BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in...

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•\*?SrJ-?iL2 ; '3f;ID'£SY BOX'Io73 ; 320S4 Ann Landers Page 3B Church News 6B Classifieds 10-11A Editorials 4A Sports 8-9A BOCA RATON NEWS Vol. 12, No. 128 September 14, 1967 Sept. 11-13, 1967 ., Hi Lo Rain Mon. 94 74 t00 Tues. 88 71 .06 Wed, noon 86 71 1.18 Thursday New 1-95 interchange is 'assured' for citv j w Landscape Architect Edward Stone shows proposed beach-park development for north beach area. Mayor Bernard Turner is at left. Architects show plans for proposed park area City Council reviewed plans for the development of the Boca Raton north beach area this week when two architectural firms presented five basic schemes for the beach and park area. The five proposals present- Police probe school thefts Police continued their invest- igation yesterday of two school breakins that netted thieves about $230 in cash and at least six blank checks Tuesday night, Det. Sgt. Alvon Nahrstedt said the checks and about $50 in cash were taken from J.C. Mitchell Sbhool, 2401 NW 3rd Ave. About $180 in cash was taken from the Boca Raton High School the same evening. Rifleman hits SCL switch A Seaboard Coastline Rail- road electronic switch valued at $25,000, was destroyed by a high powered rifle bullet Tues- day night, police reported yes- terday. "The switch was just south 3f 51st street along the tracks," Dfficer Robert Ruback of Boca Raton Police Department said. "As nearly as we could tell, Dne shot from a high powered rifle penetrated the box and ex- ploded inside. What wasn't torn jp by the bullet, burned up when :he unit short circuited," he 3aid. Railroad authorities said the Jamage occurred at 9 p.m. Tuesday and was picked up on :heir trouble board. ed by the firms of Roll, Johnson & Assoc., and Edward D_ Stone Jr. & Assoc., including parking facilities, nature trail, boat launching ramp and concession stand. The planners also recom- mended there be three tunnels from the park to the beach. In the basic plans there was a boardwalk extending the length of the park on the beach front side, and several variations on the concession stand that might include lockers and bath house. Speaking for the architects, Stone questioned the councilmen on the development of an arter- ial road. Mayor Bernard Turner pointed out that some consider- ation should be given to an arterial road but any road in and out of the park should be a full control facility. The architects pointed out that the beach committee had done a very good job. They will return to their drawing boards and correlate the five basic concepts along with the recom- mendations of the councilmen. I Ackerman I elected William D. Ackerman was elected president of the Boca Raton Chamber of Commerce at the organization meeting of the new board of directors this week. Also elected to office for the coming year were: L. Ed- ward Barnhardt, f i r s t vice president; Peter Blum Jr., sec- ond vice.president; Dr. Kenneth Harmon, secretary; Kenneth Bradshaw, treasurer. Installation of officers and directors is slated for the Chamber's annual meeting the first week in November. Study shows third exit is needed A third interchange on Boca Raton's stretch of 1-95 seemed assured this week, Area Plan- ning Director Don Morgan re- ported. Morgan told members of the Area Planning Board that fed- eral approval of a new Glades road interchange here is vir- tually assured. It and two other new interchanges -- at Belve- dere road in West Palm Beach and one in Lake Worth have already won State Road De- partment approval, Morgan said. "According to the State Road Department and all of the com- puters, it seems we'll have an interchange at Glades road," Planning Board Chairman John Flancher of Boca Raton said yesterday. "That's the figures we got Tuesday." "It is virtually certain that the federal government will add these proposed interchanges to its plans for 1-95," Morgan said. "The need for them has been statistically projected by the survey now being com- pleted by Mel Connor Asso- ciates of Tallahassee." The planner said that "the State Road Department agrees with the projections and will propose the interchanges to the Bureau of Public Roads. That will virtually assure their con- struction." Previously approved for Boca Raton were interchanges at Pal- metto Park road and at 51st street. The City Council had adopted resolutions asking first for a Glades road interchange in- stead of Palmetto Park road and later for all three inter- changes. Traffic headed for Florida Atlantic University will bene- fit most from: the new Glades road interchange, City En- gineering Director J. P. Vansant said yesterday; Another factor which might have influenced the new study was the planned con- struction of an IBM Corporation computer assembly plant just north of Glades road. The IBM plant will extend north to 51st stjreet and also will be served fey that inter- c h a n g e . Already^ under con- struction is a new road — an extension of 51st street—from Military Trail east to the Sea- fa o a r d Coastline Railroad tracks. I Interstate 95 will parallel the SCL tracks alopg the east side, inside the limits. The west tracks north of Gl, in the city of Univ< Acting Fire Chief Lou Patitto takes incoming calls over a walky-talky unit at the police sta- tion. A special operator was routing all emer- gency messages through the fire department. Of- ficer Craig Middaugh, right, jots down the inform- ation received. Phone lines cut again, PD switches to emergency setup By Jim Rifenburg Emergency communications were quickly pressed into ac- tion yesterday morning when cut telephone lines again dis- rupted service to city hall and the police station. Telephone officials said a bulldozer working on Palmetto Park road cut a 25-pair tele- phone cable at Second Avenue about 9:40 a.m. Hardest hit was the police department's control board which uses the lines to transmit through a tower near the water plant. A special operator immed- iately put into effect a routing system that put emergency in- coming calls through to the fire department. From this point, walky-talky's communi- cated with the police station and a long microphone cable from a police vehicle parked by the front door was used for dis- patching purposes. The system had a workout previously when a multi-line cable was cut in almost the same location and the same way about two weeks ago. Ed Fincham, test deskman for Southern Bell, said emer- gency lines to the police station were repaired first. The base station was put back in operation at 11:40 a.m. Telephone lines were working on a temporary basis about 10 minutes later. "We hope to correct one sit- uation there in the near fu- ture," he added. "At present the line from transmitter to tower is in the same cable with telephone lines. We are working on a re-routing system that would make this line separate from the others. Assistant Police Chief Charles McCutcheon said this ' again points up the need for a central dispatch system that could be operated on an inde- pendent power system. "As long as our base station must transmit through tele- fContinued on Page 12A) New code calls for underground wiring Raton city of the es road is •sity Park. Boca Raton's new subdivision code passed a public hearing with something less than flying colors Tuesday, but won the unanimous vote of the City Council. A number of changes thrash- ed out in a workshop session with utility company represent- Bikes, pedestrians and cars compete for the right of way at the entrance to the new Addison Mizner School from Southwest 12th avenue. Sidewalk on south side, left of picture, is not matched on north side. City Councilmen Tues< bike path on the north, if the countyl matching path on the school grounds.' iy pledged construction of a ichool board would provide a atives were incorporated into the ordinance before the hear- ing opened. The code stands essentially as it was intended however: utility service in all new subdivisions will be un- derground. Only exception will be over- head wiring to the subdivision and the installation of above ground transformers, on a foundation rather than a pole. James Spencer, vice presi- dent of Florida Power anr* Light, estimated that the maximum per-lot cost for the under- ground service would be $200 if direct burial cable is permit- ted. At the present time, how- ever, the city's electrical code specifies that all underground cable shall be in conduits, es- timated to cost as much as $1,500 per lot. Council turned down a re- quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in- structed City Manager itlan Al- ford to write the board asking for any amendments or re- visions which the board might feel desirable. Boca Raton Square Developer and real estate agent, Thomas Meredith, also pleaded for the 90-day delay. "After four years in prepar- ation of the code," Meredith said, "it isn't too much to give it another 90 days for further smdv." Middaugh dispatches police cars through a vehicle parked outside the department door. Scenes Watching the traffic at city schools, SGT. JOHN LaMONT expressed concern about the situation: "They get too close together going different direc- tions,". » .Woman to POLICE OFFICER who had stopped her for not displaying Florida tags: "Why don't you spend your time trying to catch those jewel thieves?". . .Best view of the^ city and the ocean is from the top of the new SABAL RIDGE condominium where the work- ers climb 18 floors to get to their jobs and "don't come down for lunch".. ."Cracked" vault at the Boca Raton NATIONAL BANK isn't; workmen are build- ing addition to north side. . . At the public hearing on Boca Raton's new SUBDIVISION CODE, more developers than ever gathered together in one place before, pacing the city hall lobby, waiting for someone else to speak up. . .Planning Director WALTER YOUNG, dodging feigned blows from a developer: This is just aquiet <L

Transcript of BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in...

Page 1: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

•\*?SrJ-?iL2;'3f;ID'£SYBOX'Io73

; 320S4

Ann Landers Page 3BChurch News 6BClassifieds 10-11AEditorials 4ASports 8-9A

BOCA RATON NEWSVol. 12, No. 128 September 14, 1967

Sept. 11-13, 1967. , Hi Lo RainMon. 94 74 t00Tues. 88 71 .06Wed, noon 86 71 1.18

Thursday

New 1-95 interchangeis 'assured' for citv

j

wLandscape Architect Edward Stone shows proposed beach-park

development for north beach area. Mayor Bernard Turner is at left.

Architects show plansfor proposed park area

City Council reviewed plansfor the development of the BocaRaton north beach area thisweek when two architecturalf i r m s presented f i v e basicschemes for the beach and parkarea.

The five proposals present-

Police probeschool thefts

Police continued their invest-igation yesterday of two schoolbreakins that netted thievesabout $230 in cash and at leastsix blank checks Tuesday night,

Det. Sgt. Alvon Nahrstedt saidthe checks and about $50 in cashwere taken from J.C. MitchellSbhool, 2401 NW 3rd Ave.

About $180 in cash was takenfrom the Boca Raton High Schoolthe same evening.

Rifleman hitsSCL switchA Seaboard Coastline Rail-

road electronic switch valuedat $25,000, was destroyed by ahigh powered rifle bullet Tues-day night, police reported yes-terday.

"The switch was just south3f 51st street along the tracks,"Dfficer Robert Ruback of BocaRaton Police Department said.

"As nearly as we could tell,Dne shot from a high poweredrifle penetrated the box and ex-ploded inside. What wasn't tornjp by the bullet, burned up when:he unit short circuited," he3aid.

Railroad authorities said theJamage occurred at 9 p.m.Tuesday and was picked up on:heir trouble board.

ed by the firms of Roll, Johnson& Assoc., and Edward D_ StoneJr . & Assoc., including parkingfacilities, nature trail, boatlaunching ramp and concessionstand. The planners also recom-mended there be three tunnelsfrom the park to the beach.

In the basic plans there wasa boardwalk extending the lengthof the park on the beach frontside, and several variations onthe concession stand that mightinclude lockers and bath house.

Speaking for the architects,Stone questioned the councilmenon the development of an arter-ial road. Mayor Bernard Turnerpointed out that some consider-ation should be given to anarterial road but any road in andout of the park should be a fullcontrol facility.

The architects pointed outthat the beach committee haddone a very good job. They willreturn to their drawing boardsand correlate the five basicconcepts along with the recom-mendations of the councilmen.

I Ackerman Ielected

William D. Ackerman waselected president of the BocaRaton Chamber of Commerceat the organization meeting ofthe new board of directors thisweek.

Also elected to office forthe coming year were: L. Ed-ward Barnhardt, f i r s t vicepresident; Peter Blum Jr., sec-ond vice.president; Dr. KennethHarmon, secretary; KennethBradshaw, treasurer.

Installation of officers anddirectors is slated for t h eChamber's annual meeting thefirst week in November.

Study shows

third exit

is neededA third interchange on Boca

Raton's stretch of 1-95 seemedassured this week, Area Plan-ning Director Don Morgan r e -ported.

Morgan told members of theArea Planning Board that fed-eral approval of a new Gladesroad interchange here is vir-tually assured. It and two othernew interchanges - - at Belve-dere road in West Palm Beachand one in Lake Worth — havealready won State Road De-partment approval, Morgansaid.

"According to the State RoadDepartment and all of the com-puters, it seems we'll have aninterchange at Glades road,"Planning Board Chairman JohnFlancher of Boca Raton saidyesterday. "That's the figureswe got Tuesday."

"It is virtually certain thatthe federal government will addthese proposed interchanges toits plans for 1-95," Morgansaid. "The need for them hasbeen statistically projected bythe survey now being com-pleted by Mel Connor Asso-ciates of Tallahassee."

The planner said that " t h eState Road Department agreeswith the projections and willpropose the interchanges to theBureau of Public Roads. Thatwill virtually assure their con-struction."

Previously approved for BocaRaton were interchanges at Pal-metto Park road and at 51ststreet.

The City Council had adoptedresolutions asking first for aGlades road interchange in-stead of Palmetto Park roadand later for all three inter-changes.

Traffic headed for FloridaAtlantic University will bene-fit most from: the new Gladesr o a d interchange, City En-gineering Director J. P. Vansantsaid yesterday; Another factorwhich might have influenced thenew study was the planned con-struction of an IBM Corporationcomputer assembly plant justnorth of Glades road.

The IBM plant will extendnorth to 51st stjreet and alsowill be served fey that inter-c h a n g e . Already^ under con-struction is a new road — anextension of 51st street—fromMilitary Trail east to the Sea-fa o a r d Coastline Railroadtracks. I

Interstate 95 will parallelthe SCL tracks alopg the eastside, inside thelimits. The westtracks north of Gl,in the city of Univ<

Acting Fire Chief Lou Patitto takes incomingcalls over a walky-talky unit at the police sta-tion. A special operator was routing all emer-

gency messages through the fire department. Of-ficer Craig Middaugh, right, jots down the inform-ation received.

Phone lines cut again, PDswitches to emergency setup

By Jim RifenburgEmergency communications

were quickly pressed into ac-tion yesterday morning whencut telephone lines again dis-rupted service to city hall andthe police station.

Telephone officials said abulldozer working on PalmettoPark road cut a 25-pair tele-phone cable at Second Avenueabout 9:40 a.m. Hardest hitwas the police department'scontrol board which uses thelines to transmit through atower near the water plant.

A special operator immed-iately put into effect a routingsystem that put emergency in-coming calls through to t h ef i r e department. From thispoint, walky-talky's communi-cated with the police station anda long microphone cable froma police vehicle parked by the

front door was used for dis-patching purposes.

The system had a workoutpreviously when a multi-linecable was cut in almost thesame location and the same wayabout two weeks ago.

Ed Fincham, test deskmanfor Southern Bell, said emer-gency lines to the police stationwere repaired first. The basestation was put back in operationat 11:40 a.m. Telephone lineswere working on a temporarybasis about 10 minutes later.

"We hope to correct one sit-uation there in the near fu-ture," he added. "At presentthe line from transmitter totower is in the same cable withtelephone lines. We are workingon a re-routing system thatwould make this line separatefrom the others.

A s s i s t a n t Police ChiefCharles McCutcheon said this

' again points up the need for acentral dispatch system thatcould be operated on an inde-pendent power system.

"As long as our base stationmust transmit through tele-

fContinued on Page 12A)

New code calls forunderground wiring

Raton cityof the

es road is•sity Park.

Boca Raton's new subdivisioncode passed a public hearingwith something less than flyingcolors Tuesday, but won theunanimous vote of the CityCouncil.

A number of changes thrash-ed out in a workshop sessionwith utility company represent-

Bikes, pedestrians and cars compete for the right of way at theentrance to the new Addison Mizner School from Southwest 12thavenue. Sidewalk on south side, left of picture, is not matched on

north side. City Councilmen Tues<bike path on the north, if the countylmatching path on the school grounds.'

iy pledged construction of aichool board would provide a

atives were incorporated intothe ordinance before the hear-ing opened. The code standsessentially as it was intendedhowever: utility service in allnew subdivisions will be un-derground.

Only exception will be over-head wiring to the subdivisionand the installation of aboveground transformers, on afoundation rather than a pole.

James Spencer, vice presi-dent of Florida Power anr* Light,estimated that the maximumper-lot cost for the under-ground service would be $200 ifdirect burial cable is permit-ted. At the present time, how-ever, the city's electrical codespecifies that all undergroundcable shall be in conduits, e s -timated to cost as much as$1,500 per lot.

Council turned down a r e -quest from t h e Boca RatonBoard of Realtors for a 90-daydelay in adoption of the code.However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford to write the board askingfor any amendments or r e -visions which the board mightfeel desirable.

Boca Raton Square Developerand real estate agent, ThomasMeredith, also pleaded for the90-day delay.

"After four years in prepar-ation of the code," Meredithsaid, " i t isn't too much to giveit another 90 days for furthersmdv."

Middaugh dispatches p o l i c ecars through a vehicle parkedoutside the department door.

ScenesWatching the traffic at city

schools, SGT. JOHN LaMONTexpressed concern about thesituation: "They get too closetogether going different direc-tions,". » .Woman to POLICEOFFICER who had stopped herfor not displaying Florida tags:"Why don't you spend your timet r y i n g to catch those jewelthieves?". . .Best view of the^city and the ocean is from thetop of the new SABAL RIDGEcondominium where the work-ers climb 18 floors to get totheir jobs and "don't come downfor lunch". . ."Cracked" vaultat the Boca Raton NATIONALBANK isn't; workmen are build-ing addition to north side. . .At the public hearing on BocaRaton's new SUBDIVISIONCODE, more developers thanever gathered together in oneplace before, pacing the cityhall lobby, waiting for someoneelse to speak up. . .PlanningDirector WALTER YOUNG,dodging feigned blows from adeveloper: This is just aquiet

<L

Page 2: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford
Page 3: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

Class, clinic

are scheduledBilliard classes will

b e g i n Friday in theCommunity Center, Theclasses, taught by JoeG alayda for children be-tween 10 and 12, will beheld at 3:30 p.m.

* * * *A softball clinic f o r

girls, ten and over, willbe conducted by JoeGa-layda for the Boca RatonRecreation Department.The clinic will be heldMonday, Sept. 18 at 3:30p.m. at the Little Lea-gue Field.

BOCA RATON NEWS Thursday, September 14, 1967 3A

4Ken Higginswill help you long afteryou've boughtan insurance policyWhen your car or home is damagedor destroyed, we will make sureyou get paid promptly and fairly.We're independent insuranceagents.

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22 S. Federal. . 395-4711

Judo classesstill openRegistration is still

open for two judo class-es for children, six andover.

Classes are held 7 to9 p.m. Wednesday and 1to 3 p.m. Saturday in theCommunity Center. In-structor is Buck Camp-bell, Miami School ofJudo.

Ward to teachnew course

Blake Ward, ballroomdance instructor, willbegin a new eight weekseries of social danceclasses for teens at theBoca Raton CommunityCenter. The class willbegin at 7 p.m. Friday,Sept. 15.

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Hurricane Beulah wasn't much of a threat toBoca Raton - if at all - but the city used theoccasion for a practice session by the Red CrossDisaster Committee. Checking emsrgency plans

are, seated, committee members Art Rudford,William Prendergast, and John Loughery. Stand-ing are Acting Fire Chief Louis Papitto and As-sistant Police Chief Charles MeCutcheon.

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Minor traffic cases heardduring brief court session

Minor traffic casesconsumed most of thetwo-hour session of citycourt Tuesday morning.S e v e r a l other cases

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were continued for latertrials.

Largest fine of the daywent to Willie Lee Jones.He paid $35 for drivingwithout a license. Jonessaid he owned a car buthad never had a licenseto drive it.

Louis Vincent Frankwas assessed $30 andthree points for failureto yield the right of way.An accident occurredas a result of the in-fraction.

Lorraine H. Summerspleaded guilty to pullingin front of a vehicle at astop sign and causingan accident. She w a sfined $25 and threepoints.

Joseph R. Evans wasalso found guilty of caus-ing an accident and wasfined $25 and t h r e epoints.

C h a r l e s M. Seale

paid a fine of $20. Hewas also assessed fourpoints.

Louis M. Zeff failedto appear to answer aspeeding charge and awarrant has been issuedfor his arrest.

Being low on gas wasJohn Pylman Jr . ' s ex-cuse for traveling northin a southbound lane oftraffic. He said he spot-ted a station and pulledacross the center stripwithout thinking aboutbeing in the wrong lane.He was fined $15.

David Bruce Wrightsigned a guilty waiver torunning a stop sign. BillWolfe, charged with im-proper parking failed toappear and his bond wasestreated.

In non-traffic action,Jerrie Lee Humphrieswas found guilty of dis-orderly conduct and

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pleaded guilty to speed- fined $25 or five days ining but denied going 80 jail. Her husband, Williemiles an hour in a 45 James Humphries, withm i l e zone. Following whom she allegedly had adiscussion, he admitted" shouting and pullingto 60 miles an hour and match outside a bar, was

fined $30 or six days forbeing drunk.

Lauren Phillip Moeg-enberg, who had b e e nordered to get a haircutand appear in cleanclothes did just that.

Apparently impressedwith the lad's appear-ance, Judge Kenneth M.Dix continued a vagrancycase against the youthindefinitely.

"You look much bet-ter than the last time youwere here," Judge Dixsaid. "I 'll bet you feelbetter, too."

Moegenberg said hehad decided against join-ing the Army and hadre-enrolled at BocaRaton High School.

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Page 4: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

Random observations

Private meetingsThe City Council's private meeting Tuesday

morning with Arvida Corporation might havepromoted some understanding among those at-tending, but it should not be allowed to soften theCouncil's position on improving Boca Raton In-let.

The Council's position, at least up until Tues-day morning, was that improvement of the inletshould go hand-in-hand with acquisition of landfor public use. Councilman Harold Maull putitratrifle more bluntly: "Nopublic land, no improve-ment." As far as we're concerned, that is a soundposition.,!! public money is to be used to improvethe inlet, the public generally should benefit, andnot just those with boats.

The Arvida Corporation might have some com-pelling arguments against the new setback r e -quirements the Council has proposed to protectthe public's access to the inlet. But in requestinga closed meeting of the Council to make its

Views of other newspapers

case, Arvida's position has automatically beenrendered suspect, whether it deserved to be ornot.

It might be that the City Council also has help-ed to cloud the whole issue by agreeing to meetprivately with Arvida. The Council was, ad-mittedly, merely responding to a request. Butthis is, after all, the public's business and wecan see no reason why the public shouldn't beparty to all the proceedings concerning it.

There are instances in which the Council prob-ably should hold private meetings: when person-nel problems are being discussed, when the cityis involved in litigation, and possibly at othertimes.

The closed meeting with Arvida on Tuesday wasnot such an instance. The Council would havedone better to meet with Arvida right out there inthe open or not at all.

Penchant for namesMost people love names. So, at least, we have

observed. Not only d o they give much seriousthought to naming their children, dogs, cats, petmice, stuffed animals and dollies but they arealmost as concerned to find precisely the rightname for their cottage, automobile, boat, bi-cycle, and, the ladies tell us, their favorite potsand pans.

We know a farmer who named each of his 25cows after a different flower — Columbine,Chrysanthemum, Magnolia, Buttercup, and so on.The cows knew, of course, exactly which flowerthey were and responded readily to their names.

And speaking of flowers, we read of a womanin England who decided to name one of her flow-ers "Fred ." Eight weeks ago she asked forsomething small to grow in a box. She planted afew seeds and soon little Fred, exhibiting fabu-lous flower power, grew to the astonishing heightof eight feet. A flower that tall naturally had tohave a name of its own.

Naming summer cottages tends to be a gamefor playful folk who come up with appelationslike "Dunrovin." Boat owners, on the otherhand, are inclined to give their craft names of.lovely ladies. Truck drivers, too, sometimesinscribe a romantic name on the back of theirlumbering vehicles.

There are some things, however, that mostpeople don't name. We are not really sure aboutsnow blowers, but we are faily certain that colorTV sets, air conditioners, and electric dish-

washers go nameless. Somewhere people event-ually do draw the line.

-Christian Science Monitor

DemandsConsidering the demands upon them and the

example set for them by their government, it isa wonder the American people save anything atall.

It is a remarkable fact, however, that in obed-ience to some ancient impulse, like the squirrelthat stocks nuts, they continue to put aside some-thing of their income in the several forms ofeconomic security. Last year, for example, ac-cording to the American Institute of EconomicResearch, these savers held 291 billion dollarsin insurance and pension funds, 335 billion dol-lars in savings accounts and 217 billion dollars inbonds and other securities.

It is a still more remarkable fact — and onenot so well known ~ that on these savings theAmerican people took a considerable beating.With each rise in the cost of living (or declinein the value of the dollar), they took a cut in thevalue of their holdings, and when the year wasover, they were 27 billion dollars poorer in thevalue of what they had set aside.

A third remarkable fact — indeed, the most r e -markable of them all, is that this steady declinein worth occasions almost no comment whatever,almost as if it were more beneficial than crueland deceptive. _Charles (W.Va.) Daily Mail

The view from Tallahassee

Wheels of governmentBy Malcolm B. Johnson

Florida's Governor is vaca-tioning in Europe, but the wheelsof government are turning with-out significant hesitation.

True, he'll only be gone twoweeks and telephone communi-cation is so good that he can bereached within an hour or lessfor urgent administrative de-cisions.

But, if he stayed longer andlost touch, the wheels wouldturn — even though Florid a hasno Lieutenant Governor, norany other individual official whocan perform all the acts whichthe Governor is authorized toperform.

He has his own administra-tive appointees heading manymajor agencies — Road De-partment, Development Com-mission, Beverage Department,Industrial Commission. If hewants personally to direct theiraffairs, he can do it by telephoneas well from Europe as fromthe southwest corner of theCapitol building.

On most broader decisions ofpolicy, the Governor has onlyone vote on most of the boardsmade up by the independentlyelected constitutional officerswhich we loosely term " t h eCabinet."

The others can act effectivelyand responsibly for the Statewhether they know where he isor not — and whether he likestheir decisions or not.

* * * *As a matter of fact, the Cabi-

net did carry on back in the30s when Gov. Fred P. Conedisappeared and only membersof the family knew for a coupleof weeks that he was recuperat-ing from a heart attack in aJacksonville private hospital.

Gov. Dave Sholtz, Cone'spredecessor, took a six-weektrip to Europe by ocean liner andwas out of touch nearly all the

time — and the Cabinet carriedon. (Sholtz, I believe, was thefirst Florida Governor ever toleave the country while in of-fice.)

The Cabinet handled affairsof state very well, also, duringthe long illness of Gov. DanMcCarty before his death inoffice.

We positively must have aGovernor on hand in Floridaonly to appoint officers to fillvacancies suspend current offi-cials from office, grant full par-dons to convicts, execute deathsentences, and vote with theCabinet majority to float bondsto finance certain recreationand conservation projects.

The State never has floatedany of those recreation bonds.

Neither Kirk nor his pre-decessor, Gov. Haydon Burns,has signed any death warrants(a federal court injunction hasmore than 50 men waiting in thedeath house). The Parole Com-mission can and does grantmost of the clemency for con-victs. It can turn them out ofprison. The only thing it can'tdo is restore their civil rights(the right to vote, hold office,etc.) after they have been out.The Governor must vote withthe Cabinet Pardon Board ma-jority to do that. Only the Gov-ernor can keep a man frombeginning service of a sentenceby reprieve, but the courts cando it by issuing stay orders.

* * * *So the major disruption of

public business that could comefrom protracted absence of theGovernor is inability of anyoneto fill vacancies in State andCounty offices resulting fromdeath and resignation.

The Cabinet is perfectly com-petent to elect good officials forthese positions. It does nameP ar ole C ommis sioner s, t h eDirector of Public Safety, t h eR e v e n u e Commissioner, the

Motor Vehicle Commissionerand the heads of all non-edu-cational State Institutions.

However, t h e Constitutiondoesn't give anyone but theGovernor authority to fill a va-cancy in the judiciary, or onthe Cabinet, or the United StatesSenate, or any county office.Even the proposed new Consti-tution doesn't give that authorityto the Lieutenant Governor itwould create.

This leaves what the lawyerscall a "hiatus," a gap in auth-ority. It should be closed inwriting the final draft of theConstitution. It would be per-haps best to let the Cabinet filla vacancy after it has existedfor, say six weeks, whether ornot the Governor is out ofpock-et.

And the death sentence shouldbe executed by an automaticcourt mandate if the Governorfails to act in six months or so.

Florida is fortunate in havinga Cabinet system to k e e p gov-ernment running; but no neces-sary function of governmentshould be unreasonably delayedby the absence of a single manfrom the State Capital.

Water: expensiveBy Jim Shumaker

Random observation:Boca Raton is one of the few

places — if not the only one —in the Continental United Stateswhere you can go home in theafternoon, turn on the lawnsprinklers, sit down for a roundof drinks, and the water costsyou more than the whiskey.

* * * *Water, please believe it, is

dear.Five days after we moved

into a house here we receivedthe official welcome to BocaRaton — a water bill for $7and something.

On inquiry, it turned out thatonly about $5 of this total wasfor water actually used. Thisfailed to clear up all the confu-sion, since the only water we

had tapped was to make a pot ofcoffee. The nice lady at t h ew a t e r department said shewould send out an expert tocheck the meter and look aroundfor leaks.

No fault in the meter, noleaks. By then a couple moredays had passed. In the interim,the expert found, we had usedanother 25 thousand or so gal-lons of Boca Raton's splendid

. water.If we compute accurately, the

water bill, at the present userate, will just about equal mort-gage payments on the house.

* * * *Maintenance on the lawn it-

self, aside from water, will atleast match the grocery bill.

The first four professionalswe contacted announced thatthey weren't taking on any more

" Wonder what it looks like?"

FASTER PLA

lawns this yea r—in about thesame tone a gent in sneakersand shorts would get from themaitre d' at Twenty-One.

Finally, one lawn expert grud-gingly conceded that he would,despite a million misgivings,take on the job — on a trialbasis, of course ~ provided wewould sign a loyalty oath andagree to fly Old Glory on week-days and holidays. The basicprice included trimming andedging. Fertilizing — extra.Spraying —. e x t r a . Clippingh e d g e s « extra. Watchingshrubs and trees ~ extra. Noguarantees against chinch bugs,fungus, hurricanes, war, fam-ine, or subersion,

* * * *The Lawn, it seems, is not so

much a thing of beauty and a joyforever as a conversation piece.Neighbors come over to chatabout the burned-out and thins p o t s . You get the idea that aman would rather lose his hairthan his sod.

One fellow came over with aT-square to see if our edgingwas up to snuff. Another, anIBM man, arrived with a sliderule and micrometer to makesure the sprinkler heads wereset properly. There needs tobe, we learned, just enough tol-erance to allow the spray topitch unimpeded in all direc-tions, but not so much tolerancethat the spray head becomes aneyesore and a hazard.

Somewhat confounded by allthis expertise, we sought out thereal estate man who sold usthe place. He announced that helived in a condominium anddidn't like, to even think aboutlawns.

Still casting about for altern-atives, we checked the fourteenpages of restrictive covenantsin the deed. Paragraph 103,Subsection C took care of that,to wit: "Lawns may not be r e -placed with asphalt, concrete,rocks, gravel, sand, or anyother substance without expresspermission by the developer."Nobody had seen or heard tellof the developer for severalyears. There was other lang-uage in there which, translated,seemed to say, "If you don'thave the time or money to keepyour lawn emerald-green andsatin-smooth, get out."

Neighbors and the AgricultureDepartment willing, we're goingto put the whole place in theSoil Bank.

Behind the news in business

More record breakingBy Leslie Gould

The N.Y. Stock Exchange r e -ports everything^ is recordbreaking — trading volume,market values and margin debtof the customers. This is so asto trading volume and marketvalues, but only so as to margindebt if you forget 1929, whichthe Stock Exchange can hardly"disremember" then, now orever. i

The margin debt in 1929 was$8-1/2 billion on'a $89.7 billionvaluation of all 'the then listedshares on the big board.

Latest figures, put the margindebt at $5.58 billion on a marketvaluation of $586 billion for allcurrently listed shares.

So against §.1 per cent in1929, the margin debt today isless than one;per cent of them a r k e t value of all listedshares. The 4.929 margins —the amount of cash the customerhad to put up j — ran from 10 to20 per cent against 70 per centtoday. And when speculation inindividual stocks starts to runwild both exchanges — the NewYork and American — are im-posing 100 per cent margins orall cash.

So, the cf edit picture is sound,

and if speculation continues,F e d e r a l Reserve ChairmanMartin can be expected to. raisemargins to 100 per cent. But itwon't work as a brake on specu-lation — particularly if the pub-lic fears a mounting inflation.

Speculation has stepped upthis year, but it is still largelya cash business, as reflectedby the margin ratio to totalmarket values. The collateralcovering the $5.58 billion debttotals $23.57 billion, or 76.4per cent, and even with a 20 percent drop in the market themargin would still be 70 percent plus.

There should be concern overthe rise in the turn over. In1929 the turn over was 100 percent - - that is volume equalledthe number of shares listed.T h e r e were 1,127,682,468shareslisted. In the year endedJuly 30, the turn over reached24 per cent of the 11,336,000,-000 shares listed. Related to1929 this percentage is low, butit is sharply higher than the 15per cent turn over in 1965 and19 per cent in 1966.

There are around 22 millionshareowners today against anestimated 4 million in 1929.This includes the large pensionfunds, which were virtually non-existent in *29 and the mutualfunds, which were also no factorin the markets of that era. To-day, the mutual funds and theclosed end investing companieshave more than $45 billion inthe market.

The danger in this marketisn't in the margin accounts,but in the big block buying andselling by the investing com-panies and the pension funds.They get out as quick as theyget in.

Opinions...Opinions expressed by col-

umnists and in letters to theeditor are those of the writ-ers and are not necessarilythose of the Boca RatonNews. Opinions of the Newsare expressed in our editor-ial column.

Public form Thursday 4A September 14,1967

To the Editor:Your editorial of Sept. 10

spoke of the problems of payingfor education, and about notlooking: "the problem in theeye, to think of the ostrich whoburies his head in the sand."

Until some people take theirhead out of the sand, and lookaround them and recognize thetrue problem that confronts ustoday, that of the politicians inWashington that have been r e -sponsible for the squandering ofbillions of dollars of the hardearned tax money, of teachersand others that work for a liv-

ing, on dubious projects.This nas triggered an infla-

tionary/trend, that, like a thiefin the/night, steals our pur-chasing power.

Unt i l pressure is broughtagainst those politicians, theyear ahead will bring more In-flation, plus a surtax. Any fi-nancial gains will be cancelledout in six months or less..

You remarked in the closingparagraph of your editorial:" I t ' sup to us. We've got a stakein iq and a debt to pay." Howtrue

S/Fred Wheeler

Published every Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday at 34 S.E.2nd st., Boca Raton, Fla., 33432, by the Boca Raton Pub-lishing Co., Inc. Phone 395-8300.

JAMES H. SHUMAKER, Publisher

JOHN T. OPEL H. CLAY RILEY' Adv. Mgr.Editor

Entered as second class mail at the post office at BocaRaton, Florida under the act of March 8, 1879.

Member of the Florida P r e s s Association and NationalNewspaper Association. Subscription rates': By carrier inthe city70</: per month; by mail in the U.S., one year $10.00,6 months $6.00, 3 months $4.00.

\

Page 5: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

BOCA RATON NEWS Thursday, September 14,

Stieglitz

transferred

fcCCA H A L L C O H f L t Al I 0 k

Architect'sway betweenciates, the pi

™~ - — ~—™™™» in uwr I • • • • • • M i l l . • ! • ! ! . — * ~^m* * i «L*f> * . Mk. H9> 1 "•«• JST&'

shows proposed new shopping mall on Federal high- in the design are expected to be presented at tonight's meeting40th and 5lst streets. A project of Marqusee Asso- of the Planning and Zoning Board,an includes major department stores. Some changes

Recent Real Estate Transactions

Lot sales continue brisk paceRecent Boca Raton

real estate transactionsas compiled for the Newsby the Laweyers TitleInsurance Corp. arelisted below.

Documentary stamps,listed by amount, indi-cate the approximatesale price in many in-stances. They are com-puted on $3 per $1,000value; in other words, a$10,000 sale would re-quire $30 in stamps.Week ending September 1,1967.

Lot 4, Blk 26, Royal PalmYacht & Country Club, S.S.$126.00, First Federal of Delrayto Leo F. Ceetari, Jr . and MaryB,, his wife.

Lot 1, Blk 3, Lake FlorestaPark Sec. 1, S.S. $21.00, EmilF. Danclu & Eleanor C.Danciu,his wife to Harold Kaplan, J r .and Ulla Marie Kaplan, his wife.

Lot 24, Blk 25, Unit VIII,Boca Raton Square, S.S. $11.10,Keating of Florida Inc. to JohnF. Young and Anna R. Young,his wife.

Lot 1. Blk 9, Boca Raton

Bagnoli will

retire hereThe retirement of O. J.

Bagnoli, as chairman ofthe board of Thomas C.Wilson, Inc., Long Is-land, N.Y. has been an-nounced by the board ofdirectors.

Mr. and Mrs. Bagnoli,formerly residing inEnglewood, N.J., willmake their permanenthome in Boca Raton.

Bagnoli will remain amember of the board andwill serve as consultantfor the company whichdesigns and manufac-tures boiler mainten-ance and pneumatic pro-duction tools.

He joined the companyin 1930 in a productioncapacity and was electedvice president and gen-eral manager in 1936.He became president ofthe firm in I960 and wasmade chairman of theboard in 1966.

FOR MOST PEOPLE, PENSIONBENEFITS COVER ONLY A PARTOF THE COST REQUIRED TO CON-TINUE THE "GOOD LIFE" AFTERRETIREMENT. Figure it out foryourself. Then ask yourself—"Do Iwant to reduce my standard of liv-ing when I retire?" Indeed, it paysto plan your retirement income to-day. And it pays to know how StateFarm can help you witha life insurance planthat's right for you andyourbudget.Callmenow!

2170 N.E.I Ave.Boca Raton, Florida

Office 395-3515Residence 395-2636

STATE FARM Life Insurance CompanyHome Office: Bloomington, Illinois

Square Unit 3, S.S. $78.00, Al-fred Gregg and Gertrude B.Gregg, his wife to William F.Davidson and Esther R. David-son, his wife.

Lot 12, Blk 4, C aid wellHeights, S.S. $40.50, EdwardP. Grime and Marilyn R. Crimehis wife to George F. Rahmand Edna W. Rahm, his wife.

Lot 6, Blk 2, & E 20 ft ofLot 7, Blk 2, Gateway Villas,S.S. $60.00, Itvenus Develop-ment & Industrial Corp. toFrederick M. Hammond andElizabeth K. Hammond, his wife.

Lot 10, Blk 12, Lake FlorestaPark Sec. #2, S.S. $12.00, Ar-vida Corporation to Realty In-vestment of Boca, Inc.

Lot 11, Blk 9, Boca IslandsSec. 7, S.S. $99.00, Philip A.DiSimone and Eleanor A. De-Simone, his wife to Richard O.Huopana and Barbara A. Huo-pana, his wife.

Lot 10, Blk 10, Chatham HillsSec. " B " , S.S. $47.70, AtlanticFederal Savings and Loan As-sociation of Ft. Laud to WillardJ. Bain and Romona E. Bain,his wife.

Lots 1 to 4 incl. Blk 38,P,B. Farms Co. Plat #10, NorthDeerfield, S.S. $6.00, ThomasMaxwell and Elizabeth Maxwell,his wife to Larry E. Risser andPatricia C. Risser, his wife.

Lot 1, Blk 44, Boca RatonSquare Unit Hi, S.S. $67.50,Quintin J. Liberati and NaomiH. Liberati, his wife to RolandC, Riske and Gertrude .Riske,his wife.

Lot 20, Blk 11, Boca VillasSec. C , S.S. $50.40. Gustavo P.

Hager, widower to Ralph S. Lottand Margaret E., his wife.

Lot 2, Blk 53, Boca RatonSquare Unit XIII. S.S. $48.60,Keating of Florida, Inc. to LouisF. Sowa and Connie L., his wife.

Lot 18, 19, 20 and 21, Blk 55,Unit XIII, Boca Raton Square,S.S. 526.40, Keating of FloridaInc. to Otto C. Klein and EdnaM. Klein, his wife.

Lot 3, Blk 1, Palmetto ParkTerrace, Unit 1, S.S. $63.00,Lawrence D. Kinsley and AnnaB, Kinsley, his wife to RobertF. Carlen and Miriam V. Car-len, his wife.

Lot 8, Blk 3, Unit #1, BocaRaton Square, S.S. $69.00, Del-bert L. Walke and Marion L.Walke, his wife to Nearle H.Cobb and Margaret S. Cobb, hiswife.

Lot 12, Blk 7, Replat ofCountry Club Village Sec. A,S.S. $64.50. James H. Jesse

and Gloria W. Jesse, his wifeto Martin W. Schoppmeyer and

Walter O. Stieglitz,former wildlife manage-ment biologist here forthe Bureau of SportFisheries and Wildlife,has been named to anew post in the bureau'sregional office.

Stieglitz fomerly op-erated from the Loxa-hatchee National Wild-life Refuge west of BocaRaton. Walter A.Gresh,director of the bureau'sSoutheastern Region,said Stieglitz will oc-cupy a new position withsupervisory responsi-bility for refuge opera-tions in North Carolina,

,, „ w „ ,_ South Carolina, VirginiaMarilyn M. Schoppmeyer, his ^ M a r y l a n d /

ATT: HOME BUYERS& BUILDERS!

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LOTS from *12,800 • HOMES from $38,000PRIVATE BEACH

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Agent on Premises 278-308770 A.M. - 5 P.M. Tunispn Properties of Florida, Inc.

REALTORS OF BOCA RATONThe followingare membersof the BocaRaton Boardof Realtors.Doing busi-ness withthem you are

assured the highesttype of service that canbe administered in thef i e l d of Real EstatePractice.

CROSBY W. ALLEY, 21S.E. 3rd St., 395-4404.NICK AMRHE1N, 7601N.Fed. Hwy., 278-5038.ARVIDA REALTYSALES, Inc., 998 S.Federal Hwy. ,395-2000.ATLANTIC BOCAREALTY, 101 E. Pal-metto Pk. Rd., BocaRaton, 395-8500.BATEMAN and CO.,1299 S. Ocean Blvd.,Boca Raton, 395-9355.W.P. BEBOUT, 140 N.Fed. Hwy., 395-8155.

BRANNON REALTY,Inc., 330 E. PalmettoPk. Rd., 391-0429.CAMINO GARDENSREALTY INC., P.O.Box 520, Phone 395-7020.

CARLEN APPRAISALAND REALTY INC. 450E. Palmetto Park Rd.,399-4440.BRUCE E. DARRELL,Realtor, 425 E. Palmet-to Park Kd., 395-1332.WM. DAY Inc., 500 S.Federal Hwy., 395-0220.PETER DORAN, 133Boca Raton Rd., Phone395-1102.FIRST REALTY CORP.20 S.E. 1st Avenue,395-8600.FLORIDA SITES, Inc.,38 S.E. 4th St. 395-1890.EDWARD GARVY, 641South Federal Highway,391-0900.

ORYAL E. HADLEY,400 E. Palmetto Pk.Road, 395-2244.CBAS. HUTZLER, 72S.E. 2nd st:, Phone395-8423.F. WOODROW KEETON,2950 N. Ocean Boule-vard, 395-5252.MACLAREN & ANDER-SON, 135 E. PalmettoPark Rd., Boca Raton.395-1333MADDOX REALTY, 507N.E. 20th St., 395-290(1THOMAS J. MEREDITH,Realtor, 42 S.E. 2nd St.Phone 395-1515.J C . MITCIIELL &SONS, Inc., 22 S. Fed-eral Hwy., 395;4711.

MOTHERWELL REAL-TY, 757 S. Federal Hwy.395-4044.F. BYRON PARKS, ViaMizner, Royal PalmPlaza, 395-37G0.PETRUZZELLI REAL-TY, Inc., 2325 N. OceanBoulevard, 395-0822.PLASTRIDGE AGENCYInc., 224 S, Fed. Hwy.,395-1433.THE REAL ESTATECORNER, BVC. 60 S.Federal Highway, 395-4624.RICHARD F. ROSS, 21S.E. 3rd St., 399-6444.ROYAL PALM REALTYCORP., 307 GolfviewDr., 395-1662.TOWN & COUNTRYPROPERTIES, 330 E.Palmetto Park Rd.,399-4629.WEEKES REALTY CO.,INC., 100 S. FederalHwy., 395-1214.M.N. WEIR & SONS,Inc., 855 S. FederalHwy., 395-4000.JOHN A. WRIGHT, 713Havana Drive, B o c aRaton, Florida, CR 8-2402.

Subscribe to the Boca Raton MewsCall 395-8300

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Directions To ModelsIn Boca Islands

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ITVENUS 41 S.E. 1st Avenue

Boca Raton, Florida

Development & Industr ial C^rp. 395-12i\l 399-5442 399-4179 MEPLIimCl COKP.j

Page 6: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

6A Thursday, September 14, 1967 BOCA RATON NEWS

MITCH WOODBURY REPORTS:

A visit to'fun city9

Fun City?. . .It was New York's Mayor Und-sey who labelled Ms community ' Fun City. Ihave a hunch His Honor was speaking with histongue in his cheek.

Sure, i t 's a Fun City. Fun for a week s playgo-ing binge such as the one on which I recentlyembarked. Fun for a hearty eater such as myselfwho reveled in the Big Town's good eating houses.

But aside from that, especially for a visitorwho remained mostly in the Broadway sector, it 'sa frequently dirty and slightly mad metropolisfilled with rude, sloppily dressed, gawking vaca-tioners and hurrying, jostling New Yorkers whowould just as soon push you in front of a passingcar or bus as cash their next paycheck.

Then, toss in the weather. They've had a lot ofwater fall on Manhattan during the past summer.And the week I was there was no exception. Itrained four of the seven days I was in town.

Do you wonder that outside of the theater andrestaurants (and reunions with a few old friends)I have to think the mayor's labelwas little morethan a brief commercial.

* * * *Restaurants. . .The board chairman and myself

viewed eight footlight attractions, six musicalsand two tuneless comedies. Having seen "Mame,""Hello, Dilly," "Fiddler on the Roof" and "Cac-tus Flower" on two previous Gotham sojourns, wepretty well covered the Broadway field. I'll tellyou about the eight new offerings next week.

Where did we fill our tummies? Well, we madeSardi's, my favorite New York restaurant, fortwo dinners and a luncheon. Smack in the theatri-cal district, Sardi's has intimacy, color and goodfood and service.

We also had dinner at Rattazzi's, which catersto the elite in the worlds of TV, radio, advertis-ing, literature and the performing arts. It's a cozy

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room specializing in Italian dishes (however, I en-joyed a delicious slice of beef tenderloin there).

* * * *High spot, . .I'll have to list our evening at the

Tower Suite as the culinary high spot of thisyear's Manhattan visit. This is a posh and expen-sive room 48 stories above the midtown pre-cincts atop the Time and Life Building. My oldfriend Bill Doll (he was the late Mike Todd'spress agent and now publicizes tne Ringling Cir-cis. Atlantic City's Steel Pier and the Sears storesamong others) arranged a window-side table forus and the view was tremendous. A captain, a but-ler and maid, all of whom introduced themselves,served us a seven course dinner for which weshelled out $9.75 each, plus tip.

We had wonderful steaks at Frankie and John-nie's, a loft at Eighth Ave. and 45th, not known tomany visitors, and other enjoyable repasts at theSpindletop and Toots Shor's.

* * * *Around Town. . .That was quite a bash Cliff and

Flo Kreager, of the Cloister Towers, tossed theother evening for 46 of their friends in the Tow-ers ' lush recreation room, ..Speaking of the Tow-ers , the Andy Andersons have just moved into theirnew apartment there.

John and Grace Cotter should be back any daynow from a vacation trip to Cape Cod.. .DorothyPowell, Furniture Plaza designer, is recuperatingin her Harbour Terrace home from recent surgeryin Miami.

Joe and Troy McDonald, of Boca Harbour, havereturned from Akron, Ohio, where they attended afamily reunion. It was the first time all the mem-bers of the family had been together in nine years. . .John and Anne Burns are up in Yankee land.Aren't expected back until around the first ofOctober.. .The Bayou restaurant reopens for thefall and winter season next Friday evening.. .Andhave you visited the revitalized Pal Joey? You'llfind it a different place under the new regime.

* * * *One More for the Road. . .Overheard at Dom-

inick's Rex restaurant in New York City: "Whenhe went hunting I didn't mind his taking along acase of whiskey for snake bite, but I did resenthis taking along two snakes."

Two bands

for mixerMusic by "The New

Dantes" and"TheRoyalAscots" will highlightMarymount College stu-dent m i x e r Saturday.

The dance, open to allmale college students inthe area, will be held8:30 p.m. to midnight inFounder's Hall auditor-ium.

SflOWSy

antenna

Look

Atouching moment in a beautiful motion picture. Julie Andrews and Chris-topher Plummer star in "The Sound of Music" now in its fourth week at theBoca Raton Theater.

Classified Ad ServicePhone 395-8300

Davis Is enrolledat Hanover College

NOW 1HRU SAT.

William F.Davis,sonof Mrs. Gene Do Davisof Boca Raton, was en-rolled as a freshman atHanover College t h i sweek.

Davis attended SaintAndrew's School. As astudent there he was ac-tive in dramatics, t h eGlee Club, the schoolpaper, the choir, theStudent Union Board,and the Radio Club. Hewas also a member ofthe varsity wrestling,c r o s s country, andswimming teams.

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Page 7: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

Chief Andrewsat conference

Fire Chief Daniel M.Andrews is attending the94th annual conferenceof the International As-sociation of Fire Chiefsin San Franciscoc

He will take part indiscussions on the fire-man's role during a civildisturbance* and a pro-posed resolution whichcalls for outlawing un-treated wood shingle andshake roofing materials.

All attending f i r echiefs will take part inthe discussions on civildisorder, since so manys m a l l e r fire depart-ments have reciprocalagreements with metro-politan departments toaid each other wheremajor fires cannot becontained.

The resolution on un-treated wood roofingmaterials was intro-duced because of grow-ing number of fire chiefshave viewed with alarmthe increased use of thismaterial. Many citiesand counties throughoutthe country have out-lawed wood roofs be-cause they considerthem to be a fire haz-ard.

Forsyth ends

BOCA RATON NEWS Thursday, September 14, 1967 7A

trainingHospitalman Appren-

tice David L. Forsyth,USN, son of Mr. andMrs. Thomas M. For-syth of Boca Raton, hascompleted studies inhospital techniques aswell as in the practiceof emergency first aidand was graduated fromthe 14-week basic Hos-pital Corps School, SanDiego, Calif.

The school is locatedat- the Naval TrainingCenter, and is designedto train both men andwomen of the Navy andCoast Guard. Taught byNavy nurses and seniorhospital corpsmenj thecurriculum covered in-struction in patient care,the study of anatomyand physiology, minorsurgery, the nature andprevention of communi-cable diseases, and theadministering of medi-cines.

In addition to attend-ing classes, he workedwith doctors and nursesat the San Diego NavalHospital where he put topractical use the knowl-edge he gained in theclassroom.

By: W. Paul Bebout Ji\This age of vending

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The paper coinsserved their purposeand, in fact, provedpopular. However/thiswas before Las Vegas,before the vending ma-chines, and before thecountless coin-operat-ed enterprises socommon to the scenetoday.

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Page 8: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

8A Thursday, September 14, 1967 BOCA RATON NEWS

Jim Rifenburg

Lobsters

costly^

Florida lobsters haven't "made the scene" hereyet, according to local divers, but they shouldstart that landward movement soon. Sometime inOctober the annual "walks** should begin off thecoast of Boca Raton.

The Florida Board of Conservation is chargedwith protecting the succulent creatures and warnsthose taking undersize. specimens will be prose-cuted.

The Board also issued another warning. Allthose little round floats out in the ocean are at-tached to lobster traps down on the reefs. Thetraps belong to commercial lobstermen and it'sstrictly against the law to take crawfish fromthem if they don't belong to you. However, strangeas it may seem, the current law does not prohibitpeople from tampering with lobster traps — onlyfrom stealing lobsters or the traps themselves.

Not too much fuss is ever caused around BocaRaton because we don't have that many traps out,but down in the Keys area, lobstermen get prettyupset about the whole thing. They've even gone sofar in the past as having shoot-outs with poach-ers.

Cats host Hawks tomorrow ingrid opener, Martin gets nod

Boca Raton's Bobcatswill get their first test"under fire" tomorrownight when they open the1967 football season

against Seacrest's Sea- years of blanking thehawks. Bobcats. Two years ago

Randy Cooper's Hawks the Hawks won 50-0,will be favored to win last year the score wasfollowing two straight 24-0.

illegal to spear lobsters so divers have toreach back in holes and drag the creature out byhand. This involves the hazard of getting hold oflittle things like moray eels which don't hesitateto chew off a finger if they get the chance.

On the other hand, it's real easy to dive on alobster trap, open the door and take out a meal forthe table. Just don't get caught. It takes a lot oflobster to make up for a $500 fine or a year injail.

Fishing should get betterA school of mullet somewhere in the neighbor-

hood of half a mile long was reported along, thebeach last week. And with it came the predators.

Crevalle jacks slashed and cut through theschool, tarpon came in strong, something unusualhere, and sharks were spotted lurking around theedges.

The winter season approaches and fishing shouldget steadily better from now on in the ocean andalong the beaches. Old-timers are still lookingfor that one "big run" of bluefish. Blues ranfairly well last year but not in proportions to yearsgone by.

I've been told it was possible at one time toanchor a boat in Boca Raton lake and literally fillit with blues in an afternoon. But then, thingswere always better in the "good old days."

Clinic good ideaHead football coach Joe Pribil is attempting to

educate parents as well as players. Last night heheld a clinic at the gym to explain penalties onthe gridiron. Joe's theory is that parents don'tknow enough about this particular aspect of thegame and they can enjoy it much more with allthe facts.

I think the clinic was a good idea and more ofthis type of thing should be done in the future.

Keghr's Korner

All States have roomfor area newcomers

Mel Sosey, secretaryof the All States Leagueannounced that they stillhave openings for New-comers in the area. Thisis a ladies handicap lea-gue and is open to allnew residents of BocaRaton during the l a s tcouple of years, A nur-sery attendant is avail-able while the mothersare bowling.

The billiard room hashad all the tables re-covered and leveled andagain are ready for theplayers. A new featurehas been added the firstin this area with cornerashtrays.

The fall leagues arejust about started so

that the friendly compe-tition will start showingup in the league stand-ings. These will be pub-lished upon receipt ofthe information from thesecretaries.

Some of the fellowsstarted out the seasonwith nice games. SteveBodzo had a 213, SteveNatskakula 204, FredOlsen 203, Clint Dyar206, Bill Otto 205, EarlWilkinson 214 and 211,Ed Zita 236, JohnKreis-er 226, At Wright 220,Jo e Brader 212, GeneHall 231, Don Marra 218,Jim Brooks 217, TonRadman 210, Barry Keit221 and Pete Stalker 216,Ray Mankowich 216 andRuss Bramlett 203.

Bass fishing improves

but bream still bestBass fishing has im-

proved some at Loxa-hatchee, according toresident manager BillBrown, but the "bes tfishing is yet to come."

Most of the large fishare being caught earlyand late with a decidededge for the morning.

J.A. Pruitt, Sr,, man-aged to catch his limitof bass over the week-end using a Devil'sHorse, but his largestwas only five and one-quarter pounds. RichardBehrens boated two bassweighing 7-13 and 6-9.

In the spectacularfield, the award goesto Larry Jorgensenfortwo channel catfish. Oiietipped the scales at 24pounds, the other at 13pounds.

All in all, flyroddersare stealing the show asbream fishing continuesto improve. The west

canal has been the bestproducer for the pastcouple of weeks. Brownpredicts the north canalwill produce equally aswell if worked hardenough.

Sept. 23 is the dead-line for the summer bigbass contest. Currentlythe overall leaders a r eRay Norton, 10-1;Charles Arnau, 9-13, andJack Easter, 9-7.

The Federal Bureauof Sport Fisheries andWildlife have completeda display at the Loxa-hatchee. The displaypictorially explains thepurpose and methods ofimproving the NationalWildlife Refuges. TheBureau has also donean excellent job onspraying hyacincths inArea number one.

Water level stand at15.7 feet, exactly ontime.

Rusty Martin to quarterback.

With bang and twang

Hunting starts SaturdayThe 1967-68 hunting

season will get underway with a bang and atwang on Saturday. Thebang will be from thefirearms of marsh henand bear hunters whilearchers provide thetwang with their bowsand arrows.

The statewide bowhunting season opensone - half hour beforesunrise, Saturday andwill continue throughOctober 1. Archers willbe required to possess aregular hunting licenseplus a bow hunting per-mit. Both licenses andpermits are available atthe office of all CountyJudges.

Two wildlife manage-ment areas will be openfor the archery season.The Fisheating CreekArea (Mizell Island por-tion) located in G1 a d e sCounty will be open fordaily hunting. The J.W.Corbett Area located inPalm Beach County willbe open for weekendhunting only. Other wild-life management areaswill be open for specialmanaged archery huntslater in the season.

The statewide seasonfor rails and gallinules(marsh hens) will openone-half hour beforesunrise Sept. 16 andcont inue through Nov.24. The bag limit forrails and gallinules is

as follows: King andclapper rail, daily bag15, possession 30, singlyor in the aggregate; SoraVirginia and yellowrails, daily bag 15, pos-session 30, singly or inthe aggregate; Gallinule,daily bag 15,possession30.

Bear hunters will be-gin hunting one-half hourbefore sunrise, tomor-

row in the Osceoia Na-tional Forest. The forestwill be open for a seriesof. four managed threeday bear hunts. Themanaged hunts will beheld on Friday, Satur-day and Sunday, Sept.29-30 amd October 1,October 13-14-15, andOctober 27-28-29. TheOsceoia Bear Hunt isopen to all hunters.

Hold bowling school

for kids SaturdayUniversity Bowling

Lanes will conduct afree bowling school forthe youth of the greaterBoca Raton area on Sat-urday, Sept. 16.

Because of the largenumber of new childrenmoving into the areaduring the past year,the classes will be brok-en into two groups. Onewill cover the childrenfrom age 8 through 13years of age and thisschool will be held at 10in the morning.

The other group cov-ering youngsters from14 through 18 years willstart Saturday at 2 p.m.The classes have beenbroken down into thesame divisions as theAmerican Junior Bowl-ing Congress. The Ban-tams, Juniors and Sen-

iors.Cotton Rutledge, will

be in charge of the pro-gram. Rutledge has beenan instructor of manyphases of sports activ-ity and has conductedclasses and clinics inthe sports of flying andtennis. He operated hisown bowling establish-ment in Bowling Green,Ky. Rutledge has beeninstructor at the locallanes for the past yearand a half.

John Miller, juniorcoach, will assist Rut-ledge as will many ofthe other more exper-ienced bowlers. A bookcover especially de-signed to teach a personhow to keep score willbe distributed to every-one attending the clinic.

Rusty Martin wasgiven the nod for start-ing quarterback by HeadFoo tba l l Coach JoePribil. Martin, a seniorletterman, is one of themore experienced menon the Bobcat squad.

The rest of the back-field was on "an eitheror" basis as of yester-day, according to CoachPribil. "We've got twomore days to work andsome changes could bemade."

However, for the full-back position, he pickedBob Rice or Tom Nolanto start. Rice is a seniorweighing 180 pounds.Nolan is a 10th graderand might become oneof the mainstays of theJayvee team,

John Sparling andTony Orpesa will battlefor the left halfback po-sition for tomorrownight. Sparling is a 12thgrader, Orpesa is a jun-ior. On the right half-back side, either MikeHart or Mike Andersonwill get the nod. Bothare experienced and let-tered. Both are seniors.

In the offensive line,Keith Higgins and TerryAlbury were picked asp a s s receiving ends.Higgins will work at leftend. An 11th grader, hetips the scales at 165pounds. Albury is a 10thgrader and weighs in at151.

Jeff Sweet has nailedthe left tackle positionwith Chuck Hill and DanKilpatrick trying forright tackle. Sweet let-tered last year and isone of the heavier menon the team. He weighs209. Hill is a juniorweighing 170 pounds,Kilpatrick is a seniorand the squads heaviestmember at 210.

Left guard will be atossup between Bill Feckand Terry Zettlemoyer.Feck is an 11th graderlisted at 160 pounds.Zettlemoyer is a soph-omore. At right guard,experienced Pete Blumwill vy with newcomerJohn Jones for position,Blum and Jones are bothseniors with Blumgetting the weight edgeat 165 over Jones' 145.

Senior Doug Caylorwill be the starting cen-ter, Coach Pribil said,Caylor is a lettermanand weighs 152 pounds.

Leroy Miller, one ofthe big question marksthis year came out forl a t e practice. "He'sonly had two days withus since returning fromup north," he said, "Buteven so, he should seelimited service on thedefensive squad tomor-row night. We plan onus ing him at middleguard."

Kickoff returns, punt

One of these lovelies will be ihe 1967 Kickoff Queen tomorrow night.Candidates are Jeane Kolinski, Janet Boldizar, Susan Wolff, Donna No welland Sharlene Fox.

returns, the runninggame and pass offensemade up the major por-tion of practice thisweek following last Fri-day's scrimmage game.

Fundamentally theystill weren't there Fri-day night." Coach Pri-bil said, ''but we had toswitch from fundamen-tals to specialties thisweek,

"There's no doubt inmy mind," he added,"the scrimmage gamewas good for the team.They needed to be underpressure and I think theywere almost as nervousworking before fans asthey will be for tomor-row night's Seacrestgame."

However.Coach Pribilwas a little disappointedin the scrimmage. "Ifthe team is right, theyshould hit and work ashard in every practiceand scrimmage as theywill under actual gameconditions," he said. "Id on't think they did it lastweek."

Movies were taken ofthe scrimmage andCoach Pribil said theyhelped him and hiscoaches immeasureably."We saw a lot of mis-takes by watching themovie that we wouldn'thave caught otherwise,"Pribil said. "We a l soshowed the film to theplayers and pointed outthese mistakes and whatto do to correct them."

Something new in thefootball program herealso went into opera-tion with the scrimmagegame. Coach Pribil be-gan using apoint systemfor evaluating eachplayer.

' Percentagewise ,we'll be able to find outwho is doing what heshould and who isn't andwe'll be able to pick theoutstanding player eachweek," he concluded.

Game time tomorrownight is 8 o'clock. Tic-kets will be on sale atthe gate. Some reserveseat season tickets arealso still available.

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Page 9: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

BOCA RATON NEWS Thursday, September 1.4, 1967 9A

t WinterSoftballactionMatteis led the way

Tuesday night in winterSoftball action as Bana-nti 's Boys rolled to a 17-4 victory over the StateRoad 49ers,

^ With five runs acrossW home plate, Matteis

slammed a three-runhomer to put the cap onthe inning. From t h a tpoint on, the Boca Ra-ton team was neverheaded.

Doubles, triples andsingles rang out all overthe outfield. But the playof t h e evening didn'tcome until the sixth inn-ing. With two men onbase and three runs in,

*s Ron Klipsic ran deepinto foul territory anddropped a fly ball hit offthe bat of Cole.

State Road had newlife and Cole slammed ahigh fly to left centerfield o v e r Klipsic'shead . Tom Ziolkowskicame all the way fromcenterfield, ran behindKlipsic and with aback-handed stab, speared theball out of the air to halt

_ the uprising,® The box score:

S.R.49ers AB R HMoore, sf 3 2 2Johnson, ss 3 0 0Cole, lbHardin, pGragg, 2bGibson, cfDuncan, 3bWilliams, cMoore, cCowley, IfMoto, rfPryor, rf

A Totals

3 0 03 1 23 0 13 0 13 0 02 0 01 0 02 0 01 1 01 0 0

BANANTISBananti, 2bJones, ssDodge, 3bWeinstein, rfBowles, lbKlipsic, IfZiolkowski, cfEubank, sfMatteis, cO'Neill, p

Totals

28 4 6AB R H

5 2 24 2 24 2 43 2 24 1 14 0 14 1 04 3 34 2 24 2 1

381718

S.R.49ers.000 103 0- 4Banantis...821 150 x-17

In the second game,Herrema Electric clob-bered Baptist Saints bya lopsided 12-0 score.

The game belonged toCoblentz all the way ashe hurled six-hit pitch-ing from the mound.

Coblentz got into_ trouble at only one point.W It came in the fifth inn-

ing. Walking Campbell,he let Nelson hit a ballshortstop. But Jordanflipped to Crump atsecond for one out andon to Tacchi at first fort h e double play. Thepressure was off andHerrema went on to win.

The box score:SAINTS AB R HDame, lb 3 0 2Newman, ss 3 0 1

* @ Chetter, 2b 3 0 1> Carron, sf 3 0 0

Campbell, If 3 0 2Hardin, c 3 0 0Little, cf 3 0 0Campbell, p 3 0 0Nelson, rf 3 0 0Mullines, lb 3 0 0

Totals 30 0 6HERREMACrump, 2bChetter, sfCoblentz, pBlackwelder, If

i Lowrie, cfWoodward, rfGalayda, 3bJordan, ssTacchi, lbStewart, lbDameworth, cBy the way, c

Totals

AB R H3 0 03 1 14 2 34 1 24 1 34 1 14 2 23 1 22 2 21 0 02 2 21 0 0

331218

B.Saints.. .000 000 0- 0Herrema. .252 210 x-12

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8 9 c

VALUE

4 WayALUMINUM GRATER

Select your own texture

76C1.00VALUE

HAMILTON BEACHELECTRIC KNIFE

• Slim easy grip handle

• Precision ground Stainless Blade

• Built in counter res!8 Ft. attached cord

19.95 VALUE

12.88 MODEL 275

ESnf^WJECKERO

DRUGS

« Choice ofI ' color£<• Facialiji«%

V

mmREG, K $ 1

20 Ounce REG.

ti«»««4wittiC(B.p«tlh™u«.S/tt

WIZARD ROOM!DEODORIZER •

REG.

I S. STAIMESS BUDES

VAUJ6,1*1

l i d W. C&M1II0 HIAL

BOCA RATONLighthouse Pt.

• Venetian Shopping Ctr,

Deerfield• Village Mart Shopping Ctr.

Pompano Beach• 2501 E. Atlantic

Del ray• Po»t Office Shopping Ctr.

aenagHB C O U P O N i

I VI -

SHAiPOO

64Margate

• 5709 Margate Blvd.

Plantation• af-71 W. Sunrise Blvd.

ECKERDDRUGS

Page 10: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

TOA Thursday, September 14, 1967 BOCA RATON NEWS

*63 Austin Healy Sprite.Cream Puff. $699. Call582-0396 - West PalmBeacli.1962 "Truck Ford Econ-oline. Can be seen dur-ing day. Phone 395-3140..Camper-Calif. Rainbow8* with Cab-overtop, 1yr . old, gas stove &light, Ice box. 12 volt& 110 volt lights —din-ing area. Sleeps 4, own-er . 391-0767.

USED*CARS FOK SALEA GOOD SELECTIONBoca Raton MotorsDixie at SE 1st St.

Boca Raton395-5300

We Also Buy•*64~ KARMANN G h i aCoupe, factory air, r a -dio & heater, New whitewall t i res . Real n i c es h a p e . $1375. PhoneBoca 395-8474."65 Vespa"l25cc. Excel-lent condition, $150.

395-7941Married must sell sharp'65 MBG British RacingGreen. Good year bluestreaks extras. 972-0081.*6b Austin Healey 30OTJRoaster. Beautiful con-dition. $750. 941-3869.

'66 VolkswagenAll Extras

Excellent Condition395-4737

5 B Personals

To Buy or To SellAVON

Call 278-4972WEIGHT WATCHERS"

Meets Wed. 7.-30 P.M.First Fed. Bank.Delrav.5 C Child Care

BOCA RATONPRE-SCHOOL

Age 2-6- Hours 8-5250 NW 4th Diagnol

395-7071ZION LutheranKINDERGARTEN959 SE 6th Ave.

Deerfield 399-3146TIC'TOC Nursery Kin-dergarten. l-12yrs,273NW 15th St., Boca -a95-5044.Eve.395r.1432,

'ALL NEW: B u r t o i r s "Nursery & Kindergar-ten . Year Round. Fullcare. Register now andbe sure! 274 SE 9 Ave.Deerfield Beach. 399-4586."FATTENT, experiencedbaby sitter, desired for3 children in Florestasection. Send ResumetoBoca Raton News, Box•f2415 E Schools S Gamps

Boca Palm Day School.Children 3 to 6 yrs.1/2 Day ~ Full Day395-3698 L is . & Ins.tO A Help Female

10 B Help Male

SALESWOMENFull or Part time, ex-perience preferred, butnot necessary. Apply atW.T. Grant Co. 5th Ave.Plaza, Boca Raton.

PART time girl for traf-"fie Dept. at WSBR ra-dio, Boca Raton, phone395-7401.

15 A Miscellaneous Sale

150', 5' High, chain linkfence. Almost new $75.Includes poles, gates andtop rails. 399-0180.11" G.E. Portable, also11 Ft. Octagon rug,wedgewood blue. Goodcondition. Call eves —395-2266.

C. Sec'y - StenBkkpr., Diversified &Legal Exp. for Boca,Raton area. Miami 633-4324 Eves, or Write Bo-ca Raton News,Box#12.

10 B Help Male

57 Imperial - Lebaron— One Owner all Power$300. or best offer. 630N AlA, Deerfield Beach.

PORSCHE LOVERSBeautiful 1961 Porsche1600 Super removablehardtop, New Ruby redpaint, new matching in-terior. Mechanicallyperfect, SCCA approvedracing tires, Burch ex-haust s y s t e m , callChuck 395-0385.SB Personals

Frances & SoniaMASSAGE

922-4696 for Appt.1218 S. .Dixie . Hlwd.

GATEWAYNATURAL FOODS

Natural, V i t a m i n s &Minerals Organicallygrown, d r i e d fruit.Dietetic Foods & Vege-table Juices.3206 E. Atlantic Blvd.Pompano 941-8120

BETTY'S MASSAGE "& Sauna Ph. 927-27812134 Tyler St. Hlwd,

YOUNG woman neededfor typing & General of-fice work - Part time.Write Boca Raton NewsBox #S-1.OFFICE Assistant forOral Surgeon, accurateTyping & Spelling r e -quired. Shorthand & edu-cation beyond . HighSchool desirable. 278-3202, Delray Beach.

MAN POWERWanted Immediately —General Houseworkers,No cooking. Call 395-5131 for appointment.Typing &. Shorthand, ex-cellent opportunity foradvancement with Na-tional firm. Salary .com-mensurate with ability.395-5507.5 B Personals

WANTEDExperienced singers forone of Florida's finestchurch choirs. Salary-dependent upon profes-sional background. Callor write, N.H. Gilbert,2710 NE 23 St., Pom-pano,, 942-0894.

One YoungMECHANICALDRAFTSMAN

Two or three years ex-perience, e x c e l l e n tchance for advancement,f r i n g e benefits, paidvacations, insurance.Apply in person,no phonecalls. Sjostrom Auto-mations, Inc., 134 NW16th St., Boca Raton.

' FARM SALES 'A g g r e s s i v e , honest,hardworker to call onfarmers. International-ly famous company. Highearnings for right man.Send complete resumeto Box S#13, BocaRatonNews. Our employeesknow of this ad. Inter-view will be arranged.

Presents ~"Malayan Pecan"

4x8 PanelsReg. $14.95...Now $6.95

(Factory Seconds)4301 N. Dixie Hwy.

Ft. Laud. Open 8-7Sat, till noon. 565-4261COLOR. ~TV, StereoTPortable TV, Big reduc-tions on Floor samples& discontinued models

COLE McDANBELMAGNAVOX

HOME ENTERTAINMENTCENTER

IF carpets look dull anddrear, remove the spotsas they appear with BlueL u s t r e . Rent electricshampooer $1. BelzerHardware, 3198 N. Fed.Hwy., Boca Raton.

if)'C Help, Male or FemaleNEED A JOB?

If she doesn't have it,she'll g e t it. Polly'sEmployment Svc. 1010E. Atlantic Blvd. Pom-pano. 943-2758.MAN" or woman to workin mailing dept. PrintShop, 40 hr. week. TheCur t - i s Co., 395-5144,Mrs. Martin.

10 D Situations Wanted

DAY WORK WANTED395-7680 • after 4 p.m.PROFESSIONAL Editor"desires work. Writingexperience in Medical& Legal fields. Exc-1

lent references395-7830.15 A Miscellaneous Sale

The perfect settingfor your Florida home...

CAMINOGARDENS

in beautiful BOCA RATON, midwaybetween Palm Beach and Ft. Lauderdale

Six rambling acres of garden, embracing aprivate lake and island, lie between you andthe world of everyday t h i n g s . . . in acommunity of sweeping hills, waterways,landscaped streets. . . and homes that are noless than superb!

See the distinguished EASTPORT . . . alarge, 3-bedroom, 2-bath home that featuresa panoramic dining and living room complex.Huge screened terrace is open to five rooms,features pass-through from kitchen for gra-cious al fresco dining.

One of six new exhibit homes of CaminoGardens, priced from $29,950 to $45,950.(Slightly higher on waterfront.) On CaminoReal 2 Blocks West of U.S. 1. Or see yourRealtor.

w E i E N T E R P R I S E

HURRICANE AWNINGS1 - 44x54 $12.1 - 48x46 12.

* * * *Wooden Dinette, 2 chairs$15. Occasional chairs$5. and up. 399-0595,933-3120.

SINGER 'SLANT-O-MATIC

Late model, embroid-e rs , Monograms, Over-casts, B l i n d Hems,m a k e s button holes,sews on buttons andm a n y fancy stitches.Sold new $399.50. Re-sponsible p a r t y canmake 8 payments of$10.10 or pay balanceof $78.40. For free homeinspection without obli-gation, call Credit Mgr.583-4133. Collect callsaccepted.

MODEL 1100REMINGTON SKEET

GRADE, NEW UN FIREDWILL TRADE* * * *

King Size Bedspread, 1month old. Cost $50. Sellfor $30.

* * * *12 '9"x l4 '6" rug&pad,celery tweed color, 3mon. old, Cost $150.Sell $75. Call 278-4369.Beds, Dressers, Break-front & Gossip Bench,395-1594.WASHER & ElectricDryer, Speed Queen «Excellent C o n d i t i o n$250 for both. 395-1307Twin Hollywood b e d s ,$40. Dressers $10.Dan-ish couch $20. Chairs$10. Tables $5. Break-front Set $10. Buffet $10.9x12 rug, striped multi-color, withpad $10. Good

.condition. 2420 NE 5thAve.. Boca Raton.PLAYBOY bike 1 yearold, good condition $15.Call Jay Curtis — 391-0340.3 piece Danish Livingroom suite, Only $75.482 SW 9th St. Apt. #13Call: 395-6539.AWNING for Sale. InApril we had a custom-made awning made forour terrace. Size 42 Ft.long and nearly five Ft.wide, colored green onthe inside and white out-side. In excellent condi-tion. We are having apermanent roof built onour terrace and will sellthis attractive awningat a most reasonableprice. Tele: 395-8118.

EMERSON Stereo, Hi-Fi $50. Good Condition.Honey blond, 395-9367.UMBRELLA Tent, BackPack, Air Mattress,Electric Trailer BreakController, Car TopCarrier, Tycoon Bam-boo Trolling Rod, GlassTrolling Rod, and VomHofe Reels, 395-8193.REBUILT Vacuums.allMakes. $9.95 & Up. Re-pairs and Parts. Pom-pano Vacuum, 4901 N.Dix ie Hwy. 399-6621,Pompano.

METAL Utility Cabf-nets. Base Cabinets,Broom Cabinets.

Richard's Furniture3749 N. Federal

Pompano 941-0617

Slenderella ExerciseTable, excellent condi-tion. W e s t i n g h o u s eRoaster, like new. LargeMahogany o c t a g o n -shaped table with glasstop. 395-0888.

Bought OutEntire Factory

SHOWROOM SAMPLESAll Styles &" Colors.Sofas, reg. $249.95 ~$149.95. Chairs, Reg.$99.95 ~ $49.95

SUN FURNITUREBoca Raton

US1, Boca-Delray line278-5198

APPLIANCESBroward County's larg-est selection for FrostFree & Automatic Re-frig., 1 yr. warranty.Washers.Dryers, $59.95Up. Ranges $49.50 Up.Sales - Service & FreeDelivery. Member ofChamber of Commerce

USEDAPPLIANCE MART

101 S. Fed.942-1380 Pompano

1325 NE 4th Ave. JA31326Ft. Lauderdale

Girls bike 26", IronriteIroner with cabinet andchair, blow torch. B.V.I,spray gun, T.V. $15.00.395-3379 after 4 o'clock— all day Sun.

15 E Pels, Grooming & Board

DOG BOARDINGReservations Necessary

AccommodationsLimited

Air ConditionedMARMACK

3925 S. Fed. Hwy.Delray 278-489615 A Miscellaneous Sale

24" Zenith Console$45.

395-6241BRAND new'Paymaster.orig. price $145. now$50. 395-1272, 755 Aur-elia St. Floresta.

We Buy and Sell """New and Used GunsBoca Tackle Shop

395-0969 _ . .BOOK WORLD

Books & CardsRoyal Palm Plaza

_Boca Raton 395-1220988 N. Federal Hwy.

Pompano 941-1441333 N. Federal Hwy.

Boca Raton 395-1201

15 H Boats-Motor or SailSELL FOR CASHOR TRADE FOR

LATE MODEL CAR _OWNER wants us tomake a quick deal. Hewants to go North &•nf«ds a car . 17' Mirror"Maid, 40 HP Evinrude,tilt trailer with elec.winch. Trade or CashPrice $1695.

LANTANABOATYARD, INC808-838N. Dixie

Lantana15 D Pels For Sale

SIAMESE kittens withshots, pedigrees avail-able and stud service—399-0180.SILVER Toy PoodlePups. AKC ChampionBlood Line, 2 Males,$85. 1 Fern. $100. 6weeks. 399-6675.25 A Rooms for Rent

Single room, Semi-Pri-vate Bath, near FAU.Reasonable. 395-7601.

25 B Apartments for Rent

1 bedroom Apt. & Effcy.nicely furnisb<=*d. JordanManor. 395-4567, 101N.W. Pine Circle, Bocae

AUTO PAINTING

2 bedroom, 1 bath, un-furnished with Centralheat & air, wall-to-wallcarpeting, draperies,$152.50 per mon. yrly.basis. Call:Harriet Jackman, Assoc.Atlantic Boca Realty,Inc.

Realtor395-8500 anytime

Unfurnished 1 bedroomalso 2 bedroom. Refrig-erator, Stove. From $95month. 395-4254.

AUTOS $PA5MTEB 35

4 COATS DUPONT BAKED ENAfflEl

Trutks Point!d And (.attend

10 Months'HMMM Flan • 1 DoyS«rviu

• 0PKO1STUT • PUNTS

• SIAT CCYfKS • <O»y£RTI»U TOM

• MECHANIC*! WORKS.rvin8

PolmB.ochTakc PAULSAUTO BODY & PAINT SHOP

418 So. H St. LAKE WORTH585-6220

One Black West of DixieOpen Sunday! for eitimatet

1 bedroom Apt. furn.radiant ht., air cond.quiet area. Adults —395-3287.

SERVICE DIRECTORY]

S H Boats-Motor or Sail

"PARTY BOATS"Mermaid Queen pontoonboat, 20*x8' powered by1966 50 HP Chryslermotor.C andy stripe Sur-rey top. Aluminum rai l -ing, steering console,with serving table. Willaccommodate up to 12people. Great fun for thew h o l e family. Fullprice .$1,995.

Low Dn. Pymt.Low Mo. Pymt,

* * * *1967 Hydrodyne 21'Off-shore Cruiser. 200 HPinboard-outboard. Thisboat is - LOADED -with equipment & beau-tiful because it was"custom built" for showd emonstr ation. L i s tprice $5,995.Sepcial Demo Price. . .$4,777.

. LANTANABOATYARD, INC.

Palm Beach County sLargest Boat Dealer

808-838 N. DixieLantana 585-9374

AIR CONDITIONINGFedders Air Cond4 r e - ,sidential, commercial,central & room. TomMyers Appliance—2029NW 2 Ave. 395-4611.

ALTERATIONSEXCELLENT Tailor —All kinds of Ladies &M e n ' s Alterations —Barton & Miller Clean-ers & Laundry, 2600 N.Dixie Hwy. at 5 Points.Wilton Manors.

566-4314Ladies & Men'c Alter-ations. F a s t service,Pick up &Deliver.Phone"Polly" Boca278-3546.

LUMBERDo it yourself center.Building materials &supplies from our millservice, lumber & Ply-wood cut to size whileyou wait.

DEERFIELDBUILDERS SUPPLY

Hillsboro Blvd. at Fla.East Coast Railroad

399-1010MOVING-STORAGF

Air Conditioned Effi-ciency on IntracoastalWaterway $25 weekly —

GASH lor yourORIEHTAL of

CHINESE RUGSHIGHEST PRICES PA(D FOROLD OR NEW ORIENTALS

399-2000

W i l l i e ' s Transfer &Storage. Local & LongDistance moving & stor-age. Packing & Crating.391-0606. 389 NW 1stAve., Boca Raton.

Alterations & CompleteDry Cleaning & ShirtLaundry Plant. Matty's1 Hour Cleaners. 1943N. Fed. Boca, 395-2440

AUTO PARTSCar, Truck & Tractorparts Bast! D&M Autoparts, Dick Heidgerd.'220 S. Dixie, 395-2412.

AWNINGSCanvas Awnings, Cano-pies, etc., take down,re-hang, re-covers «Brooks Canvas ProductsInc., 1167 S. Fed. Hwy.,Pomp.. 941-3830.

CAMERA REPAIRColor print. Cam-

era repair & cleaning,F r e e Est, Guaranteedwork. The Photo Mart.

942-6043CARPENTRY

Doors, Drawers, Cabi-nets, Appliances, Win-dows, Walls, Leaks, &Squeeks, make your list.One call fix all. Lie. &Ins. Call Maurice Oldre,

General Service. 395-3397F i n i s h e d Carpentry,Utility Cabinets, BookCases a specialty. BillPeters, 399-1951.C A R P E N T E R - workwanted. Small or LargeJobs. Delray 276-6397.If no answer. 276-4269..

CATERINGReceptions

Cocktail PartiesBetty Biegler

3Q5-4fifi3HOME IMPROVEMENT

Florida Rooms - Car-:ports - Patios - Awn-ings -Porches-Kitchens-Additions-Storm Pan-els. ANYTHING. Phone

395-4884LEARN TO DRIVE '

Help with Driver's li-cense tests. Qualifiedinstructor, r e l i a b l edoor-to-door service.Easy Method Dr iv ingSchool. 278-4140.A A Auto"D¥ivirig~SchoolGet your Drivers Li-cense in one day! Les-sons Daily. Boca, Del-ray, Deerfield. We callfor you.Delray 276-5353,

PAINTING DECORATINGEdward J. Hynes. Com-plete Painting & Decor-ating Service, Paintingin Boca Raton since'54.Free Est. 395-5540.

PLUMBINGExpert Plumbing, Sew-er connection. K o h t zPlumbing & Heating —395-0800. Time pay-ments can be arranged.

RE-UPHOLSTERYRattan Cushions r e -made, your fabric orours. Foam Rubber,Polyfoam, direct fromfactory. Phone 395-5152

ROOF PAINTING &CLEANING

Edward j 0 HynesRoofs & Patios Pres-sure cleaned & Painted,Lie. & Insured, f r e e•st. Call: 395-5540.PRIDE WHITE ROOFS

941-0248 391-0599SCREEN REPAIR

Window & Patio ScreensRepaired. Delray Screen51 NW 7th St. 395-3938

Boca RatonSPRINKLERS

Harvey Construction &Sprinklers — Service &Installation. Call us forthe best. 395-4452.National Sprinklers &

Wells158 NW 13th St.

Boca RatonEstablished since 1946

Sprinkler SystemInstallations

Service, Pump Repairs.Do it yourself SuppliesExperienced PersonnelCall for Free Estimates

395-1828WATCH REPAIR

Accutron & Bulova, etc.Bead stringing, Engrav-ing. John Redding, Bea-con Lite Jewelers —Beacon Lite ShoppingCenter.

"Time means moneyto all of us and all ofthe time you are out ofour newspaper, it iscosting you money. So!Come and join our Bus-iness Directory."Use the Classifieds"

MALE HELP WANTEDEXPERIENCED Sheet Metal Man, Must haveown Tools and be able to do own Layout.Immediate Employment. Permanent job, paidVacation and Holidays. Good chance for ad-vancement. Apply in Person. No phone calls.

Sjostrom Automations, Inc.134 NW 16 St. Boca Raton, Fla.

273 N.W. 15 St., Boca Raton 395-5044

REGISTER NOWNURSERY AND KINDERGARTEN

(7 to 6 Years)and September Classes

Opening Monday August 28, 1967APPROVED PRE-SCHOOL EDUCATIONPROGRAM PREPARES CHILDREN FOR

THE FIRST GRADE

AUTOMOBILE GLASSMIRRORS & GLASS

FOR EVERYPURPOSE

POMPANO GLASS CO.101 SW 5th St.

Pompano Beach, Fla.942-7232

AUTOAIR CONDITIONING

SPECIALISTLowest Prices On All

Makes of Cars

FRANKCOULSON

BUICKfa little Delray

278-3292

PRENDERGASTSPRINKLER SYSTEMS

70 Years Experience

Superior WorkmanshipQuality Materials

Satisfaction Guaranteed

Call for Free Estimateof our Low, Low Prices.

395-4852

BICYCLESNEW-USED

Service and PartsOn Ail MakesCAMPBELL

HOME & AUTO144 S. Federal Hwy.

395-3830Authorized Schwinn Dealer

Nobody HasBetter Used

¥WsThan VW.

' 6 7 AUSTIN HEALY Spriteu * Roadster, loaded withequipment - al dealer's S i n n rcost ', I77J

- Four inRoadsters and

Coupes, ready to go. Be a sportand drive a Porsche . . . fromAUTOHAUS!

IL-J BMW vm. Two demos inu / stock, save money this

week. New ear warranty.

ILC PLYMOUTH Valiant 2-Dr.U J Sedan. One owner, Snoc

very clean 7 7 3

ILL CHEVELLE Coupe. Whiteo u with red interior, V-8, au-

tomatic, power steering, $<spare never used . . .

lUi MERCURY Convertible. Is* ™ Light Blue with S i n n r

white top, real sharp 1 V 7 3

iff) PLYMOUTH Wagon 4-Dr.° * V-8, automatic, 5 7 o r

power steering /"3

ILC VW Camper. Save0 3 money. A steal at

IL-I KARMANN GHM Coupes.u / (2 in slock) one with fac-

tory air conditioning. Demos atreduced prices!

' A 7 v w ' s . Factory demos. 3° * with air conditioning and

3 with lots of other * £ rf.extras.. . . SAVE * Y •?

iL-i VW Bus. Ideal for Surfersu l or commercial Svirtr

business 4 7 3

ILL OPEL z-Door Hardtop, is° " white with red Si n o r

interior. Very clean ... U / 3

VW Faslback !-Door Se--,. . d a J : .Dark weett' r a d i ° 'heater, tinted glass, S ionrlike new 1073

ILL

ON THE SPOT

BANK FINANCING

USED CARS

700 N. FEDERAL HWY.

POMPANO BEACH,

PHONE 942-7400

fff"CadidacHURRICANE PANELS

ALUMINUM AWNINGSEstimates —Code Approved

Sensibly Priced — Established 1943

| ALUMINUM PRODUCTS. INC.PHONE 523-75^8

699 S.W, 2nd AVE., FORT LAUDERDALEMftnbrr Of C.hutubfr Of Commerce

IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT FORMANAGER TRAINEES

Fast growing Drug Chain has immediate open-ings in the Boca Raton -Deerfield Area for youngmen 21 or over, willing to work hard for rapidadvancement. We are seeking responsible menwho can quickly advance to managerial posi-tion. Retail selling experience desirable, butnot necessary. You will be given training in allphases of store operations. Good starting salaryand all employee benefits. Apply in person only...

Mr. Bach, Eckerd Drug Store150 W. Camino Real, Boca Raton

ORMr. Sign or, Eckerd Drug Store

930 S. Fed. Hwy., Deerfield Beach

PAN-EL COMPANYPresents

P A i N E L S

S T 0 C K

Rosewood, Teak, Hickory, Wa/nwfPecan, Danish Elm, Knotty Pine,

Colored Pines and Many Others

Priced to your needs from $3.99 up

Prefinished Molding Selection

OPEN 8 AM. to 7 P.M., SAT. till 5 P.M.PAN-ELL COMPANY

4301 N. Dixie Hwy.Ft. Lauderdale - 565-4261 ,

Page 11: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford
Page 12: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

12A Thursday, September 14, 1967 BOCA RATON NEWSIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHimilwllllilliinwii iiiiiiii ' • • miiiininniii • 1111111 MW

1URR1CANE SERVICE COMPANY906 N. DIXIE HWY.

BOCA RATOM, FLA.

399-7878SHADES - S C R E E N S

Storm ShuttersALCAN FLEXALUM AWNINGS & PANELS

Est. J957 Call for Free Estimates

FOR A LIFETIMEOF PROUD POSSESSION

QOMEGA

WE AREYOUR AUTHORIZED

AGENT

SALES - SERVICE

EXCLUSIVELY B Y -

$135

48 SE 1st Ave. atRoyal Palm RoadDowntown Boca Raton

- 395-3462 -Authorized Omega Agency

fCHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED)

The Home of The"SNOW JOB"

Most Homes Built by SnowConstruction Have 3 and 4Bedrooms.

Let us Show You the Plansof the Many FamilyHomes We Have AlreadyCompleted or Sell You aHome for Immediate Occupancy,

3 AND 4 BEDROOM HOMES READY FORIMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY

CONSTRUCTION lac.Coll George Snow395-1183 G E N E R A L )

EveningsSundays 399-5922

' E L E C T R I CAPPLIANCES SIPE'LIKU & SERVICED BY

Opening SoonVILLAGE

Butcher ShopPRIME HEATS

PERSONAL SERVICE

Operated by t t i Gofdich for many / e a r smanager of Smitty's Butcher Shop in Pom-pano Beach.

Hi Folks:We're at 550 North Federal Highwayacross from the Furniture Plaza, andwe hope to be open in a couple weeks.

The hours will be from 9 AM to 6 PMTuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Sat-urday. On Friday from 9 AM to 8 PM andwe'll be closed on Sunday and Monday.Our Telephone number is 395-4591. I'dsure appreciate serving 1 il of my friendswhom I enjoyed serving for so long. Giveus a try please.

Ed.

Largest Auction Gallery in the South10,000 Sq. Ft. of Selling Space on Two Floors

OFErM YEAH ROUND SINCE 1925

EXHIBITIONS DAILY 11 A.M. TO 1:30 P.M.PRIZES REFRESHMENTS

• ESTATE JEWELRY • ART TREASURESFINE FURNITURE & PAINTINGS * ORIENTAL RUGS

Dock your yacht at our Basin Adjacentto Gallery while attending sale.

2000 E. Sunrise Blvd., Ft. Lauderdale & Free ParkingOne Block East of the Gateway Theater

Can You Beat Us ?* 30% Residential Financing to Qualified Properties and

Purchasers.* 27 Years on New Construction* More than Competative Bates* No Pre-payment Penalties* Appraisals in 24 to 48 hours* No obligation or deposit required to receive prompt comm.

CALL

mi m m m m u ; COMPANY399-6153

G. Wm. Anderson, Broker

WEIR P L A Z A B U I L D I N G

855 South Federal Highway

Boca Raton, F lor ida 33432

Roger H. Miller and Dr. S..E- Wimberly are now vice presidents at FloridaAtlantic Univeasity. Title change from dean came with the new academicyear. Miller, as vice president for administrative affairs, supervises all ofthe service and business affairs of the university, while Dr. Wimbtuly, asvice president for academic affairs, is in charge of the educational pro-grams of FAU.

Chamber to spearhead studyof United Fund for cityChamber of Com-

merce directors hearda report from WilliamS. Gunn, on United Fundstudies at their boardmeeting yesterday,,

Gunn told the di-rectors of the results ofseveral weeks study byhis committee concern-ing the possibility of aUnited Fund for BocaRaton. He said his com-mittee found consider-able interest in a localfund organization. Herecommended to theboard that the Chamberspearhead the organi-zation of a local groupto meet with repre-sentatives of local or-ganizations for futureaction.

Chamber directorsaccepted and approvedGunn's r e p o r t andChamber PresidentJames E. Becker namedGunn to initiate the callof a meeting of com-

Phone(Continued from 1)

phone lines, we are sub-ject to being put out ofbusiness/' he said.

A new central dis-patching system cur-rently being studied bythe city would have atransmission tower atthe police station in-stead of near the waterplant. It would also haveauxiliary power in caseelectricity is cut off.

"Problems such asthose encountered in thebulldozer acc ident -wouldn't be entirely al-leviated," Chief Mc-C utcheon sa id . ' 'Wecould s t i l l lose tele-phone communication,but it would reducechance of having anemergency situation."

munity wide citizens andrepresentatives to fur-ther discuss possibili-ties of a United Fund orCommunity Fund pro-gram for Boca Raton.

In other action, thedirectors heard reportson the Boca Raton Inlet

Dr. Weigmanwill speakDr. Robert R. Weig-

man, dean of the Collegeof Education at FloridaAtlantic University, willdeliver the honors con-vocation address at Cen-tral Florida J u n i o rCollege, Ocala, Friday.

He will speak on de-veloping institutions.Florida Atlantic is nowin its fourth year of op-eration while CentralFlorida opened in 1958.

Dr. Weigman joinedFAU this month, afterseven years at the Uni-versity of Florida wherehe was assistant dean ofthe College of Education.

Mrs. GrahnMrs, D o r o t h e a C.

Grahn, 72, 1001 N.W.Third Ave., died Sat-urday in Kingman, Ariz.

She is survived by herhusband, John A., BocaRaton; daughter, Mrs .Nancy Heatley, F o r tLauderdale; son, MajorJohn A. Grahn, III, Ta-coma, Wash,, and sevengrandchildren.

Funeral a r r a n g e -ments are pending atKraeer Funeral Home.

I Classified Ad Service!I Phone 395-8300 !

and designated the Boardof Directors meetings ofOctober and Novemberas official meetings forchanging by-laws. Beck-er named a by-law com-mittee of Thomas J.Becker, John F. Schueh-ler and Kenneth R. Har-mon. He asked the com-mittee to submit pro-posed revisions to themembership prior to theOctober board meetingand to the directors atthat time, in order thatall r e c o m m e n d e dchanges could be ap-proved prior to the be-ginning of the new fiscalyear.

FRENCH? Oui!But stubbornly American-style diners are our bestcustomers. They love ourCANARD L'ORANGE (orangeduck), they're discoveringwhy French dishes are worldfamous. (Our Chef Maiire d*comes from the French Riv-iera.) And they're ravingabout COTE DE BOEUFROTIE (Prime ribs au juscarved at your table - youcan't imagine how good!),and about thick, juicy steaks,the finest in Florida. We'reFrench, all right. With Englishsub-titles. With pizazz. Withsimply superb food.

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Page 13: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

5 v '*'

Section B Thursday, September 1.4,1967 Page One

Of rats,

psychology

'n weights

Mrs. Gunn weighs weights to be used in experiment.

Experimenting wi thrats may not be whatevery mother dreams ofdoing, yet that's justwhat Mrs. William Gunnhas been doing for thepast four months.

Mrs. Gunn, wife of alocal stockbroker andmother of three chil-dren, presently is work-ing on her thesis for hermaster 's degree in ex-perimental psychologyat Florida Atlantic Uni-versity.

Theme for her thesisis "Contrast Effects:Shifts in Work Load."

Basic equipment in-clude two hungry Albinorats, a pellet feedingapparatus and a set ofweights. Basis for her

thesis is the premisethat "animals do not r e -spond to absolute physi-cal stimuli, but to rela-tive differences,,"

Her thesis theme andpremise were suppliedby Dr. Robert Adamson,psychology professor atFAU.

Steps in the four monthexperiment went some-thing like this:

After being kept inisolation and not fed allday, rat number one wasplaced in a glass boxequipped with a pelletfeeding device and alev-er which the r a t mustpush in order to releasethe pellet. On the leveris placed a light weight.

Rat number two, un-

She watches as the rat gets accustomed to itssurroundings and later seeks the pellet feedinglever.

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der the same conditions,was placed in the samebox with the same leverand feeding device onlyt h e lever is equippedwith a heavier weight.

After Mrs. Gunn hasestablished a set patternof responses to theleverby both rats, as record-ed on a response r e -corder, she places alight weight on the leverwhich previously hadheld the heavy weight.Then she watches r a tnumber one and ratnumber two respond tothe same weight. Herfindings so far haveshowed that rat numbertwo's responses werebelow rat number one'suntil the light weight wasplaced on rat numbertwo's lever too. Thent h e responses of ratnumber two far exceed-ed those of rat numberone.

Her experiments arecompleted now. So allMrs. Gunn has to do isanalyze her data andwrite her thesis, whichis another eight month'swork.

It'll take her a year

to complete the wholethesis.

Fortunately her fourmost crucial months arebehind her now. Cru-cial because if one ofthe rats had died, Mrs.Gunn would have beenrequired to start h e rthesis all over againfrom scratch.

"This has happened,"Dr. Adamson said.

Like most women,Mrs. Gunn admits shewas " a little scared"when she picked up herfirst rat, but now she'sused to them.

Dr. A d a m s o n andother psychology pro-fessors in the labshelped her by showing

her a technique forhandling rats .

"You just don't pickup a rat by its tail,"one of the professorssaid, "because he getsmad and is likely tobite.

"You pet it gently

and then quietly pick itup by its back."

The rats used in thelabs at FAU — all 100of them — are made tobe gentle by basicallyt h e same process.They're purchased whenthey're very tiny, and

they're petted and hand-led until they're readyto be used in experi-ments.

Even so there's noguarantee that the ratswon't bite. In fact ac-cording to Dr. Adam-son, ' "everyone who

works with rats has beenbit at one time or an-other. That's why every-one working in the labsis required to have Tet-anus booster shots.

Mrs. Gunn has not yet

(Continued on Page 2B)

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Page 14: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

2B Thursday, September 14, 1967 BOCA RATON NEWS

Magic flavor of onions turnordinary food into deluxe dish

Onions have an inher-ent flavor magic tha thighlights a multitude ofdishes — they make anordinary dish taste ex-pensive and a simpleone deluxe.

What's more, onionsare a wise food buy andteam deliciously withmany other fresh vege-tables now in goodsupply.

The Globe variety ofonion — yellow, red andwhite types — is easily

recognized by its globu-lar shape. In size theseonions are up to abouttwo and one-half inchesin diameter, with aroundthree to ten per pound.Globe onions are full-flavored with a thickishskin covering that iseasily removed undercold-running water (toavoid tear shedding).

When selecting on-ions, choose those thatare bright, clean, firm,and well-shaped with

Sauced Steak Sandwiches

Recipe of the Week

Saucy steak, slaw cookoutHere's a meal that's got everything: Color,

flavor, and that special appeal that comeswith outdoor cooking. Nothing beats a steak,especially one that's charcoal-broiled in yourown backyard or patio. The fresh air seemsto sharpen appetites, and this hearty steaksandwich will help to satisfy them. It's a mealwith man-appeal; inexpensive, too, since youuse cube steaks made extra tasty with a but-ter-based sauce.

The sauce has no exotic ingredients, just asimple blend of butter, Worcestershire andsteak sauces for zip and sliced green onionsfresh from the garden for tangy taste. Theflavor's superb, thanks to the smooth presenceof butter.

Top off your steak sandwiches with the colorand flavor with fresh tomato slices. Serve'em hot off the charcoal grill on slices ofcrusty Vienna bread which you've toasted,then brushed with extra sauce. Along withSauced Steak Sandwiches serve a zesty BlueCheese Slaw. Dairy sour cream gives theslaw smoothness and zest all in one step. Juststir it together with bits of Blue cheese, a dashof lemon juice, milk and seasonings. The milkhelps thin the thick, velvety sour cream so itmixes well with other ingredients. Toss thecabbage, pimiento, green onion and green pep-per with this sour cream dressing just beforeserving so the slaw stays crisp and fresh-tasting.

Pour mugs of milk to make the meal com-plete.

SAUCED STEAK SANDWICH1/2 cup (1 stick) butter1/4 cup sliced green onion

1 1/2 tablespoons steak sauce1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce6 cubed steaks

Inaccurate measuringcan be cook's downfallInaccurate measure-

ments can cause just asmuch difficulty in cook-ing as mis-measuringfabric before sewing.

Unless you are usingpresifted flour, alwayssift the flour before youuse it in cakes, cookies,and pastries.

If you do not sift theflour you may be usingup to 2 tablespoons morethan you should.

Measuring brown su-gar can also cause aproblem, except for thegranulated variety, al-ways pack the brownsugar into the measur-ing cup. When you over-turn the cup, the brownsugar should hold theshape of the cup.

Pack shortening, but-ter or margarine intothe measuring cup toeliminate any air pock-ets. When you remove it

from the measuring cupuse a rubber scraper toget the full measure.

Measuring liquid in-gredients is simple todo but sometimes youmay forget to look at theglass cup from eye lev-el. This is important foraccuracy. If you lookdown into the cup fromabove you will be gettingless than your desiredmeasure. If you look atthe cup above eye levelyou will be getting morethan your desired mea-sure.

Glass measuring cupswith a pouring spout andhandle are ideal for li-quid ingredients. Thenest of measuring cups{1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 1 cup) isideal for dry ingredients

Measuring spoons areaccurate measurementsand you should use theseinstead of tableware.

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6 slices Vienna bread, 1-inch thick6 slices tomato

In s m a l l saucepan combine butter, onion,steak and Worcestershire sauces; place onedge of grill to heat. Broil meat over hotcoals 2-3 minutes on each side or until de-sired degree of doneness. Meanwhile, toastbread on both sides. Brush bread with sauce;arrange on platter. Place a steak on eachbread slice; spoon remaining sauce over all.Top each with a tomato slice. Serve immed-iately. Makes 6 servings.

BLUE CHEESE SLAW1/3 cup crumbled Blue cheese

3 tablespoons milk1 tablespoon lemon juice

1/2 teaspoon sugar1/4 teaspoon salt

1 cup dairy sour cream5 cups shredded cabbage

1/4 cup chopped green pepper1/4 cup chopped green onions

3 tablespoons chopped pimientoIn a small bowl stir Blue cheese, milk, lemonjuice, sugar and salt into sour cream; chillto blend flavors. In a large bowl combinecabbage, green epper, onions and pimiento.Just before servingpour sour cream dressingover cabbage and toss lightly. Makes 6 serv-ings.

THURSDAY, SEPT. 14

Sunrise Kiwanis Club, Royal Palm Cafeteria, 7:30a.mo

Special Christmas decorations class, Garden ClubCenter, 10 a.mo

Soroptimists, Dutch Pantry, 12:15 p.m.Exchange Club, Pal's, 12:15 p.m.Welfare Council case worker, Community Center,

1 P.m.Jets football practice, Pony League field, 6;30p.m.Adult ballroom dancing, Community Center, 7:30

D.m.Girl Scout Leaders meeting, Scout Hut, 8 p.m.Masonic Lodge, ?99 N.W. 35 St., "8 p.m.Jaycees, Scott bldg., 8 p.m.

FRIDAY, SEPT. 15Oil painting, Community Center, 9:30 a.m.Weaving, Garden Club Center, 10 a.m.Duplicate Bridge, Community Center, 12:30 p.m.Billiard instr. (children), Community Center

3:30 p.moJets football practice, Pony League field, 6:30

P.m0Teens social dancing class, Community Center,

7 p.m.Beg. bridge, Community Center, 7:30 p.m.Golf instr., Community Center, 7:30 p.m.

SATURDAY, SEPT. 16Boca Square bd. mtng., Scout Hut, 9:30 a.m.Junior chess masters, Community Center 10

a.m.Drum lessons, Community Center, 10 a.m.Songflute lessons, Community Center, 10:30 a.m.Judo instr., Community Center, 1 p.m.Guitar instr., Community Center, 1 p.m.Roller skating, Scout Hut, 1:30 p.m.Teenage dance, Community Center, 8 p.m.Daily: Shuffleboard, beach, tennis courts, Kiddie

Korral.

dry skins. It is best tobuy onions often sincehome storage conditionsfrequently vary and on-ions are best when keptin a cool, dry place.

The size onions to bepurchased va ry withtheir use. The smallerones are best for boilingwhole, stewing orcreaming; medium onesfor serving stuffed andthe larger ones for lus-cious, thick slices to topoff hamburgers andother sandwiches — andof course, for onionrings. All of them areequally good for grating,chopping, dicing or slic-ing.

Here are some otherideas for enjoying on-ions:

A vegetable du jour...as the vegetable of theday, try boiling or bak-ing whole medium-sizedonions with the skin on.

Of rats

When the onions aretender, slip off the skinsand serve piping hot witha parsley-flavoredcream sauce.

Stewed apples andonions. . .Saute 2 slicedmedium onions in butteror margarine, whentranslucent, add 4 ap-ples, pared and sliced.Cover and cook slowlyabout 20 minutes or un-til the apples are tend-er. Remove cover andseason to taste with saltand pepper.. .and maybea little curry powder.

Serve immediately withpork sausage, liver orhamburger entrees.

Stewed tomatoes withonions. . .Transform a#303 can of tomatoesinto an elegant companyvegetable. Pour the to-matoes into a saucepan,add 3/4 cup of slicedonions,1/2 teaspoon saltand a pinch of pepper.

(Continued from IB)been bit.

Mrs. Gunn's thesiswill eventually be partof a report of findingsmade by the FAU'spsy-chology department in aprogram for the UnitedStates Air Force Officeof Scientific Research.The psychology experi-ments are financed bythe office.

Mrs, Gunn is one of 13students working on dif-ferent phases of the pro-gram, seven of whoma r e working towardstheir master s degreesin psychology.

From the desk of

BOCA BAZAAR20 5. DixieBoca Raton, Fla.

Artificial FlowersUnique GiftsDecoupageSuppliesBags & Trims

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- Closed Saturday

under the Banyan Tree

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Marymoimt

slates film"Good Times, Wond-

erful Times," first in aseries of film classicsscheduled for the fourthannual film forum atMarymount College, willbe presented Sunday,Sept. 17.

The British film di-rected by Lionel Rogos-in will be shown at 7:30p.m. in Founders HallAuditorium. Introduc-tion will be given bySister Regis, RSHM.

Appraised, Bought & Sold

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Page 15: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

Decorations is the topic for discussion amongMrs. Leland Davis, Mrs. Carter Maddox, Mrs.Richard Venezia and Mrs. Richard Brannon. Thewomen metMonday to finalize plans for the lunch-

eon and fashion show, sponsored by theWoman's Club, to be held at noon Sept. 23Ocean Hearth Restaurant. Mrs. Brannon is

Juniorin thechair-

man.

ANN LANDERS

Husband blamed for defectDear Ann Landers.-

My husband and I mar-ried young. I was 16 andTed was 20. We werevery happy for the firsttwo years. We had achild whom we bothwanted and we love hervery much.

Last year when I waspregnant with a secondbaby Ted became in-volved with a 16-year-old tramp. When Ilearned of the affair, hepromised he would stopseeing her and he kepthis word. I had a verydi f f icul t pregnancy,however, and the babywas born with a birthdefect. My doctor saidthe defect was due to theemotional strain which Isuffered while carryingthe child.

I have tried to forgiveTed, but I can't seem todo it. Whenever I look atthe baby I blame him allover again. Please helpme get over hating myhusband. I am making mylife miserable, and hisas well.

—BITTER WOMANDear Woman: I have

checked with physiciansin Chicago, Washingtonand Boston and all threesay it would be impos-sible to state for cer-tain that the birth de-fect was due to emo-

tional upset dur ingpregnancy. So, inthe in-terest of fairness, stopblaming your husband.

You might also do thatdoctor a favor and sug-gest that he do someserious investigating inthe field of birth defectsso that he doesn't con-tinue to cause unneces-sary anguish to othermothers who may havedefective babies.

* * * *Dear Ann Landers: I

am a girl 15 and havebeen begging my par-ents for a year to letme have a boy-girlparty. Well, they finallysaid O.K. for my birth-day.

The party was lastnight and I am just sick.One couple wandered offinto a bedroom and werenecking up a storm whenmy mother walked in onthem. She told them toget out of the bedroomand to join the others.They were so embar-rassed they left withoutsaying good-bye.

This morning mymother tore into melike it was my faultor something. I reallyfeel awful. This couplehas been going steadyfor ages and it is notmy business what theydo but I think they hadsome nerve to make out

in our home. Now mymother says I can't haveany more boy-girlparties for a year. Isthis fair?

—INNOCENT VICTIMOF

OVERSEXED FRIENDSDear Vic: Your moth-

er should not hold youresponsible for the con-duct of your friends. Ido feel that you shouldlet this couple know thatyou are keenly disap-pointed in them, and ifyour mother should re-consider and give youanother chance, chop thelove-birds off your nextparty list.

* * * *Dear Ann Landers: I

was amused by the let-ter from the Californiawoman who resented be-ing called "Doll" by thebutcher, "Honey" by thegas station attendant,"Sweetheart" by theparking lot fellow and"Sugar" by the post-man.

In London the womenare ca l led "Ducky"while in the northernprovinces it is "Luv."My favorite pet namefor the ladies is onewhich originated in Scot-land, however. It is"Hen." How do you think

that one would go overin the U.S., Ann?

—R.D.C.OF VANCOUVER

Dear Van.: Don't tryit. Chick, yes. . .but Hen—• neverII

* * * *Too many couples go

from matrimony to acri-mony. Don't let yourmarriage flop before itgets started. Send forAnn Landers' booklet,"Marriage — What toExpect." Send your re-quest to Ann Landers incare of this newspaperenclosing 50 cents incoin and a long, stamp-ed, self-addressed en-velope.

Ann Landers will beglad to help you withyour problems. Sendthem to her in care ofBoca Raton News, Box3346, Chicago, Illinois,60654, enclosing astamped, self-address-ed envelope.

Cross isassistantJack Cross has been

named assistant admin-istrator of BethesdaMemorial Hospital, fill-ing a vacancy createdwhen Russell T. Claytonwas promoted to admin-istrator this past June,according to an an-nouncement made byClayton.

The 39-year-oldCross, a native of Can-onsburg, Pa., holds abachelor's degree inbusiness administra-tion from the Univer-sity of Omaha and earn-ed a master's in hospi-tal administration undera joint U.S. Army-Bay-lor University Programof study at Fort SamHouston, Tex. His ad-ministrative residencywas done atDeWitt Hos-pital, Fort Belvoir, Va.

Bethesda's new assis-tant a d m i n i s t r a t o rserved twenty-one yearsin the U.S. Army. Hisexperience in the field,of hospital administra-tion includes the postsof director of personnelat DeWitt Hospital, ad-ministrator of a militaryhosp i t a l at Leghorn(Livorno), Italy, and in-spector general at Wal-ter Reed Hospital,Washington, D.C., theposition he held priorto retirement from theArmy and coming toBethesda.

Cross is married andhas a 17 year old sonwho is entering CaseInstitute, Cleveland, O.,as a freshman th i smonth.

Club initiates

new memberDr. Patricia Cole will

be initiated into the Sor-optimist Club at a lunch-eon meeting today inDutch Pantry.

The meeting will be-gin at noon. Special guestat the luncheon will beMrs. Ethel Peterson,regional governor ofSoutheast District, Fed-eration of SoroptimistClubs.

BOCA RATON NEWS Thursday, September Ur 1967 3B

To Place aClassified AdCall 395-8300

and WIG SALONEuropean and American trained HAIRSTYLISTS to serve the most discim-inating Ladies at moderate prices.

Finest Quality Wigs and Wiglets251 W. Camino Real - Phone 395-7055

A satisfying dessert JOINLooking for a light-

hearted, yet satisfyingdessert to finish off aheavy meal?

The perfect answer tothis is a frosty orangesherbet — simple toprepare and easy on thebudget. Orange juice isnow in good supply andselling at especiallyreasonable prices, soit's a good time to enjoyit often ~ alone, or incombination.

Here's a recipe forenjoying orange juice:

FROSTYORANGE SHERBET1/2 cups milk1/2 cup sugar1/4 cup light corn

syrup1/4 teaspoon salt

6 tablespoons froz-

1

en orange juiceconcentrate

1/4 cup lemon juice2 egg whites

Heat milk, sugar, cornsyrup and salt, in saucepan, stirring constantlyjus t until sugar dis-solves. Remove fromheat immediately. Stirin orange and lemonjuice. Mixture will ap-pear curdled but theseflecks disappear whenfrozen. Pour into 2 icecube trays; freeze for 2hours, stirring severaltimes. Beat egg whitesuntil firm. Spoon sher-bet into large bowl, beatuntil fluffy and then foldin egg whites. Return totrays and freeze 2 to 3more hours or untilfirm.

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Mr. and Mrs. John Lunger

Friends help Lungers mark

golden wedding anniversaryMr. and Mrs. John

Lunger, Moble Villas,celebrated theirgolden wedding anniver-sary with an open houseSunday.

More than 100 friendsand relatives helped theLungers mark the anni-versary at the celebra-tion held in the trailerpark's clubhouse.

Mr. and Mrs. Lungerwere married Sept. 7,1917 in Scranton, Pa.The couple came to BocaRaton 14 years ago"when there were nobanks, no chain storesand no Winfield Park."

Lunger owned and op-erate a gas station onthe corner of Federal

Highway and Royal PalmRoad, and Mrs. Lungerwas cafeteria managerat J.C. Mitchell School.

' 'We saw Boca Ratongrow up," Mrs. Lungersaid. The couple haslived in the trailer park

for seven years. Theyare charter members ofAdvent Lutheran Church.

They have two sons,John Jr., Orange, Calif.,and Alan, Swansboro,N.C , and two grandsons.

GENERAL INSURANCEAGENCY

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GAS RANGE"Harvest" sized Cook and Keep-Warm oven system. Radiant Waist-level broiler. RotisserieObservadoroven/broiler window. Removablecook top, oven/broiler door. Amer-ica s easiest range to keep cleanALL BURNERS GUARANTEEDrUR LIFE!

REGULAR LIST PRICE - $319.95SPECIAL SALE PRICE - $286.00

Model 875YRXT SAVE $33.95

Offers limited to present and prospective Florida Public Utilities and Flo-Gas customers.

HARDWICKSTD. 3 6 " AUTOMATIC GAS RANGE

r~~ ^ ~i

| "-* » i

ModelZA2636-W-1R1*

Family-size 16" oven with exclusive Equa-lemp oven burner. . . plus a bonus ofstorage space. Ideal for the homemakerwho demands top cooking performance ata budget price.

REGULAR LIST PRICE - $123.95SPECIAL SALE PRICE - $113.95

SAVE $10.00

OVER 1000BARGAINS

Every Appliance inStock Marked Down

SALE PRICESALSO APPLY ON

DRYERS • GRILLS

GASLIGHTSHEATERS and

WATER HEATERS

VISIT OUR SHOWROOM 325 N.E. 2nd St., DELRAY BEACHOR TELEPHONE 2 7 8 - 2 6 3 6

Page 16: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

4B Thursday, September 14, 1967 BOCA RATON NEWS

TSUGAR

PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16tKQUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

"ATH'S 81ACKHAWK

( B U H HALF . . . LB. 59C)WHOLE OR SHANK HALF

y.s. CHOICE %?mm

LAMBUS CHOICE

LEG 0 LAMB . .U S CHOICE PRE-SLICED

SHOULDER ROASTUS CHOICE

SHOULDER CHOPSUS CHOICE R IB OR

SIRLOIN CHOPS .U S CHOICE

LOIN CHOPSU S CHOICE FOR BAR-B-QUE OR

LAMB BREASTS .

SALEL B 8 9 C

. . . . IB. 07

. . . .LB 79C

. . . . LB. $ i 1 9

. . . . LB. * P 9

STEW

LB 3 9 C

Li.ROUND BONE SHOULDER OR CALIFORNIA

ROASTS . iB. 7 9 C

ALL MEAT STEW OR GROUND

CHUCK Wi PKG. * ! "U.S. CHOICE CHUCK ROAST OR

STEAKS LB 5 9 e

WD BRAND CUBE STEAKS OR BEEF

BURGERS . . 2 1 / 2PKG.*1 7 9

LYKES SUGAR CREEK ALL MEAT

B O L O G N / T ™ ^ *TASTE 0 ' SEA FRENCH FRIED PORTIONS OR

FISH STICKS 2 ] / 2 S*. 89 e

TASTE 0 ' SEA

GROUPER FILLET LB. 7 9 C

SUPERBRAND COTTAGE

CHEESE 2 CUP 5 9 C

OLD FASHIONED

STORE CHEESE i, 6 9 C

LONG ISLAND

DUCKLINGS . . . LB. 4 9 C

ARMOUR STAR ALL MEAT

FRANKS . . . . . LB 59C

BlackHawk FINE FLAVOR

IBacon,

MAXWELL

ALL GRINDSi

I-LB.CAN

LIMIT 1 WITH $5.00 ORDER OR MORE

*k **m ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ B ^ M ^ B ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ a n.oR«*0R **»•*

FR0ZEr4 CRINKLE CUT

P O T A T O E S . . . . . . 2FROZEN 14-OZ. MORTON;S

LB.BAG

10-OZ.PACKAGES

DELICIOUS RED "NEW CROP"

APPLES 4LARGE WESTERN HEADS

CREAM PIES 29C LETTUCE 2 / 39 e

2 8 39CFROZEN 11 -OZ. ALL VARIETIES MORTON'S

DINNERS . . . . . . 39eWHITE SEEDLESS

GRAPESU.S. NO. 1 WHITE! GAL FROZEN SUPERBRAND SHERBET OR

C1 CREAM . . . 2 / $ 1 POTATOES . . . . . 10 BAG 5 9 C

FROZEN G 8. W W/CHEESE

PIZZASEXTRA LARGE

HONEYDEWS39C HONEYDEWS 59<

SUCCOTASH 2 ! c CELERY 2 / 3 9 '10-OZ. ASTOR FROZEN

LBS.

LIMIT 2 DOZEN WITH$5.00 ORDER OR MORE

16-OZ. NO DEPOSIT BOTTLE OLD GERMAN

BEER 6/P,C99<:

ARROW 47-OZ. BLUE AND WHITE OR

DETERGENT 5O.°.Z .CO.D.W.ATE.R. 4 9 C

GALLON BLEACH

16-OZ. VAN CAMP

PORK & BEANS . . . . #45<17-OZ.STOKELY

SWEET PEAS 4 /88 e

14-OZ. STOKELY

SHELLIE BEANS . . . . 4 / 8 8 cCLOROX 49 e

46-OZ. CAN THRIFTY MAID FLORIDA PUNCH OR

GRAPE DRINKS 5/*l .15V2-OZ. STOKELY CUT OR WHOLE FRENCH STYLE

GREEN BEANS 4/88c GRAmuiTSECTIOIIS 5/'L

GALLON ITALIAN SWISS COLONY

W I N E S C H I A N T I " RHINESI«ELLER- OR ROSE $ A {

16-OZ. CAN THRIFTY MAID

fe$so»<. ^ _ ^ 24-OZ.

wessoro

(plai& fa^UM1T 2 WITH $5.00 ORDER OR MORE

CAMINO REAL SHOPPING CENTER CAMINO REAL ANDS.W. 3rd AVENUE

Page 17: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

BOCA RATON NEWS Thursday, September 14, 1967 5B

l i e HP

Heinz

Tomato SoupDixie 9-oz. Refill

CapsScott White, Pink, Yellow,Green, Paper

Towels

Prices In This Ad EffectiveOnly In Dade, Broward, PalmBeach, Martin, St. Lucie andIndian River Counties.

Pel Monte Pineapple Grapefruit

D r i n k . . . . . . 4Del Monte Yellow Cling Halves or Slices

Peaches . . . . 3

Del Monte Cut46-02.cans 1 .

89<

Sliced Beets . .3 .us 59«

Green Beans. • 4~ 9 I»Del Monte

29-02.cans

Del Monte

Green PeasDel Monte Cream Style

Golden Corn

4

5

17-oz.cans 89<17-oz.cans

Del Monte Sliced

Carrots . . . . .3Del Monte

Tomato Catsup 2 ss 69Del Monte

Spinach. . . . .3 «£ 49Del Monte Chunk Style

T u n a . . . . . . . 3 BVtoz.cans

Clip & Redeemsoo

EXTRA S & H GREEN STAMPSwith S5.0Q order or more

200EXTRA 5 & H GREEN STAMPS

with SIO.00 order or more

EXTRA S 8. H GREEN STAMPSwith SI5.00 order or more

(Coupon axpiros Sat. Saptembar 18,1967)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

Dow Handi-Wrap

Plastic Wrap

180-ct.big roll

2D0-ft.roll

38c

29c

39c

EXTRA

llllMreenSlampsmTop Choice

Burger for Dogs ?£"• $1.69(Coupon expires Sat. September 16, 1967)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

Right Guard

Spray Deodorant.Ultra BriteT o o t h P a s t e . . . .Swift's Corned Beef

Hash

7-oz.-size 79c

Pet Evaporated

MilkBorden's Dutch

Chocolate Drink. quart 2 5 C

39cPantry Maid For School orWork Lunches,

Lunch Bags . .Non Dairy Coffee Creamer

Pet Please

20-ct.

F. F. V. Oatmeal, Chocolate Drops,Caramel Chips or Fudge N Nut

Cookies 'Jff 39cSunshine

Hydrox Cookies.Wise Two-Sum Pak

Potato Chips. . .

16-oz.cello

9-oz.PKg. 59c

Borden's Assorted Flavors

Ice Milk . 3? 49cMeritaPecan Twirls. .Swift's All FlavorsFeaturing Pure Vanilla

Ice Cream

6-pak

29cKleenex Assorted Colorsor White Family

Paper Napkins .Breakfast Club White

Sliced Bread. . .

10c60-ct.cello pkg.

2 20-oz. O - Q .loaves *J«-*1 '

Prices EffectiveThurs-Fri-Saf.September 14-15-16

EXTRA

lllU^GreenStampsK^ ^ ^ WITH IMII eouaoi* **o ru«e«*ii at Wt^Hif

Dream Flower or Cashmere BouquetDusting Powder *°« $1 •(Coupon expires Sat. September 16,1967)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

EXTRA

lIlM^GreenStampsi$1.18

Anacin

Tablets l£s

(Coupon expires Sat. September 16,1967)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

10-lb.bag

4-lb.bag

EXTRA

IIIUWGreenStampsAny Kind Band Aid Any Size

Bandages(Coupon expires Sat. Septembers, 1967)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

U.S. #1 All Purpose

POTATOESMountain Grown, Red

DELICIOUSCrisp, Fresh

ROMAINE .Delicious in Salads, Large Florida

AVOCADOS .. .. 25<Full Of Juice & Flavor

NECTARINES . . . . . . 2 >b. 4 9 *One of the Finest Eating Melons, Available in Several Sizes

APPLES. . . 2 bunches

49<29<

UUINBIG PRIZES

it'sRACING

TIME!• WLBW, Channel 10, Miami

7:15 to 7:45 PM• WEAT, Channel 12,

West Palm Beach7:30 to 8:00 PM

*

Ii

CRENSHAWS TRY SOME TODAY !

EXTRA

Easy Off Aerosol

Oven Cleaner '£?• $1.25(Coupon expires Sat. September 16, 1967)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

EXTRA

itoGreen StampsSwift's Strained or Junior 100%

Meats for Babies 2 g& 50c(Coupon expires Sat. September 16, 1967)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

ii^GreenStampsPI

1 1 1The Real Thing From FloridaPictsweet

Orange Juice . . 4 ££ 49cLloyd J. Harris Family SizeApple, Blackberry or

Rhubarb Pies . . 2 "ff- 89cBirds Eye

Broccoli Spears.Birds Eye Tiny Tender

Peas

10-oz.pkg.

pkg.

10-oz.pkg.

Dri-GIo

Furniture Polish 89c(Coupon expires Sat. September 16. 1967)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

EXTRA

Shell No Pest

Strip '& $1-98(Coupon expires Sat. September 16, 1967)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

EXTRA

11 ^GreenStampsPlSwift's W/Turkey Gravy

Turkey Slices 2?£ $1.79(Coupon expires Sat. September 16, 1S67)(Coupon Good From Vero BeachTo Miami ONLY)

Birds Eye

Strawberries. .Holloway House W/Sausage

P i z z a . . . . . . . . . ^ 7 9 c{Plus SO S&H Green Stamps. No coupon required)

Sara Lee Whipped Cream Goldenor Double Chocolate

L a y e r C a k e . . . . * f f S 2 6 9

Swift W/Turkey Gravy

Turkey Slices . . . ^ $ 1 7 9

(PLUS IOO S&H GREIN STAMPS WITH COUPON]

Gorton's

Fish & Chips. . . . 1P£ 69c

(Plus 50 S&H Green Stamps. No coupon required)

Gorton's Crunchy

Fish Sticks Xz" 4.5c(Plus 50 S&H Green Stamps. No coupon required)

T h e Real Th ing From Flor idaGolden Gift

Orange Juice • •Kraft

Velveeta CheeseMaster's

Sour Cream . . .Master's

Sour Cream . . .Swift's Brookfield

Butter

quart 2 5 c

Mb. C Q _loaf

16 DZ

cup37c

8oz- 1 9 cCUD * • / * •

Mb.ctn.

Swift's Premium Tender GrownShipped Gov't-lnspectedresh Not Frozen

Kraft Parkay Soft

Margarine ctnb; 43c

Wisconsin Mild

Cheddar Cheese . «>. 79c(Plus 25 S&H Green Stamps. No coupon required)

Wisconsin Sliced

American Cheese ^ 49cKraft Cracker Barrel Sharp

Stix Pak Cheese . 1PD£- 59c

EXTRAyill ^GreenStampsP?

Swlft'i Premium

Smoked Hams ',".„•„'" . . r - 6 9 c •

„.,... 5g< ;

-;•• 63c.upon • ipJDI Sat, Svptxmbar

,_jupon Coffit From V«ro B««hTo Miami OFILY1

Fresh Cut Northern

Flounder Fillets. . ">•White Pearl Medium

Shrimp in-Fresh Caught Yellow Tail

Snappers m.

(CUT-UP OR WHOLE)

Swift's PremiumFully Cooked

Swift's Premium Boneless Smoked

Daisies '°. 89c(Plus 50 S&H Green Stamps. No coupon required)

Herman's Orange Band

Bologna J& 59c(Plus 25 S&H Green Stamps. No coupon required)

Cook Quik, Chopped Cubed

B e e f S t e a k s . . . . «•. 8 9 cSarasota Brand Chipped Beef, Ham or

Turkey 3 p3g. 99c

Swift's Premium

Cornish Game Hens 69c

Swift's Premium ProtenGov't.-Inspected Heavy Beef

Califoritia Roast > 79c

Boston Cut Roast >» 79<Barbecue SteakCharcoal SteakGround Beef. . 3(Plus 50 S&H Green Stamps. No coupon required)

Ib. 79«Ib.

6 to7-lb.av.shankportion

Swift's Premium Brown & ServePatties or Link

S a u s a g e . . . . . . 8P

Copeland's All Meat

Franks It 59c

iPdiciitessenTReals

n "ubl.i Mirkali wnh Stii

whole Ib. 69*(PLUS 200 5 iK GB1IN STAMPS Wlfh COUPON)

Mrs. Smith's

Apple PieRotisserie Cooked Rare

Roast Beef

24-oz.size 59c

89c

Camino Gardens - Boca Raton100 W. Camino Real

5!h A¥e. PIAZA- Boca RafonU.S. Highway #1 & Slh i»e.

Palm Aire Shopping Center272 S. Federal Hwy.r Deerfield Beach

Page 18: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

\

6B Thursday, September 14, 1967 BOCA RATON NEWS

.QKeqcmys episcopALcfcuncrjBoca Raton Road at N.E. Second Avenue

SUNDAY SERVICES8:00 A.M. Holy Communion and Homily9:00 A.M. Holy Communion and Church

School11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer, Holy Commun-

ion, and SermonDaily except Thursdays, 7:30 a.m. Morning Prayer and HolyCommunion Thursdays 10:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and HolyCommunion

first Presbytfrifln Churchi f UNITED PRESBYTERIAN, U S A . )

600 West Camino Real

# TWO SERVICESI 9:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.

Sermon'ARE WE GETTING SOFT?'

Ministers

Rev. Albert G. ShiphorstRev. Robert R. Bugbee

Rev. David K. AllenChurch School 9:30 A.M.

•\ir-Coiiditioned Nursery Available

A D V E N T American5001 NE 4 Ave. Near U.S.I

SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:00WO3SHIP SERVICE 10:00

Kenneth E. NosworthyStudent PastorPhone 395-3632Phons 395-4741

CHURCHES

S T . P A U L Mo Synod701 W. Palmetto Pk. Rd.

SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45WORSHIP 8:30 and 11:00(Pre-School Nursery at 11)

E.O. Krug, PastorPhone 395-0433

and 395-1939

'The University Church'

THE CHURCH of THE OPEN DOOR300 N.W. 35th St., Boca Raton

Minister: Albert L. EastmanSunday School 9:45 A.M.Morning Worship 11:00 A.M.Evening Service 7:30 P.M.

11:00 A.M. "What Kind of a God is the Christian'sGod?"

7:30 P.M. "What Shall We Learn from the JonahStory?"

An Independent, Biblically Orienied Church — preachingthe Truth of God's Precious Word.

FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCHof BOCA RATON

450 N.E. 51st St., Boca Raton, FloridaSUNDAY SERVICES

Sunday School 9:30 A.M.Worship Service 10:45 A.M.Evening Service 7:30 P.M.

NEW FACILITIES

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHRev. J.O. Gash, Interim Pastor

TEMPORARY LOCATION3333 N. Federal Hwy., Boca Raton

SUNDAY SERVICESSunday School; 9:45 A.M. Training Union 6:30Morning Worship 11:00 AM. Evening Worship 7:30

Wednesday Evening Prayer Service 7:30 P.M."Bible Teaching and Bible Preaching"

First Church of Christ, ScientistBoca Raton Printing Company Bldg.

41 S.E. 4th St.r Boca RatonSERVICES READING ROOM

SundaySunday SchoolNurseryWednesday

11 a.m11 a.m11 a.m.

Bocade Bldg. ArcadeHO E. Palmetto Park Rd.

W e e k | y 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.P*m« Sundays 2 - 4 P-m-

Kenneth Strauss to speak

Unitarians schedule services"A Neighborhood Center for

Boca Raton" will be the topicof Kenneth Strauss, West PalmBeach, when he addresses thecongregation at Unitarian-Uni-versalist Church Sunday.

Strauss is executive directorof Palm Beach County Com-munity Action Council. Sundayschool classes and serviceswill be held at 10:30 a.m.

* * * *"Born to Reproduce" will be

the sermon topic of Rev. DaleHency for Trinity Church of God.

* * * *"Matter" will be the lesson

subject for First Church ofChrist, Scientist.

* * * *Rev. Albert Eastman's topic

f o r the morning service atChurch of the Open Door willbe "What Kind of a God is theChristian's God?" Topic at the7:30 p.m. service will be "WhatShall We Learn from the JonahStory?"

* * * *"Are We Getting Soft?" will

be the sermon topic of Rev. Al-bert G. Shiphorst at both ser-vices in F i r s t Presbyterianchurch.

* * * *Rev. John Schuring w i l l

preach on "The Most UnpopularVirtue" at the 11 a.m. servicein Christian Reformed Church.Sermon topic at the 7 p.m. ser-vice will be "God's Anti-Pov-erty Program."

* * * *"Light for Our Lives" will

be the sermon topic of RevoFrederick Nelson at Un i t edChurch services.

* * * *Rev0 Paul C. Thomson, pas-

tor of First Baptist Church inTequesta and Jupiter, and sonof Dro and Mrs. George Thom-son, will preach at the Univer-sity Baptist Church morningservice.

Rev. Thomson is a graduateof Gordon College, Boston,Mass, and Eastern Baptist The-ological Seminary, Philadelphia,Pa. His graduate work was doneat Boston University.

Dr. George Thomson willpreach at the evening service.His topic will be "AnotherProdigal Son." -"

* * * *Dr. John H. Willis will preach

at the 11 a.m. service in Mor-avian Church. Dr. Willis is aMethodist minister who h a sserved a number of pastorates

in New York.* *

Rev, Dav id Nichols will

on "Restored to Right-" at services for Boca

preacheousnessRaton Presbyterian Church.

Rev. Dingle appointedpastor at Advent Church

Rev. Ronald James Dinglehas been appointed pastor atAdvent Lutheran Church. Theappointment was announced byThomas N. Turner, presidentof the church council,,

Rev. Dingle, 30, is a nativeof Detroit, Mich., son of Sarahand the late Ernest Dingle.

He was baptized and confirm-ed at Mt. Zion Lutheran Churchand was the first member oft h a t church to receive thePro Deo et Patria Lutheranscouting award for outstanding

Rev.Dingle

service to the church and com-munity in 1951. He received hisB.A. degree from Capital Uni-versity, Columbus, Ohio, in1958 and his bachelor of divin-ity degree in 1962 from theEvangelical Lutheran Theolog-ical Seminary in Columbus.

During his seminary training,he served as intern at Mt. Cal-vary Lutheran Church, L o sAngeles, and while completinghis academic work served for16 months as Vicar of the FirstEnglish Lutheran Church inColumbus.

In June of 1962, Rev. Dinglew a s ordained in his homechurch, and on July 15, 1962,he was installed as pastor of theEvangelical Lutheran Churchof the Good Shepherd, Milwauk-ee, Wis.

He served on the MilwaukeeCouncil of Churches, was a

member of the Southern Wis-consin District NominatingCommittee of The AmericanLutheran Church, advisor tothe Milwaukee Conference YouthCommittee, staff member of theLeadership Training School fac-ulty, member of the Board ofDirectors of the LutherdaleBible Camp, member of the pub-lic relations committee of Luth-eran Social Services, and servedas secretary of the MilwaukeeLutheran Council,

Mrs. Dingle is the formerMarguerite Belk, also born andraised in Detroit, She graduatedfrom Capital University in I960,with a bachelor's degree in ex-ecutive secretarial work. TheDingles have three children;Susan Lynn, 4; Scott Richard, 2;and Shari Lee, 1.

Pastor Dingle and his familywill arrive in Boca Raton Oc-tober 5 and he will preach hisfirst sermon at Advent ChurchOctober 8.

Marymount

slates series"Did the Jewish God Die at

Auschwitz?" is the title of thefirst in a series of three publiclectures to be presented byRabbi Isaac Neuman at Mary-mount College.

The lecture will be held at 8p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 20 inFounder's Hall auditorium. Theseries is entitled "Faith, Free-dom and Love,"

Rabbi Neuman, visiting lec-turer in Theology at Mary-mount, is rabbi for TempleJudah in Cedar Rapids, Iowaand lecturer in the Departmentof Philosophy and Religion atCornell College, Mt, Vernon,Iowa.

BOGA RATON MORAVIAN CHURCHRev. Christian D. Weber, Minister

Sunday School 9:45 a.m.CHURCH SERVICE 11:00 a.m.

CHURCH NURSERY AIR CONDITIONED'VA Protestant Denomination Since 1457"

FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD CHURCHof Boca Raton

TEMPORARY LOCATION - ADMINISTRATION BLDG.1675 N.W. 4TH AVENUE

WARREN FORNEY, PASTORSUNDAY SERVICES

Sunday School 9:45 A.M.Morning Worship 11:00 A.M.Evangelistic Service 7:30 P.M.Wednesday Prayer & Praise Service 7:30P.M.

FIRST BAPTISTTemporary location, 3333 N.Federal Highway, (Grant Bldg.).Rev. J.O. Gash, interim pastor.Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Morn-ing worship, 11 a.m. TrainingUnion, 6:30 p.m.; Evening Wor-ship, 7:30 p.m. Mid-week pray-er service Wednesday 7:30p.m.

CHRISTIAN REFORMED901 W. Palmetto Park Rd. JohnO. Schuring, minister; ServicesSunday at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.Sunday School and Adult Bibleclasses, 9:45 a.m. Nurseryavailable for Sunday school andmorning service at the parson-age, 1040 S.W. First St.

FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GODTemporarily located in admin-istration building, 1675 N.W.Fourth Ave. Services Sunday, 11a,m. and 7:30 p.m., SundaySchool at 9:45 a.m., WednesdayPrayer and Praise Service, 7:30p.m.

FIRST METHODISTN.E. 2nd Ave. at N.E. 6th St.Clark S. Reed, minister. Sun-day school, 9:45 a.m.Churchservices, 8:30 and 11 a.m. Nur-sery for children. MYF meetsSunday, 5:45 p.m., in the ChurchHall.

EBENEZER BAPTISTNortheast 12th Street, Rev.Earlie Robinson, pastor. Sun-day school, 9:30 a.m,; morningservice , 11 a.m0; BTU meeting5 p.m.; evening service, 6 p.m.

ADVENT LUTHERANN.E. 4th Ave. at 50th St. justoff U.S. 1, Rev. Ronald J. Dinglepastor, Sunday Schedule: 9 and11 a.m. The Church at worship;9 a.m. The Church at Study.

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALISTUnitarian-Umversalist Churchof Boca Raton, 164 W. PalmettoPark Rd., 10 a.m. Sunday Schooland Church.

FRIENDSHIP BAPTISTNortheast Second Court, pastor,Rev. J.E. Latham. Services,11 a.m. and 7 p.m. with Sundayschool, 9:30 a.m, first and thirdSunday

ST. GREGORY'S EPISCOPAL245 E. Boca Raton Rd. Sundays,Holy Communion and Homily, 8a.m.; Holy Communion andChurch School, 9 a.m.; MorningPrayer, Holy Communion, andSermon, 11 a.m. Daily,exceptThursday, Morning Prayer andHoly Communion, 7:30 a.m.Thursday, Morning Prayer andHoly Communion, 10 a.m.

TRINITY CHURCH OF GODTemporary location, AddisonMizner School, Rev. Dale E.Hency, pastor. S e r v i c e s 9:30a.m. Sunday.

FIRST CHRISTIANNew facilities at 450 N.E. 51stStreet, Boca Raton. SundaySchool 9:30 a.m« Morning Wor-ship 1045. Evening Worship 7-307:30 Wed. Prayer & Bible StudyGene Stinson Minister 4627 NE. 4th Ave. Tel 395-4901

CHURCH OF THE OPEN DOOR35th St. and 3rd Ave. N.W. Rev.Albert L. Eastman, Pastor.Sunday Services: Sunday school9:45 a.m. for which there is anursery available. MorningWorship, 11 a.m., Youth Fellow-ship 6:45 p.m. Evening serviceat 7:30. Tuesday evening Seniorchoir rehearsal, Wednesdayevening Bible study hour at7:30.

MORAVIAN CHURCH2 S.W. 12th Ave. Rev. ChristianD. Weber, minister, SundaySchool at 9:45 a.m. and ChurchService at 11:00 aom0

Boca RatonPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

Temporary LocationAKT GUILD BUILDING801 W. Palmetto Park Rd.

CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M.WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 A.M.

Radio Program Sunday 8:30 A.M. WSBR 740 on DialDAVID NICHOLAS, PASTOR

CHRISTIAN SCIENCEFirst Church of Christ, Scien-tist, Boca Raton Printing Co.building, 41 S.E. Fourth St.,west of Federal Highway. Sun-day school and services at 11a.m., Wednesday at 8p.m. Read-ing room in Bocade building,Palmetto Park Road.

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHTemporary location, Art Guildbuilding, 801 W. Palmetto ParkRd., Rev. David Nicholas, Pas-tor, Sunday Service, 11 a.m.,Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN600 West Camino Real, Rev .Albert G. Shiphorst, pastor,Services 9:30, 11 a.m.; churchschool, 9:30 a.m.

BIBLETOWNCOMMUNITY CHURCH

600 N.W. Fourth Avenue, Dr.Torrey Johnson, minister; Sun-day school, 9:45 a.m.; morningservice, 11 a.m.; evening ser-vice, 7:30p,m, Communion ser-vice at 6:30 p.m. MemorialHall.

UNITED CHURCHTemporarily in the HaydenStone (formerly the Lee Higgin-son) building, 105 E. Boca RatonRd. Rev. Frederick Nelson,D.C., minister, Church school9:30 a.m., Service, 11 a.m.

ST. PAUL LUTHERAN701 W. Palmetto Park Rd. Rev.Eugene O, Krug, pastor .Sundayschool, 9:45 a.m.; worship ser-vices, 8:30 and 11 a.m. Pre-school nursery during 11o'clock service.

UNIVERSITY BAPTISTMeets at First Federal Savingsand Loan Association building.Dr. George Thomson, pastor.Sunday services, 11 a,m.' and7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting Wed-nesday, 7:30 p.m.

HEBREW CONGREGATIONBoca Raton Hebrew Congrega-tion, P.O. Box 568. Servicestemporarily held at MarymountCollege. Leonard Bernstein,president.

ST. JOAN OF ARCS.W. Third Street, Rev. PaulL. Manning, pastor; SundayMasses 7, 9, 10:30 a.m. andnoon. Confessions will beheard every Saturday from 4-30to 5:30 and 7:30 to 8:30 p.m..Daily Masses 6:30 and 8 a.m.Holy Days, 7, 9, i0:30 a.m. and6.-00 p.m.

Worship rtith us9:45 A.M. Sunday School

11:00 A.M. Worship Service7:30 P.M. Worship Service7:30 P.M. Wed.-Mid-week ServiceSPEAKER: DR. TORREY JOHNSON

(both services)

BiBL€TOWNCOMMUNITY CHURCH

BOCA RATON*N.W. 4th AVENUE AND N.W. 6th STREET

OR. TORREYJOHNSONMinister

AN LVANGLLICML ' (JHKISI CLNTfcRED MINISTRYWltH A MISSIONARY VISION

UNIVERSITYBaptist Church

1st Federal Savings & Loan601 No. Federal HighwayOr. George Thomson, Pastor

10:00 A.M. Sunday School for all ages11:00 A.M. Rev. Paul C. Thomson, preaching7:30 P.M. "Another Prodigal Son" Dr. George

Thomson, preaching.Preaching to the heart in the heart of Boca Raton

CONGREGATIONAL

UNITED CHURCHof Boca RatonEVANGELICAL-REFORMED

@ FREDERICK NELSON, D.D. MINISTERSunday Worship 11:00 A.M.Church School 9:30 A.M.

Temporary Location InHAYDEN STONE BUILDING105 East Boca Raton Road

• •«hand ofsh ip " "

CHURCH OF GODP ^ I K I I I y (And.rjon, Indiana)

Dale E. Hency, pastor395-9652Temporary Location:

Addisan MiznerElementary School

AIR CONDITIONING Morning Worship 9;3o a.m.."Born to Reproduce"

Christian Reformed Church901 W. Palmetto Park Road

Our BeautifulNew CHURCH is OPEN

Visit With Us and Enjoy This NewHouse of Worship

SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.MMORNING WORSHIP 11.00 A.M.EVENING WORSHIP 7:00 P.M.

Nursery John Schuring, Pastor - 1040 SW 1st streetAvailable Boca Raton — 395-3942

CHURCH of CHRISTTemporarily Meeting aJ

115 West Palmetto Pk. Rd.SERVICES

SUNDAY SCHOOLWORSHIP

10:00 A.M.11:00 A.M. - 6:30P.M.

WEDNESDAY 7:30 P.M.Visitors Are Cordially Invited

Information Call 395-9385

First Methodist Church625 N.E. 2nd Ave., Boca Raton

Minister: Clark S. ReedMusical Director: Dr. Kenneth Robinson

Church School 9:45 A.M.Morning Worship 8:30 and 11:00

AIR CONDITIONED - NURSERY

Attend the Churchof your choice Sunday

Page 19: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

BOCA RATON NEWS Thursday^ 14, 1967 7B

131 S.E. 1st JLwmmsmEOCA HATON

(in The Royal Palm Shopping Plaza)OPEN DAILY 3 TO 9 - SUNDAYS 10-6

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SUNDAY SEPT 17

C REAMPIES

ALWAYS 6 0 0 D GRADE APASTEURIZED HOMOGENIZED

Regular

L I M I T O N E G O U P O H P E R C U S T O M E RCOUPON EXPIRES SEPT 17th

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EACH

MOST STORESJOST SIIAT 3 / 2 9 0

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NIBLETS CORN 23CJELLO 'n. • • « * H H W> 4% ^ ^ CAN JtU Mm A / A A i

NIBLETS MEXICORN T.24CASSORTED vm

GREEN GIANTeTEi!Ir«s.-240llFFY C A K ELE SEUER PEAS T.200MIXESS>A OZ CAN

DAWN

9 0ZP KG

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MUSSELMANS APPLEBUTTER

37*

QT BTL

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CAN

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12 OZ CAN A A U 0 Z C A N

LYKES LUNCHEON MEAT...:'..490 LYKES BEEF STEW r.47015 OZCAN

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MASTERSHALF &°HALF...!..290530CLOROX

M S N U T E M A I D REG. OR P I N K . . . .6

M0 Z

a L A » , r U A i i ^ L I M E A D E OR

MSNUTE M A I D LEMON LIMEADE..GREEN G I A N T VEGETABLESN I B L E T S C O R N - M E D . S W E E T P E A $ 1 0 O Z P K GK I T C H E N S L I C E D G R E E N B E A N S

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LS 58$•38I

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SAVE40*NET

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0

Page 20: BOCA RATON NEWS - DigiFind-It · quest from the Boca Raton Board of Realtors for a 90-day delay in adoption of the code. However, the Councilmen in-structed City Manager itlan Al-ford

8B Thursday, September 14, 1967 BOCA RATON NEWS

BY CLARK KINNAIRD

Started with five buildings

The 175th anniversarytoday of the birth (9-14-1792) of Seba Smithis deserving of notice.To quote a biographer,Smith was "a politicalsatirist who set a newpattern for Americanhumor, and who led theway for a host of home-ly philosophers andcritics from Sam Slickand Hosea Bigelow toMr. Dooley and WillRogers."

His birthplace was thelog cabin of Seba, Sr.andAphia Stevens Smithnear Buckfield, Me. Se-ba, Jr. had to go to workyoung, but managed toaccumulate savings thatenabled him to gothrough Bowdoin Collegebelatedly and graduatewith honors when twen-ty-six.

After teaching awhileSmith got into journal-ism at Portland andeventually established inthat city Maine's earl-iest daily newspaper:"The Courier." For ithe created the charac-ter, "Major Jack Down-ing," purported authorof letters to his kinfolksin which Yankee trades-men and their counter-parts in New Englandcounty governments andState legislatures werediscussed comically.

As Mary Alice Wymansummarized in Diction-ary of American Biog-raphy, the letters werepicked up from TheCourier in Boston andother cities and "theirwider c i r c u l a t i o n

through New England ledto a more ambitious pro-gram, suggested by twoyears of the'spoils sys-tem' under AndrewJackson. Smith sent JackDowning to Washingtonas an office-seeker, al-lowed him to becomethe confidant of thePresident, and viewedthrough his eyes thet rend of na t iona levents."

Shrewdly disguised asadmiration for Jack-son's policies expressedby a threadbare wise-acre shining in the re-flected glory of "OldHickory, the result wasthe reprinting of the let-ters in local papersthroughout the countryand the emergence of"Major Jack Downing"as a folk hero.

"The irony of theirvogue in the heyday ofthe new democratic erawas obvious, and manyspurious Jacks madeuse of Smith's politicaldevice," Miss Wymanrecorded.

Washington corres-pondents were embold-ened to view Jacksoniandemocracy more critic-ally. No President be-fore Old Hickory was

University building in 'phase three9

Florida Atlantic Uni-versity, which has pass-ed through Phase Oneand Phase Two of itsbuilding program, isnow in Phase Three.

Phase One providedthe five buildings cost-ing $5 and one-half mil-lion which greeted the

first students who ar-rived in 1964.

Phase Two, costingapproximately $9 mil-lion, accounted for theremaining 10 buildingsnow on campus.

Now underway, PhaseThree is expected tobring into being four

Protect garden fromhigh wind damage

Hurricane season ishere, and certainly it istime for home gardenersto "storm proof" yourgarden. Trees are one ofyour most valuable as-sets, and it takes yearsto replace one if it islost, therefore it is im-portant that you takecare of your trees be-fore the storm seasonarrives, or you may besorry! Now is the timeto be busy, says theFlorida Nurserymen andGrowers Association,

First, prune off anyhazardous branches thatmight extend over yourhouse, your driveway,your walks or your util-ity wires. This judicious

subjected so fully to pruning is one of thosepublicity of his every act ' 'stitches in time'' whichand word.

As o the r politicalsatirists arose. Smithturned to serious writ-ing; he produced a ro-mance, Powhatan; atreatise on geometry,and articles on a varietyof contemporary topics.

A collection of Seba Smith fictional letters ina book, 1833, was illustrated with cartoons suchas this, "Draw'd from natur by Zeke Downing,neffu to Major Jack Downing." (From the Libraryof Congress).

RENT ANEW CAR

UNLIMITED MILEAGE !

Rent a NEWFord, Chevrolet or Rambler sedan

with Air-Conditioning andAutomatic Transmission

can save you much dam-age later on.

Third, remove allheavy infestations ofSpanish Moss. AlthoMoss is an air plantrather than an preditor,the very weight of themoss itself when it getswet may cause limbbreakage, or even causethe tree to topple whenthe soil around the rootsgets well soaked.

Fourth, thin the crownof the tree so wind canpass through the foliagemore easily.

Fifth, lower the heightof tall weak trees, per-haps as much as ten tofifteen feet. Doing thiswith corrective pruningwill make the treesturdier and also moresymmetrical.

Sixth, brace weakforks and cable big oldlimbs. Your FNGA nur-seryman may be able tohelp you, or recommend •a tree man who can.

Seventh, feed the tree .regularly to develop astronger root system,better anchorage, and tostimulate tree vigor. Ahealthy tree is less aptto break.

Eighth, if you havej u s t had tall palmsplanted and a hurricaneis reported, it would beadvantageous to havethem staked for stabil-ity. While staking ofpalms is not generally

a practice, it will saveproblems in event ofhurricanes. If not stakedyou may want to lay thepalms over until dangerof the storm has passedand then have them setup again I

Most of these sug-gestions may also beapplied to large shrubs.Why not check yourplanting today and makespecial effort to 'stormproof your garden?

Two from city

are enrolledThomas Cutts and

Stephen Curry a r eamong 320 freshmenfrom 29 states and twoforeign countries en-rolled at Florida Pres-byterian College th i sfall.

Cutts is the son ofDr. and Mrs. WarrenG. Cutts and Curry isthe son of Mrs. NancyCurry. Both students aregraduates of Boca RatonHigh School.

more buildings, includ-ing utilities expansion,costing around $5 mil-lion.

The diggings south ofthe dormitories repre-sent two more dorms tocome. Three storieseach, they will house atotal of 246 students andcost $1,200,500. Theywill be ready by nextSeptember.

No excavations haveyet disturbed the site ofthe long awaited Alex-ander Henderson Uni-versity School. But bidshave been received andit won't be long — may-be October — until theground will be broken onthe east end of the cam-pus north of 20th street.Total cost of the projectis anticipated to be ap-proximately $1 million.

Bids on a generalclassroom building willgo out in October. Totalcost will be $2,700,000for the multi-storybuilding complex, with$800,000 of it comingfrom a Federal grantunder the Higher Edu-cation facilities act.

Last on the list forPhase Three is the wo-men's dormitory — thefirst specifically de-signed for women. Toaccommodate 364 stu-dents, it will constitutetwo wings of five stories

each and a central wingof three stories. Itsestimated project costwill be $1,861,120. Con-struction is expected tobegin before March andoccupancy is anticipatedfor September, 1969.

Also part of PhaseThree is the campusroad project dear to theheart of Fred Gardner,director of plant opera-tions.

"Even though we havethe runways left overfrom the old air base,road work still needs tobe done on campus," heexplains.

Some of the trafficpatterns are dangerous,he contends. A mas-ter plan is the obviousanswer.

"Due to lack of fundswe have to go slowly,tying up temporaryroads with whateverroad improvements can

for theCORRECT TIME!24 hours a day

Call 395-2010courtesy of

BOCA RATONNATIONAL BANK

S. Fed. at Camino Real

be financed each year.Then, hopefully, tiethem all together into asafe campus road sys-tem."

The first leg of a cam-pus "collector" roadsystem, a road leadingsouthward from thedorms, has begun. Tostart in 30 days will betwo access roads: oneleading from the eastrunway to a point be-tween the two science

buildings, and one lead-ing in the opposite di-rection to the site of thenew Henderson Univer-sity School.

Sometime within ninemonths a main entrancefrom Glades Rd. will beconstructed west ofFlorida Power & Lightsub-station. This will tieinto the master roadsystem and replace thetwo current temporaryentrances from GladesRd.

Everyone Loves A

BUICKFOR THE BEST DEAL OH A

1967 BUICKSEE FRANK COULSON

Direct Factory Dealer* FINESTSERVICE * LAEGE PAJNT & BODY SHOP

* # + COULSON '»cDELRAY BEACH

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MFULL QUART

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See this manwhen you insureyour car or home

To Place aClassified AdCall 395-8300

[PACKAGE STORE 45 S. FEDERAL HIGHWAYBOCA RATON

, M L QUART

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&5ONS

1 S. Federal'. . 395^4711

fREG. 6.

HOME OF 40 FAMOUS BRANDS

172

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OPEN DAILY 8 A.M.COMPLETE

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'REG. 5.60

FULL QUARTFLEISCHMANN'SVodka

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FIFTH

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Old ThompsonBLENDED WHISKEY

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