ and Steel'Invade tne-new Hoff­man Hlgn gym at South Am­boy.-Then, on Tuesday, Mata- wan w ill meet Toms R ive r at St. Joseph’s while Keyport w ill trek to Point Pleasant.' A ll theso games are Shore

1 Conference “ B ” contests .“ Both the local teams can better themselves. Matawan Is’ a def­inite favorite at South Amboy

~ and should be no worse than ■"i even ryith Toms R iver in

scrap to determine which team shall remain In the firs t divi­sion o f Conference standings.

The Keys’ fortunes h a v e been so bad that they can on­ly go one way, to Improve. That la hard ly likely to occur tomorrow night against t h e high-rldtng Tigers with 6 ft. 5 In. C reg Heath- In the Red and B lack lineup. But, on Tuesday,

. at Point P leasant, the Keyport five rates the favorite ro le In a Conference game the firs t time this year when they go against the “ green” and stum-

•hling Garnet Gu ll five, learn­ing basketball the hard way.

Keyporl Recreation League' ' , Jan . B

Tetro ’ s Casino (2) 751 781Sputnik’s (1) ' 685 675C rysta l Recreation (2 ) 684 720'Hygrade Foods <1> 680 700

765858756,724

Auto Boys (3) T ierney’s Beverage (0) 700650'704697

807 739 757 684 - 659 741 741 714Keyport Recreation <2)Zito’s (1) .

StandingsTeam W I , „T etro ’s. Casino ' 29(4 1514Crystal Recreation 28(9 1 8 (4 ,Keyport Auto Boys 28 17 -Hygrade Foods ' . 27 18Zito’s 21(4 23)4Keyport Recreation 21 24Tierney’ s Beverage 17(4 2714Sputnik Five - ' 7 38

. Il lg h Team Game' Hygrade ■■ ■ 012.Auto Boys 901Tetdo’s 885 nigh Individual Game .K irk —Crystal : , . 243 Phelan—Key-Recreatlon 234 G rove r—C rysta l ’ '231

High Team Series -Hygrade - ’ 2445Key-Recreatlon --------- ’ ... ,2439 . .T e tro ’s '2382 ,High Individual Series C leclerskl—Auto Boys 576 .Ku llberg—Hygrade 567K irk —Crystal . 568

' High Individual Average ' C leclerskl—Auto Boys 164 :- - 162

- T e am H lg h G ah ie .........Keyport ' - ' 966Union Beach _ - ........ ^ - 958 — :Keansbufg . 907Individual High Game . - '. Ross—Keyport 268Lohsen—Keansburg . 236

- B a rke r—Union Beabh 233■ - Team High Serlea , ‘ • Union Beach . 2746Keyport . . 1 '2 7 0 0 ::Keansburg, ?. , .2581Individual . High Series : ,. B a rke r—Union Beach ■; . 652 1. Ross—Keyport' 619, Lohsen—Keansburg ......... 609,

Monday Night Major' League’ ' Jan ._6 . . . ; ........... .............

Eatontown TV W rod f House 'J . Overly , .’ ; "— Mat-Key Recreation- . 75 Biidk Shilth 's'TaVern Pe te ’s, Appliance- , T . V . Leavy j "P a t Montagna

.. 880 -006 1042­884 , 974 973 ’ i 892 874 ,944 ,1 906 1014 1018,,,, 961 843 824 902 1028 833809 948 895

~ " S ta n d in g s * • Team -: , - . -: Eatontown TV * ,W rode House - ■ 'J . 0 .verly ■■■■••■Mat-Key Recreation •Buok Sm ith ’s TJaverd 'Pete ’s Appliance , Leavy „ Montagna ' .■r. V. i!a» W

W23302820231818J8

- L191820 22 25 30 30 -32'

Mat-Key Ladies W ed. Night League- . ' ’ Jan . 8 ' _C liff ’s Sea Food (1 ) 527 480 585,.Craig Brotbers^Bullders (2) 578 ;-568- 5B l-Marini's D iner (2) 513 685 656Van Pe lt & Son Agency (1) U67 542_5,48 Scott Funera l Home (2) ' 511 564 608C rate ’s. Beverages (1) 668 641 525Natalie ’s .Dress Shop (2 ) . 563 587 548 .Modern Pharmacy—t l ) _ . 545 546 628Stultz Fue l OU (2) 528 611 584U lrichsen’s Boat Works (11- --.560 556 564

Standings . * ,Team • . W L. VB ir-Pelt & Son'Agency 29 16. Natalie ’s Dress Shop - 26 19 .

M artin i’s D iner • " , 25 20C rate ’s Beverages 23 22Modem Pharm acy 23 22Scott Funera l Home 22 23‘ Stultz Fuel Oil 21 -- 24C liff ’s Sea Food ^21 24Craig Brothers, Builders ’ 2 0 / 25 U lrlchsen ’s Boat Works 15 30Mat-Key Merchants League

' ’ ' , Jan. 9 • ' ■>-* 'Atlantic Tile 8 Bt D Super Market P a lm e r Esso C rate ’s Beverages Cllffwood Angels Bu rlew ’s Restaurant J a g ’s Sport Goods Jo-Joe ’s Cocktail TjOunga Gcbanck’s O il .. 1Rapo lla ’s Market 'Cllffwood Amoco . ■ -Charcoal P it , .“ 3Q0” B a r O ld M ill D a iry Conklin ’s Men’s Shop OK Sales A Service Stan ley ’s Diner AH Bros. Woodworking Co.Cllffwood F ire Co.Middletown Lanes- Standings Team •Atlantic T ile •S & D Super Market Pa lm er Esso . C ra te ’s Beverages Cllffwood Angels 1Burlew 's Restaurant Jag's Sport -Ooods ~Jo-Joe's Cocktail Lounge Schanck’s Oil R apo lla ’ s M arket . .C llffwood Amoco,• Charcoal P it '"300" B a r >Old M’ l l D a iry

Conklin ’s Men’s Shop■ OK Sales 8 r Service '' Stan ley ’s D iner /-' A ll Bros, Woodworking Co.Cllffwood F ire Co,. Middletown Lanes

' 885 832 981924 896 056819 852 983954 700 994938 940 884779 832 930888 988 885831 852 889 1904 932 '893790 762 778'900 918 867927 868 817841 945 808802 865 881'906 944 925

-8 6 3 803 890833 876 83B839 910 808B44 825 824803 74» 783

W L37(4 13(434 1733 1831 20 ■3 1 ' 20 29 (( 21(4 28 2328

-27 26 25 24 23 23 •’ 23

23242929-27282B'28, . 2 0 - .31 *20 31

2018’ 11313940

733 876 843 837 735 829 811 789 -769 802 801

Key-Mat Church League. • • Jan . 7 ,Gethsemane Lutheran '(1)

Matawan Methodist (2)St. M ary ’ s Episcopal (2)Bayvlew Presbyterian (1 )■ St. John’s Methodist (0) 1^Calvary Methodist', ( 3 ) .....Keyport Reformed” 41) '- -Wgtawah PreBbyterlan (2)_(Trln lty_Episcopal ( l j ....Keyport Baptist (2 )Matawan Bnptlat (2)- Hebrew Congregation (1) ■Standings . Team : ■ .Keyport Baptist Keyport Reformed Matawan P resbyterlsn • St.- John ’s Methodist Hebrew Congregation : Bayvlew Presbyterian ;Matawan' MethodlatGethsemane Lutheran .....C a lva ry Methodist " Trinity Episcopal— - St. M a ry ’s Episcopal

High- Ind tv lduarS lng le' o, Post __B . W lsser ■ ’ - -L , D ick ---------- :----

782 824 818’ 788 709' .779'' B13; 'fi28':774v‘ 814-796 849 .768 .707—173;, 775 709 761 845 819 777 .729 797 927W _L 31 1729 19 ,27(4 20(4 28 22 25 2322 26 22 26 21 2720(4 37(4; 20 28 18(4 29(427t: : : : :248246— -----*

High Ind lv ldnal Series ~. . Q . P o s t _ • • , 662‘ . E . Schwabl u... -O*®. : • 1

. H igh 4 Ind lv ldna l A verages:O. P o s t . 177 „K . Henderson 179R . Cornell 175 "— E r B l t d e r b n c k = - - -172"— :— :J . Robinson ' 171 'Keans. Ladies Mon. NighL League

• J an. 6 1 •KoansburtFNatlonal- Bank1 (2) 628 597 Keyport Cleanera <1) 593 643Keansburg News . (2) ~ , _ 645 600H . Wasserman & Son (1> ' 693-651

, Pe te ’s. "Inc. <39 ’ _ : __ _ ;_ 632 614Marquet’s Pharmacy (0) - 612 591

Matawan Felled By Kumson 51-39

Matawan lost the game Tues­day they needed to keep them­selves a factor In tne S h o r e Conference “ B " title race when they went down before Rum ­son 51-39 at St. Joseph’s School gym ' The Maroon and Steel dropped well down Into second division as a result.

Tho defensive play o f Coach Bruce MacCutcheon’s charges was still good and they cor­rected the toot-faultlng . t h a t hurt them so badly against At­lantic Highlands. Tony Cantn- llce, leading scorer o f the con­ference, s p e n t a profitless night, scoring only three times from the floo r as Matawan’s Purvis Fee ler kept a fter him.

On the offensive. Mntawan faded out In the second half. Coach Don Trotter bad his ta ll players, notably F red Tharln , jamming the area under the basket so the Maroon nnd Steel could not drive.

Matawan broko a 6-a ll tic to go ahead In the firs t quarter on oufelde shols by Pete Ben­nett and Peeler. John Roman- dettl hit and three fouls closed the gap fo r Rumson. T h e n Cantallce sank a one-hander, Bob Austin d sl'do"shot a n d Tharln a crip to send Rum- sqn ahead. Bennett’s' long' set closed the gap to 13-17 at quar­ter time. ■ - ...

Cantallce spilled lri two fouls to s ta r t ’ the second quarter, then Peeler, Bennett nnd Nell Scully a ll lilt in a row to even the count, Deltcr Johnson put Matawan ahead the las t time In .the.gam e at 20-19 w ltli a foul. Cantallce sank his l a s t field goal of Uie night to re­store the Rumson lead and Tharln and B lk Nichols d 1 d good work to widen It. Ed Jones’ two fouls and a l o n g shot by T lm Maifce mode. It close, 26-24, a t lm lf lim e.

Magee's long onehandeft knot­ted tliq count,for M.1JS as tho aecqna.-.half.-opened/-but Mata­wan then had 'liad It. They fa il­ed . tof.scoi'e.from ,tlie f lo o r-fo r Iho rest o f th o 'th ird quartor and only a good defense held Rumson to a 59-30 lead as the period ended. Nichols took the fourth quarter opening ’ tap on tho fas t break fo r a crip. Aus­tin sank a'layup and Cantallce two fouls to make It 41-30 and he longer n ha ll gnme,

Matawan Jayvees s h o w o d ono ot those overnight lo rm re- vetRgis characteristic o f jun­ior teams and lost to the Rum ; son seconds 51-36,

. Matawan (39)'■ ■■ , O F VT . Mairee, f 3 2 8ifolmsonj-f----------- - — 0—17—1;Stephens, t ----- :-------- --1—0—2’Bennett, .0 , 4 0 8E , Jones,P ee le r,-*8oully, g

Bowne’s O il Burner Serv . (1) 574 655 F ran k Van; Syck le ’s a ) h r —- 558 880 .Gentile ’s Market* (1) 688 573Middletown Pharm acy (2) 698 592

' SUndlnga •Team • WKeansburg National Bank _. 3f. Pete ’s, Inc . , 28Keyport Cleaners 27Middletown Pharm acy 26Bowne’s O il Bu rner Service 25 Gentile's M arket . 23..H ,-W asserm an 81 Bon 23--Keansburg News 23 -F rank Van Syckle's 19- Martiuet's P lu rm acy 15

611 ■965 680 604 '024608578058

-6 50 ­554L17.

2 0 . ... 21 22 23 25 25 25 - 20 33

NJSIAA Not Adopting T_ Change In Grid Rule

New Jersey State Interscho­lastic Athletic Association an­nounced Monday that the high schools'of tho state would not adopt the two-point conversion rule In football o f the National Collegiate Athletic Association In the 1958 football season. This Is In conformity with the, ru l­ing o f the National Alliance Athletic Association o f which

W A TC HForGRAND OPENING OF

Keyport Electrical Supply Co. Fixturama .

A Complete Line O f ’Table Lamps — Floor Lamps

Room Dividers'Large Selection O f Pull Down Lamps '’ Came In And Take Advantage ’- .' 1 - 'H f The Large Discounts\ ‘ Dorlnir Tlie Alterations That ,. Are Taking Place Now •

KEYPORTEUGRKAl SUPPLY CO., Int.

■ ■ • Highway 36-R-l Box 96 B, ' ,Tel Keyport 7 -1350 - 7-1351 Keyport

tne New Jersey , Long ls land and Westchester County In ter­scholastic Athletic Associa­tions, are a ll members.

The New Y o rk P u b l i c Schools Athletic League a n d the Catholic High 6ch6ols Foot­ball League o f NCw Yo rk have not yet decided if they will fo l­low tlie N.C.A.A. change but o poll of coaches in the New Y o rk City Schools on Monday indlcntcd they would recom­mend it.

Ed .Hebcl New Jersey's rep­resentative on tho N.A.A.A., s a i d , MWc (New J e r s e y Schools) w ill not use this ru le during-the'com lng fa ll. T h e rule wayn't discussed at our recent national meeting a n d the change camp as a sur­prise ." , • “

Shore Conference

Duyvlllc Ilegionol Atlantic Highlands Lakewood -HumaonTutnt RJ vtt ’ ,MatawanF l. P leasantry—South Amboy . -Keyport

D ivU lon S tandinn W I.6 1 5 1 4 I 4 : .1 3 2 4 1 4 i 50 5 .

Prt..P.J7.B33.PMm.500.331J00A66..000* Recent studies show a great

Increase In cancer o f Uie uter­us, according to the American C ncer 6oc!cty. A ll y o u n g women a rc urged to have year­ly check-ups. Including a pel­vic examination.

60-Day Meetings For N, J, Tracks Asked

A proposal w ill bo submitted to the Stale Racing Aasocloi tlon" at Its meeting In Trenton tomorrow lo extend from 60 lo 60 days the length of tlie raco meetings at Monmouth.-Park, Garden State P a rk nnd AUanr tic City tracks this year.

John M. McCloskey, C ft m- den, p resident and busincKS manager o f the parl-m u t u o 1 racing clerks union o f this sta le , said It was being advo­cated by that organization ns a better way to raise money lo r state aid to education thun by dlrecL-taxatiart on -rea l es­tate o r some fo rm -o f Income or sales tax,.; McCIcpkey ..esti­mated tlie^ftdd&Tpto duyu of racing would produce nn add! tional $3,500,000 to ftfooo.ooo in taxes fo r the filutc. . —

It was doubted In r.immls- slon quarters that any change could be made aff trncko tn tho state now ore limited to iO day seasons by law . 'Dio eomml* slon tomorrow w ill deal wllh the riv a l applications of Mon* mouth P a rk and Atlantic City fo r racing dates Including the firs t ttyo weeks o f August.

Now Is tho timo to advcrtlso those unused artic les fqr sale. A sm all ad in tho classified column will turn them Into cash. 1

- The Friendly Lumber Yard . ; T e le p h on e M A 1 - 4 5 0 0 — 4 5 0 1 *' S U T P H 1 N A V E . M A T A W A N

Rumson ..(51)_W illiams, t 1Nichols, f . Roinanaem ,_f — Auatln.-o _i<V l l la r d l.oThsrln, g ' :Cantallce, g

F P 2 42 6 0 4

r t4 149 15

BAYSHORE JUNIOR

HIGH SCHOOL

C onferenceKeansburg School; defending'

champs, appeared to havo. a strong team with which to de­fend their honors as piny open­ed on the basketball courts of tho league during Uio p a s t week. Tlie team coached by, Coach D ick Albert opened their season by downing Coach Fred Gernsback’s Middletown Central boys, 35-16, Then, on Monday, Uie Keansburg team took Matawan Into camp by a 34-17 Count.' -

Their victory over Matawan was Indicative of Uielr toahi strength, ns the M IIS five show­ed farm o f a good order In de­feating Union Beach In tho lr firs t game, 59-42. The h i g h scoring by boUl teams w a s noteworthy In thin game as It ts unusual fo r g ram mar school baskctbutt"teams to approncli a total o f 50 points.

Raritan Township and Marl- bald. Township teams had to postpone their opener. T h e y w ill p lay It off tills afternoon nt the Keansburg School court.

Conch J o h n Lucr-kovlch. Matawan, uncovered two new scoring stars In tho g a in o ngalnst U n i o n llcucli. B ill Bowie and Terry Magee. Un­ion Beach showed ihe honoflts ot having t lie lr , fine new gym In whlcb to practice. Coach A1 Magglo lind to struggle along last sonson- wlUi nn outdoor practlco court,, but tho Bench­ers now have fnclllltos match­ed on ly by the Marlboro Town­ship t o a in,’n now Central Bchool court. '

Coach Mngglo has di’awn on tho playors who started wlUl the county championship Union Beach Lions L it t le -L e a g u e team to bolster J ils starting lineup. Danny HoUrnhan a n d ’ B i l l ” Trembley, tlio peerless battery oT bn'sftbdll days, flash ­e d , ^ Uie oftonslve fo r tho Bonohers.;-ltourahah— running' up the amazing total fo r a gram m ar school p layer o f 24 points. But-tha-Matawan fast break Bhowcd tlio Bonohers s t i l l having plenty to learn about Uk neods o f defcnslyo cage p lay, . ;' The Keansburg team showed

to advantage on Uio defensive, binding up both Middletown Central and Matawan with a tight zone, Bob Mnthes, Uiojr tali’ center, made it extromo- ly hard fo r tlie opposition to approach tho basket on drlvo- lns.. I t Is a trlbuto to Coaoh Al- ie rt_U » t.b o_cou ld . sustain. Uie loss by graduation of s u o b staro as Wayne Fclsm an and Alex Osnata and eomo up the jfonaw jhgtyesr-w ith .g- team, o f new p layers, dppnreritly'every bit aa form idable as : Uie ones that bad moved on. M a t h e s and Skip Stevens are Uie only 'h o ld o v e rs . .....................„

Rikowskl, g • 'w 2 I 5f-

12 10 34... .... Matawan (17)

O F PVan Syckle, t 0 1 1S iu rt, f 0 0 0B a rr , f 0 0 0McCormack, f 1 0 3McCann, 1 0 0 0EilotU, f ; 0 0 0Dowle, o _ 2 1 0Sabo, c 0 0 0McKnlght, o 0 0 0T . Magee, g 2 2 0Anthony; g 0 0 0W. W llsopr g _ 0 0 0Hcnsler, g 1 1 3Eovlno, g 0 0 0Pc rr ln e , g 0 0 0

• 8 5 17Matawan (51)

o r PVanSyckle, f-' 2 0 4Sturt j - f 0 0 0Ba rr , f 0 0 0Hllottl, t 0 0 0M oCorm ackr-f— ■ •5' 0 10MoConn, f 0 2 2Bowie, p 10 0 30Sabo, o , : - 0 1 1McKnlght, o : 0 0 0-Anthony, g:. v 0. 0 0T . Magee, g 9 0 10llcn a le r, g ' 2 0 4Eovlno, g 0 0 0w, Wilson, g f : 0 0 0

28 3 00■ Union .Deaoh (42)

. 0 1 1*Houralian, f 11 a 24

19 19 51

Keansburg (34)Stevens, fTapsoy, X__Altabello, t Tu lly , f , Mathes, o Ward, g . K ron lk , g .

O F0 1 0 00 1 4 02 6 10 4 ’ 1 0 0

v * r . THE I ,

mataWan JOURNAi

Jan. 18, 1958 Page KievanShadden, f Tyter, f Wenzo). f Fllzpatrlcfc, c. Trombley, g Klngctter, g Burkett, g Clayton, g Dipplo, g

Baiketbdll ScheduleTonicht ;Si. Miry'1 ISA,) «t South nivcr*.. . TomorrowAtlantic Highiuiuti «l K cypurt. - Matawan at Bouth Amboy. ■' ,Anbury I ’ o rk a t Mlddlotown.Had l la n k .Catholic at Kayrev lU f} Point P leasant at Lnk«wood. 'Humion at T om i l llv e r . itutgvra 1'rcp a t Cruydou H a l l . , t ttd Wnnk at U«Ktonal.Uranch at Neulvmo.Munaaquait o l bt. lto*e d l r lm o r ) , Trenton at Perth Ambny,Itayv illa Itogional ..at PloaanntviUa. Cartdrat at St. Mnry'a (P .A .)* . i> Manvillp »t Highland P o rk .South P la in fie ld nt JamoahurfT.Saturday New'Hrunswli'k'Ot Axbury r« rk . Txieiday

Toma P lv c r va. Matowan (a t St.Jonrph'fi),■'Kcyixirt at Potnt IMenaant. » FreolttiUI llrg iu n a l nt Middletown, Smith Amboy id Itnyviilo HrRlimnb Lakewood ot liunuon.Ncpluno at lied Hank.Mann«iunn at AidMir.v Pnrk.Perth Amtmy at Cnrtor«l, . -

INVENTORY SALE- Reg .;

Shoe Roller Skatei $14.952 0 " ’Exhaust Fan - 29 .95Pool Tablet 9 .95Golf Carl 19.95Baseball Glove ’ ' 12.95•World Globe . 7 .95Wearever Griddle - ' 3 .95Bean Pbfs ; ' 1 .95Home 13 Piece Tool S e t - 19.95- -

Hammer, Saw, e lo . • : ■■Mail Box - 3.’9 8Electric Drill » 1 /4 19.95Handyman Nail Hammer 1.98 Emergency Portable Gas Stove 9 .95 ,20 Gal. : _Wheeling Garbage Cans - 3798Simplicity Tractor No. FB 235 ,00 Wearever Percolator (6 'Cups1 3.95 Wearever Percolator (8 Cup») . 4 .25O 'Codar Sponge M op _____4 .50Johnson'i Pride— . .9 8 -Chop-O-Mate 2.9B

FOR

Halo$12 .95

16.956 .95

13.956 .95

2 1 91.19

- 1 4 . 9 52 .9 8

12 .981.495 .952 .9 8

189.953 .49 3,69

\ 9 8 .67

2 .78'(Vallp»per "8(c[iiirer« — y ioor Poiiiliers — f lo o r flimders

Stapling Guns — Raws — Drills — Torches —* I ’umps. Easy Charge — We Deliver

Yaut Hardwtre Department Store

" ^ ® ^ 6 28 W. FRONT ST, KEYPORT' Open Friday Evening! Until 9 :0 0 .

than the best of the Low-Price 3—for

Whcclbaso iU tho real mefiBiiro o f aizo nnd 'iho Chieftain dwnrfn nil tliriki wilh n roml-le'/eling 122' spanl Benta tlicm, too', with TcinjiOKt 395

powor . , , mnn-nizc, stretch-out roomlneea. '.’ . crlap Now pirociion Slylingl. So wiiy buy a cor with a low-prico nnme? Oct « Pontine for looal

B I B Y O U R A U T H g n i Z B D P O N T IA C D B A L B f l. F O R A D R I V B A N D A O R A L V O U ’ L L H H V B R F O R O B T

Page 12: —Annual Of Local Banks - digifind-it. · PDF fileEducation was presented In ... grees, it was necessary to raise & teacher’s starting sal ... Holmdel Township can antic

• STOCK U P I Fill Your Pantry with Top Quality Foods!

• FABULOUS SAVINGS I . .CUT- Your Food Costs N O W !;

‘ V , f ! , „ ,• DON'T IVIISSI these . ' / ■ *'

Cool, CoolJ-SAVINGSI ■

Hawaiian Punch Fre-Mar Fruit Cocktail Sfarkist w£sm«V Tuna - ‘ Pizza Pie Mix APPIAN way Brilio Soap Pads

B U Y 3 - S A V E u p t o 1 4 *. . Lesser Quantities Sold ’at Regular Prices,

0 0 M IX o r M ATCHG R O C E R Y, / ^ A L E S , . "

o f 2 0 pkg.

any

Fyne Taste Prune Juice Hunt's Tomatoes Meat Ravioli qhef boy-ar-dee Strawberry Preserves liquid Detergent fyne-suds B U Y 4 - S A V E u p - t o I 8 C

bots.

Lesser Quantities Sold at Regular P ricey ,•w m ' .m m s m m ........

any

Fre-Mar/Cut/ Green Beans Cut Wax Beans Fyne-Taste Stokely's Sliced Beets■I F . . J RED h e a r tU O g Y O O O ' • Bee f • fish • LiverFood Fair Book Matches/ ^ B U Y 7 , S A Y E 9 i y a ^

,1 6 o z .i ; ■ can ' 15 V, o z ._ can. :

1 6 o z . / can

H b' -— — tan box o f

3 0

m

any

Fyne-TasteApplesauce Kounty Kist who Kernel Corn Cooked Spaghetti fyne tasteFyne-Tex Ammonia Hudson Paper Hapkins

^ C lear o r C loudy

o f 8 0

rLesser QuantitiesSold a t Regular Prices.rB U Y 8 - S A V E u p t o 2 I C

/ Lesser Quantities Sold at Regular Pricei! '

“ Philodendron V 1v ; U \ |Pothoi ■Marble Qupen ■ .and Panda • w“ “ • J S

assorted 3 ,or I

Mix ’Em or Match ’Em Any Way You L ik e ’EmMAYFAIR — American, Swin o r PimentoCHEESE SLICES

. 0 0 *

PSG TOP QUALITY- •Milk Fed- ? j« . ' -------------

LEGS OR RUMPS

FREStf •Farmer Gray- Grade "A" ■ lb.'

Evjlcerated-5

SPANISH - ­Fresh Caught

b u y 4 — SAVE 16c

HYGRADE B0L0GHAor Llverwursf

$ 1 . 0 0 *2

VEAL ROASTShoulder Veal Chops lb 5 9 ° Loin Veal^ Chops

CAPONETTES MACKEREL SALMOR STEAK LEMOHS APPLES TOSSED SALAD COLE SLAW

lb.

ib-79c

RED*SelectedSliced

lb.

lb.

or LIMESCALIF.-JUICY ,

DEUCIOUS-WESTERN'

FRESH pkg.

FRESH Pkfl.

lbs. Cottage Cheese A" b°d 2T *15:49(By the Piece)

, BUY 2 lbs. — SAVE 18c*Lener Quantities Sold at Rag. Prices

Dubuque Pigs Feet 3>' 99c

anyGrapefruit Sections s t o k e l y s

Hershey Chocolate Syrup La Rosa Spaghetti ProductsW - ____ New Yo rk orJrFCIIIIIIIVI Salad S ty lo

Facial Tissue5 - S A V E u p t o 6 C

GOLDEN STAR Co lo red o r W h ite of 400

Lester Quantities Sgld at Regular Prices,

any

Whole White Potatoes Connors Kippered Snacks Baked Beans. ■ • . ,.r •Toilet TissueCake Mixes “ W K ife , Choc. Fudge o r Ye llow

B U Y 1 0 - S A V E u p t o 2 4 °Lesser Quantities Sold at..Regu!ar Prices, ;

FRESH FROZEN FOODS

FYNETASTE Po rk o r Vegetarian

PETAL SOFTC o lo red o r W h i t e . .

JIFFY • " 'V

any 6 $

Devils Food Fudge Bar Udy F .lr » ‘ "3 5 ° Blue Bonnet jx la rgarine • _ _ lb 29'Redeem Your Coupons a t Food Fair

Birdi Eye Chopped Broccoli Birds Eye Green PensGreen Beans Cut o r French S ty le

Mixed Vegetables f« uxe FF Deluxe Grape Juice

B U Y 6 - S A V E u p t o I 0 C: Lesser.Quantities Sold at Regular Prices. V .

mt^er-SeririceBoiiHi Otter!■ * m • dinnerware

Tills Week ~ Jan. j 6

& SaucerOn? Unit F R E EB«ch week with purchase o f $7.50 op More. /'P ^ r ^ f s c t i v e a t*ne New Middle.. jo jm Food F a f r -

Cherry Star King C rab Meat

6'/a oz. 7 Q C can / 7G rade "A M

Junket Rennet PowderiAsserted O U/i'oz. O 7 C .Flavors 3 ^ 'p k g » * < 5 / ------

W hite Rose Tea BagsTake Tea pkg. o f # r C

— And See . 48 ■ Q D -

S A V E .

Hormel-,Genoa S a l a m i pl#.Cocoenut lb.

tM. ^ 0 ;2 5 cBakers Cookies (3 °Choc. Chip bigChoc. Sandwich

21b. ^ 0

1 Fudge Pilled beg lb. beg

■Dole P ineapp le Clunkl, „ M o e lle r Macaroni ■!b" 2 ^ 2 5 °

Bakers S;;,"/ Sandwich £ 4 3 °Crushed N o i i j^ C

Dog Yummles 1 Ipeg . fcpkgi.,f% IftL‘ plgi. 3 3 °

Cat Food T“ , 3*/20 M ule Team Borax' Pi,. Boraxo .. 1 9 °K rispy Cracjters 2 p? , r 3 7 (?K a b i s c O 'O M ^ r ^ 2 5 0 S ta rk is t Tuna P i e / ; " * £ 2 5 ° Grand D u c h e s s S f e a k £ l 'X :5 7 0 -

Blu W hite Bluing71/, 6s. 2 5 °Makes

Cloths Whiter pkg.

l a H t i a r g F e a t u r e B u y t JVeid L O W P r i c e I

' Fhirlane — Finest 9D a lity :

Men's T-ShirtsGuaranteed ONE YEAR * 5 02 ST!2• Nylon Reinforced Coller i Shrink Reilitent 0 Reinforced Teped.Niek lend D Shei: Smell, Medium, Lerge

. H i x s o n V C o f f e e

EXTRA RICH J b- 7 0 G- ■ can. m m

CLIP TH IS VALUABLE C O U PO NSAVE 10‘*“W e 5 e i The

s’ aizKsamasjasmffir^sietescKafflsaiiMssjiseH^si^^To Limit Quantities — None Sold To Dealers OPEN LATE: THurs. t o 9 pm > Frl. t o 1 0 pm

On ^ gallon pkg. o l Flnut Queflty Abboft’i Ice Cream—Hold oicluilvely a f Food Fe/r 5up«r*Merliefi. Redeemable at Your Local Food Fair On ly

gwB8sa»Bt?jgts8nraM«8a iB ^ ^

* on codnr tow n o put p tn n r oo on u ir -o u io i of

ABJOTTS JANi IQOAN DE1UXI AOOOTTS THRIFT-PAK

ICECREAMFood’ Felr S lo rti « fll redeem thli coupon for 10c on theE Lhete of'ono Abbotti. Jen* in D o l i i i or Abbott* ft-Pek Helf-eetlon. Thli coupon. U ro ld If tend , pro*• hibited or'restricted. ■ Cedi' veluo l/ a k . Cutlomer muet poy eny eelti t u .

Coupon Espires Jan . 22 , 1958

aSiiciau-' > — ________ _ _ _ _ __iS a f 8 am to 6*pm FREE PARKING A l Prices Effective Jenuw y16t17an<! l 8 0 n l v r