BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor...

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' £ " - - - . - - . •• , . , i - " . - . . ' - f , . . . - Y . . ' > . . / v - - . - . . . . - . . - . : . - - . : / .••i-t- CttTIZEN AND \CHRONtCLE,i THURSDAY, AUGUST », 195*-— Noinahegan Estates-~ : , To Open Model Home , An attractive locale adjoining Nomahegan Park Is the site of Nomahegan Estates, a_new group of 150 homoLta-be built by th«i G. vard is being opened today. - - The merging of two contem- porary architectural styles—ranch and split-level—is-«ffect'ed in the dwelling. The sales program, will stress the combination of grace- luli" 1 ranch-type exterior with con- venience of the split-level "arrange-, inside.— • ,• -• priced at $19,490. Good terms are available to veterans and non- veterans. The homes include three Bedrooms, a separate dining room, a 29-foot mahogany-paneled rec- reation room, a h6bby room, 2',^ baths and an attached garage. Custom planning is evident - in fW-rv det.ill Thorf nrp two fire- home on the tract at 104 Boule-1 The 7'-!-r,oorh dwellings arc^P'ac.es, pne a brick corner hearth YOU ALWAYS SAVE MONEY AT ;'v-'v';\ m BARON'S BRING YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION TO BARON'S AND PROVE IT YOURSELF COMFORTABLY AIR-CONDITIONED uated in the recreation room 1 ; The. living room has cathedral-vaulted ceilings; the stairs leading from it to the bedroom wing hav,e a I wrought iron railing. Another charming touch in this area is the bak;ony overlooking the living room. '-..-.. HALO^ENE for RHEUMATISM and ARTHRITIS U2.98 .'.•"• 59e PROPHYLACTIC TOOTH BRUSH 2'" 89 C AJftX HEAR BETTERifeX ORPAY NOTHING! <£M Amazing NEW JS-M HEARING AIDP59- 15 BAY fRfccTRIftLi TERMS $2.00 SOF-SET 1.59 POCKET TISSUES fefe 1 1 if pf mm. '.>'•••••':• '•&•'. 1 FLASH BULBS] Press 25 SLEEVE OF 10 ASSORTED PLASTIC COMBS 34 EASTMAN STREET (6pp. Cranford Theatre) , Tel. CRanford 6-6100 (Store Also in West field) STORE CRANFORD Z«»la Tau Alpha Tea . For College Entrants The Union County Alumnae Chapter of Zeta Tau Alpha will entertain area young women en- tering colleges this'fall at a tea Sunday from 3 to 5 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Robert Brown, 234 Oak Tree roatl. Mountainside. " Invitations have been issued to freshman, women entering colleges imd universities where Zeta chap- ters fire located. • Mrs. -George S. Smith, 1000 Konyon avenue, Plain- field, is president of the Union County group. •' ' ' " Garwood Births Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Backhaus of 252 Second avenue announce the birth of a son, Mark Daniel, on August 8. ; A daughter, Colette, was born to~Mr.~and-Mrs—John~Matlaga-o 216 Hickory avenue . on_ August 8 at Muhlenberg Hospital, Plainfield. Congratulations are being re- ceived by Mr. and Mrs. John Monahan, Jr., of 89 Fifth avenue on the birth of a daughter, Doro- thy Anne, August 10 at Muhlen- berg Hospital, Plainfield,' . A son, Vincent Richard, Jr., was born August II at Muhlenberg Hospital, Plainfield, to Mr. and Mrs.,Vicci of 621 Spruce avenue. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Bates'an- nounce, the birth of a daughter, Nancy Gail, on August 11 at Over- look ,. Hospital, Summit. The Bates reside at. 337 Third avenue.. A daughter, Frances ?Suzari, was born to Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bart- Jett^of_18_Second i -avenue on: Aug= nst 14 at Muhlenberg Hospital Plainfield. BUSINESS DIRECTORY RAPID R n P' i T T /->r •> LAING MOTOR CAB CO. Your Autl C r u for*- WeitOcU I'- Sale* and rh«n>: PLaJnfleld 6-tlU 11B-1S1 E.,flU> Street PlalnfleM • Service Dept: 184 E. 4th Street \ MARSHALL MOTOR SALES. INC. Since,1024 AataorUed Dealer UNCOLN * MEBCUBT Bale* Bervln General Bepaln .. Dud Cars EUubetb 4J1 No. Broad 8t, NOTICE Ti\ke nolleir that application has been Innde tc» tlie . Township Committee of the- Towii!;hJ|k "of Crun/ord, New Jvj-s traiufi-r... to—Buitlui—W.—SluWiiuu trading m "The I.od|:e" (<ir prc-nll located lit U-.% South Avenue, West, Cron- furd. New ' JeiWy. the Plenary Kit.il Cot'iijiuntriiuM liceiifU* No. C-'A heretofore iKNUed to Bertha W. Stelnemunii, Execu- trix, trudiui! an "The Lodiic" for the premise)! located at U-5 South Avenue west, Cranford. N. J. Objection)*, if jtny, should he made Immediately In writing * to J. Walter Colfee, Clerk of the Tovvnkhlj) of Crari ford. N. J. '•' ItHHTIIA W. STE1NEMANN. Vd Illv.-Kid.' Olive. Cranfoid. N. J. . B-: ® What Should You Know Before You Decide ~to Buy a House? To buy a house—-This is one of the big decisions of your life, perhaps the biggest.JTherc's a lot you should know before you sign on the dotted line. There's a lot to keep in mind when looking at houses. We have written a book on the subject and we'd like you to have a copy. It is sent Free on request. The coupon is for your convenience. •*. . Public Service Elcclric and Gas Company Room 8311, HO Pork Place, Niwark, N. J. - - . t 7 . Pltaic wind'me a.copy of your book, -jjok for When You Buy a Hou^c". Name ^ Address . What to (H tet* <utd pu KORHIS CHEVROLET, Inc. ABtaarlui •ALBS * BEKVICM Complete PartJ Dept. '•"» ana' C'entril Aves. . WeilSeM WK.lfl.ld t-MIO RA\ySON MOTORS, Inc. A«Ui*riaed roNTIAO Complete Par|a and Hepalra ' WKSTFIELD IS Nartli An.. B. WEatfleld (-81*0 ... PLAINFIELD H Nik Aft. PLalnaeld «-8«00 UNION COUNTY BUICK CO. , Aath*rlu4 (' "j B U I C k' ' " •alts and Ser»lo« OMC TBUCK BALES Good U«ed Can 410 Nortb A»e.. K. WEtUeld I-6S30 WeilfleM BANKS Company BANKING SEBV1CB Member FDIC •' Narth- Ate., W.. Cnafard 'CBjiBfori . 3t00 •—-. Z-0O7* 17« E. Broad 81.. Wotileld WEstOeld I-ISOO *M Park A»e.. Beotck plalna . rAawHi I-4SM UNION COUNTY TRUST COMPANY nvnallasd Cheeking Aeoanta ' —.Loang Savlnai 'Account* AU Trust Service* C«B*«BliBtly Laeaicd OtBeea IM k i t h An, E.' Cnnfard —CB «-100<. KUub«th 0-IWOO 1 « Broad 81. lia EUubcth A«a. 1*0 WulmluUr A»«._oo» Wutflcld A». BUaabctk Member FDIC BANKS and SAVINGS INSTITUTIONS- A COMPLETE BEIiyiCK IUS ALL BAVEKlj Of ALL AUt8 /BVipgS Insured Savluy*Home Loans Bsulevaid at Center. Kenllwortk ' C IUD(»rd tl-tl^oo ' . £»»t Jermey Bear Dr«*<l. Cllubetk " Kl.lubclh t-iduo North Wood biu Usn. UB4CB - ' U n l t a S-11300 BUILDING CONTRACTORS cat. 1921 MODEBNIZ1NO CONSULTANTS # AdfUHonn # AlterattoBS Roof Repair* Gotten Bldliur t Walnut Ave. CRanford C-S474 A. IA1ONE S SENECA BOAD CBANFOBO CBaaf«rd HIM . : . , BEAUTY SALONS * WILLIAM'S BEAUTY BOX US North Union Avenue TOIM otm . WATCH FOB OtJR BEMOVAL NOTICE TOWNE BEAUTY SALON lot WUnil A»e. ' CB(-HM . Crantar CAMERAS MARTENS' PHOTO SHOP CamerasProjectors Everything Photographic PbotoatatlBf—Quick 8«r*iee Pauport Photo* — 15 Minute Berries 31 .North Ave.. W. CBaoford U-lOt* - COAL ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS THOMAS BENINATI BLSCTBICAI. CONTBACTOB INDUSTBIAX, CBaafard «se Merlh Mk M. •aaOwMtk FLORISTS DEHMgffS FLOWER SHOPPE . n-owEss ros - fcVERT OCCASION Member T. T. D. . CBanfar* •-lota 197 IT. TJBUB An. Craafar* KENHWORTH GREENHOUSES A. BOKSSLE, Prop. VLOWEB8 rOB A U OCCASIONS Wedding Bouquet! MfimheT norlst TeleSMph Delivery An^L IXTNIHAL, DESIGNS CBaaiord 6-Ote* ' . I t Craa* SI. ' Kenllwettl) VENTERS FLORIST . & GREENHOUSE •XOWBBS YOB A I X OCCAS.ONS Mfmner TJ>JL Flowera By Win , CBaataat B-sset IN WltkUu An. . KnUwarta REKEMEIEH'S FLOWERS, Inc. ' WEDDING • * rUNEBAIi WOBK PUB 8PECIALTT ' ' Member FIsrUU' Telef raph Delivery Au.'a. . JOB Wolnwt. Ave. CR 6-4700 FOOD MARKETS CHAS. KURTZ MARKET QBOCEBJES VBOZEN FOODS GARWOOD COAL CO. WE t-*in •17 Nartk Atra. rraatal D«U*«t) REEL-STRONG FUEL CO. Dependable, Friendly Service Sine* l&U' HEATING OILS fiai CBaatard «-«»0* Union and NorthAna. Craafard LOVELAND FUEL CO. Authorized DlaUlbutor ' ' FAMOUS BEADING ANTUBAC1TE Essohciat Fuel Oil Koppcni Coke Call CBaafard 0-1H* S4H North Ave., E. ' Cranlard CONTRACTORS M. D1FABIO Qamaral Coalraatar . . ,- DBTVBWATB Built T o L a n . .. Built Pennanentlr CXaaiar* «-«M HKnttlilM An. Craafard UNION AVENUE M MEATS * POULTBT '. Orocerlea Produce \- Frozen Food* : Free Delivery CBaaiard e-UM ie North TJBloa Ava. . \ Craaiord FUEL OIL GARWOOD COAL CO. PUBL OIL COAL COKE \ Prompt Deliveries ' Call WEatfleld a-31(B BIT North' Avcnae . Garwood LOVELAND FUEL CO. Authorized E88O HEAT FUEL OIL . Prompt. Courteom Service JbWfcLER MARTIN JEWELERS .. , Be«itered Jeweler • American Gem Society •. Expert Wmteh aad Jowelry Kepaln 17 N. UNION AVE. CBANFOBO LAUNDRIES * MOREYLARUE LAUNDRY CO. LAVNDBT . DBT -CLEANTNO BUG CLEANSINO FVB STOEAOE . BTEatSeU Z-ttZ IS W. Jeraer ' v Elisabeth 'ArLime Scale Removal^ We have saeeessfBDy . developed a NEW melho. Cor the BESIQVAL •* LIME SCALE fraao elacced daaotltlr taafcln* beaten a»d paro roltt. Our metnod la oriclnal and exclusive. Work done on premises witliout .re- moving coil or tuminc off beat. I fnt Savincs up to 70% of n cost of coll. A year guarantee on.all work! CALL CBAJtFORD 8-3555 or . W t a j t ir.i.D 2-4999 »AN"FOa)D SOFT WATEB EQUITMENT COWANI 45 MOKTH AVESCE. EAST CRAMFORD. H. J. LIQUOR STORES * '.'•••••L — Free DeHv CALL CB. 6.1044 Street - -'-. BREors LIQUOR STORE FBEB DEUVEBT Call CBaafBiid « - e u e tl N. Vales Awe.' Cnsiord IK KENILWORTH K B POLLACK'S FOOD MARKET for • .'. LIQUOR WINK ,,, . can CBaaford e - e n e BOO Waahugtaa An. MOVING and * STORAGE HENHY P. TOWNSEND •OVIJfO aVSTOBAQa rACKOfO *U WEatfleld 1-4404 . • V • OIL BURNERS * on. . SUPPLY CO. INC. Complete Qti TT..»ing Sarvlc*- - CHaafard 6-3(120 Offlcs and Showroom US CaaUnalal Amu, "' " Craaful PLUMBERS BRENNAN & TOYE FLDlfBINa BBATtNa 'i' * TDarota tN Brat* Craafirl CHAPMAN BROS. rLUMBINO It VBAT1NO MTBACTOBS — JOBBINO —• / JO LUMBER BUILDERS' GENERAL' SUPPLY CO, atttlwoik lfaaons- Matrrlaai nrytUac Wmr n* Baai Hardware w~i«itij Material Screens - Flooring - Paints - - - ~ Appliances "" ' CBanford 6-OSOf CCBleaalal A»c- Cramfar* CRANFORD - WESTFUXD BUILDING SUPPLY COMPANY 1 Call CRanford, 8-1144 North Ave.. E. ; .'•• C FUEL OIL Concxcts Conctructlooi- ^ Boad Building Bew«r» ^ u Call CBanford 6-2808 M Barnilda Av*. CranfaraV CLOCK/ REPAIRING CLOCKS ALL KINDS Sprjnr-Bna-Welgnc Cleaned Repaired ' -, .. - - Pal In Or«a».--• E. P. CHAMBERLAIN CHanfoid 8-1IM DEUCATESSENS COLONY DEUCATESSEN Complete Line of - •'• DEUCACJBS W%Cooking AV . P*k^ng Don* on Premises DRUG STORES * REEL STRONG FUEL CO. 'Dependable. Friendly Service Since 1823 eoal-HEATINa OILS.- eahr CRanford «-UW Daba aad North Avea.- Crufara FUNERAL DIRECTORS DOOLEY FUNERAL SERVICE FUNEBAL DIBEOTOBS Phone! CBanford 111 North Ave., W. Craaford FURNITURE CBANFORD FURNITURE BEDROOM • LJV1NO BOOH KITCHEN 0 SIMMONS BEDDINO Phone: CRanford 0-3141 IM North Caloa Av*. Craaiar UNLVS PHARMACY Cnat. II, lind. Reg. Pharmacies BFBCIALUTS Orars Cooaullae Baby Naeea Procrlptlona Called For and Delivered. J- OPEN SUNDAY Call CBaafard e-4aU If boanawer. RAhway T-11S0 U t e BaHtaa Boad ' Craatard HARDWARE CRANFORD PAINT & HARDWARE STORE ATLAS POWEB TOOLS Olaaa - Garden ~colm- House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth A n , B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber Millwork CaD Sarid. Gravel, clc xe Beats Av*. W. STANDARD LUMBER & SUPPLY C O . ^ LU # InsuIaUoai #) HaRhvane. ffi IIIIB, < CBanford •4 nikh Btrwo MOVING and STORAGE Oil Burnen CBantord.«-mo - M Hstta A*», •. Craahil REAL ESTATE JOS. J. GUKER ' UAL ESTATE ' ••' '•nd _ ENSUBANCE Of All Klndl North Ava, W. CEaaferd «-lUf IOHN W. HEDfS & SON BEAL ESTATE and, (NSOBANCB Phone: CRanford «-0T7T I t BterUi Ava, B. CHAS. M. YEAKEL •tats laaansea BUrlfAfos e North A*o,. W. CBaaford 0:414 Taxi Service SCARBROUGH-S TAXI SEKVINa CBANFOBD FOB%t Go Anyplace, Anvlirn» \ CRBaford 6-20OO TELEVISION *• ALLIED VAN LINES - Packioa> * Shtppinot > ' . 'Cat. ISU Local and Long Dtstaneo Uowtnm CaD CBanford < MS *>atk A»». m. CHANFORD RADIO \nuvuioM * KAWfl BXrAIBB Oar BadkM Kepalred duford t-mt I raatiaai Street \. Cr«»f"' UPHOl^TERERS CBANFORD UPHOLSTERY SHOP Cpaolsterlnr & Interior bocorattna" Slip Covers - Furniture CRanford It* Soalh Ave, E. Cr.«l"' The names of vecetabte exUsris OMd in making Icsther firm aiai Oexiblo sound like a feofraphte •ymphoiyr. They Include wattlaV quebracho, divl-divl. stnnae. g*m kter. mancrava and mytof "--- •Meat Ml. The Empty Quarter of southern Arabia is perhaps the driest place In the world—a vast desert almost without human habitation. : * VENETIAN f BLINDS CBANFORD ~ UPHOLSTERY SHOP Venetian Blind* Outom Quality brand* CJtanford «-0*M t*S Sealk An, K. - The first United States radio station w.uc ca-jjhlliil in 1903. ,.<•*"* GIVE TO EMERGENCY POLIO FUND Vol. LXI. No. 32. CRANFORD. NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER. 2, 1954 Entered! OllK-e ..t Cr.uiftiid. N. J. 22 Pages —^ 10 CENTS Water Company Lifts Hose Ban, Reports Problems of Area Solved Fruits of the battle for better 'water service for this area con- ducted during the past year by the Intel-Municipal Water Committee. were evident today as the Plain- lield-Union Water Company re- ported that new sources of supply I •now available and those to be' available by next 'summer are ex- pvcted to prevent a recurrence of the water difficulties which'.reaeh- t ><l a; climax here during the past two years... . • ..; All Restrictions Removed. At the same time, the water company announced removal i of all restriction on water use"for the! first time since early June, when developing drought conditions caused imposition pf twice-weekly evening hosing schedules. IJy next summer, the Plainfleld- Union statement declared, the, —cnrnpnnyV-total-supplywill-bp' in excess of maximum peak needs as .foreseen by two recent indepen- dent engineering repprts. The company added >that long-term growth in-the area is expected to be met by further development of the naritan<and Delaware River supplies,/ . - , • ' '• 'The engineering reports referred to-wcre^those.prepared for;Plain-^ - tic;ld-Union by, "Buck, Seifert and Jones, NewYbrk'consulting engi- neers, following an order from the Public Utility Commission that an independent survey of the com- pany's facilities and needs ' be made prior to the granting of a ' rate increase earlier this year; and by Maleqlm Pirnle Engineers for —the Inter-Municipal Water Com- mittee. . ' ; Supplies Increased George M. Haskew, superinten- dent and. chief engineer of the company, attributed the lifting of restrictions to steps being taken to increase water supplies. The com- Honored by Surgeons ^yy pipe Ifne, making available Rari- tan and Delaware River waters through the Elizabethtown Water Company's recently completed48- inch transmission main''allowed .Plainlleld-Union to completely re- fill its storage reservoir during the first week of August, he said. Since that time, as a result of the new source,- the reservoir has remained full and water levels in the Neth- erwood well field have been al- lowed to rise over 25 feet, he re- ported. Consequently, the engi- neer said, it is bow deemed entire- ly safe to allow ^allTpurposejunre^L (Continued pn page 8) - ; Subscriptian: Awards to 30 Thirty-three more youngsters earned awards during the past week in the second week of The Citizen and Chronicle's six weeks' subscription contest. . ; The drive will continue through October .1. A total'of 63 new subscriptions ^ p have tx^en turned in during the two weeks. A day oncTnight football or a pen arid pencil set are awarded as prizes to youngsters who turn in two new, one new and two re- newal or four renewal subscrip- tions to this newspaper. Two youngsters, Stephen Gat- J'us, Jr., of 506 Lincoln avenue, cast, and Richard Larsen, of 414 Manor avenue, earned both awards ^Jth nccood waak. Other; prize winners included: Lorraine Kenny, 108 Orange ave- ,'»ie: Frank O'Brien, 7 Oak Lane; Dwiyht Weeks, 1J5 Heming avqr »ue; Robert Johnson*, 124 Oak lane; Stephen Shaw, 26 Tulip street; Bill Calvano, 12West Holly street; David Eaton, .37 Craig place; Jeff Fleuren, 10E Parkway Village; Grace Speth, 224 North •>venue, west; Bill Dennis, . 123 Hillcrcst avenue; Nelson Lightcap, "Sylvester street; Jeffrey Quinn, IS Wade avenue; Larry Pace, 210 Alhor s(ivct; -frib" Millie fj W<"-t place; Barry Aduibato, 208 Sailer _strecJL- '._'__ "~AVs7), Charles Johnsonr62 Cent- ennial avenue; Terry Persons,: 6 .Parkway Village; Johnny Starr, -.'» Hampton road; Johrmy O'Reilly, 131'Oak Lane; Jeffrey Farrcll, 702 Springfield avenue; Robert Shire, Uti Oak . Lane; Carol. Shire, 116 Oak lane; David GrLicom, 7 Syl- (Coniinued pn page 8) Early Copy Requested Since the office of T h e Citizen •'"(I Chronicle will be closed Mon- day in observance of Labor Day, ••"operation of organization pub- licity chairmen and local adver- tisers in setting their copy in i-ar|y for next week's issue will be appreciated. . . • DR. NEIL CASTALDO ICS Names Dr.Castaldp Associate Dr. Neil Castaldo of 103 Lincoln avenue, east, school doctor since 1941 and a practicing physician in Cranford since 1935, received noti- fication during the past week of his election, to. the runk of asso-*- ciate in the International College of Surgeons. His AICS degree will be conferred at a - convocation in the Chicago Civic Opera House on the evening of September, 10 .dur- ing the annual assembly of the college in that city. Dr. Castaldo, who prepared a thesis and wrote Up 50 surgical cases as. part of the requirements for his degree, was informed in 'a letter from Dr. William R. Love- lace, president of the college, that he was'elected at a regular meet- ing "of the executive council of the United States section of the college in Chicago on August 21. Rehearsal for the convocation ceremony will be held, in the Chi- cago Civic Opera House at 8 a.m. September 10. The annual assem- bly will be held at the Palmer House' in Chicago on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of next week. - The International College of Surgeons .was founded by Dr. Max Thorek in Geneva, Switzerland, in .1935,-and-the-United^States-sec- tion of the college was incorporat- ed in Washington*, D.C, in 1940. Dr. Castaldo will be eligible to become J l h i (Continued on page 8) Mrs. Haagensen lists Winter Library Schedule The Cranford Free Public Li-' brary will be open on Saturdays starting September 11, Mrs. Hazel Haagensen, librarian, announced today. The winter schedule of'the li- day as follows: Adult Department, 9:30 a.m.-to'5:30 p.m. and 7;30 p.m.- td 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9:30 a.m^-to 5:30 p.m. on Saturdays; Children's Room, 1 to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Saturdays.- The library will be closed on Labor Day. Freeholder Endorsement ForMcMahon Edward C, McMahon, former Republican municipal chairman, .was endorsed for the Republican nomination for an unexpircd term as the Union County freeholder last night by the Republican Mu- nicipal Committee.. A long-time, active Republican worker, Mr,. McMahoh has been considered a leading candidate on several other occasions for ap- pointment to the Board of Free- holders, \fiit each time someone else" was given the post. The vacancy"was"brought*aBbuf by the death of the board's direct- or, John H. M. Dudley of Eliza- beth. At a meeting next Thursday evening in Elizabeth, the Union County Republican Committee is scheduled to select its candidate to scek~the, unexpired term at the November^ General-Election._1 With the entry of Mr. McMahon into the race there are. at least 11 candidates W the nomination. F. Edward Biertuempfel, Union may- or, is believed to be the strongest candidate. At least live Elizabeth men have heen mentioned for.Jthe post: State Committeeman Wil- liam J. Secland, City Chairman Lauris H. Sorensen, forme* Tax Assessor Robert McNair, Redevel-i opment Commissiqner Robert T. Walsh and School Commissioner John J. Schomp. Mrs. Elite Scheideler of Roselle, who lost in April in her bid (or renomination as a freeholder, is also in the race. In Kenilworth, Republican.lead- ers are pushing Mayor .Robert C. Krueger for the nomination, whije Mayor L. Thomas Daub of Gar- wood was considered a leading candidate until being named sec- ond undersheriff. . • . Both Union and Elizabeth are making strong claims for the nom- ination! They say they deserve more representation. Closings General Here on Monday :: —rln-observance-of -Labor-'Dayr the Cranford Post Office, town- ship offices. Public Library, banks and_rnoj;t—local business offices and stores will be closed on Monday. Motorists parking in the town center on that day will not be required to insert coins in parking meters. ; Although the Post Office will be closed all day, with no mail deliveries and no window serv- from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. for/the convenience of box holders and stamp, machine users/ There will be no classes for those attendirig^the summer* ses- sion at Union Junior College, and. assail young people well, know.^the public schools will not-'be open anyway until next •Thursday. . . . ChildDevelopmentTopic For Teacher WorkshopTalk Parents of local school children sociatlon of Physical Anthropolo- as well as the puolic were in- vited today by Dr. Hovyard R. Bes.t, superintendent of schools, to hear an address by Dr, Milton W. Krogman, physical 'anthropolo- gist, School of Medicine, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, Tuesday at B:30.a.m. in the Cranford High School auditorium. -address -whicTT will deal with what parents and teachers—jean." cxpect""of"a"child at various age levels will higlv light the opening day program 1 of the school system's annual two- day teachers' Workshop. Dr. Best said presidents of local. Parent- Teacher Associations have been encouraged to Urge their mem- bers at attend the address. Dr. Krogman has been at the Philadelphia .university since 1047 and has headed the Philadelphia Center for Research in Child Growth, since that time. He holds bachelor, masters and doctor of philosophy degrees from the Uni- versity of Chicago and formerly taught there and at Western Re- serve University. President of thq .American As- from 1946 to 1949, he if author of the book "Growth of Man'* which was published in 1941: He was a national research fellow a£ the Royal College of Surgeons, London, in 1930 and 1931. Another highlight of the teachers* workshop to be held Tuesday andWednesday will be a- discussion" of "The Wctzcltind by Thomas Tipaldi, fifth grade teacher at~Cleveland' School. On Tuesday afternoon, high school' instructors will hear a presentation of the Citizen Edu- cation Program. At the same time, the elementary grade teachers will hear'the discussion of ''Thie Wct- zel Grid" and then will attend group discussions for their as- signed grade.'- < >• On Wednesday, teachers will re- port to their assigned buildings for meetings with principals and for preparations for the opening of school the next day. Dr. Best reports' that -a Wetzel Grid "is a device for assessing the physical growth and development of children by weight, height and " (Continued on page S) Being Moved For Economy For reasons of economy, the; coconut sweetening division of the Wood and Selick Company, which has been in. operation at South javenue, west, and Lincoln avenue since January 3; 1950, is , in the process of moving ' to a larger plant in Elmhurst, Ll"i., where it will amalgamate its production with another firm in the same line, it was reported yesterday by Richard . J. Boddington, plant manager. Some operations already have been',transferred to the Long Island factory, but others will be continued here for some time, Mr. Boddington said,. He declared he could not say now just when re- moval" of operations here woulc| be completed or what would/be the future of the. local building. He also declined to name the other company- with which- Wood and Scliclc is affiliating in the swect- eniiig process. » -,..'", A few of the key personnel .of the Cranford plant will be trans- ferred to the new Scene of opera- tions, the plant manager related He said there are still about 20 persons employed by the company here at this time. When in- full production, the- local plant em- ployed some 50 persons. Wood 7 and ~Selicfc7^which~hasr Tfc r main office" in New York City, placed a valuation of $450,000 on its facilities here when opera- tions started'in 1950 $300,000 on the building and $150,000 on itsVequipment. . building, of ,pne- and threc- story\construction, was -erected in 1949. It'has face brick and cast stone on 'the South and Lincoln avenue Sides, and the fireproof interior has walls pf a special type. of cement which can be cleaned with\steam for easy main- tenance of sanitary conditions. Operations here included sweet- ening, toasting, flavoring -and ccjujnng or idw cuconui from the Philippines. Before coming to Cranford, Mr. Boddington was in charge of one of the plants of an affiliate of Wood and Selick in India and also formerly was in charge of operations for the company in the Philippines. ' Graduates Enter Service 'A sharp increase in the num- ber-of—high-school^graduates-go- ing dirccUjfcjnto the armed forces from . high school has been re- pottcd-iby_lthe^_Cranford _High School guidance department. / , ] The class of 1953, a -department •jffcport says,- sent 12 pejreent to the services, while in\ 952 and previous years the classes aver- aged about five to seven percent. "Many joined," the report says, "because they were . uncertain about a vocational choice and felt 5[. y give them a more mature outlook on a Vocation, and- enable them to continue their education-with the benefits of the Korean G.I. Bill." • -"' According to ' the reportj, the class of 1953 is similar to fornje. classes with respect to Us occu- pational and educational place- ment. "It is interesting to note, how- ever, that in the past four years ^ been able to increase tage •,»<. gnuekmtcd * tending accredited four year coll- eges from' 23 percent injl948- 1949 to 38 pcrcent^foi—the-Class of 1953," the report says. The department says it is diffi- cult to explain the 15 percent- in- crease in the number of students attending four-year colleges wfieif (Continued on page H) MOD Campaign Nets $1,022 total of $1,022:43"had "been received up to yesterday in the emergency March of Dimes drive in Cranford, it was reported yes r terday by William D'Arcy, local chairman. The drive is being ex- tended* so that residents who haye been, away on vacation during the past "two weeks may make their contributions. Checks should be sent to Miss Marian A. Schmit*. local treasurer, Box 69, Cranford Four youngsters aided in. the drive during thepast several days. Donald Hendrlckson of 83 Cen- tennial avenue collected $21.59 and Paul Harmclin of 20 Pcrsh- ing avenue turned in $4.50. Mary Grant and Carol Szabo raised $2.00 for the fund by staging a fair for children in their neigh borhood. . . See School Population of 3,500 With ,the opening of school a week away; Dr. Howard R., Best, superintendent of schools, an- nounced assignments today for members of the faculty and staff of th^e Cranford public schools. . Because of two new 12-roonY schools which will be opened sometime .this fall, there ariymany changes, in assignments this year. In addition, there is/a consider- able number of new'iraculty mem- bers caused by' resignations, re- tirements and' vacancies brought about by/tfie appointment of four assistant principals. - ' Principals 'Assigned. Miss Etta Tunncr willbe prin- cipal for Brookside Plac'o, Cleve- land and Roosevelt schools with an office. in Brookside Place- School. Miss Miriam L. Eisen- _ d_ Anthony_ J. _Terregino "will be assistant" principals. Miss Eisenring has been assigned ta Roosevelt School and. Mr. Terre- iino to Cleveland School. ' Lincoln, Sherman "and Walnut Avenue schools will be under Vin- cent F. Sarnowski, principal, office will be in Sherman School. Miss Irene F. - Gilbert and Miss Beatrice E. Warner will benassistiuit^principals. Miss Gil- bert will have her office at Wal- nut Avenue School ancl Miss Warner will.be at Lincoln School. G. Frank. Zimmerman continues as principal of Cranford High School, while Mrs. Ruth S. Janov- sik is supervisor of elementary education and Frank J.. Martz is supervisor of secondary education. Mrs. Janovsik "will have an office in Cleveland School. Assignments to the elementary schools are as follows: Brookside Place School Kindergarten,. Mrs. Blanche Virsoco; first grade, Mrs. Mildred Mahony and. Mrs. Edna McFad- I impoilc-U "3en; sccond~g7acle. Miss Rebekah Poynter and Mrs. Dorothy Petro- vich. Also, .third gradc f Mrs. Dorothy Strauss and Miss Joan Whittaker; fourth grade, Miss Ruth Morgan and Mrs. Hattie Meyer; flfth grade, John Taormina; and sixth grade, Mrs. Sally Volmer- and Mrs. Marion Eschcnlauer. Cleveland. School Kindergarten, Mrs. Jeanne Saunders and Mrs. Rose Murray McGhee, who will spt-nd^ half her time'in Cleveland School and the other half in Roosevelt School; flrsWgrade,-~Mrs; Joan—Doolan, (Continued on page 8) Dog-Leash Need Cited Police Chief William A. Fischer today 'issued a warning to dog owners that summonses will be is- sued to violators of the local ordi- nance providing that dogs on pub- lic streets must be on a leash not longer than six feet and in charge of a person over 12 years of'age. The "TwarninE followed com- pluints of several violations re- ceived by the police in recent weeks. Mrs. Mary Gruber of 198 Locust drive reported Sunday morning that a. large black dog running at large;'attacked her dog while she was walking her pet on a Icaslg Patrolman Frank Caruso was sent to cht'ck up and reported that -the offending animal was in the own- er's hOyiiM: when he arrived on the peri^rjjcally to see if the dog was permiUed ? to run free. —L.-M. Banks of 9 Willow street also reported that his dog was at- tacked last week while in his cus- tody on a leash by another dog not on a leash. There also have been complaints from residents in other sections of the township about dogs being permitted to run without leashes and with no onein charge of them. To Westfield Home Mr. and Mrs, Weyman O. Steen- grufe and daughter, Gail, of 379 Lincoln avenue, east, moved lust Thursday to 526Fairmont avenue, Wtstfleld. Residents of Cranford for the past 13 ycarsv Mr. Stccngriife. is" president of the Cranford Repub- lican Club< a member of the Cran- ford Historical Society and on the Aid Veterans at Lyons Hospital Among Cranford women now active as Red Cross Gray Ladies "at the Veterans Hospital, .Lyons, are-those shown above: <1 to r) seated, Mrs- Jessie Marshall, Miss Catherine Klein, Mrs. —Frances-.-Bo»;ttg»iir,._Mrs!_.Audrey._Jtoot and_Mti_Francoi.--Colo;-. second row, Mrs. Gladys Brunt,. Mrs. Florence Moppert, Mrs. JeanetU: Glogorski and Mrs. Ida -White; rear row, Mrs. Grace Frantz, Mrs. Dorothy Clauer, Mrs. Loretta Myers. Mrs. Floy Pollard and Mrs. Fritzie Mecks. Absent at the tiirie the picture was taken were: Mrs. Serena McCoy, Miss Eleanor MeFarlane; Miss Stella Sho<t, Mrs'! Edna Poss and Mrs. Helen Troebliger. Some 3,500 Cranford children will return to classt-s iri the public schools next Thursday morning. The total enrollnlent is again ex- pected to be an all-time record. Students of St. Michael's School .begin classes on September 13 fol- lowing it mass for the student body in St. Michael's 1 Church at 8 a.m. Public school students in Gar- wood and Kenilworth also begin classes. next Thursday, while freshmen, of Jonathan Dayton Reg- ional High School, Springfield, re- port Wednesday und all students next Thursday. .' The n e w St. Theresa's School in Kenilworth and St.- Annoys.School-in Garw<iod . also open on September 13. Because the two new elementary buildings, Brookside Place School ;ind the Walnut. Avenue School, have not been completed, children assigned, to' those schools, will re- to Cleveland and Sherman Schools, respectively. Dr! Howard R. Best, superinten- dent of schools, announced that children assigned to Brookside School will report to the auditor-; ium of Cleveland School on open- ing day. Kindergarten students of Brookside School will report to 4. To Serve As Gray Ladies "Although we arc not now actively engaged-in a war, there are hundreds of thousands of veterans who need our spare time tp help "them rehabilitate themselves," declared Mrs. Frances Boettger,: chairman, as she launched the fall recruitment for Red Cross .Gray Ladies for the Veterans Hospital, Lyons. . These volunteers have served approximately 2800 hours during the past year, some working from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. one day a week, others working one evening from 7' to 9:30 p.m. Anyone over with, the desire 21 years of age to help somfont> Industrial Tract Getting Railroad Aid -Further signs of passage of a bygone era in railroading 1 were less fortunate than himself may volunteer, Mrs. Boettger said. After an interview, the volun- j , . ,,... . .. , teer wijl be taken by some of thc'l f°» n 'tspM _coalinjs station., water tank, ash pit and sand storage seen here this week as' the Jersey Central Railroad prepared to tear active Gray Ladies to the hospital for a day of observing.'This should show the applicant whether or not she wishes to take the short ori- entation course; in_October. At the end .oj this ( two session course, the volunteer; is-plaeed in the type of work.she seems best fitted'for. All .those interested in obtaining more information should call their local Red Cross; Chapter. building to make way for indus- trial development of :i tract be- tween the railroad and North ave- nue, cast, above the old round- house at Elizabeth' avenue. Work on a new warehouse being constructed for Associated B:>.by Products by D. O..Evans of Hill- side is already nearing completion, and the developer re,iM>rts that ad- ViSI •••.vovj Walnut "Avenue School, students will report to ; the auditorium of Sherman School, while those kin-' dergarten pupils will report to the kindergarten room. The opening of school will, also mark the beginning of new school hours fur both elementary and high school students. Dr. Best salt! all elementary schools will oppnat.9. a.m. and continue until 11:45 a.rr -vhen the lunch period Jbcgins. The , lunch period is over at 12:45 p.m. v and schools will close at 3 ?p.m. Kindergarten classes will also begin at 0 a.m. but w£l.Lcnd.at.ll: 30 a.m. Theafternoon kindcrgar- ten classes begin.at 12:30 p.m.JUUL continue until 3 p.m. At the high .school, students must report at '8:40 a.m. ' and classes continue through to 2:52 p.m. The lunch hour will continue right through the class periods. Registration for all grades will bo held', tomorrow. However, par- ents unable to register their chil- (Continued on page 8) UJC Registration Tops Last Year's ditiorial .buildings will be erected Cranford_women-now_scrving_-as-removal-of-the-old railroad as Gray Ladies include: Mrs. Helen Troebliger, Mrs. Edna Poss, Mrs. Stella Shest, Miss Eleanor Mrs. Fritzie Meeks, Mrs. Floy Dorothy Clauer, Mrs. Grace Frantz,-Mrs. Ida WhiUvMrs. Jean- ette Glogorski; Mrs. Florence Mop- pert, Mrs. Gladys Brunt, Mrs. Frances Cole, Mrs. Audrey Root, structures makes room. Coaling station, water tank, ash pit and storage building all w.cre mportaril l<> the operation oT s but arc no longer that Jersey Central has complctrid--dieselization of its line. Perjnit for the 1 warehouse being crwrtwl b,v the Hillside contractor at 440 North avenue, easti was is- j s(c;)m Mrs; Boettger, Miss Catherine ; sllwl ^y Building Inspector Fred J. Klein and Mrs. Jessie Marshall, j n^ll.-r in Julv. with valuation Wind and Rain, [ lh ^ Damage Reported Although Cranford. alohjj with other communities in this area, es- caped the full force of the hurri- cane that caused so much damage j aloii{j the Eastern Seiiboard on; Tuesday, there were several in- j stances here of tree limbs, wires, I awnings and signs blown down! and of motorists mired in rain- softened ditches and trenches. in July, listed at $40,000. To Benefit Aid Squad Proceeds of a clog show handling class to be conductcil at Veterans" Memorial Home starting Septem- ber 10 will be donated to the First Ai<l Squad, it wax announced ((wlay'by Mrs:. George Putschcr of Ic. who is in charge of Registration for the fall term at Union Junior College is run- ning about 30 'percent ahead of Jast_year; Dru-Kenneth—C.—Mac-- Kay, president and dean, an- .nounccd. Dr. MacKay attributed the' In- creaso to a gent'ral population increase in this area and" the ' larger graduating classes in near- by high schools. He said this trend is likely tocontinue for some . time to corrfe. , ' An increased enrollment was also reported last' year. Dr. Mac- lt;iy—suid-Uiat—was-an—indication - of the trend that is now develop- ing. The enrollment' of Korean vots and more stable economic- conditions were also cited by the- junior college president as rea- '.sons for last year's increase. building fund • of the Cninfordj 'It will be necessary, Dr 1 . Mac-r Kay said, to restrict applications in some curriculums. He pointed out, however, that applications are still being received for the i coming semester. - . '-. Once again engineering Is the ! * ! / Mrs. I*ut*u.-her explaincrl that the aim of the non-profit project is to Despite the fall of "almost .two j train. o'wnc'rs to - h^nrllc- their own inches of rain, the new <l:mi gaies, dogs at shows instead of' hiring handledjthe increased. How; of_theXptofcssionaLJiandltrs. Ciiristian ^Continued page 8) Knudieii of Rahway will be train- most popular turri£u!tlrtr Applications in this field arc also running ahead of,..—last—year's- figure. Adult School Adds Science Courses To hicet the needs of our scion-] Radar, atomic energy,., thinking ments .of Pembcrtpn, Metuchen tillc world, the Cranford At'nH ''machines, modern chemistry, rock-1 and McBruney schools. From 1942 School \till olfer courses on '"Sci- tHs and jets, radio astronomy and ence -for Everyone" and "Excur- j television. sions in Astronomy" at its fall Dr. Orens attended Virginia, to .15)44', he was a professor and civilian training administrator for the U.' S. Army Signal Corps. He term, which opens on October 5. j Vermont, Columbia, Yale, and jheaded the physics department of "Dr. T.~P. "OrcViV:," pnirosnr 4tr"KcHitf"'UnI\>eiSltte^ : ~:<iHr-'lvct-lV&ir[*Ma'dlsoii College foV'fouY'years" physics andoh:urinan of the gfud-r: hi.-i doctorate from Virginia Uni-| fore, joining the staff of the New- ujitc division of .Nfewark College of versity. He has taught at Nassau |.firk college.. Mrs. Redden Aild the astronomy course will deal with such-sub- jects as: Solar system, time and •dntWnce in^pacc travel, light, and tools of the astronomers. Mr. Spiers formerly taught, for_ 15 years in private schools, l Engineering, Ulill be coordinator Collegiate Center* 1 Brenau College, of the "Science for ^Everyone" Clcmson College und the College course and Dr. Thomas Blissard, | of the City of New York, associate professor of physics at j ' He served as project and re- the same college, will be the in-! search officer in the Army Air structor. Dr. Orens resides ut 112 Force's fixed Gunnery' School in Mukatom drive. tiictitii) ballistics research Jrom Mark H. C. Spiers of 10 Pitts- 1U43 to I94f> and chief of Analyst Held street, president of the Union Section. U. S. Navy Underwater faculty of Union Junior College. | County Amateur Astronomers' Research Laboratory, New Lon- He. Is principal of Benjamin j Club; will be. the teacher for the don, in 1946. hl Wt p Franklin elementary school, West- Held, and director of' the West- field Adult-Scjfiool. He has betfh a member of the faculty of the Westlleld public- schools since 1P42. Mr;.and Mrs. Steehgrafe and daughter attended the-Presbyterian Church hue. astronomy course. Dr. Blissard received his doctor- '"Science for Everyone" will l>e ute in education in 1949 fromCol- with umbui University. He attended a non-technical discuuion demonstratiims of the most in the vicinity of Philadelphia.' As- tronomy has been his hobby for about 30 years. He has lectured to such groups as teachers' associa- tions, men's and women's .clubs and study units. He is now ems ployed by a Hillside manufacturer > ' ' •-; Dickinson College, and Pennsyl-las a quality control analyst in conf tant and fascinating scientific vania >nd Columbia Universities.^nection with engineering und P*j^'>, modern day marvels. Mrs. Charles He was principal of Metal Town-j duction problems. This^ firm P™^ : Redden, president-director, .viid.' ship High School for two years ' duces precision ' * Amonj; topics to be diicusied aic: and beaded the science dcoairt-1 cruft. '•.-VJ

Transcript of BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor...

Page 1: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

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CttTIZEN AND \CHRONtCLE,i THURSDAY, AUGUST » , 195*-—

Noinahegan Estates-~ :

, To Open Model Home, An attractive locale adjoiningNomahegan Park Is the site ofNomahegan Estates, a_new groupof 150 homoLta-be built by th«i G.

vard is being opened today. - -The merging of two contem-

porary architectural styles—ranchand split-level—is-«ffect'ed in thedwelling. The sales program, willstress the combination of grace-luli"1 ranch-type exterior with con-venience of the split-level "arrange-,

inside.— • ,• -•

priced at $19,490. Good terms areavailable to veterans and non-veterans. The homes include threeBedrooms, a separate dining room,a 29-foot mahogany-paneled rec-reation room, a h6bby room, 2',^baths and an attached garage.

Custom planning is evident - infW-rv det.ill Thorf nrp two fire-

home on the tract at 104 Boule-1 The 7'-!-r,oorh dwellings arc^P'ac.es, pne a brick corner hearth

YOU ALWAYSSAVE MONEY

AT

;'v-'v';\

m

BARON'SBRING YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION TO

BARON'S AND PROVE IT YOURSELF

COMFORTABLY

AIR-CONDITIONED

uated in the recreation room1; The.living room has cathedral-vaultedceilings; the stairs leading fromit to the bedroom wing hav,e a

I wrought iron railing. Anothercharming touch in this area is thebak;ony overlooking the livingroom. '-..-..

HALO^ENEfor RHEUMATISM

and ARTHRITIS

U2.98.'.•"• 59e

PROPHYLACTICTOOTH BRUSH

2 ' " 89C

AJftX

HEAR BETTERifeXORPAY NOTHING! <£M

Amazing NEW JS-M

HEARING A I D P 5 9 -15 BAY fRfccTRIftLi TERMS

$2.00

SOF-SET1.59POCKET

TISSUES

fefe

11ifpfmm.

' . > ' • • • • • ' : •

'•&•'.

1

FLASH BULBS]Press 25

SLEEVE OF 10

ASSORTED PLASTIC

COMBS

3 4 EASTMAN STREET(6pp. Cranford Theatre) ,

Tel. CRanford 6-6100(Store Also in West field)

STORECRANFORD

Z«»la Tau Alpha Tea .For College Entrants

The Union County AlumnaeChapter of Zeta Tau Alpha willentertain area young women en-tering colleges this'fall at a teaSunday from 3 to 5 p.m. at thehome of Mrs. Robert Brown, 234Oak Tree roatl. Mountainside. "

Invitations have been issued tofreshman, women entering collegesimd universities where Zeta chap-ters fire located. • Mrs. -George S.Smith, 1000 Konyon avenue, Plain-field, is president of the UnionCounty group. •' ' ' "

Garwood BirthsMr. and Mrs. R. R. Backhaus

of 252 Second avenue announcethe birth of a son, Mark Daniel,on August 8. ;

A daughter, Colette, was bornto~Mr.~and-Mrs—John~Matlaga-o216 Hickory avenue . on_ August 8at Muhlenberg Hospital, Plainfield.

Congratulations are being re-ceived by Mr. and Mrs. JohnMonahan, Jr., of 89 Fifth avenueon the birth of a daughter, Doro-thy Anne, August 10 at Muhlen-berg Hospital, Plainfield,' .

A son, Vincent Richard, Jr., wasborn August II at MuhlenbergHospital, Plainfield, to Mr. andMrs.,Vicci of 621 Spruce avenue.

Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Bates'an-nounce, the birth of a daughter,Nancy Gail, on August 11 at Over-look ,. Hospital, Summit. TheBates reside at. 337 Third avenue..

A daughter, Frances ?Suzari, wasborn to Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Bart-

Jett^of_18_Secondi-avenue on: Aug=nst 14 at Muhlenberg HospitalPlainfield.

BUSINESS DIRECTORYRAPID R n P'

i T T /-> r •> •

LAING MOTOR CAB CO.Your Autl

C r u f or*- WeitOcU• I'-

Sale* and

rh«n>: PLaJnfleld 6-t lU

11B-1S1 E.,flU> Street PlalnfleM

• Service Dept: 184 E. 4th Street \

MARSHALLMOTOR SALES. INC.

Since,1024

AataorUed Dealer

UNCOLN * MEBCUBTBale* — Bervln

General Bepaln ..

Dud Cars

EUubetb4J1 No. Broad 8t,

NOTICETi\ke nolleir that application has been

Innde tc» tlie . Township Committee ofthe- Towii!;hJ|k "of Crun/ord, New Jvj-s

traiufi-r... to—Buitlui—W.—SluWiiuutrading m "The I.od|:e" (<ir prc-nlllocated lit U-.% South Avenue, West, Cron-furd. New ' JeiWy. the Plenary Kit.ilCot'iijiuntriiuM liceiifU* No. C-'A heretoforeiKNUed to Bertha W. Stelnemunii, Execu-trix, trudiui! an "The Lodiic" for thepremise)! located at U-5 South Avenuewest, Cranford. N. J.

Objection)*, if jtny, should he madeImmediately In writing * to J. WalterColfee, Clerk of the Tovvnkhlj) of Crariford. N. J.

'•' ItHHTIIA W. STE1NEMANN.Vd Illv.-Kid.' Olive.Cranfoid. N. J. . • B-:

®

What ShouldYou KnowBefore You Decide

~ t o Buy a House?

To buy a house—-This is one of the big decisions of your life,perhaps the biggest.JTherc's a lot you should know before yousign on the dotted line. There's a lot to keep in mind whenlooking at houses. We have written a book on the subjectand we'd like you to have a copy. It is sent Free on request.The coupon is for your convenience. •*. .

Public Service Elcclric and Gas CompanyRoom 8311, HO Pork Place, Niwark, N. J.

- - • • . t 7 .Pltaic wind'me a.copy of your book,

-jjok for When You Buy a Hou^c".

Name ^

Address .

What to (H tet*

<utd pu

KORHIS CHEVROLET, Inc.

ABtaarlui

•ALBS * BEKVICM

Complete PartJ Dept.

' •"» ana' C'entril Aves. . WeilSeMWK.lfl.ld t-MIO

RA\ySON MOTORS, Inc.

A«Ui*riaedroNTIAO

Complete Par|a and Hepalra

' WKSTFIELD

IS Nartli An . . B. WEatfleld (-81*0

. . . PLAINFIELDH N i k Aft. PLalnaeld «-8«00

UNION COUNTY BUICK CO.

, Aath*rlu4(' "j B U I C k' ' "

•alts and Ser»lo«OMC TBUCK BALES

Good U«ed Can410 Nortb A»e.. K.

WEtUeld I-6S30WeilfleM

BANKS

CompanyBANKING SEBV1CB

Member FDIC•' Narth- Ate., W.. Cnafard

'CBjiBfori . 3 t00 •—-.

Z-0O7*17« E. Broad 81.. Wotileld

WEstOeld I-ISOO*M Park A»e.. Beotck plalna

. r A a w H i I-4SM

UNION COUNTYTRUST COMPANY

nvnallasd Cheeking Aeoanta '

—.Loang — Savlnai 'Account*

AU Trust Service*

— • C«B*«BliBtly Laeaicd OtBeea —

IM k i t h A n , E.' Cnnfard —CB «-100<.KUub«th 0-IWOO

1 « Broad 81. — lia EUubcth A«a.

1*0 W u l m l u U r A»«._oo» Wutflcld A» .BUaabctk

Member FDIC

BANKS andSAVINGS

INSTITUTIONS-

A COMPLETE BEIiyiCK I U SALL BAVEKlj Of ALL A U t 8

/BVipgSInsured Savluy*— Home Loans

Bsulevaid at Center. Kenllwortk' C IUD(»rd tl-tl^oo ' .

£»»t Jermey Bear Dr«*<l. Cllubetk" Kl.lubclh t-iduo

North Wood b i u Usn. U B 4 C B -' U n l t a S-11300

BUILDING •CONTRACTORS

cat. 1921

MODEBNIZ1NO CONSULTANTS

# AdfUHonn # AlterattoBS• Roof Repair* • Gotten

• Bldliur

t Walnut Ave. CRanford C-S474

A . I A 1 O N E

S SENECA BOAD CBANFOBO

CBaaf«rd H I M . : . ,

BEAUTY SALONS *

WILLIAM'S BEAUTY BOXUS North Union Avenue

T O I M

otm. WATCH FOB OtJR

BEMOVAL NOTICE

TOWNE BEAUTY SALONlot WUnil A»e. '

CB (-HM

. Crantar

CAMERAS

MARTENS'PHOTO SHOP

Cameras—ProjectorsEverything Photographic

PbotoatatlBf—Quick 8«r*ieePauport Photo* — 15 Minute Berries

31 .North Ave.. W. CBaoford U-lOt* -

COAL

ELECTRICALCONTRACTORS

THOMAS BENINATI

BLSCTBICAI.

CONTBACTOB

INDUSTBIAX,

CBaafard

«se Merlh Mk M. •aaOwMtk

FLORISTS

DEHMgffSFLOWER SHOPPE

. n-owEss ros -fcVERT OCCASION

Member T. T. D.. CBanfar* • - lota

197 IT. TJBUB A n . Craafar*

KENHWORTH GREENHOUSESA. BOKSSLE, Prop.

VLOWEB8 rOB A U OCCASIONSWedding Bouquet!

MfimheT norlst TeleSMph Delivery An^LIXTNIHAL, DESIGNS

CBaaiord 6-Ote* ' .I t Craa* SI. ' Kenllwettl)

VENTERS FLORIST. & GREENHOUSE

•XOWBBS YOB AIX OCCAS.ONSMfmner TJ>JL — Flowera By Win ,

CBaataat B-ssetI N WltkUu A n . . KnUwarta

REKEMEIEH'SFLOWERS, Inc. '

WEDDING • * rUNEBAIiWOBK PUB 8PECIALTT

' ' MemberFIsrUU' Telef raph Delivery Au.'a. .

JOB Wolnwt. Ave. CR 6-4700

• FOOD MARKETS •

CHAS. KURTZ MARKET

QBOCEBJES VBOZEN FOODS

GARWOOD COAL CO.

WE t-*in

•17 Nartk Atra.

rraatal D«U*«t)

REEL-STRONG FUEL CO.Dependable, Friendly Service Sine* l&U'

HEATINGOILS fiai

CBaatard «-«»0*Union and North Ana. Craafard

LOVELAND FUEL CO.Authorized DlaUlbutor ' '

FAMOUS BEADING ANTUBAC1TEEssohciat Fuel Oil Koppcni Coke

Call CBaafard 0-1H*

S4H North Ave., E. ' Cranlard

CONTRACTORS •

M. D1FABIOQamaral Coalraatar

. . ,- DBTVBWATB

B u i l t T o L a n . . . Bui l t P e n n a n e n t l r

CXaaiar* «-«M

HKnttlilM An. Craafard

UNION AVENUEM

MEATS * POULTBT '.Orocerlea — Produce \ - Frozen Food*

: — Free Delivery —CBaaiard e-UM

i e North TJBloa Ava. . \ Craaiord

FUEL OIL

GARWOOD COAL CO.PUBL OIL

COAL — COKE \Prompt Deliveries '

Call WEatfleld a-31(BBIT North' Avcnae . Garwood

LOVELAND FUEL CO.Authorized

E88O HEATFUEL OIL .

Prompt. Courteom Service

JbWfcLER

MARTIN JEWELERS.. , Be«itered Jeweler

• American Gem Society •.Expert Wmteh aad Jowelry Kepaln

17 N. UNION AVE. CBANFOBO

• LAUNDRIES *

MOREYLARUELAUNDRY CO.

LAVNDBT . DBT -CLEANTNOBUG CLEANSINO — FVB STOEAOE

. BTEatSeU Z-ttZIS W. Jeraer 'v Elisabeth

'ArLime Scale Removal^We have saeeessfBDy . developed aNEW melho. Cor the BESIQVAL •*LIME SCALE fraao elacced daaotltlrtaafcln* beaten a»d paro roltt.

Our metnod la oriclnal and exclusive.Work done on premises witliout .re-moving coil or tuminc off beat. I

fntSavincs up to 70% of ncost of coll.A year guarantee on.all work!

CALL CBAJtFORD 8-3555 or. W t a j t ir.i.D 2-4999

»AN"FOa)D SOFT WATEBEQUITMENT C O W A N I

45 MOKTH AVESCE. EASTCRAMFORD. H. J.

• LIQUOR STORES *

'.'•••••L

— Free DeHv

CALL CB. 6.1044Street - -'-.

BREorsLIQUOR STORE

FBEB DEUVEBTCall CBaafBiid « - e u e

t l N. Vales Awe.' Cnsiord

IK KENILWORTH K B

POLLACK'S FOOD MARKETf o r • .'.

LIQUOR — WINK —,,, . can CBaaford e -ene

BOO Waahugtaa A n .

• MOVING and *STORAGE

HENHY P. TOWNSEND

•OVIJfO aVSTOBAQa

rACKOfO

*U

WEatfleld 1-4404• . • V •

OIL BURNERS *

on.. SUPPLY CO. INC.

Complete Qti TT..»ing Sarvlc*- -

CHaafard 6-3(120

Offlcs and Showroom

US CaaUnalal A m u , "' " Craaful

PLUMBERS

BRENNAN & TOYE

F L D l f B I N a — BBATtNa ' i '

* TDarota

t N Brat* Craafirl

CHAPMAN BROS.

rLUMBINO It VBAT1NO

MTBACTOBS

— JOBBINO —•/ — JO

LUMBER

BUILDERS' GENERAL'SUPPLY CO,

atttlwoik lfaaons- MatrrlaainrytUac Wmr n * BaaiHardware w~i«itij Material

Screens - Flooring - Paints• - - - ~ Appliances "" '

CBanford 6-OSOf

CCBleaalal A»c- Cramfar*

CRANFORD - WESTFUXDBUILDING SUPPLY COMPANY

1 Call CRanford, 8-1144North Ave.. E. ; .'•• C

FUEL OIL

„ Concxcts Conctructloo i- ^

Boad Building — Bew«r»

^ u Call CBanford 6-2808

M Barnilda Av*. CranfaraV

CLOCK/REPAIRING

CLOCKS — ALL KINDSSprjnr-Bna-Welgnc

Cleaned — Repaired '-, .. - - Pal In Or«a».--•

E. P. CHAMBERLAINCHanfoid 8-1IM

DEUCATESSENS •

COLONY DEUCATESSENComplete Line of

- •'• DEUCACJBS

W% Cooking • AV. P*k^ng Don* on Premises

• DRUG STORES *

REEL • STRONG FUEL CO.'Dependable. Friendly Service Since 1823

eoal-HEATINa OILS.- eahr

CRanford «-UWDaba aad North Avea.- Crufara

• FUNERAL •DIRECTORS

DOOLEY FUNERAL SERVICEFUNEBAL DIBEOTOBS

Phone! CBanford

111 North Ave., W. Craaford

• FURNITURE •

CBANFORD FURNITURE

• BEDROOM

• LJV1NO BOOH

KITCHEN

0 SIMMONS BEDDINO

Phone: CRanford 0-3141

IM North Caloa Av*. Craaiar

UNLVS PHARMACYCnat. II, l ind. Reg. Pharmacies

BFBCIALUTS

Orars — Cooaullae — Baby NaeeaProcrlptlona Called For

and Delivered.

J- OPEN SUNDAY —

Call CBaafard e-4aU

If bo anawer. RAhway T-11S0

U t e BaHtaa Boad ' Craatard

• HARDWARE

CRANFORD PAINT &HARDWARE STORE

ATLAS POWEB TOOLSOlaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna'

Plumbing Supplies - WallpaperFloor Bandinp! Machines

l«4 Booth A n , B. ' CBaafotd a-l««

Give NowTo Aid Polio

Lumber — Millwork

CaD

Sarid. Gravel, c l c

xe Beats Av*. W.

STANDARD LUMBER& SUPPLY CO. ^

LU

# InsuIaUoai

#) HaRhvane. ffi I I I I B , <

CBanford

•4 nikh Btrwo

MOVING andSTORAGE

Oil Burnen

CBantord.«-mo -

M Hstta A*» , • . Craahil

• REAL ESTATE

JOS. J. GUKER' U A L ESTATE

• ' ••' ' • n d

_ ENSUBANCEOf All Klndl

North Ava, W. CEaaferd «-lUf

IOHN W. HEDfS & SONBEAL ESTATE

• and,(NSOBANCB

Phone: CRanford «-0T7TI t BterUi A v a , B.

CHAS. M. YEAKEL•tats laaansea

BUrlfAfos

e North A*o,. W. CBaaford 0:414

Taxi Service

SCARBROUGH-S TAXISEKVINa CBANFOBD FOB %t

W« Go Anyplace, Anvlirn»

\ CRBaford 6-20OO

TELEVISION *•

ALLIED VAN LINES

- Packioa> * Shtppinot

> ' . 'Cat. ISU

Local and Long Dtstaneo Uowtnm

CaD CBanford <

MS *>atk A»». m.

CHANFORD RADIO\ n u v u i o M * KAWfl

BXrAIBB

Oar BadkM Kepalred

duford t-mtI raatiaai Street \ . Cr«»f"'

UPHOl^TERERS

CBANFORDUPHOLSTERY SHOP

Cpaolsterlnr & Interior bocorattna"Slip Covers - Furniture

CRanfordIt* Soalh Ave , E. Cr.«l"'

The names of vecetabte exUsrisOMd in making Icsther firm aiaiOexiblo sound like a feofraphte•ymphoiyr. They Include wattlaVquebracho, divl-divl. stnnae. g*mkter. mancrava and mytof "---

•Meat Ml.The Empty Quarter of southern

Arabia is perhaps the driest placeIn the world—a vast desert almostwithout human habitation. :

* VENETIAN fBLINDS

CBANFORD ~UPHOLSTERY SHOP

Venetian Blind*Outom Quality brand*

CJtanford «-0*Mt*S Sealk A n , K. -

The first United Statesradio station w.uc ca-jjhlliil

in 1903.

,.<•*"*

GIVE TO

EMERGENCY

POLIO FUND

Vol. LXI. No. 32. CRANFORD. NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER. 2, 1954 Entered!OllK-e ..t Cr.uiftiid. N. J. 22 Pages — 10 CENTS

Water Company Lifts Hose Ban,Reports Problems of Area Solved

Fruits of the battle for better'water service for this area con-ducted during the past year by theIntel-Municipal Water Committee.were evident today as the Plain-lield-Union Water Company re-ported that new sources of supply I•now available and those to be 'available by next 'summer are ex-pvcted to prevent a recurrence ofthe water difficulties which'.reaeh-t><l a; climax here during the pasttwo years... . • ..;

All Restrictions Removed.At the same time, • the water

company announced removal i ofall restriction on water use"for the!first time since early June, whendeveloping drought conditionscaused imposition pf twice-weeklyevening hosing schedules.

IJy next summer, the Plainfleld-Union statement declared, the,

—cnrnpnnyV-total-supplywill-bp' inexcess of maximum peak needs as.foreseen by two recent indepen-dent engineering repprts. Thecompany added >that long-termgrowth in-the area is expected tobe met by further development ofthe naritan<and Delaware Riversupplies,/ . - , • ' '•

'The engineering reports referredto-wcre^those.prepared for;Plain-^

- tic;ld-Union by, "Buck, Seifert andJones, New Ybrk'consulting engi-neers, following an order from thePublic Utility Commission that anindependent survey of the com-pany's facilities and needs ' bemade prior to the granting of a

' rate increase earlier this year; andby Maleqlm Pirnle Engineers • for

—the Inter-Municipal Water Com-mittee. . ' ;

Supplies Increased

George M. Haskew, superinten-dent and. chief engineer of thecompany, attributed the lifting ofrestrictions to steps being taken toincrease water supplies. The com-

Honored by Surgeons

^ y ypipe Ifne, making available Rari-tan and Delaware River watersthrough the Elizabethtown WaterCompany's recently completed 48-inch transmission main''allowed

.Plainlleld-Union to completely re-fill its storage reservoir during thefirst week of August, he said. Sincethat time, as a result of the newsource,- the reservoir has remainedfull and water levels in the Neth-erwood well field have been al-lowed to rise over 25 feet, he re-ported. Consequently, the engi-neer said, it is bow deemed entire-ly safe to allow ^allTpurposejunre^L

(Continued pn page 8) - ;

Subscriptian:Awards to 30

Thirty-three more youngstersearned awards during the pastweek in the second week of TheCitizen and Chronicle's six weeks'subscription contest. .; The drivewill continue through October .1.A total'of 63 new subscriptions

^ phave tx en turned in during thetwo weeks.

A day oncTnight football or apen arid pencil set are awardedas prizes to youngsters who turnin two new, one new and two re-newal or four renewal subscrip-tions • to this newspaper.

Two youngsters, Stephen • Gat-J'us, Jr., of 506 Lincoln avenue,cast, and Richard Larsen, of 414Manor avenue, earned both awards^ J t h nccood waak.

Other; prize winners included:Lorraine Kenny, 108 Orange ave-,'»ie: Frank O'Brien, 7 Oak Lane;Dwiyht Weeks, 1J5 Heming avqr»ue; Robert Johnson*, 124 Oaklane; Stephen Shaw, 26 Tulipstreet; Bill Calvano, 12 West Hollystreet; David Eaton, .37 Craigplace; Jeff Fleuren, 10E ParkwayVillage; Grace Speth, 224 North•>venue, west; Bill Dennis, . 123Hillcrcst avenue; Nelson Lightcap,"Sylvester street; Jeffrey Quinn,IS Wade avenue; Larry Pace, 210Alhor s(ivct; -frib" Millie fj W<"-t

place; Barry Aduibato, 208Sailer _strecJL- '._'__

"~AVs7), Charles Johnsonr62 Cent-ennial avenue; Terry Persons,: 6

.Parkway Village; Johnny Starr,-.'» Hampton road; Johrmy O'Reilly,131'Oak Lane; Jeffrey Farrcll, 702Springfield avenue; Robert Shire,Uti Oak . Lane; Carol. Shire, 116Oak lane; David GrLicom, 7 Syl-

(Coniinued pn page 8)

Early Copy RequestedSince the office of T h e Citizen

•'"(I Chronicle will be closed Mon-day in observance of Labor Day,••"operation of organization pub-licity chairmen and local adver-tisers in setting their copy ini-ar|y for next week's issue willbe appreciated. . . •

DR. NEIL CASTALDO

ICS NamesDr.CastaldpAssociate

Dr. Neil Castaldo of 103 Lincolnavenue, east, school doctor since1941 and a practicing physician inCranford since 1935, received noti-fication during the past week ofhis election, to. the runk of asso-*-ciate in the International Collegeof Surgeons. His AICS degree willbe conferred at a - convocation inthe Chicago Civic Opera House onthe evening of September, 10 .dur-ing the annual assembly of thecollege in that city.

Dr. Castaldo, who prepared athesis and wrote Up 50 surgicalcases as. part of the requirementsfor his degree, was informed in 'aletter from Dr. William R. Love-lace, president of the college, thathe was'elected at a regular meet-ing "of the executive council of theUnited States section of the collegein Chicago on August 21.• Rehearsal for the convocation

ceremony will be held, in the Chi-cago Civic Opera House at 8 a.m.September 10. The annual assem-bly will be held at the PalmerHouse' in Chicago on Tuesday,Wednesday, Thursday and Fridayof next week. -

The International College ofSurgeons .was founded by Dr. MaxThorek in Geneva, Switzerland, in.1935,-and-the-United^States-sec-tion of the college was incorporat-ed in Washington*, D.C, in 1940. Dr.Castaldo will be eligible to become

J l h i(Continued on page 8)

Mrs. Haagensen listsWinter Library Schedule

The Cranford Free Public Li-'brary will be open on Saturdaysstarting September 11, Mrs. HazelHaagensen, librarian, announcedtoday.

The winter schedule of'the li-

day as follows: Adult Department,9:30 a.m.-to'5:30 p.m. and 7;30p.m.- td 9 p.m. Monday throughFriday and 9:30 a.m^-to 5:30 p.m.on Saturdays; Children's Room,1 to 5:30 p.m. Monday throughFriday and 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.on Saturdays.-

The library will be closed onLabor Day.

FreeholderEndorsementForMcMahon

Edward C, McMahon, formerRepublican municipal chairman,.was endorsed for the Republicannomination for an unexpircd termas the Union County freeholderlast night by the Republican Mu-nicipal Committee..

A long-time, active Republicanworker, Mr,. McMahoh has beenconsidered a leading candidate onseveral other occasions for ap-pointment to the Board of Free-holders, \fiit each time someoneelse" was given the post.— The vacancy"was"brought*aBbufby the death of the board's direct-or, John H. M. Dudley of Eliza-beth. At a meeting next Thursdayevening in Elizabeth, the UnionCounty Republican Committee isscheduled to select its candidate toscek~the, unexpired term at theNovember^ General-Election._1

With the entry of Mr. McMahoninto the race there are. at least 11candidates W the nomination. F.Edward Biertuempfel, Union may-or, is believed to be the strongestcandidate. At least live Elizabethmen have heen mentioned for.Jthepost: State Committeeman Wil-liam J. Secland, City ChairmanLauris H. Sorensen, forme* TaxAssessor Robert McNair, Redevel-iopment Commissiqner Robert T.Walsh and School CommissionerJohn J. Schomp.

Mrs. Elite Scheideler of Roselle,who lost in April in her bid (orrenomination as a freeholder, isalso in the race.

In Kenilworth, Republican.lead-ers are pushing Mayor .Robert C.Krueger for the nomination, whijeMayor L. Thomas Daub of Gar-wood was considered a leadingcandidate until being named sec-ond undersheriff. . •. Both Union and Elizabeth aremaking strong claims for the nom-ination! They say they deservemore representation.

Closings GeneralHere on Monday

::—rln-observance-of -Labor-'Dayrthe Cranford Post Office, town-ship offices. Public Library,banks and_rnoj;t—local businessoffices and stores will be closedon Monday. Motorists parkingin the town center on that daywill not be required to insertcoins in parking meters. ;

Although the Post Office willbe closed all day, with no maildeliveries and no window serv-

from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. for/theconvenience of box holders andstamp, machine users/

There will be no classes forthose attendirig^the summer* ses-sion at Union Junior College,and. assail young people well,know.^the public schools willnot-'be open anyway until next•Thursday. . . .

ChildDevelopmentTopicFor Teacher WorkshopTalk

Parents of local school children sociatlon of Physical Anthropolo-as well as the puolic were in-vited today by Dr. Hovyard R.Bes.t, superintendent of schools, tohear an address by Dr, MiltonW. Krogman, physical 'anthropolo-gist, School of Medicine, Univer-sity of Pennsylvania, Tuesdayat B:30.a.m. in the Cranford HighSchool auditorium.

-address -whicTTwill deal with what parents andteachers—jean." cxpect""of"a"childat various age levels will higlvlight the opening day program1 ofthe school system's annual two-day teachers' Workshop. Dr. Bestsaid presidents of local. Parent-Teacher Associations have beenencouraged to Urge their mem-bers at attend the address.

Dr. Krogman has been at thePhiladelphia .university since 1047and has headed the PhiladelphiaCenter for Research in C h i l dGrowth, since that time. He holdsbachelor, masters and doctor ofphilosophy degrees from the Uni-versity of Chicago and formerlytaught there and at Western Re-serve University.

President of thq .American As-

from 1946 to 1949, he ifauthor of the book "Growth ofMan'* which was published in1941: He was a national researchfellow a£ the Royal College ofSurgeons, London, in 1930 and1931. Another highlight of theteachers* workshop to be heldTuesday and Wednesday will be a-discussion" of "The Wctzcltindby Thomas Tipaldi, fifth gradeteacher at~Cleveland' School.

On Tuesday afternoon, h i g hschool' instructors will hear apresentation of the Citizen Edu-cation Program. At the same time,the elementary grade teachers willhear'the discussion of ''Thie Wct-zel Grid" and then will attendgroup discussions for their as-signed grade.'- < >•

On Wednesday, teachers will re-port to their assigned buildingsfor meetings with principals andfor preparations for the openingof school the next day.

Dr. Best reports' that -a WetzelGrid "is a device for assessing thephysical growth and developmentof children by weight, height and

" (Continued on page S)

Being MovedFor Economy

For reasons of economy, the;coconut sweetening division of theWood and Selick Company, whichhas been in. operation at Southjavenue, west, and Lincoln avenuesince • January 3; 1950, is , in theprocess of moving ' to a largerplant in Elmhurst, Ll"i., where itwill amalgamate its productionwith another firm in the sameline, it was reported yesterday byRichard . J. Boddington, plantmanager.

Some operations already havebeen',transferred to the L o n gIsland factory, but others will becontinued here for some time, Mr.Boddington said,. He declared hecould not say now just when re-moval" of operations here woulc|be completed or what would/bethe future of the. local building.He also declined to name the othercompany- with which- Wood andScliclc is affiliating in the swect-eniiig process. » -,..'",

A few of the key personnel .ofthe Cranford plant will be trans-ferred to the new Scene of opera-tions, the plant manager relatedHe said there are still about 20persons employed by the companyhere at this time. When in- fullproduction, the- local plant em-ployed some 50 persons.

Wood7 and ~Selicfc7^which~hasr Tfcr

main office" in New York City,placed a valuation of $450,000 onits facilities here when opera-tions started'in 1950 — $300,000on the building and $150,000 onitsVequipment. . •

building, of ,pne- and threc-story\construction, was -erected in1949. It'has face brick and caststone on 'the South and Lincolnavenue Sides, and the fireproofinterior has walls pf a specialtype. of cement w h i c h can becleaned with\steam for easy main-tenance of sanitary conditions.

Operations here included sweet-ening, toasting, flavoring -andccjujnng or idw cuconuifrom the Philippines.

Before coming to Cranford, Mr.Boddington was in charge of oneof the plants of an affiliate ofWood and Selick in India andalso formerly was in charge ofoperations for the company in thePhilippines. '

GraduatesEnter Service

'A sharp increase in the num-ber-of—high-school^graduates-go-ing dirccUjfcjnto the armed forcesfrom . high school has been re-pottcd-iby_lthe^_Cranford _HighSchool guidance department. /

, ] The class of 1953, a -department•jffcport says,- sent 12 pejreent tothe services, while in\ 952 andprevious years the classes aver-aged about five to seven percent.

"Many joined," the report says,"because they were . uncertainabout a vocational choice and felt

5 [ . ygive them a more mature outlookon a Vocation, and- enable themto continue their education-withthe benefits of the Korean G.I.Bill." • - "'

According to ' the reportj, theclass of 1953 is similar to fornje.classes with respect to Us occu-pational and educational place-ment.

"It is interesting to note, how-ever, that in the past four years

^ been able to increasetage •,»<. gnuekmtcd *

tending accredited four year coll-eges from' 23 percent injl948-1949 to 38 pcrcent^foi—the-Classof 1953," the report says.

The department says it is diffi-cult to explain the 15 percent- in-crease in the number of studentsattending four-year colleges wfieif

(Continued on page H)

MOD CampaignNets $1,022

total of $1,022:43"had "beenreceived up to yesterday in theemergency March of Dimes drivein Cranford, it was reported yesrterday by William D'Arcy, localchairman. The drive is being ex-tended* so that residents who hayebeen, away on vacation duringthe past "two weeks may maketheir contributions. Checks shouldbe sent to Miss Marian A. Schmit*.local treasurer, Box 69, Cranford

Four youngsters aided in. thedrive during the past several days.Donald Hendrlckson of 83 Cen-tennial avenue collected $21.59and Paul Harmclin of 20 Pcrsh-ing avenue turned in $4.50. MaryGrant and Carol Szabo raised$2.00 for the fund by staging afair for children in their neighborhood. . .

See School Population of 3,500With ,the opening of school a

week away; Dr. Howard R., Best,superintendent of schools, an-nounced assignments today formembers of the faculty and staffof th e Cranford public schools. .

Because of two new 12-roonYschools which will be openedsometime .this fall, there ariymanychanges, in assignments this year.In addition, there i s /a consider-able number of new'iraculty mem-bers caused by' resignations, re-tirements and' vacancies broughtabout by/tfie appointment of fourassistant principals.

- ' Principals 'Assigned.Miss Etta Tunncr wi l lbe prin-

cipal for Brookside Plac'o, Cleve-land and Roosevelt schools withan office. in Brookside P l a c e -School. Miss Miriam L. Eisen-

_ d_ Anthony_ J. _Terregino"will be assistant" principals. MissEisenring has been assigned taRoosevelt School and. Mr. Terre-iino to Cleveland School. '

Lincoln, Sherman "and WalnutAvenue schools will be under Vin-cent F. Sarnowski, principal,

office will be in ShermanSchool. Miss Irene F. - Gilbertand Miss Beatrice E. Warner willbenassistiuit^principals. Miss Gil-bert will have her office at Wal-nut Avenue School ancl M i s sWarner will.be at Lincoln School.

G. Frank. Zimmerman continuesas principal of Cranford HighSchool, while Mrs. Ruth S. Janov-sik is supervisor of elementaryeducation and Frank J.. Martz issupervisor of secondary education.Mrs. Janovsik "will have an officein Cleveland School.

Assignments to the elementaryschools are as follows:

Brookside Place SchoolKindergarten,. Mrs. B l a n c h e

Virsoco; first grade, Mrs. MildredMahony and. Mrs. Edna McFad-

I impoilc-U "3en; sccond~g7acle. Miss RebekahPoynter and Mrs. Dorothy Petro-vich.

Also, .third gradcf Mrs. DorothyStrauss and Miss Joan Whittaker;fourth grade, Miss Ruth Morganand Mrs. Hattie Meyer; flfthgrade, John Taormina; and sixthgrade, Mrs. Sally Volmer- andMrs. Marion Eschcnlauer.

Cleveland. School •Kindergarten, Mrs. J e a n n e

Saunders and Mrs. Rose MurrayMcGhee, who will spt-nd^ half hertime'in Cleveland School and theother half in Roosevelt School;flrsWgrade,-~Mrs; Joan—Doolan,

(Continued on page 8)

Dog-LeashNeed Cited

Police Chief William A. Fischertoday 'issued a warning to dogowners that summonses will be is-sued to violators of the local ordi-nance providing that dogs on pub-lic streets must be on a leash notlonger than six feet and in chargeof a person over 12 years of'age.

The "TwarninE followed com-pluints of several violations re-ceived by the police in recentweeks. •

Mrs. Mary Gruber of 198 Locustdrive reported Sunday morningthat a. large black dog running atlarge;'attacked her dog while shewas walking her pet on a IcaslgPatrolman Frank Caruso was sentto cht'ck up and reported that -theoffending animal was in the own-er's hOyiiM: when he arrived on the

peri^rjjcally to see if the dog waspermiUed?to run free.—L.-M. Banks of 9 Willow streetalso reported that his dog was at-tacked last week while in his cus-tody on a leash by another dog noton a leash.

There also have been complaintsfrom residents in other sections ofthe township about dogs beingpermitted to run without leashesand with no one in charge of them.

To Westfield HomeMr. and Mrs, Weyman O. Steen-

grufe and daughter, Gail, of 379Lincoln avenue, east, moved lustThursday to 526 Fairmont avenue,Wtstfleld.

Residents of Cranford for thepast 13 ycarsv Mr. Stccngriife. is"president of the Cranford Repub-lican Club< a member of the Cran-ford Historical Society and on the

Aid Veterans at Lyons Hospital

Among Cranford women now active as Red Cross GrayLadies "at the Veterans Hospital, .Lyons, are-those shown above:<1 to r) seated, Mrs- Jessie Marshall, Miss Catherine Klein, Mrs.

—Frances-.-Bo»;ttg»iir,._Mrs!_.Audrey._Jtoot and_Mti_Francoi.--Colo;-.second row, Mrs. Gladys Brunt,. Mrs. Florence Moppert, Mrs.JeanetU: Glogorski and Mrs. Ida -White; rear row, Mrs. GraceFrantz, Mrs. Dorothy Clauer, Mrs. Loretta Myers. Mrs. FloyPollard and Mrs. Fritzie Mecks. Absent at the tiirie the picturewas taken were: Mrs. Serena McCoy, Miss Eleanor MeFarlane;Miss Stella Sho<t, Mrs'! Edna Poss and Mrs. Helen Troebliger.

Some 3,500 Cranford childrenwill return to classt-s iri the publicschools next Thursday morning.The total enrollnlent is again ex-pected to be an all-time record.

Students of St. Michael's School.begin classes on September 13 fol-lowing it mass for the student bodyin St. Michael's1 Church at 8 a.m. •

Public school students in Gar-wood and Kenilworth also beginclasses. next Thursday, while •freshmen, of Jonathan Dayton Reg-ional High School, Springfield, re-port Wednesday und all studentsnext Thursday. .' The n e w St.Theresa's School in Kenilworthand St.- Annoys.School-in Garw<iod .also open on September 13.

Because the two new elementarybuildings, Brookside Place School;ind the Walnut. Avenue School,have not been completed, childrenassigned, to' those schools, will re-

to Cleveland and ShermanSchools, respectively.

Dr! Howard R. Best, superinten-dent of schools, announced thatchildren assigned to BrooksideSchool will report to the auditor-;ium of Cleveland School on open-ing day. Kindergarten students ofBrookside School will report to

4.

To Serve As Gray Ladies"Although we arc not now actively engaged-in a war, there

are hundreds of thousands of veterans who need our spare time tphelp "them rehabilitate themselves," declared Mrs. Frances Boettger,:chairman, as she launched the fall recruitment for Red Cross .GrayLadies for the Veterans Hospital, Lyons. .

These volunteers have servedapproximately 2800 hours duringthe past year, some working from9 a.m. to 3 p.m. one day a week,others working one evening from7' to 9:30 p.m.

Anyone overwith, the desire

21 years of ageto help somfont>

IndustrialTract GettingRailroad Aid-Further signs • of passage of a

bygone era in railroading1 wereless fortunate than himself mayvolunteer, Mrs. Boettger said. •

After an interview, the volun- j , . ,,... . .. ,teer wijl be taken by some of thc'l f ° » n 'tspM _coalinjs station., water

tank, ash pit and sand storage

seen here this week as' the JerseyCentral Railroad prepared to tear

active Gray Ladies to the hospitalfor a day of observing.'This shouldshow the applicant whether or notshe wishes to take the short ori-entation course; in_October. Atthe end .oj this( two session course,the volunteer; is-plaeed in the typeof work.she seems best fitted'for.All .those interested in obtainingmore information should call theirlocal Red Cross; Chapter.

building to make way for indus-trial development of :i tract be-tween the railroad and North ave-nue, cast, above the old round-house at Elizabeth' avenue.

Work on a new warehouse beingconstructed for Associated B:>.byProducts by D. O..Evans of Hill-side is already nearing completion,and the developer re,iM>rts that ad-

ViSI

•••.vovj

Walnut "Avenue School, studentswill report to; the auditorium ofSherman School, while those kin-'dergarten pupils will report to thekindergarten room.

The opening of school will, alsomark the beginning of new schoolhours fur both elementary andhigh school students.

Dr. Best salt! all elementaryschools will oppnat .9 . a.m. andcontinue until 11:45 a.rr -vhen thelunch period Jbcgins. The , lunchperiod is over at 12:45 p.m.vandschools will close at 3 ?p.m.

Kindergarten classes will alsobegin at 0 a.m. but w£l.Lcnd.at.ll:30 a.m. The afternoon kindcrgar-ten classes begin.at 12:30 p.m.JUULcontinue until 3 p.m.

At the high .school, studentsmust report at '8:40 a.m. ' andclasses continue through to 2:52p.m. The lunch hour will continueright through the class periods.

Registration for all grades willbo held', tomorrow. However, par-ents unable to register their chil-

(Continued on page 8)

UJC RegistrationTops Last Year's

ditiorial .buildings will be erectedCranford_women-now_scrving_-as-removal-of-the-old railroad

as Gray Ladies include: Mrs.Helen Troebliger, Mrs. Edna Poss,Mrs. Stella Shest, Miss Eleanor

Mrs. Fritzie Meeks, Mrs. Floy

Dorothy Clauer, Mrs. G r a c eFrantz,-Mrs. Ida WhiUvMrs. Jean-ette Glogorski; Mrs. Florence Mop-pert, Mrs. Gladys Brunt, M r s .Frances Cole, Mrs. Audrey Root,

structures makes room.Coaling station, water tank, ash

pit and storage building all w.cremportaril l<> the operation oT

s but arc no longerthat Jersey Central

has complctrid--dieselization of itsline.

Perjnit for the1 warehouse beingcrwrtwl b,v the Hillside contractorat 440 North avenue, easti was is-

j s ( c ; ) m

Mrs; Boettger, Miss Catherine ; s l l w l ^y Building Inspector Fred J.Klein and Mrs. Jessie Marshall, j n^ll.-r in Julv. with valuation

Wind and Rain, [lh^Damage Reported

Although Cranford. alohjj withother communities in this area, es-caped the full force of the hurri-cane that caused so much damage jaloii{j the Eastern Seiiboard on;Tuesday, there were several in- jstances here of tree limbs, wires, Iawnings and signs blown down!and of motorists mired in rain-softened ditches and trenches.

in July,listed at $40,000.

To Benefit Aid SquadProceeds of a clog show handling

class to be conductcil at Veterans"Memorial Home starting Septem-ber 10 will be donated to the

First Ai<l Squad, it wax announced((wlay'by Mrs:. George Putschcr of

Ic. who is in charge of

Registration for the fall termat Union Junior College is run-ning about 30 'percent ahead ofJast_year; Dru-Kenneth—C.—Mac--Kay, president and dean, an-.nounccd.

Dr. MacKay attributed the' In-creaso to a gent'ral populationincrease in this area and" the 'larger graduating classes in near-by high schools. He said thistrend is likely to continue for some .time to corrfe. , '

An increased enrollment wasalso reported last' year. Dr. Mac-lt;iy—suid-Uiat—was-an—indication -of the trend that is now develop-ing. The • enrollment' of Koreanvots and more stable economic-conditions were also cited by the-junior college president as rea-

'.sons for last year's increase.building fund • of the Cninfordj 'It will be necessary, Dr1. Mac-r

Kay said, to restrict applicationsin some curriculums. He pointedout, h owever, that applicationsare still being received for the icoming semester. - . '-.

Once again engineering Is the

! • * ! /

Mrs. I*ut*u.-her explaincrl that theaim of the non-profit project is to

Despite the fall of "almost .two j train. o'wnc'rs to - h^nrllc- their owninches of rain, the new <l:mi gaies, dogs at shows instead of' hiringhandledjthe increased. How; of_theXptofcssionaLJiandltrs. Ciiristian

^Continued b» page 8) Knudieii of Rahway will be train-

most popular turri£u!tlrtrApplications in this field arc alsorunning ahead of,..—last—year's-figure.

Adult School Adds Science CoursesTo hicet the needs of our scion-] Radar, atomic energy,., thinking ments .of Pembcrtpn, Metuchen

tillc world, the Cranford At'nH ''machines, modern chemistry, rock-1 and McBruney schools. From 1942School \till olfer courses on '"Sci- tHs and jets, radio astronomy andence -for Everyone" and "Excur- j television.sions in Astronomy" at its fall Dr. Orens attended Virginia,

to .15)44', he was a professor andcivilian training administrator forthe U.' S. Army Signal Corps. He

term, which opens on October 5. j Vermont, Columbia, Yale, and jheaded the physics department of"Dr. T.~P. "OrcViV:," pnirosnr 4tr"KcHitf"'UnI\>eiSltte^:~:<iHr-'lvct-lV&ir[*Ma'dlsoii College foV'fouY'years"

physics and oh:urinan of the gfud-r: hi.-i doctorate from Virginia Uni-| fore, joining the staff of the New-ujitc division of .Nfewark College of versity. He has taught at Nassau |.firk college..

Mrs. Redden Aild the astronomycourse will deal with such-sub-jects as: Solar system, time and•dntWnce in pacc travel, light, andtools of the astronomers.

Mr. Spiers formerly taught, for_15 years in private schools,

l

Engineering, Ulill be coordinator Collegiate Center*1 Brenau College,of the "Science for ^Everyone" Clcmson College und the Collegecourse and Dr. Thomas Blissard, | of the City of New York,associate professor of physics at j ' He served as project and re-the same college, will be the in-! search officer in the Army Airstructor. Dr. Orens resides ut 112 Force's fixed Gunnery' School inMukatom drive. tiictitii) ballistics research Jrom

Mark H. C. Spiers of 10 Pitts- 1U43 to I94f> and chief of AnalystHeld street, president of the Union Section. U. S. Navy Underwater

faculty of Union Junior College. | County Amateur Astronomers' Research Laboratory, New Lon-He. Is principal of Benjamin j Club; will be. the teacher for the don, in 1946.

h l W tpFranklin elementary school, West-Held, and director of' the West-field Adult-Scjfiool.

He has betfh a member of thefaculty of the Westlleld public-schools since 1P42. Mr;.and Mrs.Steehgrafe and daughter attendedthe-Presbyterian Church hue.

astronomy course. Dr. Blissard received his doctor-'"Science for Everyone" will l>e ute in education in 1949 from Col-

with umbui University. He attendeda non-technical discuuiondemonstratiims of the most

in the vicinity of Philadelphia.' As-tronomy has been his hobby forabout 30 years. He has lectured tosuch groups as teachers' associa-tions, men's and women's .clubsand study units. He is now emsployed by a Hillside manufacturer

• > ' • '

•-; Dickinson College, and Pennsyl-las a quality control analyst in conftant and fascinating scientific vania >nd Columbia Universities.^nection with engineering und P*j '>,modern day marvels. Mrs. Charles He was principal of Metal Town-j duction problems. This firm P™^:

Redden, president-director, .viid.' ship High School for two years ' duces precision ' *Amonj; topics to be diicusied aic: and beaded the science dcoairt-1 cruft.

'•.-VJ

Page 2: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

Miss WikanderEnlists in WAFFor Three Years

Miss Betty Wikander, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Wikan-dcr pf 17 North Union it venue, hawenlisted in the Women's Air Force.

Sunny Acres GardenersTo Hear Talk ou Tulips

Lawrence Hubbard, a memberof ' the Westfleid Men's jGartleaClub, will give a talk on "TulipCulture" next Thursday eveningfor members* of thi» Snrtnv Arrp«;

Students,Teachers at Alliance Vacation Bible School

"women's~bran'ch of the air force,for three years. . . ;•' -, • She will be sworn in on Septem-ber 14 in Newark and transferred {to. Lackland Air Force Base, SanAntonio, Tex., for recruit training.i A graduate of Crunford High

'i-h

_ 5 • !•.*.» :

' fcvas active in student activitiesthere and in Girl Scouting. Shewas president of the high schoolForum Club and took pnrt in aJunior Town Meeting of the Airtelevision program ,6ver .StationJVATV; Newark.. She was also, a(member of the Spotlight staff. Cre-ative Writing Club and the Stu-dent Council and also took, part ingirl's sports. -i' For the past four years, sheserved as a counselor at GirlScout camps. During the pastthree years, she was at Camp Pine-lock, Columbia, and previous tothat was at Camp Blue Heron,Sparta. Last summer she attend-ed the All-State Encampment '.in.JVyohnini:. She is a senior scoutfind a member of Troop 36. Shehas also served as a program aide"for several local units. /

'.' Miss Wikander is a menfber ofthe Westlieid Squadrorv^Civil AirPatrol, and the RMinlield civil

: defense plane spotting unit, whichis stationed atop Plailineld High

Garden Club. He will also show"a Him, "Spring in Holland." ~~r~

Mrs. John Curlik will be hos-tess to the group meeting at ft p.m.at the home of Mrs. Walter Knorrof 1715 Westover . road,* ClifrkTownship.

A workshop meeting' w i l l beheldon September 15'atr 10 Q;m. atMrs. Khorr's home. At-.that^ timeshe will give an., illustrated' talk onthe importance of color in flowerarrangements.

Aids March of DimesPaul Harmelin, 11. of 20 Persh-

ing avenue,' yesterday turned 'in$4.25 to the'emergency March ofDimes campaign, results of,vadoor-to-door canvass he conducted]in his neighborhood.' - / v •

. • ' ' . . . • — P h o t o b y A . N l c H o a g l a n d

iKoxvn above are students and teachers who have been participating in the activities of the Daily Vacatipn Bible School

Aluante Ch/rch during the past two. weeks. Parents and friends have been i n v i ^ to attend dosing, exercises of the school ,

at 7:30 tohight. The session u?ll end officially1 tomorrow morning with prescntatton of awards for attendance and work accomplished.

list Booting Class„ The Northern New Jersey Power

Squadron, a unit, of the UnitedStates Power Squadron, will be-gin its free Lecture courses inpiloting and small boat' handling'on September 1^ at 8 "o'clock i

red.. He said Barbara Mitchellwas bitten when she tried to'Pt,]tthe other dog away.v-The""Mitch.ells do not own a dog, and th"police gave no report of the own.ership of the attacking 'animal*.

Governor to Sithe- Essex County Vocational and!, Governor Robert B. MeynerTechnical High School, Jfield. Commander Albert Andrea-sen invites all persons \^ho aretinterested in the fundamentals of

*"?$# ^i-V*011 '? these,^ l j i s!eswhich will tie given weekly fora period of ten weeKS. |

r " ' j, i

Following a report to the police jon August 23 that Barbara Mitch-ell, 6, of 721 Willow street, had!been bitten on the lower left;thigh by a dog owned by L.

an invitation to atten'a'the kickoff dinner-for the reoltc'tion. of Harrison_ A. Williams...Democrat, to Congress. The affair'will be held September 9 a t

Shackamaxon ' Country c 1 u bWestfield. and James Delancy'

he expects more than 700 per-sons to attend.. ' .

M-!

!!Banks of 9. Willow street, Mr.iBanks informed "the police at 6p.m. Wednesday that his dog wason a >eash in his custody and wasattacked by another 'dog not.on ja leash when the incident occur-

Loses Driver's LicenseLawrence C. Roberts, 24 years

old, of' 133 Columbia avenue. js

among 49 license revocations ah-

m

?f:?\}

.-.vijM

Kv-T.f-'.

•* A member of St. Michael'sChurch, she was graduated frontSt. Michael's School and was af i ember of the CYO.

tfosary Society to OpenSeaHon Tuesiluy Evening

__£ T.he_Rosary. Society of St. Mich-ael's Church will open its seasonJj ith a meeting Tuesday evening.Members will'meet in the churchfit 8 p.m. to recite the Rosary and

till then adjourn to the school forie business meeting • and social

bour. Social chairmen for thejpceting will be Mrs. John A. Pan-jfcuch and Mrs. Joseph G. Peters.5 Plans for the meeting and a gen-

- iral outline of activities for the(Joining season were completed atI meeting of the executive boardIflonday afternoon at the home ofJjlrs. Alfred Frigola. president, 7guiumit load. . "

v - Attending, were ' Mrs. James

?'alsh. Mrs. James 'McOuire, Mrsvaul Novak, Jr., Mrs. Carl Brutz,

firs. Ed wind Fearns,' Mrs. FrankD'Brien, 'Mrs. Roy Sandford, Mrs.f. Sherman Currie, Mrs, FredHacker and Mrs. J. Jerome Behan.

mm

p RetiresFrom EMMO Stamlard Oil2 Walter A. Humphreys of 332pentennhil avenue was one of agroup of.. 13 employees who re-Qicd this month from the BayonncBellnery of Esso Standard OilCompany..

• fc Mr. Humphreys had 45 years 2(ponths* service und was a Hist

-gas s tinsmithlat the time of his•btirement.- He was tlrst employedlit Bayonne Refinery on April I,

_&0,8;j:ehired_far-the-£ipe-Shop-on4ugiist 26, 19U; transferred io the^in Shop on November 18, 1914,•Where he remained until retire-iient. " : ;•-

William J. Dearden. The localmotorist had his-driver's .liccruerevoked' for 60 days for fourspeeding violations.

it?

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THE CRANFORD CTiTIZEN AND CHRONICLE, THUHSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1954

ploraphile Gardeners Listfall Flower Show Plan$

Plans for the Floraphile Garden' up, Mrs. A. S.-Wells; educationalClub's second fall flower show, pn|. exhibit, Mrs. J. R. Conover andSunday. September 19. at the Mrs. J. A . Bradley;" special pro-!

Plage Three

announced thia week; jtQ. L. Van Inwagen, chair-

TThe affair will,, be open'ironi'3' to 9 p.m.

Entries are to be filed by .Sept-ember 13 with Mrs. J: Shupperin the arrangements classes andwjth Mrs_F. Charles in the horti-culture classes. The., latter classesarc open to the public.

The arrarfge^ent~classes~winfcatura the following subdivisions:

I Library, a composition depicting

-'the W'e o f a b o o k ; t h e Park- anaturalistic arrangement usingdried or fresh material; tiny-totsshop, open to the public, a minia-ture arrangement," flowers andcontainer not to exceed five inches

. ;„ any dimension; the decorator'sshop, open to the public, a com-position using a fabric as an ac-cessory; the art center, a mono-chromatic arrangement using anyco]or on the color wheel; the bar-ber shop, an arrangement in redund white; the apothecary, an all-white arrangement; the antiqueshop', an arrangement in an antique.container; the supermarket, opento the public, an arrangement

., featuring, fruits or vegetables ina basket-type container; the hab-(.i-flifslicry, an arrangement by hus-bands' of members, suitable for aden; the sweep shop, a tablePetting for four, using any. themefor a child's party; and the furni-t"»' inart; an arrangement suit-

"able" for a" television set. "VThere will be 10 subdivisions in

the .horticultural- classes a? fol-lows: 1. Roses—floribunda/hybridtea and any other type/w rose; 2.Dahlias—decorative, norripon, cac-tus, best collection/3. Zinnias—

. giant hybrid, cut/and come againand pompons;j4L Asters -—^giantcretfo, princp_i. and pompon; -5.Marigolds^eollection of giant chry-santheinum-f lowered, carnatieh-

3, *or dwarf marigolds; 6NScaWosa; 7. 'Collection of annuals;

collection of perennlals;; 9.Fancy-leafed caiadiums; and 10.Shrub: worthwhile for fall coloror fruit. .' • . - , • . " •

Exhibitors are permitted only- one entry in 'each classification.

Mrs. H.. I. Mitchell is serving.a_toi_ulti>nLfor_thc_.showt Othercommittees are: Schedule, Mrs. C.W. Stockberger and Mrs. N. H.Biubaker; interior staging, Mrs. J.D. Garbcr, Mrs. L. E.'Moody andand Mrs. F. P. Huston, Jr.; ex-tciior staging, Mrs. J.. J. Collinsand Mrs. J. J. Walsh-

Entries—Horticultural, 'Mrs. W.|v J; Dodds and Mrs. F. Charles; and

arrangements, Mrs. J. Shupper;classification; Mrs1. N. H. Bru-bakef; judges, Mrs. E. Hume; bodpitality, Mrs. W. J. Foppert;awards,.Mrs. J. V. O'Malley; pub-licity, Mrs. J. A. Taddeo; clean-'

Mrs. j . i>. Sorhmerville andK THn7Pldino; program;

M r s R- G- Hoyt; tickets and fi-nance. Mrs. J. R. Phelan. Mrs.FOppert is president 0! the club.

HendricksonCase

Senator Robert Q. HendricksonJR., N. J.) said today in a state-ment that attempts "to discredit"the candidacy of Clifford P. Casefor the United States Senate are"misguided and will prove to beunsuccessful."

'•I know of, such attacks fromfirst-hand knowledge. In my earl-ier years as United States Sena-tor, I tob, was bitterly assailed asbeing 'too liberal,' " Senator Hen-drickson said.

In recent weeks, former Con-gressman Case has been attackedfrom so-called reactionary ele-ments of the Republuran Party.

"Clifford Cdse is/a fine Ameri-can," the New/Jersey senator,said,' "and oru/whose" leadershipis needed in/Lhe Senate by Presj/dent Ei'seprhower, The responsi-bility ofyttepublicans and the priv-ilege of all right-thinking Ameri-ca ny to support the President

•ough the election of Clifford!ase .arc clear hofnr<- in."genatbr Hendrickson noted that

he endorsed- Case's candidacy inhis keynote speech to the StateRepublican convention followingthis year's April primary and saidhe knows that Case "will meas-ure up in every way to what Iknow him to be."

CRANFORDTentative School Caleiular - 1954-55

Month1954

SchoolDays Holidays

SEPTEMBER 16 3-rMeetinc of Administrators

-7V8—T,

'Sight-Saving'Month Opens

.The Union County OptometricSociety .has marked the beginningof national "Sight Saving Month,"September 1 to, 30, with an appealfor greater conservation of "oneof our greatest assets i— eyesight."

Dr. Harold Berman of the localoptometric group pointed out that"at least /Half of fh"e~S7,000 "Ameri-cans who lose their eyesight an-nually go blind because of neglector carelessness.

Declaring that "more than 85percent of the -world, we knowcomes to us,through our eyes/' Dr.Bcrfnari said this is a precious na-tftnal asset which Americans canlittle afford to take for granted.

"If we lost 27,000 men, on tliebattlefield, we would consider it agrave national disaster, but theloss«of 27,000 pairsr of eyes canhave an equally devastating^ effec

BREEN'S WILL BE CLOSEDA I L DAY MONDAY

—: —(LABOR DAY)"~ ~ ^ ^ "

PfcEASErDO YOUR SHOPPINO^EARtY!

THIS WEEK'S BEST BUYSIN HALF GALLONS -

V2 GAL,

GoldJCheck BJeiided Whiskey J.99Breen's Deluxe Bourbon 9.50Golden Wedding 9,95Gilbey'sGin 9.49Gordon's Gin 9.80

OCTOBER

NOVEMBEC

21

17

JANUARY

FEBRUARY

MARCH

APRIL*

MAY

JUNE

18

23

15

21

16

phers* Workshopopens- for pupils

2—Election Day — SrtnwV-closed. 11-12—Teachers' Convention —

School closed •25-26—ThankscivinEr Becess —

. School• closed22-^School closes lor Christmas

Recess (single session)

3—School opens

21-22—Washington's BirthdayKecess-

8-r-_ood Friday — School closesfor Easter Recess, Apr. 8-15,inclusive '

30—Memorial Day — School closed .

22—School closes. Single sessionsJune 20, 21, 22

Total - - - - 184

Note: COLUMBUS DAY. October 12 —School open with appropriate exercises

UNCOLN'S BIRTHDAY. Saturday, February 12 —Observe on Friday with appropriate exercises

Dance Instructor

on the national welfare." he said.Dc. Berman pointed out the eye

j___n_jpX_the_Jnost.-.dc_cate partsof the body, which is why simpleneglect causes the loss of vision.

."This is also .jjvhy the basicrules of eyecare are so important,"he declared.

The best protection for the eyesis a regular eye examination, hedeclared.

"If detected in time, many blind-ing eye diseases can be arrestedor cured. But treatment must bestarted early in order to be effect-ive. Complacency about ones eyescan lead to a needless delay insecuring treatment and can resultin- the complete loss of vision.**

Mrs. Gloyier Named 'Mrs. Jane Glovier of Cranford

is a member of ."'the committeeplanning -the Republican centen-nial celebration and- picnic to be

held September 18 at MonmouthPark, Oceanport. More than 8,000persons are expected. Clifford^ P.Case, Republican candidate forU.S. Senator,'and Mrs. Case andthe 14 Republican candidates forCongress and their wives w,ill at-tend. Vaughn Monroe and theTommy Tucker Orchestra will jx?on hand from 12 noon unpl 4p.m. to entertain the crowd.,

Experimental GroupPopular, Koos Reports

One of the most noteworthy dis-plays 'now drawing crowds atKoos Bros., Rahway^ is a look intothe future called the Experimen-tal Group: a bold new approachto furniture design for tomorrow'sliving. Similar in concept' to theexperimental car-of ther-automo-bilc industry, the ExperimentalGroup is not for sale. It is a

KiwanisCIubSpeaker ShowsHypnotism Value

Value of hypnotism in teachingi_. demumtiateii by Stuillng P.1

Miller-, of Madison; hypnotist and

Thursday durjng the opening ofthe 'hew Mayfair Market,—Kcnil-worth. The. turkey was awarded,to the woman in".the store whohad been married t h e longest.Mrs. Chamberlain and her hus-band celebrated their 59th wed-ding anniversary last Saturday.

MRS. WARREN WEISBURGER

Mrs. WeisburgerReopens Studio ~

Mrs. Warren Weisburger will re-open her dance studio Tuesday inher home at 23 Chester Lang place.

rs^.. Weisburger, the formerYvette Fairhill, is a graduate ,ofCatherine Little School, Philadel-phia, and Ballet Arts, New York.

She has' appeared on Broadwayin the "Red Mill," "As tfte GirlsGo" and on television on "Toastof the Town," the Milton BerleShow and Steve Allen's "Songs forSale." • .". , • •

"A resident of'Crarif:ord"for sixmonths, Mrs. Weisburger formerlytaught dancing at- the CatherineLittleficld School. Philadelphia.•Mm Sit the Ruvel School of Dances'New York. She opened her localstudio last spring.

show-piece which pioneers newmaterials and' mechanical fea-tures never ' before possible, pro-vides a practica.1, well-plannedsolution to • today's space prob-lem.

Developed after years of re-search and planning at a. cost'of$25,000,, the. Experimental Groupincludes in two all-purpose unitsall the requirements of the livingroom, dining room and bedroomin an area just 14x20 Jeet Jong. -

Each basic unit was designed tofunction separately or go togetherWith complete campatibility.

lecturer, at the luncheon'meetingof the Kiwanis Club at/ MarkosRestaurant on" Tuesday. His topic)was "Hypnotism Down/ Throughthe Ages." • ' . ' . '

.Us,ing G. Winfiold Si-ott, a clubmember as a .subjcct/^Mr. Mi'.lershowed how. the wopas of a songwefe easily l&arned under the re-laxing influence of hypnotism andretained by the subject after thespell, was broken. /

Visitors at the mee.ting includedGarry Arthur Newman, grandsonof Arthur F: Metz; Paul Marten,3rd, guest of ' jftussell Hoagland;John Kirchner find Donald Scott,Quests of G. Wintteld Scott. Dr.Kenneth C. MsicKay, guest of Club !

President Kenneth Iversen; Nels jFalkcriberg, Harry Herzfeld andAlbert Cauld, members of the Ro-selle-Roselle Park club, and Wil-liam Miller, guest of David Mur-ray. • . '

William Kohler of the attend-ance and membership committeepresented Past President Chan-ning Rudd a.four-year perfect at-tendance tab for nis 'attendancepin, « . • • • •

The meeting was conducted byMr. Iversen, who reported.that Lt.Governor Herman Dettmer ofWoodbridge will pay an otllcinlvisit to the local club at nextTuesday's meeting.—; r — -

'r~r' " ' Portrait '. '. ~Portrait of a Child, the Houston

Museum of Fin» Arts favorite. _• wonderfully natural_ little girl,painted by U^adairneLebrun. who.lived at the eourt^f Louis XVI anddid a score or more^ofMarie/Antoinette.

portrait* pi

Form Campaign UnitAn organization meeting of _ic

campaign committee for the. re-.,election of Harrison A. Williams,Jr.,' Democrat, to Congress, -washeld last night at the ElizabethCarteret -Hotel.penthouse. Among.r

TJTCJ i L idcnrs-Ticrvrrig 6H t!ie carnT"paign committee are Richard Eg-gers ' and Edward GalTney ofCranforfl; John Bariyasz, AndrewMosca, Michael Glodic "witf'TranlCWanca of Garwopd; arid RichardWeber an&'iMrs. Cr Wickh.am-'bf"Kcnilworth. f ." ' • • - . . '

Auction Sale PlannedBy KiwaViis for October

An auction sale for benefit ofthe charity fund of the CranfordKiwanis Club will be conducted bythe club at Sherlock Hall from 10a.m. to 4 p.m. on October 2. Mem-bers and friends of the club willdonate articles to bo auctioned.

Auctioneers will be Richard Mc-Fadden and Channing Rudd. Com-

1 mittee" chairmen for the event in-clude: John Harney, collections;Fred Gray, Jr., publicity; Dr.Henry Mineur, arrangements, andWilliam McCrea, luncheon.

CRANFORDS

SUNDAY AND HOLIDAYDRUG STORE SCHEDULE

OPEN SUNDAY9 A.M. To 9 P.M.

BELL'SHATHAWAY'S

SEAGER'SBARON'S

WILL BE CLOSED

Woman Wins TurkeyMrs. WWA. -Chamberlain of 1

Adams avenue was awarded aturkey cooked on the S u s a nAdams WABD television show last

^OUR FAVORITE

COLD B i l l• By the. Can

/ • By the .Bottle\ • By the Quart

• By the Case*

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Page 3: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

tHE dtAWypRP c m g E t l AW!) CHRtfmCLE, THURSOAY, SEfoBMBERj, J 8 M

Celebrate Rutz AnniversaryMembers of the"wedding party were guests as Mr. and.Mrs.

Erurin Rutz celebrated their iwenty-ftfth wedding anniversary at aparty at their home, 8 Hawthorne street, Saturday evening. . ' . ,•

Among those present were Mr. and' Mrs. Jules J. -Small ofBahway, Mr. and Mrs. Waltor Boehling of Lake Hiawatha, Mr. and.Mra. James HulA of Ruthpifoid,

liL

and Mr. and Mrs. .George Rennieof New York' City.

Mr. and Mrs. .Small were bestman and maid, of honor at thewedding. Mrs. Boehling, thenMiss Elsie; Reindel of Jersey City,

m

Iff- 5 •>:•.::.••-*

3 ? . : ' I • '•• '•'

life

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il:

ence Werbetk of New York City,wereJjride&naids.-and^Mr.-Rpnni©"was an usher.

Also present. Saturday wereMrs. Freida IJutz of Detroit; Mich.,who stayed oil this week to visitwith her son \and daughter-in-.law. and Mrs. Rutz's mother, Mrs.

-Nannie Sperb of Cranford. ; :

Mr. and Mrs. Rutz were mar-ried on September 1,1929,, at St.Stephen's Church in the Bronx.They .moved, into their presenthoine here 22 years ago. • At thattime Mr. Rutz was employed bythe Vulcan Electric Company in

Shires CelebrateWedding DateAt Open Mouse ..

Mr. and Mrs! E D. Shire ofRockledge,-Fla.,-formerJy~oi-Cran».ford, were entertained at an openhouse-Suhday-by-Mr.—and-MrsrrTrM. Nolan of 321 Reiford 'avenue' incelebration of their 35th weddinganniversary. • . : • •

Mr. and Mrs. Shire formerlyresided at 19 Elm street- Mr.Shire is .retired .from WesternElectric Company. The couplearrived here Saturday and willvisit relatives and friend.-; untilreturning home on September 14.They are the guests of. Mr. andMrs. Nolan.

Among the guests present attrie open house were:,- Mr. and

New York. For the past 17 years M r s - George : Schaffter and Mr.he has" been a letter carrier atthe Crantord Post. Office. " .' '

They'1 have three children, Cpl.Donald Rutz, 21, serving withthe Anr.y in Europe; Phyllis,, 15,entering her junior year at Cran-ford High School, and Audrey,. Jl, who will be in the sixth gradoat Sherman School.. ' "'

Schmidts to MoveTo Connecticut

Mr: and Mrs. Walter. J. Schmidtand .their five children of 305Prospect ave'nue will leave Wed-nesday ' to make their home inRiverside, Conn.

An employee of Standard-Va-cuum Oil Company, .he has beentransferred to the- firm's new plantin Westchester County, N.V.

Residents of Cranford for thepast nine\ .years. Mr. and Mrs£Schmidt have been active mem-bers of • the First PresbyterianChurch. Mr. Schmidt is superin-tendent of the junior department©f-the Sunday School

and Mrs. Harry Rohrback, all ofLake Mohawk; Mr. and Mrs. Sid-ney Logan .of Dunellen, Mrs. FernPrejean of Cranford, Miss A. Ra-mani of Jersey City, Mr. and .'Mrs.Harold Glovier of. Cranford.

Also, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ward-Lw jot Plainfield, and Mr. and

Mrs. William Herzog, Sr., Mr. andMrs. A. J. Da vies, Mr. und Mrs.

Fritz, Mr. and Mis. WTB. Humphries and Mr. and Mrs.E. Calvin Shire, all of Cranford,as well as grandchildren and otherchildren of guests.

bcr.of the finance committee. Mrs.Schmidt is a member of the Mar-garet Greene Guild and they areboth members of the CouplesClub.

-Nancy. Karen and Martha" werestudents in Roosevelt School lastyear, while. Kenneth and Markdo not yet attend school.

The family accompanied by MissMary Moditz of New street re-cently returned from a vacationto •'Journey's End." West Chest-erfield,

Mrs. Edward La Tourcttc of 4Oraton drivd" is expected homethis week from St. Elizabeth Hospital where she. has been a pa-tient for the past ten days.

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Fop-pert of 607 Brookside place enter-tained at duplicate bridge on Fri-day evening. Their guests wereMr. and Mrs. David N. Tyre, Mr.and -Mrs. Herbert Mitchell andMr. and Mrs. Norman Brubaker.

. Mr.-and Mrs. Robert A. Wilsonand their son, Ricky, formerly of

' 17 Colin' Kelly street, moved lastweek to their home at 10 Hillsideplace.

Mrs. Richard Dorian and familyof 214. Elizabeth avenue -returnedtoday from a three weeks' stayat Lavallett*.

Mrs. William Hubiak arid hortilyr —J

t Iroquois road have returnedborne after spending three weeks"as guests of Mr. and Mrs. ErnestCiam at High Falls in the CutskilfMountains, N. Y. Mr. HubiakJoined them there for weck-end.-i.

Robert Juhrto WedGirl From West field

The engagement of Miss LoisAnn Stiles to Robert BernardJulir, son of Mr. and Mrs. WilTHam Juhr, Si.,- of 42 Beech street,has' been announced by' her par-ents, Mr/and Mrs.-Raymond Stilesof 205 Harrison avenue, Westiield.

. The bride-elect is a graduateof WcHtfield High School aiid at-tended Katheri.ne Gibbs Secrc-

x ^ , New. York City. Sheis employed- by the PlainfieldBpard/cif Education.

MrvJuh'r is a graduate of'Cran-ford''f High School and recently,completed 14 weeks' training inelectronics at the Naval TrainingCenter, Great Lakes, III. He isnow• home on- a 15-day leave.Following his leave, he will re-port to the USS Mount Olympusat Norfolk, Va.

No date ' has been set for thewedding.

In Church - Wedding

MRS. WILLIAM D. LOCKE

Locke-DempsterNuptial CeremonyAt Trinity Church-. Miss Elizabeth Dempster, daugh-ter of" Mr. and Mm. William Demp-ster of 104 Riverside drive, be-came the bride of William DavidLocke, son of Mrs.. Joseph. M!tocke of 102 Riverside drive andthe late Mr. Locke, at Trinity.Church on Saturday.

The Rev. Frank V. H. Carthy,rector," performed the ceremony,assisted by the Rev. Ronald G.Albury, curate of Grace Church,Metuchen. A reception followedat the .Winfield Scott Hotel,

The bride was • given in mar-riage by her father. Mrs. Wil-liam J. Dempster of Roselle washer sister-in-law's matron of "ho-nor, and Mrs. A. M. Kossak of 3Oraton drive was bridesmaid.,

Edward J. Locke of Cranfordwas best man for his brother, andWilliam J. Dempster i 61 . Roselle,brother of the bride, and CharlesWaag of Bay Shore, L.I., a cousinof the bridegroom, were ushers.• After a wedding trip to "NewEngland the couple, will reside at215 Chestnut street, Roselle.

A graduate of Roselle ParkHigh School and Berkeley .Sec-retarial School, the bride is em-ployed as a secretary by the At-lantic Refining Company, Newark.

Mr. Locke, a graduate of Cran-ford High School and—UnionJunior College, is a sophomore atRutgers' University, where he ismajoring in hospital administra-tion. He was in the Wavy fouryears. Including service in.Korea.

"'• Mrs. Walter M. -Cooper .andMrs. Robert B. Ackland enter-tained at luncheon on Mondayafternoon at the hitter's home,209 Hojly street, in honor of thebirthday anniversary of Mrs.Richard Guy of 36 Horning ave-nue. \The guests incIudwl.-Mis.Charles F. Hansel, Jr., Mrs. Rob-ert Winkel, Mrs. R. C. Folk, Mrs.William F, Little, Jr., and.Mrs.James Kierhan. • .

Mr.- and Mrs. John J. Bankerof 10 Makatom drive entertainedon Saturday evening for Mr,.and

iMrs. John Brach and Mr. andMrs. Walter E. Thorn.

A family picnic, was held bythe Mome,ttes Club on Sunday atNomuhetfun Park. Attending wereMr. and Mrs. William Hubiak,Mr. and Mrs. John Voss;Mr. andMrs. John Rispoli and Mr. andMrs. Fred De Marco. ' .

were, guests last week of SlrTandMrs. Carter K. P»H..ring avenue.' Mrs. Porter's brother,Mr, Collins, Jr., has just returnedfrom, two years in Korea'.

-cr

Birthday CelebrationFor Sgt. Page and Son

Police Sgt. Harry P..Page of 547Lexington avenue and his son,Harry R. Page of 3 Phillips street,celebrated- their birthdays" Fridayevening at a family gathering atthe .,Lexington avenue address.Sgt. Page became 51 years old andhis son 24: on Friday,

Among those present wereHarry's twin sisters, Alice,. nowMrs. Alfred,, Grickowski of 542Lexington avenue, and Adelaide,now Mrs. Nicholas Penebre, of 4Piirk - terrace, and their husbandsUnd the Penebre children, Joseph,Putricia, Kathy and Deborah; andhis brother, Bradley M. Page ofG;uw<)od, and the wives of thetwo "Honored gues.fsT"

' Mrs. Charles Wilson of 2 Eng-lish Village returned home afterspending two months at Che-beague Island, Me.

Mr. and Mrs. John Hulkowichami their children, Richard, Pa-tricia and Bunny, of 34-Iroquoiriroad have returned hx»nc aftervisiting for a week in Andover.

Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mat-Leanof 111 Spring - Garden street and

Social HappeningsMr. and Mrs., George Ford and

sons, Joseph and George, Jr.,formerly of 300 Centenriial ave-nue, have taken up residence22 Riverside drive.

at -andria.

M i s r>»C»l«. nf 1A9

ennial avenue, a resident of Cran-ford for more than' 70 years, mov-ed last Friday to Lynbrook, LongIsland,' where she will make herhome with a riieciB, Mrs. John A.MacDonough. Miss Doyle wasentertained at dinner recently byMrs. George Schietrum ol 458Lincoln avenue. :. -•

—Mrs-Patrick-J—Grall-and tarn"ily of ;107 Holly street are. vaca-tioning for two weeks • at VisionBeach near. Lavallette.

Clarence Fritz, Jr.,. of 8 Sum-mit road, and Skip Molson of 42West Holly street left last weekfor Los Angeles, Calif., to attendthe annual convention of the PhiGamma Delta fraternity. . . .Theyare students at Lafayette Collegewhere'they .are members of thefraternity.' ." . % ,.,., ,

Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Boyerand children, Janet,. John andGeorge, formerly'of 3 Craig place,have moved to 33 Rosedale road,Overbrook Hills, Philadelphia. Mr.Boyer is employed as a construc-tion engineer by the-Conduit andFoundation Corp. of Philadelphia.Mrs. Boyer formerly was activein Trinity Church . here. -

.Mr. and Mrs. Robert "jTPattqnand son, Donald, of 117 Oak. Lane,are spending this Week vacation-ing in New. .Hampshire.

Mr. and Mrs. C. 'B. Staples andson, Donald; of 14 Elizabeth ave-nue are vacationing this woat Ocean, B.each. -They have astheir guest Charles Ray, Jr.,. of106 Oak Lane.

Mrs. Edward "T.Towler has re-fturned to Hampton Hall after Va-cationing in Maine and NewHampshire. • .

Mr. and Mrs. Norman R. Jonesahd son, Robbie, of'16 Sylvesterstreet, have concluded a week'svacation at Riveria Beach on theMaiiasquanPleasant.

River, near Point

,:Col. Donald McGrayne, USA,formerly of Cranford, spent'themonth of August vacationingwith his wife and daughters,

.Misses Nancy and Sharon Mc-•Graync, at Beach Haven , Park.They will return to 'their homein Baltimore this week. MissNancy McGrayne will spend sometime in Canada before returninghome, and Miss Shivron McGraynewill visit with Mr. and Mrs. Don-ald McGinnis of 724 Linden place.

Mr. and Mrs. George H. Batesof 18 Hampton street- will returnnext week after vacationing attheir_ summer home' at SatanacInn, N. Y. '

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bcchtold,Jr., of 8 'Columbia avenue, hovereturned from a tour of SouthernCalifornia, Colorado' Rockies andthe Grand Canyon and Ypsehiite-NalionaLEarks^Stopavers^-atJUjs-Angcles, San Francisco and Yose-mite were made with side tripsto the giant redwood trees, Cata-llna Island,- Hollywood',' BeverlyHills, San Diego and Mexico.

Miss Carol Wooley of 9 Forestavenue returned Tuesday fromspending several Weeks in Aiex-

, Ir»d;

Mr. and Mrs. Can Swinton aridfinnghtpr-: fjay nnd Mg. "f '18Locust drive, have returned froma two weeks', vacation at Laval-lette.,/. '•' ' ;'_., •"

Mr. andMrs. L. E. Lisk of 604Orange avenue are vacationingfor two weeks at The SamplerInn, Ocean Grove. ..' .,.•,

Public Safety ; Commissionerand: Mrs.nClarenceJj.-Fritz_of-8.Summit road entertained at a.barbecue, supper ..Saturday eve-,ning in honor. of Mr. andJMrs.Everett D. Shire of Rockledge,Fla., for.rner.Iy of Cranford. Amongthose present were: Mr:' and 'Mrs.Thomas -Nolan and children, Mr.and Mrs. Roy Irving, Mr. andMrs. E. Calvin Shire arid chil-dren and Mr. and Mrs. WilliamHumphries and children.

' Mr. and Mrs. Victor Whitmeycrand' children, Darlehe and Victor,Jr., of 405 Manor avenue havereturned • after a two-week vaca-tion at Lavallette.

Mr. and Mrs. George M. ChWery. and .Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Siry,all of South Union avenue, re-cently returned from a motor tripip) the West. Many points of inter-est were visited including Yellow-stone National Park, Bryce Can-

Lyon_and_ithe^GtandJCanyjon. Ihe.Bad Lands and the Painted Des-ert. The ir\p also included^ tourover the Big Horn Mountain.

Mrs. Cameron E. Ogden andsons, Cameron and David, havereturned to their home in Moun-tain Brook,- Ala., after spendingthe summer here visiting her par-ents, Mr. and ,Mrs..:Jacob Stan-ley of 9 Sylvester street, and herbrother-in-law and sister, Mr., andMrs. Jon Hoffmann.of 10 Willowstreet. • < "'' • .'

Mr. qnd Mrs. A. J. Eisenbachand children, Thomas, Catherine,Louise, Robert and Margaret, of41 Cayuga road, are moving today.to Scranton, Pa., where Mr. Eisen-bach .has been transferred bybusiness. Residents of Cranfordfor -•seven^-years1---Mr-.—Eisenbach-is affiliated with the DaystromInstrument Company, a subsidiaryof American Type Founders,Elizabeth. . . -

Mr. and Mrs: Irving. Weiss andchildren, Robert and Susan, ofUnion,' will... take up residence,today in their new home at 10Shetland drive..

Mr. and Mrs.' James Blundelland their children, Barbara andJimmy, formerly of 101 Mohawkdrive, have moved-to Morrisvllle.Pa.

', • !• " : ' ' • ' • ' " • • - - \ • ' : ' • • ,

THE CRANFORD 'CITIZEN AND C! CLtl, THTJR9DAY, 1954 Psgejflye

Daley-AndersonRites SaturdayAt Camp Chapel

The outdoor chapel of CampOckatiicron, Medford, • was - - thesetting Sdt'mday fur the wwldlrrg

daughter of Mrs.. B, Hayes Ander-son, Jr., of Media, Pa., and Court-land James Daley, son of Mr.and Mrs. Courtland Daley of As-bury Park."

The Rev. William Ottrim offi-ciated at the- double ring cere-mony. A reception followed, atthe-LJcamp_let_2Q0_guestS;_-Giveri-in-marriage-by her-bro-

ther, B. Hayes Anderson, III, thebride was attired irv a white em-rbroidered organdy b a 11 e r i n-a-length gown and she carried anold-fashioned bouquet of whiterose buds1 •and^-carnations.

Mrs. William Mulford of Media,Pa., was matron of honor and MissJudith L. Hibberd was her cous-in's bridesmaid.

Elwin Barton of Pitman was thebest man and Frank. Ramsey ofCranford and Francis Parkes ofWilmington. Del., ushered.

A cousin of the bride,. WilliamF. Hibberd, was the"'organist. '•

Following a wedding trip toMaine, the couple will' make theirhome in Garwood.

Mrs. Daley is a graduate ofHaddonfield High School and Ur->sinus College, Collegeville, Pa.,and formerly was a teacher' atthe. Nether Providence HighSchool, Wallingford, Pa.

years and formerJy_KaS—with-thei^-

.Mr. a graduatejt>f.As-h i i t

B ) . gbury Park High School, TrinityCollege, Hartford, Conn., and Col-umbia University. He teaches sci-ence at Cranford, High. School andand is soccer coach and head ofthe visual 4>ids department..' Dur-ng World War II, he saw servicein the U.S. Navy. "

Joan RanhoferBecomes Bride

Miss Joan B. Ranhofer, daugh-ter of Mrs. Jessie M. Ranhofer ofLinden, formerly of Cranford, be^came the bride Saturday, of WilrHam W. Pascoe, son of Mr. andMrs. Philip J. Pascoe of SouthPlainfield, in a ceremony in Cal-vary Lutheran Church.

The Rev. Arnold J. Dahlquist,pastor— of f iciatedv — ; • --•-

Miss Carolyn Ranhofer of Lin-den was her sister's maid of ho-nor. Charles Monk of Plainfieldwas best man. ' • ; .

Upon their return from a w e d -ding trip, the couple wi l l resideat 324 North avenue, Fanwood.

Mrs. Heinz Wiegand and h e rdaughter, Jean, , of 38 . Iroquoisrbadr are spending this week atAsbury Lodge i n the Catskills.

Dr. and Mrs. C. Lyndall I^nappof 410 High street spent the week-end a T B o w Lake, N. H..„ . '

Return for Visit HereFrom Florida Borne

Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Van Ness.!Sr., formerly of 16 Arlington road.!have taken up residence in .their:new home in S t Petersburg1, FIa.j The marriage of Miss BerthaThey moved to Florida in July- Anna Settele. daughter of Mr. :ind

Sgt. John Thall,Bride on WeddingTrip to P<

Summer Session ConceptChanging, UJC Dean/Says

The pre-war concept of the summer session as merely anextra or makeshift session, designed to serve a limited number "

Visits Scotland's Edinburgh Castle

ana are spenoong uus weeK nere ; f o a n l

S g t .Winfield, and

M. Thau,

I extra or numtial students, has been changed. Dr. Kenneth C. MacKay

X l Utanuf Union Junior ColltA, .euiiiy — l

' summer session; Dr. MacKay sa'vs, hn'ytn^i'n on an i:in-law and sister, Mr.' and Mrs-'Mr. and Mrs. Howard^Thailj . H. Purcell of. 130 Spring Gar-; Cayuga Nrflwd, was heldSund;den street.. ,', '•-|sL John the Apostle

Residents of Cranford for 27; Clark-linden.

l -ofof 2

inChurch,.

[[ Cyearsji Mr. a id Mrs. Van Ness;were 'members of the CranfArdrMethodist Church. Mr. Van Nesswas employed by. the Rahway.News-Record-.for the past she:

Rev. Charles P. O'ConnorLor. officiated, A re-

followed at LePree's,- Hu.

art of -the college organiza'tionand planning. . The impetus of, the

L.turning veteran interested in-jra-crting "P n i s iorma} educationand thf'desire of college students

l to spend their summersprofitably m

The. bride • was given

a stimulating en-viornmi-'nt of the campus augurs

_Mac'Kay_.t h c f u t u r e

Cranford TeacherMarried in Union

Miss Shirley Louise Hansen.daughter of Henry G. Hansen ofUnion' and the late Mrs. Hansen.and Pvt. Donald Sanford Young.USA, son of Mr. and Mrs. CharlesS. Young of Dumont, were mar-ried Saturday at the First Bapt-ist Church, Union. ( )

Upon their return from a motortrip to the New England states,the couple will make their homeat 8, Lawn terrace. Mrs. Youngi Mr. and Mrs: Raymond O'NVill

31

Enrollment for the tw6 six-week sessions this summer cx-reeded 200 students who reside in

New Jersey communities lo-tJci in Union, Essex, Monmouth

dn'd Middlesex' counties. Eliza-beth, as usual, sent the most stu-denti 1o the college-' with-Cran-

•- ™ford supplying the second largestPark High School and formerly; • , , l j . l l Eifihteen Students reside in

j-Vega .of Elizabeth Was- matron-0(honor. . William Lassi • of Wt~;t.field was best man and John pj|_'ulski of Winfield and JosephTucker of Clifton ushered.

Following a wedding trip to thePoconos. the .couple will reside inChicago. .

Mrs. Thall , attended •ly

was . employed by- Airtron, Inc.'l i d "linden.

A graduate of 'Cranford HighSchool. Sgt- Thall formerly \vasemployed-.by Boyle-Midway, inc-He is stationed at'O'Hare Inier-national Airport, Park- :e, Hi.

Elizabeth- and 13 in Cranford.During the summer sessions, a

wide, variety, of "courses are avail-able to'accommodate students and

has been heavy if;; and businpss1 fields

I with the science and liberal artsIcurrit'iilums following, the co!leg«-president said, It was also pointed.

Will teach in the Cranford school and their children, Robert and .WJ^L the UJC president thatsystem this falL Mr. Young is! Carol, of 19 Madison avenue have • " P> •Stationed at Fort Monmouth. Both'returned from two weeks spentare graduates of Jersey City Statef at Shejburne Falls, Mass., andTeachers - College.

Mr. and Mrs.. J.- R. MacDonaldof 215 Orchaird street will cnter-tairi at cocktails on Saturdayevening for a group of friends,preceding the dance'at the EchoLake Country Club, Westfield.

South Hero. Vt. During theirstay in Vermont, they also visifojtheir _son. Barry. OTSeilL Avho - has -been working his summer vaca-tion at Oak Ledge Manor, Burling-ton. V t He will return shortly tothe University of Vermont in Burl-ington'for his sophomore year.

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Westfleld 2-3423Open Mon. Eves.

Madison avenue returned onSunday afU-r spending a week atHarwichport, Cape Cod, Mass.

Coir(melFashi(mpreiients;AN OPEN and SHUT CASE

DRESSES

Wool Jerseys

SKIRTS

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cottons for theschool-bound

M « ourIn the fabrics canter

FABRICSmPLICITY AND McCUUX PATRRN8

CENTER15-17 NORTH AVE.,W. CRanford 6^505

Reeves Brothers combed washable corduroy.Advertised in Life Magazine, August 16th.

Colors: Red, Royal and Shrimp

LABOR DAY WEEK-END SPECIAL!Button Trimmed

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32 Eastman Street CranfordFREE PARKING IN REAR OF STORE

— - — OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS ^

I courses-designed'to rneet theland interests of adult personnel| who are not degree candidates(are available in the-humanities as| veil as in the sciences, businessland"ohRineeriiig fields.' '"' "~~

The second term of the summer,• sessions'comes to an end Septem-Ibor 10. ' . • '•"

SOCIALSMr. and Mrs. John M. Fabrcy

land their sons, William and Jamos•of .Kochesten N. Y., were week-lend guests, of Mr. and MrSi C. L.I Van In'wagon of 19 Oak lane.

Jay Banker, son of Mr. andiMrs. John Banker . of 10 Maka-Itom drive, was honored at a party[Friday evening in • celebration ofIhis lourteenth birthday anniver-

sary. Fourteen guests from Cran-ford attended. v

Mr. ! . gnerand their daughters, Susan, and

Judy, of 37 Algonquin drivrmimi'd home after spendingweek in.Westbrook, Conn.

and! Mrs. Frank . Wagneri d

p : A ddoins of 321 North Union avenue Ientertained' at a dinner party onSaturday evening. Their guestswere Mr. and Mrs. Robert Win-"kel, Mr. and Mrs. Charles F.Hansel, Jr*,. and Mr. andHenry Keep, of Cranford, RobertShepherd a'nd Miss Carol Morri-son of New York. Mr. Shepherdwas their guest for the week-end.

Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Tartarand their children, John, Joanand Jane, formerly of Westfield,have taken up residence atMohawk drive.

Mrs, C. B. Ogden and her sons, vJohnny and David, of-32 Iroquois•!road have returned home after |spending the summer months atOcean

. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. MacDonaldand their .-daughter. Miss TarniMacDonald,' of ]215j6rchard~streetwill leave tocfay* to spend a fewday* • visiting Mrs., MacDonaldNmother, Mrs. James Gifford Scullof Atlantic City.

Linda Lee, Sally Ann and Wil-liam toward Carter of '"New

ed commentaries for<a,'Pittsburghtelevision station.' She majored inart^ at Pennsylvania College forWomen, Pittsburgh.

mf.••- ., .7- ...-/V- -A gradua te of Granford High*'<$^f?f"'' School in 1950. Miss Holroyd dur-

' ' < * ^ ' ing her. college career ' showedpaintings and sculpture in the ln-

r'SUtu Tcjchcis' Cpllei;i.- Co-

GOP Slates Meeting r wilt havo it_s initial «rxt ::ng of the ' The club's board of directors will. fall st-nson -:.5 3:!5 ii.:r!. W«-diu-s- ; meet at""7:3f> p.m. Wednesday prior.

The Cranford Republican Club day in the- pr.^y.ct-j^l bui:dn:cj.'to the regular meeting. -•i'W

erative Exhibit and in other ex-hibits. .- •

I'oi

Brunswick havethis, week with

been , visitingtheir grand-

mother, Mrs. Thomas F. MLT-ritt, Sr., of 1 Spruce street. Theirmother is the former Miss^WetonaMerritt. . '

HopTh« first succencful automobile

A visitor to Scotland's capital, .Edinburgh, for the Inter-,-national •-Festival 6f-Music;and -Drama is "Miss" Johanna Holroyd,"daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Holroyd, Jr., of 217 Centralavenue.. She it shown, here at-the entrance .to historic EdinburghCastle with one of the kilted soldiers of the garrison.

Miss HolroydVisits EdinburghMusic Festival

After completing her studies atthe University of London, MissJohanna Holroyd, daughter of Mr.

c u i a m o b i l etrip from San Francisco "to New 217 Central avenue, visited the In-Yk d to 1903 "York w«i tnade to 1903.

Drama at Edinburgh, Scotland,last month.

Miss Holroyd who sailed for Eu-rope on June 23 expects to returnhome in .November.' She took asix.week's course in art at the Uni-versity of London under a scholar-ship granted by the Institute ofInternational Education in NewYork. Miss Holroyd .expects toenter the field of commercial art.

. . s. While: in England, she Hasternational Festival of Music and j been making sketches and record-

a n d M r s - Holroyd, Jr., of

- B I R T H S -Mr: and Mrs. Milton F. Hager-

strom of 5 Oneida place have an-nounced the birth of a- sort,Steven Andrew, on August 5 atMuhlenberg Hospital, riainUeld..Mr. and MrsT Andrt-w Bain of15_Retford_avenuc-aro-the-muter—nal grandparents.' '

Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Good-rich of 127 Roosevelt avenue have.announced the birth of their firstdaughter, Ruth. Williams, on Aug-ust -23 at'Elizabeth General Hos-pital. They . also have two sons,Robert and James.

Their fifth son, Mark Thomas,was born to Mr. and Mrs. JohnP, Kerry of 433 North Union ave-nue-on August ^4 at Sti-ElizabethHospital. The couple also has onedaughter. • —•;

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hayeck of515 Centennial avenue are receiv-ing congratulations on the birthof a son, Samuel George, on Aug-ust 24'- at Muhlenberg HospitalPlainfield. They also .have ndaughter, Natalie.

Mr. and MrsT'philip R. McGin-nis of Aiken, S. C, announce, thebirth of twin sons, Peter Mertonand" Michael Gord6iir"Iast'~Thurs~day. The couple also has twogirls. Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Me-Ginnis of .724 Linden place arethe paternal grandparents.

Mr, and Mrs. Archie G. BirdJr., of 600 Spruce avenue, Gar-wood, announce tHe birth of adaughter,. Dorothy Ann, at Muh-lenberg Hospital, Plainfield, lastWednesday. The paternal grand-parents are Police Sgt. and Mrs.Bird, Sr., of 530 Orchard street.Maternal grandparents are Mr.and Mrs. Anthony Bickunas of 59Burnside avenue. Mr. and Mrs.Bird have another daughter,Karen Lee, 2 years old;-*-1

SPALDINGV > SHOES

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17 NORTH AVE., W.Next To Cranford Theatre

• • • • • i - '•

^rrt^—ifnn-i '-,-,-,--•-»- -*•

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I: V I

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m•mi

111

fashion is a l w a y s al lowed i j ie very "last w o r d '

- > - v '..-•;.i• - ' i . ' > ' : : '

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I sports

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}

Page 4: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

Pate Six

• • - ' , . . - y . : .

'>-,'"'V -V/ ' • • ' " ' •' ":' • V ' - — • ;,J -•• ' L! i 1 <*•

THE CRANFORD CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 2. IBM

ill

i

OBITUARYJoseph A. Cox

Services will be concucted at i „ „ ' ,u- ' ' •the First Baptist Church at 1:30 R o M ? l l c ' t h l s c v c n i n c -pirn. Saturday for Joseph A."Cox. 1 " ' h ("m""""' "•"*•

| Judkins Memorial Funeral Home,'Twelfth avenue and Morris stre'et,

or at the(church

"77T High street, who died |hf*:irt 'attnrlr' 'Tiipvri:»v" :it

Born In Dihwlddle, Va., Mr. CoxTiipsTinhe) hadHampton Hall,;where

employed as h stewardyears. The Rev. BenjarniiT~W. D.Allen,.; D:D., pastor, will officiate.

been j than' 55 years.. He wa* chairmanfor 541 of the board of deacons, of the

Interment will, be inBest' Cemetery, Dover.

Heavenly

The body may be viewed at the

i First Baptist Church and superin-tendent of the Sunday Schoolthere.

He ' was a member and oldestpast master of Stone Square Lodge

38, F and A M , and a member of: King. 84, of 2 Hamilton avenue,Zerubal Chapter 5, Royal Arch! who served with the Lehigh Val-Masons; • Jo$ephiis Lodge 16, ley Railroad for 50 years as a civilKnights Of Pythias, and'Ivy Leaf,'engineer, were conducted at GrayCourt f C l t h ll f P l i f l d Memorial. 12 Springfield avenue.Court of Calanthe, all of Plainfield.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. ILouise Cox; four sons. Charles.James and Roland of Cranford and IJudson of Chattanooga, Tenn'.; ajduu«l;tcr, Mr;

Monday afternoon by the Rev.pastorof

develop the New York division ofthe line and its terminals. He re -tired in 1940 and became.a privateconsulting engineer. During WorldWar II he was employed at theBayonne Naval Depot .

Mr. King . was. a member of the'New Jersey State Board of Pro-

: First-Presbyterian Church. In-^fcssional Engineers and-Land Sur-

of" Detroit, Mich.; two brothers. I Mr. King died' Friday „ in thiWilliam of"Cranford and James of i Wftkes-Barre (Pa.) General HosKing and Queen County. Va.; fourgrandchildren, and four great-grandchildren.

Arthur M. King

pita! following a titan attack; Hewas visiting in Wilkes-Barre Whenhe became ilKon August 22/. Born in Dresden, N. Y:, Mr

. , King came to Cranfbrd from New]sark in 1928. During his service

Funeral services for Arthur M. I \xilh the Lehigh Valley he helped

& ) . • * £ • • •

Take a holiday from the kitchen this Labor Day, weekend!Enjoy easy, breezy meals in your favorite outdoor eating spot.Everything you need for wonderful fun-feasts Is right here atCHAS. KURTZ MARKET. We've the pick of picnic pleasers . . .cues for barbecues . . . and the best buys in food supplies forALL your holiday meals. And best of all •— you'll save realmoney because every Item is LOW PRICED for our LABORDAY FOOD SALE. .

COCA-COLA Plus Deposit

ARMOUR'S

CORNED BEEF HASHHORMELS SPAMLIBBY'S

PINEAPPLE JUICELIBBY'S

SLICED PINEAPPLELIBBY'S

MAXWELL HOUSE '

INSTANT COFFEE

FRESH KILLED

timitnt^iitEYsREADY-TO-EAT

SMOKED HAMSIMPORTED

DANISH HAHFruits & Vegetables

TENDEB . '

YOUNG BEETS bu.5c

from LOOK Magazine'sDredin Kitchen

18-oz.cans

46 oz. can 29c

Maxwrll HouseCOFFEE

Borden's Instant

I-ilLsbury'sCEI'ST

MK'orawk'jSHANK END

Aunt Jrminu'sI'ANCAKE FLOVB

ImportrdDAMSU HAMS llb.SI.39

2 Ib.

Quality Meats

!>>U'ANSON'8

tMCKEN TIES 29cNEW GREEN

CABBAGE..LOCAL.

ib.

5c

DOLE'S

PINEAPPLE JUICE .:s2can*-29eS N O W - C R O P __ "•'

-fctM-tH>rV

WHITE TL'VA

lHM-Air —AIR

TrrndDETERGENT 2Ic.

ran 35c

$1.49

. 31c

E .-.-...;.. 2 «m«r28r 10 Ib. S2 25 lb. $4.49

PHONE

6-0595 DELIVER.

OWN E D & OPERATED BYBUERKUN & SYS ES KEY. INC

INION AVE. Storo Hours: 8 A. ML to 6 P. M. Daily CRANFORD

SUNSHINE

BROWNIES

the Clinton Hill Lodge of Masons,-j^NewarElppnsistory.

Surviving are his wife. MrsGeorgia Anderson King; twidaughters, the Misses Helen anRuth King, both at home, and abrother, Charles, of Lake Bluff,I1L

7 Eipieit R. BcrtraridErnest Robert Bertrand,

^ybars old,, of 127 Columbia^ ave-nue, a port engineer and survcyor, died Saturday in the StatenIsland Marine Hospital afterbrief illness. Mr. Bertrand became ill August 16 as he was e.turning from the Mediterraneanon the SS Newbery Victorywas taken off the ship by aCoast . Guard cutter. He wasserving as chief engineer on thiship. " " " • ' .

A native of Philadelphia, hiattended schools there. He hadresided' in Cranford since 1935.Mr. Bertrand had spent - most d'his life in the Merchant Marineand allied services,, He served asa port engineer for "Cities Servicefor 15 years and in a similar capa-city for American Foreign Steam-ship Company,. He had been withthe Pudential Steamship Corp-oration-of New-York-€ity-for tHepast few years.

During World Wat- H he" wasengaged in reparing and rebuild-ing ships. He had recently salv-aged the Ncwbcrry Victory, whichwent aground on the rocks offCasa Blanca, and was returningthe ship to this country for thePrudential .Steamship Corpora-tion when he was stricken.

GOP to OpenDrive at Dinner• A-testimonial dinner September

23 at the Flagship, Union, in honorof Charles F. Beijrdsley of Spring-field, former chairman, of theUnion uoumy Republican Committen, will serve as \iw

cicty of Naval' Architects andMarine" Engineers, the AmericanPhiladelphia Turners. and of theZion. Reformed Church, Philadel-phia. . ,

His only survivor .is a' sister,Miss Freda E. Bertrnad, of Phila-delphia. • . •

Funeral services""will~be" heldtoday front Miss Bertrand's homein Philadelphia. Interment willbe in Mount Peace Cemetery,Philadelphia:

Miss A. M. Bulwinski

M. Bulwinski. S3, of 61 Osborneplace, were conducted by the Rev.Frank ' y". H. Carthy, rector . ofTrinity Church, at the home Sat-urday afternoon. Interment wasin Rosehill Cemetery, Linden.

Miss Bulwinski died in Muhlen-berg Hospital, Plainfield, last Wed-nesday after a long illness. A na-ive of Elizabeth, she had lived in

Cranford 25 years. She was .grad-uated from. New Brunswick HighSchool in 1919.

Surviving are a brother, J. Wil-iam Bulwinski of South Bound

Brook, and six sisters, the MissesHelen and Alberta Bulwinski, athome; Mrs. Alice Urbanowitz of

ranford, Mrs. Jane H. Bj-eese of

ano of Elizabeth and Mrs. John

Family Life'I'm going to work this fall and

have wondered whether ' to sendmy child to nursery school 'or getsomeone to come .in dnd take careof him," say a conscientious mo-hcr. "It's always seemed to mehat young children should be at

home and not parked-out some-•where-.- -Btrtr-latclyrVcrhcardTsontrthings—that—made—me—think -the-youngstcr would really benefitfronj nursery^ school."^,,.,.,,, .„ : „

Modern nursery schools providegood experience and training forpic-school children. . They are agreat deal more than just a placeo" "park the kids." Nurserychools arc a convenience to work-iijj mothers, but whether mother

Works or not, nursery school, ex-perience benefits children,

A good nursery school has ataff of persons especially trainedo understand children's emotions

and the implications of their be-havior. . The play materials andthe program arc provided to suithe children. The nursery schoolprovides experience in living withithcr children, in supervised playwith good equipment, and in aood emotiohar climate that helplive the child a feeling of security,treiigth, i n d e p e n d e n c e andchievement.The experiences of a good nurs-

ry school, selected with care, can

iiirsery school cannot be expectedo tukc thc place of the family, but

can supplement and - helpitrengthen family relationship!)nd family life.

'It is not enough that parentsprovide their children with all the

iterjul things of life. They owehem also good example and alertind loving care. Part of this alert-ness should be an awareness ofthe child's problems, his activitiesjnd associates.' It is ironic com-ment on the parent's intelligencewhen the mother of a young slayercries in bewilderment: "But. hewas such a good boy!' "

—Buffalo (N.Y.) New»

for the GOP campaign this falin Union County.! . ,

This was' announced .yesterdayby Edward' C. McMahon of 20Parker avenue, former CranfordRepublican ''municipal chairman,

_who_is serving-as chalrm^ of Jhecounty-wide dinner committee.The affair is being sponsored bythe Union"C6unty~Regiilar~ReT

publican Organization, Inc.Former Congressman Clifford

P. Case of Rahway, Republicannominee for United States Sena-tor, and Fred E. Shepard of 'Eliz-abeth, GOP nominee for Congress,will be among the speakers. High-light of the evening wil) be atalk by a prominent national Re-publican lender.

Tickets for the dinner, which isexpected to attract a banner at-tendance, are now on sale andmay be1 obtained in Cranford fromMr. McMahon.

School CrossingOfficers Reviewed

Importance of their work% inprotecting the lives of Cranford's

Chief William A. Fischer as areview of special officers was heldat police .headquarters Tuesdayafternoon in preparation for theopening of school next Thursday.

The officers were inspected byChief Fischer and by Capt. LesterW. Powell, who will supervise themen on their school..posts.

Special officers and ; their as-flHrnpntc. Hnrinfl ihp school VCar

wilt be: George Bartow, RooseveltSchool; Henry Pujat, High School;Anton Specht, Cleveland SchoojfAugust Bohman, Alden street andNorth Union avenue;^-AugustusBrady, Sherman School;Rinn, South Union 'and

John McKicrhan, St.JofinTCol-'

avenues;Michael'sins (replacing Fred Farmer, re-

signed), Lincoln School.

Two Local <*irlsIn Nursing Class

Two Cranford girls arc membersof the Class pf 1957 at ElizabethGeneral Hospital School of. Nurs-ing. •

They are: Miss Nancy A. Lock-wood, and Miss Mary L. Lyons.They were guests t Monday at a':ea at the Nurses' Home. ^-

They will' report back to theNurses' Home Monday at 10 p.m.and begin classes Tuesday morn:ing at Union Junior College.

Stones Pj!|t on. Tracks,Railroad Police Report

Capt. Lester W. Powell reportedTuesday • that he-had conferredwith the parents of two 10-year-old boys" who were said to haveput-stones on the Jersey CentralRailroad tracks just east *iof-theroundhouse. • -—A~reuurt thai ho^s~rHjtf~pTacedstones on the tracks was receivedfrom the railroad police Fridayevening. Sgt. Harry Page investi-gated at that time but reportedhe' found no one in the area andno stones on the tracks.

TwelfthHStreet• *

Home Burns AgainKENILWORTH—Firemen were

again called to a frame structure

at 245. North Twelfth street tofight a blaze last night at qbuut

6;40. . -, It is. believed the blaze started

f-ra the first floor' partitions anjspread to the attic, Most of thc.interior was, gutted, fire

R e p o r t . ' • . . • • ; •

s . j n i

Chief Leon Tripodi reports i,04a-invcattgating thc brazenris1i^~known how it started. •. The same1, structure was t}y(.scene of a (ire in a sofa in a livingroom of one of the apartmentsJuly. Following that firing Inspector" Fred teipol ton-idemned the home. No, one \vasresiding there at the time of \Jt-night's' fire. ~—— —: -v; |

Members of, the KenihvorthVolunteerT^re-Departmem^w^ron the scene about an hour.

— BUV IN CBANFORD —

Your Invitation to

UFESGREATEST

MOMENTBe/ore choosing your wedding

loviutions be SQIC to sec cbc

complete cange of fonnol and '

tbovn IQ our sunplc otalo^QC

At pdcec far less duo

*>onld ffnicoi po pty tot

qoaBrjr imritadoo^ they a n

beandfuOy pnxfaccd la tbe

Evcdast Process on fine papeit

drattforft (Btti|nt'21 ALDEN STREET CRANFORD

Established 1897

It SPRINGFIELD AVENUE, CRANFORD :

We offer residents of Cranford and vicinity an

outstanding funeral home, complete with air con-

ditioning, organ, large light rooms for your every,

convenience. Our own display room.

y

AND ClfeftNfcLfe, THURSDAY, gfipffeMBER^g. 1954

A&P !S READY WITH BUYS GALORE!

Extension Serviceplans to Be ToldAt Meeting Here

Representatives of many localorg;iiiirations will mccl ;•• CAIV

licrTn r-hnrchat 1:30 pjn.to hear Mrs. Mary W.

Irm^rong, Union County homel int discuss plans for the UnionCounty Home Economic Service ofputi;t.rs University in this area.

Lecture" topics and instructionalnrogrums available . through the^tension service, including torn-

re!ations^-faniily_ ecpnoinics,nc management, food and nu-

trition, and-.clQthing selectionjndconsti uction, will be outlined byMw. Armstrong and M i s s Annap,ierr, assistant home agent. •

Miss Carolyn Yuknus, associatehome agent, also is availablethrough the extension service forconducting clothing classes, andpromoting 4-H Clubs for youngpeople.

Arrangements . for next week'splanning meeting were made byMrs. B. E. Schneider, representingthe "women" of the host church.

All local women's groups are in-vited t» Send representatives tothe. meeting. ' . . -.

Towne Beauty SalonIn New Quarters Today

The Towne Beauty Salon, form-erly of 108 Walnut avenue, will beopen for business today in its newand larger quarters at 110 Walnutavenue. .Features;;at,the. new .ad-dress include separate rooms forwashing, setting, drying and tint-ing hair, in addition to a pleasantreception room.

Mrs: Rose Sachs of Watchung,proprietor of the salon,- came toCranford in 1947, when she boughtthe Cavanaugh Beauty Shop at 4Eastman street. After three yearsthere, her business had grown to.apoint where she had to move intothe larger quarters at 108 Walnut

•eiiue.—GontlnuedI has necessitated a second move.

Before opening her. shop inCranford, Mrs. Sachs was a beau-tician in a department store andlater in a shop in Plainfield. -Thenshe and a partner operated theFan Lady Fair in "Fanwoodforthree years until the outbreak ofWorld Warll. . '

TUi week AIP Siper MuleisSelf-Service stores will be

0pento9P.M.Thursday

and FridayClosed, Monday

Sept. 6 , Labor Day

Local Men.to AttendAlpha Sigma Phi Session

G. WaddiU of 127 Oakane~wJll~represenrthe~Davisfatid

Elkins College Chapter of his col-lege fraternity. Alpha Sigma Phi,at its biennial convention. Thefraternity, founded at Yale Uni-versity in 1845, will meet this yearat Port Huron, Mich., during theweek after Labor Day.

The convention, which is thegoverning body of the fraternity,will be composed of delegates fromthe 55 undergraduate chaptersacross the country. The- meetingswill also feature addresses by na-tionally prominent alumni.

Mr. WaddiU, a senior at Davisand Elkins this year, is presidentofhis chapter. •

Also attending from 'Cranfordwi" be Mr. and Mrs. Arba S. Tay-lor of 611 Brookside Place. Mr.Taylor is a member of the GrandS l S i g m a Phi.

Boned Chicken

Deviled Hani

Swift's Prtin

Uiulafwood*.

Lundiaaa meat

ARMOUR'S STAR

Corned Beef Hash23«WA5. Ilk

OffliW

Chopped HamDeviUdHam 2Vimna Sansage

Treat

League Furthers PlansFor Children's Concerts

Final plans for acquainting thepublic with details for the JuniorService League's concert series forchildren were completed Tuesdayevening at a meeting of theleague's ways and means com-wittee at tee home of., the

M Xman, Mrs. L; M. Tucker, 8 Pitte-field street. The first concert willbe held October 30.

d i r ^ f e T a B g e l i n g l S i e »Mrs. R. B. Wttkel, league presi-dent; Mrs. Robert M. Crane, Mrs.J- L. Matteson, Mrs. Henry Keep,Jr.. Mrs. Charles F. Hansel. Jr.,Mrs. Charles H. Griffiths, Mrs.Robert L. Clare, Jr., and Mrs.n«dKley C. Folk. Representing thepublicity , committee were-uMrs.William F. Uttle, Jr., chairman,and Mrs. Santiago PorcellaTHL :

Exlensive VandalismReported at New Home

Extensive damage was done byvandals in the house he is build-ing nt 75 Spruce street, it Was re-^rted to the police on Monday by

ter Bender of 104 Preston ave-nue.

IInvestigation by . Sgt. Edward

*€ revealed that ty panes of glassad been broken in 18 windows,

•Wno Wooden window frames had***'" broken and flw c i ^ r i f ^

Chleku Broth

Riee Kritnies

SWAHSOM'StartChicken 5» 33c

Turkey

Chicken Fricassee

GROCERY BUYS GALORE!

Pineapple Juice 3 85cIstesBnois

Grapefruit Juice 3 r 55cMF-Onr Finest Owlity

Grapefruit section. 4 ^ 5 7 c

Prune Juice ™ 3S,85c

_ ; i _ B|<kA Sultana brand I2OZ.|AQ Jlfc-OColite IflW Fancy pi,. IUB pl, W

Sliir1ll^lx~>^'frafeCocktail A » - « t a n - i i i ^CliBgPeadie$rJ:c:d21or37« M

c.:28«Nott's Applesauce . . 1 ]::<UC

Small Sweet Peas s;:; 7 2 * r « •Sauerkraut AWf.««y,jHy-- 2 " * 2 3 e

Spinach WK«WW 2 " « 3 3 C

Bon Olive Oil ^OH... *-47«Chicken Chow Mein Dinner^;:; S9«Mayonnaise An"P.9. ^33 C 5 5 °Salad Dressing * ^- q^47°

P I C N I C T R l A T S !

Rita CrackersDelson#sScbtkinsGained Hams ».M.M.y.rBroadcast Redi Meat.Codahy Roast Beef Hash .Wilson CnOpped Beef •

Mixed Pickles sw..»-M.nfc.«.nbr.»d^3|oLibby's Dill Pickles . . . ££25«MaineSardines^_^L»j^«^_3^r2O0

Mustard RelishLibbf's Ripe OlivesStuffed Olives ••.••£*-«Bread &BntterPickles .Jfe, »-&B n r w ' s Cookies 'cheeou».ch;P

8 ^°^j fe

lane Parker Cookies.£3? plj 12^21°*|WdirW|pr—^a-^ica-F^vT-pfSnjrSandwich Ba^s ^ H ^ J *£ 25C

~~" wmiwWfr&2K

BEVERAGE BUYS!

Coca-Cola - • - tilLtt*

lgrim QualityRead¥-To-Cook

ONE PRICE ONLY i

Snail 4 to 11 lbs.

Large 18 to 22 lbs.(Year Ago Ik 59c)

Super Right & Other Top-Grade Brands

; : j ^ i : J

+19,}

Shank Portion. Butt Portion melaorEttkerRallrull-Cut

Hams

(Year Ago lb. 55c|

Sbank Portion •uttPortloo

C lYear Ago Ib 59e)

Ground Beef y ^Ribs of BeefRibs of Beef

10 incheuf

7 inch' cu»

> - •

Paper Hiptln ^Family She A

• •

m

w

Porterhouse Steaks ib-Boneless ChuckPork Loins •**>-*•Pork LoinsPork LoinsPork Loins

Yeib.

ib.

ib.

lb.

ib.

ib.

lb.

n>.ib.

ib.

Ib.

ar Ago39c

59c,69c

69c•77c

95c65c45c55c55c63c

Now

Legs off LambLegs off Lamb

596 Shoulder Lamb Chops ">•c

cChickensVeal Roast

89° Ham Slices55° Sliced Bacon w.Ryh.39° Frankfurters *££»49° Avoaoblo only la Tr*h I

51c Fancy Shrimp . .59° Fried Haddock Fillet

Year Ago65c73c79c57c59c1.1589c55e

lb-lb

lib.!

lib.

How

49»

49**lC w

79e

69c

FRUIT AND VEGETABLE BUYS GALORE!

Seedless Grapes ^ 2 25<Cantaloupe c.iiform._i.rg..;i. «.eh25e Tomatoes R«Jrjp« l e i t " 2 l

"Pears •.rii»H-c.i.fo,ni. 2"^ 29° Iceberg Lettuce ya***™*™ J3Yellow Bananas G"°" p* lb156 Cauliflower F—..rb/,.™.California Lemons ^"^r 4f«'15e Pascal Celery V g .Seedless Limes "^° :;15° New Green Cabbage ^mn..,brf.rm. , b j .

i l l• . ' 5 : ^ .

FROZEN FOOD BUYS!

:

DAIRY BUYS GALORE!

*43cg

KHchea(%armWaxedP4perMarcal Paner Napkinsw^- 2

Ice Cream 2KnU«ye-O«IJ««u* With Ice mr_m mm^

$trawberries-2r4^ gaSBBK. -Welch's Grape Juice . . . ; ;21C Gruyere Cheese

Sliced AmericanSliMd Swiss Cheese

9 ' 9 J 'o t

Frui» Flavor* —plu»d»» • boHlaiWhit* Rocli. HoffmanV 4 Urj.CanaJaDry—plutJap. *boHU

Beanbley Cod Fish Cakes XFish Sticks "^v ^'°lg

ot49e

Lihby's Raspberries . , . '°;; 35C

HOLIDAY BAKERY BUYS!

Cream Cheese *£29a

U M N of ft* SM TIM R&

Funeral Directors

iz srHiNcrnxD AVENUE SIS EAST BROAD STREETCKANFOBO, N. X — CK I-IM2 WE8TFUXD. N. J. — WE 1-110

* ripped from the wall.

IMr. Bender said the damage,

^timated at $200, v,a« done bcl«»ccn 9:30 p . m . Sunday and 5"m. Monday.

Neighbors reported seeing two

Ijoys between 8 and 10 years old™" f r o m the house toward Orch-ard stroc-t at 11:30 a.m. Mohday.

"Money usually loses its buyingP0*1'1" urhen government bewynes

Jr what it buys. Perhaps it prhVfa

m, e n m T y ' o r " " ^ c r e a t e t h«

I nont-y in some other way, such asborrowing from banks. The crea-

ol more money cheapens it,

Iof i^aS'A b|*cr<U> lowers the price01 the crop." feu g |

(N:Y.) ^ ~

) .

b f f w T i m N^^IMIck's Omge * *

"

•--«»7«

": 49

Port Ahnnliniiii Poll

v ir«utk

For your pknk grill, wrap and cook in

Reynolds Wrapt &* perfect food wrap.

4 complete Dieof well knows brands of w/it,tlqtor. beer ani detire carried In licensed stores.

Pound CakeStrawberry PieHOI IS H«mburg'»r or rV«nWurr«r plfl. of Q for 1 CjC

White Bread J

Plain Banish Bing~loal

hery Persoaal Soap, For dij)»«, Uundlrv • p d t * ^

25«

Ivory SoapFor <Jiih*i, UuaJry and bald

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Page 5: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

. .'-r1-

' - ( " • ' . : . •

Page EightI • • p

' . / ' • •

^ANP^HROm

Assignments Listed_ (Contijuied from page one)"Mrs. Doris NeWswanger and MrsRuby Ferreira; second grade, Mrs.Elizabeth Sargent, Mrs. LynnoreSheehan Bause.;. Also, third grade, - Mrs. Emma;

Tracy and Mrs.fourth grnrio, Mice

Gloria Mills;

and Mrs. Elmyra Shugart;Cora

Thomas Tipaldi; and sixth grade,Mrs. Mary Miller and Mrs.Gwendolyn Thm-ston^

Lincoln SchoolKindergarten, , Miss . Florence

Messick and Mis Marlyn Sbkolin-sky; first gsadeT Mrfc. MargaretVee, Mrs. Virgiha Hansen Jonesand Mrs. Hazel Valentine; second

' grade. Miss Elizabeth, Aug. Miss-Malleville—MacNeill and Miss

Caltope Dadenas.Also, third grade. Miss Elizabeth

Greene, Mrs. Alice Collins andMrs.;. Barbara , Cra.ney;.'' fQiirthgrade, Mrs. Mary Wilson findMrs. Eunice Thompson; fifthgrade, Mrs: Ethel Patterson andMiss Marilyn Jacoby; and sixthgrade, Mrs.1 Vashti Yothers, <andBurton Mandell. •

Etoosevelt SchoolKindergarten, Miss Helen Klase

and Mrs. McGhee; first grade, Mrs.Gwen Ising and Mrs. Ruth Regvh-Gwen Ising' and Mrs. McKee Reg-enstein, second grade,. Mrs. ElsieMiner and Mrs. Vivian' Pfeil.-

Also, third grade. Miss Diane

commercial, William F. Kelly,Harry Lawrence, Charles Post,Miss Dorothy Robinson and Thom-as . Scutro; .mathematics, ' MissGladys- Estabrook, Miss BeatriceSchwoerer; and Oliver WestAlso, social studies, James Avery,

George Bardes, Maurice Blanken,Karl Budmen, • and Stuart. Gold-blatt; science,Arnnlrt

Courtland Daley,FMa H

Dr. Castaldo Named(Continued from page 1)

years as an associate.During World War II.. Dr. Cas-

taldo served in the Army MedicalCorps at Walter Reed • Hospital inWashington, D. C. He entered the

ver and Harold Wilson.Also, French, Miss'Lucy Teague

Latin, Ernest Lovcland; SpanishAlfonse Russo; librarian, Mrs. Es-e|le Gallant.

Also, eighth grade,-Miss Jean-e'tte Armstrong, Miss Judith Ades,Miss Catherine Cleary, Pa,ul,Liqn,Miss Joah Wiubush,, Mrs. . Marg-aret Rhein and Mrs. HarrietStrein; seventh grade. Miss Made-Iyn Cassidy, Miss Mary Duggan,Miss Lucy Hartnett, Mrs. EdnaLaird, .Miss"Norma Marsion, PaulSelby/ Mrs, Ahn Siegel and Mrs.Joan Smith. \

Special subject teachers include:hc following: Elementary, MissMary A<nato, art; Miss Jean Voor-hees and' J. Seth Weekley,-physi-cal education; Channing Coppage,

Louis Haar and James Lenny,music; Miss Hazel Kingsbury, arulMrs. Myrtle Krippendorf, home•conomics; Tho'tna^ E. Stone, di-ector of child guidance.

Also, high school, Burton Long-nbach and Miss Edna Peairs, art;

Miss FlqrcpcV Alp, Stanley, Gray-son, William Martin and Mrs. Eda

Gottko and Miss Nancy Harkrader;'sharenow, physical education; Mr.fourth grade. Miss Marie Tedeschiand Mrs. Artha'linda Quaintance;fifth grade, Milton Berkowitz andMrs. Aris Saul;.and sixth grade.Miss Mary Donovan.

' • . Sherman School

nelli; first grade, Miss Mary Mar-tell, Mrs. Shirley Young and Mrs.Shirley Pelan; second grade, MissRhRuth PoynterReutter. ,

and Mrs. Rose

'&£'.'"•

Also, third grade. Miss ElizabethAJlcn and Mrs. Christina Diel;fourth grade, Mrs. Ruth BowneCoppage and Mrs. Mary Lenz;

; fifth grade, Ernest Hobbie andMrs. Adelaide Nenortas; and sixthgrade. Mrs.. Helen Skerratt andMrs. Rita Sansone. ;.. .

Walnut Avenue School .Kindergarten,' Miss Anne O'Don-

nell; first grade, Mrs. Mary Whiteand Miss Jean Harris; second

....-.' grade. Miss Estelle Goldstein andMrs. Margaret Closser; third grade,

'• Mrs. Natalie Casale; fourth grade,• Mrs. Ada Roth; fifth grade, Mrs.

: -Dolores "Koellner; and~sixfh"~grade.Mrs. Elizabeth Duffy.

High SchoolEnglish, Paul Buonaguro, Mi-

chael Corrado, Mrs. M. AlmiraGuy, Miss Alice Mathews,' FrankRamsey and Elmer Weber; guid-ance, Gerhard Kellner; psycholo-gist, Dr. William

Haar,/Mr. Lenny and Miss OlgaSpepht, • music; Miss Gloria' Allenand Mrs; Ruth Lund, home econ-omics; Roy Daniels, Thomas Gam-binp, Joseph Goodman and EmilSchumann, manual training.

Drl-Neir"In-

spector and Dr. William Silver-man is dental inspector. MissElizabeth . L. Durrell is healthsupervisor and Mrs. Barbara Ho-mack is school nurse. Mrs. Kath-erine I. Popp will 'serve as schoolnurse and attendance officer.

Secretaries have been assignedas follows: Cranford High School,Miss Thercsd' D'Alessandris, Mrs.Louis Svedman and Mrs. Marguer-ite Dixon; Roosevelt School, Mrs.Ruth • Hofman; Brobl$side PlaceSchool. Mrs. Elizabeth Ball; Cleve-land- School, Mrs. Ruth Stevens;

Sherman School, Mrs. Edith Hel-ler; Walnut Avenue School, Mrs.Ruth Musa; and Lincoln School,Mrs. Gertrude Todd. '

Mrs*, Elizabeth Hird will be Dr.Bestjs JMiss_Joann©Callanan will serve in the officeof Herbert McCullough, secretaryto the Board of Education. Mrs.Hazel Weiland has been assignedto the offices of Dr. .Best andMr.: McCullough-•'-Mrs. Jane Gwathney will be Jn1

charge of the high school cafe-teria.

serylee in l»«i ana came out as acaptain in ]i)43.

A graduate of Bayonne HighSchool, he received his bachelorof arts degree from Cornell Uni-versity, Ithaca, N. Y., in 1929 andhis medical degree from the St.Louis University Medical School,St. Louis. Mo., in 1933. He in-terned, at the Jersey City MedicalCenter and Bayonne. Hospital be-fore establishing his practice inCranford. He had an office on Ret-ford avenue for a year and a, halfbefore locating at his present ad-dress. • • ". '

An associate surgeon at RahwayHospital, Dr. Castaldo is secretary-treasurer of the .Cranford Physi-cians!..Club,,chalrmanof the schoolcommittee of the. Union CountyMedical Society, a member of thewelfare committee of the. NewJersey State Medical Society andpresident of the Sipencil Labora-tory, Inc., of Cranford.

He is a communicant of theChurch of-the Assumption in Ro-selle Parkj vice-president of thechurch building committee- and amember of the Holy Name Societythere.

Dr. Castaldo's election as anassociate of the International Col-lege of Surgeons also makes "Mrs.Castaldo eligible to become amember of the organization'swomen's auxiliary. They havefour children, Patricia, 17; Carlrt,15;-Sandra--13,--and Neil==IOr"aHin the local schools.

pleted during the fall months.Restrtctiona Explained

In commenting on the water re-strictions' which have been'in ef-fect since the first of June, Mr1.Haskew said that they were abso-lutely necessary during June! andJuly,..ahd that August was neces-sary as a fo t poring' hpfnrn thnycould, be completely lifted. June

similar occupations, -ten; anothers, two. --Two members of th<c.Iass Were unemployed or at homiand. five were married.

As to the class of 1954, the oc-cupational, educational place-ment seems to follow the.set by previous glasses.

"There

and July were~well BeigWTBe~av^erage in rainfall and restrictionswere general throughout northernNew Jersey. In the territory serv,<ed by the Plainfield-Union Com-pany, the higher areas were, onseveral occasions, completely outof water for hours at a time.

Water Bans Lifted(ConttnueO. from Page One)

stricted use. of water in the ter-ritory served.

. Thanks to Consumers •Mr. Haskew added that the com-

pany wishes to thank its consum-ers for/abiding by the restrictionsand thereby helping to . conservewater during the drought period.

The company official further re-ferred to the announcement ofAugust 10 that approximately sixmillion gallons daily additionalfrom within the company's serv-ice area would be available beforenext summer. In this connection,Mr.—Haskew reported" that deliv-eries already have begun on 9,000feet of 16-inch pipe wheih wouldcarry the new diversion grant fromtho Green Brook well field intothe distribution system. Construc-tion in the. new Kenilworth wellfield has been temporarily sloweddown 'due to- zoning proceduresbut will. He estimates, be com-

Sckoolg Open Next Week^Continued jrojn. jpage I ) ......

dren tomorrow will ibe permittedto dp so arty day through Wednes-day. No'students will.be register-ed next Thursday, the opening dayof school, Dr. Best said. The hoursfor registering students are 9 a.m.to noon and 1 to.4 p.m. Registra-tion cards, are available at theprincipal's office in Cleveland,Roosevelt, Lincoln and ShermanSchools and the Board of Educa-tion office in Cleveland School.

In connection with the two newbuildings, Burton C. Belden, chair-man of the building committee, re-ports orderly but slow progress iscontinuing. Work on the. Walnutavenue Wilding continues to besomewhat behind progress at theBrookside place structure,.he said.

Mr. Belden said the Board ofEducation is "pushing to get thejob done." He said there havebeen no major hold ups. Work onthe acoustical ceilings, tiling, elec-trical. flxtures_and_wood ..work__isnearing completion at the Brook-side Place School.

At a meeting Monday evening,the building committee discussedgrading and landscaping for thetwo buildings. It- was decided toadvertise for bids to firiish therough.grading and landscaping atboth schools. The committee hopesto receive bids at the September21 meeting of the Board of Educa-tion, Mr. Belden said.

difficulty in finding em ploy men'not golttg^ti

especially boys.. The tightness inthe labor market is well.'Jcnownand there is little that can b.done at the 'high school level tcalleviate the. situation. The guid-ance department, however, continues to maintain close Iiais6nwith the New Jersey EmploymentService and the principal em-ployers in the area," the. reportsays., . . . . . . • '.

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WINES A

List Workshop Talk(Continued from page 1)

age alone."The grid is named for Dr. Nor-

man C. Wetzel, who 'bases thevalidity of it on the study of therecords of four and one-half mil-lion children from 11 major geo-graphic and ethnic groups andwith wide range of socio-economicconditions. \

Mr. Tipaldi conducted a pilotstudy last year, using the WetzelGrid on the 25 pupils in his fifthgrade. Using the previous heightand weight records and the medi-cal history from the school's med-ical, cards, plus a scries of heightand weight measurements takenat three month intervals by theschool nurse, he was able to plot'a significant record of each stu-dent on his individual' grid graptiL

"If the plotted patterns of someof the students, after the finalseries of'height and weight meas-urements, indicate growth fail-ure, whatever the cause, ^thesestudents will be recommended.fora more careful examination bytheir family physicians, via theproper channels of communica-tioni" Dr. Best fcaid. '

Dr. Bes£ said the grid can beused/to indicate physical status,matfiration^basal^hcat—.producetion, caloric need, developmentlevel, and rate of progress. Hesaid the ' grid can anticipategrowth failure from one to five

in advance as there issignificant lag between

yearsoften athe onset of growth failure andits physical evidence. <.. The pilot study Mr. Tipaldi car-

ried on last year will help de-termine future Use of the Wetzel

school superintendent explained.During the year^Mr. Tipaldi at-

tended the Child Study LeadersTraining'session 'heitf"w(tH""ifl-r'Julia Weber of the State Depart-ment of Education in Bloomfteld.

Graduates Enter Service(Continue^, from page 1)

national college enrollment figureshave decreased and when* therehas" been only a slight rise in en-•gotlment in the college: picpaia-

Report Storm Damage(Continued' jrom page 1)

Rahway River and : no , serious,flooding was experienced, Town-ship Engineer Patrick J. Grail re-ported. Gates at the Hansel andDroescher Dams were opened at8 a.m. Tuesday and the river flow.was soon under control.>-tStorm conditions at 12:30 a.mTuesday - forced Patrolman JohnHerzer to mount the curb in thepolice car he was driving to avoidhitting a pedestrian in the centerof Springfield avenue, hereportedNo one was., injured and no dam-age was reported to the police car.

Shortly after 7 a.m. Sgt. HarryPage reported a' station wagonstuck in a gas line trench softenedby the rain on Brookside placeLater the Elizabethtown Gas Com-pany informed the police Brook-side j)lace had been closed_orjjbe-tween "OrcfiarcT and Spruce streetsbecause of the condition of theroad.

Patrolman Richard Schofield re-ported early Tuesday morning thata large free limb had fallen acrossthe intersection of Orange andSpringfield avenues. He ushed thelimb to the side of the road andthe Shade Tree Commission wasnotified to remove it.

The Shade Tree Commission al-so was notified When a citizencalled headquarters at 7 a.m. toreport a large limb hanging overthe street in front of 215 Elmstreet.

At 8:30 a.m. Patrolman JohnVarley reported the awning of Mc-Curdy's Jewelry Shop at 6 Aldeiistreet .had been'damaged by thestorm and was banging againstthe window. He rolled it up toprotect the glass.

A flooding condition at Willowand Lafayette streets was reportedto the Public Works Departmentby Sgt. Page at 8:20 a.m, -.

The sidewalk was temporarilyblocked off in front of .the Coro-net Shop at 2 North Union' avenuewhen police were informed'at 10:-45 a.m. that the shop sign had beendamaged by the wind.

Repair service of the Bell Tele-phone Company was. notified whena report of a wire down in frontof 1 Carolina street, north, wasreceived at 11 48 a.m. • -

-The-,-' police—also—notified - thePlainfield-Unlon Water Companyof a dangerous condition'caused bya sunken ditch in front pl214 Eliz-abeth avenue.", X

Mrs* .Riggs Hostess——XTo District Chairmen ".

Mrs. W. Harold Riggs, president,.of. J 8_. Eoceat-Jivenue_.w.as:. hostessTuesday at a special meeting ofthe committee chairmen and offi-cers, of the Women's Auxiliary ofabeth District. ., ;the Episcopal Church of the EJiz-

It was announced that; the siteof the fall meeting has beenchanged. It will be held at St.Paul's Church, Rahway. on Sep-tember 21, beginning with HolyCommunion at 10 o'clock. -Theguest speaker Will be BishopQuentin Huang of Burma.

Leaves for Cdllege

JOSEPH KULMAYER

Kulmayer EntersCitadel College

Joseph. Lloyd . Kulmayer, sonof Mr. and. Mrs. Joseph Kulmayerof 451 Brookside place, has beenaccepted by" the Citadel, the mili-tary college of Charleston, S. C.It is recognized as thePoint of the South." Mark Clark,the famous general of the' U. S.Army in Europe in World WarII, became the president of theCitadel last April. ,

Mr. Kulmayer was an activemember of the /Boy Scouts inTroop 80. He graduated from theCranford. High School last June.He'~plsiyed"—orrthe' "soccer "teamand was well known for his out-standing golf records. In 1952 hewon the Echo Lake Caddy Tourn-ament.

He will motor to Charleston to-morrow and begin his trainingand studies' on Monday.

Earth TremorsFelt by Residents

The telephone at police head-quarters was kept busy for anhour starting at 2:50 p.m. yester-day by" local residents calling toask: "Where's the earthquake?"

Reports of windows rattlingand houses shaking were receivedrom Garden street, Retford ave-

nue, Brookside place, Hawthornestreet, Keith Jeffries street,-Ches-:er Lang place and from severalresidents of the Heathermeadesection. ' ' .

Under direction of Capt. LesterPowell, Patrolmen Roy Brinker-hoff, Frank Caruso and R a l p hKoury ..toured the areas f r o mwhich reports were received intKtce police cars but could findno' local, reason 'for' the -distrub-ance.

Police of nearby communitiesreported similar experiences, butast night no definite reason forhe tremors, had yet been listed,

although some sources said theyseemed....tajhave-.bcen centered-inhe Woodbridge area. •'. -

Awards to 3 0(Continued jrom page 1)

vester street; James Kiernan, 124Herning avenue; Tommie L'Heu-reux^2Q4~Orange7avenire;~SandraKolbe, 21 Greaves place; JosephLobl, 304 Elm street; George Ab-do,_ 25, Dunham | avenue; Gregory |R6urkej\~2l4 "Orange avenue;/Thomas "Srjiegel, 75 Centennialavenue; and\Gail Griffiths, 115Oak Lane. \ •

A -total of 159-xyoungsters areenrolled as participants....in....thedrive.. •••"'".' ' \ " •.'"•"":•

ONE CHICKEN: • • : . • " - * ' " " " — p l u s - — . . . •'• ; ' ' . ' • ',

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Many Pupils Fail to EatBreakfast, Schools Report

According to a report by the health department of the Cran-ford public schools, many students, come to [school with little or nobreakfast This, the reports says, causes them to experience hunger. .! .~ nni1 mci1n«snfM;<i hpforo th*»ir lnnoK nhrin/i :and

Another need reported bypersonnel is that of more rest.

'They (the students) need .tohnow and practice better personalhealth habits to aid in warding offchronic illness in later life,^ thereport states. "This need can bestbe - met-through .personal_ jntefcviews. This, of course, is a coop-

• crativc program with the Guid-ance Department."" ..'•.,>„'.

The report says that 969 pupilswere examined by the school phy-sician, Vhilq 347 athletes were al-so «ivcn physical check-ups. Tu-berculin Patch Tests were given to691 students and no evidence of

•'active pulmonary tuberculosis wasfound.; In addition, 270 pupils andpersonnel were x-rayed.

Keystone Teleblnocul

the school-' physician and school

re y _ .Teleblnocular rTests

werej administered to 1,240 pupilswhile audiometer tests were givento 1,897. y '. . .. .

During the past school year, 198accidents, were attended by the-scl}ool_,nwrscs._.w-hile_»23_p.upnswere seen, in classroom inspectionsby the nurses, The nurses held'. 94c6nferenpes with j parents and 2,-564 conferencesThey made a tota

-with students,of 83 home vis-

The report -say^ the program isconducted for the1 purpose of"maintaining, and improving the•health status of the student body.Much praise can be given to theteachers for their cooperation inobserving and referring problems

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to the nurses, for further check-up. .,

The aims of the health program,the report states, are: '

To assist in the promotion of ahealthful school environment.

To1 participate in a health-gujd-ance program. ' " , ' ' , °.. To devctop-and maintaiu dctjrable health habits.

'-Section Two*

To assist- in communicable dis-ease control by recognition of ear-ly symptoms and by securing nec-essary medical care, ' „ ,'••'

To instruct the pupils and' schoolpersonnel in the procedures ofemergency health conditions which..might demand immediate care..

To assist the physician with thephysical examinations in schoolchildren and personnel.

To aid in securing the correc-tion of defects and the promotionof health.

To , develop desirable attitudestoward health practice and life sit-uations. ' . •

Curtiss-Wright FetesGriffith for Service

George-L. Griffith of 117 Severihcourt was among 21 general Officeemployes honored last Thursdayfor their years of service with theCur t i s s-W r i g h t Corporation,Wood-Ridge.

Mr, Griffith, who is administra-tive assistant. to the director ,ofeconomic planning, received a pinemblematic of 10 years of service.

Presentations of awards weremade by Boy T. Hurley, chairmanand president of the'corporation,at ceremonies in the plant. Recip-ients were employes whose per-Jods-of-service-range-1 ronr~ftve"to

15th Season CRanford 6-2934

GERALDINENursery School

Cor. FOREST & NORTH AVES.For children two to six Tears-

Half Day and Full DaySessions.

Registration Day Sept 7th.School Begins Sept 8th.

Mail in Your HeserycdtionT o d a y .

more than 25 years with Curtiss-Wright or 'its predecessor com-panies. ' •- ••-•'-' •-"y"}• Curtiss-Wr.ight Corporation iscelebrating its 25th anniversary.It was formed on August 9, 1029,with the merger of Curtiss Aero-plane and Motor Company and theWright Aeronautical Corporation.

7Pay Hike Veto

Erwin Rutz of Cranford, presi-dent of the Tri-dounty Letter Car-riers' Association, reports that pos-tal employes are keenly disap-.pointed-over—President Dwight-D.Eisenhower's veto of postal' paylegislation. .

Mi*. Rutz, a carrier at the Jocalpost i office, heads an associationwhich represented postal workersin Union, Middlesex and Somersetcounties.

"The bill,, which passed theHouse of Representatives unani-mously and was'opposed by onlyfour votes in the Senate, was amost conservative one,*' said Mr.Rutz, who asserted "there is nomore justice in asking that' payscales be based on postal rates,than to require that police salariesbe rated on the' number of arrestsmade."

The, Tri-County Associationpresident stressed that postal.em-ployes are fully in accord with theadjustment Of pay scale inequitiesmentioned by the president in hisveto message. However, Mr.-Rutzexpresse3~opposition fo the ReesBill, another pay measure, whichthe administration favored. Hesaid "such a bill would give dic-tatorial pawcr-to-a^single-adminis-trator and would result in the. de-struction of civil service and re-turn of the spoils system."

He pointed out that the vetoed*bill contained' provisions for re-classification of jobs and salariesby a committee of nine men ap-pointed by the President.

Mr. Rutz paid high tribute toRep. Harrison A. Williams, Jr. -for"his untiring efforts in behalf ofthe pay bill and for the generalwelfare of-postal employes."

Landscape Design,Sculptue NeWAdult Courses' Persons with a flair for the ar-

tistic will find two new courses atthe Cranford Adult School thisfall trt thpir libin

lower section of the shaft is a coni-,dcflectornfur diffusion of clear

air blasts over" the surroundingarea, and according to the ctaimnof its developers, it will dissipateground fog. .

"Whether or not this new de*iel-ojment' will accomplish the «>>-

Scheherazade was the fabledteller of stories in The ArabianNights.

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tory course."It appears, .however, that the

more favorable economic condi-tions in 1952-53 as compared withthose prevailing'in 1948-49, havemade more money available to thefamily to spend on higher educa-tion for "its children. Also to beconsidered is the fact that manysmall, privately endowed, liberalarts colleges are unable to com-pete in the race for top studentsbecause of dwindling endowmentfunds, etc. In order to keep their

K .and'

MEDIUM WHITE EGGSFrom Linda Farms, N. J. ..... Doz. 49c

employed, they have in some in-stances lowered their admissionstandards."

Of the 153 members of theClass of 1953, 59 went to four-year colleges, including 10 to'en-gineering and technological coll-eges, 46 to liberal arts and threeto teuchers colleges. In addition,11 went to junior colleges and 20others to other schools of highereducation: Business schools, five;!]nursing schools, nine; art school,one; and other schools, live. Thearmed forces attracted 19 grad-uates.

Among the remainder of theclass, 37 went into employment:Industry, seven; trades, three;office occupations, 15; clerical and

FRANKFURTERSHAKIITCER 3 M . 0 0

TASTY AND LEAN

CANNED HAMS6 to 14 lbs. each.— at law pdea of

.... ^ f i u , •• They are home landscape, de-sign, and sculpture.

John M. Cummings, head, of theagriculture department of BergenCounty Vocational and TechnicalHigh School, will be the instructorfor home landscape design. Thecourse will include the selection of.propcr-plants,-use-of-gardeh-orna-ments, . house architecture, .'andplantings, landscape maintenance,and redesigning established homegrounds.; ' , . * ' • •

"In order \o complete a land-scape design of your grounds, eachstudent will be requested to pur-.chase drawing supplies," Mrs.Charles Redden, president-direct-or, announced.

Mr. Cummings has previouslytaught at the Plalnfleld and West-field adult schools.

In ihc Sculpture course, instruc-tion, will be offered in a variety ofmaterials 'including clay ' model-ing, direct plaster and the carvingof plaster and stone. Emphasiswill be placed upon method andcreative three dimensional design,Mrs. Redden said.

Charles E. Stovens who holdsmasters degrees in line art andfine art education will be theteacher. He has taught at variousadult groups and his work has ap-peared in shows at Baltimore Mu-seum, American Museum, Wash-•injgton,—D:~0.,-'Newark™"Musetnn,Whitney Museum and Museum ofModern Art, New York City.

In addition, painting and drawing with Miss Hortense Budell 'asinstructor will be offered again.

Turnpike to Try OutFog-Dispelling Device

The New Jersey Turnpike Au-thority is making test installationsof a newly developed device to de-termine-its effectiveness in lick-ing fog and smoke problems on theTurnpike, it was announced thisweek by Paul L.Troast, chairmanof the authority. ••

Four installations of this newautomatic device, known as the"Weathermaster," manufactured

[-by:-Diesel Power,- Incr, -of-Penn--sylyania, are planned immediatelyat various locations on the Turn-pike, well in advance of the sea-son when fog affects all highways.The "Weathermaster" consists ,ofa propeller driven by a motor andmounted high on a shaft. At the

jectlves set fbr. it-cannot be stated

Nonce or IIEABING• Board of Adjiulment — ZoningNotice is hereby given that the Board

of Adjustment 4Zonirt£ I of the Townshipof Crjnford. N. J., in the County ofUnion, will hold a public hcarlhg on

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 10S4at d:lS 'P. M. ID.S.T.t nt.the MunicipalBuilding, corner North Avenue and AldunStreet, Cranford, N. J.. to consider:

5/M Application of Frank Spatuzzi onbehalf of Shetland Park, Inc., owner, fortiidciinc variance of five feet on T,ot 100,known at 123 Wilsblrc Drive. Residence"A" District . ,

At the time and place above stated allInterested parties arc invited to be pres-ent when full' opportunity to bu heurdwill be given to them.

By orderBOARDt OF ADJUSTMENT

Harold M. Buck.Robert L. Clare, Jr. • Chairman.

Secretary.Dated: August 26 1954. . 0-2

Eyes Examined

DR.G. HINDMANOptometrist

107 N. UNION AVE.

CRANFORD 6-1332• . • \

Bwwi iBMf lmaNei ti otingr style) ^ ^ 7 ;

CORNED lEJEF ^ 53<ICHOICE C U T • .. * • % « • % , .

CHUCK ROASTS" '"33cARMOUR'S STAR

CANADIAN BACON *Come In and Talk to Us About Your Freezer Orders

We Cut Prices to the Bone - • No One Will Beat Us !

NEED{w Know uch About Its O er!

Of course, you don't know the name of the gentlemanwho holds the title to this beautiful automobile.

We can't tell you ourselves who he is. We don'tknow his name, or his occupation, or the missionthat brought him to this particular spot.

And yet, werfeel—as ^ou undoubtedly do—that weknow fl great- rlp.il nlmilt riimf ^J

FRANK VODEASKA

Co«t11 WALNUT AVENUE

Prices to Church and Civic Organizations 4

CRanford 6-1113

We would surmise, for instance, that he is a well-known and widely respected member of his commu-nity—and a prominent figurtf in his daily profession.

We would guess, with reasonable certainty, that heis a person of sound judgment ahd excellent taste.

We would be willing tb venture that he places greatvalue on the comfort and safety and well-being of hisfamily jand his friends.

And we would feel safe in Raying that he is the softof person you would like to know. »

For anyone who has enjoyed thtj privilege of daily

LAING MOTOR119-121 East Fifth S t

contact with'Cadillac ^owners—as we have—under-stands that the vast majority of the men and womenwho drive this distinguished car share a great commonbond in all these Vespects.

Owners, the world over, will testify that the wohder-ful things a Cadillac says about you constitute one ofthe finest rewards.oi Cadillac ownership. But it isimportant to remember that Cadillac's eloquence isessentially a by-product of Cadillac's quality.

And this quality has never before been so manifestas in the Cadillac creation currently in our showroom.

. It is beautiful and distinguished and luxurious. . . and fine in performance—to a degree unprece-dented, even for the -'Standard of the World".

Why not stop in and see us soon for a persona]inspection and demonstration? You'll be' a mostwelcome visitor at any time! ' .

CAR COMPANYPlainfield, N. J.

M I••nrio* connected yj—fa proving, yotur right I*

i om tit* Vfr

obUlning medical C*VMtiant tt««tm«nt «r "

^pttalltttioa;\—4« laauiano* m

•4a -t«bUtMnq widow'tm

fO t IXMtT AS5I5TANCIAT NO CHMQt TO YOU

D.A.V.UNITY CHAPTER. NO. UM. S. G u n z n , Service OffUxr

CRanford C-8S3SIkl* PMrtoUo I l i u m Bpoaaoi«4 *» '

Breen*s Liquor Storm•I H.VHUM AVI, .

"The installations being fnade-'onthe Turnpike are purely for tostpurposes during varying conditionsof actual fog and those tests, alone,will, demonstrate whether, or notthe equipment will do the jobclaimed for it." •

Colony (Jiib BoardTo Meet Tuesday , v .

An executive board meeting of

the Colony Club of Crapford will

be held Tuesday levelling at they l g at tne Ihome of Mrs. John J. Monahah " 4'Hik I

V. Stillman. Mrs. Thomas J. Camp-bell, Mrs. G. l?rank Zimmerman,and Mrs. Burton Jamison. .

Enterin<; Junior CollegeMiss Patricia Ann Ross, daugh-

ter of -Mr.-and Mrs. Randall "A.

/ • • • • • • • ' m

Hickory str.'.t. R a n d a l A .

I Ross. 222 Arbor street, will enterThe following members will at-' virK inii» Interment College, Bris-

tol. V;i .thispresident, Mrs. Victor D. Shahecn], m a n y^' . , , „ . , _ „ . r ' jMrs. Hugo M.-State.*. Jr. M r s . , u a t c o f Cranford High School andLawric Montgormry. Mrs. C. Van . theretook part in various acUvi-

-month rtor—hcr-frc.h--Miss Ross is a gradr

j j y . M . C. VanChamborlin. Mrs. Hoy S. Zachary,Mrs. James Caruso, Mrs. Lawrence*Tabelman, Mrs. Arthur E. Pbole,M

p us a t ities of organizations and clubs;

Francis Bacon is sometimescredited"- with .being the real author

Mrs. Wilfred A. Burton, Mrs. John j of Shakespeare's plays.

vaf

Before The StormyComes

SEPTEMBER IS NOW UNON US AND IT WON'T BE LONGBEFORE THESE PLEASANT SUMMER DAYS OF 54 WILLBE A THING OF THE PAST.

THE UNPREDICTABLE WEATHER OF FALL AND WIN-TER IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER.

IFV YOUR PRESENT ROOF IS NOT IN TIPTOP SHAPE, "DONT NEGLECT THOSE VERY NECESSARY REPAIRS.LEAKS CAN BE MOST DAMAGING.

See Us For Your Roofhif» Materials

EVERYTHING FOR BUILDING, MODERNIZING, REPAIRING.

BUILDING MATERIALS - — APPLIANCES

3 3 6 Centennial Avenue ' CRanford 6-0595

. "Your Service Center for Every Building Need"

P .:• :-OM

;-Ba

f?i

J—

•^w you enjoying the extra convenience

If' ur new "Walk^Up-Winrfow" oni the ^ Walnut Avenue sielcof our Cranford Office has proved to be very popular. Folksaround here like the quick* service that saves them time . ,vthe extra banking hours the Window offers exclusively inthis area. ^ • ••'•

Discover for yourself the advantages of using our Walk-UpWindow. Here you can . . .

. . . Make savings and checking account deposits . '

. . . cash checks. .

. . . meet installment loan payments _^

. . . deposit in Christmas Club Accounts •

. . . pay Water bills

. . . pick up payrolls with prior notification to usThe Walk-Up Window furni^lits you with lO1/ additional hoursof banking service a week. lt\j open—,, .

MONDAY through THURSDAY — 7 : 3 0 a.m. to 1:30p.m., and from V to 6 p.m.

L •

1-1

IFRIDAYS — 7:30 a.m. to 1:30 pun., and from 4 to

TRY the Walk-Up Window. You'll use it often!

IllCRANFORD OFFICE: 100 South Avenue, Ea*t

,_,.• ' J M«mb«r ftJaral Oapaullntuianc*

Page 6: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

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v. l ' • • • • " ' • ' ' . . > " . . • • . • . ' • • . - • • • ' • , " • ' • . . • • ' • • / • - • • • — • • ' • ; ' '

; • • ' . ' ' . ' • • " • • '

1 /- . ' - . . ' ' • ' • , - ^ . ' • " ' • • • . ' : • • • • " • • • . r ^ ' „ • * ' • "

v. ' "

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Two ۥ:THE CTANFORD AW) Lg. TmjRSOAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1854

THE CRANFORD CHRONICLE",, established 1893; THE CRANFORD CITIZEN, established 1898.'•.'"- (Combrtied in 1921)

Letter* toEDITOR

CIIARI.RS M. RAY. EDITOR AND PUBUSIIKK•/

NATIONAL EDITORIAL

Editor. Citizen Sc, Chronicle,C| an ford, N. J. / ..Dear

ciete des 40 Hommes et'« Chev-aux, fun and., honor, group of theAmerican Legion, tb the .grandpromenade of the Grand Voitureof New Jersey. _ .

The appointments, were made byMr. Dommergue. The conventionwill be held September 9, and 10

TH5 CRAWFORD CITIZEN AUD CHRONICLE/THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 2. T9S4

• / •

mjttw of the Block Dances that At a recent election. Charles A.h.ivu jusi Vti.-i.-H cornpleted 1 would Zoeller of Springfield was elected

IN \ RETROSPECT' from th* Filet of The ClHxen and Chronicle

'• • . . • • ., F i v e I Y e a r s A « o ' :' . • - • • • ' •

A 'marginal higway between Lexington, andWalnut avenues, built in. conjunction with Iheelimination of the Lehigh Valley Railroad cross-ings in that area, was opened-to traffic and Walnut

-aVe«Ue~wa?TiI6crea~bfrTat~ira^Smith, supervising engineer for the Reid Controct-

hke to express our npprwlntinn rhof HP C:,r,»~ U

^

H- Mr TVMember: Quality Weeklies of New Jersey

»•' Entered at' tKfc Post Oflicc at Crunford, N. J., as .Second Class Matter./£ubli!>ried Thursdays atCrariford N. J., by The- Crutilord Citizen and Chronicle, Inc. Offldtfl newspaper for Cnrnford,G:ir\vn6d :ind Kvnilworth: Stitiscription Rate, $4.00 a-"Year: Advertising Rates on Request.

FFICE: 2J-23 Alden Street, Cranford, N. J . «$jx*r /^'• ' TELEPHONE CRANFORD fi-floon

Let'sts

of your cofiperatiop in the publi- mergiie. Mr. King was electedcity you gape o u r dances. chef de train, Dr. Walter K. Fas--

I would also l ike to thank the n a c n t ' medicin; and Robert "M.adults who assisted in this p r o - Minton and . Mr .^DommerRue ,gram: Dr. and Hfrs. Elmer Koyen, chcminots , /P.T.A. President; Mr. Snd Mrs'.' A. Installation of riew ^officers will

, Suarez. Mr. n d Mrs. J Charles b e held on October 30.Flaijj. Mrs; Bernard Grint, andl'_ - — -~L^

jinitn, supervising engineer gin nit- mm ing Company, Woqdbridge, reported that excavfl

• tion was to be started for temporary detour trestles

employes of the Cities Service'Company ; - > ;,'affiliates. Competition was on a nation-wid•" , ' '4Miss Parsons planned to enter New. Jersey d .Ti 'f' •for Women, New Brunswick. " - 'c

<j Fifteen Years Ago 'Tentative plans had been completed .' .•_.

second y e a r ^ Cronford's Adult Education k •'.•,'"'*which was to open October 18 and comii . ' , '

-10"-week#i,-Hccor<ling-to~Mrs.—Mose9-A«t'rrj~—!"';"•"rector of the Adult Education,Committee '"V1". . . . • . : , i . . . . / . , . . , . . • . . . . . . . i i ^ . , . ^ t . . . n . n r , f t , , . . R . ,..., t ' , ! . • •

Page Thrto

Colonial flamesStill Predominate

•FM"'1 houses and other -con-

and'another. bath may be built up-stairs. '. W ': • ' : • t ,_ ;.

rtouse-oi-the-month selectionsare by'no means limited to tradi-tional ftS'lcs. The scyres of hpi'.sesin its portfolio, each tbe Work of

Olympic ParkSets Big Week-end

Continuous band music, a four-

was exju-i ,0

for use.by trains while the bridgeavenue was being constructed.

Walter Anderson, Irene Grossmann, CharlesMahnken and Marion Martin returned from an iri-

.terdenominational young people's conference heldat Pocono Plateau, Cresco, Pa., at which theyrepresented Cranford Methodist-Church.

The Rotary Club golf team defeated the Lions.Club golfers,;18 to 5, at Echo Lake. Presidenth M e f t C l b h

Fui Hie i iui nine in HKJUJ ycdi»;.., inertto be np contest locally in either prihiii •-Mayor George, E. Osterheldt and George-D. );.-,'•Republican candidates for Township Coinn.probably would be unopposed in.the gener.il !tion as no Democratic candidates were infield. > ." . i

The 1939 edition of the Cranford High sfootball team held its initial d r i l l a t Nom;J

Despite the fine job done by Town-ship Engineer; Patrick J. Grail and hisstaff in.recentlyears in improving and expanding the township's existing'parking,

"facilities, it is quite obvious that therms agrowing noecK for developmentJpi newand larger off-Vherstreet parking areas totake care of the increasing/number'<rfcars using Cranford streets throughoutthe week'.

One proposal ulucii we feel-shouldbe giveivserious coiisideratipn right now;is tire use for paiiytng of the large plot oftownship-owned/land oil Springfield ave-nue between/North avenue, east, andNorth Union avenue and. extending backto Counh/Park property.along the Rail-way Riyer

pc start was made here last yearwly?h the Public Works Department

•arcdtheareairet\vccTi-the~gas station"lit Springfield avenue and North avenue,east, and the house at (> Springfield ave-nge and created a parking lot which pro-vides space for two dozen cars. The town-ship engineer now has under considera-tion plans to extend this area behind thetwo houses fronting on Springfidd ave-nue and to.construct an entrance drive-Way above the vacant house at 8 Spring-field avenue. This would provide roomfor another dozen or so cars.

But why stop there? If a start is tobe made on work in this area, why notcomplete the job at this time by clearingaway the brush and small trees back to

the/County Park property and extendinge parking area there and also along

Springfield avenue up to a point about 60feet from North Union avenue? '

Doing so would create parking spacefor approximately lOO.cars while at thesame1 time preserving the natural beautyof the grassed area and the half-dozenvenerable trees in the corner plot fac-ing on Springfield and North Union ave-nues. _ ^

Appearance of the whole area—alsowould be improved, for clearing of weedsand brush at the back of the lower end ofthe plot would Yeveal the neat little parkalready created by the Union CountyPark Commission along a stretch of theriver above the bridge at North avenue,edst. Further clearing of a few feet overthe County Park property line above thepresent park would be a simple matterlirid rwouldunty now hidden .from the street.

Use of this area for parking would inno way interfere with the long-discussedplansjto erect a jiew municipal buildingon the plot. In fact, it would facilitate thecarrying out of such plans by providing aparlcingloT for the new building before-hand and simplifying-landscaping prob-lems. .

We suggest that action on this pro-posal should be taken now1—before theproblem becomes acute — to help re-lieve congestion in the business center onweekdays and parking problems ofchurches in the area on Suhdays.

_

tPI.

Apgar.Also Mrs. Schillinger land the

Recreation Committee for the useof their equipment, the Band Box•for donating records,' CranfordRadio for th6 ' use of a micro- Miss Barbara Brown, daughterphone, the Rublic Works Depart- o f M r . an^ Mrs./William E.Wownmerit, the Police and Fire Depart- i• „ . .. _- /. • , , „.,

. . , . , , , . K of 8 Indian Spring road, and Missments who helped us in many , 7w a y S . . Patricia Miller, daughter of Mr.

To "the Teen Age : Committee, and" Mrs. Edgar H. Miller of 4who did such a grand job of PHtsfield street, both graduates ofp l a n n i n g and executing, the Cranford High School, will enterdunces, my sincere thanks: Marion- 0" 1^ Junior College; N[ew Lon-Kaye, chairman; Patricia Bailey, don< V- H - t h i s f;l11 a s memberssecretary; Dick Lewis, treasurer; of the junior clas$.

i • • ' . - ! • ' • •

.•Ivc.'!-.e

> • , !

" • n

-and Carol Koyen, publicity.' Sincerely, . _

Alice P. Lightcap(Mrs. N.) :'ChairmanBlock Dance' Committee

NJC Admits TwoFreshmen

Dungarees Seen on the Way OuFf or School Wear

Arts1*.'>

<'... In the past several years, there hasbeen an increasing interest in the prob-

-Jem-of-appropriate-attire-foriBtPd|ewte-4n-high school. r-v— -—-:—- - -—--

Only last week the wearing of dun-garees by students was banned at Reg-ional High School in' Springfield, whilelast year both Roselle Park and Hillsidedecided to do the same.

Recognizing the problem, the Hi-YClub of Cranford High School made asurvey last spring of how the situationis being handled in Union County highschools. This report has been referredto the Student Council for considerationthis fall..,

Some authorities feel that the wear-

ing of dungarees leads towards sloppi-ness and poor manners and towards gen-eral dectirip of discipline.. Other evils in

i f f hip

relation to Uie snuggness 6f some of thisattire also have been cited by these au-thorities.

Meanwhile, it is reported that localschool officials are seriously consideringa similar ban in the Cranford school sys-tem. It is possible the Board of Educa-tion will consider the problem at its nextmeeting..*'\. School authorities seem to be look-ing in the right direction regarding theproblem and would do Well to give servious consideration to a ban on dungareesin order to promote a more wholesomeatmosphere at the high-schools ^ ^

A.four-day orientation programwill be highlighted by an outdoorbhapel service, a picnic supperwith senior counselors and a re-ception and a formal dinner be-fore classes begin on September17. ., . ' • , . •••

At the local high school, MissBrown was a member of the Stu-dent Council, Spotlight and GoUden C staffs and the Modern Dance

--•- ~ "~ ""T"i . Club and took the female lead inTwo Cranford residents have ... • i ~> • > uu i •»» J . ,. , ', tbe, senior,,.play This-summer-she-.beon^adtmUed-~tcr-.«he:-freshin:ra • l o y J ^ the l i n g e r Sewingclass at New Jersey Co ege for Machfnc

yCo^ Plainfield. She

Brunswick ^ ^ U" i V C r S l l y > N ° W * enrolled in the liberal arts pro-. gram.

Starting classes at NJC on Sep- M i s s Miller was a member of thetember 16 will be Miss Nancy Lou S p a n i sh Club,^Forum Club andLcrda, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Biology Club at Cranford HighLouis W, Lc-rda of 10 Orange avc- School. ShewiH follow the medi-nue; and Miss Gayle Patricia Sas- cill secretarial program,si, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dan- Returning to Colby this fall foriel Sassi of 407 Elm street. Both h e r s e n j o r y e a r j s Miss Alicia Vanare graduates of Cranford High iderstine, daughter of Mr. andS c h ^° ' - Mrs. Harry Van Iderstine, Jr., of

Tbe incoming class at the State 2 2 pocring way. She was public-University women's college will ity

rchairman for the Student-include approximately 360 stu- Alumnae Fund and d member ofdents from all 21 counties in New^ Boot and Saddle last year.Jersey and representatives from • • • .California, Connecticut, Illinois, '" '"' ' •»Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, n -•. c • ' • •Nbw York, Ohio, -Pennsylvania, r e a l t o r s Sponsor ing

wi?ji_E<hicalioiial ConferenceThe Cran'ford-Board . of Real-

tors will join jwith the EasternVnion County and Rahway boardsin sponsoring the third annual ed-ucational conference September 21

_/._.._atcColpoia_Guuntry Club.Colonia.A. Jules bommergue, chef de Included on the program-wi.'L be

gare; John "WrKingrchef de trairi,ni"puttfhg contest from 1,1'a.m. toami Edward W. Heinz, all of Cran- noon and a luncheon" followed byford, will be delegates of Union 15rminute talks on real estate sub-County Voiture No. 227, La So- jects.

o b e e r a e h e R t y 7 lgross score for the day with an 83.

. The Saturday matinee program for childreninaugurated the previous year, was to reopen on,.September 10, it was announced" at'a meeting ofthe- Cranford Council for Children's Movies atthe home of Mrs.. C. V. Gary, 507 High street.Many communications were reported received

. from civic organizations in the (community, ex-pressing appreciation for the work accomplishedand offering assistance for the future. • Memberspresent at the meeting included Mrs. G. E. Thurs-ton, Mrs. F. S. Swackhamer, Edward White, IV,and John Stanek; manager of the Cranford Theatre.

Ten Years AeoDr. Howard R. Best, supervising principal,

announced that 14 new teachers would be amongthe faculty of the Cranford public schools whenthe schools reopened for the, 1944-45 year.'

• Total disbursements of Cranford. ^Chapter,American Red,Cross, during the year 'ended June .30, 1044, amounted to $40,955.09, an all-time recordin the history of the local chapter, according tothe annual report of Treasurer Henry W. Whipple.

It wip announced by Edward Montenecourt,overseer of the_poor, that relief costs in'Cranford

\ were reduced 53.6 percent during ...the previous• year. He stated that his office was caring for thelowest number of cases recorded here in the sixyears he had directed relief work in the com-munity.

Six Cranford men were certified as membersof a local Business Counseling jCommittee,_tp. aid

•'"Vc!;teTari's"'ii4''Wfaimn^>t^-warrante3"loans in the"conVmunity, it was announced by Charles R. Erd-man,. Jr., commissioner • of the Department ofEconomic Development. They were. George E.Sauer, Edward C. McMahon, Winchester Bri.tton,Sr., S. K. Klein. J. Walter Csffee and ClarenceFritz... . , ' . - , -

Miss Ruth A. Parsons, a June graduate ofCranford High School, was awarded one of the 20scholarships of the Hejiry L. Doherty Foundation,a fund maintained for the sons and daughters of

••••:.-I

: irii-

'.'iff.•Hi-

Dr.i'-'ur -•"ir.-

n:ro

;m

Orange".New automatic traffic light signals at ;',,

. tersection of Lincoln and South avenues w, ,pected t o . b e in" operation within a u v i l : 'construction of concrete'traffic islonds at :.,cation was nearly completed, according to '[ship. Engineer T. J. McLaughlin.

At. a luncheon meeting in the chapo) <-;•Methodist Church, the Rotary Club discu.- vi •sponsoring here during the winter or an !•

. national Institute in cooperation with Rot.iVv •in Westfield, Roselle, Rahway bnd\LindL>trRowland P. Blythe, president, explained tlv,:

• lectures would be given in each' of the ii\ imunities.

St. Michael's Parochial School was to K1 classes on September G, and the Cnihforc! .(Uschools were to reopen on September 12.

Twenty Years Aeo. Improvement-of the second section of I

ington avenue by the construction of a m;ira'road was expected to be. undertaken soon, i:

.• indicated, at .^meeting of the Townshjp c-'.in"mittee when buls on the work were receive.;

,Sgt.-Maj. Charles C. Hoag of 186 North .,ve-nue, east, retired after 30 years of service-ir. 11-iJUnited States Army, was given a testimoni.il <im.nor and review by the officers of .the 113th in-fantry, his unit at-the time of retirement.

At a meeting of the Cranford Hij»h Si hoolAlumni Association held in Grant School, Win-chester Britton, Jr., was elected president <ki* ,t

...ing Eucene iD..Iowler-anA Bohert -M^Grawf l~l-Dr. Lloyd M. Morrisett, new principal m-

nounced that the jCranfdrd public schools \v.n,i,iopen on September 5. "Dr. Morrisett was It•introduced to the residents of Cran'ford at ;i ;lie meeting being arranged, by the BoaiVEducation.. ' .

Charles Ehmling was appointed by JusticeCase of the Supreme Court to serve as a numberof the condemnation' commission to fix awards f(rproperty necessary in the elimination of the "rodecrossings of the Lehigh Valley Railroad in Picton

b-

Rabbits and squirrels belong tothe same order of animals as,dorats and beavers. • • .

Ipso Facto, a Latin expression,means, ."by the very, fact itself."

Local Men NamedDelegates by 40&8

HAROLD F.BENNER, Inc.Automobile Painting

AntLorised DtTCO BefintabfjcBOOT and

FENDER WORK

Dolox m^ »ni>f RefinlaUacWeldlnx —Traek Letterins

CRMiford 6-J1U<M BOOTH AV&. Mi-

No Better Glasses: • • > ' • • • * * . ' . •

No Better Name . .

3*unnersNISOUniON OnKMNt

I - • • • ' ' ' \

"Ntxtto Puhtti StrriaP '277 North Broad Street

- > . Elizabeth, N. J;f

IM W STFIEID. COnwf tioif end Etnu Optn Monday Evmlngi.

CRanfordNow that Cranford youngsters are trudging,back to BchooL let's all use extra dare at inter-sections — and let's give the little white-beltedsafety patrolman the same quick obediencewe'd give to an older officer of the law. Hb'»

~3olng a very Important Job loir every one opjug—._»--.—qiirtrdinq-tho—Bafety-ol—our— fuhu&—citizens!

REEL-STRONG FUEL CO./•DEPENDABLE. FRIENDLY SERVICE SINCE 1925" \

OITICEJ YAHDJ

COR. NORTH & UNION AVES. / LEXINGTON AVE. AT L.V.H.H.

DAYTIME,NIGHT TIME, WHEN IT ISSNOWING OR POURING, PAY DAYOR BILL PAYING DAY/YOU CAN ALWAYSMAKE DEPOSITS AT THE SUBURBAN TRUST COMPANY

(,.]i

: :iitied tremepdously in pop-! types and sizes including nmch j be Labor Day weekend features at: »>"..— . - in - ' - j m t m.iii.v np-i'uiyrnpic Park.wm'ch wil idose its

fr.uiitional American col-

-BY—MAIL,, AND YOU CAN ALWAYS PAY YOUR BILLS BY CHECK.

THE NEAREST CORNER, OR R. D. MAILBOX, IS OUR RECEIVING TELLERIF YOU USE ONE OF OUR FREE BANK-BY-MAIL FORMS. BANK - BY - MAIL.PAY-BY-CHECK. w

IN ADDITION TO OUR REGULAR CHECK SERVICE, WE ALSO OFFERTHE CONVENIENCE CHECKING ACCOUNT.

Y*

^riHHiklMil TRUST COM

r- CHANFORD OITICE — X North Avenue. W.WESTFIELD OAKWOOD SCOTCH PLAINS

lift E. Brosd S t ' 1M Center 8 1 4M Pwk A T * .

• a n a noKMJUL DEPOSIT DMDIAKCI COSTOKATIOM

,1

oven in

ir.U'

ii'.i

home still predominates in.v and ,is.preferred by

such , ','moderniiuUis" as Florida' -and theand mountain states. Amer-Jtiuly.the melting pot of

to: !y

.pit.1. The homes our families/•ill always remain a mat-Uidividual preferehce and.

Iv'anhoe, house^of-the-.. is a reproduction of theA rnerican from the" drawingL.f Royal Barry Wills, A.I.A.,

;I:IIIM exponent of the New Eng-'..KI :::itlitional styles.i;ui!il'is" General Supply Com-

_ ;ni\ Kical sponsor of the House-|(',f-t!ii'-Month, points out that this

'.t house-of-the-month se-'ii. is a complete five-i%>m

on 'the first floor and that"work room" mrfy, if pre^:!. . orve as a dining room, tel-m room or double as a guest: ;ilso that if more sleepingis needed, additional rooms

ro"ri.

ww- biiilcSers,of our area by the local hou.sc-of-i ,hthe-month sponsor a.--' a free serv-

ice, t The portfolio is Uc>l! worthstudy by the families planning tobuild.

Polio Drive $2 "ivTwo Cranford girls have made

the emergency polio fund richerb y 5 2 . . - • • • • . ' •

• The money is the proceeds froma , neighborhood fair held lastTuesday at the home of one of,the girls, Carol Ann Szabo, 330Manor avenue. She was assistedby Mary, Grant of 15 Qnk lane.

Struck by Car DoorTimothy Carr, 8, of Westfield,

was treated at the oflicc of Dr.Thaler Sunday evening for a con-tusion of the forehead sufferedwhen he was struck by the open-ing door of his father's car in theparking lot of Veterans' MemorialHome, South avenue. '

gton p:irk management, innnticipation of the summer's larg-est crowd, has,-ordered tons of foodand refreshments and will use thest-.idhun area, as a supplementaryparking lot. . '

Olympic Park's roller skating'-rink—w i 11 -re< >j>en- tomorrow- nightrThe rinkA; autumn ..schedule willbe Tuesday, Friday and Saturdaynights plus Sunday afternoons, effective September 12.

The fireworks display will beat 10 p.m. Monday, following the.season'i; last show. Les Oriols. aDiinish. trapeze troupe, have topbilling in the cuirertt circus. '

Joseph Basile's band will playafternoons ;md evenings through-ou.t_-the weekend. Robert Guen-•ther, Olympic president, said to-chiy that the rotund East Orangebimdmaster, whose music has-beena park feature nearly 30 years,will be bat-k again next summer.

BACK TO SCHOOLIN

CHAPMAN SHOESAT

CRANFOROSHOE

9 WALNUT AVE.CRANFORD

In Style

and

Quality

- Styles

Galore

To Suk

Your Taste

from CRIB TO

Thomas Hayfeck, Prnp:

From This AreaInducted Into Service

Five Cranford area men .were.inductee! into the armed forces lastThursday by Selective ServiceBoard 44.

They are: William T. Cole of lpCentral avenue, Edward J. Praulof 8 Orange avenue, Kenneth V_.

fi fi

'Ctti• --m: , 4m

• / . •

•••'••.V.il

•oda BALA . Case of 24 $ ^ . 8 9 No (..CtUB 12-oz. cans | Deposil

HALF CASE 6f 12 — 95c 3 cans 25cNo Deposit! No Return! '4 FlavorsJ

V "'•' Li

" ,*i :'*

Lancaster "Oven Ready" Beltsville . * .

TURKEYS ib 4.Plump, juicy, tender! Just the treat for the holiday!

SMOKED HAMS45

VAN CAMPWITH PORK

Shankrortion. Ib.

B l l ( tl'ortion, Ib.

, U'liolo orEither Half, Ib.

erly of Crariford.-and Hans Rodieof f>5 Willow avenue and HowardGlock of 347 Hazel avenue, both ofGaiwood. ' "

They reported to the PlainfieldCity Hall and were sent to the in-"duction station in Newark.

Owners Kcport TheftsOf Gir Aerial, Huh Caps

Theft of a radio' aerial from hiscar was reported to the police onSaturday by John E. Reid of 209Lincoln park, east. He snid thetheft occurred sometime . Fridaynight. '• ' •* Mrs. John J. DiG.mdio of 5Ranui'po. road reported 'that twohub caps- were stolen from hercar whilo it was parked in theAcme parking lot at Miln and Al-den streets between 6:15 and 7:15p.m. last Thursday night.

ART SUPPLIES• FIGURINES

• CANVAS BOAKDS. •EASELS

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YOUR SAVINGSare insured

lip to $10,000

per member when you save with the

CRANFORD SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION

For ewer 67 years the CBANFORD SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION haspaid dividends on the savings accounts of its members without interruption.Today our position Is stronger than ever. Our latest dividend at the rate of 2V* %c

All Saving* Received Effort the 15th of (beMonth Earn Dividends from tbe ls\.

Thinking of BUILDING, BUYING or REFINANCING„ YOUR .HOME - Come In and Consult Us

We Have Plenty of

Mortgage Money Avaifatfe~CRANFORD SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION

2 N. Union Avc, Cranford, N. J.

OFFICE DOCKS S Monday torn Friday) d^lly 8:30 A, M. i» 4:30 P. M.

, Monday 7 P. M. to 9 P. M.

MKUffWRK FEDERAL IIOME LOAN BANK SYSTEM

BEAI>V-TO-EAT SMOKKD

HAM *z£a IU:Slices^^«^^5^- Boneless^LANCASTER HAMCANNED HAM -:TCANNED HAM —RIB ROASTCHUCK LAMB

Whole at-fclthrr llmlf Ib

incaslrr Wholif or

rackersPicklesSpam

NABISCOGRAHAM

Kosher StyleSpears

"THE MIRACLEMEAT"

16-oz.cans

IS-or.package

32-ox.jar

12-oz.'c a n •

29ll• • ' "••'• { •

'• , : , ' . • • )

SI1ANKI F.SS SMOKED Whole orBEAUY TO EAT Either II»lf Ib.

BEVERAGES PRINCESSl«S-fool roll

rUvon drp.

Ijtnras(rr "U.S. Choice"Oven Urqdy, ^ Inch cat

3 &leal» In One 'Roani, Choptf, Stew

C-lb.8l>e

Ib.

Ib.

59<

BalaClub ,,%aM

Thin Line S?JUlu

r,--o«.botllr»

dep.

Vacmun Packed Luncheon Meals Frosted Fish Features!Bologna c

pk°e':29c Mackerel Fillet ™r' Plb;. 47c

C o o k e d L o a f PWo «k«-29c Vl . , , . „ „ .m I • o nz x''i—f r-. «« t Iounder * illetPickle & Pimento ^ ^';29c _, •• .« L o . ,Neapolitan Loaf . * - ' t t tSWc S w o r d f l s h S t e a k

Spiced Luncheon Meat %;fi: 29c Rainbow TroutOlive Loaf £& 29c Precooked Features!Thuringer 22;"3t: 29c Scallops

PICNIC NEEDSChipzel Potato Chips ' C 25cTritzel Pretzels ££tr 21cCheese Sandwich V ^ - J S 25cRipe Olivet ^ H L S "H«n 31cStuffed Olives ,,,o

I,DE^k 45c

Wax PaperFonda Paper Plates _^ffi' 98cDixie Drinking Cupg .?"& 39cPlastic Spoons ^Z 2 i". 19cPaper NapkinsIKJDSON 2tt«i 23cPaper Towils 8WANEE 2 roll- 33c

2 "^ 29cHE-HEA J g ^ ,

Boned Chicken ^ S " 5 31cHom-de-lite Mayonnaise"1^33c

* TO I. /

Grape ConcentrateTuna .Fish ^

I.ouli I... I.lbby 7-os. 45c

g Fancy I'ink

SHRIMP 'b 65<Suaiisou BtH'f. Chicken, Turkey

PIES :3ss.79< Sherbet

.DAIRYCRESTI Special! Hall gallon

DAIRYCREST Orangeor Raspberry^ Pint

Fancy Domestic RINDLESS

SWISS>edal this weekend! Wonderfulivor! Excellent value!

Bur-B-Que or Frankfurter

RollsPKG.OF 8Fn>sli from our «wnOVOIIM . . . Get set for thedouble holiday!

*Z. 59cSo:.3ic

Provolone Cheese. ,b. 57c

Pound CakeVirginia I^eo K <Main or Marble •* '

COOKIES. CRACKERSHappy fami ly A u i l l . , . i VkAnniversary Asst. Ji*"

»CmtS / S«cUI Tr» ^ pk(l

SunshineHydrox *,**£% 39cHi-Ho Crackers STyE 36cWeston Cookies,!££& ' ^ 29c

PANTRY NEEDSl / Evap. Milk M>UKLLA 4 JS 47c

Ideal Peach Preserves I 8£ 29cMuenster CheeseAmerican £££Blue Cheese «£:"Cheez Whiz KRAFT

ib 49c

*"& 29c

Cinnamon Htrcussel

2

ICE CREAMIce CreamIce Cream Pops *tf r 35cIce Cream Sandwiches W 3 5 cButterscotch Toppingr»f0

v.A^ 15cWalnut Topping r i ^i r g SS 33cChocolate Fudge ^X^lr 17c

COFFEE. TEAIdeal Coffee v*."«22L« &*&Wincrest Coffee rti*lOT

Asco Coffee TK''^

EXTRA SHARP.

Cheese "• 79CFeature of the »v«-et?

Supreme White

Bread ^H»ve op '-J(tt_Bs/« lo

Omted for Irzlbne

Home-Style Pickles _Sskimo Flake Tunanbbv^Cat Food

OlltrCIIw||a

Ammonia

FtASTIC: eap l(I-o«. bolile'

rABSON'M •K-o.bott le '

F00P6

.°.*B29cnic

35c

€offeeCoffee"

l>agS

£' 63c *£

U»Unt S-o«. Jar »>DEAIi Oran.e PekoeHpeeUI Offer! p k ( , . , s |

: • ''"Y »•.*;'*•• ft

CANDY DEPARTMENTMarshmallows S&TZS 33cKraft CaramelsJelly Drops

ccUo pht-VIRGINIA LEE

] Hershey Mini 29c••'•••—•; ' %

Minate Maid

Limas ^Cauliflower

Ho. 23

PineappleJuicer

tool* Chunks13«t-»i. pk«. '

Bowl

MKAIIHOOK

Corn ONCOB

;- -0B a n

largHead*

Celery

llowKvaFUNK & WAGNALL

UNIVEISAL STANDARD

EncyclopediaVegetables

ra

. • • • • ra

Only ^kCwttfa anypur<;h«Bc^

SI v*lu«!

AM Advertised Prices EffectiveThrough Sat., Sept. 4.

SPRY

Old DutchCleanser2 ?- 23c

HALOSbanpoo

Oa Bmlm fa S luM S*lUn« Tuil<:l»(r«

SunkistOrange-Ade3 >s 47t

Dial'Soap2 -:;- 23c

IpanaTooth Paste'*?& 47c

On HAU |a Star« TollclrU.

SunkistLemon-Ado3 - 49c

StrongheartDog Food

:^ 19c '—,

OIL

Planter'sHi-Hat

r Qrr 73c

UnderwoodDeviled Ham

s ^ 19c

VAtciiM TOP

&o*«« ,

DallMason Jars97c = $ 1 . 0 9

RealemonLemon Juice

& 33c

BLUESUDS

« tlluea! A '01.

Ideal Dallfruit Jars

OrleansLolli-Pups'*•". 27c

M

T}ie Cranford ACME at Alden & Aliln Streets is comfortably air conditioned for your shopping cohifort

Page 7: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

/ ' " • ' . ' . • - ' , • • •

THE CBANFORD fatlZEN AND CHRONICLE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBEft 3, 1954•n. X ^

p*gt

Dr. Aitcheson

isdom'"Wisdom,' the Principal Thiiig"

will_Jj<r .the subject taken by theRev. Geoijjje A. Aitcheson,' pastorof the Alliance ChUrphv ait the i 1a.m. worship service' Sunday. Fol-lowing the sermon, Holy Com-munion. will .be/served.

m

2s>v$£:\':.-

w

if;.1

At the 7:4S ~ p-m* evangelisticservice.' Dr.'Aitcheson will con-tinue his studies in the Book ofGcnesis,/laking as his topic,."God's

,'Carc of an Unwanted Mother andChild:"* There will be a piano solobv^SJiss Bc\-erly Pettcrsen.

/Both the Junior and Senior/Youth Fellowships will meet at

'6 :30 pin. Sunday." Members ofthe church Softball team, which.recently „ captured the " ChurchLeague championship, will speaka! the senior meeting. The seniorgroup will conduct a service atCranford . Hall in the afternoon.

The Labor Day Rally of theKorth Jersey Alliance Youth Fel-lowship Rally Zone will be helda^ the Women's Club of Morris-town. . 51 South street, Morris-town, ori Monday. There _wil1 ..betwo .services. on«r at~^ p.m. andone at 7 pjn. The Rev. KennethFrazer. pastor of Christian" andMissionary Alliance Church iri

J52?.bJIQ?!l>- ? ? - • - l^iJL, JM-'__tbe.speaker at both services. Carswill leave the local church forthe rally at 12:45 p.m.

The Bithia Class will meet atthe home of Mrs. C. E. Keyser,225 Midwood place; Westfield, onTue><lay at 8 p.m. , '

. There will be a •.meeting of theWomen's Missionary Prayer Bandat the church at 10 a.m. Wednes-

. day. The regular mid-week Biblestudy and prayer meeting will beheld at 8 p.m. : '• The New Jersey MetropolitanChapter quarterly meeting of theLadies* United Missionary QrganLJ

zation will be held at the C. andM. A Chuich in vNorth Caldwell

• next Thursday. There will be twoservices."one at 10;30 a.m. andone at 1:30-pjn. Mrs. Lewis King,

' missionary to India, will be the

Meetings to ResumeAt Temple Beth-EI

First • regular meeting of theor trustees of Temple Beth-

wiU bo hcM—ia the- templeat 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, it was an-nouhced today by H MartinFriedman, president

A congregational meeting willbe held at the temple next Wed-nesday night.

Regular Friday night servicesof the temple will be'resumed forthe new1 season on September 17.

ill7pit"

Sailors of China have used themariners* compass for' over 3,00ft

Student LeadersFor MethodistService Sunday

Edward Fuchs, a student at Dal-las Theological School, Dallas,Tex.," will be the speaker at the9:30. aim.,service at the MethodistChurch on Sunday. His topic will

'•The Means of Faith." Harlon'., Drew, Jr., son of Mr. and

jfrs. Drew, Sr.', of Cranford> willaksist witji the service. Mr. Drewis\ a student at Columbia BibleCollege, (Columbia, S. C.

Children's church leaders willbe: Nursery Department,''Mrs.• E.Billich, Sr.; Primary •Department,Mrs. A. MacDougall, and JuniorDepartment, Mrs. H. Sjursen.• There will be a "meeting of thecancer dressing unit of the-church

dp.m. the! same day there will bean executive meeting of>--4nfeWomen's Society of ChristianService. The Commission ori Edu-cation, with William Knox aschairman, will meet in the chapelat 8 p.m. ' i

Young People's Choir rehear-sals will be resumed at 7 p.m. nextThursday. All young people fromthe sixth grade through h i g hschool are invited to join, . Mrs.Alex Ellenbacher is director.

Rally Day will be held at thechurch on Scptehnber 12, withSunday School and church serv-ices at 0:30 and 10:50 a.m.

Isaac Lay Thomas, III, andChristian Eva Thomas, childrenof Mf. and Mrs. Isaac.Lay Thomas,Jr., of Grand Prarie, Tex., Werebaptized by the Rev. Donald T.Baggs at the church Jast Sunday.

A knot is a unit of speed equal toone nautical mile or 6,080 feet per

IOD HAY ram COMjTOKY. HAPMNEB8 ami lh« WAT TO MKALT(kr«««ck UiUniac U M B I af Uw fallawlac , . "i q w c i RADIO rsoaKAMs ..or THIS VICINIT*I

Hi. cvill ' 4 «*8 ,hc> — Every 8aa«ar<IIM ka) — Cvary Saatar

*:00 a. m.. •:«» a. m.

Ma. M M91m. *Ot ' < llot kcl — Every Sanday .......... ...10:l» a.m.•te. w q H <UM.ka>— Ii4. Ita >>n4ir Euh H(..l1:09 > . • .Sta. WQXat <IM« ke> — tna Batar4ay Each Ma.' _._ 1:05 p.m.

. I n m l i tar tna UtusUn am4 npvU t( taMlh ntcttri frsa* thaa*i n i n u will b« appreciated.

Monitor Views dw Now»TO(» ka>— Emrf TaoJajr. Naw* Braa4aaat »:4» p. am;

!'i : ' •

COAST TO COAST MOVERSAnrwhere In UieJtJ. 8. or Cah»d»

gaie, Bcmaonable andImmediate Service..

By Van — Rail — Boat — Air

HENRY P. TOWNSEND, AgentALLIED VAN LINES, Inc.Stance rackinx * Cratlnc » Specialty

Estimates Given FreelyCall WEatfleld 2-4484

KNOW YOUR AMERICA^HEDENBERG-MVBEAN

I T is «. oreoRAH, tviIM

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We are at your service when it conies to Insur-ance problems. Weil be glad to review yourpresent~tHsWafflaT7>r"~he1p you choflmhft-jfl

L tbat wi l l give you complete-and lastingprotection. .

SEE THIS WEEK'S XNSWEH ON NEXT PAGE

HEDENBERG-MACBEAN106 SOUTH AVE..EAU, CRANFORD*CR 6 - 3 0 0 0

PresbyfprianFall Service

SefSummer service schedule, with

a single service at 9:30 a.m., willconclude &t the First PresbyterianChurch this Sunday. Starting-September 12,' there will be' twoidentical services at 9:30 and IIa.m. each Sunday.

Plans also arc being made forthe re-opening of Sunday Schoolon September 12. There-will betwo identical sessions of each de-partment at 9:30 and 11 a.m. ex-cept in the Senior Department,"which will meet at 9:30 .only.New registrations for the Church-School'will be taken next Wed-nesday and .Thursday . "in . theSchool office. — ' - " * ' . '

Theie will be a meeting of theentire Church School staff at 7:30p.m. Wednesday. Teachers of theNursery Department will. be inthe nursery room from 2 to 3p.m.- next Thursday to greet thenursery children and give theman opportunity to get acquaintedwith their new room. • All chil-dren who art three 'years old_ areinvited.. Mothers may registertheir children for the nursery atthis time.

The 'Rev. Robert CL JLongakcr;smessage at. the 9:30 a.m. servicethis Sunday will be "Man DoesNot-Walk ^Alone;" — — "

St. Michael'g,Corner

By JAMES f\ WOODS

'Sv

The nineteenth century pro-duced one of the greatest popesever to mount to the Chair ofPeter. He was of the nobility —but was -to 'be revered and re-membered'' as the champion ofthe working man. ,

He was a son of Count LudovicoPccci and Irom his - earliest yearsgave promise of greatness. Hewas a noted scholar and a man ofdistinction and popuarity in Eur-ope at the time of his election.

As Leo XIII he found himselfinvolved In a great struggle withGermany's "Iron CHancellor,"Prince Otto Von Bismarck. Fromthis struggle he emerged a greater,,more, distinguished leader —withthe gratitude of the German"people and the respect and admir-ation of the.Imperialistic Bis-marck. . ' •

Now it. was France which drewhis attention, - and here -again .hewon world acclaim by the clear-ness of his stand. In an EncyclKcal to the French people he clearlydefined the church's attitude to-wards government and politics.Those opponents of the markedlyanti-clerical Republic who insistedon identifying their oppositionwith the church were dismayed

CHBISTIAN SCIENCECH17RCH SERVICES

church *— Christian Science -dcRThe ability, power, and sinless

perfection which characterizeman's, real nature in God's like-jicss-will. be..brought-out-at-tian Science services Sunda

The lcssbn-s,ermon entitled"Man" Includes the following pas-sages'from the King J^mes Ver-sion of thef Bible (fephesians 4:.7, 13>: "fiiut ,unto every one of usis given grace according to themeasure of the'gift of. Christ . * .Till we all come in the unity ofthe faith, and of the knowledge"of"the SoJyof God, unto a perfectmaar.ixnifi- the measure of the sta-ture of/the fulness of Christ."

From "Science and Health withKcj^to the Scriptures" by. MaryBaKer" 'ESdyV tHe: following ..pas-sage will be among those read(258:21 >: "The human capacitiesarc enlarged.and perfected in pro-portion as humanity gains the trueconception of man and God."

The GoldenJText is from Gene-sis <1:27): "God created man inhis own imaglt in the image ofGod creatpd he him.".

F11ST CHDICH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST

TMGFffXD AVt. AT lULN St.CBANFOBD

Servlcci: Sunday II A.M. -, Sunday School 11 A.M.

Testimonial ServiceWednesday Evening, 8:13 o'clock

During July and AusiutBEADING BOOM

IIS V«r«h Unl.n Avc. Cranl«r4"Open dally Moo. thru Sat., 1 to 4 P.M.

Friday evening 7:30 - 0

By the Rev. Albert Allinger, Cranford Methodist Church,Text: "ffor ju«l as lho body is on* and has. many membtn,

|nd all the miinbtn of th« body, though many,axe one body, so it is with Christ/' .

. L. Corinthians 12:12Within a few days the Second Assembly of the World Coun-

cil of Churches will be history. Reports of the many meetingsand discussions held since August 15 at Evanston, III., are notcomplete. We do'not know what the 600 delegates have to shar "').with us on the conference-!theme '"Christ —The-Hope Of ;TheW6rld." • The newspaper impression is. that the mood of thesedelegates from 48 countries, the cooperation, the harmony ofthought and feeling has exceeded expectations. It is not easyto gather.such an all-star cast of laymen and ministers togetherfrom'diversified backgrounds'and expect to achieve a lot in two Vweeks. The New York Times' Sunday edition announced the7

first report entitled "The Responsible Society in a World Per-"spective." It if the council called upon the world's Christiansto work for the "embodiment of the responsible society in politi-cal institutions" by emphasizing the following: .' ' • *

1. .Every person should be protected against arbitraryarrest or other interference with elementary human

» . ' , , ' r i g h t s . , • "••• " . • .

2. Every person should have the right to express his, religious, moral and political convictions.

. 3. Channels of political action'must be. developed bywhich the people without recourse to violence change

, their governments. . !• • • •T h e 5,000-word report conc ludes wi th t h e s e words :"We stand .against submission to engul fment by, or appease-

ment of totalitarian tyranny and aggression. W e a l so s tand againstthe e'xplotation of any people b y economic m o n o p o l y or politicalimper ia l i sm. In the world communi ty we m u s t stand for thefreedom of, a l l -people to know the truth which makes m e n free

r^and Yor''ba^fc~civil^IiBerties~br^alI people to s trugg le for a higherfreedom." '_ • •

These are words of hope in a day w h e n hysteria haspenetrated. the walls of almost every home. We are afraid-tospeak our minds on any vital issue for fear of being misunder-

- stood or being looked upon with suspicion. It also follows thatsuch an atmosphere is not conducive to the search of truth norwill we have the courage to proclaim it" and follow it when it isfound. Jesus said, "Ye shall'know the truth and the truth shall,make you free." • > . .

It is hoped-that all the churches will study carefully the 'findings of the assembly in the next year and make it the basisof discussion in the local church. Reports of the assembly andinformation qn the World Council of Churches may be obtainedfrom the Ecumenical Book Shelf, 156 Fifth avenue. New York

; ° . N - Y

- • • • • ' • • • • •

by his "Render to Caesar," butthe justice of his stand broughtnew respect to the papal office',trade, commended publicly allchampions of the rights-of the

He condemned the African slaveNegro, and, looking into the fu-ture, condemned segregation ofthe liberated slaves. . '

He foresaw the evils of divorceand wrpte jHjwejjfully agajnst ,it..The evils which' he'poiHted out asresulting ".from divorse are Amer-ica's shame .today, and, more thanany other single factor, contri-bute to the success- ^f'atheisticforces, both" here and" abroad.

His encyclicals and pronounce-ments form the lengthiest scriesin thc history of the papacy andarc distinguished by their clarity

and simplicity.His greatest triumphs ' — and

there were .many — came in thefield of sociology. His famous en-cyclical Rerum Novarum, "Onthe Condition of the WorkingClasses," condemned the hardshipsand injustices. of the capitalisticsystem, which had grown alarm-ingly with the Industrial age.. In-"sistently, he defended the dignityof man and deplored the systemwhich relegated him to the. levelof .a souless commodity, to bebought cheaply, used and abusedto exhaustion, then discarded.

On this coming Labor Day,working men 'might well whispera prayer that the great Pope ofLabor may one day become theSaint of Labor.

Ronald Flaig to AttendLuther League Sessions

Flalg, sou uf MiMrs. Charles Flajg of 5 Omahadrive, will represent .the, Luther

.! At~League4,jot Calvary^ LutheranChurch' at. the 59th annual con-vention of. the Luther League ofNew Jersey. He Is treasurer ofthe local unit.

- Some 350 lyoung people fromthroughout New Jersey'will gatherat Drew/University, Madison, forthe convention Saturday throughMonday.~Vii. H. T. L4hmann, book editorof^Muhlenbeig Press, Philadel-phia, will be the main speaker.He will address the opening serv-iice Saturday,' the Holy Commun-ion service the.following day andthe final day's worship service.

Alliance ChurchVacation SchoolExercises Tonight

Closing exercises of the DailyVacation Bible School at the Alli-ance Church will be held-; at 7:30tonight. Each department of theschool will take part and studentswill demonstrate some of the les-sons they have studied during theschool term. Parents and friendsof the children are invited to at-tend. • • , . • - • • • • • • . ' . • ' • •

The_ school Jhis year .hasjaeen(he largest ever held at the church,with the attendance averagingabout 250 for the first week. Itwill close Friday morning, atwhich time awards for attend-ance and 'work accomplished wilbe presented. •"

Personnel of the school is/asfollows: • '

Superintendent, Mrs. . JA. A.Storr; secretary, Mrs. C. ScPerry;Nursery Department, /Mrs. A.Whlttaker, superintendent; Mrs.W. Felmly, Mrs. P. Johnson, Mrs.G. Tranor.Mrs. j . Sabados, Mrs.H. Murphy, Miss A. Bassard.

Beginners' Department, Mrs. G.Sharpe,; superintendent; Mrs. A.Boudier,' Mrs.. T. Curtis, Mrs. E.Carriger, Mrs. H. Hermann, Mrs.H. Johanson, Mrs. M. Riccitelli,Mrs. TJ. Lorentzen, Mrs. J. Jacob-sen', Mrs. J. Lame, Mrs. C. Keyser.

Primary— Department, Mrsr~E.Moore, superintendent; Mrs. D.Cunningham, Mrs. D. Davis, Mrs.H. Davis, Mrs; F: Lowrey, Mrs. D.Nelson, Mrs. M. Peters, Mrs. P.Golias, Mrs. R. Pizella, Mrs. G.Aitcheson, Mrs. A. Yacko, Mrs. J.Schuhmann. .

Junior Department, Mrs. F.King, superintendent; Mrs. At.V elke, Mrs. E. Francis, Mrs. G.Bode, Mrs. P. Sharkey, Mrs. O.Hermanson, Mrs. F. Kitty,, Mrs.E. Lowrey, Mrs. R. Parker.

Intermediate Department, Mrs.W. Malwitz, superintendent; Mrs.T. Crane and Miss M. Keyser. ,

Communion"Oh, To Hear and Speak!" will

be the subject of the sermon ofthe Rev. Arnold J. Dahlquist, pas-tor of Calvary Lutheran Church,this Sunday at 9 a.m. Communionwill be administered for the firsttime since ' July. Mrs. LouiseHausmann will be soloist.

The Cancer Sewing Unit, orig-inally scheduled to meet -nextTuesday, will meet at 10 a.m. onSeptember 14. The Church Coun-cil will hold its regular meetingnext Thursday at 8 p.m. in thechurch house. First fall rehearsalof the Senior Choir will be heldin the church at the same time.'

• A full" schedule of activitieswill Presume the following Sundwith regular church servicesi At8:15 a.pi. (matins) and the mainservice.at 11 a.m. Sunday Scnoolwill open the fall term^vithclasses at 9:30 a.m. and resumptionof the bus service, to/outlyingcommunities. Anyone-jiesiring in-formation concerning this busservice may call the'churchor' Pastor Dahlq

Trimity/ChurchSummer Service

^ EndingThe/last of the summer series

of services will be held at Trinity

of UN Specialized AgeuciesRotary by Economic Adviser

Church this Sunday at 9.-30 a j

Frank V. H. Carthy,W *>*« TJ~l-.r r i l rh l lr i i l

Dr. Richard F. Peterson, economic, adviser on social and econ-.. . ,_, .„. « ^ _ _ - . - ^ _ ^ ' nhe"lMlted Statesr a 1 r s t M h e ^ g t n f r t m

nnford Rotarians thqt these activities'of the ITN rright weltk i d i v i l d ti i

short address entitled . means

Rotaria t q h iviiesof the ITN rright weltof keeping underprivileged nations out of the Communist

ence or No-Existence' It was announced

Sunday .'that . TriniSchool will open for/winter season onNew students wilKbe,all grades at Hun time.

Richar<d J. I0rk, seminar}sistant, ia delegation7 of local youth' toannual .. Youth,;. Conferencediocesej /to . be held .Scp'.ciJO-12 aT Medford Lakes; Mr.will /be in Cranford ovor

-end to draw up finalfull choir rehearsal

Id Friday night, September io"tder direction of Robert v'

Hazen, organist and

«,poke ot the luncheon meeting of the'Crantord*

the

, Eddie- Rickenbacker w.-.sautomobile race driverdistinguished himself in

How Christian Science Utah

"The lasting Solution

to Conflict"

WVNJ—620lcc."Sunday^ Sepleinber 5 — 9 AJL

you slioulA.

l Pontiac is One of the Greatest Cars Ever Buift!Mulch today's Punliac with America's finest cars and you'll get adruinulic picture of Pontiac value. First of ull, Pontiuc is big-bigger, in fact, than many cars costing hundreds of dollars more.IfVtiitiuc is beautiful—with its distinctive Silver Streak styling.IiiHidcV you'll find genuine fine-cur luxury mid. u|»|ioi|itiuent»-r

ifj-^i'b. the rotuuiuesg und conifort tliut come only with a longwbeelbuiic. But the big ourprine comes .when you test Pontiuc'aperformance. See hpw alert it ia to every demand in traffic, how ithandle* and corners almost without effort, how it takes to the o|ienroad with plenty of power to epure and saves money every mile.

B.S-17W

Pontiac has the Best Resale Value in its Price dasslAlong' with all its fine-cur size, luxury' and performance*. Pontiachas a very special attribute no cur ut any price-can beal—its un-surpusKed reputation for ycar-in, year-out dependability. Poniiuc'scarefree, economical long life and its- proved record of amazinglylow niuinteiiunco expense ore so widely knpwn au<( acknowledgedthat it commands the highest resulc Value in its price class. Be-cause Poiithic-is America's most desirable used cur, your original t

investment comes back in greater measure wheta you trade.

Pontiac h Priced Just Above the lowest IAfter you've convinced yourself of Poi(liac'» value,' after you'vecoiisitlcred ull the good tliuigM you've heard about its depeud'ability—see hoW it comparvs dollar-wist-. Despite the fact that ifs a

.fine car in every souse of the term, Pontiuc is priced so near thelowest tliat if you can nffor<l n»y >n»iy r]iT y o u van itffttrd u Puuti

We'll Make You a Deal You Can't Afford to MisslRight now We're making such liberal Irude-hr allowances thatyou just ciui't afford to pass up the greatest opportunity youever bud to become u fine-car owner. Come in and get die fact*.

DOULUZ fOB 0OIX.1K YOU CAVT BEAT A roXTIAC I

R A WSON MOTORS SALES, Inc.l*ONT|UsO RALES AMD SEKVICK ' ' '

433-457 NORTH AVE., EAST, WESTF1ELD, N. J. * PHONE WE$TF1ELD

i u 1

C

. . . . . .;• :it the, Methodist Church

Thursday.;•., speaker said that Ambas'-,r Lodge has a staff of 15M-IN and observers to provideniaterial from which to formpolicy of the United States .

^^iTuliircity~is"give»r"fo the:. (,i the various U. N. brgan-

nf'concerned with the bui ld -'\ip of standards of lining in, i rii-i w^h poorer economies,::,.se activities are construct .ti/i-ffs in preventing such n a -: from succumbing to c o m -ftiiCund accomplishments of;• ;iKt-ncies" are. very consider-'. iff. Peterson declared.ommunist f o r c e s / p r o m i s e..V and immedia te /acUon t opo^i er^populations, according

Rotary

to Dr. Peterson, where demo-cratic forces are constrained topromise nothing they cannot de-liver and to c a r r y , out theirconstructive -aid as rapidly aspcssible to meet the quick-rturn

-challenge ~rjf~ComhiunismT^ TSpecialized agencies' of the

United Nations were compared,by the speaker wiOT cabinetposts, and departments of' theUnited States. AH are concernedwith technical functions to assistwith programs ,of. the democraticpowers promoting western ideals,he related.' '.-•.'_

' In outlining' the importance ofthe agencies, pr. Peterson pointedout four fields of contribution tothe cause pf democracy. Fijrsf Is

. „ / •

Available OnEasyvT«rmt

GENERAL ElECTBICOIL-FIRED BOILER• turn

Chapman Bros.Plumbing and Healing Contractors

36 NORTH AVE., E. CRanford 6-1320CLOSED SATURDAYS DURING SUMMER MONTHS

and HOUSES

The American people have racial roots thai lead.Jbacjt jnto_ evflry part of the woild. Despite *uch gen^-_eraUzation labels as the "consenraUve New Englander."the "breexy middle westerner/' the "hospitable south-

er." the "typical American" Is pretty much theM lf M r i

.emer. .yp

same whether he lives In Maine. California, Missouri"or Oreaon. • ,

So it is with our houses.We- have New F«T^^"4 Colonials, T.onl«lanq

French designs, western ranch types.' solid JludsonBiver Dutch brick 'ho——"^, «s well as th> Mw«r.

rontftrnpffrgry i!»*VjI'M- And we find them all(airly well distributed from coast to coast from'northto south. Apparently the house a man builds dependsmore on his personal taste (or that of his wife) thanon where he builds 1L

The House illustrated Is Colonial at its best — byRoyal Barry Wills. AJLA. But if your taste runs toother styles you will find them too In our MasterHouse-of-the-Monih Portfolio. '

This Is a bee service to people of this area whoplan to build new houses. You are cordially Invitedto make use of it

336 Centennial Avenue CRanford

YOUH 8EHVTCE CENTER FOR EVERYBUILDINO MEED. ',

- r - - . , t • • • • . • ' • '

the contribution of informatonavailable to the entire UnitedNntions-asMveil M. lu.tlif UHHe"<TStates dnd \lo the political au-thorities of the United States inaddition to private industrialorganizations: This informationfrequently is complied by thestatistical section., i •

Second activity is .the promo-tidn of investments in foreigncountries. The desirability of thisactivity is based on the conceptthat we cannot be sound econom-ically unless the whole world issound.- A resolution has beenbrought before the United Na-tions for promoting foreign in-vestments -, in underdevelopedcountries, Efforts are being madein. cooperation with such coun-tries to.insure the safety of suchinvestments in the face of pres-ent threats of. nationalization offoreign developments, and to in-sure proper return on such in-vestments which can be with-drawn from the country. In thisconnection the International Bankfor Reconstruction has had nodifficulty in obtaining privateAmerican capital for foreign loansand bonds, Dr. Peterson reported.

Third consideration in economicactivity the speaker said, is thevery small investment, in econ-omic development of countriescompared with the returns and

On Lois Wicks jSchooTT^ctcfciii Staff

F.:

.results- ^obtainedv—'The—United•-and_irrigatipn~~was-~losfc -to--tSt t P»'escht population and puttiStates put up $13,000,000 out ofa "total assessment of $24,000,000for the purpose. This figure isless than the amount budgetedby the .city of New York forstreet-cleaning. An investmentof $24,000 in the introduction ofhybrid corn to Europe -producedan increase'in production of $24,-

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDNotice Is hereby elven that the Board

of Assessors has submitted to the Town-ship Committee its rcport...fff . assessmentsagainst lands and real estate by reason ofthe construction of <lt sanitary sewerfrom the intersection of Bloomlncdaleand Blrchwood Avenue, northerly alotu!Blrchwood Avenue to Cranford Avenueand 'easterly Wong Cranford Avenueapproximately 020 feet: 42) concretecurbing on the 'easterly side of WalnutAvenue between Rurltan Road and Mit-chell Place; (31 sanitary sewer -in-SbuitAvenue .from Lvhiuh Volley Railroad 67Gfeet westerly; (4) sanitary sower In Hari'-tan Road from existing sewer 120 feeteasterly; (31 sanitary sewer in Connecti-cut Street from' Lexington' Avenue toClark Street and in Clurk Street to Den-inan Road and in Denman Road to apoint US feet north of Concord Streetand in Concord Street to a point 123 feetwest of Denman Road and in Morse.Street from Connecticut Street to a pointlaS feet west of Denman Road; 101 sani-tary newer in Lexingtnb Avenue fro(nmanhole 90 feet west of G'efl Avenuenortherly 478 feet to a point 70 feetsouth of Denman Road; 171 sanitarysewer, in Bloomlngdale Avenue beginning.at a -manhole 44 feet west of Cherry woodAvenue and running easterly 470 feetto Kentlworth-Crajiford boundary line;<0> sanitary sewer in Rosalie Avenuefrom Blrchwood Avenue 1000 feet. east-erly to Route 4 Parkway; <9> sanitary•ewer beginning at corner of Walnut andBlake Avenues through right of way, toDenman 'Road at William Street, thenalong Denman Road to Hendrlcks Strict,(hen along Hendrlcks Street to Stough-ton Avenue, then along Stoughton Avenueto Livingston Avenue, then along Living-ston Avenue to South Union Avenue,then along South Union Avenue to JamesAvenue; (10) sanitary sewer In DenmanRoad from William Street 238 feet north-erly; Ull sanitary sewer in. DenmanRoad from Hendricks Street 1745 feetsoutherly as local improvements, andthat said report accompanied by mapsIs on file in' the office of the TownshipClerk open to inspection by all persons

-in lnterest;-and-that-the—Townshlp-Gom-^mlttce will m<>et on Tuesday, September14. 1954 at 8:30 P.M., in the MunicipalBuilding1 to consider said report for con.'

"arm«tlon~at~WhIch~"meetrng~ all persons'in interest may be heard.

By order ot the Township Committee.J. WALTER COFFEE.

Township ClerkDated: August 10, 1854. . ' .

Roofing—--SidingGutters - Leaders,_• MMorh ••:.."/...:

Guaranteed.

JOHfMrDI FABIO" M2 E.' LINCOLN AVENUE

r CRanford fr-1105

Miss .Bette Jane Smith of Springfield once again is on theteaching siaflF of th,e. Lois Wiclfs School of the Dance of Unionand Cranford. -After several years' extensive study with theschool. Miss Smith became a full-time teacher three years; ago.Last summer; for professional experience, she toured the Southwith the Gae Foster Roxyettes. This year she attended the'Na-tional Association of toance and Affiliated Artists' convention for'approved dancing teachers held. for~bne week in New York City.The latest styles"in jail phases of the "dance were presented,including, new theories on the approach-to more efficient .teaching.

000,000 in two years. Anotherexample cited by • the speaker wasa fertile valley in Afghanistan

fulfilled promises of the Com-munist powers. It was frequent-ly, possible to trap -Cornmunists

that was useless because of severe; in" Claims that were belled \>ymalaria conditions which havenow been' eliminated. He sdidalso that Ceylon has a once fer-tile plateau that is entirely use-less because Jhe art of terracing

present population and puttingthis plateau into production is acurrent study of UN economicagencies. •

The fourth consideration ad-vanced by Mr. Peterson was thepublic- platform- provided by theUN for the proof of western ac-complishments compared with un-

facts, he said• In response to a question, thespeaker asserted that Communistpowers cooperated in the opera-,tions of the agencies only with a

advantnge, and that,were "never advanced

statisticsby such

IHobert E. Crnne. "The- meeting;was under the leadership of jPresident 'C. Van ChnmberllnJClub singing was under the c!i-|rection of. Charles E. Dooley. with| o f. D r ^ n d M r s T a o m a s R Austin ; l o r 'Arthur • K. Burditt at the piano.!

Rotarian guests, were Wesley i"Stange"f~of the Newark Club,]

thMr * ^' ' ' j ->"iy "f H"i '"l l" 'itRobert Gumbert of Westfield.. •

M**s Austin to Attendtucknell Orientation jiarMiss Diane E. Austin, daughter'

i of 4 Tulip street,'will be a mem- j "

'v- st'ulten» Kov-ernnlent ottieractsve ir. other extra-curricu-

At BjickhelL shey for" the degree of bachc-

iilld OTmcn ' irhn trill ritp.irt -it ' •Ti rP'Y—M C<ih*rt,—Jg.t , oloctri-Bucknt-ll UnivcrsitV, Lewisbttrg C l ng' s J1"1^' fn^rr-nn. L'SN. son of

- h . 'o , _ u . . - . . : . - ' . . , '.: •,T..J^-'-i-- " y - C6ag-TO_ 330 Waloiil

Marshall, Fellow WorkerShare Idea Award . . !

Walter R. Marshall of 220 South |Union avenue, shared an award of.$75 with Henry Doerinfl of B.iy-onne at the last mettinfi of the;"Coin Your Ideas" Committee of!Esso, Standard Oil Company at :BaxotincjRellnery. I

Mr. Marshall and Mr. Doecing,both instrument' repairmen, sujj-'jgested the use of seal oil in placeof glyeol in ievel indieirttir leys toreduce instrument repairs

Pa., September 17 fcir'a t ' ive -d; iv ' . . , . '" ,">• • J .i. v..- ' •ivtjnue, • i> itxiurd the heavy

orientation period pii.ir to the op- -cruiser USS ••Baltimore currentlyeniii},' ojC'lliif.'tpllf«e for its 109th on ii>- third Meyi:terronean •cruise•yent'r-••• : u • I\vith the- U.S. Sixth Fleet."

Miss Austin was graduated from - •- '. . "Craufnrd High'School in June and: Myopia is 'fifarsigr}t«Jness.! '"

•:r :fl

ANSWER

Deborah Samson enlisted in 1778 as Robert Shirt-Jiffe. The military authorities supposed she wasa man.

! • : : : • ; .

sources as was done by the west-ern world. - ;

The speaker was introduced tothe club by Stephen Orlando,chairman of the international ser-vice committee, and the thanksof the club were expressed by

if you need to save . . .if you are In a hurry . . .if you live at home . . .and want college training

JUNIOR COLLEGECAN HELP A LOT

and we mean UNION JUNIOR COLLEGE

r

You can do your freshman andsophomore years here in lesstime (with summer sessions)and at lower cost by enrollingnow and living at home for twomore years.Or you can earn an associate inarts degree in the same period

. and be prepared (tor a career.Union' Junior College offerstransfer or terminal courses withthe. degree of associate in arts in

business administration, chemistry, economics, engineering, geol-ogy, government, history, languages, mathematics, music, phil-osophy, physics, secretarial studies, or sociology.Union Junior College is convenient by bus or car; operated atmoderate cost; accredited; "coeducation; transfers with-advancedstanding to best universities; provides day or evening classes.

far oil details inquire of Registrar, CR 6-2600

UNION JUNIOR COLLEGESpringfield Avenue at Holly Street, Cranford, N-J.

II '54!. EachJSaratigs AccountInsured up to $10^)00

//0 ON VOUR SAVINGS

^ CURRENT DIVIDEND, • •

The Leading2 Savings Institution in Central Union County

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED AT BROAD AND PROSPECT STS.

> ! ' • • . " . • : •

WESTFIELD FEDER

-REGISTER rom-

TIMF TOQQ

• 7

Phono CRanfordfor* taxL Our ratessonable but you get topservice.. Forget traffic ,

' inc. call tv cab.

TAXITMAOiQiWE GO AXYWHERi i

Taught by teachers who are especially trainedin their field./Beginners, advanced and pro-fessiomd students will be accepted.

Miss Thehna-will be available for a personal InterviewThunwlay, Sept. 2nd, Friday, Sept 3rd and Saturday,Sept 4th — 10:00 A. M. to 5:00 P. M.

TAP — BALLET — TOE — ACKOBATIC — MODERN JAZZ

AND HAWAIIAN DANCING VOCAL TRAINING

LOIS WICKSSchool of The Dance

1 1 Eastman Street ' Cranfor<uV(« few doors east of the CraiiWd TbeStre) "-'•[

for information phjtne CR 6-2258 or 6-4563

SAVINGS

• s s f l

BROAD AT PROSPECT ^ 7 ^ ^ / \1 " ^ . i * A SAVINGS INSTITUTION

i• • • /

•••i'.t'-mi

Right now, you Can get a big, dependable, '44 Dodge for only, a few dollars morethan .you'd expect to pay for a light carin the lowest price field.

And when you do, you,will hate a lotmore tar in every way. ..' ;

You will have long, low linea and naturalbeauty that prove a car can be big.undimpressive Without being awkward or

You will have more driving enjoymentfrom fully-automatic PowerFlite Trans^mission, Pull-Tune Power Steering, andnew Dodge Full-Power Brakes.

And you will get the tasting1 satisfactionand greater reward* of owning; and driv-ing the car that has built a tradition ofdependability for 40 great years. Discoverall that Dodge offers. Come in today!

appearing to be contrived.

You wflFhave more power and flashingperformance from tlio record-breaking150-h.p. Red Rum V-8 engine.

You witf have more prujo winningeconomy from the car that has won twostraight victories in tho fumoutt MobilgaaEconomy Run.

DEPENDABLE'54

m i

— Dodge Dealers present: Danny Thomas, ABC-TV • Bert Parks in "Break The Bank." ABC-TV • Km Bcaen. KBC B a i a ——

HUGH GLARK MOTORS609 North Ave.y W. Westfleh

r<m

Page 8: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

; - •;;•••• .; ' . • • ' " ; } • : > . . . : . . • • • : • • • • ; ; ; • • ; . • • £ ' • . - . . ^ ; / ' - , . . . • . _ > ' " . . ? • - • • . / • v - J _ " : 1 ^ . v v . , . . • ' ' ' . i : ~ . - : ' • > " • ' ••^•'•*'/-' • ' • • • - r ^ ' '•: •^•••' - ' ^ _ _ : } S ' r - - T

Six

Nurses BeginStudies TuesdayAt Junior College

Getting off to a quick start,. some 50 student nurses will begin

— their - studies - Tuesday at -Union]Junior Coneye.

The girls are student nurses atElisabeth Qeiieiul iPerth "Amboy General Hospital^This wjfll be the fifth year that stu-dents at the Elizabeth hospital willtake their academic courses at thelocal college, while the students ofthe Perth Amboy institution willbe attending Union Junior. Collegefor the first time. " .

-—T4*c-regular-lail-tecm-at-theTjun-ibr college get? underway on Sep-tember 23., Freshman orientationday will be held on .September 17when placement tests will be ad-ministered and all new studentswill be introduced to the staff andfaculty. • .

Registration for the fall term forboth day and evening students willbe held on September 20, 21, and

» . tateTcgistnrtion continues un-til September 30. • •

For j h e first time, the studentnurses will also take their labora-tory as well as academic coursesat the local college. Following a^reception .on Tuesday, the girlswill begin .classes on Wednesdayand labs start.on September 10.,-:X)r. Kenneth C.MacKay, presi-dent and dean, reported that afac-

; / , . . . _

abrasion of tfie^ right shoulderwhen be fetlJ'#liile roller skatingat the>South Union avenue park-ng lot last Thursday night. He

was taken , to• pqlice headquartersby Sgt. Harry Page'for treatment.

CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1954"

Trtty-azhjnrntstrntors meeting willhf hplrT nrir'Spptpmtwr Iff

T/ax Appeal Hearings ..Set for This Month

Hearings on appeals from 1954assessments by municipal officialsfiled. bV'Crariford property ownerswjll be conducted on September21 by the Union County Board ofTaxation" ~ ~ ~ ;

,. The board announced earlierthat 11 Cranford property ownershad filed appeals. -

Appeals from Garwood will beheard on September 16,,

Injured While SkatingRichard- Darnbrowski, 12, of 414

Walnut avenue, .suffered tfn

Pt

SPECIALIZING IN FILLING PRESCRIPTIONSOF,EYE PHYSICIANS

PRESCRIPTION OPTICIANS

109 JEFFERSON AVE.' Martin Bid*. — Street Floor

EL. 2-2340O»«a • A. V. U « r. M. Dally — tt*a. * Tfcara. » A- M. U S F."

l ; i ' • • • • • ' • . . . .

ip

lR

Announcing Another Season of

CLASSES NOW FORMINGfor Children 3-years^ld and over

> Ballet - Toe - TapAcrobatic — Spanish Castinet — American Jazz

, - Special Classes for Boysin TUMBLING and TAP

— 0 PrivateLessons forThosei Eligible^""• No Registration Fee ...• No Contracts to Sign• No Fees in Advance• One Dollar per Lesson

Miff Yvettt ho« appeared otoiuon th« Broadway Stage;has toured the United States a^BWtfc Pacific In legitimate•hows and has been seen on Many T,V. presentations, in-cluding the Milton Berle Show. Steve Allen's "Songs ForSale/' "Toast Ol The Town." e t c , -

Call CRanford 6-35392 3 Chester Lang Place, Cranford, N. J.No.' 11 CRANFORD BUS STOPS AT CORNER. . -

Area Residents SelectedFor Grand Jury Duty

Two Cranford area rr*irtpnt.<

were among citizens selected forGrand Jury duty for the Septem-ber session. They are: Mrs. Doro-thy M. Hinkel, clerk, - of 203Thomas street, and R. Earl Erik-,sen,' Sr., supervisor, of 344 Beechavenue, Garwood.."

Superior Court Judge RichardJ. 'Hughes wilf enpanel_the_GJandJury on September 8.

Men In Service \Cpl. Donald Rutz, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Irwin Rutz of 8 :tfaw-thorne street, stationed in TriesteWith tbe 351st Infantry, has beenon maneuvers as radio operatorwith a machine gun company inGermany.. A graduate of Cran-ford1 High School in 1950, he en-tered'the service On March 3, 1953.

Salmon are noted for their' ability to jump waterfalls whileswimming upstream.

, • NOTICE..'"Take notice that application, has been

ma'de. to the Township Committee ofthe Townyhip of .Cranford. New Jersey,to transfer to* Bertha W. Steinernnnn,trading as "The Lodije" /or prctnlscslocated at 3-5 South Avenue, west, Cran-ford, New Jersey, the. Plenary Ket:ill

_Con«iirnptHin__ license^Nsi^C^i^b^retofHr~rssue*d (b"*Bvrtriii W. Stelnemann, jExecutrix, trading an "The Lodge" for thepremises' located at 3-5 South Avenuewest. Cranford. N. J.'. Objectiony. if any. should 'be madeimmediatejy .In writing to1 J. WalterCoffee, Clerk of the Townahlp of Cran-ford. N. J.. . '

(Signed) •BEHTHA W. STEINEMANN,

. 12 Riverside Drive,Cranford, N. J. 0-!

\ . • . . . .

I PLAY SAFE ON

TV REPAIRS

Trust the repairing - •of'-your TV wt onlj tothoroughly qualified, ex-perts. We are staffedby factory -. approved

exclusively*

Dreaming ofYour Own Home?

* ~ i t'

itSend \o

We give you information on what to check when you looc"

at houses, old houses as well as new-ones.-Wc tell you

to arrange a mortgage, and give you

an idea of what it all will cost. Then

we tell you about the/conveniences and

luxuries a house could have.

j Public Service Electric and Gas Companyj Room 8311. 80 Park Place, Newark. N. J.I Please lend me a copy of your book, "Whatj to Look for When You Buy a House".

SJEHVICE'Name...

j Address.

A 090 34

BUSINESS DIRECTORYRAPID RErERENCE TO RE - - ' _ • i i VJ

XAING MOTOR CAB CO.

Tour Authpztxed

IIS-1SI E. otk Streil»«rwlce Dejrt: nt E. 4tb Street

MARSHALLMOTOB SALES. INC.

Since 11124

AmlkMiicd Dealer

IJMCOLM * MEKCCmi

•»I*» — Bcnica

Genera]. Repairs

Vied Can ' -

BXisabcth S-60W

Ml N« Broad St. '— Ellxa.betta

NORBIS CHEVROLET. Inc.

• A U S * SEKVICS

Comnlete Parta Dept.

iecta u i c-caUal Awta. . 1T«*U|cUr-eiie

HAWSON MOTOBS. inc.

Complete Parts and

WESTFIELD

Is Harlk A * * . B.' WKataeU B-STSS

PUUNTOXD

UNION COONTY BDICK CO.

26 EASTMAN ST.

CR 6-1776

Aalaarlxa

•alMUiSurlc*one T«iica:

4*0 Narifc A*e , E. • ' WestfleUKEilBcM Z-SOSO

BANKS

COMPLETE BANKINOMember FDIC ..

• HaHk A»e^W, CrmmlmttCManfari . « » S

I«e Center "-M, O i n a M -- WrTiUtelS •!-—7S '

_... iii.-*.^BfM« BU WeatmaU" " Wbiidi t-tise J

A*e-. Beetck

UNION COUNTYTBUST COMPANY

Untigmtri — laana — Savinci Account*

All Truat Services

— • CaaTealraUy LteaU* OOIees —

1M BMlk A»«-> B. Cnafanl — C« S-1SSS

14S BraU Bt, — 1U EUaabelfc A n . t

MO W o i m l u U r A*e^-«SS W n U k U A i tEliaabeib

Member FDIC

• BANKSSAVINGS

INSTITUTIONS

A—COMPLETE—aritvicE—*-osAIX..HA.VEJU~Or- ALL -.

csInsured Saving* — Home Loans

U.«le««rd al CtnUr, KcDlIw.itk

KLiutxtkK.flb W. .d D««r Elm. Lla<Lca

IJa<Ko

MOOEKNLZINa CONSDtTANTB

« Additions 0 Altentton

• Hoof Kepaln • Gotten• Leaders # 8Mlnr

# Jalousies >..

1 Walnut AT«. CKanford 9-Uli

A. IAIONECrcnaKral ''ContracUnQ

S BENECA KOAD CRANFORD

. Oaafar* •-«••«' - "• '

• BEAUTV SALONS *

WILLIAM'S BEAUTY BOX

' 113 North Union Arena*

WE HAVE MOVED NEXT DOOETO OUB NEW 8ALON AT

110 Walnut Avenue

TOWNE BEAUTY SALONTEL. CE 0-31(4

CAMERAS

M A R T E N S -PHOTO SHOP

Camera*—Projectors,. . Every thin* Photofuphlc -

PbotsiUUac—Quick ServicePauport Photo* — 15 Minnie Service.

31 North A»e^. W. CK*nford 6-102*

COAL

TH0MA8 BENTNATI

KLSCTBIOAX

COirTBACTOB

CBaafut

tM Nartfc sUi St. Keansrerlk

FLORISTS

DEHMER*SFLOWEB SHOPPE

. PLOWBRS FOR. . BVKJtT OCCASION. ;' •., Member F. T. D. v •

. ' " Cmsafars « - l » n • .' ' . .'1*7 N. tTalea Ava. ' - Craalar*

KENILWOBTH GREENHOUSES- A. BOESH1.K. Prop.

TOOWUU FOR AIX OCCASIONSWedding BouQuets * ' •

Member Florirt Telecrapb Delivery Ani l .rUMERAL, DESIGNS

. CRaafers «-«t«S . .ts Craea St. KudlwattB

. VENTEBS FLOBIST& GBEENHOUSE

FLOWERS FOB AIX' OCCASIONS

" • " i " I D S . — Flowers Bar Wire

•emnwutkIM Mlealraa Av*.

REKEMEIEB'SFLOWERS. Inc .

WEDDING * FDNRKALWORK OUB SPECIALTY ,

' Member. • 'rierUU' Telecraah Delivery Ala's.

106 Walnut Are. CB 84700

FOOD MARKETS *

CHAS. KUBTZ MABKET

- OaOIGB MEATS * rOTJUT

' FBOZKN FOODS

GARWOOD COAL CO.

KOPPERS

COKB

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G A R W O O D KENILWORTH

THE CRANFORD CipTIZEir AND CHRONICLE. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 2, 1 5

— It was learnedMayor L. Thomas'Daub

ppf the Lehigh Valley Railroadlo permit him to assume the $7,500a year post of second undersherifldt' Union County, to which he was(

appointed Monday by Sheriff AlexC. Campbell, effective as of No-vember 1. \

Mayor Daub has been an elec-trician with the Lehigh Valley for2« yaars and has 12 years more toj;o before reaching retirement age.

His name also had been. men-tioned among likely candidates fortlie vacancy on the Board of Free-holders caused by the death lastweek of Col. J. H. M. Dudley, butthe mayor, said he himself had, noteven considered that possibility.Mayor Daub was defeated as aGood Government Republicancandidate for freeholder nomina-tion in the April primary election..

On November I Mayor Daub.will' succeed Roy'E. Carey of Un-ion, who will.become first under-'sheriff upon retirement of Charles

Set for NewSchool Term

GARWOOD — Cleaningpainting work in classrooms

and

Mr. Carey, who had been'countysuperintendent of public works,became second undersheriff whenWilliam Darroch of Mountainsideand formerly of Garwood retiredlast December. Mr! Ayers hasbeen" in the sheriff's .offjee sinceSheriff Campbell's election in 1938and himself served as sheriff • fortwo terms*..

First elected mayor in N6vem-ber, 1944, Mayor Daub has beenreflected to head the borough govr..•

. crning body every two years since'then, gaining.the distinction of be-injj the only local mayor electedfive times in succession. This year,

.however, he did not seek'nomina-tion °for reelection.

Mayor Daub served on the Zon-inK Board from 1937' to 1940 andon, the Board of 'Education from1040 to 1943,. Including one yearas president of: the board. He/Waselected to the Borough Council in1943 and assumed the ,post .ofmayor in 1945. /

He "became a member of theGarwood Fire Department in 1928,

(Continued on jtagc 2) ,

MAYOR L, THOMAS DAUB

JTSallFof all.schools has been com-!pleted, and installation of newjheating and ventilating equipmentin classrooms at Franklin and Lin-coln Schools is expected to be com-.

. pleted' this week in readiness for!I the opening of the new school termI at 8:30 a.m. next Wednesday, itwas reported today by Superin-tendent of Schools Lewis F.. Laird.

It probably, will -be. severalweeks, however, before laying ofthe. new floor in the gymnasium ofLincoln School and installation ofnew lighting and' ventilating iequipment in the auditorium there jhave been finished, Mr. Laird re-vealed. Meanwhile, he said, phys-ical education classes will be con-ducted outdoors when weatherpermits.

The renovation work continuingat Lincoln School also will delaybeginning of the after-school rec-reation program sponsored for lo-cal young people during the schoolyear by the Recreation Commis-,sioa^itwwas~-r^portetr ;byr JosephTroiano, physical education in-structor and recreation director.

The program of repairs' and in-stallation of new equipment at

[.Lincoln and" Franklin Schools wasbegun early in the summer, andcompletion of alt details had bocnhoped for before the opening ofschool. Financed by a $60,000bond' issue authorized by voters ata special school election last year.it included installation of new au-tomatic heating and ventilating

(Continued on page 2)

At Regional Next Week-•••/ SPRINGFIELD ,— An enrollment of 1,350 students is exacted

when Jonathan Dayton Regional High School opens next Thursdaymorning. Warren W; Halsey, supervising principal, iti =OrienWtiotr-4)ayJ'~-for~fre^hrrian .willTe helcf

announced.-

New Kindergarten

Banquet HeldGARWOOD—F. A. Garrity of

Englewood, , regional'' director ofLittle League Baseball of theCentral East Coast, spoke to morethan 200 persons last night at theLittle League banquet held in theCranwood.

PAL, first-piace team, andSqnoco, second, were presentedwith league trophies. Certificatesand awards were presented to theboys who will not be able to playnext year because of the agerequirement.,. W. Joseph Choborda,Tresident,j dasky °f" 6 ^ 1 " * % w n u ^ whospoke. Among those attending! starred in football and- wrestlin-were Mayor L Thomas DaubJ at Jonathan Dayton Regional High

Miami Left Tackle PostBid by Johnny Nadasky

GARWOOD — John Naddsky.son of Mr, and. Mrs. Samuel Na

players in the Little League andminor' league and their parents,sponsors and league personnel.

Arranging the affair were Mrs_.Michael Koromi, FranK Deredita,Jack Hay, Herbert Wprthwein.

School, Springfield, is reportedmaking a strong bid for left tackleon the University of Miami foot-ball team this fall.

The 210-pound sophomoreshowed, great promise in the spring

{Continued onpage 2) I gridiron drills at Coral Gables, Fla;

Thrills Galore on Conducted Tour(Ed. Note: Miss Doris T. Col-

wcll of 414 North avenue, Gar-w(\nd correspondent of The Citi-zen and Chronicle, has just re-tu'rnejA- from a 10,000-mile vaca-tion trip to the West Coast andup. into Canada, and' presentsherewith.a report on hef experi-ences.) '

By DORIS T. COLWELLI never though it was possible

to see so much country with onlya 15-day vacation. But it is.

Hoarding a train from_Elain-fjeld .alone I started my 10,000-

mile trip throughout thet Southand Northwest. In Chicago I. metsome 50/ persons with whom Itraveled on a conducted tour. Sowe were off—our destination LakeLouise and.Banff, Can.

Gallup, N.M., was our first stopWe arrived.Just. .in...time to at-tend the last night of the. Inter-Tribal Indiari Ceremonial,' heldhere for three days; each .year aithe Indian capital of the world.More than 30 tribes participatedin the affair-and-traveled-through^out' the west in covered wagons.

old beat up and new . cars andtrucks to be present. • They weredressed in their bright costumesdecorated with Jewelry of silver,turquoise and coral. Among thetribes present were the Apache.Cheyenne-Arapaho, Cochiti. Hopi,-Jcme'z, Laguna, Navajo,. San Ilde-fonso, S;m Juan, Santa Ana.Sioux, ' Taos,. Tesuque and Zuni.They performed many dance.the War Dance, Owl Dance, EagleDance, Hoop Dance, the Feather

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on Wednesday.They wiU duplicate the daily routine with shortened periods to acquaint

them w.ith' the operation of the-school, before the upper classmenare present.

A luncheon for new start mem-bers, the president of the teachers'.Association and members, of Iheadministration staff will be held atnoon Tuesday..'At 2 p.m. a generalteachers' meeting will be held toprepare for' the opening of schoolon the succeeding day.

Fourteen new stun! memberswill be on hand for the openingthis week. They include: MissBarbara Beck of New Jersey Col^lege for Women, clothing; Dr. LeRoy Booth of Texas TechnologicalCollege, director of guidance; Ber-nard Carr of Temple University,commercial; Miss Jean Elliot ofTennessee University, science;Harry Hein of Trenton StateTeachers College, industrial arts;Miss Alice Kai'mazin of ' Cedar•Crest r;e0Hcge,J"f»odsr~ r~' "

Also, Mrs. Julia Latzer of C(rf-:umbia University, English; MissClaire Lehmann of New; JerseyCollege for Women, English-Ger-man; Mrs. Elizabeth A. M'Gurty ofCollege of St. Elizabeth, commer-cial; Theodore Monica of PanzerCollege, driver education-physicaleducation; Roger Richards of Rut-gers University} English; Miss Na-omi Rinehart of Tulane University,mathematics; Miss Jean Rosenastof North'Carolina University, com-mercial; and Charles Scnsale ofMontclair State Teachers* College,mathematics-science.

By School BoardKENILWORTT —jKindergarten

hours 'adopted in Way for, the1954-55 school ^ear will go into'force with the opening of school!next Thursday, the Board, of Edu-cation announced today.

At a recent meeting of ~4iheboard, several mothers requestedthat the board consider going backto the houri used in previousyears. _ ; , .

The new kindergarten hourswill be from'9 to 11:30 a.m. and12:30- to 3 p.m. . -

Since the protest voiced by the• mothers on August 10. 46 othermothers were Contacted and 37agreed with the change and nine-opposed thenn,-the-board -announc-ed.

Among reasons cited for thechange by the board were: TheState Board of Education rulesthat not less than 2% hour ses-isions can be held/a desire to have;equal hours to provide equal edu-cation, twelve of the 18 UnionCounty districts contacted havethe same hours and the kinder-garten children, will be off theplayground at a time when otherchildren will be present.

The board said that the opinionof those mothers in favor of the

(Continued on page 2)

oico, union Reach Agreement;Last-Minute Talks Prevent Strike

KENILWORTH — Following aii, Uy- reaching the

co Brass and Copper Company:aiid Local 4526,, United Steel-;workers of America., CIO, reached:agreement' early, yesterday morn-,ing on a new one-year contract.'

1 Under the terms of the new]pact, the 3(i() employes will beiKiyen a five-cent across th,e boardpay increase, will bo paid for,-jury—tliify—imd—will—bt^K-rmitttfrtj-three days leave with pay for sick- 'ness or death "m the .family andsoine jobs Were upgraded.

prevented.. .The former two-yearagrct'ini'iit <-xpiiv<l yi'sterday 'andthe. unionJadopted a no contract.no work policiy. At • a meeting,SunU;iy in Itosojle,. the local votedlinaminnusly to strike unlessauii'emont was Waclu'tl or thecniiipany agrivcl to extend theformer contract.1. ''Jfhc~;~nninn^:irmmirfr<;-ft rlT;itTilJ

had - kept all previous benefits "jiuaddition to the new ones agreedupon. " *

^ 'A meeting of the local will bj»_"kctd^SunyiTy afternoon at" theMa»sonic Temple, Roselle, to ratifythe agreement. Robert Wilson of

- Cranford/ president, headed thenegotiating c o m m i t t e e " . ' Alsoserving on the group were: JamesCermcle, chief steward, JamesAmoiosa, Dan. Paricello, ArthurWeeks, and Steve Makara, record-ing secretary,/• Ernest Moselle, in-

'"ll"i riallToiT;ri "represenfaliveT an~dI,awrV-iicet Tallisman, union coun-sel, also participated in trie talks.

(Continued on page 2)

Propose Krueger for FreeholderjKENILWORTH—Local Republi-. Municipal 'Chairman Leroy Stur-l zin, a tax assessor; Samuel'Vi-»;

s- ' . ' • . ; ' I tale, president of the KenilwOrtljJatr.es Flynn. a member of; Republican Club; and Daniel Ben-

jciin leaders launched a drive this:week to obtain the Republicannomination for an uncxpired tenrrdn the Union County Board ofChosen Freeholders for MayorRobert C. krueger.

The vacancy was brought aboutby the death last week of JohnTirT^"15uaiey*™)f""'Eliz:'ilJ«;th. tlie j•Brfion County Republican Com-jmittee will convene next Thurs-day at the Elizabeth Cart-eret Ho-tel, Elizabeth, to choose a nomi-nee. • ,

A Kenilworth committee ' hasbeen named to spunrhead .the driveto gaiii the nomination for 'MayorKrueger. Borough Clerk PhilipMcGevna. has been appointedchairman of the finance commit-tee. Servingvwith him. will be:Councilmen Ernest Vardalis, Ken-neth Hart, Oliver J. Brown, Jr.,and Alva Myers, former MayorWilliam Lister and Republican

the Planning Board and vice-presi-dent of the Konilworth Young Re-publican Club, was named pub-

inatti, president of the .Kenilworth,Young Republican Club. .,

The committee pointed out _that'lieity chairman. He will be asrj Mayor Krueger is the youngestsisteri by former Mayor Max Ber-I (Continued on'page. 3)

- KENILWORTIl—All students of.the Kenilworth public schoolswill report for classes at !) a.m.next Thursday morning, Edwin W.Kr^us, ,s,iijperintendent of schools,announced.

All kindergarten pupils will]report at '9 a.m. the, first, day ofschool and will then be assignedto morning or afternoon classes,Mr. Kraus said. •

. Eight new teachers will be onhand to greet some 1,000 childrenexpected to be enrolled. One

additional class—a first grade-has beenJ added this year.

Mr. Kraus said all new teacherswill report at 10 a.m. Wednesdayand all teachers will meet withthe administrative staff at 1 p.m.

The opening of school willmark the beginning of a new "ad-ministrative arrangement. Mr.Kraus will continue as superin-tendent of schools and MissSigneSwanberg will begin her duties asprincipal. Kenneth Glover willcontinue as administrative assist-ant. • •

v '

!"Dance and~~rnany others.• •'•• It was fun during our tour/talk-ing- to-people-from-i2- to-72-fromall parts of the United States andCanada, including - Birmingham.Ala.; Toledo, O.; Chicago. 111.;New York: City.,"and Buffalo.N.Y,: Pittsburgh, Pa.; Cleveland,O.; Brookiicld. 111.. Madison, Wis.;Maywood, . III.; St. Louis. Mo.;Boston, Mass.; Beacon. N.Y.; Phil-adelphia.. Pa.; Toronto, Can., and.Harper, III. I was the only per-son on the tour from Jersey.

Our- escort was a -young- recentcollege graduate who was filledwith personality and was a barrel^

I of fun". Surprisingjy^t-nough, jrnyl•ToonTrnliTe. was from New YorkCity but was born and raised inWestfield. Among the group weremany school teachers; a doctor,office workers, students, a news-paper printer, contractors, a nurse,an .attendant in u mental hospitaland a governess;

We traveled partly by coachin u private tour train—practic-ally non-stop.

Itgiant Grand Canyon in Arizona,but you have no idea of its size.If it were possible to drive aroundthe canyon it would cover morethan 3,000 miles? At the bottomyou caYi faintly see the ColoradoRiver, which for centuries hacut through the. rock. Of course,

(Continued on page 3)

Labor Day SerihouTopic 'Work of GotV

i GARWOOD—For his Labor Day;iM-tn<m—topic SmwittV;—the—Hr

_Walter_.C-lj2ughY-pai;tor— ot S i .Paul's EvanccJiraJ—arjfjLJteJfojwiChurch, has chosen: "How. toWork the Work of God."

This Sunday will mark the lastof the combined services from 9to 10 u.m. '"A Stone in the Road"will be the subject of the RevMr. Pilgh's junior sermon.

The Church Consistory will.meet at the church Tuesday evc-'»>inu£3>nd there will be a meet-ing of the Ladies' Aid Society at1:30 p.m. next Thursday.

St. Paul's xvill be host to atncctiug> of tlie executive boardof the Federated Churchmen'sBrotherhoods of the New Yorkarea at 8 p.m. on Friday, Septem-ber 10.

mm,••mm

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LINDENNorth Wood Near fclin -

KEMLWORTHBoulevard at Shuppinji Center

Page 9: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

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Baby Parade to HighlightPlay field's Closing Program

KENILWORTH — A day-long program of bicycle/ and doll,carriage parade,, refreshments. _ baby contest and presentation ofawards wiU be held tomorrow at the. municipal, playground next to

; School to close the year's activities. .;• -.&,'.T i o ' o a v ' j ' f i r t i v i ' - d ' i 1 ' v i ' 1 f\ t " ' i / ' ' • '•» ',~j ' • ' " ' " l i l i - y r t r i :\r\n i\iM

carriage paradeTat 10\ a.m. The)——^- :——-? —vehicles, will be judged on' how.: Hocki'n: second, Dennis Golcher;»el l thev are decorated and «ne apd third. Larry Rouse.prize and three rtbbons u,11 be' »« «;•*»'"»" game Friday, the

', • . . . i local nine downed McManus Fielddistributed irr each group. . , o f L i n d t , n 6 . 3 a t Under!..'—

At noon, the Recn-ation Coin- ^ basketball team from tJ\e lo-

i V * . ] " ' ,•'.

soda. All children have'been re-quested to'.bring bus. lunches.

The. baby p-iradc is • j-chedulfHfor 2 p.m. Entrnnt>'>hoj<d not bein costume. Mrs. Aoclph Leik.^u-''ska-;, playcround c.iri-s'.ar, N.iid,and children do r.o: have to b(,-entered with tif-corat-ct: fJtuits, .Cer-tificates wi.il, be prt»en:fd in thefollowing—"-•ctTtrrpnrr'ETST ""PTeTtTe t

. girl. cutt>t"bj>y. ch"!ri *ui:h curlier-Ihair, child ,uith b!u«.->t eyes juilthe child ••with the brownest eyes*

At 3 p.m., the pr-L-sfntation*-' ofawards will bo hcia with medalsgoing to the" chil;: who -Moored Themost points throughout the play-ground season, to the child withthe best attendance and to Missand Mr. Playground. Voting forMiss and Mr. Playground .is now

'underway and the winners will beannounced tomorrow-

Mrs. Leikauskas <:*id ihe aver-age daily attendance f"** .bi-trn 75during the season ink: 350 children,including 200 boyV .-.nd 150 Kh'ls.were/registered a: the !>!:«>'ground.

perienced team from the SecondWard Park, Linden, last Thursdayevening .and lost, 48-32, at the Lin-den couiti The teams will pfciy areturn game tonight at the samesite.

Mrs. ^rjtikauskas said Senior' Girl Scoutswi l l assist her duringtomorrow's closing day activities.

0• > * ' • ' • * • '

{.;. 'A'/- '•

%X-

tHe season, the director ?M$, with•''an average, daily attcridantx- of 35children. '

Winriers of the obstacle racesFriday uere:> 5 to 8 jvar olds —first. Arthur Vilafe; second. BillySiebert; and third. Michael Ran-

)dall:' 8 to 10 vear olds — lirst.Diane Lipfert: Second. Philip Lej-da; and third. Cheryl Ty>ka; and10 to 14 year olds — iit>'.,.Kit-hard

Voleo, Union Settle; (Continued ppnj'page one)' • .Albert Thompson, personnel di-

i rector, handled the negotiationsI for the firm.! Negotiations were r e s u m e di Tuesday morning arf. 9 a.m. and! continued t<> 3 'ixm. Talks* -Were: started again at 6 p.m. and aboutthree hours later Alan Wiscniold

! of the" Stale Mediation Service: was called in. The talks c6n-• eluded at 5:30 a.m. yesterday.

On Monday, the union rejecteda three-cent an hour pay hike.

1 The local asked for a 10-cerit an""h'our Tiicrease' iimT IT" company-'paid pension plan.

I At Sunday's meeting, the localj-installed new officers. Mr. Wil-, son began his second two-year• Jerm. , -r • '

i *?

(Continued jrom page 1)| chief executive in the history of. the bprough and is a past presi-1

CROSSE 1

•LACKWELL

LEMONADE

dent of the KenilwoAh Young Re-publican Club. .,.

; While the Good GovernmentRepublicans of UHion County; arenot expected to efldorse -ny can-didate, some of its members; areexpected_ to. support the Kenil-worth mayor. It is also expectedhe will pain sncounty's young! Republican " ele-, , . t-1-1 t ' '"A\ ' " " ~ " ~ ^

Mayor F. Edward .^Biertuempfelof Union is conceded to. be ihestrongest candidate -at this timefor the "post. However, 'he alsofaces possible "opposition fromElizabeth Municipal C h a i r m a nLauris H. Sorensen, State Coiri-mitteeman _Wi|liam._-J^. Seeland.former Tax Assessor Robert Mc-N a i r. Redevelopment Commis-sioner Robert T. Walsh and School

BOROUGH OF KENILWORTH.PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE in hereby given that theHoroiitfh of Kenilworth on tlie 14th day

at SepttmtN-r. 1954. ot 8:30 P.M. (P.S.T.I.it tho Council Cnamber, Borough' Hall.Boulevard, Kenllworth. N. J.. will sellall 1U right,, title and interest in theherelnafjer particularly..-described- propr'erty, as said properly' is not needed forDUblic use The,, -property uhnll \ be soldat public auction to. the higln-st bidder,upon the following* U-rma. and conditions:

a. A deposit ol thirty percent of tlie saleprice shall be paid at the time of theBale.

b. The balance of the. purchase price, incash, shall be paid.within sixty daysafter the sale, und the purchaser'shallpay a proportionate nhore of the taxes'

I from the date of sale for the balance• of the current year and for any sub-

sequent year, based on (he assessedValuations, and existing-tux rates.

c. If the purchaser fails, neglects, or re-. fuses to pay the balance due, together

with charge9 u"d taxes, within.the saidsixty days, the deposit made shull beretained by the Horotiuh of ,Kenllworth

' unless the governing Body, by Beso-lution; decides to the contrary. /

d. Purchaser shall pay the costs of/publl-' cation of tlie It-gal Notice of Sale, rev-

enue stamps, and drawing of the deed.— Therproperty-sh.ill-rje- eonvwea" "b y"BaT '

Bain and Sale Deed, subject to restric-tions of record. If any, and ion Insordinances. . . . 1

e. It shall be a further condition of salethat where the Borough of. Kenllworthsells a parcel of' property having; .-afrontage of more than fifty feet, then in

• that instant, the purchaser shall not be- • allowed to erect a home upon a piece of

property having less than a sixty footfronutjtt'. -

f. The Mayor and Council reserve theright to accept or reject any or all bids.The Boroush represents . that title to

suld properties may have been acquiredeither by Deed. Tax Foreclosure, or "InHem" Tax foreclosure. .

The premises particularly described Ap-pear on tho official Boro.ugh AssessmentMap. a copy ofwhlch 1H on (lie in (theOffice of the Heglster of Union County.

Minimum' • • ' Bale .

PriceS -100.00

Black407

73

—3I~

31

42

l-olsi . an

M6nroc Avenue13

lttth StreetS 300.00

N.

N. 17th StreetNortherly Vj of

X. 17th Street •/..13-14 und -'/

Northerly 10 (I/of

~ N." 10th JStreetl"l»-J9f20-21

N. tJSth StreetS3-23-24-25

U. IBth Street.'•' 18-10-20-21

/ H. Itfth Street •

S 800,00

8 025.00

• 30000

S1SO0.0O

S1500.00

SI 500.00

/ P H I L I P J. M c G E V N A .' •' • Borough Clerk.

A.ugust 24, 1934. ; ' . • - •

Commissioner John J. Schomp,all of Elizabeth.

Other prospects include: SchoolCommissioner William C.'Sever-son of Union. Freeholder Eifie L.Scheideler pf_ Raselle, who wasdefeated in .her bid for renomina-tion in April; Scotch Plains Mayor

verjs of Plainfield.Hrwood 'Mayor L. Thomas paub

was. also considered a leadingcandidate for—nomination, but hisappointment as second uhdersher-iff eliminates-him from considera-tion. . -

Daub Honored ^'•' (Continued from page 1) .

served as a lieutenant for twoyears and as a captain fo^ seven

ttOSSE ft BLACKWEU • WORID'S RNCSl NAME IM FOODS

D i s c o v e r J u s t H o w ' G o o d F r o z e n O r a n q e v C o n T n U c

T R Y C R O S S E & B l A C K W E L L F R E S H - F R O Z f N O R A N G E J U I C E

A l w a y s a T r e e - F r e s h N n i j r s ! S w e e ' f i c i » o i

•0«

w. MdtOBBtTS ^td^TtkVd SW J«ney C3y 1. R Ji • Journal Sijoor* 3-5fS« — -

Af Alt IMtlUC IMPEPU0UT 6IOCIIS

Announcingn . . . . - - • •

The Reopening of Classes• OF 1

. . . . i

Lynn EmmettOF TU£

Lessons In- ACHOBATIC

- ANp MODERN DANCING ,

NEW CLASSES BEING FORMED FOB BEGINNERSIn The

BABY. PRE-TEEN AND TEEN-AGE GROUPS

REGISTRATIONFriday. September 10th £ Saturday, September 11th

2 - 5 PJf. "' 10 AM. - 3 PJNLAT-

»'* IlilL Wavhinrton Ave.. Kenljuorth. N. 3.ESsex 2-2926

ROOFINGUMteni — — Siding

TBS, WE FINANCE. TOO!

WILLIAM L.

SCHROEDERSince 192H ' .

I Vtfelnpt Ave. Gnnford

CALL THISNUMBER FOR

YOUR NEW

BOILERCRANFORD 6-9653

tor H M b«al In heating

OIL BOILERHoc'* • genuioe big besting value—engineered into a compact, »p««-•aving unit.—Numerous Icaiure* a»-sure operating economy—-c*M irooconstruction for longlif*. Built-indomotic water beater, if desired.

MOE SCHNEIDER. Plumbing & Heating

1 Behnert PlaceCranford, N. J.

HEATING SYSTEMSMY 8PEC1ALTV

BOBOUGHOF KENILWOBTH, PUBLIC NOTICE

Public notice is hereby given that theBorough of Kenllworth on the 14th dayof September, 1954 a t 8:00 o'clock P.M..daylight savins time, at the CouncilChambers. Boroufah Hall. Boulevard.Kenllworth. New Jersey, will sell all its.right, title qnd interest in the herein-after particularly described property assaid property is not needed for publicuse,.The property will be sold at. a public

sale to the hiehest bidder, after publicadvertisement in 'the Cranford Citixenand Chronicle, a newspaper circulatingin the Borough of Kenirworth. by twoinsertions at least once - a week duringtwci^consecutive weeks, the Ust publica-tion to be not more than seven daysprior toNJhe safe. •

The premises are hereafter particularlydeitcribed arto? appear on the officialborough assessment map. a copy of. whichis on file in the llnion County Register'sofTico as follows:

atlalmaaaSals

Block. Lot \ Price174 _ 7 to 20. incl.175, 49. 50 and 91. and V

53 to 58. incl. 82.850.00The above described premises shall be

sold under the following terms, cpve-i, reslrictlonsond coridltiong_wh(ch,'*b*rJ"c'6risrdered! as real covenants

running with the land.' I. A deposit of thirty per cent 130'; >of the sale price shall be paid at thetime of the sale.

2. ..The balance of the purchase' price,in'cash, shall.be paid within sixty daysafter th-.' 'sale .and the purchasers, shallpay a proportionate share of the taxesfrom the d7ife: of. the.sale for the'balanceof the current .year' and for .any subse-quent year based oh. the assessed valua-tion and existing* tax rates. • ' x

3. If the purchaser' fails, neglects, orrefuses to pay the balance dOe. togetherwith charges and taxes,, within the saidsixty days the deposit made shall beretained by the Borough of Kenilworth.unless the governing body, by resolu-tion, di-cides to the contrary.

4. The purchasers shall pay the costof publication of the legal notice of sale,revt-mic -stamps and the drawing of thedeed. The property shall' be conveyedby brirgaln and sale deed, subject torestrictions of record, if any. and zoningordinances-.. ,' • • ,

5. Said premises, shall be used for one-family dwcHing houses only and not more;than—one—*I>—dwelling-"house -"shall"beconstructed on any plot of , land havingU width of less than sixty (60> feet ora depth of less than one hundred (i00>feet. ". .

(I. The Mayor and Council reserve theright to accept or reject any or allbids.

7- Purchasers ^hall. as a condition 7,olsale.^, install" a water main, sanitarysewer,' establish the grade1* of SummitAvenue and shall cause the same to bepaved In front of said 'premises in ac-cordance with the1 plans and specificationsprepared by* the.BorokigtV Engineer > andapproved by the Mayor and Councilof the Borough of Kenilworth.

8. In order to guarantee to. the- Bor-ough of Kentlworth the installation ofuald sewers and water-"<malnj the pur-chasers shall, pridif 'to* the- delivery ofdeed, deliver to the Borough of Kenll-worth a surety bond of some insurahfi-and Indemnity company to be approvedby.. the Mayor and Council- and theBorough Attorney conditioned upon theinstallation of * the aforesaid vewer andwater mains within a period of ninemonths from the date of thfai sale.

0. The purchasers shall, prior to thedelivery of the d- ed. enter into a specificcontract to perform the said work andsaid "bond shall be conditioned upon'full'compliance with said written agreementwith the Borough of Kenilworth.

10. Th? .purchasers, shall deposit withthe Borough of Kenllworth an amountequal to the total cost of the road,determined by the Borough Engineer, toconstruct a road from Michigan Avenueto the end of the property purchasedThe-Borough—ofrKenihworth •hall cortistruct the road and assess the propertyowner's aftd return to the purchasers anyamount deposited in excess of ihtlrassessment. Said money to be depositedone month before the work on the ttWis commenced. * ' ' ' •

• . • " , - . .PHILIP J. McGEVNA. •• . Borough CU'ik

Dated: August 24. 1B54. . 9-9

has served as prfsirient nfion-Morris League' of. ExemptFiremen. • ' ' i ,J

He is president pf the HonoraryBranch of CnSinford Local 52, Pa-trolmen's., Benevolent Association,and in 1952 .was awarded a silverlife membership card by the local.He also served for four years aspresidenfof Local' 1387~Interna-tional Brotherhood of ElectricalWorkers, AFL. .

.Mayor Daub was,, born in. Ho-boken and lived inJer-sey Ciiy.formany years before he arid Mrs.Daub came to Garwood after theirmarriage in 1927. They have adaughter, Mrs. Donald Springle ofManasquan; a 2-yearTold grdnd-

LINCOLNTailors & Cleaners

18 Softh Union A-ffg* CtaaftwitAV*. PATBTtA. rr»sx

• * •

EXPERT WORKMANSHIP•

_C'LEAN1NO._*. PKESSINOALTEHATIONS A MEFareS

• oaLADIES' AND BfEBra

GARMENTS.

TOMi CiJLJM

Hara't top-oottfc CM .t**jfopl*l Wbcnavar ycttr au

' attindoo, whether it's onlyawda atttndoo, whedatr Vt onlya check-up or s r«p«lx Job. wtgladly caA for and tklhrs*. Inaiphoo* w. Our JBodan StrHJCa*will U «t jour -floor la • |it>l

UNION COUNTYBUICK COMPANY

AU NOKTH AVR

years, and has been active eversince. An organizer of the UnionCounty Firemen's Association, heis a member of the New JerseyVolunteer Fire Chiefs' Associationand a life member of the Ne>y Jer-sey State Firemen's Associationand of the.New Jersey State E*-

BOBOUGH OF KENILUOETHPt'BLIC NOTICE "

PUBLIC NOTICE in hereby given thatthe Borough of Kenilworth on the .14th

day of September. 1054. at 8:30 P.M.iD.S.T.», at the Council Chamber, Bor-ough Hall. Boulevard, Kenilworth, N. J.,will sell all its, right, title and tntcrc&tin the hcfciiia'tei* particularly describedproperty, as said property in not - neededfor public Use. The property shall beso.ld at public' auction to the highestbidder, upon.' the following terms andconditions: *. ^ 'a. A deposit of thirty percent of the

sale price shall be paid at the timuof the sale. .

b. The balance of the purchase price, incash, shall bs paid within sixty daysafter the sale; and Hie purchaser shallpay a proportionate share of the taxesfrom the date'pf sale for the balanceof Jho current year and for any sub-sequent year, based on the assessed

ic. If the purchased fails, neglects, or re-

fuses to pay the balance due. together"with charges and ta>fes, within t^esaid sixty days, thv deposit made shallbe. retained by the Borough of Ken-ilworth unless the Governing Body,by Resolution, decides to the con-trary. . •"Purchaser shall pay the ^costs pf pub-lication of the legal Notice of. Sale,"revenue stamps, and drawings ,of thedeed. The property shall be con-veyed by Bargain and Sale Deed,subject to restrictions of record, ifany, and zoning ordinances. .

e. It .shall be a further condition of salethat where the Borough of Kenllworthsells a puree) of property having afrontage of more than fifty feet, then

. in that instant, the purchaser shallnot be allowed to erect a home upona piece of- property having less thana sixty foot frontage. ' %The Mayor and Council reBervc theright to accept or reject any or allbids.7he said premises shall- be sold ex-

. pressly subject to the fallowing re-strictions. . rmmelyr~that-said-premisesshall l\ot be used for the erection-of any building thereon and saidrestrictions shall .be set fovih-lin -tho-deed and shall be a real 'covenantrunning with the land.

The . Borough' represents that title tosaid properties may have' been acquiredeither by Deed. Tax Forecjos.uro.jir "InRemtT-Tax ' foreclosurer • ~ - "

The premises particularly describedappear on , the official Borough Assess-ment Map. a copy of which is on >ill<"in the Office of the Register of UnionCounty. •• . •- • * . .

Minimum' Rale -

Blark l.oi , Price73 I and 2 5240.1)0

• PHILIP 3. McGEVNA.Borough Cleik.

Dated: August 30. 1B54. • U-t)

son and a granddaughter born lastmonth.- . • • '

Classrooms Ready(Continued\from page. 1)

equipment for Franklin and; Lin-coln'Schools, laying of a new gym-nasiirni fluui inLhicoln Si-hool a»<|installation of nin the'auditorium o( the latterschool. .,

Opening of the new. tern) will bepreceded by a general meeting ofall teachers in. Franklin School at1 p.m. Wednesday. •

New pupils may be registered atFranklin, Lanciln and WashingtonSchools-on-the-opening-dfty*-—Pu-"pils entering the local system, forthe first titne must' present birthcertificates and certificates of vac-cination against smallpox and im-munization against diphtheria.

Eligible to enter school aVe chil-

dren who are 5 years old or whowiU be that age by January 1..

The faculty will include one newteacher, Mrs. W. Joseph Chobordaof 335 Myrtle avenue,;Who'wtll filla vacancy caused by resignation ofMrs. Harriet Bluhm,, kindergartenteacher at Franklin School.

Schools will be open a

one day less than the total for thepast school year. ,

LL Banquet Held(Continued jiom page one)

Louis Casale, Fred McCarrick jjndMr. Choborda.

—ThtH-tCcnilworth'play the Garwood All Stars onSunday at 2 p.m. at BeJl Stadium.Proceeds will be donated to theemergency/ "March of. Dimes"drive.

BOROUGH OF KENILWORTHNOTICE TO BIDDERS

Notice is hereby given that scaled bidswill be received by the Mayor and Coun-cil o( the Boroush of Kenilworth fortfasoline to be opened and read in- publicin the Kenilworth Borough Hall onSeptember 14. 1954. at 8 p.m.

Sjx-clflcations may be obtained in 'hooffice of the boroush clerk In theKviiilworth Borouch Hall.

Bids must be enclosed, in sealed envel-opes bearing' the name and address ofthe bidder, addressed to the Mayorand. Council of the Borough of Kenil-worth. Bids must be accompanied by- acertified check for not less than tenpercent • (10'.* > of the amount bid. -:

By order of the Mayor and Councilof the- Borough of Kenilworth.

PHILIP J. McGEVNA.' Borough Clerk.

Dated: 'August 30. 1034. . 1/t 9-2

BOROUGH OF KENILWORTHNOTICE TO BIDDERS

Notice is hereby *£iven that sealed bidsWill be- received by the Mayor and

b U ~ 6 r ^ n 'O t n n : i T ) t h t B o r U g h 6 r ^ n w o r t hfor HC-1. RC-2. and MC-1 asphalt, to beopened and read in public in the Kenil-worth Boroush Hpll on September 14.1954. at B p.m. '

Specifications rnay be.obtained in theoffice of the borouch clerk in theKenllworth "Borough Hall.

Bids must be enclosed lit scaled en-velopes bearing the. name, and addressof the bidder, addressed to the Mayorund Council sit- the Borough of Kenil-worth. Bids must be accompanied by. acertified check for not less • than tenpercent HO't * of the amount bid.

By order of- the Mayor and Councilof the Borouch of Kenilworth.

PHILIP J. McGEVNA.Borough Clerk.

Dated: August 30. 1D54. * . 1/t 9 2

WINDOWSHADES

~ HOLLAND MADISON. - ; • • * • ' . . • • .

HOLLAND TOKK CLOTH

RICHARD HARTIG(40HNSTON PAINT SHOP)

1QJ N. Union AV«LC CHanford 8-25M "

List Kindergarten Hours(Continued Jrom page one) ,

new change.was that after a fewweeks inost children' wcnild beable to go to and from schoolalone.

Special police officers will be onduty at school crossings, the boardreported.

VFW InvitesYouth GroupsTo Join Bazaar

KENILWOftTfti su

Brownies,

or;;:in-

Scouts, Cubs.League "ifrhtl olliers arevited to take an active part in :hebazaar to be held by Kenilworth'Post 2230, Veterans of Fon-i^WarS, ait the KenUworth VeK-r;uis

;-Center on Septen\J)er 10, 11 •,,•,,;1?. . • • ,

.George >Bender, bazaar ch.iirTman, announce^ that such. orKaiii-—zalions \yiil.' be given floiir s|,;)cefor booths atLthe bazaar, with pro-ceeds of. their sales benWitinrj'their treasuries."

Also featured at the affair winbe games, refreshments and m-tertainment.

GOP Postpones Meeting• KENILWORTH — Because- Tf

the Labor Day holiday, the Ken-ilworth Republican Club will ,,<,tmeet on Monday evening as sched-uled, Sam ' Vitalev- president. :itr-nounced. The^i.plub "will nuttSeptember 13 at Borough Hall.

FALL IS LAWN TIME510-} FERTILIZER

PULVERIZED LIMESTONE

8-6-4 ORGANIC FERTILIZER

PEATMOSS'

LAWN SEED NO. 4

80 lbs. $2.45

80 lbs. 70

80 lbs. 3.50

large bale 3.95

Ib. .95

. • . • • • - • • ^ - A L S O - . ' S ' • •'•

Agrico, Vigoro — Boyung, Bone Meal,

Hyper Humus and Garden Tools

Come and Get It1—- and Save!

L BARTELL140 CENTRAL AVE. CLARK, N. J.

NOW OPEN SATURDAYS TILL 5 P. M.

TEL. RAH WAY 7-1581

I i ( :• ' 'A

* V )

0 '

• - ( • _ . . ,

r•• .1 •

! • ) • • • -

' THE CRANFORD CITIzfeN.AND CHRONICLE, THUR9PAY..SEPTEMBER.2*. 1954 Paie Three

ih.e land' is largely unpopulated, sides. • It was very cold up there,with its grazing, hilly a^id.desert] „ the roads in most of the rnoiiln-

## protects againtt bruhe blowouts

NO INNER TUBE TO BLOW OUT! ',. • • T . . , - • * .

Self-seals punctureson running wheels

Preventssudden flats

Maximum safetyagainst dangerous skids

New tread designgives quicker stops

TRADE-IN FORA NEW SET!

SEE YOUR.GULF DEALER

FRANK SHIMON

We're offering aBIG. BIGTRADE-IN

ALLOWANCE!

At CrossingGARWOOD—Police Chief Fred

' Falzone today issued an appeal tomotorists to cooperate in prevent-

• congestion—vjersey-Central • Railroad crossingjjytcs are down by forming . twolines of cars as they wait onCenter street on .either side ofthe crossing. • '

The right-hand lane of Centerstreet on. each. side of the - rail-

J-r<M<l hasV-been—divided -in twowith a ne)V painted, line, and thewords "Form Two Lines'1;' alsohave been lettered on the road-

Chief Falzone said that, if in-structions are followed there willbe room for 30 cars waiting onCenter street between South ave-nue iind the railroad and for 20cars between North avenue andthe. railroad. This should help

• prevent backing up of waiting carsinto either of the busy thorough-"

••fares while the crossing gates aredown. • . • •

The police chief also warnedthat the police will be. strict in theNuance' of summonses to motor-ists double parking in the cross-

. in;! area.

land d<yted with oil \yells "hereand there. . v

California varies from the pic-turesque old Spanish <tyy of SanDiego with i(s great naval portto beautiful Los Angeles on ttio

ue- Pacific to hilly San Ftan- will fnvv thf Krnilvr 'Hh- Al-1

5p3 E. GRAND ST. RAHWAV

Thrills Galore- (Couunucd jrom page one)the colors are beautiful and varyfrom reds, yellows, grays andblues. We stayed in a, lodge onthe rim of the canyon. Thank

* -»<MNlness—I—didn't—-walk—inr'mjr• sleep! We were only about 150leet from the edge. *

Hiding through/ Ok 1 a h om a,northern Texas and southwestCalifornia is very lonesome, as

cars-, its Fisherman's wharf and itsChinatown.'' Much time could bespent1 abound these cities, whichare just filled with loads ofthings to see and do. In L.A. wetoured the city, the Brown Derby,Cocoanut Grove, the BiltmoreBowl and many other interestingplaces^~Dnforfunately, I didn'tsee any stars but passed some oftheir homes, in lovely BeverlyHills. Many, of them live rathernear each other and the homesare a little more modest than Ihad expected, and are very closetogether (about 50 to 100 feeteach). We visited many interest-ing spots, including the WilshireDistrict, and the home of WillRogors, passed movie studios andexamined the footprints on the.sidewalks in front of Grauman'sChinese Theatre. ' ,

In San Francisco we saw thefiimous bridges, went to the topof the Mark (Mark Hopkins Ho-tel), had lunch at the Fisherman'sWharf, viiiited Chinatown, rode thecable car and went to variousnight clubs.

Washington and Oregon werevery beautiful, with their trees ofVirgin fir pine and spruce andtheir endless mountains alongtheir rocky coastline.

; The eight-hour cruise from

BOBOUGH OF CrAftWOOD1-UOPOgED

ORDINANCE No. 311 'AN ORDINANCE to Amend . Ordinances

No. 261 and No.. 281. Entitled '"AnOidtiuncc to License and Ruuillutc theSale and Transportation 'of AlcoholicIkvir:.i;<-s in the Boroush ot Garwood.New Jersey, and to Provide Feus There-fore."

BE IT ORDAINED, by the Mayor andCnuncil o( the Borouffh of Garwood,County ill - Union and Stiitc of NewJoisc.v:

I That Section 10 Ifi of OrdinancesNo. 1'<*1 and No. 281 uhall be • and areluTi-by amended to read as follows:' It: <f> No Alcoholic Beverages shall

hi- MIM in any licensed premises before* iho liour. of' 7 A.M. on Week days or

iM-fnre the hour of 1:00 P.Ml on Sun-d-iy'*-. <>r* after Ihe hour «f 2:00 A.M. on:ill -ila.vs; except New Years . pay,...each

"yv-ii*; When salei* may coiilinue to bern'*dc l>etween t h e hour^ of Z'.Ott A.M.Mid 5:<HI A.M. The Licensed premisesshall close and open, on the above said

_lwmri. .2.'All Ordinances and parts of Ordin-

ance* inconsistent with t h e . provisions..i this ordinance be and the same a l eh.r«l>v repealed. '

3. This Ordinance shall take clTcct

NotlrcThr' -above ordiiiance was introduced

.••id'tM-vst-d on first rvnAit\ji at a regularnut-tiiii: of the Mayor and Council of thor^rouuh of Garwood, "N. J., Held onAucui't lp. 1954, and • will .be consideredtoe final passage, aficr a public hearing,-*t anotiu-r resular mcetlnjf of said Mayor-ind Council id the Municipal Building.

* G-iru'ood, N e w Jersey, onTUESDAY; SEPTEMBER 14. 1954,

at B:M o'clock P. M.•' (Daylight Savliif* Tnncl

WAtTER S. McMANUS.Borough Clerk.

1)J!I<I: August 10. 1954. D-D

Eyes ExaminedBY APPOINTMENT

DR. H. BERMANOPTOMETKIST

541 BOULEVARD.. . KENILWORTH

CH 6-0200

roam, the streets and- may be seenbegging for fotkl from the tour-ists.

I attended a dance at the BanffSprings Hote/, which is very ex-clusive. (The prices of roomsrange from $25 to $300 a day.)

_IL_hai_al>ou t—C00—rooms~~arnns~•very beautiful.

Most of the people I met whiletraveling were other tourists fromall over ' creation. I even metMagistrate aiid Mrs. William Bru-

-Seattle-to* •Vkrto'riaJ""f6~v'ancou"ver,B.C., Can., Jn the blue waters ofthe Puget Sound was enjoyed.Quaint Victoria was., lined withlittle shops selling goods of theBrjtjsh_JSmpirev. including^ lovely^china and plaids. We lost~lhreemembers of our tour in Victoriawhen they missed the ship, butthey flew to Vancouver and metus.'there. While on board shipour gang gathered around a bigbaby grand piano and sang forother passengers.

•The eternal snow-capped peak.sof the Canadian Rockies werethrilling to see, and the mostbeautiful spot I have ever seenwas the world famous Lake Lou-ise, a. jade-green lake fed by age-old glaciers and surrounded bymountains..In Banff-1 had-the-thrill of

my life by riding the chair lifton Mt. Norquay, reaching almost7,000 feet in the air. I was scaredto death. You ride alone on thelift which is only closed on three

tains 'are very poor because ofthe severe winters, and there archardly any guard rails. One olour tour buses almost turned overan embankment when' it was ue-

Polio DriveBenefit Game

cal March of Dimes chairmJih,said the committee is aiming atr a i s i n g $300 through Sunday'sgame. The borough's goal- in theemergency'.funfa' drive is $800.

Tickets 'for the benefit gameGARWOOD—An all-star team w j I ) . b c s o l d i n „ h»1,m.-t,>-h»,K,>

week, it was • an-

Bell Stadium at 2 p.m. Sun-day in a game being sponsoredby the Garwood Lions Club forbenefit of ythe local drive foremergency funds for the NationalFoundation for Infantile Paraly-sis:

-presl

Garwood Births1 Mr. and Mrs. "Carmen Guerrieroot 214 North avenue are rt'c*e|ving

f);.1i[.Mr.r,.E:itrir-i-i A

ust 13 at Overlook Hospital, {-ium--Mtrecdentivpf the Lions Clul5. \

-Chairman Dugan urged "local,residents to contribute generously A daughter, .Dianne. was born

mit.

to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Yankowof 26!) Willow, avenue on' August18 at Overlook- Hospital, Summit.

in response to the letter sent toevery home in the borough thisweek in connection With theemergency campaign for addition- , w ,jiiiUB.dS_toJielp:cofttf*we-the-fi8ht-*pWillow'T»w^ Wilfred King of 267 Beech

ust 13""at Muhlehberg Hospital,Plainfield. „ . 1_

Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Doherty of674 _ Willow avenue announce thebirth of a. daughter, Lynn Ellen,!;il St. Mirtuiel s Hospital, Newark,

Card «»f Thanks" I would,like- to thank the 1and oil who mny hive made itpossible" for-the picnic to Falco^

"IT.ey ct-rtauil-/t o b e '""•\ir''"v1,-ri <lr •»H<-JH

A daughter, Suzan Faiih, was!born to Mr. and Mrs. Yaimalfoof 1000 Center street on Auyu'st33 at Overlook' Hospital. Summit.

A , son, William Cranston, wasborn on August 24 in Orange

Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Roll, 222:' MemoriijTJHkjspital to Mr and

derfu! work they are doing in,giving the children and parentsof Garwood'pleasure. I am sureI-can speak- for all those - whowent. • Gar\v-:j<Al iureiy deservesa lot of credit.

against poliomyelitis. of a son', DonaldvClifton, on Aug-1 avenue.Second Avenue

of New Mexico. were trav-yeling almost the^same route asI, and we met' on severaj occa-sions along the way. \

The weather was fine, through-out tho trip -except for Jibout oneday of rain.

For amusement when things gota little dull we sang, played cards,or .walked around the train., Onenight the ladies ,in our jcar hada hat contest made • out of just-any old thing in our fcuitcases.Some designed their bonnets outof underwear, stockings./trayelingirons, cameras, shoes/ shoppingbaskets, pockctbooks, tpwels andpine branches. Then we paradedthrough the entire 15 tip 20 othercars to be judged.

But, of course, there is no placel i k Jful-to be back again.

GAIIWOOD SOCIALSMr. and Mrs. Nicholas LoBue

_of 201 Second avenue ?re plan-ning to hold an open house andreception for 50 guests Saturdayevening in observance of their1

\ twenty-fifth wedding , anniver-sary, dale of. which was yestef-aoy. •...;_'.' ..'. _:. ._.

The Ladies' ' Auxiliary of BayLcdf Post 6807, Veterans of For-eign\ Wars, will conduct a pakesale \n September 11 in the FireHouse from 10 a.mrto; 3 - .m.

Jut<y\ Wehru'm, daughter ofMr. ancl Mr.s. Fred Wehrum of523 Willciw avenue, was' honoredat. a party recently when she

anniversaryJT Twenty guesls werepresent from\Garwood.

Men arid Women'M«n mourn *or what they have

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Mayor HeadsGOP Drive

KEN1LWORTH—Mayor RobertC. Krueger will serve as localcampaign chairman for the Re-publicans this fall, the local cam-'Pitg" commitU*.''-Qft"<H"iecil torday.

-eoimcttnicrr tjffifer J. Drown,Jr:( and firnest -Vardalis and Re-publican Municipal Chairman Le-

Girl Suffers Head InjuryWhen Struck by Mirror^KENILWORTH — Six-year-oldSally Kyeen. daughter of Mr andMrs. Thomas Kileen of 642 Kings-

releasedHospital

ton avenue. has beenGeneralfrom .Elizabeth

•wftoro- she , was (renteI f«w—severehead lacerations.

roy Sturgis will serve as cam-paign directors. Sam Vitale, presi-! nesday.

She was struck by a five-footmirror hanging irt back of-a'bed-room door in her home last Wed-

Patrolman George Ker-

| | | .

dent of the Kenilworth Republi-, nari, Jr., reports that the* mirrorcan Club, will be finance chair-j probably fell when the door wasTnan and former Mayor William ijhoiwd-^ J^_^id_Uiejhj!d_c.o_uJd

n-vwiil—toe—treasurer; Jan7e¥ilf6t~ explain what happened. '' J. Flynn, a member of the execu-J The child was taken to the hos-tive committee of the Union* Coun-j pita! by the Kenilworth, First Aid

:lty•"" Republican Committee^ will Squad ambulance.handle publicity. • —'—, •['s Coordinators lor the campaign;

will be Daniel Beninati, president

Shirley WilkinsonMarried in Chapel

Mm-:

lican Club, and Eugene Coppolaof the Kenilworlh, RepublicanClub. . ' . ' ' '•'- •. ,;j

The Republican candidates for;Borough Council are incumbents; KENILWORTH—The ma|riageAlva Myers and Kenneth R. Hart., of JUiss Shirley Anne Wilkinson.Councilman Hart i.s completing a' daughter of Mrs. Bernard J. Wilk-one-year uht-xpireiJ term to which1 iiison of 34 North .Tvyeniy-third

.he-was elected in JNfovcmbcr. Hcj street, and the late Mr. Wilkinson,

...is serving as chairman of the: to John Andrew Anderson, son ofbuildings and grounds, commit- Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Andersontee. '«' Rochester, N.Y.,-.tqok place

Mr. Myers is., finishing out hisfirst three-year term. He is presi-dent of the council and chairmanof the public safety committee.

111.'* $ >•

f .&:;.r: •:..'.•

Bible TeacherTo Speak at ChapelEast Orange, an author and Bibleteacher oTmany years' experience, j n awill be fiuest speaker Sunday at -Kenilworth Gospel Chapel,

Saturday at 4 'p.m. at the Kenil-worth Gospel Qhapql. .'. .

The ceremony was performedby Fred G. Mackenzie and wasfollowed, by a reception in thechapel auditorium for 200 guests:

The bride, escortedv by CalvinWaldron, registrar of king's Col-lege, wore t> gown of white em- fig -bruidcxed_arg;uidy-and -a-chapel -f | — ' — "length veil. Her bouquet was ofwhite swpelheart roses fashioned

ark avenue and South Twenty-third street. He will speak atthe Family Bible Hour,at II a.m.and the evangelistic service at8 p.m..

During the morning service,there will be classes for' the

nosegay. ' •*Mary Mobley of Pompano

Beach, Fla., was the maid of ho-nor. She wore pink and white'flowered organdy with pink ac-cessories: The brideshnaids wereMiss. Joan :Watts of Kew Gar-dens, L.I., and Gail Easton -of•Keiiilworth--—They were attired

ery—and Jbjepinners department. I candy also.and Melvm Wistner of Plainfieldj T h e f|ow"er Kirl was Mary Eliza-will give an illustrated talk to b e t h -Rii* of Delaware City, Del.the primary and intermediate de-J R o b c r t straton of Rochester

and'wlil be followed by a ftieet--ing—or.thc Sunday Schoofi staff.The opening of the fall sessionof the school will be discussed,and final plans will be made forthe Sunday School picnic to be-held on September 18. •

Loliniami, Renter Shoot.A Pistol Tourmv

KENILWORTH — Pa'trofmenCharles Lohmann and RobertReutcr participated Saturday/inthe Annual New Jersey Patrolman'sBenevolent, Association police pis-tol tourney at TeanecX Patrol-man Lohmann shoj/a 234 andPatrolman Reuter/a 276. '

The same officers took part in,-•.»<<••.•-.... t h e International .Police Pistol$§%p\:' matches recently at ttufiajnc site.

'" £• Patrolman Lohmann "shot a 295and was awarded. a_distinaiiishedexpert certificate, while f>atrol-

rian Reuter fired a 284 to win a•'expert certificate.

I

Again Adjourn HearingsOnPolIutionCoiupIaints

KENILWORTH — Hearings oncomplaints against Allied SteeCompany and Volcp Brass andCopper Company charging viola-tions of the anti-noise and anti-pollution ordinance have been od-^ o u r n e d t o September 13.

This action was taken by Mag-istrate William Bruder Mondayevening in Municipal Court.

It was reported that representa-tives of Volco will meet Tuesday•evening with Borough Council, todiscuss the situation.

Kcilneth-TravillaofGlenskllVPa.Miss Barbara Walls / 6 f Kew

Gardens' and .Steven/"'ustoBrooklyn were tluj/soioistsFred Davics was/the organist.'.. Following a/wedding trip toBermuda,' thp^couple will take uprefldj^ice^irt Fort Campbell, Ky.

Th« bnde'-elect is a g"Jrmaj|i(3iiT~DliyIon RegionalScbrtol. Springfield, and king's

First Aid DriveSupport UrgedBy Councilman

KENILWORTH — CouncilmariAlva Myers; chahrman iqf the pub-

pealctfTor public support for thefund-raising drive—by the tCen-(jworth Voluiiieer Fire Departmentto construct a . building for itsfirst aid squad and ambulance.'

He . said members • of the de-:partment are doing the work on

-finance the project. .He termedthe .project a "wbrthwhile" one.

At a xecent .meeting,.'BoroughCouncil sold a triangular tractof land at North Nineteenth street,Washington avenue -and Crossstreet to the department for $1for a site for the building.-—-The department is how wprk-ing on plans 'or me lund-raisingdrive and expects toj announceplans in thef near future.

— — * _ _ _ — — * — ^ — - j '

Places in Baby ParadeGARWOO — Competing among

more than .200 blond boys andtheir own with only donations tol girls, Carol Fitzpatrlck, 2, of- 149

Willow,- avenue, placed second inthis category during the -Shirty-sixth annual baby'' parade atOlympic Part in Irvingtoa. She-is the - daughter of Mr. and ,WflUam

Scavenger SrheduleGARWOOD -r Caifeage collec-

tions—wiit—bg'Monday. Labornouncedintendent J<ups wiltside ofand onnesda,

•feere uuit was an-

Siieet Super-Iwskey- t*ick-

osa the southTuesday

north side cexl Wed-

Big Game HuntersOn Safari DownB> the Riverside

Steve Redzinak, proprietor ofthe Riverside Inn. Northf avenue,east, and Springfield avenue, and side InnJoseph DiTullio-of 15 Woodside -4uavenue went big game huntinglast week and pulled a three-footalligator, out of the Rahway Hiver.

Investigating when he heard theexcited yells of a half-dozen boysfishing from the river bank nearthe inn, Mr/DiTiillio discovered

that the youths were not merely"crying 'Wolf!' "'• when they an-nounced loudly that there was analligator coming down the - river. T h e s t r a n g v i s h o r t o t h e

Mr. DiTullio took a heavy surf* chip's usually5 tame waterw;.casting rod he happened to,havein his --car, fastened- a choicepiere nt. -fcom-tho River

kitchen to a bluefish-dangled it above the

head of the transient saurian inthe river.

When the 'fish" struck greedilyat the lure, Mr.: DiTullio begandoing some yelling* of his own,for he was having a rough timekeeping from being dragged into

the river. Mr. Redzinak Responded to the calls for help and lm\his brawn to the task of lthe fighting alligator.

pretty much • the . worseafter the' tussle, andrdborted sadly that thepassed away last T

Mr. Redzinak .announced* that:the alligator wfll" be stuffed a , j d

mounted in the trophy room atthe Riverside.

Ignatius de Loyola founded theorder of Jesuits...

College, Del.Mr. Anderson ' attended Monroe

High School, Rochester, N.Y., andKing's1 College, Del., and the Uni-versity of Delaware.' He i

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THE CRANFORD CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 2. 1054 Page PIv*

Upsets'or Playoff C

— — a r t en's bold Chocks^-oaded their long, uphill' battle for the.-.'...^(T ihampionship of the Crartford Recreation1 Sof,'h^" '•"'![""

1

y evening by walloping the pennant-winning VFW nine, 11-1,Mi-morial Field, . -. • . • • - . . -

Biiien's lost the first game of the final round of the playoff, 3-1,BL the VFW last Wednesday eve-L but came back to win the

nd contest last Thursday' eve-tiiiiii.'1-0, behind the no-hit hurl-L."of FfliX Appezalto.^ ^ 5 S r l i ~ t K T " f tMonday evening w.ith a vengeance.ri,uy opened the scoring with•hrce runs in the first inning when^rittuin tripled, with the basesHaded. They came back with an-

er in the second on a homerund

otherther in the,< Shipkus. Two more.in the third,

l ixth and four in theone in" sixth and four in theone in;c\'L>n4h clinched the decision: The

's only tally came in the sixth

In addition to the hits by Ship-us and Brittian, Santella belted

a triple'and Muldrow-a double inicon's ' 11 -hit attack. Appezalto,,e winning-pitcher... allowed only

Jfour hits, while Ed Twill, the los-jcr, «ave up 11." In the first game of the final

bound. Torn Abbott hit. a home£uii with a man on in the firstlinning. K. White and Raymond

had two hits for the winners.Twill was the winning pitcher andf.Appezalto took theloss

Santella's single in thcilfth inn-ii scored Armstrong with the

riuirsday night's contest. Twillthe lose? as he gave Up five

•Ruling"the- regular season, thegW won 15 straight games and

ended'the season with a, 15-1. rec-lird. iBreen's cameJjvihird behindftlio Peppermint'-ROom, whom theyllefwited'in two straight games in[ihejlrst *ound of the playoffs, :

The contest Monday evening

iictivity in Cranford this year."

Jowl ing LeagueSets Opening DateThe Cranford Bowling League

licill open its tenth season Fridayt, September 10, at Echo•s, Mountainside, it was- an-

nounced Inst Friday night, at aElecting of team captains and offl-rers at the home of President Royft. Scheller, 7 Park avenue.

The schedule for . the comingre;i!;on -was -adopted,_.which. in=tluclt'S several' "bumper". nfght

latches and winds up with a two-nan sweepstakes. Theire will be

ho bowling Christmas, New Year'spr Good Friday, Because of an ih-trense in the cost of alley rental,flic- weekly charge for three games

I | ^nas. been increased from $1.80 to~ 2 . n o . • .• • :

There are no changes in the team=f= Hinmes or sponsors and the same 24

Jo;nns . will. participate this year.The Democratic Club keglers are

[the defending champions. .

Scotia with their' "arma ofJlQld,'L_are_BO ^extensive that theItiland has been, sometimes termed

Peterson LeadsAmateursJIL Golf^Tourney at Hill- Cranford'js Alvin Peterson', localihsurance man, • led all amateursin' the 10th annual Francis X,(ioakley Memorial pro-amateurbest-ball tournament Friday atGalloping hill, Kenilworth.

He topped the amateurs by threestrokes with 37-33—70. ' . •

' Alex Antonio of Forsgate team-ed with John Becker of SpringBrook to win the be^t ball, handi-cap division with 33-32—65.

Babe Lichardus, professional atBaltusrol, Springfield, turned inthe best round of the day, 35-34—6 9 . • . • • ;

-Ed.Havelka of Kenilworth, pro-fessional at Ash Brook,, had a 38-

Peterson teamed~wiih Ed Kringle,

Small, Eag^r SquadJJpens Drills•A""' small but eager group of

.football candidates "greeted CoachStan Qruyson at the first work-out of the Ciaufofd High Schoolgrjdders yesterday morning at thehigh school.

•\j • . ^

About ,25 boyi were on handfor the initial,.-workout and . nomore than 101 additional playerslire expected to report to CoachGrayson by the time school opensnext Thursday morning.

During the current week, thecaacbing-staff-expects-to-concen-trate on calisthenics, rolling, block-ing, fundamental drills and ballhandling. Coach Graysph said hewill also emphasize lots of run-ning. The coach said the boys areeager to get into shape for thecoming season and some evendsked for two drills daily. How-ever, .Coach Grayson-says he feelsone short, snappy workout eachday is sufficient.

Equipment was handed out toplayers Monday and Tuesday atthe high school^ The first formal

Area Golfers GainSecond RoundIn County Play; Three . of the Cranford area's

of Lincoln Park 'Driving Range to j five entries in" the 27th annualtie for .fourth place, while Carl I Union County public links tourna-Trieschmann of Garwood teamedwith. Jack Mitchell of Essex Coun-ty for the same spot. JThey_'jhad

Al Zalonis of Spring- Brook; aCranford resident, was thirdamong the amateurs with, a netscore of 77-10— 67, while Peter-son was fourth with a 70-2—68.

Local 52 Finishes LastIn PBA Softball Loop

Cranford Local 52, with a recordof three wins and i'O.defeats^endj-

d i ^ r F l i l T i O h T l sea-son of the Union' County PoliceSoftball League this year. Lastyear, Cranford'finished third,inthe final standings and was elimi-nated, by Elizabeth in the playoffs.

Roselle, which concluded theseason in first place'with "11 winsto two defeats, dre wa bye forthis season's playoffs. Taking partTnTplayoft competition this week'were second-place Elizabeth, witha record of nine-victories and fourlosses; third-place Linden (lastyear's champions), 9 and 5; fourthplace Wcstfield, 6-6, and fifth-place; Rahway Prison, 6-8., . -Rahway * finished-- sixth with arecord^of six vvins and eight losses,and Union was just above Cran\ford with four victories to nine 'de-feats. - , • •

ment gained' the second roundSunday at Galloping Hill in Ken-ilworth. '^ iriJJ. .,.,,.,'.u.-.:.i>..-- ..-.S' ~ATvin~Peterson and Anton Pre-uss ofiCranfprd and Mike Elko ofKenilworth won their matches.Peterson, medal winner and a topcontender for the, title, defeatedRudy Dombrowski of Linden, 1up, and Preuss downed Joe Sher-ma of Union, default. Elko -whowon the crown in X1929 routedRay Sullivan of Hillside, ;4 and3. Sullivan1 was the medalist in1952 and 1953. X-

-Gus Scheidegger of Kenilworthlost to Mike Vinegra of Roselle, 1up, and Walt Fischer' of Cranfordwas defeated by Ben Marcellianoof Summit, 3 and 2.

Pflug Captures ThirdIn 20-Mile Bike Race% Bill Pflug captured third placein the 20-mile junior men.'s all-around championship bicycle roadrace Sunday in, Weirs, N.H.

He trailed 16-year-old JerryVnillancourt of Newark who wonin 1:09:56, while Paiil Valet ofl|tfew York City was second. Pflugwas the pre-race favorite.

Coffee, NicolelloTo Attend Clinic

Townsh|p Clerk J. Walter Coffeeand Louis L. D. Nicolello of West-field, formerly of Cranford, willattend the Eastern Association ofIntercollegiate Football Officials'two-day clinic for rules and mech-anics interpretation at CornellUniversity,

The ' program, which opens to-morrow, will also include, the 1954annual examination under the

"supervision of Commissioner AsaS. Bushnell of Princeton.

Mr. Coffee is past president ofthe New York Chapter.

The most troublesome pest to«.Jn99MattJaA!!-iAu»tralian -iarmei's is the rabbitr

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Asks $78,000 in SuitAgainst Concrete Firm

In a Superior Court suit filedwith County Clerk Henry Nulton,Kenneth-Van Ness of 1.6 Arlingtonavenue asks $78,000 for injuriesand property damage against Wel-Don Concrete Corporation of West-field. /

The plaintiff says his car wasstruck by a defendant's truckdriven "byJohrt'Ventriglia, "ah Em-ploye, in Westfield on November24, 1953. Mr. Van Ness claims $75.-000 for injuries to himself and $3,-000 for property damage.

An inlaid design,of small par-ticles of glass or stone is a mosaic.

drill of the year got^underway at Park, the Blues came back to9 o'clock >yesterday morning.Workouts'-'will continue all this

down Scotch Plains and - upsetRoselle. Jeffeyffn finnl'y

in the morning -and Coach J the . annual Thanksgivihg Day

day morning. Labor Day, for allboys who can make it. • • .-' With a good nucleus returning,the team has high hopes of im-proving upon last year's 2-7 re-cord. After losing six straight toLinden, Millburn. North" Plain-field, Rahway, Hillside and Roselle

nlllknknew they were in a tough' battle.Jefferson's persistent, single-wingground attack was the difference."Coach Grayson will be assisted

by Jim Avery who will handle the,backfield and Paul Selby who willassist with both the line and thebackfield. '

Cranford Heads Division BIn Police Pistol Round Robin

Cranford, with a. record of nine victories'to seven defeats,finished seventh in the first round of Union County Police Pistol Leaguecompetition, according to. standings announced this week.

First-round honors went to the Linden police, who. won ' 16matches and-lost none, while Elizabeth, champion last year, finishedsecond, 15-1. Westfield was! third.With a record of 14' and 2; Plain-field fourth, 13-3, and Pennsyl-vania Railroad and Roselle No. 1tied for fifth at 11-5, These firstsix teams will constitute DivisionA in the second-round round-robin.

Second-round matches will getunder way next week, with theteams divided into three classeson the basis of the first-roundstandings. Cranford, high teamin Division B* will face Springfield,w Wchjwon j jye . ajid JtasUJ, J. ,.in_the:'Tirs£' round, .. at the Nomahegahrange at 1 p.m. next Wednesday.

Also jn, Division B will beilworth, which'had an 8-8 record,in the first round; Fanwood, 6-10,and Summit, 5-11, or Roselle Park,5-10 with one rt'gular match stillto shoot..

Garwood, which lost, all 16 ofits first, round matches this year,ended up low man in Division C at"the bottqm of the league standings.

Cranford finished first in ^vision B in last year's second roundwith a perfect record of victoriesover Kenilworth, Roselle Park,,Springfield and Fanwood.

In their final match of the firstround at the Nomahegah range,last Wednesday, the Cranford po-lice lost to the Pennsylvania Rail-road Police, 1,153 to 1,133. AlFischer was high man" for Cran-ford with a 291, and Joe- Kovacswas a close second with'289. Otherlocal scores were: Pete Miller, 277,and Dick Schofield, 276. Fred Rob-erts; team captain, shot for score,:getting-a~367~ ;

Capt.' Roberts announced thisweek that Al Fischer led the localteam in the first round of leaguecompetition with an average of287.44 in 16 matches and a highscore of 292. Joe Kovacs was sec-ond,'with an overage of 282.12 in16 matches, and high score of 291;Dick Schofield was third with276.33 in 15 matches and high of290; Pete Miller was fourth with275.13 in nine matches and a highof 286, and Fred Roberts was fifthwith 264.87 for 16 shoots and highof 276.

The team average was 1117.56,with high of 1,133 and low of1,097. .

Men I«__Servjce_: ~Cpl. .Richard T. Schultz, son. ofMr. and Mrs. T. C. Schultz of 204Elizabeth avenue, has returnedafter spending the past 18 monthsin France and Germany. Cpl.Schultz was attached to the 843rdEngineering Aviation branch _ ofthe Air Force. He expects to be

USED MR

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10 — 1 9 5 0 CHEVROLETSChoose the Model you want

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1951 CHEVROLET . i 975.00S-Door Hcdaa. He«tllne. blmck.radio, .healer. Mat' coven and dlr.•If. . ItV time lo (hed your old car.

1953 DODGE 1700.00

1 9 5 0 F O R D . . . . . . 7 5 0 4 1 0••VS" Deluxe X-Uoor. beaalMalblack.'beater, l i b of low-coil mlU«In' IbU one.

J8M)beater tinted claa«. w.w. tlre« andanU-traiumlulaD. V E tt V low

Special 4-Door Sedan, blae, radio;bcaUr, a««i Kovjtrm _mnd M*aidatd_

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WE 2-0212"OPEH UNTIL S P. M."

1 ' •

Rutgers ElevenBegins Workouts

Rutgers' University, pioneer ofintercollegiate football, waded in-to pre-season training this weekin preparation for the State Uni-versity's 86th gridiron campaign.

Twice-daily drills at Freedman'sFarm, Columbia, have started theScarlet on what it hopes will bethe comeback trail' this fall, aftersuffering its', first losing season, in1 t.*-yelirs Rutgers,' opertia tough nine-game s c h e d u l eagainst" Princeton September 25.

Coach Harvey Harm an ,will becounting heavily upon 11 return-ing lettertnen and Id promisingsophomore newcomers to make;the difference this time. Leadingthe Scarlet as co-captains will behusky John (By) O'Hearn of3oi|th Orange, veteran guard andcenter, and ISO-pound Angelo Ian-nucci, who earned ^All-East men-tion ' at fullback last year.

Battling for the crucial quarter-back job in Rutger's T-formationoffense will be fiery Ron Mastro-lia. 150-pound speedster from Ro-chelle Park, and. sophomore BillGatyas, a triple-threat performerfrom Perth Amboy. Both -can op-erate as halfbacks, as well.

Studentts, TeachersIncrease in County _

During the" 1953-5T school year,.he number of students and .teach-ers in Union-County- public schoolscontinued to increase,- Dr.- A.. L.Johnson of Cranford, county sup*^rintendent of schools, announced.

The number of children attend-ing public schools' in the countytotaled 69,134 last year, an in-crease of' 3,447 over the previousyear. . •••••• , .

The county's 21 municipal andone regional district employed 3,-193 teachers, an increase of 142over the previous year.

Garwood and Winflcld were the'only towns to report slight declinesin enrollment.

discharged from the service thisweek. _l

Pfc. William S. Minton, son ofr.jand[MrsL.Bgfeer.t.M^ _Minton..of-

96 Centennial avenue, is amongthe troops who arrived in SanFrancisco last Wednesday aboardthe transport Gen. E. T. Collinsafter serving 14 months in Koreawith the First Marine Division. :

Tennis CrownTo Miss Stevens

Miss June-Stevens of 'Cranfordwop, her second tennis title of theweek Sunday .when she teamedA>4th Henry Hci.ie of ClJih. itnyftTthe 19th annual Union' Countymixed' doubles tennifc champion-ship at Warinanco' Park, Eliza-beth-Rpselle.

Miss Stevens also won the Cran-ford women's , net crown thisweek. She and Hesse scored aSurprisingly easy win over CephasJWoniieU-of-Rahway-and-MrsrJudyAurand of Elizabeth. 6-2, 6-3.

Honorary PBA Tackles ^Hawks at Memorial Sunday

Crofss CountryWorkouts Set

With only two lettermen' return-ing. Coach J. Seth Weekley reportshe will have to develop almost acompletely, new cross countryteam this year at Cranford HighSchool.

Coach Weekley , $ays practicewill get- underway tomorrow whenthose boys wishing to join theteam are asked to report to thehigh school at 9:30 a.m. The coachsays practice will begin immedi-ately.' Lettermen' returning are LouMcClendon and Frances Kecnan,Among hill and dalers who havegraduated are: Steve Beach,Bruce' Berran,' Gporge Conger,Bob Hagerthey,' Rudi Metzner,John. Prichard, Dan Rearick and-Hal-Voorhees: '~ _>—...—--•-*.

About a dozen boys signed upfor the team in-tHe spring.

Meets have b e e n arranged withUnion, Plainlicld, Irvington, R a h -way , Edison, Jefferson and Dover.The squad wi l l a lso be entered inthe state and county meets . CoachWeekley said it is likely that oneor two more teams Will be addedto the schedule.

. "What the government did dur-ing the atomic 'crash' program wasto borrow and commandeer pri-vate know-how in an emergency.The. real problem is how to keepthis know-how at work in the de-velopment- of a" new and revolu-tionary industry. Ort the basis ofpast experience, the governmentcannot do this job any more thanit could develop the automobile,electronics, or modern chemistry.If given its head in atomic mat-ters,. American business will seryj>the interests of the consumer."

—Barron's Weekly.

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD-PROPO8ED

••-• • ' ORDINANCE N«. (II-IHAN ORDINANCE Prpvidiitf tor o Section

of Sanitary Sewer at Manor and Cas-ino Avenuefl. • '

BE IT ORDAINED by the TownshipCommittee o( Township of Cranford,New/ Jersey: • • . .

Section 1. That a section of sanitarysewer be constructed across the culvertat the intercsection of Manor and CasinoAvenues In accordance with the plansand specification* prtpured for same bythe. Township Engineer und on file inHis office. . '

Section 2. Tho estimated cost of mildconstruction is $600.00 und to defray,said cost the sum of S600.00 is herebyappropriated from the existing capitalImprovement fund.

Section 3. This ordinance shall takeeffect immediately upon Its publicationafter final passaij* as provided by Statute.

' •' ••' Notice vThe foregoing ordinance won Introduced

and passed on flnt readinil at a meetingof the Township .Committee of the Town-ship of Cranford, N. J., held on August10. 19M, and will-be considered forpassage, after public' hearing, at anothermeeting of said Township Committee atMunicipal Building, Cranford. New Jersey,on , ' • . •

TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 14, 1934at 8:30 o'clock P.M.

J. WALTER COFFEE.Township. Clerk.

Dated: August 10, 1954. . 9-8

PBA willround of j

the playoffs of the Union County!Baseball League to a close Suntfayrby defeating the Westfield Hawksat Memorial Field.

The first game of the playoffsbetweep Cranford and Westfield;was ;playcd oil ^August 22 and.Cranfotd-won,-6-3rbt'hiud"-thc-fintrjhurling of Tom Sharkey,...,. !

Westlield gainecl a tic /or sec-ond place witlnhe local nine bywalloping the Plainfield Dreiers,1.3-1, Sunday at Tamaques Park,Westfield. Both" Cranford' andWesttie'ld compiled 9-5 records. It;is the eleventh Consecutive year Ithat Westlield has finished first'or Jsecond in the league.

Manager Mort Richey expectsto- pitch "Sharkey again Sunday.Westfield will probably N startGeorge Sexton who was the lojjer'.jin the first contest. If it rains inn jSunday, the game will be playedMonday, tUibor Day, at 'MemorialField at 2:30 p.m.

In the other half of the playoffbracket, the pennant-winning Lin-den Buckeyes evened their seriesat one game each with the Eliza-beth Braves. LinderV won 1-0 Sun-day behind Johnny Taw, whileMike Frank took the loss although'he hurled' a no-hittev for seveninnings.

sion,in thcl.in-den-Braves series and Cranforddefeats Westfield, the final roundof the best of three games playoffs

will get/ underway September\12.This wffBftr TSTearT that Hictteywould jbc able to use Sharkey inat least one game of the finalround/ Sharkey is scheduled toreturn to Immaculate ConceptionSeminary, Darlingtoii. on Septem-ber 12 and probably won't ;beavailable for the remainder of t iisseason.

Local Policemen QualifyIn Teaneck Pistol Shoot

Patrolman ' PJiederick ^Roberts,captain of the Cranford policepistol team, qnd Patrolman AlbertFischer, high scorer this season onthe team, were awarded "distin-guished expert" -certificates forqualifying in the annual inter-national pistol matches at Teaneckrecently.

Patrolman Fischer posted a 293,while Patrolman Roberts shot 288.A score of 25§ or better was re-quired to qualify. ; ——•

FRI.-SAT. SEPT. 3 - 4EDMUND JOAN

_._i—OWENN--• - ~ - WEVOON— IN '8CieNCE TIIKItLEH

" T H E M " ,

"Holida7 Island*In Color 'Novelty tarloon

SUNDAY ONLY SEPT. 5VIBUINIA

MAYOSTEPHEN

MeNALI.VI ""DEVIL'S CANYON

.- Technicolor• >lus .1 STOOGE COMEDY

Sport and Bags tlunny Cartoon

MONDAY'Men of Fighting Lady'

June StevensRetains Women'sSingles Ciwn

June Stevens, defending chamrpion, vybn the municipal women'ssingles title again by defeatingAnn Duff, 0-4, 6-0, on the Spring-field avenue courts this week.Previously Miss Duff had elimi-nated Cam Ferro, 6-2, 6-0.

In men's' singles matches, JoeSluzis defeated'Fred Prejean, 11T9,6-4. and Harold Schein defeatedAl Halprin, 6-0, 6-1.

Mixed doubles competition gotunder way during the past we'efc,and results in early matches werereported as follows: Hugh Mairand Ann Duff defeated Bob Crawand Ann Burke, 7-5, 6-1; CharlesRay. Jr., and. Grace Johnston de-feated Henry and Dot Hirschland,6-1, 6-1.

EXPERT SHOEREPAIRINGQUICK SERVICE

LOUIS MONTINISHOE BEPAIHINO .—•

8 Alden S t Cranford

PL U-1117 Show. 1 - 7 - K:*O P.M.CON-T. SHOW; SAT. * 8l)N.

TODAY. FHL & SAt.JOAN CRAWFORD

._ " JOHNNY^GUITAR". . . • I *o . .

"Creature front "The, Black Lagoon"

SAT. SUN. MON/CinemaScope

"DEMETRIUS andThe GLADIATORS"

. . o l i o . ., J TONy CURTIS

PIPER LAURIE"JOHNNY

DARK"

FIREWORKS LABOR PAY, ' following our evanlng circus

(this show doses -the ..season)Captain Joseph Basile'i Band—.

•_ 1 _ Bubbles Ricardo at tha mik«.~" " "' .. Swimming Pool, 10 a. m. to J p. nt.

Free Circus Starring f X V 'Ui9iOi.S ~ •*-the Oanish aerialists • * . • 1»*»'» '^ '»«

Gaudsmith Brothers, clowns and poodles;Massive Twins, somersaults-balancing;

Lott and Joe Anders, bicycling jugglers '—WeMlbe seeing you

again next year at • , -i"The Place for Fun

OLYMPIC PARKIRVINCTON-MAPLCWOOD

ACCELERATEDHIGH SCHOOL

DAY OR EVENING CLASSES

Approved forVeteran*

dlschtrgcd *H»t

¥ • • u s campUU • (sill bl«h•cboo) taotie In t y««I«. pf-^are f«r ft professional carc«rIn «ngfii«crlo^, baalncB* m4"miBisitstloa, ele. K u p yourJob* ftmage » *c^«4ttle tosalt yoar own coavcnUoc«,kail cr.«U given (or P'Ulhigh Mbool w « I . Co-odacavll.nal. >»•CGItiTeK AMV DAY TUI8

•tern * A.M. a . • P.M.

' Talc* your choice of «ch«d-ulei trom 1^ to 28 honn a

' w*«k. day or avanlng.Ir-N.J.- 8t«*TT

* BchoorcartiHcalo "ip-prcved for «dmli»ion tocollege.Your V«Uron'» Allowancern«y be M much a* twice,or •ran three times, yourtuition.A veteran with 3» monthsentiDemant can make up 2years of Wgh tchoQl andhave alm,o*t «nou0h left for• 4-year college cours«.

JERSEY PREPFouoded 1*24

1186 RAYMONP B0ULEVABD. comer Brood St. NEWARKOpposite Public Service Bus Teim|»al — Phone MArket 9-4050

« « W A N l | ! W A B M 8 I H | A ! I [

CRnnFORDNeW Phone No. CR 6-9779

MATINEES IUILT J P.M.

CONTIGUOUS SAT- - SVN. - BOL.

NOW THRU SAT.. SEPT. 4CinemaScope - Technicolor

Stereophonic Sound'VICTOIt

MATIIHKHIIHAK"

UAVWAUU

"DEMETRIUSAND THE

GLADIATORS"f l u > In -Technicolor

BttETT - nARBAUAKINti E AWBKNCE

"Jesse Jamesvs. The Dalton."

_ S U N MOM. — TUES.SEPT. 5 - 6 - 7

In Tccbnlcolo/A«,AN . JOAM

_L4Utt-

HELL BELOW ZERO'— plas —

JKNNItCU MONTilOMKKYJONES CLIFT.

"Indesdretion of AnAmerican Wife"

WED THUR8. — FRI.SEPT. . 8 - 9 - 1 0

All Technicolor 8bowCI,VI>K PAT

BCATTY OUBIKV

"RING OF FEAR"•«»•—

flUO'K'OE MONTOOMKHV

'Battle of Rogoo River"

AIR-CONDITIONED

RIALTOWESTFIELD

TODAY — FHL —SAT.SHIRLEY ROBERTBOOTH RYAN"About Mrs. Leslie"

-T .- .— Hit # 2 —VAN - RUTH

HEFLIN ROMAN

'Tanganyika1''IN TECUN1COLOR

S O N T — MON. — TUES.CinamaScope

TechnicolorStereophonic Sound

"Demetrius andthe Gladiators"

- . WITH—VICTOHMATURE—"—

SUSAN HAYWARP ,— ALSO —

CAMERON MITCHELL

"Gorilla at

[ ! ' • • • • ' • ' • •

'.-• i , '•

ml

• • • : -y;Hi l

M

l SEPT 8 THRU 11ALAN LADD

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— Hit # 2 —JENNIFEH JONES

MONTGOMERY CLIFTIN i . _

'Indiscretion ofan American Wife"

OQITEIONWlKSeiEEN!

t.m. »—•;!•• •*•»-

Page 11: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

• v ••• «.• •. - ••<$

• >:•<

ffi>

{ ,'

ifei ?- r

(V

I,I'

THE CRAWFORD CITIZEN AND CHHON,,THE CRANFORD CITIZEN >ND CHRONICLE. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER J. 1954

Real Eskate For Sale

Board Toldtarge Tract

— i m a «M seats mlnlnam. A8. HI bjr

. Unes — IB cents a lf«e. A«» *«tIn caps, 4*abU price.

BCPCAT INSBKTIONS (CoBMeall*e* x k i wilhaot co>y ctuufea) —Sc u l i a v ir t , ?S e n l i miolmam.N* 4lseaasal' • • line •<• ar «4aact In .-las.

CASH, Cheek* ar Stamp* mast ae-,, eampaajr advertising" coay. Not

'htaa adftlbla far errors in a4s tafceaby tcleabeba. • . * •

DEADLINE FOB COFT—Wednesday?'_ Hi IQ-A Ml. — -

rett

For SaleKITCHEN or other CUSTOM CAHINETS:

Mtnton-Blll Cahini-I Company, 20(1' North Avc.; Gu'rwnod. WE-slficld 2-SOH".

If

rrfifsters, office-.furniture; sales am• wrvice. Centennial Business Machlnr

Co., 230 Centennial Ave., Citanford 6-7300, , U

START .YOUR CHILDREN'S. SCHOOLVEAH RIGHT with The World 'BookEncyclopedia. Coll after S P.M. RArr-way 7-4218^ 1 • ' -' B-2

UPniGHT PIANO, cood condition.1 CRiih-ford 6-2043. . '

.(JETTING ENOUGH HOT WATEHT Limescale removed from para colls, tank*lru beaten. Work done In your ownhome by specialist. All work guaran-teed. Cranford Soft Water EquipmentCo., CRanford S-3SS5 or.. WEstueld 2-4B88. • . ' tf.

BENWX. AUTOMATIC WASHER SERV-ICE. ALL WORK GUARANTEED.B. W. rLARTEY. CRanford «-171fl. U

CUKV—PERSIAN—tA&ti I—COAT:—air14-10. S300. Sacrjflce.,'Ciill WEsiflclll3 - M O 3 - W . , • • ' . . . . •

ALUMINUM STORM WINDOWS .-indr Comblnatinn Scr»»«-nv ;i

FrVe estimate* AI!>;in-l.»wiY. lira North

XAUIE -PADS. 3-pr. w U . . irVim »0.05.Choice of beautiful colon.', ffrer t-.ti-mates civen. Alban-l^-wis. 109 W. UnionA v c . CRanford «-0WiB. " \ tf

.PITTSBUnGH PAINTS, full linr \of In-terior and cxU-rior. Painter*' diWiujntIn houMr lot quantities. .A lban^

?- 109 North Union. Ave. V If

FurnishedFor Rent

CBANFORD REFRIGERATION SERVICEon rrmid»lr«._Keivlnalnr. Croilfiy, Cold-spoCNorge. B. W- sTartey. CRanford«-1718. • . u

UOOMS POn RENT by day or week.Reasonable rate*. CRanford fl-ixta.

CRAWFORD HOTEL U

CARPENTER and CONTRACTOR. Allkinds of alteratioiu, .porches, etc.' Lud-wlg Seiberl, 388 Lincoln Drive, Kenll-worth. CRanford «-052fl.

CBANFORp REAL ESTATE BOARD

.MULTIPLE LIST YOUR PROPERTYWITH A. MEMBER OF THE

•• CRANFORD REAL ESTATE BOARD

• 17,000.00

LARGE ROOM with separate, beds, Conr.'Vcnient . CRanford 16-4301. '•

ATTRACTIVE FURNISHED FRONTROOM, .large closet; .6 minutes tostation, quiet neighborhood. CRunford6-85S7.

KUnNlSIIED ROOM. Beritlcman only.Convenient to all transportation. CRan-ford 0-6031.

UPHOLSTERING — r'urnilure rep,draperle*. slip covert;, Venetian hlin\itf.Nice choice of fuhrick. V. Kuntner \iS«" 120 South Ave., E. Tt-I. CllanforVl6-0803. . II-A—

VENETIAN BUNDS in ..lock'. 2!l In 30Inches, custom qiKilitv tittkck blinds, all04 Inches lonC. $2.0.%; UIM> Jeiicraft andC. W. Breni^nian cuntom blinds. 30c bfj.tl. Cranforri Upholftrry Shop. 1211South A v e . E. CJI:ilifc.rd B-«a93. tf

TOPSOIL. till dirt, gravel, «-iin.hid »t<ine,—-cinrterriinor^iiiVfr 'CiHT'S'iii H."H Aliw..y

7-7224. •

MADE TO pltDE.ll rudlutur enclosures,!aw;n furniture, cahllu*tj, und consolecjbincU for -|H>rtabte sewlnu iiuchllur^.Fred DavcY, 4:1 N. 7th Street, Krnll-wnrlh. Cltanfura (»-5.i:.S. II

PARK PET. TOWNE 'Unusual Pctji, Supplies '

114 Chestnut St.. M<»«. Pk.—CH 9-0323• : «

_TOP_SOIL. .4 La yard-load,-H4-dellver.-d.Bulldozer for hire und trencllinc.CRanford 6-2883' . .

I'lANOS, SALE! Flour miniplc spiiwtj.,drastically ~Teduc<>d, tcrniii. Cranffirid

"Pianu Co., 3 North A«- . u East, ClUn-ford 6-3720. -

CHEERFUL ROOM in private home,reasonable, ncur truiufcKjrtation, tfaraifcoptional^ Call Cllanforti U-411UU afterti P.M. •''l' V, 0-0

COMFOHTABLY F U K N I S H E ' D ROOM.near all traiihportation.' Business nlanonly, 100 Nortii A v e , East, Cliunlord

y 6-6SB0. ' . If"

NICELY FUIIN1SIIED HOOM, use o lVkiulicri, caru^e tiyuilubic. WEstll>:ldB-50U0-H.

FORMICA, MICARTA and TKXTOLITEcounter top leplacements. Mlnton-BillCabinet Co., 390 North Ave,. Garwood.WEstfieid a-soaa ' . .

T. V. SERVICE-NTTES;-SUNDAYS. •HOLIDAYS. I T C . "

13 years T. V. .experienceJERSEY RADIO SERVICE

Herbert F. SorgoCRANFORD 6-04M

CARPENTER — CONTRACTORRepairs porch enclosures, cabinet work,

screens, garages, caulking, termitework, roofing;' block ceilings, attic in-suUUon. interlocking metal weatheistripping:

GEORGE IT. NOBES6 Adams Ave., Cranford

ClUnford 6-6817 ' ti

TRUCK CRANE and TlD.-ft Bulldozerfor hire. S. W. Oliver. Inc. CKanioi-d6-3159 and Linden 3-7034. ti

rttnenl For RentUNFURNISHED. 3 HOOM APARTMENT.

available Sept. 1!>; rent SU5. heat -andutilities supplied. Adults urcleVred,314 lincoln Ave., ,hear lliiili St. Rini:d bell. •

Apartment* WantedAPARTMENT, 21* or 3 rooms arid bath,

close to town, reasonable- rent. CRau-ford 8-6902. \

FIVE ROOM APARTMENT ,or duplex.unfurnishedr Wli i l ly Cranford, good

- neighborhood. f*uiriUy of four. Ueasoii-able rent C

FINE PAINTS, colors ami enanivUChrnilrott- Puiiit Wnrks, 7H9 llntilvvanlKrnilworlh. CHanford (i-lBlul. t

BUIU1ING MATEHIAI-S—Cinder bloecement bloc.kK, sandstone. C e in v n tsidewalks • installed, Morris Slllx-r-

• stein, CHanfnrd U-33(>2. a-20

" V E N E T I A N ' B M N D S . 23" - M", whilw andivory, (2.00. Iinniediate delivery.Alban-Lcwis Hardware, lot) N. Union

• A,ve. ; . , , . . _ : .. . ' ,- . u

BU1I.O1NO MATERIAL, approximately400 clndetLblocki*. nxHx.l7t.tlled.fiicc miboth Mues. Ideal for bUlldiim extensionor farages. Morris Silbersteili, 11l l c s l i r A v o . Citanford 6-33«2. • 9-3

PCDIGKEED CHINCHILLA UADII1TS.1st .class. 6 Mohawk Drive, Cranford.CRanford «)-301B. ' ' 0-16

GIRL'S BICYCLE and BOY'S BICYCLE.38 inches, »13 each. Goud cunditlon.IK La balie Ave.. Cranlurd.

ALPACA COAT. uray. s i u sub-tcen~l2.$10. Citanford 6-4673,

CAnillAGE. Atlas, very cood condition.Call Cflanford II-1503. '

ANTIQUES — l'llic waitwtund. $13; -4-. drawer cru»t. *2<>; cherry drop-leaflablr, MS; .Pa. Dulcli dry-kink, *4n.

1 Mrlodian. *3*V; grjil"»,ch.iir, VictViriuii-love-neat, %\ivt \\\\\v corner. cuplHt^r<i,

cb«.'rry chi'ht *>( ill:iu/rrs, old chairs,, etc. J. FuinU-yv. Glni;<il)>.-..(l C:u>ll>'

Hd . Hamburg. SO^M-X County. N. J .•a mile off Ihuliway No. 23.

BABY CARHIAGE with luutlrcMt. u»u<icondition, -very reasonable. WEstlleld3-3378-R.

40-FOOT EXTENSION I ADDKU, |ijrncli-• Cll lr n e w r u j i j u n i m c job, «25; UI.M.

14 window shutters w SI each. Ill' Orancv Ave. . Craufoid. CHauford 0-

ENGINEER. SMALJ\ FAMILY, must have3-5 rooms by Oct\bci' 1st. Under $80,Including heat. Qood tenant. Besticfcielices. WEitlleld 2-S74U-M.

For RentSTOKE FOR KENT, ioo\Walnut Ave,.

suitable for any type of business.Immediate occupancy. Apply SellerDIIIC Store, 102 Wulnut A v e . Citan-

_ l o r d tl-al-Jl. . . , \

House for RentHOUUIMM GOOD LOCATION, Ul/alljibli-

Octlinfnllii|. , 3 lur«- bvdroonVs. tile-. • b»th,-olr-heat—portrh,"lln'rllafe,"suragcT

ndlllU only. CHauford 6-0323, •

Wanted To BuyGUNS WANTED — Licensed collector

paying high , prices, for modern orantique rifles, shotguns, revolvers.

, Linden 3-3340Y U

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTINU — Housewiring. Jobbing. . fluorescent fixtures,repairs and plugs installed. GcorgSanguillano, 12 Myrtle Street TelC R f l !

IF YOU PLAN TO BUIIJD. repair or makealterations, call T. JOHNSEN. 403 Cen-tral Avenue, Cflanford 6-0548. tl

ROOriNO AND SIDINGGUTTERS ti LEADERSCeiling Blocks Installed

Aluminum Combination Window*Home Insulation

In conjunction with. aiding w e paintwood trim.

Over 5.000 satisfied 'Customers.WM. L. SCHHOEDER

1 Walnut Ave. CHanXord

JALOUSIE porch enclosures "Ludman. 'Add that extra room now. Mlnton-Bil'Cabinet Co. 290 North Avenue. Garwood. WEstncld 2-5080. . CRanfoni0-0328. ' ' . t<

FOL-DOR "Holcom.'i & lloke" i spacesaving folding doors, Mlntbii-Bllt. 201/North Avenue, Garwood. WEutflcJo2-SO8O — CRanford 6-0328. U

T.V. REPAIRED IN YOUR HOME. tl.IMiper service call, plus' parts. Day oinight. Economy Electric. 105 .Bonjamii.St.. CRanford 6-3839. ti

SEATS — Cane, rush rattan. Work calledfor and delivered, - PLalnOeld .6-0370347 JefTcraon Ave.. North PlainOald. N J

. WE BUY BOOKSOne or a thousand. Please call fordetails, P.M. Book Shop, PLailillcld 4-39O0, i tf

ANTIQUE AMERICAN FUHN1TUHE bylioil-conllnerelal party lor pclsohai col-lection. Hiuhest prices paid. CullPrinceton 1-tijiiil or write Box 017, c,u

.._ CiUwu-aiid^Ciiiuiiicle : .---*• 0^23

Wanted1'AHT OK F U » - I.OAIJ. rhlladi-lpl.lu.

Ilaltljiioiv, Sllvt-r Springs. Wushintftuii.I). C. or uiiy Hto|> on U.S. No. I. Friday'iiltfM. St'iit. 4. lUuM.nuble. Morris Sil-bomtcili, II Uetilcr'Avc!, CHanford U-

HOLLAND WINDOW SI1ADKS, ii|> to illinches, on your roller, «1.20. S.IMIC U.i>Service Alban-Lewis Hardware, 101)North Union Ave. <f

MAN'S BIKE. Enclish make. Zd-luchfully equipped. Llko new. Call CKanford 6-11001 or 31tl N,.rtl. Ave., F-u»t

' Cranford1.

GIRL'S BICYCLE. Columbia. 28-inchexcellent condition. ' Sacrilkc-', CKuil-ford 0-4I3S..

16 MM. KEYSTONE MOVIE PHOJK.C"TOR. 300W. complete with . case uiid

. reel, f lu . Exct>i»'ni contlithwi. wn,demonstrate. CHanford (io-HB uftei

> : - • & - P . M : ' • • • ; • • •• • .-. '• ' ' 7 1

1 UUSSIAN SQUIHKEL CAPE STOLE withsnap-In sleeves and mink tall*. Excellent condition, KJ5. Cllanford tl4760.

UOYS UlCYCLK., JU-iiuh. in fiilr .condlll.m. Cllanford Il-ti7:ij

FUR COAT. »«»•!,. d.ved cnnyji ulif 12.very uood condition, *4S. Cltanfoi'tl ti6 HO -»

PEAT MOSS, »3.0i bale: 5-lO-S fvrtillx-l13 50 a bai-: lime, 7(K- .1 h.ti Cll.in

.ford H-O41U. Free delivery. <i

SPECIAL -. %2'2i Kormicu land I'aiu-lyti^--_r/abr4caU'd ,_on *<" lily\VIMM1., 22''x-lU-

for table top*, breud k>odrdK''*»nac!<b a n pltu 1O0 other u«e». Uolbicr A

'Co.. 73l)U«.iiiral AVf., Wt-.illi'ld. D-l

yvur rouiul, *>DIUck'sAEu Kami iMll.t itu»

Krt-v delivery. ,*CU.i)tforc

EGGSHell)

.3. do*, f ) .6-0418.

Cranford** Oldest

PIESI1IITIII\

DRUG STOREI. WALTER 8EAQEB

Bcs. Plurm.104 NORTH

UNION AVE.

ft 64700

Lots For SaleBUILDER'S OPPORTUNITY — Lot, cor-

ner North Ave. and John -St.. IUIIXBO.paved street on both sides, all Im-priivcmcnts in and puid for. Price$3,200. Pay for lot when house iscoinplctc.' Will give mortgage ' if*necessary, Owner, MOristuwu 4*3751.

—TREES •TniMMED-~AND~HEnroVKbi

Cord Wood for SaleLandscape ~ Nurserymen '.

Call WEstlleld 2-6520 or WEstflcld 2-807VEvenings after 6JIM LOVELAND ti

W.il-planned housc^nd_gart|eri_rnakc_lhis.•M IwlU-i MlV^Tuin-a. new *hoii>.e. Propertyis. in perfect condition. First floor con-sists of living loom, dininu room, moderntiled kilchen. tiled bath and brriromn.Swujnd floor. 2 bedrooms: attic. Insula-tion. Full-size combination aluminumstorm sash, and screens. Venetian bhnusth>ouuhoiil. New G.E. oil-burnlni: unit.

I 530 gul. outside oil tank. Open porch•""I K-raile. Recreation room in cleandry cellar.

THOMAS M.TCMEEKI&. Realtor13 A.ldcn Steel Ko<ims 7 and 8

CHanford 6-1237

EASY ON THE HEARTEasy <n the eyes and. the pockctbboktoo. *]4.S0O buys this 12-year-old bunga-low with oil hot water- heat, modernkitchen with large space for eating,spacious living room, basement recrea-tion room, terraced back porch, attachedgarage. (J0X12O lot.

YOU CAN HIDE YOUR HAMMER!When you purchase a home in the con-dition'this .one Is, Large living roomwith llrcplnce. full dininc room, sciencekitchen, extra utility breakfast room,rear screened porch. 3 nice bedrooms,tile bath. 50x125 lot. $18,000. „

LIVING I.iKE A SAIiDINE?It may., be O.K. for you but it is not«o..d for your kids. Give them, this 4-bedroom' home with its .luruc yard toroam In, enclosed front porch, entrancehill, living room, dininu room, kitchenorr««r5r-flom-;u!rttarn--hcatr''Sr3:5oO"~~' '

LARGE. 4-BEDBOOV HOME. U jhit floor, oil beat. gar»e<r."'LsffSe 'ass.town. ' .

a-noO.M HOME, steam ioil>. c^*cr. deeplot. 11-4.500.

Manv others at

RICHARDS-SWACKHAMEB.« Aides Street-<-

Mrs. Ruth Kevr ' CRMrs. Alpha d e l a U o t t e CH

WESTFIELD — T-reomBcauttiully manpriced risht This, waa'z L*»tfloors-large living room,infi xootn^ TV toouikilchen. 2nd nuox* — T11.3^11.3. one l l - a ^ } ; f'Vihower, stairway to atcif_Nice, tui^enirnt. oil »b.*a rprivate backyjrtl. detjebrd

-.r -wate . root.-toevtu'and sCDyttt:;»fc=jB3omE.Venetian ' blinds; nvx^fftx £ol-<£ipc3- Lm'taxes. Close to bcruxiC»••••>. 21* Grove Street. WEisSrJd 3 -5002. . ,»-Z

trucking — HaulingBOBBINS * A l l raw, trx.

313 South Ave-. E.. CBanfonl C-«atVMOVING — STORAGE — PACKING/ Agents Allied Vai "

STAHHY EYED!That's what Khc'll he when she seesthis 11-ycar-old tl-room oilonial. Doubled.'uttcd enclosed back porch, science tiledkitchen, tiled bath, knotty pine recrcu-tlon room. AH this tin a beautifullywooded plot, convenient to school. ,

Etmer H. Smith ..Harold M. Wilson

_- CR 6-6704CB S-10S4

O. B, HOWLAND -^ REALTOR

Open evenlnga and Sunday a

PLUMBING and HEATING. S e w e r *i cleaned With electric newer machine

Guaranteed. William i. Ledden. ' TelCHeslnut 8-1207 and CRanford 6-2935\ ' ' U

\ WILLIAM F. DAVIDSONGeneral Contracting, Carpentry, Masonry,

Plastering - and Roofing. CRanford8-3039. No Job too small. EstimatesWithout obligation, U

ASPHALT DRIVEWAYS, crushed stone,till dirl, driveways excavated. Frontend loader for hire. Joseph lai Brucio,37 Henley NAvc. Cllanford 6-31B7.

MASON- CONTRACTORS.Complete masonry. Sidewalks. Hag-

stone Work. Garage building, brickwork. Free estimates, bchwUrl.CRanford 0-0405. .

"WHILE WE AIIE POSTPONINGLIFE SPEEDS BY" :

Don't wait to Biiy — •. • Decide to do it now.

Inspect —This fi-ioom Colonial with H i baths,modfln kitchen with birch cabinets.extra first floor room off the livingroom, entrance hall, excellent condi-tion. Inruc lot with 2-ear garage, choicelocation. Asking $18,500.

Y«ur Comfort — Our Pleasureand it's a pleasure f«ir us to offerthis iittnictlvu well-built 3-bedrw>mhome with modem appointments thatassure comfortable .living. Quiet rcs{<-denlial street near town; only SI6 800

W s tSee this excellent' buy In -a CapeCod ""Bunc-ulow;"- ^Wood-burning" Hre-placp in the .living, room, screenedporch, recreation room. 2 baths, oilhot wulcr heat and attached uari\se.

Rental*RENTALS . FOR ALL OCCASIONSBanquets — Wecfdmcs —.

Dances — Organizationetc. — nhu>

4 BOWLING ALLEYS

Riverside DriveCR S\970I " CR S-HSS5

GARWOC*p RECREATIOX. U f JCarttAve.,tot B tcaW Icaeues on ABCbowlinlf lilleys. Ufe^tlickJ 2-&K9

Fltwr ServiceRJ'MENZEL V- Floor saaptsc' aod ie-

Hntahlng oi \ old floors ai sptcully.—CRanfonl-6-0343.— «1 Baabeh « t r -

rust. Craniord. ' tf

Dressmaker, Alteration*LADIES SUITS and DBE5SES nude «o

order; also alterations, l l n . UjsadLCRanfqrd' 6-2452. tf

LostBANK BOOK No. 27336. Subuj

Co. If not restored before.10. 1954. applicalitfa—wtB-bnew. book.

Help Wanted- FemaleGIRL OB YOUNG WOMAN . for dry

cleaning %tnre. Blue iRibbon Cleaners,100 North Ave.. Garw>ood.

BOOKKEES^ER. experienced, full ornart dmr. Work in pranford. CRan-fortl C-34C7.

WOMAN, reliable, for cleaning 1 or 2day* a week. 200 Hampton Street,CBanford G-02SG.

HOUSEKEEPER - — . Mature, capableironi i i , care for children and homewhile mother works. Plain cooking.Sleep in. Own room, and bath, fteccn

P L i T ^

UelpWMale or Fe)

STUDENT or bomeonV capable offor window dis-

play. Bujt S18. c o Citizen .Kid

Wanted- FemalerOMAN WISHES BABY SITTING, dayor evenings, good references. CRan-fard 6-4CZ9. • ' • I

13OTHEB WISHES TYPING to d o att u r n . CRanford 6-3387.

E3CPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER dc-sxres temporary or part time work.Caanfan) 6-7810. . .

Jamestown, Va., was the firstpermanent. colony settled inAmerica.

J)r. H. JRermanOptometrist

EYES EXAMINIBY APPOINTMENT

CRANFORD THEA1BUILDING

15 HOBTH AVEw W.

CRANFORD 64)200

WANTED FOR CRANFORDJ OFFICE.Man in his sixties. Some experiencein bookkeeping necessary. ' State' e x -perience and references. Box 8J5. c / oCitizen', and Chronicle.

SALESMAN TO SELL USED CAHS forold established Chevrolet dealer whocarries a larce stock of I O K I rccon-

. ditioncd' iiscd cars'. Commission plusdrnwr.—Sfe—Mr.—Me.vel ut 30a~Ci?nT;

. Ave.. WEstflcld 2-0230,

Trees Taken DownAmi Bcaaoved

8taM«« Pnllesl OuttyOaUK GtABANTKBD

By larormaeo

A.V.B0YD1 Walnat Avenue '

CLABK TOWNSHIP. N. J.Vial KAh<ray 1-1—t

CRanford 6-3787

Dr. Cporgp Franus' ~^Cfiifopractor

.Three Springfield Avenue

Cranford, N. J.

SERVICEMAN'S ARMY CAP, toot M « B -d.iy in center 'of tuwn.needed. Return AmericanHome, 22 Riverside Dr.,Heward. •

Tom Albans „,Sid NunnMildred Davlcs _..Lois Brooks ', ;Etta Minctti ..;

CR 6-0847u CR 6-S487

CR 6-3681....,.- CR 6-1500

Cn 6-0735

LET ME BOARD YOUII PET in myhome, expert' care; " reasonable rate.Cllunford 6-D382. \ 4-15

LANDSCAPE CONTRACTORS* . L>rwiui - Shrubbery - Trees

Ilototlilliig - Grading i TrenchingHOBEItT.S St WIESE163 N. Lehlgh Avo.

CRanford 6-3284 Linden 3-7764

FurrierA. KANTNEH. New furs. f'ur coats

reslyled and repaired. 118 WalnutA v e , CRanford B-1678. ' tf

Construction ,)NE CAR GARAGE. 12X20 Including-concrete footing and floor. Cinder blookr

or frame construction, overhead .door.complete. (7S0. CRanford 6-3820. tf

t f

ELECTRICAL INSTALLATIONS and re-pairs, wall outlets, light switches, etc.Lamps rewired, door bells and chlniasrepaired. John Frey. WEstlleld 24OO4-M.

Autos for Sale' / SEE OOH "OK" USED- CAII

AI) ON PAGE 5. SECTION 3

NOIllllS CHEVROLET.' INC.2(10 A N D (iM C E N T U M , A V E .

WESTFIEK4J

!*ONTIAC, '52, ' private owner, U.OtMlmiles, fully equipped. Ilcst offer.

.327 Walnut Ave.. Cllanford 6-11300.— Cail~uftcr~tf:30~P;M7

1053 rOIID 2-divor u.lah, darkwith ull i-vlrii, tup condltiun.llelil 2-257U-K.

1052 CHEVIlOt.tT. Ul.uk. 4-<l<W>r ilelukcM^d,in, kadln and heater. Asking »0OU.CHanford U-054A.

1 fit, lu-to -l-door M-daii, blut-U,uiKid runnini; x'ondittoii. Heaiu>iiablc>CHaitfoid I)-:I:IS7.

1047 PLYMOUTH 4-dtM>r . kedan. radio,whruU'r and fo^-liijhti. Amaihig con-

dition and excellent tlies. MechanicallyH

WILBUR COONSHOES

. far •''..•WOMEN tTTTH

PBOBUEK PEET

ANDREW CRISANTI. Gndaate air

ScbMl of PncitpedlMUi CENTENNIAL AVK.

CKANPUatU

TELEVISION AND KM ANTENNAS IN-STALLED and repaired. Work guar-anteed. Rca»ui»blu ralcii. Tubes checkedin you. home. Call PAnwood 3-4150

,or Cllunford ti liooi. -U

• REMOVAL OK^ LIME SCALE .Nut getting enough hot wutcrY Hotwater prcssurv lowT When tanklessheaters and puracolls ore lilling upwith llmo scale save up to 2/3 of re-placement co4t by having it cleanedout. Call CR 6-U43O .

LAMPS. TOASTEH.M. IKONS. KEWIIIED.Cull for and delivery. Evenings undHaturdayti. Don Davis. CHunlord U-B070. ' . tf

EXPERT AUTO HEPAIUS _ Ileu.oiiuble.No Job too small. Call Hcury, Cllan-i J

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Hobert M.Piper. Ucsidentlul ami commercial

ATTENTION WOMEN WHO OWN

,jamas and create.* incnV tiousers, etcon vmit' own honer. Save money byenrolling now. This week only hallprice fee: Special i-.ui.-i.lci Jtlon toU|l|>liaill-e btoiv d.'jl.ls. Mlu. tll/.lhc-lhConnor.. CKanfonl t!-aitl3.

ELECTRICIAN — Houses and gurjgcwWired; now bervlces lllft.iIU,i for »•!. c-tric ranues; outlets. Will pick upUlld deliver Illlnlis to be l.p.illi,!.S. l'etci»«ii, 34 MacArthur A v e CHun-

' ' fnr«f II.Ill'1

I N S U R A N CALL TYPES

G. C . NunnInsurance Broker

181 North Ave., E..^ CRanford 6-3685

C O . NUNN181 North Ave., East ot Centennial Ave.

CHanford 6-3883 or CRanford 6-5487OPEN Saturday and Sunday.

OPENING OK SCHOOL IS NEAH! Here'sa hoiiiir In the new school district undolUy -a i.lt..rt.-»i*nlk: Frame' Colonial. 14yfiirs. *ul<l. with fireplace, bay window,full dlliilli; room, large kclence kjtclleliand scr<¥tu-H poich. Thre« twin ul/ehedroonis and tile, bath. Asking $18,000.

KAriLY OCCUI'ANCY-with this DutchColonial in cxivllcnt condition. Sun-r<mm. lirvpliu-'v. (ulj:.flln.iii|j_.rouin._threeI»*droom8 'ilnn'two car'garage. Pricedriuht for u good buy.

TKKES AT NO EXTIIA COST! Thisproperly Is ur.u-.-u wild b<-aiitiful big'"'"•• front and luck, in Heathermeude.White Colonial, painted lust year. Inter-ior need* . decorating und will be . con-Nlilcccd in the price. Three bedrooms,iircplucv. Kcreened porch, attic withKtiilrwuy. attached garage, oil heat.

. BHAMEEN . AUEMCY. REALTORS15 North Ave., E. CRanford 0-1000

Mrs. II. T. Rearwtn CRanford S-44MMrs. Ann Cooper CRanford A-O44O

- Mrs. E«clyn Wade Cflanford 6-1053

Painting —DecoratingT. A, CRANE —- Painting and Decorating.

343 Walnut Ave. TeL CTUnford 6-0080.for estimates. - tx

TruckForUu*l'^i-TON PICK-UP TRUCK FOB HIRE

with or without driver. Flitno mlleaffe. Morris Stlberateto.

" ford B-33S2.

Piano TumngRELIABLE PIANO TVKIMG and . . ."ing by recognized experts. C i u t e r i

Piano Co.. Tuners and RebuiMm.3 North Avenue. East. Call CBaotonl6-2720.

NITSCIIKE ti fjLUNCK — Painters andDecorators. 47 North lath Street. Kercllworth. N. J. Telephone Cllanford6-4713 — CHeslnut 5-3466. tf

WILLIAM ROESEL. Interior and Ex-terior Painting.. Skilled mechanics.Personal supervision. 303 ColumbiaAvenue. * Cranford. Call Cilanfo.'d

„ 6-3713. «LINDEN DECORATING CO. Painting

aml-rlcr.iratlng.t-e»tablislH.U lfllgj ».airL l d a 3

gtLludcn,a-3380.-

H. MENZEL — Painting and paper-hanging. Phone CHanford 6-1343. 61

—EUxaboth-AvenucT-Craiifordr tf

Nursing ServiceCIIANKOUn V. N. A. for Ceiieral Nurs-

ing. Visit*, Hypodcrmli's. Mutcrnal andInfant Care, Health Education, TheVisiting Nurse Can Help You. NominalKitr. Tel. CHanford 6-07S7, or consultTelephone! Directory.' Hours: Dailyexcept Sundays and Holidays. B:3oA.M. to 4:30 P.M.; Saturdays 8:30 tn13:30. - . U

U O U O W « h — S e h o o l — a n d "Ccfnegcsubjects. Carolus T. Clark, U.A. (Yale1

l .L .n . Kd. M.. 330 MoUnUin Ave..Westfleld. Call WEstflcld 3-2741-W. tf

Real Estate~Wanle&FOUR BEDROOMS. 2 bath^ 2

r i i U t l ilie school. Prlrurip^ls oni>.c o Citizen and Chronicle-

MclNTYRE'Slawn Mower

SALES — SEBVtCErAKTS — WELDING

Asrthwfaed —Reo-Edipse-ExcelloMuqr Other VuBons Mate

BdlVcalV SEKVICB

WEstfieU 2^5282XS N. Ebascr S t , Westfleld. N. 1 .

Boarrf ofMonday

CELLARS. ATTICSf CLEANED d, I,removed. Morris; CRanford 6;33ii2

ub toBloom

Queen Elizabeth was known England's'virgin queen.

Woodrow Wilson was the {,1stJ^siderrffronr-VirgliT^""

J Education. vWis informedI evening that Cranford has

,acres available in the ]lingdale a»d Ashwood avenuesLea to soil for a possible expan-Ision program. .. 'I -.-:..• tnformation was given

I1MSURETO DE SURE

DEREMER346 Willow A»e.Garwood, N. J.

SHOE REPAIRSPECIALISTS IN

-M«n'«~Full-Soles-Ladies' Inviaible Soles

SHOE REPAIR(Formerly of Roselle)

40 YEARS' EXPERIENCE106 N. UNION AVE.

CRANFORD

I Mav6r'"Robert C. Krueger andBcW-ufih Council at Borough Halfc

The board—was also informeeI that land is available wesl oflpcnbrook drive,'but that permis-J *L would have to be obtainedhtm the State Water Policy Com-I mission in order to develop .theI site! This area is now a naturalI catch b:isin and is often-under.aI mucb ••« two feet of water. .I At this recommendation of the[citizens Committee for th« PubI lie Schools, the board requestedI inftiriniition,. regarding land in theIrcar.of the Blue Ridge Manor,I The 'board has been informed;I Charles de Grau, chairman ofI the planning committee, said, thatLost of this property is private-l]y owned.| During the meeting, the boardland council reviewed the whole• school expansion situation.I Attending the meeting , ' yereI Major :Kruegerr~Coancilmen Al=Jva Myers, Ernest Vardalis, Ken-Ineth Hart, Walter Boright, OliverI }."Brown,-Jr-.>-andsRrBmteMascara;[Trustees. present were: Mr. deI Grau, William C. Smith, presl-I dent; Howard Murphyx SydneyiTyjcwski, Alfred' Sealev Mrs.I Myrtle Reynolds and' Henry\Bird.I Edwin W. Kraus, superintenlof.'schools, also Was present.

OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY1

yppspiiuucif611 n i n e Avtw ***w*'** <

PL.&O00S *

Jumble St&reIUACK AGAIN !

! VOUIl JUMBLE STOIIE !

OI'CNING T0C3DAY. SCPTEMIIEII 7th

COME S M COME SAVE

10 South Ave, E. CR U-0233

In relation to area, the twortjrst countries on the American

continents arc Canada and Brazil.

INSURETO flE SURE

^ \

At Accident b Never AHappy Occasion Bui IT* ALot tatimT To Take Finan-cially When Insurance PaysAll The Expenses.

WE DANDLE A I L VOBMSOf^INSimANCK WITH

REPRESENTATIVECOMPANIES

CH/RUES M. YEAKIINSURANCE

CRaifird 6-2474Cranford Trust BUg.

ROOM t. 8ECOND FIOOK

, GENERAL VISITSCRANFORD HOME

To make shopping easy and apleasore. Craafaid's Generaldectxic dealer, the ConsumersDirect Supply, has been »iti«-iiig many h f* >f ^vhose occurpants'aiie demanding the finestelectrical appliances, such asirons, toasters, docks, radios,vacuum cleaners, etc.' You toocan receive a visit by ringing

-GBanIonl-6-0590 ; ~-FOB HEAL SERVICE *

<INTtl- 10

CONSUMERSDIRECT SUPPLY CO,

Hardware ft • Houseware

Paunl ^- Wallpaper

NIGHTSUNDAY

Antennas Installed and Repaired

CRanford $150Plug Parts'

. \ • • • • . . • • • ' • • i

Economy Electric105 BENJAMIN ST. CRANFORD

EXTERIORS-INTERIORSEXERPTLY PAINTED

Reasonable Estimates

Michael M. Barich458 Orchard St. .—Cranford

CRANFORD 6-5200

UUSIRA1IONS is inFOR YOUR MONEY

IAVOUIS!Successful advertising b not necessarily a matter of bigness

• l o n e . . . » consists of using newspaper space more dramati-

eoOy and more frequently. We can give you more advertising

for your money, at no extra cost, because we are equipped

wlA the Metro Newspaper Service. Our skilled staff Is pre-

6ot wHI command certain attention for your ad and alte

s»rfce She copy that setU. YON pay only for

H»mm- * e space.

I *» *r •• r*«es* Ask any of

» «mth rot our

Cranford Citizen & Chronicle21-23 ALDEN ST. CR. 6^6000

[Cotirt FinesIl8 Speeders

KENILWQRTH —Eighteen mo-torists were fined'Monday eveningi Municipal Court on charges ofspeeding; including' five for ex.-ceedint! the speed limit on theBoulevard. .

The following were fined forpewling on the Boulevard: Rob-

ert J. Spitzkopf of Newark, PaulF. Becti of Glen Ridge, DavidCOnlcy of Vu'ux Hall, Dorothy M,Britln of Springfield, and RichardJewelle of East ..Orange. Theywere assessed a total of $82., Fined for speeding on the Gar-den State Parkway and other bor-ough thoroughfares were: Nicho-las Antonicello of Jersey City,Salvatore Marinaro of Newark,Joseph Mazno 61 hong Branch,Andiew Ma3c of Newark, CharlesT. Eyan of Clark, Norman Ber-nard of Highland Park, AnthonyFabrio of Avenel, Frances Paul-owski of New Brunswick, HarlanCohn of Brooklyn, Edward Schma-ler of West Ora^ige, Thomas Pec-ora of Newark, Joseph Iacovo ofWest Orange and William Muellerof . Wt-stfield. Their fines andcost of court totaled $102.

Joseph Novatin of Cliff woodwas fined $14 for Improper1 pass-i»K, while a similar fine-was-naidbyTVVilliatn Marino of Irvingtonfor failure to Keep right. For

simr on the,right, Henry Lor-ciitzen of Union City was assessedSI4, while passing a red Ught costJohn Canrlght of 34 Springfieldavenue $9. John Corn of Spring-field'was fined $20 for passingon the right at an Intersection.North Eighth street and theBoulevard.

Girls Aid Polio DriveGAUWOOD — The local com-

mittee in charge of the, emergen-cy diive to raise funds for theNational Foundation for InfantileParalysis received an additionalS2 last week as the result Pf. 0"nvass conducted in their neigh-borhnod by Shirley Jean Knight,a. dmiRhter of Mr. and Mrs. Pran-«s Knicht of 90 Fourth avenue,«st, and Dorothy Wreesmaa, 7,dauiihtcr of Mr. and Mrs. CharlesWreosman of 86 Fourth avenue,cast. ' ' ' ',

HEATWO

Stokes Guilty0fA|tandonmentCharge-KEN]ltWORT.H — Mrs. WilUam

Stokes* $1 years old, was foundgajilty Idenday evening in Munici-pal Co4>rl on a chai*ge of aband-

Costa Praises Camp Dix, Kilmer

Iteed J25 and-$5 cost of courtMag ist atei WilliBm Bruder.

Mrs. Stokes, pleaded not guilty.Special Police Officer James Re-go am) Police Chief George Conktin testified against Mrs. Stokes.The charge was filed by' ChiefConklin.

AccOtding to the complamt, M"rs.k f e d *

ward, 2. and Charles, 3. Theywere rescued from her home at24? North Twelfth street on July7 after a frrebroke out in a sofain her apartment. '

Barton FuelWins Playoff

. KKNILWOJRTH -^ Barton Fuelwon the playoff championship ofthe Kenilworth Softball Leaguelast Thursday evening by edgingthe Volunteer Fire " Department,•8-2, at the.Harding,School Field.

Ed Kizelevicz outpitched NookieDqvid to gain the "crown.

. Barton opened the scoring inthe first frame when Walt Dud-zinski, league president, singled,stole second and scored on a singleby Ronnie Carolan.

The firemen came back withtwo runs in the third. George

"Cassera singled home one of thetallies and he scored the otheron an Infield out.

ing. Barton scored the tying and,winning runs. Bill Carolan walk-ed and scored on a triple by Dud-zinski. Kizelevicz' double scored•Dudzinski.. r \ •.. ,'"Barton Fuel scored its thr«4

runs on five hits and .committedtwo errors, while the Fire Die-'pqrtment got only two hits to gowith the two runs and

.charged with one misplay. .On ^behalf of the Recreation

Committee, Fred Kelly presenteda trophy for the playoff victoryto Bill Carolan, Barton Fuel cap-tain: Dudzinski presented a tro-phy for first place to Andy Card-el la of the Fire Department nineand awarded, 'the second placetrophy to Kelly who representedVardalis Real Estate. Dudzinskiaccepted the third place trophyfrom Kelly.

Teachcrs LuncheonScheduled by PTA

KEN1LWORTH — A luncheonfor the teachers of the "Keriil-worth public schools will be heldWednesday ' at the ' Community1

Methodist Church by the Kenil-worth Parent-Teacher Associa-tion. Mrs. John CHegan. hospi-tality chairman. Is in charge ofarrangements,

Final plans for the luncheon aswell as the PTA-fair to be heldOctober 9 were completed Mon-day evening at a meeting of theexecutive committee at HardingSchool.

It was announced that eightmembers of the association willattend a School of Instruction atthe Townley Pcesbjterian_Church.Union,' on September IS. Attend-ing will be: Mrs. Grenzille Lyon,Mrs. Leo - Abramson, - Mrs.- ArthurVitale, Mrs. Henry Patrylow, Mrs.Lotus Wilken. Mrs. Clifford Wolf,Mrs. Frederick Rein and Mrs.William Bridges., Mrs. John Ruth, president, an-nounced the appointment of Mrs.Bridges as juvenile ' protectionchairman. .

Mrs..Ruth, presided.

ICenTlworth Parent-Teacher Asso-ciation have been,announced, by

nhn ff Hutr?. prffsidpRt..; - —Members of the committee in-

clude: Mrs. Leo Abramson, budgetand • finance; Rodman Harrison,prograrn; Mrs: Clifford Wolf, par,-ent education and mental health;Mrs. Henry Patrylow, publicity;Miss Minna Kaphan, membership;Mrs. ^Louis Wilken, exceptionalchild.

.Also, Mrs. John O'Regan, hos-; Mrs. G. Lyon, room mo-

thers; Mrs. Harold Reynolds;'school lunch; Mrs. William1. Smith,legislation; Miss Helen Mergott,publications; Mrs. Morse Shepard,international relations;' Mrs^, JohnRenner,. safety, Mrs. Z"adtf"i>hep-ard. summer round-up.. .

Also, Mrs. Arthur Vitale, homepublicity; Mrs. Avery Ward, homeand family life; Mrs. FrederickRein, library, shelf; Mrs. " EmilElias, Founder's Day; and Mrs.C. W. Thomas, Mrs. ConstantinoBurbarise and Mrs. Oliver J.Brown, Jr., members-at-large.

Officers of, the association arcalso1 members'* x>t the executivecommittee. • They_are: Miss SigneSwahberg, principal, who is first-vtCe-presidept; Edwin W. Kraus,superintendent, of schools,' who in

'second vice'-president; Mrs. How-ard Murphy,'recording'secretary;

Plttn Route 2 2 PavingKENlLw'ORTH —The borough

is notifying • all owners of prop-erty on Route 22 that the StateHighway "Department will begirtimproving the. highway .on^Sept.-ember if. All owners are beingUrged to make any necessary uti-lity repairs before < the pavingbegins.

A neon) on • JulM boa «4>

OH, BUBNESS

JOSEPH-GENERAL

103 Adams Ave.CONTRACTOR

CRmford 6-mPAINHNGMASONBT

He Bifid, "CongratalaiiotaBlby friendly

Reservo C&pt. Dante A. Costa of 438 Third avenue, Garwood,"training officer of the 9!2Olst Transportation Staging Area, is shownchatting... with-Brig. Geti. Ralph W. Zwicker during his recentlycompleted two weeks of summer field training at Camp Kilmer.The local reservist saitl he was impressed, with the progress madeat the post during the past year and reported that in lidditiort tohis^ownynifs'^rt-thc-job*^ training, he .enjoyed a visit to "CampDix, where he studied the basic training program, given;recruits

• there. "American parents may take consolation, in- the fac^ that"•their boys are getting the best possible training and are well pre-'pared for whatever may come1 during their service td their

• country," Capt. Costa remarked. '

PTA ^Committee Leaders

KENILWORTH — Members ofthe executive' committee of the

Mrs. Alfred Seale, correspondingsecretary; and Mrs.TWilliam Lang,treasurer. . .

Building InspectorIssues ,14 Permits—

KENILWORTH — Building In-spector Fred Tpipel reports 34BiiiTdrng^'lpermits were issued inJuly with an estimated value of$234,650, including 19 permits forhomes with an estimated valueof $171,000. •_ The remaining permits were" foreight garages, two factories, twostores, one dwelling,alterationr onecommercial alteration and onesign. • •

Of the 17 permits for dwell-ings, 10 were "issued to the G. &H. Construction Company for itsKensington Homes development.

Kenilworth to Pay$108,502 to Regional

KENILWORTH — This boroughwill be required to pay $108,502.60this year to send its pupils toJonathan Dayton Regional HighSchool, Sprfhgfield. This is anincrease of about $40,000 over theprevious year.-

Borough Council has orderedthat the money be paid to 'theUnion County Regional DistrictNd. 1 when the, funds, are...avail.-fable. Actually, money has al-eady been .appropriated- for theschool district.

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Name, AssignFour School

make use of the supervised cross-ing areas. • _ • . . . ' . - .

Jhe Public Works Departmentis now painting the crosswalks in1

designated areas throughoyt theborough. ; "• .S

fHL\ILWORTJI—Four new spe-cial . police officers 1o handle.strhool crossing assignments willbegin their duties with the open-}ing of the public schools next'Thursday. ;. '..';'

Appointed special police offi-cers by-Mayor-Robert-e.-Kruegerand confirmed by Borough Coun-cil were: Mrs. Amelia Virkaitis,Mrs. Rita Vitale. Mrs. Mary Mer-ola and William Clark. Mrs. Con-Vad Schroeder who has been sery-<ing as special officer-at HardingSchooj for the past several yearswill continue in that post.

The following school crossingareas have been set up. Council-man Alva Myers, chairman of thepublic safety Committee;"'announceed: Harding ; School and the'Boulevard. Twenty-third streetand the Boulevard. Newark andMichigan, avenues. Washington,avenue and Twenty-second street,Monroe avenue and Cross streetat" Eighteenth -street and. Boule-vard and Twenty-first street., Mrs. Vitale has been assignedto the Twenty-third street and theBoulevard crossing. Mr. Clark atNewark and Michigan avenues,Mrs. MeroJa at Washington ave-

Sundaj^School

Mrs. Virkaitis to the Eighteenthstreet crossing.

As in the past, a regular _mem-^ber'of the police department willbe assigned to the traffic light inthe- Boulevard at North Twenty-first street.

The new school crossing offi-cers were sworn in Monday byBorough Clerk Philip "MeGeyna.Unifornis -have been ordered forthe new special officers, Mir. My-ers , reported.

TJnd«;r the increased program,the school crossing officers will beon duty daily. Monday throughFriday, from 8:30 to 9 a.m.. 11:30a.m. to I p.m, and 2:55 to 3:30pjn. •

Mr.' Myers reported that let-ters have been sent to the Boardof Education and to St. Theresa'sSchool informing them of - theschool crossings and requestingthem to instruct their students to

MayAddSixNew Classes y

KENILWORTH — Because ofincreased "enrollment., it is ex-pected that six additional classes

_will be!c'-Added_to_._.the-l.S'undaySchool! of the .Community Metho-dist Church, the Rev. John.R. Dex-heimeri pastor, announced.

A ; rally" of the Sunday • Schoolstaff will be held next Thursdayevening at 8 o'clock to announceclass assignments' and to distribute'teaching aids. The Sunday Schoolwill 'open on September 12. Itis possible, the Rev. Mr. Dex-heimer said, that split sessionsn ay be needed.this year for theSunday School.

At the 11 a.m. service Sunday,the pastor will preach on the topic"Christian Approaches to Labor"in the final talk of his series onthe second assenrtbly of the WorldCouncil of Churches. Mrs. Wil-liam . Bridges will be organist.. The Blue Circle j>t the Wo-men's Society "for" Christian Serv-ice will meet today at the homeof Mrs. Clarence Anthony of 401Lincoln drive.

plcted by the executive -commit-tee of the Methodist Youth Fel-lowship tomorrow at ;.'_ .rr}oe(ing

"afif"T p.m. The group will Beginits activities ,on September .12.

Fall activities will also be dis-cussed by the executive commit-tee of the WSCS Tuesday at 8p.m., at the-church.

Velcrans Center AsksHeating System Bids

KENILWORTH — Bids for aheating system are being receivedby the Kenilworth Veterans' Cen-ter, it was announced this week byGeorge Bender, president of theorganization.

Closed bids should be submittedby September 13 to Mr. Bender,or to Joseph Smolar, commanderof Kenilworth Post 2230, Veteransof Foreign Wars, or Paul Zema,past commander.

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Page 12: BUSINESS DIRECTORY · Olaaa - Garden ~colm - House Furniihlna' Plumbing Supplies - Wallpaper Floor Bandinp! Machines l«4 Booth An, B. ' CBaafotd a-l«« Give Now To Aid Polio Lumber

THEJgANFORD CITIZEN AND CmONlCLK, TTTtTHSPAV,

Creative ArtGroup OpeningSeason Thursday

Miss „ Valerie • V.- Youtkus ofElizabeth and Herbert S. Wyllieof South' Plainfield. instructorsior the lan - term of art classessponsored hy. thn Cranfogd Croav

be Served and the publio isinvited Jo attend, y

Two<-hour daises, schedtriedrfor15 wjeeks, wilj'be held Thursdaysfrom' I to 3/p.m... beginning Sept-ember 16/Evening classes will beheld Thursday from 8..to 10.o'clock,and morning classes will beh«.-3d Mondays, 9:30" To' 11:30,Starting • September 20wishing to join may do so at. the

nulling oif

HERBERT S. WY1AIE

•tive Art .Group.' will be' intro-duced as the group opens its fallseason with a ' get-acquaintedmeeting at the ^Casino at 8 pjn.n e x t Thursday. • .Refreshments

-: „ - iy contactMichael Sikora, 5 1 North Unionivenue, treasurer, or Mrs. Dll-ilord Collins, 20 holly street,membership chairman. Enroll-ment in'each class is limited to20. . . .

Miss YouTkus, instructor for theevening class, was graduated

..frona_'Batiin-Hii!h-School. MiamiBu>jr.ess. Colleee. Miami, Fla., andthe X«-vvark School of Fine andIndustrial Arts, and has com-p!e:eu five years of' post-grad-U JC- study in portraiture underL o$K>!d llatzxil and John. R. Gro-bach pi the Newark School. D...ins several summers, she has attended the Backman School oArt in Noank. Conn., and Farns

i-worsh Art School of- North TrunMass. . "."

Along with the Art Council oNew Jersey. Miss Youtkus wgan.ized the Elizabeth Art Club anwas its first vice-president. ShiSauEhi at the club's children's artclasses and was committee chairman ,of two county art .cxhibilions,-the first Sprihg Exhibitioheld at an- Elizabeth departmer.store and the first Outdoor Ex

Instructor for Fall Art Classes

ToilortdbfDUNftfTE With

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Yout boy » l l b . thVilltdMw attached ••-ponl-thun belt d

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to I I

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SHOPPING LIST FOR

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2.98D• gUlLTEIEONED CAMPUS JArKETS

instructor at evening sessions of the fall term of art classessponsored by-the Cranford Creative Art Group, is shown withher unfinished painting, "Tranquil Pause." Herbert S. Wyllie ofSouth Plain(l<±ld will be instructor for morning and afternoonclasses. The term begins September 16.

D VARSITY SWEATERS, Granford colors.Sizes 6 to 18. from 3.98

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11 NORTH UNION AVENUECRANFORD

hibition on Broad street, Eliza-beth.

Miss Youtkus has exhibited inNew York, New Jersey and theSouth and hus-~xeceived severalawards. • She is a private artteacher and the corresponding sec-1retafy'orthe Art Council.of NewJersey. She has traveled through42 • states and four foreign coun-tries and will return September12 from, a vacation in Bermuda.

Mr. Wyllie, instructor for themorning and afternoon classes, isa graduate of Curtis High School,Staten Island; Newark School ofFine arid Industrial Arts andPratt Institute in New York. Hehas studied with Prank Reilly,Max. Herman, Khosrov ; Ajootan

)and Owen Smith. During/ WorldWar II he_did_art—work for theEighth D i v i s i o n ' s publication,"The Golden Arrow," while serv-ing in the infuntry. '. . - -•

Well known in this "area as ateacher and lecturer, Mr. Wyllieis an active and productive artistwho has won many awards... Add-ed to, his laurels^is the first placehe won this summer at the Straussgallery Show in New York. Form-"erly•of "BaHway^Tic^ recently mov-

pose of the group-will be to singtogether for the (enjoyment ofsinging. All local persons inter-ested have been invited to attendthe organization meeting.

ed'his studio to South Plalnfield.

Choral Group to MeetA men's and women's choral

group will be organized on Wed-nesday, Septernber 15. at8:15_p.m.at the home of Mrs. Edward Tris-tram, 610 Springfield avenue. Pur-

Newcomers-PlanOpening Luncheon

Plans for the first regular lunch-eon meeting of the Newcomers'Club on September 1 were com-pleted Tuesday evening by. theexecutive board at a meeting atthe home of Mrs. William K.Sharpe, Jr... of 15 Mohawk drive.

The regular meeting will beheld in Sherlock Hall of TrinityChurch at 1 p.m. The programwill consist of games ,iml miyeractivities. Mrs. Douglas R.Schneider presided.

^The evening bridge group ofthe Newcomers' Club will meet to-night at 8:15 at the home of Mrs.Daniel M. Buckley, 211 Balmicreload, north. Attending will be:Mrs. Nicholas Impterate, MrsHarry C. Syvertsen, Mrs. FrancisD. Dulicai, Mrs. Rudolph A. Latig-Jieinrieh—Mi-s-Richard-JrSRryKaTMrs. Edwin C. Younghouse andMrs. Remington Merry.

Not True nesTha "wings" of flying squirreli

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Register Now,

VOTE

In November

JtWORTH

VoLLXL No. 33. CRANFORD. NEW /JERSEY, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1954 Entrred as ttt roitd cln>s- inail ni.ttier atthc'jPoHt Office at Crun(.»rd. N. J. 22 Pages ^ 10 CENTS

Discussion

For SchoplsBy a 5-2 vole. the/Board

Edacayon Tuesday>«raiing votedto purchase and install plaques atthe Brookside Place and WalnutAvenue

: tbe plan submitted byMpK' Charles^ Redden, chairman

the publicity committee, were' John H- McClintock. farmer vice-{iru=:iJent and' president of theUnion County School Boards As-sociation, and Burton C Bel'den

It was explained by the chair-man of the -publicity committeethat questionnaires were sent tot-.u-h member of tbe board io

' determine their feelings on havingplaques and whether the namesof board members 'should appear

.jin_thcm.-A-inajp»ilyjof.boo' fsivorcd having plaques andhaving the names of present boardmembers appear on them.

In opposing the plaque*. Mr.-MeClitttock- said-he did. not seewhere plaques would help thechildren of the school system.Mr. Bolden said it. would be aI).11 Id step not to have plaques, butpointed out that the Westfieldschool docs not have them, nordo schools in Scotch Plains,Mountainside and Roselle.

Mr. Bdden said it was about

buitt in Cranford and that it wasno credit to the present boardthat the new buildings are nowbeing constructed. He pointed outthat the land for the buildings was

' bought many years ago and thatthe" plans, for them were madeseveral years ago. '"'.'

Mr..:.;Balden..also1 strongly op-posed placing the names of boardmembers on' the plaques, stress-ing that board members were notentitled to that .type of recogni-tion. He called the plan unjusti-

A motion to «»yrl"*»of board members was favoredonly by Mr. Belden and Mr. Mc-Clintock. and it was defeated bythe tive votes of the other.mem-

.'::- bers present. . • • :

A motion to appropriate a totalof $500 for the two plaques was

•approved by a 5-1 vote with Mr.McCHntock abstaining and Mr.Betden opposing.

The publicity committee wasauthorized to prepare a sketchof a proposed plaque for consider-ation by the board. •

Mr. Troutman called the plaquesintegral parts of'the'building. Itwas decided the cost 'should becharged oEainst the capital fundsof the new schools. Mr..Belden

t said he felt the money could be:. better spent in other ways and

pointed out • that landscaping andsidewalk work still remains to be

. - done with the'money available.

List 84 NewSubscriptions

Twenty-four more awards werepresented during the-past weekto local youngsters in The Citizen•t'ltl Chronicle's six weeks* sub 1

•'scription contest. The drive wUltontmue through October 1. A to -tal of 84 new subscriptions .and 211

-renewal subscriptions have beenturned in during the past threeWeeks.

A day and night football or a{ICM and pencil set are awarded asIifizes to youngsters who turn intwo new, one 'new and two re-newal or four renewal subscrip-tion-; to this p

Stephen Gatyas of 506 LincolnJiveri.ue.'xrast. became the first con-s t a n t to' receive a" third prize.James Zachary of 128 Makatom

••tlrtvc-was awarded two prizes dur-i>'H the Week.

Other prize 'winners included:Philip Hohnqvist. •• Algonquin

(Continued on page S)

Vole RegistrationHours Listed by Clerk

, • _Ther:nrst-Qf^sevelJ-special evei"rung hours for vote registration"

I/will be held tonight, TownshipClerk, J. Walter Coflec an-nounced. -

His office will be open from 7to 9 p.m. in addition to regularhours to sign-up voters. The of-fice will be open the same hours-on the following dates: Septem-ber 9, 14,; 16, 20, 21, 22 and 23.The deadline to register to votefor. the November 2 General.

I "Election is September 23i""

CurriculumChange ToldBy College-

To tie in the. engineering curric-ulum with colleges students mostoften transfer to, a slight revision•in-subject-matter -for- those -stu=dents has been arranged •• byUnion Junior College) Dr. Ken-neth. C. MacKay,'.president anddean, announced.

The change, Dr. MacKay said,results from a report made by afaculty committee on the engi-neering curriculums of 45 col-leges and-universities, The~num-ber of hours of rnathematics hasbeen reduced from five to three.This will lighten the load, for thestudents and correspond moreclosely to the curriculunis_oOhe_45 colleges studied. Dr. MacKay

I'said. ;" .' ." :.• An effort wil l , be made. Dr.-MacKay said, to encourage stu-dents to take public speaking inaddition, to English compositionin their freshman year. All fresh-men will be required to take anEnglish placement test and a spe-cial class in English "drills andgrammar will be formed for thosestudents needing such work., •

Another, change announced' bythe college president is the sched-uling of all mathematics coursesat the same time so that studentscan .be placed in classes accord-Ing .to how they. rate, in la mathe-matics placement examination.

In the' language field, Dr. Mac-Kay said that German, Frenchand Spanish will be offered forday students • and German andSpanish for evening pupils. .

About 100 courses, the samenumber'as last year, will be avail-able at the day and evening ses-sions of the college during the fall,semester which begins -on Sep-tember 23. Registration is- sched-uled for September 20, 21 and 22and. freshman orientation will beheld on September 17.

College ClubCollecting Books

Collections are continuing, withemphasis on children's books, forthe four-day book sale tq^be heldby. the .Cranford College"ciiib atthe Municipal Building startingOctober 20, it was announced to-day by Mrs. Ira Kerzman, generalchairman for the event.

.Proceeds of the sale will go intothe club's fund for scholarshipsfor Total girls. Last year's booksale netted $600 for this purpose.

.Persons.haying books they wishto contribute should get in touchwith Mrs. John B. Warrington'of15 Kensington avenue-or any Col-lege Club member. Members havebeen, making collections through-out the summer. ' '-

Mrs. Kerzman reported thatMrs. Roland R. Graham, Jr.,; hasbeen named pricing chairman forthis year's project.

Boosters to Planrund Drive TuesdayAt a" meeting-in ..the Municipal

Court Tuesday evening at 8o'clock, -the Cranford BoostersClub will make plans tor its an-nual fund raising drive. •

Calvin Shire, drive chairman,reports the annual campaign willbe held on September 18.

School BellsRing TodayFor Students

School bells will ring again to-day for more than.3,500 publicschool students of Cranford andon Monday for feore thaVi 650 pu-pils of St. Michael's School.

Such problems as the inaugura-tion of new school districts andthe introduction- of --fawny-- h£wteachers face pupils-^—beginningclasses today in the public schools.

Pupils of Roosevelt, Cleveland,Sherman and Lincoln Schools \yillreport to classes as usual, butthose students assigned. last springto Brookside Place School' ajhdWalnut Avenue School will f re -port to Cleveland School (andSherman S c h o o l , respectively.Neither of the new schools isready for occupancy.

Summer work on the four olderelementary sc_h<iote_and_ CranfoWlHign Scjiool has been completed.Dr. Howard It. Best, superintend-ent of schools, reports. LJbrariihave been reestablished in Roosivelt, C1 e v .e J a n d and Linco liSchools, while sidewalks have be. ;irepaired at all entrances of Rooslevelt School. The 'gymnasiumfloor at the high school and Lin-coln School have been renovatedand the exterior of RooseveltSchool painted.

Fencing at Roosevelt School hasbeen completed ' and a basketballcourLland__play_-area_at—LincolnSchool and a basketball court atthe. high school have, been estab-lished by laying black top., Paint-ing, plastering, sealing of floorsand repairing' of windows hasbeen accomplished at all thebuildings. •__ _ _ "_

"St. Michael's School will openMonday following the 8 a.m. massin St. Michael's Church. A class-room has been added to give theschool 16 rooms, two for each ofthe eight grades. During the sum-mer, all classrooms and corri-dors were cleaned and painted.This will murk the twenty-fifthyear of classes in : the presentbuilding" arAIden and JWHn itteetS»

TimetableDiscussions

Provisions made for improvedcommuter service for Cranford inthe Jersey Central Railroad's pro-posed fall timetable, scheduled togo into effect with the. end.of Day-,light Saving Time on September26, were evaluated at a meetinglast night of Mayor Fred P. An-dersen . and his • citizen's—commit-tee on commuter service..

The , proposed schedule will bediscussed further at & meeting inNew York this-afternoon betweenthe mayor and the committee andEarlc T. Moore, president of therailroad, and "Harry E. Yerkes,general pasenger agent. . >-.. .'-•-

Mayor Anderson reported thatthe railroad has been most coop-erative and has shown itself mostanxious to maintain good relationswith Cranford, - and that definiteprogress has been; made in . thecampaign for Improved servicehere. He added, however, that the'fight wil be continued until Cran-ford commuters .have gained allthe-points they* deem -necessary toinsure adequate commuter serv-ice for the community. '

Under the railroad's proposedfall timetable, the schedule of thecastbound train leaving Cranfordat 7:53 a.m. has been stepped up afew minutes so that it will arrivein.New York at the same time itdid before the protested timetable

ftf Ingt April.' thilH ifn-proving the chances of commutersgetting to work on time. - •

The proposed new schedule also-adds an 8:20 a.m. train for Cran-ford to arrive in New York at 8:50,improves the running time of the5:30 p.m. from New York to Cran-ford' and adds another Cranford.

(Continued on page 8)

Group to Screen Handicapped NamedAppointment of ^ t f n y n i " l l ' firiHinflg •*" itin—^UnnAin^p—f^mn '| t\.,n j n nfr..rffmTf~g,,fr111T1 o | (tj Mff1Appointr

l'i>i>muttce to determine, which

entrance-to special classes for re-tarded and handicapped studentsl>;ii been announced by Dr. How-clr'l ft. Best, superintendent ofiihoots. . ' .

Anthony -Tcrreginoi.Principal, was named chairman cf'he committee.

Under recently enacted legisla-tion, local Boards of Education areri'<juir«l to provide education orinning for retarded and handi-t';ij>l>etl children. Dr. Best said the

committee will arrangephysical

ht» .vchologjcaHests for children in" and present their

finding? 1". <hn nU^ndnmy rnn"i—mittee of the Board of Education.

Othe.r. rocmbcrs~-of--thc com«_mittee arc: Dr. Neil Castaldo,medical inspector, Mrs. CatherinePopp, school nurse and attendunccofficer. Miss Elizabeth Durrell,school nurse. Dr. William Trever-ton, psychologist at, the highschools. Miss Beatrice Warner, as-sistant principal, Thomas Tipu'.dl,fifth grade teacher, Mrs. Ruth Jun-

of elementaryMartz, super-

supervisoreducation, Frankvisor of. secondary education, undThomas Stone, elementary guid-ance director.

Parents of retarded or handi-capped children should apply foradmittance for their offspring attbe office of the Board of Educu-

Terrcgino and supply informationon -thc-jhild't^condition. The le«-islatjon' requires, Dr. Best suid,that bedside or home instructionbe provided until other facilitiescan be set up. ; /

A'cooperative plan of providingchisios for these ttudents willprobably'be discussed at a meet-ing of Union County school super-intendents later this month, Dr.Best said. In some cases, childrenwill be sent to special classes setup by larger cities for specifictypes of education or training, heexplained. ' ,

At the present time, some ofthese children are attending pri-vate schools or are given no train-ing at all, Dr. Best pointed out.

OPEN TI1UBSDAY M G U I 8 TIL 0 . .:. THIS SATURDAY TO M »

Taxpayers Approve Proposal to OrganizeCwk Group toSelectTji^MeeV

The board of "directors of theCranford Taxpayers Associationlast week unanimously approvedthe proposal to' organize a JointCivic Committee for EncouragingCandidates for the Board of Edu-cation and empowered PresidentRoderick W. Smith to appointrepresentatives to the new.-.group.

John H. McCHntock, a memberof the Cranford Board of Educa-tion and president of the UnionCounty School Boards Association,presented the proposal for theJoint Civic Committee, the neces-sity for a more representativegroup of citizens 'taking an inter-est in encouraging qualified can-didates to run for the Board otEducation and the 'nced'^o -pre-vent the domination or control ofthe board by any one group orfaction. ' . _ _~ Mr. McCfintocic pointed out

that no member of the\ sponsoringcommittee, is a candidate for elec-tion or reelection to line' boardand thd),' the formation of theJoint Civic Committee \ts not; in-tended to,criticism of ariy presentor former members of ihe schoolboard. In fact, he declared, -Cran-ford has been fortunate in havinghigh type residentsjarJ its Boardof Education. He aiso.Emphasizedthat the formation, of. the JointCivic Committee woiild not pre-clude any interested residentsfrom presenting themselves"." ascandidates, either to the commit-tee or to the voters directly.

Thus far, the Taxpayers'' Asso-ciation and the VFW Auxiliaryhave approved the proposal toform a Joint Civic.;-Cornlmitte*.\while the Kiwanis Club, )becausoof their international lpy-'laws,h^ve^advised.jthat. they. Wi,l|_not be

eral other civic, groups arc ex-pected to' take action within thenext few Weeks., ' t

R'. S. Hunicke; a member of theMayor's Special Railroad . Coin-m'ittpe, told of various confer-ences during the p a s t severalweeks in an effort to secure im-proved service for local commu-ters '—• . • . . '. - ---•

President Smith appointed L.R. Bcardslee chairman' of the as-sociation's nominating committeeto .submit a new slate of officers,and George S.. Sauer was named torevise the group's by-laws. C. C.Rothenberger was appointed toconfer with the finance commit-tec of the Township Committeeon the setting up of the municipalbudget for'••thc\coming- year-andJohn V. Nostrand Was named toconfer with the Board of Educa-tion, prior to. the presenting oL the

able to participate as a club. Sev- • new school budget.

Courtesy Emphasis NeedDr. Best Tells Teachers

- . There' is a . need for greater, emphasis: o"h courtesy _ir* theschools. Dr. Howard R. Best, superintendent of schools, told faculty"rnembers attending the annual two-day teachers' workshop of theCranford; public schools Tuesday morning at Cranford High School.

• Dr. Best said the teachers should try to develop courtesy aspart of ' the educational prfc"gram and also by setting a goodexample. He said they should setUp 'feThigh standard of courtesy intheir relations with their studentsand with j other teachers.

There has been a tendency tolet down on the matter of cour-tesy, thep school "superintendent'said. He poriited . out -that • thedevelopment of courtesy and selfrespect is one method to helpcombat-the problem of juveniledelinquency. A person who re-spects the rights of others willnever be a juvenile delinquent,he said.. .

Dr. Best also.discussed in detailTicw ;state,._legislSti.on which prqrvides that local Boards of Educa-tion provide education or- trainingfor retardedchildren.

and handicapped

Dr. Milton M. Krbgman, well-known physical anthropologistfrom the Graduate School of Medi-cine,, University of Pennsylvania,Philadelphia, was jhe keynotespeaker. Head of the PhiladelphiaCenter for Research in ChildGrowth since 1947, Dr. Krogmanis a foremost authority in theUnited States today on c h i l dgrowth, its many deviations, andits *' many implications in the

Teaming process.Dr. Krogman spoke about the

various stages of child growthfrom JnfancyJo^adolcscence-andthe influence of 'heredity in de-termining a child's type of stature.He said there ure early maturers,

^Continued on page 8)

Dreyer DevelopmentHearing Set by Board ..

The Planning Board will hold apublic hearing at 8:30 p.m. Thurs-day, September 23, in. the Munici-pal Building to consider the ap-plication of Union "Realty Corpora-tion of Jersey City for permission,'to""'use "a" seven-acre'tract on'Brookside place for a residentialdevelopment.

According to the proposed mapfiled with the Planning Board, thedevelopers plan to build 31 one-family ^Koines in the4Jract, which isa part of the Dreyer farm.

GOP AcceptsSteengrafe's

nation'Weyman O. Steerigrafe sub-

mitted his. resignation last nightas president of the Cranford Re-publican. Club' a't a meeting in, theMunicipal. Building.

Edward C. McMahon, first vice-president, was named to carry outthe'duties of the office;-••-

In resigning. Mr. Steengrafepointed out that' he~rccefttly~mdV-ed to Westfield. He said he be-lieves the ' president of the clubshould be a resident of Cranford.

Mr. McMahon, chairman, dis-cussed plans for the picnic to beheld September 25- at Brown'sGrove by all Republican groupsin the community.

Mr. Steengrafe is principal ofFranklin School, Westfield, anddirector of the Westfield AdultSchool. .He. has twice been, anunsuccessful candidate for iheRepublican' nomination as an as-semblyman frpm Union County.Hc_was_setvJng_his;_second_-termas. president of the local Republi-can club. •

Prior to the regular meeting,the-Board-of-Direc tors- met- to-<lis-cuss plans for monthly meetingsthroughout the year. '

Mrv Steengrafe presided at theopening of the meeting and thenturned the chqir over toMcMahon.

Mr.

Roller Skating PartiesContinue Tomorrow

Supervised roller skating partiessponsored by the- Township Rec-reation Committee will continueeach Friday evening from 7 to 10

Three GivenAssignmentsAs'Angels?

Allan Whitney, Kanken Millardand Robert Fast have been select-ed- to play the three male leads' ofJoseph,-Jules-and Alfred-in— My-Three Angels," to be presented byth s Cranford Dramatic Club at thehigh school on October 22 and 23as |a joint benefit with_the_C,ran-forji Rotary Club. "All three areknown j/or . -previous, outstanding.performances In Dramatic Clubproductions.

Completion of the cast was an-nounced by Mrs. John Hoffmann,chairman of the casting commit-,tee, at the September meeting ofthe club directors on Tuesday.

In the supporting cast are Mil-ton Reinhart, John Whittlescy, RayWinklciv Mrs.JCcanlLjWashbourne,Mrs: Edward T.. George and Mrs.

Herman.The production will be under

the joint direction of Mr. Whitneyand Miss Elsie Midgley. •

Rehearsals for "My" Three An-gels," a recent Broadway success,will begin next Monday at' Mrs.Washbourne's home. Other activ-ities in connection with produc-tion already have begun, and a"smash hit" is anticipated by theDramatic1 Club.

Other/business at the board,meeting included a review of pro-gress reports of committee chair-men in connection-with the forth-coming production and generaldiscussion , of the type of dramato be selected for" the club assem-bly in December. .

ducted the session,' and others atftending included: Mrs. Hoffmann,Miss Midgley, Mrs. Estcllo Stan-ley, Mrs. George Trurnporc, PaulDunham, James Burnush, WilliamOld, James Rich, D. C. Morgan-thau, and Mr. and Mrs'. John Starr.

Aid Squad to ActOn Building Plans

Final- approval of preliminaryplans for the Crnnford First Aid

p.m. at the South Union . avenue) S q u u d "s proposed headquartersparking lot; Mrs. "Charles Schil-Hnger, secretary. announced.

The program had previouslybeen held on Monday and Thurs-day evenings, but during the fallwill be on Friday evenings only.James Avcry and Thomas Tip-aldi will continue as supervisors

VTA to Open 58th SeasonAtLuncheon September 21—Village—Improvement—Associa-tion wil | open its 58th seasonSeptember 21 at a planning lunch-eon at 1:30 p.m. in Sherlock Hallwith the executive board as host-ess, Mrs. Sidney Nunn, programchairman, announced.

Special .events planned for theyear include a silver tea and

"Fcbruary~7l5~scssion. - ;An auction and tea is slated

for March 15 and a productionby' the Drama . Department onApril r».

The civics department willsponsor a speaker on "October 19and t the Garden Department'spresentation for ' the Christmas

Chinese auction October 5 at thcI program on December 21 will befufinc of Mrs. i;corgc~C7=Dreycr,{a speaker on'"Planls."of tlie"Bible,"horivMountainside; fashion show on

27, ntTCriin'forrl HighSchool in cooperation with theEvening Department and theJunior VIA, and a luncheon andcard party at Kobs Brothers, Rah-way, on January 25. .

An international r e l a t i o n 6luncheon has been slated for Nov-ember f6. At t h e same meeting,a speaker from the Federal Bu-reau of Investigation will bepresented.

"The Art of Being a Mother-in-Law" will be the topic of atalk by Mrs. Herman de fetter1

on January 18,. while the Ameri-can Home Department will spon-sor a talk by Grace Howcll on"Bohemian Glass Blowing" at the

and Christmas! arrangements.-May— i7- 4jak—boon— solee-tod—for-j

the annual meeting and electionof officers, while the annualluncheon and installation of offi-cers is scheduled for June 6.

"Sirs. William J. Gubas is presi-dent of the association. Otherofficers include: Mrs. Nunn, firstvice-president; Mrs. J. C. Klein,second vice-president; Mrs.. Rob-ert J. Allen, recording secretary;Mrs. George E. Kamps, corrcs-pondlng^sccrctary;- Mrs. Walter E.Chapman, assistant secretary; Mrs.James A. Watters, treasurer; Mrs.William Klein, assistant treas-urer; and Mrs. Hashim, auditqr.

D e p a r t m e n t and committee('Continued oil page 8)

building is scheduled to be votedon at the -regular meeting of thesquad in the Municipal Buildingnext Monday night. Victor D.Sruihccn, president, will conductthe session ' . '~ The preliminary plans havobeoh prepared for the squad fr.eeof charge by Architect* JosephAllan, Jr., of Elizabeth, Mr. Sha-

Board EaUaJta ActOn Dungaree Ban

No, action was taken by the .Board of Education Tuesday eve-ning .on' a proposal that the wearing of jeans be banned in theCranford, public .school system. ' -A

-. Following its regular meeting, the board went into executivesession and a lengthy, discusssion was held on the problem. The board

issued' a statement pledging its'support to the staff "in the main-tenance of discipline within theschool system."

The text of the board's state-ment:

"The Board continues to supportthe staff in the establishment ofmeair*N for the maintenance ofdiscipline within the school sys-tyin, which will include also mat-ters of dress and decorum whichmitfht iff any way affect the schooldiscipline and the overall educa-

-if :

bcen reported..Contributions to the building

fund this week had rcachpd a to-tal of $9,270.

A talk will be presented atthe~tnectin'g by~an Instructor fromthe State Police Academy atTrenton.

GOP PicnicSet to OpenCampaign

Preparations are being m.-ule fora_picnic_iat Brow.nX-Gjove.-oliBJcorjninRdale avenue, on SaturrjjSay. September 25, to open thefall campaign, it was announcedtoday by George E. Berry,-chairman-- -of-*—-the —Republicancampaign committee. The picnicwill be sponsored jointly by theRepublican Municipal Committeeand all Republican clubs and or-ganizations in Cranford.

Free admission tickets.will bodistributed by eommitteetnen andeomrriitteewomen to party and in-dependent, voters and -their fami;

lies, v• Starting at 2 p.m..,- a variety of

attractions and activities appealingto both adults and youngsterswjll be provided, Mr. Berry re-portcdr Those" attending iilso"willhave the opportunity of meetinginformally and chatting with istateand local officials who are tlo beinvited. *~ . ^- ~r'

. Mr. Berry stressed, however,that the occasion is designed as'an afternoon of- pleasure and so-cial activities, and that there willbe no speeches- and no promotionalefforts in the interests of individ-ual candidates. '

Edward C. McMahon is chair-man ot the picnic committee.

Lions Club StartsDrive for FundsTo Assist Blind

The ,li)54 campaign for funds forthe blind and near-blind in Cran-iford" and Union County was begunbythe Lions Clulron Tuesday withthe mailing of Blind Seals to everyhome in ,town.- Edward C. Rear-ick, chairman of the club's sightconservation and blind commitstec, announced that the goal, thisyear-has-'.been set at $1,800, an in-crease of $300 over last year's fig-ure.

Raising of the'.goal was neces-sitated,-Mr. Rcarick cxplaincd,-by.the occurrence of an emergencycase here during the pas't yearwhiph exhausted the. club's emc-r-gcncy"fund" and •also~used~up~thcreserve set aside for the launchingof this year's -campaign. This caserequired an eye operation and re-habilitation expenses costing wellover $1,000.

Proceeds of last year's BlindSeal drive enabled the local Lionsto distribute $1,000 in direct helpto the blind-and near-blind and-incontributions to such organiza-tions as.the Sunshine Committee,Union County Association for the^Blind, Seeing Eye, the AmericanBible Society for Braille transcrip-tions and others. '". '..'..

Mr. Rearick" ' expressed ' confi-dence that local residents, heeding'the drive slogan "Be ThankfulYou Can See," will insure contin-uance of the club's work amongthe blind by purchasing and usingthe. Blind Seals sent out in themail.

'.-• ) i

tional program."—It—was learned- that -during the

discussion a board member citedan editorial in last wreck's i-rfitionof the Citizen and Chroniclewhich stated: ''School authorities

. would do well to give seriousconsideration to a ban on dunga-rees in order to promote a morewholesome atmosphere at thehigh-school.-"-- -•

Dr. Howard R. Best", superin-tendent of schools, said yesterdaythe principals of the school'system,have been studying the problemof sloppy dress for sometimejJMUdwill continue to study tr^c^prob-leni. The principals will follow upu)ith ' whatever procedures arenecessary. Dr. Best said.

Some members of the board, itwas learned, were against a banon the wearing of dungarees be-caii.w-''it"'""wouTd''Th'te'rfe're'"'wlth"-"iii''::student's individual freedom.while others cited the hardship to •some parents who find dungareesan inexpensive attire for stu-dents. It is reported that the boardmembers felt a less drastic stepthan a ban would be sufficient atthis time and that a ban could beImposed &T~a later daic~iif it wereIouad.to.ht. necessary „........

Meanwhile, the Student Councilat the high school has under con-sideration a survey made last yearby the school's Hi-Y Club of whatother schools in Union County arcdoing about the attire of students.

The wearing of dungarees wasbanned l a s t sprihg at HillsideHigh, Sl/Thnni ^n^ n *:irnilnr han

;••! : v -

m

••»?$••••%

AM

goes into operation today whenJonathan Dayton Regional HighSchool in i Springfield opens. Forthe past two years, the girls of theregional high school were pro-hibited from wearing jeans. Theproblem is also under considera-tion in other communities in thecounty, while Linden has bannedthem for many years.

Plan to AttendPBA Convention

Patrolman Louis L. Guertin,state delegate, wjll be the officialrepresentative of Cranford, Local52, Patrolmen's Benevolent Assoc-iation, at the annual convention i fthe State PBA in Atlantic City ohSunday, Monday and Tuesday. Pa-trolmen' Italph J. Koury and V.Leltoy Brinkerhoff are alternator

Plans for attendance, at the con-Venli<>n were made at a meeting of:Local 52 at police headquarterslast "night. ••:• •-.

Patrolmen Brinkerhoff and TjeoA. Schiiltx will bu.niembcrs of theUnion County PBA AlJ-Star teamwhich will play the Essex CountyAll-Stars at the convention onSunday. •

Other meml>ers of the local d e -partment planning to attend the

rtTTTTTeT Uluinl^y n!|!:utA tot(i) <>f $1,:!•>«.;« had been , . . .received up to yesterday in the include: Chief William A. Fischer,emergency March of Dimes, drive Capt. Lester W. Powell. Sgt. Harryin Cranford, it was. reported by P. Page, and Patrolmen LawrenceWilliam D'Arcy, local chairman. T. Bonnell, president of Local 52:"Checks'»nny~beT;ent t«rMlss' Marian rYunk'A. Caruso^trcasurer"bf"A. Schmitz, local treasurer, Box, local; Frederick G. Roberts, A l -

'89, Cranford. ,.(Continued on page 8)

Adult School Lists Women's GlassesThree new courses designed

women will be available at thefall semester of th CrunfordAdult School, which' opens Oct-ober 5 ut Cranford High School.

Two of the classes will betaught by Crunford High Schoolinstructors: Stenography refresherby Thomiis F. Scutro, Jr., and re-ducing und modern gymnastics forwomen by Miss Florence B. Alp.A course in upholstering will betaught by Henry Eckloff of Kcn-llworth, who operates the EckbcUpholstery of Crunford.

Reducing and modern gym-tnasties for women is "a gymna-sium course providing training in

posture and instruction in the] is a KKUluate of Rider Collegp.f>lri(linin»;ntjjls of _>'"jn.'j"n withJTreiitim^ He ajsii !»>>;<sj> niaster'g"emphasis" on diels that -will tend VleKfcc from Montclair State-to keep body weight within liniitsj Teachers Colli'tie:

lth-jind-cx-L—Meniberi—at—the— uphoUu-ring-—tend life-span," Mrs. Charles Red-] clrfss should be able to re-uphol-den, director, announced.

Miss Alp has been a physicaleducation teacher ut—tho highschool for the past three yearsand is a graduate of Panzer Col-lege, East Orange.

Mrs. Redden said stenographyrefresher is for those- who havehad Gregg shorthand und havegrown "rusty."

"Office1 workers will, find thecourse extremely helpful for in-creasing their speed and improv-ing their outlines," Mrs. Reddensaid.

recreative physical activities that| Mr. Scutro has been at Cr;m-i i d i h S h l i 1 i

p ywill improve body condition and ford High School . -1949. ami

I ster a small'vhair during, thu tentwo-hour sessions, Mrs. Reddensuid.

"All the steps necesary to res-tdring the chair will be explainedanil demonstrated," she said.

In addition to i-onducting hisown business, Mr. Eckloif has'given courses for employes of <Bell Telephone Company and Wes-tern Electric.

Other courses designed l'rimar-ily to the interests oi womeny tat the fall semester o7 the school.Mrs. Redden said, includefor personal use, scwir.antiques.