Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take...

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Hoaaou™ c o .. h istorical assm - FBEEaotD, N.J. »SSH., THIS WEEK 12 Pages , One Section COVERING TOWNSHIPS OP .HOLMDEL, MADISON MARLBORO, MATAWAN AND MATAWAN BOROUGH ' 92nd YEAR — 48th W E E K Member ' -National EdUorisl AssodsUoo MATAW AN, N. J., THURSDAY. JUNE 1 , 1961 Mtmb«r New Jersey IVcii Association Single Copy Ten Cents Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day -W7SK' A parade and tncmorlal services at the Doughboy I Matawan members of the armed forces who gave Monument at Memorial Park, Matawan, marked Me- (heir lives tor their country in World War I I and the mortal Day services in the borough Tuesday. Above, I Korean Conflict. "* ' Councilman John J. Wftlsh-Jr. reads the sames of I .................................................. ........... Currie, D ay W ill Press F or Regional; R ap B oard Silence Edward W. Currie, former pres* Schools has endorsed and is cx- ident of the Matawan Township • Board of Education, and attorney for the Committee for Better Bor- ough Schools when that group was pressing for a separation of thc borough and township into separate school districts, was critical yester- day of thc present board of educa- tion for not haying carried on a Dropram of presenting thc case for regionalization since the time the special'election of today wadset " u p c - .- . ... . . , Mrr'Currlo also found it regret- able the'.board had not adopted a resolution of strong endorsement - of the regional plan at one of its last meeting* before this election. The former school board president believed that the board’s lack of positive action had cast a shadow of doubt on the issue in the minds of voters with whom he had talked. Mr. Currie said he wanted to put his personal endorsement on lhe regional program in addition to that being given it by the Committee for Better Borough Schools. He found it meeting every aim thc group which had agitated for sep- aration had been seeking in 1939 and 1960 in the way of a more equitable apportionment of school costs. This refers to the apportion- ment of school operating costs be- tween the municipalities on a per capita basis of school attendance rather than an assessment basis. Committee for Better Borough House Explosion In Madison Township A two-story house at 53 Barker’s Lane in the Morristown section of Madison Township exploded Tues- ,.day night when the tenant, John Haddou, tried to light a gas water heater, - o ........................ Mr. Hadclou, who was home alone at the time of the explosion, was taken to the Laurence Harbor First Aid Squad by the owner of the property, T. R. Barker, who was working on his farm adjacent to the Haddou house at the time of the explosion. Mr. Barker told po- lice he heard the explosion and saw Mr. iladdau crawl out of thc cellar. - Mr. Haddou was treated by the Laurence Harbor First Aid for first degree.burns‘of the face and body and rushed to Perth Amboy Gen-: eral Hospital, where he is reported in fair condition. The sides of the house were buckled by the forcc of the concussion and the- interior was demolished, according to po^ lice. The Laurence Harbor Fire Department propped up the sides with beams to prevent them from Collapsing. Mr, Haddou had returned to his home shortly, before the accident at 5:35 p.m. Fire Marshal Robert Alien said the explosion probably was touched off when Mr. Haddou attempted to light the gas hot water heater. The heater was served by bottled gas. Marks Anniversary Mrs. Genevieve Donnell, 132 Main St., Matawan, owner of The Friend- ly Shop, marks her 22nd anniver- sary in business today. In celebra- tion of the occasion, all merchan- dise will be offered at 22 per cent discount at the shop on Friday and Saturday, ~No3ce“ To Business Men In connection with the P.P.T. 1 Form, the Governor has signed intq^ t-it^ V July *nd August- For . / ____ n >n *1 nr rail CfVlmit iiD tft erting every effort to get the re- gional school district proposal, to be voted on today, passed, Donald T. Day, chairman of Better Borough School group, stated last night. Should regionaliiation be defeated in the vote today, Mr. Day em- phasized his group would continue to press for its resubmission. “ We can’t see it being defeated/’ he stated, "but if it is, we'll demand a second vote,” Asked ajbaut-.the attitude al the Better Borough School ' grbub to- ward the proposal for'fli board, of school estimate, which would be acted on by the voters Monday if regionalization is not passed today, Mr. Day said the Committee for Better Borough Schools would have to be-shown that-the benefits it looks for under regionalization Nineteen Named For Scholarships Area Students Earn State School Grant The New Jersey State Scholar- ship Commission Monday announc- ed thc initial awarding of 19 schol- arships to bayshore area students who will be entering college in Sep- tember. Each . scholarship is for $400 or the amount of tuition, whichever amount is leas. Students will receive the award for a four- year period provided they remain In full-time college attendance and maintain a satisfactory academic record. Awards are based upon demon- strated financial need and scholas- tic ability as determined by a qualifying examination, in addi- (continued on page four)---- Madison Man Held In Bookmalcing Raid A 44-ycar-old Madison Township man was seized Thursday in one of two raids carried out by New Jersey State Police on two big and separate numbers operations in Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd Wheran, Mercury Circle. The raids were disclosed by State Policc who also capturcd two other men with Whcr- an and a fourth in thc second ar- rest.' . . , ' ' Wheran was found when six troopers broke into an apartment of a relative at GO! First St. Taken into custody with Wheran were Charles Smith, 41, of 1 Magnolia Ave,, Jersey City, and Walter Ven- tola, 47, of 222 Garden St., Hoboken. State Police said the trio'was con- ducting a combined numbers-book- making operation estimated to be worth about $4000 a day. The raids were led by' Deputy State Attorney General John J. Bergin and Major Hugo Stpckbur- ger of the Slate Police- The three men were accused on bookmaking and lottery charges. They were ar- raigned before Hudson County Judge Furman W. Reeves, who set baH of $10,000 for each. All three ratted the bail and were released, pending future court action. Notfce_ Our yard "and office will be closed Saturdays during the months ’ * oil law. Senate Bill 175, Chapter 17, L. 1961, which delays the effective dale of Chapter .51, L , J9W tQT DfW year Forms received are not due unlil May 19C2. For any further in- j formaUOdVciHl HO 2-MW. •• * , George A- WeirtW, or service call COi/u <4-0200. Louis Stultz J r ., Inc - L, . ............ N«U£c .............. New York Turnpike Exprei* buses; frequeatdafly service from RoUoV Commuters boy W tr.p could be attained under tho board Of school estimate setup. He deplored the public had not been better In- formed on this second proposal, and was of the opinion the group he heads would not be diverted by il from their intent to carry reg- ionalization to a reality. _ On the June 5 proposal, he stated he would oppose if if it meant do* ing away with a popular referen- dum on school budgets to limit pub- lic participation in them to a pub- lic hearing conducted by tho board of school estimate. . . George Spoor Heads ; Demo Exec Committee Announcement has been made by George Hausmann, president of the Matawan Township Democrat- ic Club of Districts 2 and 3, that George Spoor has been appointed chairman of the Democratic Execu- tive Committee of Matawan Town- ship. ■,i -. At a meeting held In thc Veterans of Foreign Wars Home, Cliffwood, lhe revised by-laws were read for the second time. • ■ . Members discussed the Levit- town situation and arranged for coming social events. A picnic will be held in August and a spaghetti supper in Septem- ber. Dates and times will be an- nounced. John Kelly was named chairman of thfe picnic and serving with him will be Mrs. Hans Krim- mcl, co-chairman; Norman Wood, Mr. Spoor and Joseph Emm. Refreshments were served. The next meeting will be held June 28 in the VFW Home, Cliffwood. V ote S la ted T o d a y O n R egionalization Plan Presented .God And Conn try Award .. Voters in both Matawan Town- ship and Matawan Borough will go to the polls today to determine whether the consolidated Matawan Township School District should be reconstituted as a regional school district. ' _ Polls will be open Irom 2 p.m. until 9.p.m. at three volinu places' established by the Board of Educa- tion. Because of the special.nature of the election, Voters of the town- ship and borough will cast their ballots separately and in order for regionalization to pass,'the proposal must be carried by a ihajority of each group. _ The cafeteria of Matawan High School will.be used as the votjng place for Matawan Borough resi- dents. Voters of Matawan; Town- ship election district 1' will use tho girl’s locker room as a'polling place, and all other' township: .voters will use facilities at the Cliffwood Mem- orial School. : ‘ ' . Operation Would Start July 1 . Should the proposal be approved in both the township and the bor Tii es Punctured, 40 In One Night Matawan Twp. Police Praised For Probe Chief J . Edgar Wilkinson. Mata wan Township Police, said yester- d a y his department expects to make arrests shortly in a case in which the puncturing ot 40 auto tires in one night in Cliffwood Beach is involved. The chief said the puncturing of the tires is a lone incident, nothing like it has oc- curred before or since. " Chief Wilkinson disclosed that he had not planned to make an an- nouncement until the miscreants actually were in custody, but be- lieved that thc receipt of a letter praising the department for its action in such a situation merited the revelation. Thc lengthy investi- gation has tied In tho suspects so well, the chief declared, that the disclosure is made, Thc letter is as follows: “ As new members of this community, wc wish to thank and commend the polled.* About- ago. we. had trouble with two punctured tires. The officer who answered the phone asw ell as the one who came to in- vestigate were not only cordial hut made us fed as une of tho family. This may sound strange -but- where we came from,-if you called thc police for a gang accumulating or punctured tires, you were almost treated as a crank. It got so bad, you didn’t want to call the police, which 19 a pretty sad state of af- fairs. That is one ot the reasons we left. ’ “ I can't Impress you enough with the good and safe and sound feel- ing your department gave us. Vou are all so nice and understanding, not rude or superior. lt‘a wonder- ful to live in a community where vandalism and gangs arc nipped in the bud." ' Chief Wilkinson noted that thc puncturing of thejlrcs occurred un- der the covor of darkness by an apparently roving group in a car, keeping a walchout for the move- ment of thc patrol car and for sign of persons being anywhere on the streets before they stopped for another “ Job" on tne tires. Honor War Dead In Township oughV the regional district would begin operations July 1. Monies ap- propriated for school support for the 19GI-G2 school year would bo reapportioned' for U k purposes un a per- pupil capita basis between the borough and tho township.— If voters decide to reject the re- gional proposal and retain the pres- ent consolidated district, then an* '> (continued oh page four) Matawan Board Setts Rond Issue • Phelps-Fenn & Co. 4% Coupon Bid A Si,375,000 bond issue,.approved by[ Matawan Township School Dis- trict 'Voters last October, was sold by.the bo.ud of education Thursday nigh^io finance construction of the township's new high school. The lssue.J .:was purchased by Phelps* Fe/tn& Co. and John Nuvcen & Co. anil Associates on a coupon bid of 4,0"per "certt.' ; *jrhe firms, which combined to make the purchase of the 20-yuir bonds, offered a premium of (2,375,- 482,83 lor the issue. However, the firms also agreed not to pick lip tho last seven bonds, saving the board $4000. The amount picked up by the successful . bidder for marketing was $2,363,000.. ' ’ ' . There were two.other bids on the $2,375,005 issue. Farmerf_&Mer- cltams National Bank of this bor- oiigh and B. J. Van Ingcn, New York, comhined for a bid of $2,375,- m at 4,03 per cent Interest and a premium of J1G87, Halsey-Stuart &Co., New York and Chicugo, bid $3,375,071 at 1.125 per ccnt with a $71 premium. The Nuveen firm also was the successful bidder reccnily on the $1,500,000 high school bond Issue in Raritan Township. . To Advertise For Dlds The board voted to advertise tot , bids for the construction of the new school. Bids for general construc- tion, iron and steel, and electrical work will be returnable at a spec- ial meeting of the board of educa- tion which is.scheduled for July 7 at* ft p.m. . The 1500-pupil, school will be iHiULQft * 40-acrd tract ott Atlantic Av*-Ttionh bf tVhuruh SV. lh o ptop- t’Fty cost'$100,000. Tho school will contain a total or 53 rooms, in- cluding one or poaalb/y two gyms, a cafeteria to seat 500, a COO-seiit auditorium, library, science labs, fine oris rooms, industrial arts rooms, home economics rooms snd labs, and several olher S p e c ia l uso" facilities. On base specifications, the school will be 132,000 square feet In size with a second gyrfi, 137,000 square feet, Finne, Lyman and Pinne, Elizabeth,’ are the architects for- the-sdiool program. Teaching contracts for 1961*02 were awarded tn Ronald Maksra and Miss Nancy VanEtten, both at $4200 and Mrs. Mary Itayden, at $5800. The next regular meeting of the board will be held Tuesday, Juno 20, because of thc graduation schedule. The Rev, Frank E. Sweeten, pastor of tho First Methodist Church, Mntawun, fastens *»lnw as llov Scout Ronald IVJIIJ/mi Treniper /* honored after work- ing for more thun a year on the rtniulmwnli tor llie God and Country Award. Tlm rcrcnionv took placo during thu Sunday mornlna service at 11 o'clock in Ihe church. Watching wHli articular Interest aw tho Hoy Scours pnrenti, Mr. n «<1 Mrs, ICvcrptt Trcmper, Mhfdleu'K Kd.. Matawan. nnd r.Mtto (irate, scoMimwter o! Iroop G6, sponsored by Ihe Mntawaa P«rent>Teachcr Association. Woman Killed On Area Highway Third Fatality In Madison Township A 50-year-old Madison Township woman, walking her dog on Houle 35 at 9:20 o’clock Thursday night was killed when she was struck by a car. Mrs. Jane Clancy, 274 Green- wood Dr., Cliffwood Beach, waa pronounced dead on arrival at Perth Amboy General Hospital. The driver of Ihe car, Zane W. McGhee, Middletown Township, told police he was driving south on the right hand lane near (he Pirate (continued on page four) Commander Theodore Soltys, Guadalcanal Post 474S, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Is shown above placing a small American flagon the monument io Mafawan Township on Memorial Day. Hie monument, which is in front of the post home, reads "Dedicated fo those who served la all wars of the United States.** All units and organizations in Matawan Township participated in the parade and memorial service on Memorial Day. In the parade were the Girl and Boy Scouts, Lit- tle' League teams. Oak Shades and CJiffwowJ Fire Department*;, Mata- wan Township First Aid Squad, Police Department, municipal of- JiciaJs, member of V.F.W. Post 42#-aad-it*- Ladies-Auxiliary^ and \ both township drum corps., the' ough. Ladies Auxiliary. President of the Sixth District and a member of tlie auxiliary lo Guadalcanal Post; George Brenonf Junior vice commander of Monmouih County Council V.F.W. and a mon>lx*r of Guadalcanal Post; Boyce Willard, senior vice commander of the local post, a symbol of remembrance; Robert - F letcher,- jun k>r-vtc*- com- mander. a symbol of puriiy; Mr. Matawan Firm Will Be Given Safety Citation lh e Monmouih County, Industrial Safety Committee wltl honor win- ners in last year'fl 33rd Interplant Safety Contest at Its annuo! dinner tonight at the Crystal Brook Inn, Eatontown, the State Department ot Labor ond Industry/ announced t&tay; ‘ T lii Hanwm Van WinklR-Munning Company of M«|awan,wo» both a merit and group- award for lota! plant participation in the contest. Merit awards aro given for com- pleting I960 without a disabling injury whila th® group award Is presented to the contestant having tha best safety record in the various competitive classes. Guadalcanal Coastaliers and Jersey' Hrenon, officcr-oMhe-day, in mem Cyclones. j ory-of the^heriocr tjead.i... During services, held in front of) Chaplain of Ihe Ladies' Auxiliary, (be post home oJ Guadalcanal Post, Ann Mitchell, offered a prayer and Commander Theodore Soltys gavejMrs, Ethel Lovero, auxiliary pres- the opening speech and Chaplain ndent, placed a blue wleaih. an tm- William KricJtser. £ave. the.invoca- l blem of eternity................................... tion. Mayor Peter J . Waters wa» i . The Rev. Francis OUcrstock, pas- the guest speaker. . jtor ,of the BayrfeW Presbyterian Notice Application forms io claim ex^ cmption on assessed valuation of dwellings owned by persons 65 years or over having an Income not in flxceso of are available by railing iIO 2 Forms must be filed by July J , and applicants tnuM prove-agerintinnnhip~*nd"r7Wner;r ship of property. This is under the provision of N. J. L iw , Chapter 9-IWJ. . Ccorp,t‘ A. WenrJeJ,' Assessor, , ............ Towmhip of Marlboro jfp—adv 1 Notice ChJfcoal chicken tad PVench fries to take out |I^S, Kollo Vo*i llousd, I ( M i , Keyport State Engineers Tour Six Corners See Renewal O f Jughandle Plans Keyport officials and. memtiera of the Chamberof Commerce mot yes- terday with representatives of tho State Highway Department lo dia- cuss plans for da^lng lrafflc con- gostiun.and eliminating hazards uf left-hand turns off Route 33 at Six Corners. ——• ............ * .................... Richard Hammel, president of thc Chamber of Commerce, and Mayor Charles It. Applegate term- ed the^meeiing "very satisfactory'' and addcd.H was rotksnnahle to ex- pect thu stale will tnkrt hirtiicr- sieps to reduce tlio har.iuds al the intersection. Mr, Hummel reported thu ntute i9 etyectod to revive pinna it al- ready hus on file to cllmlnato left- hand turns through thu use ol a system of Jug handles. Ho aald a system nt light signals to dlruct hltfhway war* fm W i ! out b /iriate reprcsenlattVflS, HOWard ------- -------- division o. ................................ . ported that left-hand turn-only light slnnnls would snarl traffic nt limes or |x'«k loud during Ihe summer months since through truffle would bo funnelled onto only ono luim. Others representing the-state at. tlio meeting were George K. Thoin- 7 Swirn Club O u t . tlolmdrt Townitlilp Zoning Board or Adjimtiiirnl llniratlny turniHt dawn Iho a|>|,Ilcnllon or tlie llolmdel Swim Club to build a pool on ItlllrrKil ltd, on Ihe Cwiecl properly. Till) awlni dub h»d lOUKhl a/Vnrlnnco lor Iho J iool th tliu rnri'.v q( a iuo permit n M il ,!A'! rotlik'iitlnl jono. — Peter Gonovcsr, clwilrmau, ex- plained llto boon! botlovcd It had nil powor lo (.'Infinity sucli a use vdtlvmt positive it.pulnllon tor ll In tlio toning n-illnnncp, Tlio chnlnnnii di'clnroj llie lianrd la bo »vn,|,ntlii'tlc will, Hid pllglil ol tlm cluli nml Miuuejlcd arnui wlioro llui rralrlclloni ol nn "A" realdi'ntlnl >0110 would not Im In- volved. Kill tlio clialrnmn tminil llm lo,vnilii(iron,niltloo nnil llto plan- nliiH liourd would having lo rede- fine llto “A" ri'ililontlal une pir- liilltcil liar) lictoro llm Innrd could luko upon lisall Iho tmnl- liiK of nucli a permit. Air Pollution ........... TSol SuHlaihcd J Rigby, dtroctor of thaj - - *,■ of road construction, re- AloraanVfif0 Firm ... I li.ft lirmt.jl lltl'il.itlllll tflll.^ ^ ' Got* New Scrulfny One Junior High Board Secretary Post It Filled Mmllmm Tuwlmlil|i-Board OHidurr: cut Ion Im , clodded 10 bull4 .only mil! Jnnlnr lil|{h achool at llill^lnw und It will bo on Iho^I’ orlh AmUoy waiur -work) proporly In tho Old liiltlllii *ocllon, Stwluy. Ktirdtlnnkl, dmlrmiiii «I Hit* liullil!n|| cm,mill- too.- tvnnmmcpd at n"inecUl ttWW- I’rlilay,, ' At a hootlnit lii'fnni llm Stain I)o- imitmonl <i( i:ducol|,iii In A|,rll, an Iirl|;liml plnu ill tlm lionrd to lyvn.J tor 1MWMKHI ID Iwlld two 1000 . |iii|i|l junior liluli mcIiixiId, ono at tlio wuler woilu nite nnd oiw im till I-'nriliutton 1run on (nllriMl ltd , wai lunii'd dnwn by tlm ulnlo r i IjuIiih beyond llm |nniiii\t (Immclal cnimclly nf II,n lo\vnidil|i, A OW Immllnti llmll wn* tist In thn riifunal. Mr. KnrdrliniU ^nnouncud At H >ul>a,qiwnt lionrd nu'f'linvi dc^. 1 - ■tall SOD-puiiH Junlnt Wptt wnam »n4 tint* Inuit-jinp/l junhr M/;lt Kt'hm>|. fn rnakliij) hla aiiniiiini:ciii',rif nt liin decision In lavor (it tlio alnjiili ItM' iiiipll Jnnlnr I1 I/ 1 I 1 1’iiihy, Mr, Knnl- A teller waa read al Ilia Marl- /liulcl t'liipliuauril tlu, not'd ul l)oro Townnlil|> C'onmillloti niBollii/t | * ,>'"nd micli »(.'lu)<)l Jml n* arnn aa Tlmradav from IIih AW |.,',I|„||„„ ,lln <ll»lrlc! l«’'.mllt.'d; lo cm ’I'huiMilay from tho Air Mutton Commission, iStato Depurlmmt of a>, chief of 10 traffic ojiLTitlloritj lluultl,, clnarlim. Iho' tliiim,.lim Btfcllon. and l!dward lli>Ufihloii, ot Chr-rnicat IV,, ami (lu, H ,K|o A«- Ihe geomoirlc deniun sccllon of Iho pi^n Co„ MommivlUe, of finlltlnB highway department. Other mem hers of the'trade unit altcndlou were J. Harold Hendrickwon, dtBlr- mill of 'tlie civic affairs committee, and Merrill H. Wallace, parktnu and transsx>rtatlon commlttoe head, Cleared By Jury O f Auto Death Charges The Middlene* Counly Grand Jury Friday cleared a 20-year-old Psrlin driver of responsibility In the deaths of two ynuuK hlcycuHlN in Madinon Towruhlp last summer, Cleared of charges of cauainu deuth by auto was Harry C, liuvvler, 8 Pine Tree Dr., Parlin, who lost his own wife in an automoblle.^ chlent six months before Ihe lia|»- edy last Jniyf ............ Mr. Bowler’s car sirwk Iidward O'Brien, ei^ht, of 4 PrinreJon Jtd,, Madison Township, unit Mulmel lleudland, ulso eU'.ht, of 44 Mifl1k*II Aviv. Pisr.utaway Townnhlp. Tho accident happened on July 31, lf)fiO, on Priuceion Rd. m the Mad- iM>n Pork M i’ctlon of (he towmliip, 'IIm* O'Brh'n boy was killed in- Ktfintly and the Headland young- ster oie«J the next diiy. Mr. Bowlrr lold poliri' hn w:ts. d»lvinj{ ftlonj', Princetnn Rd. when the boys M il tlio bicycles wiU'-vl "to come oul of nowh**ie." lhe Headland family, former Madison n*.iidenl«, weie visltlnii 111 " loivm.hip ul the lime of (he ncddtviL Hit Woman's Car MaKlfltrulc James If, Martin, Maluwan, a flue of $10 und V>coils on William P. Conroy, Morgan, as lhe driver ciurdoit un accident ut the Broad /md Liifio A'ti. jnfef*ectio« May 15. Mrt. Ma- bel Mount, 21, ItaHliihtown, ac« cuwed Mr. Cnnfoy of ruimini'. Into the side of her car. J»he declared that she had started our from Ihe stop siftf) when warned of the ap- proach of Ihe Conroy car and had slopped. She said Mr. Conroy was y,olrt |4 too fait noting a report of 21 feet n( skidmarks before the iw pact. Patrolman William P. Haus- er, borough police, iove^tij'ated. Indicted By Jury A W#K/dbridj;e man wai Jndiclcd Friday by lhe Middlesex Cotmiy of—au’- naulllo}/ ond to I •< !> '* a M:idh/>n 'I’owinhip housewife, MjtOJc.*! l*owrr, V> , o! 021 l<:ii>-A»y Ave, was indicted for breakiiip, and rniry.and wiili infr/il to rape. Power is accoieiJ of hr/Mk lug ini*» the }>o»n* ot liw Old Hridj’*’ bwaewife and knocking her In the kitchen fl/sor. Hcr^arann drove him sway and b« was arrested severs! iM/urs islrr at hl» Iwmft, police afthi ' foul fumei ond odors. Tlm letter was a copy of onn sent hy the“Air Pollution Commission lo (.ol, W. P, Lambert, 3A luluenieie Dr , MdUwsn, tha coni|duiiiant. Ths Comrniision reiHirted ii liud Inveati^itted rcjxnlw nf air pollution on Apr, 1 nnd Bunin nn Apr. ID filed by Col. Limhorl, Tlm letter stated that il was nousihlc* that "opnrathoial fslliirci*' st tlio pi (tut In Morjiuovllla might hsve <-uu«rd temixirary emitting <m those dn(- Init mo Coiiinmiiloii was satis- fled from ita inveiitli'.atloii thnt there wtis.no ronson to fear tliey would be recurrent or lnitln|{, Sei'en years ni;o thu township .entrled n cum Into court, cltiHtf llm Clismplon Conipnny and tlie mutter vyiis. ono of |onK..flK(liil.i!lll. nt towiiniiip commU|i*e ineetlnjtn at llinl (line. 'I‘h» iowmhip civil didonso dlrce- lor won j'lven permin>don to havo (continued on pui'o four) stniri one Is not hclnjj losl sijtlit of. lie (minted out that with Iho total (•stimuli' o f construetiiHi tout wjuip* hiK tho onn Junior hitfh thnt will b« preienled nM'rrnton June 15 Ihoro (mnllnued (in pane four) Pollca Nab Man With Illicit Alcohol Hailnwe Jnnea, 01, ot 20 Ailing* ton ltd., Cranford, waa Jalled yw- lerduy In ilefflull of |230O bail after he won arraigned in Matawan Mu* nlclpal ('ihirl Imforo Mflftlslrat* .lames It. Muiltnnn vhargei o! poi. HesM lnK Illicit nnd unlaxnd alcohol. . A 17 year old youth, apnirheiuled with Jones, fact's Jiivrnlk clisr|- es loduy. (w»llcu ie|ioi’led. ' - Police reported that Jones wai found In po*«efl<loti of two quait Im < ul colorless n\CK»uhlue‘ wtwa In* was ii|)prehendeil on Mlddlofrilt Rd..'iueaday. lie lold. imllcii-.iifl .xa-*.- reived the iiUHniililue In Newark, .SinU'Mii'nU by .looes worn turned over to uj-'enU of tlio State Divtvloa of Ak-oholh: Beverojte Control fur luveatimtlkmf ' Freelioid’s Projcided IVIiinicipul ilospiial Would Serve Marlboro Also Othor FRHS Town«; Slto For Private Ono Shifted To Raritan ’Iwo l]n-,pllu! pio)«c(s j'ol under wiiy In Monmouth Comily lu the p/iit .lorlnij'.ht, I-rerhold Bonm«h CoijiiVll lijsifiich’d id jiltor/my, M. Rhyoioiul Mcdowtm, to inquire In* to llinl huroiiMh’s chances of r*< renJInK lla borrmvind capaeiiy to finance a $Z/>7.1,000 lOObed hoi- pilat. 'llie hospital is ptrtnned nol only lo service Freehold Boroujth bul olio ail Hie immiclpulftien rom* prlstna the Freehold Ui*Khmal lll«h .V cI iikiT<|ist rlct. M*ribor« Towruhlp would bo one of Ihese. fiorne difficulty already has arisen in the FreeJjold pro/cct ba* ca»i»e the Monmmllh County Plan* niriK Hoard projection of Iota! pop- ulation to be served by the !io»pll«l by im- I* II7.0W which is ?A,000 more ihun a survey by Hubert L Mm (iie/'or, a hoflultol consultant. On lha hiaii of Mr. MacOrcjjor's iitpuen it Ij;»* been necessary to revise iho m t estimates upward already und tlie compliant found lhe first fij'urn used by Mayor OillaliHn, coinin}! lo IIT»’IV_ 7)O i)7 'iola7]y~iiTa(17?|<Tatel 'IIn* r»*velaiion Howell Tow/nhlp will Ik- lovried 1>V tlv'- P l‘*ehoUt mufik-Jpiii h-d l< t iho slilM- In;' from; that rnnriidpiility this w^'-k ol rt jHivale tej'jpltal pionio llt/fl by I.aniood OinMloclioo <U, lo< , N**w y«»k, to Ituntsn *f.«»wo- ihip.”” ifohhrlei wy| tin*’ rej»oite»i first fiNtiwiMtf'** w',«n th« move^xil from Howell look plac<t, but Karl- Iso wui founi have two sullahlo •it<ts ^ r M 1 ‘fivatu Project Tlio l.fimoml nrlVAtd pro|ect r * jMMtedly would ho financed hy th# - contributions and bond* of i cof< |kh atlou of 30 to 4<J participating pliyslclnns who would pay off (lit construction costi to.La* ni'mil, 'lhe hosplial would have 13$ beiN. 1i)n Lomond project anpoftrad UJ be maklnu unuuial lieacfway whaa a re{w>rted offer of (r*>« land was mado un which lo locale It, but then the owner Willidrow wheo learn)f)(( it was to bo a privately op* eratcd nod financed undertaking for P'Odt, Two sites aVe under chulca now In ftaritan for Ita location. Sites advanced by Mayor Philip J . Blanda Jr. and Committeeman Maf- viri Olimky reportedly hsvs bom releciiHi because no lowers or olher utilities were available, and tie; sites under civoice do h«vo them. ' ' lloweil officials reportedly ire keeping a wary eye on lhe Lamund project. In caso the PrerlKiid-pro* __ pci faifrr>y the wayside in its ••ally sfuK'**- Howell officials ra-' main ciiivhdent u( their ability to fimotie inch an lind<'ttaklnn as ihe l . a m o n d plan repreients more M'titltly than Raritan........... ••‘Ibe-c-tyM rslimate of (li<« pioird lor Raritan la for IM brd» u« sitalnit |2,97,1,00*1 for only |0Q N u t 1‘ttsMd snd Ihe land for tfu PiechvU hospital can ba rniinicipally provided snd ifu? Ms- Htst will be tijc Uh 14 Prcfholl.

Transcript of Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take...

Page 1: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

H o a a o u ™ c o . . h i s t o r i c a l a s s m -F B E E a o t D , N . J . » S S H . ,

THIS WEEK 12 Pages

, One Section

COVERINGTOWNSHIPS OP

.HOLMDEL, MADISON MARLBORO, MATAWAN

ANDMATAWAN BOROUGH '

92nd Y EA R — 48th W EEK • Member '-National EdUorisl AssodsUoo M A T A W A N , N . J . , T H U R S D A Y . J U N E 1 , 1961 Mtmb«r New Jersey IVcii Association S in g le C o p y T e n C e n ts

Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day-W7SK'

A parade and tncmorlal services at the Doughboy I Matawan members of the armed forces who gave Monument at Memorial Park, Matawan, marked Me- (heir lives tor their country in World War I I and the mortal Day services in the borough Tuesday. Above, I Korean Conflict. "* ' •Councilman John J. Wftlsh-Jr. reads the sames of I .................................................. ...........

C u r r i e , D a y W i l l P r e s s F o r

R e g i o n a l ; R a p B o a r d S i l e n c eEdward W. Currie, former pres* Schools has endorsed and is cx-

ident of the Matawan Township • Board of Education, and attorney for the Committee for Better Bor­ough Schools when that group was pressing for a separation of thc borough and township into separate school districts, was critical yester­day of thc present board of educa­tion for not haying carried on a Dropram of presenting thc case for regionalization since the time the special'election of today wadset

• " u p c - . - . ... . . ,Mrr'Currlo also found it regret-

able the'.board had not adopted a resolution of strong endorsement

- of the regional plan at one of its last meeting* before this election. The former school board president believed that the board’s lack of positive action had cast a shadow of doubt on the issue in the minds of voters with whom he had talked.

Mr. Currie said he wanted to put his personal endorsement on lhe regional program in addition to that being given it by the Committee for Better Borough Schools. He found it meeting every aim thc group which had agitated for sep­aration had been seeking in 1939 and 1960 in the way of a more equitable apportionment of school costs. This refers to the apportion­ment of school operating costs be­tween the municipalities on a per capita basis of school attendance rather than an assessment basis.

Committee for Better Borough

H o u s e E x p lo s io n In M a d is o n T o w n s h ip

A two-story house at 53 Barker’s Lane in the Morristown section of Madison Township exploded Tues-

,.day night when the tenant, John Haddou, tried to light a gas water heater, - o ........................

Mr. Hadclou, who was home alone at the time of the explosion, was taken to the Laurence Harbor First Aid Squad by the owner of the property, T. R. Barker, who was working on his farm adjacent to the Haddou house at the time of the explosion. Mr. Barker told po­lice he heard the explosion and saw Mr. iladdau crawl out of thc cellar. -

Mr. Haddou was treated by the Laurence Harbor First Aid for first degree.burns‘of the face and body and rushed to Perth Amboy Gen-: eral Hospital, where he is reported in fair condition. The sides of the house were buckled by the forcc of the concussion and the- interior was demolished, according to po lice. The Laurence Harbor Fire Department propped up the sides with beams to prevent them from Collapsing.

Mr, Haddou had returned to his home shortly, before the accident at 5:35 p.m. Fire Marshal Robert Alien said the explosion probably was touched off when Mr. Haddou attempted to light the gas hot water heater. The heater was served by bottled gas.

Marks AnniversaryMrs. Genevieve Donnell, 132 Main

St., Matawan, owner of The Friend­ly Shop, marks her 22nd anniver­sary in business today. In celebra­tion of the occasion, all merchan­dise will be offered at 22 per cent discount at the shop on Friday and Saturday,

~No3ce“To Business MenIn connection with the P.P.T. 1

Form, the Governor has signed intq^t-it^V July *nd August- For. / ____ n >n *1 n r r a i l C f V lm i t i i D t f t

erting every effort to get the re­gional school district proposal, to be voted on today, passed, Donald T. Day, chairman of Better Borough School group, stated last night. Should regionaliiation be defeated in the vote today, Mr. Day em­phasized his group would continue to press for its resubmission. “We can’t see it being defeated/’ he stated, "but if it is, we'll demand a second vote,”

Asked ajbaut-.the attitude al the Better Borough School ' grbub to­ward the proposal for'fli board, of school estimate, which would be acted on by the voters Monday if regionalization is not passed today, Mr. Day said the Committee for Better Borough Schools would have to be-shown that-the benefits it looks for under regionalization

Nineteen Named For Scholarships

A r e a S tu d e n ts E a rn S ta te School G r a n t

The New Jersey State Scholar­ship Commission Monday announc­ed thc initial awarding of 19 schol­arships to bayshore area students who will be entering college in Sep­tember. Each . scholarship is for $400 or the amount of tuition, whichever amount is leas. Students will receive the award for a four- year period provided they remain In full-time college attendance and maintain a satisfactory academic record. •

Awards are based upon demon­strated financial need and scholas­tic ability as determined by a qualifying examination, in addi-

(continued on page four)----

M a d is o n M a n H e ld In B o o km alcin g R a id

A 44-ycar-old Madison Township man was seized Thursday in one of two raids carried out by New Jersey State Police on two big and separate numbers operations in Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day.

The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd Wheran, Mercury Circle. The raids were disclosed by State Policc who also capturcd two other men with Whcr- an and a fourth in thc second ar­rest.' . . , ' '

Wheran was found when six troopers broke into an apartment of a relative at GO! First St. Taken into custody with Wheran were Charles Smith, 41, of 1 Magnolia Ave,, Jersey City, and Walter Ven- tola, 47, of 222 Garden St., Hoboken. State Police said the trio'was con­ducting a combined numbers-book- making operation estimated to be worth about $4000 a day.

The raids were led by' Deputy State Attorney General John J. Bergin and Major Hugo Stpckbur- ger of the Slate Police- The three men were accused on bookmaking and lottery charges. They were ar­raigned before Hudson County Judge Furman W. Reeves, who set baH of $10,000 for each. All three ratted the bail and were released, pending future court action.

Notfce_Our yard "and office will be

closed Saturdays during the months ’ * oil

law. Senate Bill 175, Chapter 17, L. 1961, which delays the effective dale of Chapter .51, L , J9W tQT DfW year Forms received are not due unlil May 19C2. For any further in- jformaUOdVciHl HO 2-MW. •• *

, George A- WeirtW,

or service call COi/u <4-0200.Louis Stultz J r ., Inc

- L, . ............N«U£c ..............

New York Turnpike Exprei* buses; frequeatdafly service from RoUoV Commuters boy W tr.p

could be attained under tho board Of school estimate setup. He deplored the public had not been better In­formed on this second proposal, and was of the opinion the group he heads would not be diverted by il from their intent to carry reg­ionalization to a reality. _

On the June 5 proposal, he stated he would oppose if if it meant do* ing away with a popular referen­dum on school budgets to limit pub­lic participation in them to a pub­lic hearing conducted by tho board of school estimate. . .

G e o rg e S p o o r H e a d s ; D e m o Ex e c C o m m itte e

Announcement has been made by George Hausmann, president of the Matawan Township Democrat­ic Club of Districts 2 and 3, that George Spoor has been appointed chairman of the Democratic Execu­tive Committee of Matawan Town­ship. ■ ,i -.

At a meeting held In thc Veterans of Foreign Wars Home, Cliffwood, lhe revised by-laws were read for the second time. • ■ .

Members discussed the Levit- town situation and arranged for coming social events.

A picnic will be held in August and a spaghetti supper in Septem­ber. Dates and times will be an­nounced. John Kelly was named chairman of thfe picnic and serving with him will be Mrs. Hans Krim- mcl, co-chairman; Norman Wood, Mr. Spoor and Joseph Emm.

Refreshments were served. The next meeting will be held June 28 in the VFW Home, Cliffwood.

V o t e S l a t e d T o d a y O n

R e g i o n a l i z a t i o n P l a n

Presented .God And Conn try Award

.. Voters in both Matawan Town­ship and Matawan Borough will go to the polls today to determine whether the consolidated Matawan Township School District should be reconstituted as a regional school district. ' _ ’

Polls will be open Irom 2 p.m. until 9.p.m. at three volinu places' established by the Board of Educa­tion. Because of the special.nature of the election, Voters of the town­ship and borough will cast their ballots separately and in order for regionalization to pass,'the proposal must be carried by a ihajority of each group. _

The cafeteria of Matawan High School will.be used as the votjng place for Matawan Borough resi­dents. Voters of Matawan; Town­ship election district 1' will use tho girl’s locker room as a'polling place, and all other' township: .voters will use facilities at the Cliffwood Mem­orial School. : ‘ '. Operation Would Start July 1 . Should the proposal be approved in both the township and the bor

Tii es Punctured, 40 In One Night

M a t a w a n T w p . Police Pra is e d F o r P r o b e

Chief J . Edgar Wilkinson. Mata wan Township Police, said yester­

d a y his department expects to make arrests shortly in a case in which the puncturing ot 40 auto tires in one night in Cliffwood Beach is involved. The chief said the puncturing of the tires is a lone incident, nothing like it has oc­curred before or since. ■"

Chief Wilkinson disclosed that he had not planned to make an an­nouncement until the miscreants actually were in custody, but be­lieved that thc receipt of a letter praising the department for its action in such a situation merited the revelation. Thc lengthy investi­gation has tied In tho suspects so well, the chief declared, that the disclosure is made,

Thc letter is as follows: “As new members of this community, wc wish to thank and commend the polled.* About- ago. we. hadtrouble with two punctured tires. The officer who answered the phone as well as the one who came to in­vestigate were not only cordial hut made us fed as une of tho family. This may sound strange -but- where we came from,-if you called thc police for a gang accumulating or punctured tires, you were almost treated as a crank. It got so bad, you didn’t want to call the police, which 19 a pretty sad state of af­fairs. That is one ot the reasons we left. ’

“ I can't Impress you enough with the good and safe and sound feel­ing your department gave us. Vou are all so nice and understanding, not rude or superior. lt‘a wonder­ful to live in a community where vandalism and gangs arc nipped in the bud." '

Chief Wilkinson noted that thc puncturing of thejlrcs occurred un­der the covor of darkness by an apparently roving group in a car, keeping a walchout for the move­ment of thc patrol car and for sign of persons being anywhere on the streets before they stopped for another “Job" on tne tires.

Honor War Dead In Township

oughV the regional district would begin operations July 1. Monies ap­propriated for school support for the 19GI-G2 school year would bo reapportioned' for U k purposes un a per- pupil capita basis between the borough and tho township.—

If voters decide to reject the re­gional proposal and retain the pres­ent consolidated district, then an*

'> (continued oh page four)

Matawan Board Setts Rond Issue

• P h e lp s -F e n n & C o .4 % C o u p o n Bid

A Si,375,000 bond issue,.approved by[ Matawan Township School Dis­trict 'Voters last October, was sold by.the bo.ud of education Thursday nigh io finance construction of the township's new high school. The lssue.J.:was purchased by Phelps* Fe/tn& Co. and John Nuvcen & Co. anil Associates on a coupon bid of 4,0"per "certt.' ; •

*jrhe firms, which combined to make the purchase of the 20-yuir bonds, offered a premium of (2,375,­482,83 lor the issue. However, the firms also agreed not to pick lip tho last seven bonds, saving the board $4000. The amount picked up by the successful . bidder for marketing was $2,363,000.. ' ’ ' .

There were two.other bids on the $2,375,005 issue. Farmerf_&Mer- cltams National Bank of this bor- oiigh and B. J. Van Ingcn, New York, comhined for a bid of $2,375,- m at 4,03 per cent Interest and a premium of J1G87, Halsey-Stuart &Co., New York and Chicugo, bid $3,375,071 at 1.125 per ccnt with a $71 premium. The Nuveen firm also was the successful bidder reccnily on the $1,500,000 high school bond Issue in Raritan Township.

. To Advertise For DldsThe board voted to advertise tot ,

bids for the construction of the new school. Bids for general construc­tion, iron and steel, and electrical work will be returnable at a spec­ial meeting of the board of educa­tion which is.scheduled for July 7 at* ft p.m. .

The 1500-pupil, school will be iHiULQft * 40-acrd tract ott Atlantic Av*-Ttionh bf tVhuruh SV. lho ptop- t’Fty cost'$100,000. Tho school will contain a total or 53 rooms, in­cluding one or poaalb/y two gyms, a cafeteria to seat 500, a COO-seiit auditorium, library, science labs, fine oris rooms, industrial arts rooms, home economics rooms snd labs, and several olher Special uso" facilities.

On base specifications, the school will be 132,000 square feet In size

with a second gyrfi, 137,000 square feet, Finne, Lyman and Pinne, Elizabeth,’ are the architects for- the-sdiool program.

Teaching contracts for 1961*02 were awarded tn Ronald Maksra and Miss Nancy VanEtten, both at $4200 and Mrs. Mary Itayden, at $5800. The next regular meeting of the board will be held Tuesday, Juno 20, because of thc graduation schedule.

The Rev, Frank E. Sweeten, pastor of tho First Methodist Church, Mntawun, fastens *»lnw as llov Scout Ronald IVJIIJ/mi Treniper /* honored after work­ing for more thun a year on the rtniulmwnli tor llie God and Country Award. Tlm rcrcnionv took placo during thu Sunday mornlna service at 11 o'clock

in Ihe church. Watching wHli articular Interest aw tho Hoy Scours pnrenti, Mr. n «<1 Mrs, ICvcrptt Trcmper, Mhfdleu'K Kd.. Matawan. nnd r.Mtto (irate, scoMimwter o! Iroop G6, sponsored by Ihe Mntawaa P«rent>Teachcr Association.

Woman Killed On Area Highway

T h ir d F a t a l it y In M a d is o n T o w n s h ip

A 50-year-old Madison Township woman, walking her dog on Houle 35 at 9:20 o’clock Thursday night was killed when she was struck by a car. Mrs. Jane Clancy, 274 Green­wood Dr., Cliffwood Beach, waa pronounced dead on arrival at Perth Amboy General Hospital.

The driver of Ihe car, Zane W. McGhee, Middletown Township, told police he was driving south on the right hand lane near (he Pirate

(continued on page four)

Commander Theodore Soltys, Guadalcanal Post 474S, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Is shown above placing a small American flagon the monument io Mafawan Township on Memorial Day. Hie monument, which is in front of the post home, reads "Dedicated fo those who served la all wars of the United States.**

All units and organizations in Matawan Township participated in the parade and memorial service on Memorial Day. In the parade were the Girl and Boy Scouts, Lit­tle' League teams. Oak Shades and CJiffwowJ Fire Department*;, Mata­wan Township First Aid Squad, Police Department, municipal of- JiciaJs, member of V.F.W. Post 42#-aad-it*- Ladies- Auxiliary^ and \ both township drum corps., the'

ough. Ladies Auxiliary. President of the Sixth District and a member of tlie auxiliary lo Guadalcanal Post; George Brenonf Junior vice commander of Monmouih County Council V.F.W. and a mon>lx*r of Guadalcanal Post; Boyce Willard, senior vice commander of the local post, a symbol of remembrance; Robert - F let cher,- jun k>r- vtc*- com­mander. a symbol of puriiy; Mr.

M a t a w a n F ir m W ill Be G iv e n S a fe ty C ita tio n

lhe Monmouih County, Industrial Safety Committee wltl honor win­ners in last year'fl 33rd Interplant Safety Contest at Its annuo! dinner tonight at the Crystal Brook Inn, Eatontown, the State Department ot Labor ond Industry/ announced t&tay;‘ T lii Hanwm Van WinklR-Munning Company of M«|awan,wo» both a merit and group- award for lota! plant participation in the contest. Merit awards aro given for com­pleting I960 without a disabling injury whila th® group award Is presented to the contestant having tha best safety record in the various competitive classes.

Guadalcanal Coastaliers and Jersey' Hrenon, officcr-oMhe-day, in mem Cyclones. j ory-of the heriocr tjead.i...

During services, held in front of) Chaplain of Ihe Ladies' Auxiliary, (be post home oJ Guadalcanal Post, Ann Mitchell, offered a prayer and Commander Theodore Soltys gavejMrs, Ethel Lovero, auxiliary pres- the opening speech and Chaplain ndent, placed a blue wleaih. an tm-William KricJtser. £ave. the.invoca- l blem of eternity...................................tion. Mayor Peter J . Waters wa» i . The Rev. Francis OUcrstock, pas- the guest speaker. . jtor ,of the BayrfeW Presbyterian

• NoticeApplication forms io claim ex

cmption on assessed valuation of dwellings owned by persons 65 years or over having an Income not in flxceso of are available by railing iIO 2 Forms must be filed by July J , and applicants tnuM prove-agerintinnnhip~*nd"r7Wner;r ship of property. This is under the provision of N. J. L iw , Chapter 9-IWJ.

. Ccorp,t‘ A. WenrJeJ,'Assessor, , ............

Towmhip of Marlborojfp—adv 1

NoticeChJfcoal chicken ta d PVench

fries to take out |I^S , Kollo Vo*i llousd, I ( M i , Keyport ■

State Engineers Tour Six Corners

See R e n e w a l O f J u g h a n d le P la n s

Keyport officials and. memtiera of the Chamberof Commerce mot yes­terday with representatives of tho State Highway Department lo dia- cuss plans for da lng lrafflc con- gostiun.and eliminating hazards uf left-hand turns off Route 33 at SixCorners. — —•............ * ....................

Richard Hammel, president of thc Chamber of Commerce, and Mayor Charles It. Applegate term­ed the meeiing "very satisfactory'' and addcd.H was rotksnnahle to ex­pect thu stale will tnkrt hirtiicr- sieps to reduce tlio har.iuds al the intersection.

Mr, Hummel reported thu ntute i9 etyectod to revive pinna it al­ready hus on file to cllmlnato left- hand turns through thu use ol a system of Jug handles. Ho aald a system nt light signals to dlruct

hltfhway war* fmWi!out b /ir ia te reprcsenlattVflS,

HOWard ------- --------division o. ................................ .ported that left-hand turn-only light slnnnls would snarl traffic nt limes or |x'«k loud during Ihe summer months since through truffle would bo funnelled onto only ono luim.

Others representing the-state at. tlio meeting were George K. Thoin-

7 S w irn C lu b O u t .tlolmdrt Townitlilp Zoning

Board or Adjimtiiirnl llniratlny turniHt dawn Iho a|>|,Ilcnllon or tlie llolmdel Swim Club to build a pool on ItlllrrKil ltd, on Ihe Cwiecl properly. Till) awlni dub h»d lOUKhl a/Vnrlnnco lor Iho

Jiool th tliu rnri'.v q( a iuo permit n Mil ,!A'! rotlik'iitlnl jono. —Peter Gonovcsr, clwilrmau, ex­

plained llto boon! botlovcd It had nil powor lo (.'Infinity sucli a use vdtlvmt positive it.pulnllon tor ll In tlio toning n-illnnncp, Tlio chnlnnnii di'clnroj llie lianrd la bo »vn,|,ntlii'tlc will, Hid pllglil ol tlm cluli nml Miuuejlcd arnui wlioro llui rralrlclloni ol nn "A" realdi'ntlnl >0110 would not Im In­volved.

Kill tlio clialrnmn tminil llm lo,vnilii(iron,niltloo nnil llto plan- nliiH liourd would having lo rede­fine llto “A" ri'ililontlal une pir- liilltcil liar) lictoro llm Innrd could luko upon lisall Iho tmnl- liiK of nucli a permit.

Air Pollution ........... „ TSol S u H l a i h c dJ Rigby, dtroctor of thaj - - *,■of road construction, re- A lo ra a n V fif0 Firm... I l i . f t lirm t.jl l l t l ' i l . i t l l l l l t f l l l . ^ ^ '

Got* N ew Scrulfny

One Junior High

B o a rd Secretary Post It Fille d

Mmllmm Tuwlmlil|i-Board OHidurr: cut Ion Im , clodded 10 bull4 .only mil! Jnnlnr lil|{h achool at llill^lnw • und It will bo on Iho I’orlh AmUoy waiur - work) proporly In tho Old liiltlllii *ocllon, Stwluy. Ktirdtlnnkl, dmlrmiiii «I Hit* liullil!n|| cm,mill- too.- tvnnmmcpd at n"inecUl ttWW-

I’rlilay,, 'At a hootlnit lii'fnni llm Stain I)o-

imitmonl <i( i:ducol|,iii In A|,rll, an Iirl|;liml plnu ill tlm lionrd to lyvn.Jtor 1MWMKHI ID Iwlld two 1000.|iii|i|l junior liluli mcIiixiId, ono at tlio wuler woilu nite nnd oiw im till I-'nriliutton 1 run on (nllriMl ltd , wai lunii'd dnwn by tlm ulnlo r i IjuIiih beyond llm |nniiii\t (Immclal cnimclly nf II,n lo\vnidil|i, A OW Immllnti llmll wn* tist In thn riifunal.

Mr. KnrdrliniU nnouncud At H >ul>a,qiwnt lionrd nu'f'linvi dc .1- ■tallSOD-puiiH Junlnt Wptt wnam »n4 tint* Inuit-jinp/l junhr M/;lt Kt'hm>|. fn rnakliij) hla aiiniiiini:ciii',rif nt liin decision In lav or (it tlio alnjiili ItM' iiiipll Jnnlnr I1I/1I1 1’iiihy, Mr, Knnl-

A teller waa read al Ilia Marl- /liulcl t'liipliuauril tlu, not'd ul ■ l)oro Townnlil|> C'onmillloti niBollii/t | * ,>'"nd micli »(.'lu)<)l Jml n* arnn aa Tlmradav from IIih AW |.,',I|„||„„ ,lln <ll»lrlc! l«’'.mllt.'d; lo cm’I'huiMilay from tho Air Mutton Commission, iStato Depurlmmt of

a>, chief of 10 traffic ojiLTitlloritj lluultl,, clnarlim. Iho' tliiim,.lim Btfcllon. and l!dward lli>Ufihloii, ot Chr-rnicat IV,, ami (lu, H,K|o A«- Ihe geomoirlc deniun sccllon of Iho pi^n Co„ MommivlUe, of finlltlnBhighway department. Other mem hers of the'trade unit altcndlou were J. Harold Hendrickwon, dtBlr- mill of 'tlie civic affairs committee, and Merrill H. Wallace, parktnu and transsx>rtatlon commlttoe head,

C le a re d B y J u r y O f A u t o D e a th C h a rg e s

The Middlene* Counly Grand Jury Friday cleared a 20-year-old Psrlin driver of responsibility In the deaths of two ynuuK hlcycuHlN in Madinon Towruhlp last summer, Cleared of charges of cauainu deuth by auto was Harry C, liuvvler, 8 Pine Tree Dr., Parlin, who lost his own wife in an automoblle.^ chlent six months before Ihe lia|»- edy last Jniyf ’ ............

Mr. Bowler’s car sirwk Iidward O'Brien, ei ht, of 4 PrinreJon Jtd,, Madison Township, unit Mulmel lleudland, ulso eU'.ht, of 44 Mifl1k*II Aviv. Pisr.utaway Townnhlp. Tho accident happened on July 31, lf)fiO, on Priuceion Rd. m the Mad- iM>n Pork Mi’ctlon of (he towmliip,

'IIm* O'Brh'n boy was killed in- Ktfintly and the Headland young­ster oie«J the next diiy. Mr. Bowlrr lold poliri' hn w:ts. d»lvinj{ ftlonj', Princetnn Rd. when the boys Mil tlio bicycles wiU'-vl "to come oul of nowh**ie." lhe Headland family, former Madison n*.iidenl«, weie visltlnii 111" loivm.hip ul the lime of (he ncddtviL

Hit Woman's CarMaKlfltrulc James If, Martin,

Maluwan, a flue of $10und V> coils on William P. Conroy, Morgan, as lhe driver ciurdoit un accident ut the Broad /md Liifio A'ti. jnfef*ectio« May 15. Mrt. Ma­bel Mount, 21, ItaHliihtown, ac« cuwed Mr. Cnnfoy of ruimini'. Into the side of her car. J»he declared that she had started our from Ihe stop siftf) when warned of the ap­proach of Ihe Conroy car and had slopped. She said Mr. Conroy was y,olrt|4 too fait noting a report of 21 feet n( skidmarks before the iw pact. Patrolman William P. Haus­er, borough police, iove tij'ated.

Indicted By JuryA W#K/dbridj;e man wai Jndiclcd

Friday by lhe Middlesex Cotmiy of—au’-

naulllo}/ ond to I •<!>'*a M:idh/>n 'I’owinhip housewife, MjtOJc.*! l*owrr, V>, o! 021 l<:ii>-A»y Ave, was indicted for breakiiip, and rniry.and wiili infr/ilto rape. Power is accoieiJ of hr/Mk lug ini*» the }>o»n* ot liw Old Hridj’*’ bwaewife and knocking her In the kitchen fl/sor. Hcr^arann drove him sway and b« was arrested severs! iM/urs islrr at hl» Iwmft, police afthi '

foul fumei ond odors.Tlm letter was a copy of onn sent

hy the“Air Pollution Commission lo (.ol, W. P, Lambert, 3A luluenieie Dr , MdUwsn, tha coni|duiiiant.

Ths Comrniision reiHirted ii liud Inveati itted rcjxnlw nf air pollution on Apr, 1 nnd Bunin nn Apr. ID filed by Col. Limhorl, Tlm letter stated that il was nousihlc* that "opnrathoial fslliirci*' st tlio pi (tut In Morjiuovllla might hsve <-uu«rd temixirary emitting <m those dn(-

Init mo Coiiinmiiloii was satis- fled from ita inveiitli'.atloii thnt there wtis.no ronson to fear tliey would be recurrent or lnitln|{, Sei'en years ni;o thu township .entrled n cum Into court, cltiHtf llm Clismplon Conipnny and tlie mutter vyiis. ono of |onK..flK(liil.i!lll. nt towiiniiip commU|i*e ineetlnjtn at llinl (line.

'I‘h» iowmhip civil didonso dlrce- lor w o n j'lven permin>don to havo

(continued on pui'o four)

stniri one Is not hclnjj losl sijtlit of. lie (minted out that with Iho total (•stimuli' of construetiiHi tout wjuip* hiK tho onn Junior hitfh thnt will b« preienled nM'rrnton June 15 Ihoro

(mnllnued (in pane four)

Pollca N a b M a n ’W ith Illicit A lc o h o l

Hailnwe Jnnea, 01, ot 20 Ailing* ton ltd., Cranford, waa Jalled yw- lerduy In ilefflull of |230O bail after he won arraigned in Matawan Mu* nlclpal ('ihirl Imforo Mflftlslrat* .lames It. Muiltnnn vhargei o! poi. HesMlnK Illicit nnd unlaxnd alcohol. . A 17 year old youth, apnirheiuled with Jones, fact's Jiivrnlk clisr|- es loduy. (w»llcu ie|ioi’led. ' -

Police reported that Jones wai found In po*«efl<loti of two quait Im < ul colorless n\CK»uhlue‘ wtwa In* was ii|)prehendeil on Mlddlofrilt Rd..'iueaday. lie lold. imllcii-.iifl .xa-*.- reived the iiUHniililue In Newark, .SinU'Mii'nU by .looes worn turned over to uj-'enU of tlio State Divtvloa of Ak-oholh: Beverojte Control fur luveatimtlkmf '

Freelioid’s Projcided IVIiinicipul ilospiial Would Serve Marlboro

A ls o O th o r F R H S T o w n « ; Slto Fo r P r iv a te O n o S h ifte d To R a rita n

’Iwo l]n-,pllu! pio)«c(s j'ol under wiiy In Monmouth Comily lu the p/iit .lorlnij'.ht, I-rerhold Bonm«h CoijiiVll lijsifiich’d id jiltor/my, M. Rhyoioiul Mcdowtm, to inquire In* to llinl huroiiMh’s chances of r*< renJInK lla borrmvind capaeiiy to finance a $Z/>7.1,000 lOObed hoi- pilat. 'llie hospital is ptrtnned nol only lo service Freehold Boroujth bul olio ail Hie immiclpulftien rom* prlstna the Freehold Ui*Khmal lll«h .VcIiikiT <|ist rlct. M*ribor« Towruhlp would bo one of Ihese.

fiorne difficulty already has arisen in the FreeJjold pro/cct ba* ca»i»e the Monmmllh County Plan* niriK Hoard projection of Iota! pop­ulation to be served by the !io»pll«l by im- I* II7.0W which is ?A,000 more ihun a survey by Hubert L Mm (iie/'or, a hoflultol consultant. On lha hiaii of Mr. MacOrcjjor's iitpuen it Ij;»* been necessary to revise iho m t estimates upward already und tlie compliant found lhe first fij'urn used by Mayor

OillaliHn, coinin}! lo IIT»’IV_ 7)Oi)7 'iola7]y~iiTa(17?|<Tatel

'IIn* r»*velaiion Howell Tow/nhlp will Ik- lovried 1>V tlv'- P l‘*ehoUt mufik-Jpiii h-d l<t iho slilM-In;' from; that rnnriidpiility this w '-k ol rt jHivale tej'jpltal pionio llt/fl by I.aniood OinMloclioo <U, lo< , N**w y«»k, to Ituntsn *f.«»wo- ihip.”” ifohhrlei wy| tin*’ rej»oite»i first fiNtiwiMtf'** w',«n th« move^xil from Howell look plac<t, but Karl- Iso wui founi have two sullahlo •it<ts ^ r M

1‘fivatu ProjectTlio l.fimoml nrlVAtd pro|ect r *

jMMtedly would ho financed hy th# - contributions and bond* of i cof< |kh atlou of 30 to 4<J participating pliyslclnns who would pay off (lit

construction costi to.La* ni'mil, 'lhe hosplial would have 13$ beiN.

1i)n Lomond project anpoftrad UJ be maklnu unuuial lieacfway whaa a re{w>rted offer of (r*>« land was mado un which lo locale It, but then the owner Willidrow wheo learn)f)(( it was to bo a privately op* eratcd nod financed undertaking for P'Odt, Two sites aVe under chulca now In ftaritan for Ita location. Sites advanced by Mayor Philip J . Blanda Jr. and Committeeman Maf- viri Olimky reportedly hsvs bom releciiHi because no lowers or olher utilities were available, and tie; sites under civoice do h«vo them. ' '

lloweil officials reportedly ire keeping a wary eye on lhe Lamundproject. In caso the PrerlKiid-pro*__pci faifrr>y the wayside in its ••ally sfuK'**- Howell officials ra-' main ciiivhdent u( their ability to fimotie inch an lind<'ttaklnn as ihe l . a m o n d plan repreients moreM'titltly than Raritan...........• •‘Ibe-c-tyM rslimate of (li<« pioird lor Raritan la for IMbrd» u« sitalnit |2,97,1,00*1 for only |0Q N u t 1‘ ttsMd snd Ihe land for tfu PiechvU hospital can ba rniinicipally provided snd ifu? Ms- Htst will be tijc U h 14 Prcfholl.

Page 2: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

Page Two THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Thursday, June 1, 1961

LEG A L NOTICEN O TICE

Take notice that Hollywood Liquors t t Groceries Inc., a corporation of the

< State of New Jersey, has applied to the Townihip Committee of the Town­ship of Matawan for a Plenary Retail Distribution License No. D2 for prem­ises located at 82 Lower Main Street, Matawan, N . J .

The names and residences of all . officers and directors ol said corpor­

ation are as (oUoh? :William F . Daniels, President. 1701

Grand Central Ave., Lavalette, New

Shady, Vice President, IB _ ania Ave., Lavalette, NewJersey.

M rs.. Grace CastilicnU, Secretary* Treasurer. Lavalette. New Jersey.

The only stockholder holding more than 10 per cent of any stock in said corporation is the said William F. Daniels and Phillip Shady. .

. Objection, if any, should be made Immediately In writing to Rose K . Wenzel. Clerk of Matawan Township.

HOLLYW OOD LIQ UO RS AND G R O C ER IES IN C. William F . Daniels,President,82 Low er Main Street,

' Matawan, N. J ,. . .jS »11.23. - .

Jersey.Phillip . .

Pennsylvania Ave.,

N O TICETake notice that application has

been made to the Township Committee of the Township of Matawan by F & M Liquors Inc.. a New Jersey Corporation, trading as P St M Liquors having its principal office In Store No. 2 of building in the Central Shop* ping Plaza located on the southwest corner ot Slate Highway Route No. 35 and Cliffwood Avenue, Cliffwood, Matawan Township. ~ , —

The names and residences of all officers and directors, ana the names and residences of all Stockholders holding one or more per centum of the stock of said corporation ore as follows:

Frank* A. Holub, 32 Annapolis Drive. Hazlet, N. J. .

' Bertha Holub, 32 Annapolis Drive,. Hazlet, N. J . ■

Miles Walter, 125 Morrislown Road, Elizabeth, N. J .

Objections, if any, should be made Immediately in writing to Rose K. Wenzel. Clerk of The Township of Matawan. . -

F & M Liquors, Inc.Frank A. Holub, President.

LEG A L NOTICEN O TIC E

Take notice that Arthur N. Rubin, trading as Villaga Tavern, has ap­plied to the Township Committee ol Marlboro Township for a plenary re­tail consumption license for premises situated at south side Old Tennent Rd., approximately 600 ft. west 'OJ railroad station. .

Objection, If azty, should be made Immediately in writing to: FloydWyckoff, Clerk, of Marlboro Town­ship. '

AnTH UIt N. RU BIN , Tennent Rd.,Morganville, N. J .

j8 $5.M

J8 $10.69

32 Annapolis Drive, " . N. J . ,

N O TICET A K E N O TICE that Veterans Me-

jnorial Home, Inc. a corporation of . the State of Nev^ Jersey application

has been made to the Township Com- mlttee of the Township of Matawan for renewal of Club License No. CB-1 for premises located on Cliffwood Avenue (comer Hawthorne Street). Lots 4*9-0, Cliffwood Matawan Town* •hip. "

The names officers ot me

and residences of tbs . . . . _ _.e corporstlon are:

Theodore Ro1ty«, 30 North Shore Concourse, Cliffwood Bcach, N, J„ President.

Boyce- Williard, 141 Laurelhurst Drive, Cliffwood Beach, N. J .. Sr. Vice President.'

Robert . Fletcher, 1832 Woodmere DriveL Cii/fH-ood Beaeh, N, J .. j r . Vice President.

Charles Candiloro, 24 Matawan • Road, Cliffwood Beach, N. J . , T reas­

urer.William Davis, 851 Woodbine Drive,

Cliffwood Beach, N, J,. Secretary.The names and residences of the

trustees of the Coiporatlon are: Charles Hobby, 78 W. Prospect Ave..

Cliffwood Beach, N. J .George Brenon, 18 Shoro Concourse,

Cliffwood Beach, N. J..Vincent Gaunt, BIO Sherwood Drive.

CUtfwood Beach, N. J .

N O TIC E •Take notice that Cliff Reeves Tav

era Inc.. a Corporation of tbe Stats of New Jersey has applied to the Mayor and Council of the Borough of Matawan, N. J ,, for a plenary retail consumption license for the

Sremises known as Dutch Mill Inn, D. 1, Highway 34. Matawan, N. J.

The names and restoences ot all tbe officers and directors, who are

the stockholders of Cliff fleeves TaV' ern Inc., are aa follows: <

Clifford F . Reeves — President Grace M» b e e v e s — Secretary- Treasurer ' ’

Estelle Bradley — Vice-President Objections, if any,.should be made

Immediately In writing to. Arthur C. Hall, Clerk of the Dnmugh of Matawan, N. J.

Cliff Reeves Tavern Inc by, Clifford F. Reeves, .

- - President - ...................j8 ffl.23 -

L E G A L NOTICEN O TICE

Take notice that Charles and Julia. Kaoieck trading as Freneau Tavern has applied to the Borough of Mata* wan for a plenary retail consump­tion license for premises 27 Freneau Avenue. Matawan, New Jersey.

Objection, If any, should be made immediately in writing to Arthur C . Hall, Clerk of the Borough of Mata­wan, New Jersey.

• Chiirles and Julia Kanieck 27 Freneau Avenue

. Matovvan, N. J.J8 $4.95

CLEAN BLUESTONE for. drive­ways,p arking areas, walks etc.,

.03f/£c per square foot, put down and spread. Call COlfax 4-7670 after ~ p.m. w]8

25 FOOT Johnson Bros., cabin skiff. Ready to run. $2600. Terms.

Call LOwell 6-1345. wjl*

N O TICETake notice that Richard E . GllUs

trading as Matawan Wine and Liquor Store nas applied to the Mayor and the Council of the Borough of Mata wan for a plenary retail distribution license for premises, situated at 120 Main St., Matawan, N. J .

Objections, if any, should be made immediately in writing to: Arthur C. Halt. Clerk, of titd Borough of Matawan.

(Signed)U C IIA - -

J8 |3.61

RICH ARD E . G IL L IS , 120 Main St., Matawan, N. J*

Objections, i f any. should b« made Immediately in writing to Rose K .‘ Wenzel, Municipal Cleric of Matawan Township.

Jfl |14.10

V ET ER A N S M EM ORIAL HOM E INC.Theodore Soltys, President

C. AND B. ESSO SERVICE

Highway 34 Matawaa

V A C U U M C L E A N E R B A G S a n d V A C U U M C L E A N E R B E LT S F O R

A L L M A K E S O F M A C H I N E S

GALE’SmwmCO 4-2000 - Wo Deliver

H A R D W A R E CO.Open Friday Evenings T il 9

Free Parking Ia Rear

. 9 -4 5 0.S H E R IF F 'S S A LE SU P ER IO R COURT O F N EW J E R S E Y

CH A N C ERY DIVISION MONMOUTH COUNTY ,’ "Docket N of 2203-W '

United States Savings Bank of Newark. N. J ., a corporation of New Jersey, Plaintiff vs: Jam es Clarke and Carol Clarke, his wife Defendants.

By virtue of a w rit of execution in the above stated action to me di* reded,' I shall expose for sale at pub­lic vendue, at the Court House in the Borough of Freehold, County of Monmouth. New Jersey <oq Monday, the 26th day of June, 1001. at 2 o’clock, P.M. Prevailing Time.

All that ccrtain lot, tract or parcel of land, situate, lying and being in the Township of Matawan, In the County of Monmouth, in the State of New Jersey:

B E IN G known and designated as Lots 407 and 408, Block 19 ss .shown on a certain map entitled "Map of Cliffwood Beach section 1, Matawan Township, Monmouth County, N. J. November JW23" and which mnp was filed in the Monmouth County Clerk's OfOco April 3, 1024 In Case No. 60*1.

The aforesaid described premises are also known s s 46(1 Cliffwood Ave*. nue, Cliffwood Beach, New Jersey.

The approximate amount of the Judgment to be satisfied by «ald saleIs the sum of $11 ,600.00 together with the costs of this sale.

IRA K. WOLCOTT, Sheriff. Dated May 23. 1061 Stetson & Gormiey. A ttys.

DIAMONDS. I polish and sell at factory price. Great savings, try

me. Rings, ctc., to match. Call 787-0589. wj8'

SU P ER IO R COURT O F NEW J E R S E Y

CH A N CERY DIVISION MONMOUTH COUNTY D O CK ET NO. F-3069-00

ST A T E OF NEW J E R S E Y TO

JO SEPH R . JOHNSON AND MRS. JO SEP H R . JOHNSON.

L.8 . wife of Joseph R . 'Johnson,G E O R G E C. JOHNSON and MRS.G E O R G E C. JOHNSON, wife of

George C. Johnson, ANNA B . SMOCK, and M R. SM OCK, husband of Anna B.

•Smock. M A R G IE JORDON and MR.'JORDON, husband of Margie Jordon.G E O R G E IR V IN E a n d MRS.G EO R G E IR V IN E , wife of George Irvine. ED W IN A. IH V lN E and MRS.EDW IN A. IR V IN E , wife of Edwin A. Irvine, A L B E R T M. IR V IN E and MRS. A L B E R T M. IR V IN E , wife of Albert M. Irvine. A LL EN D. IR V IN E and M AD EL D. IR V IN E , wife of Al* len D. Irvine. R O B ER T MATTHEW S and M RS. R O B ER T M ATTHEW S, v.lfe of Robert Matthews, JA M ES MATTHEW S and MRS. JA M ES MAT­THEW S. wife .of Jam es Matthews,M ARG A RET J. MATTHEWS, JOHN DOE, husband of Margaret J . Mat* thews, said name John Doe being fictitious. FRA N K M ATTHEW S and MRS. JrVtANK M ATTHEW S, wife of Frank Matthews, AUGUSTA t MAT­THEW S' and WH. MATTHEW S;' hus- band.of Augusta Matthews, H A R R IET L. M ATTHEW S and M R. MATTHEWS, husband of Harriet L . Matthews, W IL­LIAM O. M ATTH EW S and M RS. W IL­LIAM O. M ATTHEW S, wife of William O. Matthews, ills', her. tlielr, or any of their heirs, devisees and personal representatives and his. her. their or any of their successors in right, title and Interest, JLD A JORDON and H A RV EY E . JORDON, her husband.M A E /JOHNSON, widow, unknown owneralils Heirs, devisees and personal representatives, and his. their or any of thciksudcesiors in right, title and Interest. 1

YO U A R E H E R E B Y SUMMONED and requireil lo servo upon Heuser,.Heuser II DevMalo, plaintiff's attor­neys, whose 'addjess is 159 Main Street, MalawA/fT New Jersey,Answer to tha {Complaint filed in civil action, In/M ilch Grace Hilton Is plaintiff nnd JtAeph R. Johnson, etc.t el als., are /efendants pending in the Superior’'Court of New Jersey, within 39 days after June 15th, 1061,exclusive of 6iich date. If you fall . —— -to do w . Judgment by may J j # * S T R A W B E R R Y boxes com-

for the v r . .._ _____ __

FOR SA LE15 FT. TROJAN, mahogany ply­

wood, 1957 Johnson Javelin, 35 h.p., new electric starter, lights, 2 life preserver cushions, water skis, anchor, paddle, rope and compass, 1 adult life jacket. Boat and motor in excellent condition, boat painted and varnished, ready for water. $600. Call CO 4-3030, after 4:30 call CA 2-2167, ask for Bill. wjtf

PURE BRED Collie puppies, Cham­pion stock, 9 weeks old, wormed

and inoculated. Call WHitncy 6-4845. W jl

J22 40*4 $29.4 9

L E G A L NO TICE Sealed quotations will be received

by the Board (rf Education of the Township of Madison, Middlesex Coun­ty, New Jersey for furnishing}'

Educational Supplies Science Supplies & Equipment Industrial Arts Supplies At Equip­

ment .Science Supplies & Equipment

Athletic Supplies & Equipment Quotation* will be accepted at 8:00

P.M. Eastern Daylight Saving Time on June 21. 1001 at the Browntown School, Highway No, 310, Old Bridge, New Jersey.

Specifications may bt obtained from M r. John Partridge, Acting Secre­tary, Board of Education, Madison Township School No. 18, 3S Bushnell Road, Old Bridge. New Jersey.

The Board reserves the right to re* ject any/or all quotations submitted and to waive sll'im m aterlat infor­malities, and to award contracts forthe whole cretlon,

May 21 J1 $131

or any part st Its dia*

John Psrtridge, 1 Acting Secretary Madison Township Board of Education

N O TICETake notice that Abe Solomon, trad­

ing aa MorganviUe General store, has applied to the Township Committee of Marlboro Township for a plenary re­tail distribution license for premises situated at corner of Old Tennent and Spring Valley Rd., Marlboro Town* ship, J .

Objections. If any. should be made Immediately In writing to: Floyd Wy­ckoff, Clerk, of Township of Marlboro.

J8 99.01

(Signed)A B E SOLOMON Box 499Morganville, N. J ,

BILL RYDER’S

TOWN TAVERN1 7 4 M A I N S T ., M A T A W A N

Package Goods — Sandwiches

C A L L L O 6 -9858 F O R P I Z Z A B Y V E R N A

MATAWAN FORD IS REALLY FLYING!!

WATCH FOR OUR DISPLAY JUNE 5tli

PRE-VIEW SAT., JUNE 3rdW h a l A C e le b ra tio n —

Y o u 'll N e v e r B e lie ve It —’ , 'T il Y o u See Itl

REFRESHMENTS

M a t a w a n F o r d........................ Sticiejsqrs lo lieo. S. Barrett, ft Son

Inc.

6 0 M A I N S T .L O 6 -3 1 0 0

M A T A W A M

he rendered against you for the lief demanded in the Complaint. You shall file your Answer 'and proof of Service in duplicate with the Clerk ot the Superior Court, State House Annex, Trenton, New Jersey, In ac­cordance with-Uie rules of civil prac­tice and procedure.

Tills action has been instituted for tho purpose of foreclosing two tax sale certificates, first No. 02 dated February Sth, 194i m ade by H»rry J . Magee, Collector of Taxes of the Township of Marllwro -lo- Marlboro Townthip which Tax Sale Certificate has hecn assigned to Grace Hilton and conveys real estate situate in the Township of Marlboro, County of Monmouth nnd State of New Jeuey and known as Block No. 2. Lot' 9 r on the Assessment Map of the Township of Marlboro.

Second.Tax Sale Certificate No. 100. dated January 3rd, 1D45 made by Har­ry J . Magee, Collector of Taxes of the Township of Marlboro to Grace Hilton and conveys real estate situate In the.Township of Marlboro, County of MonmouUi and State of New Jer­sey, known as Block 2, Lot 53 on the Assessment Map for the Township of Marlboro. .

You and each of you are made de­fendants in the above entitled action because you have or may claim to have soma right, title, lien or other Interest affecting rthe real estate btlnii foreclose**-toy yirtut ot-<ftmen«ip, in­heritance, descent, Intestacy, devise, dower, curlfrsy, mortgage, deed conveyance, entrey or judgment or other legal or lawful right, the nature of which and the reason that you and each of you are joined as defendants as set forth wilh particularity In the Complaint, a copy ot which will be furnished you oa request addressed to the attorneys for Ihe plaintiff at the above mention address.D A T ED : M ay 17. 1W1

t (I. GRAN T SCOTT) jlS 170.12 r

SHOW CASES, 3 ih good condition;also wrought iron Hollywood bed

board, frame and spring, reason­able. Call 787*5628 or 787*1531. wjlGAS RANGE with heater, thermo*

s t i t . and grill, white porce/a/n,- good condition. Call COlfax 4-7680.

' w jl*

SINGER portable sewing machine, used very little, perfect condition

$60, Call COlfax 4-5608. wjlRUMMAGE SALE sponsored by

Matawan Methodist Men's Club at gorage -on - Broad. Street next to parking lot Saturday, June 3rd and Saturday, June 10th, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.- J8

FO R S A LEMANURE, mulch hay, straw, feed­

ing hay. Delivery on aJl. Call COlfax <-0924.______________ wjtfOFFICE EQUIPMENT; unlimited

■avings on new and used deskj, chairs, files, shelving, parts bins, drafting equipment and etc. Ralph Moccl, 255 Washington S t r e e t , Keyport. Call COI/ax 4-1558. wtlWESTIHGHOUSE washer, practi­

cally new (2 weeks old) and bath room sink. Call Louis Costa COlfax 4-0501 or COlfax 4-1533. wtf

ALUMINUM WINDOWS

DOORS & JALOUSIESNO MONEY DOWN

CRAWFORD CROMEYKEANSBURG 787-2406

“ PRESBYTERIANS Pioneer at Matawan.” Just published, mny

be purchased In Matawan at JThe Friendly Shop, Main St., in Keyporl at Bayshore Stationers, $TW. Front St., The Keyport Weekly, 52 W. Front St., and in Freehold at the Monmdlith Couffiy Historical As­sociation Library, 70 Court St. Price per book, $3.98. wjtf

SERVICESSLIDING DOOR closets, wall pan­

eling, tile ceilings, extensions, stairs, alterations, repairs, general carpentry, r e a s o n a b l e . Andy Schaap, COlfax 4-0616. wtl

BAY ROOFING CO.PUTTERS, LEADERS 705 BAYVIEW AVE*,

UNION BEACH COLFAX 4-3997

wtlYOUNG WOMAN wishes typing to

do at home. Neat, accurate. Call 787-1481.________ wjU

.. LOW COST HEATING

Complete systems Installed as low as $495. Duct work, furnaces and sheet metal work. 31 years ex­perience.

.C A LL LOGAN COLFAX 4-2916

wjU

FR EE ESTIMATES ONALUMINUM

WINDOWS - DOORS SIDING

NO DOttfN PAYMENT KARL FRANTZ - CO 4-3405

______________ wjtlRUGS, never used, 9~x 12 - J30,

other sizes, private. Call SEa Bright 2-0549.__________________ wjtf

plcte:also pogier lawn mower. Call Eowell 6-0724. ' wjl

fashing machine. Asking $25, as is. Calf HO 2-2095. wjtf

LEG A L NOTICE

D-422S H E R IF F 'S S A L E .

SU PERtC m CO U KT OV N EW jf e n S E Y -

CH A N C ERY D IV IS IO N .... MONMOUTH COUNTY Docket No. r.1780-80

Broadway Investment Corp.) ft cor poraUon of the State of New Jersey, Plaintiff v«: Robert D. Brown and Grayce Brown Defendants

B y virtue of a writ of execution In the above stated action to me dl« rected, I shall expoBe for lalo at pub* lie vendue, at the Court House In the Borough of Freehold, County’ of Monmouth. New Jersey, on Monday, the Bth day of June. 1061, «t 3 o'clock, P.M. Prevailing Time,

A ll that certain tract or parcel of land and premises, hereinafter parti* cularly described, situate, lying and being in the Borough of Matawan In the County of Monmouth and Stateof New Jersey:

B EG IN N IN G at a pol ............thirty eight <138')' feet-northeast of

ttlnt one hundred

Ihe i>o}»t formed by the Intersection ot the northeasterly line of llabblt Lane and the southeast line of Main Slreet; thence (I) Northeasterly along the southeasterly side of Main Street north 32 degrees 30 minutes east 60.S feet to a point; thence (21 Southeast­erly at right anglea to Main Street south 57 degrees 30 minutes east 124.2 feet to a point; thence (3) Southwest* erly and parallel with' said Main Street south 32 decrees 30 minutes west 6&5 feet to s point; thence (4) Northwesterly at right angles (o Main Street north 57 degrees 30 minutes west 124.2 feet to the southeasterly side of Msin Street and to the point snd place of beginning.

Also known as No. 60 Main Street, Mntawan. Neiv Jersey,

Also known as. Taj; Lot .No. 4 nnd Tax Block Nn. fl on ihe Tax Map of the Borough of Matawan, New Jersey.

Tfto approximate amount of the ludionent to be satisfied by said sale Is tho sum of tUSD.oo together with Uie costs ot this' snle.

in A E, WOLCOTT, Sheriff. Dated Mny 2, 1001 David L. Grccni1'. Ally.Jt • 37*4 133.01

ST A T E OK NEW J E R S E Y TO L.S . SPA FFO H D W. SCHANCK, one . of tho Defendants.

You are hereby summoned and re­quired to serve upon Heuser, Heuacr it De Malo, p lsln tllfs attorneys, whose address in 159 Main Street, Mntawan, New Jersey, an answer to the Com­plaint filed in a civil action, in which The Matawan Hnnk, a banking cor­poration of the Slate of'New Jersey Is plaintiff and Edgar Joseph Cormier et als., are defendants, pending in the Superior Court of New Jersey within 39 days after June 8th. lDOl, exclu* slve of such date. H you fall to do so, Judgment by default may be ren* dered against you for. the, relief de­manded Jn the complaint, to u shall tile vour answer and.proof of aervice In duplicate with tho Clerk of the ''— •srlor.' ~— "* • " •Superior-' Courts- S late . House.-Annex,. Trenton, New Jersey, in accordance with the rules ot civ il practice and procedure.

This action has been Instituted for the purpose ot foreclosing a mortgage dated Mby 2fl!h, 1056. made by Edgar, ----- . . . . --------- n j»e|Joseph Corm ier and. Marie Cormier, hls-wiier-as-m oclfiagors-and-i to The Molawati Bank, a’ bankL„ porallon of the State of New Jersey, as mortgagee and concerns reol es­tate located on Dutch Lane Rond, Marlboro Township, Monmouth Coun­ty, New Jersey. You are mode a defendant because you are the holder of n mortgage nu d e hy Edgar Joseph Cormier and Marie Cormier, his wire, dated/May 28th, 1950 in .tho amount of Two Thousand <(2.000.00) Dollars which mortgage was recorded in the Monrpoulh County Clerk's Office In Book 1W>0 of Mortgage, Page 284. •Dated: May I7tli, 1901.

I . Grant ScottClerk of the

J0 |30.e7

- WJ2 -- , .. S H E R IF F 'S S A L E . ,

. S U P ER IO R CO V B T 1 •O F NEW J E R S E Y

CH A N C ERY DIVISION • MONMOUTH CO U N TY. ,

Docket No. F-004-80 Reynold Santoro, Plaintiff v s : Marie

Bauaoux single person1 and Alfred Blenenwald and Margaret Bienenwald, his wife. Defendants

By virtue ot a writ of execution In Uie above stated action to me di* rected, I shall expose for sale at pub* lie vendue, at the Court House In the Borough ot Freehold, County of Monmouth, New Jersey, on Monday, the loth day of June, 1061, at 2 o'clock, P.M . Prevailing Time,

All the following tract or parcel of Land and the premises hereinafter particularly described, situated, lying nnd being in the Township of Marl* boro, in the County of Monmouth and Stata of New Jersey: .. .

D ttaiN N lN a at a stone in tha north* weit<rly*o0t1issrot' w *'P *rt* f« s« # n y conveyed to Thomas Henry>and.iiear the northeasterly edge of the public road leading from Pleasant Valley to Freneau; thence (1) South 47 degrees 00 minutes West as the needle point* ed Sept., 1937, 18 35/100 feet to a point in or near the middle of said road; thence (2) North 41 degrees 55 minutes West along or near the middle of the same 81 72/100 feet; thence (3) North 54 degrees 43 min* utes West 370 53/100 feet; thence (4) North 31 degrees 05 minutes West 00 7/10 feet; thence (5) North 11 de*

?:reet 05 minutes West 210 35/100 eet; thence (6) North 20 degrees 45 minutes West 07 63/100 feet; thence (7) North 30 degrees 52 minutes West

stlil along or near the middle of said road 80 feet; thence (8) North 59 de* grees 06 minutes Ea st at right angles to said road 1,205 feet to the center of G ravelly Brook thence (9) South­erly up the center of 'said brook Its meandering courses to the northwest comer of said Thomas Henry tract and an angle in the brook near the ore bog; thence (10) South- 47 degrees 00 minutes West along said Thomas Henry’s line 550 feet lo the stone and place of Beginning. >-

Containing 20 acres. .Ths property is locoted on the

northeasterly side ot NM0,1?® approximately one hall mile •ou” 1* easterly from the Intersection NolsM Road and Lloyd Road and i in the Vicinity of the Jersey Central Pov.er f t Light pole number JC 419 MO. I" Township of Marlboro, County of Mon* mouth, New Jersey.

The approximate amount of tne Judgment to be satisfied by said sate Is the sum of $14,100.00 together withthe costs of thla nale......

IR A E . WOLCOTT, Sheriff. Dated May 8. 1061 Kenneth E . Joel, Atty. ; j!5 39-4 1*7.25

<IOOD HOME with children, part Cocker Spaniel puppies, free. Call

COlfax 4*1654 after 5:30 p.m. wjl

N O TIC ET A K E N O TIC E that the' following

offers for the purchase of lands and premises situate, lying and being in the Township of Matawan, In the Counly of Monmouth and State oi New Jersey, together with agreements for the payment forthwith of the amounts set forth below as the equivalents of the annual tax levy against said premises for the current year M g like sums for each of the following years until said premises are assessed for taxes, nnd further naymcnt of all fees and .expenses incident to offers, were submitted to, considered and approved .by the TownB P fCom­mittee of the Township of Matavs nn suhjcct to final approval at the reg­ular meeting of said Township Com­mittee to be held at the Municipal Building at 147 Low er Moln Street, Township of Matawan, New Jersey, on the fifth duv of June, 1901, nt eight o'clock. P . M.. E .D .S .T .:

1—Offer of Uie sum of |150.00 in cash and *27.00. tax equivalent, for lot number 710, Block number 22, Map of Cliffwood Bench, Section One.

2—~Offer of the sum of $160.00 in cash and 127.00, tax equivalent, for lot number 1251, Block number 34, Map of Cliffwood Dcach, Section One.

3—Offer of the sum of $300.00 in cash, and $54.00 tax equivalent, for lots numbered 13. 14. and 15. Block number 9 (40). Township Assessment Man; also agreement, to demolish di­lapidated structure now on lot num* her 13, Block nnmber 9{40).

4—Offer of the sum of 1100.00 ih cash and $18.00, tax equivalent, for lot number 411, Block number 0, Msp of Woodflelds,

5—Offer of the sum ol $150.00 In cash and $27.00, lax equivalent, for lot' number • I24T. Block number - 34. Map of Cliffwood Bench. Section One

ROSE K . W EN ZEL, Township Clerk

J1 $9.18

Take notice thst Peter F . Chokola. fad ing as Chtkola- Beverage Co. has , . .

trP.^ I “apPhed'ta-the-Dinrctorof-the Division—of ">e Alcoholic Beverage Control lor • O l O V I l I U n a person to person transfer of State Beverage Distributors License No. N8 from Martlp Snnevvskl trading as Country Club Bottling Co.

He has oIko applied for a place to

Perth Amboy to corner G&slnn Strand Gerard Ave., Matawan Twp,, N. J . and to maintain a warehouse and salesroom at the same address.

Objections, if any, should be made in writing to the Division of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 1100 Raymond Blvd., Newark. N. J .

; ‘ Peter F . Chokol.v . 94 Leslie Rd.,

Colonia, N, J.Jfl $7JW '

THREE prom gowns, size 9, worn only once. Call COlfax 4-0044,

BENEFIT SALE of used household artlclesj D i s h e s, glassware,

lamps, picture frarties, kitchen wares and books. On the lawn (rear) at the home of Mrs. Herbert C. Burrowes, 100 Main St., Keyport (2 blocks from Front St.,) 1 to 5 p.m., Thursday and Friday, June 8th and 9th, Cake and coffee by the Pool. r» “ wj8*PARK AVENUE, 1960 trailer, 3

bedrooms. Inquire 353 W. Frtint St., Keyport. ‘ wjtf

W ANTEDURGENTLY n e e d e d cottages,

bungalows, summer end country homes, rooming houses, land, farms, other property anywhere. Gallina’g Realty, 215>48th St., Un­Ion City. Call UNion 7-8790. wj8

LO ST .JERSEY > And Florida drivers i JJ*

censes and registrations' also fm* portant papers in black U.S. Navy folder In vicinity of Keyport or Keansburg. Reward. Finder please call 787-3J99.______________ wi* .

PARKER Boarding Home for aged men and women; 24 hour super­

vision; Individual diets. Licensed by State of New Jersey. Reason* able ratei l!4 miles south ol Matawan light, Highway 24; oppo­site Whl'o Gato Inn. t a l l

FOR REN T HOUSES FOR SA LEPLEASANT, large furnished room,

located in Keyport, near bus line, railroad station and schools. Write Box A in care of this newspaper, and kindly include business refer­ence ____________ wjtlARNOLD HOUSE, 123 First St,

Keyport. C l e a n comfortable rooms for gentlemen, buses pass our door. Inquire on premises, wtfFURNISHED ROOM for woman,

kitchen privileges, all improve­ments., Inquire 196-lst St., Costa Court',1 Keyport, or call COlfax 4-6582. - wtfFURNISHED single rooms. Inquire

Crowley's Tavern, 197 Main St.,Keansburg. ■_____________ wjtfFURNISHED apartment. 3 rooms -and bath, all utilities supplied. $20 per week, couple preferred. Call OSborne 1-0763 or OSborne- 1-3463. . wjtf

6-0611.LOwell

jtf

IRONING

If you didn't iron those summer clothes in the fall now is the time. Will wash and iron dresses, blouses, stretch and launder all types of curtains. Call PArkway 1-3595. _____________________ wjtf

APARTMENT, 3 rooms and bath, $65 per month, must have infer­

ences.. Inquire 101 Florence Ave., Keyport or call COlfax 4-5430. wjl*KEANSBURG - Beautiful five-room

apartment completely rebuilt. New floors, large sunroom and foyer. Heat furnished. Adults, no cat, dogs. Near school, railroad, stores. Available now. $100 month. Write Box O in care of this news­paper, „ wjl

BETSY EOSS HOMES

BEFORE you Buy or sign a Con­tract for a house call us and com­

pare our General Contract price to others. We will build you a cus- . tom house, not a prefabricated house, on your lot or ours, to your specifications with no money down, 100% financing. New homes for sale presently under construction. Call COlfax 4~16?6 or 1137. wjUSIX ROOMS and bath, half brick,

half frame, 3- bedrooms,- large kitchen and large living room? All electric appliances and new plumb­ing. Large patio and garage?*alistorm windows. Lot 50 x 200. COlfax 4-3832.

Callwjl5

UNION BEACH, six roomsr"and'' . bath, half brick, half frame,* 3 bedrooms, large kitchen and-Farge- living room. All electrib kitchen arid large living room. All electric., appliances and new plumbing. Large patio and garage; also storm windows. Lot 50 x 200. Call COI- fax 4-3832._____________, wjl5

CAPITAL Plumbing and Heating.Repairs, Installation and alter­

ations. Licensed In Keyport-Matai- wan area. Call LOwell 6-155K. wj8

HEATING ; '........

Conversions of all types. Hot water, hot air, floor furnace -<» as low as $265 and up. No down payment. 36 months. • ;

' CENTRAL JERSEY^GAS APPLIANCE SERVICE LOWELt 6-2695..... "

wltfW ANTED TO BUY

W A L T B U Y S A N Y T H IN G

Furniture, tools, radios, bikes, guns. What have you to sell? Cali 787-0846. wjtfCEMETERY PLOT in Green Grove

cemetery. Write Box N in care of this newspaper. wl

Business OpportunitiesLIQUOR LICENSE for sale, Rari­

tan Township. Call COlfax 4-1913 or COlfax 4-9877. wjl

AUTOS FOR SA LE

SCHANCK .& SIHLERUSEDtARS

HWY 34 MATAWANLOWELL 6-4239

;_______________________________________ W]tt1053 BUICK Super Riviera, auto­

matic transmission, good condi­tion. Can be financed, $185. Call COlfax 4-1117 or LOwell 6-3339. wjtf1947 CHEVY. Call COlfax 4-0704

or HOpkins 2-0881. wj29'55 FORD, radio and heater, 2 door,

$300. Call COlfax 4-5981 after B p.m. wjl*

BE YOUR-OWN BOS?, running a G uIr SerVjce S ta tio n .r F ir s t rafd

Income. Choice high volume- sta­tion located in Matawan. No ex­perience necessary. Gulf will train you and. pay you while training: Financial help for qualified men. Mechanic preferred. Call HEmlock 6-6666. w|8

INSTRUCTIONPROFESSIONAL teacher for each

instrument, rental lee plus stu­dent discount deducted if instru­ment Is purchased. No contracts to si n. No insurance to pay. Tlie Music Spot, 42 Broad St., across from Village Television. Call COl­fax 4-5998. wjtf

Now Is. the time to advertise those unused articles for sale. A small ad in Uie classified column will turn them Into cash for you.

TWO bedroom bungalow, nice loca­tion, adults only, no pets. Inquire

115 Broadway, Keyport. w jlTWO ROOM furnished apartment,

linens and utensils furnished. Call 787-3631. ______________________wjlAPARTMENT, 2nd floor, 5 rooms

with shower and bath, 1 mile south of Matawan. Call after 6 p.m., LOweH 6-2825. wjl*MATAWAN, apartment, 3 rooms

and bath, heat and electric im eluded. Call LOwell 6-4300. wjtfONE_housekoepjng room, furnished,

next to bath, on bus line. 19 At­lantic St., Keyport. wlLARGE furnished room near sta­

tion, gentlemen preferred. Call COlfax 4-1547. ...... wjlAPARTMENT, East Keansburg, 4

‘rooms with gas stove and refrig-, erator. Will supply, .material: for decorating, rent $55. Call 787-5628or 787-1531.____________________ WjlFOUR ROOMS, unfurnished, tile

bath; also two room furnished apartment; one furnished sleeping room. Inquire 205 Main St., Key-port.___________________________wjlFOUR bedroom split, $145, no util­

ities; also Cape Cod apartment, $125, all utilities supplied, 1 year lease. Chateau Realty, 215 -Carr Ave., Keansburg. Call 787-5884,evenings Hllicrest 2-3082. wj 1HOUSE, newly decorated, 3 rooms,

elderly woman preferred. Write Box H in care of this newspaper.APAJVTMhr>JT, ‘ 5 rtjoms, -. adults

only, no pets', t Inquire 15i Main 5f., Keyport ’M A TA W A N A R E A , office space

with part time secretary and bookkeeper service if needed. Call LOwell 6-2222.________________, wj8FOUR ROOM n e w 1 yo decorated

bungalow on Rqutc 34, Matawan, large grounds, garage. $75 per month. Adults preferred. Call after 5 p.m., LOwell 6-0058. wjlLARGE furnished room, available

for gentleman. Call COlfax 4­7639 or inquire 129 Atlantic St., Keyport. _________ wjtf

MATAWAN house, 6 rooms, living room, dining room, 2 bedrooms,

tile kitchen and bath. Aluminum screens, storm windows and doors, awnings, full dry cellar, fenced in back yard. Shade trees and shrubs. Inquire 37 Johnson Ave., Matawan.

_______________ wjl*

HOUSE, 6 rooms, oil bumeif, % screens and Venetian blinds.’ $90

per month. Call after 5 p.m., COl­fax 4-41BQ. wjlBUNGALOW year around, 4 rooms,

steam heat, shower, hot water. 908 - 2nd St., Union Beach. In­quire 804 - 2nd St., Union Bcach or call COlfax 4-3406. wjl*

M i i M M l H B i a » i MI H I i M M l« M M M M a « a a a a a a a f M ^ M m m t | 0 M | t t t t |

B U S I N E S S S E R V I C E ST o p S oil

TOP SOIL FILL DIRT

FU EL oa & KEROSENE

KEANSBURG ICE & FUEL CO.. INC.

HWY 36 W. KEANSBURGKEANSBURG 787-0258 . Witt

TRUCKING _____ ' AND

EXCAVATINGLOADER DOZER SERVICE

Top Soil, Crushed Stone, R o a d Gravel and Fill Dirt.

ECKEL BROTHERS LOWELL 6-1845

BOX (14, OLD TENNENT RD. MORGANVILLE, N.’ J .

‘ > ' ~ ■_________________ wjtl

C o n tra c to rsCARPENTER aod building contrao

tor, J . O. Metager, Florence Ave., Keyport New home,, garage,, ill alteration, ind repair*. Call COl­fax 4-1159. WjU

THOMAS KEARNEY PLUMBING A HEATING

388 Maple Plica Keyport

Free Estimate* ' CO 4-07MFOUNDATIONS, concrete, brick,

stone, fireplaces and patios. Free estimates. Call COlfax 4-2626. w|15

DON’S TV SERVICEnr fait efficient radio and tctr -Inn service call LOwell 6-3844

■__ ;__ w]i

TV SERVICE LOWELL 6-1600

TEN EYCK RONSON INC MATAWAN ' 1 •

PERSONAL SERVICE 30 YRS.WjU

T o p Soil

ROAD MATERIAL

Blue stone, cinders, gravel, sand, grits, road gravel, fill dirt, top toll, etc.

BULLDOZING 4 BACKHOE SERVICE

Excavating for cellars, pools,, sep- tics, laterals, tanks, footings, pipe lines, grading, etd. Free estimates.

. ECKEL’S TRUCKING WOOLLEYTOWN RD. MORGANVILLE, N. J .

LOWELL 6-5707 ______________'________ w]tf

TOP SOIL

TRENCHING and bulldozing, ma­son sand, gravel, driveway gravel, blucstone, fill dirt, top soil.

DIETRICH BROS,NEW BRUNSWICK AVE. .

MATAWAN LOwell 6-3993'- 2192

_________ ■_______ ' w)tf

TOP SOIL - EXCAVATING

LANDSCAPING .Fill dirt, road gravel, cinders, sand and blue stone.

B & R TRUCKINGHARBOR ROAD, MORGANVILLE

LOWELL 6-0864

W. R10RDAN. T. CARRAGHER '• wjtf

S lip C o ve rsRICHARD’S U L C U K a 1 INC,

Slip coven and Draperies madt i> order. Your fabric or oun ai Ion price,. Payment)- arranged 534 Been SL, Hazlet COlfax t 1544. wtl

M a in te n a n c ePAINTING, carpentry, g l a z i n g .

lock repairs, sump pumps, roof­ing. Small Job specialists.

GENERAL SERVICES CO. LOwell 6-3107

_____________• wjtlMOVING, odd jobs, larga trees and

shrubbery removed, attics, cel­lars and yards cleaned Landscap­ing done. Call LOwell 6-3322 after t> P-m ._______________U p h o ls te r y

RICHARD’S DECORATING Chair bottoms, $5; sofa bottoms $10; expertly repaired at your home. 534 Beere SL, Hailet COI fax 4-1544. wU

CUSTOM Upholstery Shop. Now you can have your kitchen set,

living room set or car rcupholstcred at low prices. Time payments ar­ranged, For free estimates call COlfax 4-5955 or Inquire 441 Middle Road. Hazlet between 5 and 9 p.m. _______________________ v wjtfFURNn'URE repairing and uphol­

stering. All Fabrics and Plastics, A. Strang, 180 Washington Street, Keyport. Call COlfax 4-3668 be­tween' 12 and 1:30 p.m. or after 5 p.m. wjtf

M isc e lla n e o u sCONVERTIBLE TOPS

For all model cars. Lanya Upbol- Shop. 33 Little S t. Matawan.stery _____

Call LOwell 6-3016. '1«BARB SERVICES. Public ste- —nographer.. public, relations,. Em-- ployment Agency, publicity. 178 Broadway. Long Branch. C a l l CApital 2-4747. ; wjtf

A n tiq u e sOPPORTUNITY SHOP

ANTIQUES 'tVe buy'and sell Antique Furniture Bric-a-brac, China, Glass, Dolls Jew«lry, O; «(4HilF*teien (Umftg Th- Matthews, 115 Broadway key port. COlfax 4-1448. .. wjtl

VETERANS no down payment, F.H.A. financing available, 3 bed­

rooms, 1 story home, full dining room, $11,900. Sterling McCann, Real Estate, 253 Broad St.,- Key- COlfax 4-1376. wj|MATAWAN, split 4 bedrooms, l'/-j

baths, attached' breezeway and garage. G.I. and F.H.A. financing available, J16.500. Sterling McCann, Real Estate, 25J Broad St., Key- port. COlfax 4-1376. . wjlUNION BEACH, property on High­

way 36, 3vbedroom house needs repairs, 80 foot front 10(Uoot-deep, 2 lots facing Washington St. Near Church, schools and buses. Call COlfax 4 5608. wjjNEW 5 room ranch house in Haz-

let, hot water heat. *$15,900. Call COlfax 4-0768- ' ’ wjtfMATAWAN, Cape Cod, 3 bedrooms,

full cellar, garage. G.I. and F.H.A. financing available. $13,501: Sterling McCann, Real Estate, 253 Broad St., Keyport. COlfax 4-1370.: ' ----- w il"

WALKER & WALKEK REALTORS

Highway 35, Hailet COlfax 4-5212 Opeo 1 Days ,

VETERAN—NO DOWN •' CHARMfNG i Story-Colonial in ex­

cellent condition. Good location for commuter; walking distance to schools and shopping. Living room; formal dining room, large bright kKlrhPJV 1 b drxjoms and bath, base­ment) Has jusf Tften-newiydecor- ated;'low taxes. Price 912,900. -

Write Tor dataJog and map. r ................................................ wit

FOUR bedroom split level on 2/3 acre, near Middletown Shopping

C e n t e r . Assume approximately $15,000 4lA% V. A. mortgage, only $18,700. Chateau Realty, 215 Carr Ave., Keansburg. Call '787-5884, evening Hllicrest 2-3082. . v wjlBUNGALOW 2 bedrooms, f u l l

dining room, garage, hot water heat. Immediate possession, only $10,000. Sterling McCann. Real Estate, 253 Broad St., Keyport COlfax 4-1376. wjl5 ST. GEORGE PLACE, KEYPORT

EXCLUSIVE . Spacious 6 room home, 3 bedrooms (master 20x24) bath , separate dining room, 23 foot living room with fireplace, basement, garage, deep plot. Priced for quick sale $12,900. Yes we have the key. Elwood A. Armstrong Agency, 555 Prospect Ave., Little Silver. Call SHadyside 1-4500.______________

HELP WANTEDREGISTERED NURSE, 11 p.m. to

7 a.m. shift, five days. Call CO fax 4-2027. wjtfFEMALE for pen printing and as­

sembly; also experienced office personnel. Inquire Ballard Adver­tising. First St., Keyport. wjtfMECHANIC or mechanic's helpers

must have some mechanical ex­perience and toils. AppFy-in person, RollO'Transit Corp., 275 Broadway, Keyport. wjl5FEMALE to sell in store, also abil­

ity to type. Call LOwell 6-2277 wjl*

DENTAL ASSISTANT, part time. Write Box L in care of this news­

paper . ____________wjjFEMALE business solicitor for cof­

fee machine vending service ex* cellent commissions. Write includ­ing phone number to JPdst Office Box 332, Rod Bank. wjl*OPERATORS for Singer Sewing

Machines. A p p l y Rosewood Sportswear, 136 Main St., Matawan. ••_______ wj!5WAITRESS, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.,

Monday t h r u Friday. Apply Homestretch Diner, Highway 34, Holmdel. wjj

Situation' WantedWILL DO hand ironing in homer

8 years experience ih laundry. In­quire 29ff.VanDom St., Keyport or call COlfax 4-1905. wl*WILL wash tnd Iron all types ol —Cyrtajni; ..also stretch curtains in m> own home.' Prompt sendee. Call PArkway 1-3595. wjtlWOMAN loves children, will care

for a child or children weekly while mother works or evenings. Call 787-6593;- -....... wjl

PETSVACATION TIME »a coming.. Boarv

your dog at Roelbow KcnnrLe Individual pens , with run, lovin; care. fElsle Bowcrt, Old •'Marlboro Townshin f all HOpk;.\2-2895.

Page 3: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

Thursday, June 1, 1961 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Pag* Three

Democrats Order Holmdel Shakeup

Ii\ a series of moves aimed at strengthening the Holmdel Demo­cratic Club prior to the November general election, the organization's executive committee this week ap­proved the appointment of new of­ficers, voted to absorb the women’s club into the general membership and listed committee assignments for the election campaign, r Archie R- Price, club president

and township committee candidate, appointed several officers to fill un­expired terms until the club’s reg- ulai1 election in. November. Named and approved by the executive group were'James F . Hartnett, vice president; 'M rs. Ethel Smale, treasurer, and Mrs. Edward Ko- Jola, secretary..

At the same time, Mr. Price an­nounced the appointment of Ralph Schneider and Mayor James Ack­erson as c^-chairmen of an “ inten­sive door-to-door membership drive which will seek to re-enroll the mgny township Democrats into a new, aggressive Democratic Club."

- - Absorb Women’s Club ‘The executive'commlttee voted to

absorb the separate Holmdel Dem­ocratic Women's Club into the gen­eral membership in order that members of the women's group may play a greater role in political affairs of the township. Mrs. Smale, who is president of the- women’s' unit, will submit the proposal to the Democratic women at a meet­ing to be scheduled shortly.

M r.... Hartnett, campaign cha ir­m an , reported that the ciub is

“ m uch encouraged by the riumcr-"

oui offers of assistance and support which have come from both Dem­ocrats and Republicans In. every area of the township.” He ssid that the club intends to wage a clean campaign on many issues which will be at 6t&ke in the coming election. ♦

M r. Hartnett .named Herman Cruz to head up a businessman's fund-raising drive which will pre­cede a general solicitation of cam­paign contributions. He also named Mrs. Smale to serve as co-ordina­tor with the County Democratic Committee, which has expressed an interest in the local contest. Mem­bers of an election strategy com­mittee will be named within the next few weeks, he added. Tlie ex­ecutive group will meet again F r i­day, M r. Price announced. .

High school graduates—want to know how you can complete your service obligation through t b e Army Reserve . . » almost at ytiur convenience. Call HOpkins 2-209S. Ask for Manny Lamhut. __

$ £ P W m S P E & /Jtf23*

g p gD a lu x * L O - B O Y T V With H A N D C R A F T E D

. Tha Maybrooka Modal Q^736 Contemporary “ Lo* B o y " C o n s o le In.

ftNt gramadWainut color,ruRNifutt 8 r* ined Mahoganym t S o c p io r o r * ra * n « du tu n c Blond Oak color.

c h a s s i s

apo sq. in. rtctartiufar picture aree.£ rlnt«? Circuital No Pro-

£ ^ 2 ° n ,5hortcu**f Carefully fh| ^ 8?Id9/ 6d’ ^^iwnenta II 7 ^ • st#ned ru£Ked b***-C o s t* morito m aha, but gives you fewer

'service Head«ch«a| —

T R A D E Y O U R O L D T V NOW!

TEN EYCK RONSON i n c :

L O 6 -1 6 0 0U P P E R M A IN ST. M ATAW AN

Wont lo odd a flaw"wing lo /our homt? U f y* qvoto you on

. l/ia job, irffftoiif ©6{f* faftao.

LEAVE YOUR BUILDING & REMODELING UP TO USY o u c a n b e s u ra o f best r e s u l t s a t l o w e s t c o s t l

Whether you an build­ing a new tionu or improving or repairing on old om, our expert worimonship make! a big dlffenntt — In your fovorl Our prices moke sense, (oo. Cel our (ree ertimote on any project, largo or small.

Y{t build garagtb of., fached, or separata, w llh o r .w i t h o u t brffwaft. Gsf OVf f r t i srtfmote.

* FIN AN CIN G A RRA N G ED f -

NEIL M. BAXTERCO N S T R U C TIO N CO,

C O 4 -5 1 4 8 — 2 1 6 M id d le R o a d , H a z le t

S&L Will Offer Service Variety

A wide variety of financial serv­ices, including the first drive-in window, will be available to resi­dents of Holnidel Township when Shadow Lawn Savings and Loan Association opens its new Holmdel Village office June 17 at South and Main Sts. in the center of Homdel Village. --

John G . Lawley, president of the institution, said fait night the new office will offer borrower or saver a convenient place in which to han­dle ali financial transactions. In ad* dition to the savings and mortgage programs, a number of special services will be made available to the public. He said savings and mortgage payments could be han­dled at the drive-in window.

The association’s president said the savings program will Include regular savings accounts, insured by the Federal Savings and Loan

Insurance Corporation, « per­manent agency of the United States Government, *ave ■ by - mail serv­ice, and school savings programs.

Christmas Club M r. Lawley said the new office

will continue to operate a Christ* maj Club which costs the savj?r nothing and insures that each club member wili have the specified amount of money, with earned div> idends added, on hand in adequate time for the holiday season. For added convenience there also will be offered American Express Trav­

eler'! Chequei, money orden for the safe and economical payment of bills, and utility bill payment service for gas, water ahd tele­phone bill remittances. . •

Homo mortgage loan applications may be made at the new Shadow Lawn Savings' office for persons wishing to buy or build a home or to refinance an existing niortguge. Home improvement loans also will be available to residents who wish to undertake nwderniration pro« grams or make repairs on their homes. Shadow Lawn Savings and

Loan Association will provide up to {2500 (or this purpose, M r. Law* ley said.

A final Wpe of loan that may be obtained to meet an emergency situation is an account loan, Mr. Lawley concluded. He said this makes' it unnecessary for a saver to withdraw funds to meet an un* foreseen situation. Instead, tho mon­ey continues to earn dividends, and tho saver Is advanced tho funds needed up to DO per cunt of tho amount in his suviit^s account. Tho savings passbook is left with (he

association as collateral for the loan,

P e n a l i z e M o t o r i s t !

Four area motorists have had their driving privileges suspended by the State Division of Motor Ve­hicles- under tho ixiint system and mundalory speed njvor.utlnn plan* They include Richard Silvestrt*Ifcyport; Clmries J . N a p p J r * Keansburg; Michael T . Uarmyic* Holmdel, and ..William Riorda%Morganville. •____ - _

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • J

* FREE INSTALLATION S..A LU M IN U M c o m b i n a t i o n ”

S t o r m W i n d o w s 6*or$7700

• W E A T H E R S T R IP P E D• T R I P L E IN S E R TCan be cleanefl easily from Inside. M *d f ef all ALCOA Aluminum.Free installation fay -oar own skilled e rif lim m . (W i; SELL , A T ^ A D V ER T IS ED P R IC E S ). H UY D IR E C T —SHOWROOM O N LY! NO A SA LESM EN !"N O COMMISSIONS! These are quality windows at X lowest prices anywhere— Sh6p! Compare! Save! A

Genuine Alcoa . AluminumCombination

A DOOR

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Green Peas Our Pineit puillty

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K T . M A l M A IN S T , K EA N S D U K O Hon. • T w o . • W«4 . . f t u r i . , Ualll I P .M .

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Page 4: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

i » * r t in

Pag* Four 1HC MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. JThursday June 1, 1961

mESTABLISHED I US . . . .tclcpboM COlfu 4-MM — J . M AB EL BROWN, PUBUBflBK

PubUBhed every ThurwJiy at Kfyport, MonmouUiJtounlj, N. J . BY BROWN PUBLISHING AND PAINTING COMPANY4. Mabel Brown.- Editor — Geraldine V.' Brown. AiaocUU Editor

Tb« Mauwao Journal la a newspaper dt the people, by people. «nd for the people.*4 Its aim la to serve the beet Interests ol Matawan and tfcinJly; to present all uf the new* ol the week without bias or prejudiN■ v — ---------- .*— —------- u,e (ndienable rifht*’ their confidence.

IU’, m» present au ui iiiw « *» » «i «>» "c ,_ _ clean, sane, conservative manner, respecting the Inalienable ol our dUxeaa. and thereby maklnf Itsell worthy or tl**Second-class Postage Paid at Matawan. Mew Jersey/*Responsibility for typographical errors U limited to tbe eost of the epaoe

occupied by such error. ________ " ’ ;______ ~ - . .Subscription Rates Payable ln Advance - Ona Year (within state)

Three Months ........... —flix Month* „

N A T I O N A L E D I T O R I A L

One Year (outsJde state) .. One Year (outside U. S.) .

\ z S0017.00

i $ ( p K 0 T I ( j > N

T H U R S D A Y , J U N E 1, 1961

Tlie Public Hearing* T h e M a taw an T ow nship Com m ittee will meet M o n d a y

' evening to consider adoption of an amendment to the m unici­pal zoning ordinance w hich, if approved, will clear the w ay fo r the development of a 1300<-home planned com m unity by W illia m J . L e v it t jr . . .

T ru e , the ordinance permits downgrading of lot sizes In the township’s prim e residential zone but only w ith in the confines of the planned com m unity which must be constructed on a tract of at least 250 contiguous acres.

j In order to insure the developer w ill not take advantage o f the downgraded lot size of 7500 square feet y/hich is al­lowed as a m in im um , the township has stipulated in the ordi­nance that an average o f not more than 2.6 house m ay be b u ilt on an acre. T h e average lot size, therefore, w ill be more than one-third of an acre w ithin the planned com m unity.

W e urge residents to take advantage of the form of gov­ernm ent w hich requires public hearing on matters of im ­portance. I f yoU have any questions concerning the pro­posed com m unity, the meaning of the ordinance or the intent o f the township, yo u _have the opportun ity to be heard: M o n - d a y . * . . . . • ■ & .

: Our Attractive Park —W e ’d like to com plim ent.;officials-in M a taw an fo r the

excellent appearance of M em orial P a r k , m ade spick and span and bright fo r M em orial D a y . N e w flow er beds enhanced the appearance of the neatly cut grass shaded by1 sturdy trees,

- T h e borough has asked.that persons refrain from playingball in the p a rk or taking part in other activities-Which m ay iead.(K@itt to tram ple the flowers and shrubs. W e th in k this m in or restriction is w ell w orth*vJiiJe in v ie w of Uie appearance o f our park today. . • . . * .

' A n d wliile w e're about it , w h y shouldn’t_ a ll6 f‘ us'd<rouf best to maintain o u r own grounds so they present a welcome

-Scen e-ttLyisito rsJo Jhe borough?—J u s t a little pffortfoutdoors,- often Will suffice to maintain an a ttra ^w criip pe a ra n c e ^o f y o u r property,

A Word To Joe . ” _Joe Fixit has won quite a repu­

tation, at least in his own home, for being a pretty fair hand with

( the hammer, sow and paintbrush.‘ He sees to it that the plumbing

Works and the rcc room paneling ' have won the admiration of all the

neighbors, In his spare time Joe “ *n<l bl J ‘

. . . . . . h e - t a tLately Joe hps been Retting mc«-

cuts the grftss *nd blows, Vhc dual oil his lishlhfr tackle.

' sages Irpm the Front. Oftlee obdutf Ihe slate of the landscaping or

* maybe absence of same.After browsing through a favorite

leaflet, ‘‘ How to Landscape Your Home.” I'm inclined to slip old Joe A line or two of advice; Take it easy. Don't rush it. Plan ahead. Fools rush in . , . etc.

For Keeps Landscaping is pretty much for

keeps, as many a home owner dis­covers daily as he peers out from behind a dense forcstvt-rccshiding the outlook from his living room window.: . ■ .

The tree once was so little that it was in danger of being crewcut- ted with every pass of the lawn mower, Now it is a gloriously big adult, complete with nests of robins in her hair and a sturdy trunk good for many board feet of lum­ber

To all you Joe Fixits who can Icll when the water is getting deep,I can only soy stick jp your guns and don’ t be chivied into doing a hasty landscaping job.

Raymond'!’ . *KoHjobp;~who work­ed as a landscape designer before he came to Rutgers as ornamental horticulture specialist, wrote "How

' to Landscape Your Home" and drew the diagrams for it.

Make Right Choice Ills experience guides his pen

when he writes that many land­scape failures can be explained by poor choice of plants.

So if you need a plan for your do-it-yourself landscaping project get a copy of Lcaftct 97 from the usual placc, your county agricul* turol agent or Garden Reporter,

. College of Agriculture, Rutgers University, New Brunswick.

Then read all the words and make a rough plan of your own with your.cholce of plants to fit the corners, the entrance and whatnot.

After that, make U your business to study these plants and If Jhey hove /lowers, decldc whfcli volors you like. You can see them at

'-plant nurseries and parks and bo­tanical gardens where you’ll find them plainly labeled.

. Just Drowse There arc many such placcjr'to

see landscape plants under growing conditions, including the Rutgers

j Display Gardens, always open,\Vhat all this adds up to is a spe­

cial message to Joe Fixit that ho can clip and tack to the kitchen bulletin board. Shopping around and looking at shrubbery and trees Is so much more fun at this time of year than moving a lot of dirt around. - .

— HBut'be- sure"ioget~younjrder!n early sd your nurseryman can

. make hit delivery fcariy ncxt; fall.

MISS D IA N A W A Y T E

Penalize Drivers /Five bayshore area motorists had

their dr(vlng privileges suspended under the point system: and manda­tory sp^dirig programs of t h e

—State/TDiVfiion Of-M otor Vehicles. They include Michael E . Keegan, Old Bridge; 7 William H . Hetrick, Route' 3?, Keyport; Joseph Klacc- klewlcz, OMWrldge; Jam eS. Ger- roano, CUftytood Beach, and Afex* ander "X? Berio, - Keyport; ......................

Miss Diana Wnytc, 166 First St., Keyport, .who will be graduated from Keyport High School this year, will leave June 23 for the summer to enter a professional carccr in musical comedy in sum­mer stock.

' Miss Wayte will appear with sev­eral well-known Broadway stars at the Carousel Theater, Framing­ham, Mass.; Oakdale Musical Theater, Wallingford, Conn. and in Rhode Island. She will dance and sing in road company, productions of three Broadway shows, "The King and I ,” “ Destry" and “ The Merry Widow.1'

She is a member of two profes­sional performers' unions, Equity nnd Agva. For the past three sum* mer seasons, her dance instructor, Charles Walter, has made arrange­ments for Miss Wayte to dance with the Manhattan Rockets on ex­tensive tours throughout tho United States,

Two summers ago while on tour, Miss Wayte was selected to dance in and act with Jimmy Durante, Last summer she sang a solo while on tour and was captain of her dancing group. She bas danced and sung at hospitals, at Fort Mon­mouth and also in many benefit and charity shows throughout the New Jersey shofe area, in New York and Brooklyn.

Assistant TeacherMisS Wayte has studied dancing

for six years and is a/TOssistant teacher at Walter's School of Danc­ing, Keyport. She received operatic voice training for a year with Maes­tro Malone In Carnegie Hall, New York, and for two years studied voice tralplhg wllh Clinton Heyer, Matawan. -

In Keyport High School Miss Wayic has been an acrobat lor four years with the twirling squad. She also is a member of the staff of the school newspaper and partlci- pated in several concerts given by the band and twirlers. Site Is a member of-the Honor Society and. was chosen as the most talented in.Jier~class_She -attends...Grace Methodist Church, Union' Beach” and is soloist in the choir. .

Miss WAyte will dartce and sing Jn Keyport before she leaves for sum m er"stock ; m -th e -W a ltc r’sSchool of Dancipg annual revue to be hfcjd at Keyport High School auditorium on Tuesday and Wed­nesday nt 7:45 p.m. __ .....

Dinner SaturdayA fried chicken dinner will be

held Saturday at St. James A .M .E . Zion Church;* 100 Atlantic Ave., Malawan, from 12 o’clock noon un­til. 7 p.m. ; .............

CommunicationTq the Editor,

I would appreciate your printing this letter. .

Now that I have completed my term of office as President of the Matawan Township High School P a re n t-T e a c h e r Association, I would like to express publicly my th?hfa-10 'all members of our com­munity for their friendship and sup­port during ihis past year.

I am indebted to the press of our area, particularly to The Matawan Journal, for the extensive coverage given our activities. This has re-, suited In an increased attendance at our meetings, and has afforded our community the opportunity to be aware of and to participate in our various functions.

I am grateful also to the Mata­wan Grammar School p-TA and its president, Mrs. William Gade, and to the Cliffwood P-TA and its pres­ident, -^Mrs. Vinvent DuBeau, for theic splendid co-operation through­out‘ the year. i •

My. thanks are due the parents lor their general support nnd at­tendance and also for their finan­cial support, for contributions of food for our meetings and assist­ance in serving.

Our students also deserve my thanks, for the January program presented lo our members; -for the printing of publicity posters; for help in mlmeographinR our minutes nnd announcements; for cake bak-. ing for our meetings, for the music wc enjoyed at our meetings; for decorating for our student dance.

I wish to express my appreciation to ail of the faculty, principally for their devotion to our children, but also for their unstinting co-opera­tion with the P-TA, even when wc have added extra burdens to their busy lives.

In fact, co-operation was so abun­dant during this year that it would be easy for me to fail in making an adequate expression of my ap­preciation . 0

(Signed)Marguerite Marshall

(Mrs. Wiliiam F . Marshall) _ Past President, • *’ Matawan Townshib*— ‘

High School P-TA

Miss Betty Lou Pitney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Pitney, Ticetown Rd., Browntown, was given a farewell party by her co­workers of the Cabot Co., New Brunswick, Monday and presented with a gift. Miss Pitney is leaving by plane Sunday for a stay in Anchorage, Alaska.

The members of the Browntown 4-H Sodhoppers Ciub met at the home of James and William Arace, Route 51G, for their monthly shop meeting Wednesday. Walter Dud­ley, the shop leader, is assisted by James. Arace.

Mr. and Mrs. J . A . Towe, West Virginia, are visiting their son-in- law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Burkett and family, Sayre Woods South, for a week.

M r. and Mrs. Fred Gaub, Route' -516, are on a week’s automobile

trip through the New England States. ' .

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Patterson, Margaret St., entertained 10 guests Saturday evening for their dangh-. ter, Miss Joan Patterson, who was celebrating her 15th birthday. .

The members of ther Madispn Township School Band took part «rt the parade Sunday held by-, the American Legion in Old Bridge, and also on Memorial Day in the Laurence Harbor parade.

On Monday, A . Romeo, fourth grade teacher of the Browntown School, is planning to take his class to the Newark Museum and Plane­tarium.

Mrs. Beryl Burke’s mother has returned to her home in Pennsyl­vania after spending two weeks with her daughter and family.

Miss Susan Pitney, New- York, spent Sunday and Tuesday visiting

her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Pitney, Ticetown Rd.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gaub, Brown* town, entertained at a family party Sunday, evening in honor of their daughter, Mrs. Donald Nesslage, Spotswood, who was celebrating her birthday.J The Junior Youth Fellowship of the Community Church, Brown­town, met with the South Amboy Presbyterian ^Church Youth Fellow­ship Sunday evening. Box lunches were brought to the meeting and a film, “ God Is My Co-Pilot,” was presented.

Mi6s Celeste Wenzel and Miss Rose Wenzel, Route 516, spent Sat­urday evening as the guests of Miss Marie Gaub, Route 9.

Miss Mildred Green, Route 516. visited her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Rusself Green, Spring Valley Rd., Memorial Day. f

M a t a w a n T o w n s h ip M e n G ra n te d ^ C o u rt A w a r d s

Two MatawafrTownshlp men re­ceived^ total of $5000 for injuries nnd damages suffered in a three- car accident in Morgan in October I959rStanlcy-CrBltner; Matawan Rd.T^riyer'bf-bhercarr-received $4100 -while Max Modern, 287 Fur­man Rd., a passenger in the Bitncr car, got $900,

The judgments approved in the court cf Monmouth County Judjje Alton V. Evans; were against Mrs. Dorothy J . Martin, Clark, and Mrs, Theresa L . Spain, Kearny. A car driven by Mrs. Spain struck the rear of a car operated 1 by Mrs. Martin which in turn struck the Bitner vehicle.

Louis Drazln, Red Bank, repre­sented the two men; John Budd, Newark, was attorney for Mrs." Martin, while Frank P. Zimmer, Asbury Park, was counsel for Mrs. Spain. . .

Eig h te e n G r a d u a te s ’ O f Business School

Eighteen bayshore nrcn students of the New Brunswick Secretarial, Accounting and Prep School, will receive their diplomas and certifi­cates at the 29th nnnual graduation exemse scheduled tomorrow night at the Rdgcr Smith Hotel, New Brunswick.

Graduates listed, by the school arc Donald A . Bencibcnnlj Union Beach; Roberta T , Joros, Laur rcnce Harbor; John L . Lorenzo, Glilfwood; Elsie L . Marforio, Key­port; Dories E . Moser, Matawan; Anthony Solar, Cliffwood Beach.

Also Patricio M . Ayottc, Janet L . Campbell, Stella Fnlkoski, Anna R . Golnszewskl,, Anna E . Hofmeycr, Frieda Katz, Rosemary’ H . Lyons, Lorraine M, Northrup, Diane D. Piano, nnd Valerie E . Pieuce, all of Old Bridge.

Je w is h T h e o lo g ic a l D e g re e F o r L e v in e

Lee Israel Astor Levine, son of Rabbi IlarryY). H . Levine nnd Mrs. Levine, 47, Elizabeth St., Keyport, will be awarded the Degree of Bachelor of Hebrew Literature, at the G7th nnnual Commencement Exercises of The Jewish Theologi­cal Seminary of America. New York, Sunday at 3:30 p.m. The de­gree will be conferred by Teach­ers Institute, Seminary College of Jewish Studies. 1

As part of the joint academic program between the Seminary College of Jewish Studies and Col­umbia University, Mr. Levine also will be conferred the Degree of Bachelor of Arts from Columbia University this June. Mr. Levine is r. member of Ph( Beta Kappa.

H a r o ld P . H o lm e s Sr. Services O n S a tu r d a y

Harold P . Holmeis sr., 67, of 22 Center St., Matawan, died Tuesday, May 30, 1961, at the Veterans Hos­pital, East Orange.

M r. Holmes was born: in Key­port, son of the late Arthur and Elizabeth (Glasgaw) Holmes. ; He was a member of Raritan Post <23, American Legion, Keyport, and was a veteran of World War I.

Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Christine (Maguire) Holmes; six daughters, Mrs. Leon C. Hayes, St. Albans, N .Y .; Mrs._Robert An­thony, Jersey City; Mrs, Peter A l­modovar, Perth Amboy; Mrs. Her­man Gatson, Cliffwood; Mrs. Har­old Hunley and Mrs. Robert Shaw, Matawan; two sons; Harold P. Holmes jr ., Atlantic Highlands, and Paul Holmes, Rahway; a brother, Luther Holmes, Brooklyn, and 18 grandchildren.

Funeral services will be held Sat­urday afternoon at 2 p.m. In the Second Baptist Church, Matawan. The Rev. William J . Hutcheson, pastor, will officiate. Interment, under the direction of the Bedle Funeral Home, will be in Midway Green Cemetery, Matawan.

In stall O ffic e rs O f L e g io n A u x i l i a r y - —

Marlboro Township U n i t of American Legion 462 met at the legion hall recently, when Mrs. Anne Rinear, P o r t Monmouth, and M r s .'M . Marus,- Keyport, in­stalled the following officers for the coming year: Mrs. Holmes Lamberson, president; Mrs. 1.. Lore, vice president; Mrs. Ray­mond B r o w n , secretary; Mrs. Marie Frci, treasurer; Mrs. Martin Smith sr., chaplain; Mrs. Joseph LaMura, scrgeant-at-arms; Mrs. G . Davies, historian.-

The hall has been recently re­decorated by the legion and the auxiliary. Plans were mnde for the coming year^.ac».W\t\e«.' _ v.. The uuxlliary^piaced' a" wrVatif on the honor roll ut the Marlboro Township Central School on Sun< day afternoon at 2: 30 p.m. and also placed' one at the honor roll at the fair grounds on Old’ Tennent Rd. Refreshments yv e r c served back at the post home following these exercises.

Social SecurityQ—I have a physically handi­

capped daughter, age 30, and I have supported her since her fath­er died in 1939, 1 an^---* - widow G0-years-or-age, and c*pecr,to re­tire. Will my daughter be eligible fqrj any Social Security benefits at that time based on my work under Social Security when 1 reach 62- years-of-age?

A —Ycur daughter, if she was dis­abled before age 18, can become eligible to monthly bcnefit^under the disability provisions of the Soc­ial Security law when you are at least C2, tne retirement age forwomen, ; •______ ____ __ _

Q—I am thinking abouT retire­ment soon. How can I find out what my social security benefits will be,and tig you have pamphlets?___

A —For anyone planning ,rctiro- ment soon, our advice is-“ Inquire Before You Retire!” The social security office at -313 State St., Perth Amboy, will provide you with helpful information nnd free up-to- date pamphlets. Generally, we en­courage the filinj? of an application for social security benefits within three months of retirement,.and if you are considering stdpping your work Sept. 30, we suggest you visit our office as early us June.

A r e a Residents In S o u th A m b o y C h o ir .

Mozurt's Twelfth Mass in G Ma­jor will be presented by the choir of Christ Episcopal Church. South Amboy, Sunday .evening at 8 p.m. Clinton C. Heyer, Matawan, is choir director.

The soloists will be Robert Simp­son of the Westminster Choir Col­lege, Princeton, who has’ made a previous appearance in Handel's Messiah with this choir; Mrs. Shir­ley Egncr, Matawan, a member of the Choir qf Riverside Church, New York, a student of ,,its director; Richard Weagle; Mrs. Ernestine Crumin, St. Mark's Church, Keans­burg, a graduate of Westminster Choir College, . Princeton; Alfred LaMtiru, Morganville, bass soloist of the local choir for eight years,

Miss Helen Collins, Haddonfield, will be the accompanist. She also is. a graduate of Westminster Choir College and organist of the First Presbytjerian Church, Haddonfield.

A n n o u n c e Services A t T rin ity Church

The First Sunday after Trinity at Trinity Church (Episcopal), Mata­wan, morning prayer, litany and ante-communion will be at 8 a.m.; morning prayer and sermon, 10 a.m.; church school, 10 a.m.; even­song, 5 p.m.; youth study group, 5:30 p.m. At the 10 o’clock servicc there will be a servicc of admission for acolytes. The Rev. Carroll B. Hall, vicar, will be in charge.

Past Presidents’ dinner of Trin­ity Guild will be Monday at 8 p.m.

Holy Communion Tuesday will be at 8 a.m. *

Parish council will meet Wednes­day at 8 p.m. In the parish house.

A bake sale will be sponsored by the church school Saturday, June 10, hetween 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. it will be held In the parish house.

: whereby an exclusive broadcast­ing ban could be obtained for the township from the Federal- Com­munications Commission.

' Bid ProtestProtest by Jannarone Contract­

ing Co., Matawan, against an al­leged irregularity in the awarding of bids by the township committee on road work on Texas Rd. May 11 failed to avail that firm much advantage. ,

C. Floyd Wyckoff, township clerk, freely acknowledged that he had opened a bid from the Jannarone firm at the May 11 meeting but, by an oversight, had failed to read the Jannarone quotation when bids were being considered. As a re­sult, the contract for 1000 tons of hot patch went to the Manzo Con­tracting Co., at $8 per ton.. Mr. Wyckoff was instructed to read the overlooked bid. It was found the Jannarone figure was $7 per ton, making it the lower bid. The governing body went into executive session on the issue.'

When the conference was con­cluded, Frank Ratcliffe, chairman of roads, announced It still would be necessary to award the contract to Manzo'as ffie“ tiaulBge factor in the delivery of the patch to the work site made theirs the cheaper bid. With haulage, the Manzo fig­ure was quoted at $10.24 pej*. ton while the Jannarone figure..was quoted at $11 per ton.'*

Manzo Figure Low The Manzo firm- also gained-the.

bid for-J0Q(Ucm9_of three-fourths inch road stone Vt $2.90 per ton. The Jannarone bid was $3 per ton and there wos; a still higher bid.

Committeeman- Paul A.—Chester read off quotations on doing the revaluation and tax nup work. Six bids were for revising the map, 1

being paid in other'Middlesex- dis­tricts uncalled for. He charged these were all smaller districts than Madison, so there was no suitable basis for comparison.

Leonard B o o t h , transportation chairman, reported he was study* ing the comparable involved trans­portation system of the Freehold Regional High School and was meeting with a panel of citizens who had securcd transportation consultants to advise of the revi­sion of'the district's transportation system. . . . •

Lduis Horvath, health committee chairman, -denounced the ineffec­tual action taken thus far ait Madi­son Park School. He warned over­flowing toilets had forced- closing of the school one day this week.

Vote Slated. (continued from page one)

other vote will be heId_OTonday to determine whether a board of esti­mate shall be created and given authority to estimate and appropri­ate school funds.

Under the law, consolidated 5Chool“ districtB~with-a-population of more than 10,000, may create a board of estimate. Voters, Monday, however,, will have the option of establishing the estimate board or of, leaving budget making the prov­ince of the school board as has been done in the past. I t the voters approve the creationof a board of estimate, it Will'be comprised of six members includ­ing mayors of both communities, a member of tho township com- mlttee.and the borough council; the president and one . other member of the school board.

The two mayors and the schoolfor revaluation and three for a board president would be manda-

B a p tis t G r o u p Plans F u n D a y O n S e p t. 1 6

The Ladies Aid Socicty of the First Baptist Church, Matawan, is pl.nnning.to hold a Fun Day on Sat­urday, Sept. 16, starling at 9:30 a^m. on the church grounds, Main Sc., Matawan, ..

Events of.the day will include a fish pond, games, wiilfe elephant,' refreshment booth, also fancy and jewelry tables, and a homemade food booth.

i * Pollution

combined job. Mr. Chester stated there would be 1730 items on the tax map and that the lowest figure was $12,000. Frank Foss, Keyport, the township engineer, submitted a $25,000 bid. Bids ranged all the way up to $40,000.

The bids are expected to come up for action tomorrow night. Mr. Chester, was in favor ot holding .them:for-the June 8 meeting, but Committeeman Joseph A . Lanzaro. demanded action at an earlier date. <

“ We’ ve been shifting this .from meeting to meeting," he said, "Only this week we were severely criticized by the (Monmouth Coun­ty Board of Taxation) tax board for not starting this program soon­er. We must do something.”

One Junior High(continued from page one) . ■

will be an included proposal to use some of the $2,225,000 to effect pur­chase of the site for the second junior high. The Farrington tract Is under option.

One High School Cheaper . The building chairman submit--

ted estimates to show it would cost $3,100,0b0 for two 500-pupil high schools as against the $2,225,900 for one 1000 pupil junior high school. Mr. Kordzinski commented 'that the board was not in n position to ,erect two 500-pupil buildings in a design that could be added to easi­ly in the future because their stort­ing costs would be in excess of what the stnte will allow.

Harold Leder, Westfield, was hired at $7000 to fill, the post of board secretary made vacant by the deatb of Clarcncc D . McHenry in December, .John Partridge jr., a board member, has been acting secretary in the interim, but he has complaincd repeatedly to the board of the need to fill the office without delay.

M r. Ledcr is a graduate of Rut­gers and holds a Master's Degree in Education from Montclair State College. He also holds a law de­gree and is a teacher in Irvington High School. He will take office on a full-time basis soon as ths school closes. •

Approve Salary Guide On the motion of Mrs. Catherine

Mollis the board approved a salaiy guide for non-professional person­nel in the system and rehired the clerical staff in the system. The salary guide Is based on regular annual increments over 12 years.

The assistant secretary to the board starts at $3800 and rises to a maximum* of $6200 in $200 in­crements; secretaries go from $3100 to $5500; clerks from $2650 to $4450,in $150 Increments; executive secretary, $3200 to $5600 at $200 in­crements; area principal secretar­ies at $2650 to $4650 in $150 incre­ments and general clerks f r o m $2350 to $3550 and $100 increments.

The guide also allows two weeks vacation after one year of employ­ment and three weeks after 10 years; 10 days of sick leave; two days for personal leave; three days leave for a death In the family and $1.50 an hour wage for part­time clerks. . . .

CriticliesPresldent__H erbertljorddn,CenffalTa rfc,rc-~

tory members of the board of esti­mate. The township committee member would be elected by the committee itself and. the council member would be named by a vote of the borough council. The school board also would elect its represen­tative who would serve with the president. : •

Woman Killed On(continued from page one)

Ship when he saw the dog fn the road. He said he did not see the woman.

iMr. McGhee explained thaL. he swerved to the right-lo avoid hit­ting the dog but struck Mrs. Clan-’cy. • ••• . . . - -Mrs. Clancy was taken to thfe hospital by the Laurence Harbor First Aid SqLad. The dog also was injured and taken to the Matawan Animal Hospital on Route 516. Pa­trolman William Barry investigat­ed.

' Native Of IrelandMrs Clancy’s husband, - James,,

said that Thursday night he was in New York making pfeparations fpr the wedding of a nephew,-MrSf Clancy was born In Ireland and had lived in Madison Township 21 years. She also leaves two sons, Dennis and John, and a daughter, Miss Eileen, all at home.

Mrs. Clancy was tlie third pedes­trian killed In Madison Township this year. Two weeks ago Janies Arkln, 81-year-old Laurence Harbor man, was killed on Route 35. On Apr, 14, five-year-old Marie Brac­kett was killed as she played in froat of her Sayre Wood;:,,-South home. 1

N E W S N O T E : “ T h e U n io n Beach B o ro ugh Council T h u rsd ay night directed the B o ro u g h C le r k to advertise Ea st P o in t fo r sale for developm ent as a. m a rin a .’

* I N V E S T M E N T O P P O R T U N I T Y ,W e are pleased to announce the offering to discriminating

clientele of a beautiful, lush peninsula of 13 4 acres, its white sandy shores caressed by the g e n t^ sparkling blue waters o f R a rita n B a y . Ide ally suited fo r a m a rin a , criss-crossed w ith quietly running lagoons. S ite a paradise f o r w eekend rendez­vous by yachtsmen, theatrical stars, in dustrial giants and H a r ­r y Ross. T lie fabulous La n g a n a Beach occupies the eastern portion of the prope rty. T h e tract abounds w ith relics o f the fabled and rom antic Le n a p e Indians who tro d the nar­ro w , scenic paths to the shore to trade w ive s and trinkets. Fo rtu n a te beachcombers have fo und trace-s of th e ir advanced civilization, arrow heads, bedsprings, overstuffed chairs, auto­mobile tires, etc. W ill be offered at auction. T lie successful bidder should be ready to begin construction w ith in 90 days o f signing. A modest assurance bond of $2,000,000 is required. J . D . M urchison please take notice. ~T H E B I G S P E N D E R S . . . T h e o n ly tiling tha t multiplies faster than rabbits is a beaurocracy. . , . The hardest thing to p lay is second fiddle . . . O n the gloom y side, U . S . gov­ernm ent programs w hich already have been authorized will cost the taxpayers a trillion dollars in th e n e xt 40 years. A trillio n , im case y o u ’re interested in seeLng it in figures, is a thousand billion, $1,000,000,000,000 . . , T 'lia t’s probably w h y nobody gets excited w hen the K e y p o r t iricter reader m a ke s' a q u arte rly report showing 5,000,000 .cubic feet of w ater !s lost somewhere . . . W h y not call fo r a spot check of meters throughout the io ro u g h ? A f t e r a ll,-w e ’r e losing 40 per cent of w h a t we should earn on w a te r'a n d that ain’t hay . . . B y the w a y ,“ let’s have a contest to nam e tlie proposed L e v itt developm ent in M a taw an T o w n s h ip . J u s t send in yo iir sug­gestion and w e’ll m ake sure the tow nship officials receive them . . . Som e suggestions . . . W a te rsville . . . Bonnem aburg . . . K o w a lc ity . . .

T A K E T O T H E H I L L S . . .. Y o u can keep y o u r long green b ut I ’ll take the Chartreuses any d a y . , , I t seems that our N e w F ro n tie r T rea surer of th e U . S ., M i s . E lin o r R . S m ith w ould like the color of m oney changed. Sh e w o u ld like e very­thing under $500 and higher than a b u c k printed in dis­tinguished-colors to m ake the bills easi«r to id e n tify . , . F r .’instance, the b ill co uld.be blue,.'den oting p o ssib ly,'the mood o f one receiving it In;change. T h e fi-ve-doJlar bill would be printed in a beautiful apricot shade, $20 bills could be m au ve and a century note w ould be a w ild chartreuse . . . O r perhaps we can-go to the m o d e m , fh fee a n d fo u r color print­ing jo b on o u r tired old m oney . . . Ju s t th in k howvbUT bills w o u ld look in glorious, livin g co lo r.- B a n k s cdQld supply spectrums f o r everyone. -T h e pot of gald . w ould be the rain­bow and.w e could all stop lo okm g for. it. JLatlies_could-maleh their accessories to th e b ills.th ey tote around fo r mad money . . . X h e richer the shade, the m ore adequate the finances.W o u ]d save a la Lo tg ig o lo s Jrp m disappointm ent. ......O N E G O O D T U R N . . . W estern Ele c tric C o m p an y, which seems to m ake it a habit to provide fin e r, things fo r people’s conscience, is being helped out of a difficult problem this w eek b y three local youngsters. Western Ele ctric found itself stuck w ith thousands o f goldfish ■ occupying a waterfilled foundation w hich \vas wanted fo r a building site. T h e fish were placed there to-eat u p mosquitoes before th e y hatched but the y started hatching themselves un til, th e y num bered about 3000. W hen the w ord ot the company's predicament spread, our little volunteers o ffe re iia ita ke ^ s o n ^ o i-'.th e vfish olf the ir h a nds.‘ A s a.'restrft; Fre<i Sipgfer, 99 F lo fe n c e ^ V e .; K e y p o rt, is receiving 10 "goldfish; and C athe rine George+and her sister are going to take four fish. T h e young ladies live at A p p le to n D r . , H a zle t. W e ll that's 14 a n d W estern Ele ctric - wants you to know that e ve ry bit helps.

H A I L T O T H E C H I E F . . . I f Lo u Ls C oIIichio was the prom oter e ye rybo dy thought he was he w o u ld h a ve charged admission to the inauguration ceremonies held i.i\ the K e an s­burg pub lic Schools.*"The stage was replete w ith loud speak­ers, wire recorders, the honored guests’ v cry attractive ladies and oodles o f little children . , . P a r t I lik e d best was when the invocation was pronounced b y the R e v . E d w a r d A . C o r ­riga n of S t. A n n ’s C h u rc h . T h e good fa the r asked for guid­ance “ fo r o u r new m ayo r and councilm an . . . ” and then he paused and in a lilting Ijrish voice that tw inkle d w ith good hum o r turned to the council and added, ''an d you too M a rty Lo h s e n .” . . . B y the w ay M a y o r CoIIichio has emphatically denied that council w ill meet in his swiinming pool on those hot, s u ltry, sum m er'nights . ; ." W h y not? I f M a r t y goes to any sessions there, he’ d better w ear his w a te r wings.

L o o k i n g B a c k w a r d

IU m a A b «vt Folks And Things W * K n sw In T b » L o a f A f *

(continued-from page one) a radio in tho basement o t Marl*boro Fire House synchronized with .................................... „ _____fire signals. The committee also I tuatly gets $13,700, And Mr. Gordon ■^??-Jl?Hj^-lQ„P^rch°se equipment [ found the allusion to lesser salaries

verted to the statement by Wiiliam Kerr, board president,- criticizing the hiring of William J . Sample anew as superintendent at a $1J,- 500 salary. Mr. Gordon claimed to'know thct a reference by Mr. Kerr to the superintendent of Perth Amboy Schools getting only $10,700 n year was a mistake, that.the sup­erintendent in Perth.,Amboy ac-

Nineteen Named(continued from page one)

tion, the law provides that a suc­cessful applicant must have been a resident for a period of not less than 12 months immediately pre­ceding the date of his application, that he must be graduated from high school within a period not greater than one year from the date of his application and must have demonstrated high moral character, good citizenship, and dedication,, to American Ideals. Al­so, he must enroll in an approved college as a full-time student.

Payment will be made to stu­dents after registration in the fall when they secure from the‘ regis­trars of the colleges they are at­tending official statements of their enrollment as full-time students Awards are distributed equally ov­er the terms of the academic year.

Student RecipientsBayshore are»» students awarded

scholarships were'G. Gordon Behn 153 Forest Ave., Keansburg; Philip C. Cummings, M Liberty P I., West Keansburg; John H. Iiuzeta, 31 Cornell D r.,’ Hazlet; Albert 1'urim- sky. 428 Aumack Ave., Union Beach,

Also Rose Marie Wallace. Cliff­wood A ve ., Cliffiyood; Jane C Wat- kinson, 51-Highland B lvd .; Keans-" burg; Muriel R . Wilson, 137 First St., Keyport; Peter Mariolis, 211 Broadway, Keyport; John F. Mcn- zel, Ro uteJ5, Cliffwood; Kenneth" MUrray.' S^TTieresa^Ave., Keyport^Judith A . Norberg, 117 Laurelhurst D r., Keyport.

Also Raymond Rainvilic, II Lo­cust Grove P k.. Keyport; Robert G . Smith, 89 West Prospect Ave., Keyport; Michael Catherwobd. RD, Matawan; Judith M . Davis, 13 Ev* erly St.. Old Bridge; Brian J . Sef- cik, 251 Austin Ave., Old Bridge; Margaret Szymkowski, Old Bridge, and Linda G . Towney, Laurence Harbor. ' *

Forty-Five Years Ago (Issue Thursday, June 1, 1916) Work on the new steel draw­

bridge over Matawan Creek near Keyport is progressing rapidly, a number of the girders having been placed on the abutments the past week. The lift will be constructed with the material in on upright position, which naturally will take longer to complete thaii if the work could be done with the ma­terial placed horizontally across the crcek. .

From Browntown comes the prize egg story. Three hens were discovered under a corn crib on a farm there the other day and under them were forty-seven eggs. The hens had stolen their nests and were grouped together something in the shape of a triangle. Just now long they haVe been setting is not knoivn, neither has it been learned how many chicks, if any, have been'fiatched out by either of them. An average of nearly sixteen eggs to a hen, is a larger number than the housewife would try to have hatched out at one setting if she had ’ ‘sef* the hens. . :

Twelve pupils of Madison_Town- ship this week are taking the Stater examinations Tor the eighth year.

Miss Edith Eskescn returned yes­terday with her father, B. K. Es ­kescn. from the Walnut Lane School far Girls, Germantown, Philadelphia, where she has been a student the past four yearsi MissEskesen had the hottor~of' betocTvaledictorian of her class and took a prominent part in the com­mencement . exercises the -oastweek........

On Tucsday of lasrw^lTcviacircewas taken in New Brunswick be­fore Judge J . Kearney Rice acting as a.. Supreme Court Commission relative to the charge that the Township Committee of Madison had illegally Ordered work Roads, etc., done. ,

M y, the autos that passed through town on Memorial Day! At time* they would go along in bunche* ol fifty to seventy-five in a row with-

would be a few minutes’ respite before another lot appeared. A t­one time fully 300-cars'Were held up by the lowered gates at the sta­tion, when apparently there would have been no, need for it, had the train stopped before reaching the ., crossing.

Strawberries hereabouts are rip- eningvery slow and it will be a week or iraore before any local berries will be on sale.

It is said the Keyport afternoon1, freight boat to New York will start running on June 12, but ft fi- doubtful if it will begin until the latter part of that weekr f

The Malawan Graded School will close for th« summer on June 15th.

Twelve hundred gallons of gaso« Jene were used from the Bushness Garage tajnk from Saturday to Wednesday morning.

Thirty Years Ago (Issue Friday, May 29, 193!)A t the meeting of the Borough

Council Tuesday night an ordin­ance was introduced forbidding tho use of motor boats on the lakes in Matawan a_rid providing, for a fine of $10 for -any offense of the new ' ordinance which will become effec­tive July l_ ■

Clifrwood Bcach will open for the 1931 season Memorial Day. One feature of Cliffwood Beach is its swimming pool, which has receiv­ed favorable comment on its light­ing at night. This ha* met a real nced.,Jhcr<»-aro-inany-people- oc- - cupied during the daylight hour* whose only leisure hours are in theevening. - .......- «

The Board of Education met In a snort sessiciL,Wednesday night to__?i!scu! s insurance sUuation oo

£ ^ rcc school buildings in th* school district which are consider­ed to be under insured. A t present there is $175,000 insurance on the

i buildings mrhile the appraised valii- i ,°f the- three school properties, including land, js $400,000;

John Eggleston reports that weak a-r, pJ ti fu 1 down in Peconio

Bay. with his hook and line, y e * terday, he .caught 1 IB weighingin fcve nrtaute, and then ,h „ e . " 2 '

Page 5: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

Thursday, June 1, 1961 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Page FJv*

Shower Honors Margaret Read

Miss Margaret Anne Read, Mid­dletown, formerly ot Matawan, was the guest of honor Friday evening at a surprise bridal shower at the home of Mrs. John. L . Chamberlain, Madison Township, given by Mrs. vRobcrt Bcringer, Trenton, and Mrs. Donald Nesslage, Spotswood, mem­bers of the bridal party.

Miss Read vwJJ become the bride . of Jackson Lewis Hammitt, III, on . Saturday, June 24, in Christ Episco­

pal Church; South Amboy.A pink wedding-cake was t h e

centerpiece of Che table from which buffet supper was served. Assist* inc the hostesses were Mrs. Fred­erick Gaub, Old B r i d g e ; Mrs. Thomas Anderson, Matawan; Mrs. A . Edgar Palm, Middletown, and Mrs. Chamberlain.

Attending were Mrs. J . Franklin Dominick, Mrs. Henry Kdegler, Mrs. Donald W.- Robinson, Mrs. Elmore Kattner, Mrs. Russell A . Stetler, Mrs. Karl Heuser, Mrs. Gerard A- Devlin, Mrs. Frederick

~TC. Dederick, Mrs. CharlesSpring- , horn. Miss Anne Chamberlain, and Mrs. David Bruce, all. of Matawan; Mrs. Theodore E . Boyd jr., and Mrs. Peter A . Read, Middletown; Mra: Donald Beam, Mrs. Harry Petty, Mrs. William Bouchard, Mrs. Joseph E . Plppett, South Amboy; Mrs. Robert H . Veale, Parlin; Mrs. Charles ; .E . Hunt, Brielle; Mrs. Thomas Curry, Bordentown, and Mrs. Charles Logg, Princeton.

— Gifts were-sent by Mrs. J . Lewis Hammitt, Mrs. Thomas English,

.Mr^.George I. Hahn, Mrs. William C , Ludi, Mrs. ‘ Dwight Qatwood, Mrs. . R a l p h W. Herrick, Mrs. Robert B . .. R e x, Mrs. George Doublier, and Mrs. Rensselaer L . Cartan.

Wins Essay Contest Al Marlboro

" So/e June 16-17A rummage sale wil! be held by

the aukillary of ihe Morganville In­dependent Volunteer Fire Co. at the fire housfe, Route 79, on June 16 from,3-to 9 p.m. and June 17 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

DIRECT IM PORT SALE!

K E Y P O R T J E W E L E R S29 W. Front St, — CO 4-2008

Miss Elvira Castello, Matawaa, (left), a head clerk at the New Jersey State Hospital at Marlboro, Is showiv accepting a $25 United States Savings Bond from Mrs. Katharine E . White, Red Bonk, (rifthtj, president o! the hospital's Board of Managers, for submitting the best entry In an essay contest recently conducted at Marlboro to celebrate the hospital's 30th anniversary (1931*1961) and Mental Health Week.

Tlit essay contest was on the subject ‘-My-Concept of What MarU boro hag Accomplished During its First 30 Years," and was open to both employees and patients at Jhc hospital. In addition to Miss Cas- tcllo's award, honorable mention awards were given to Virginia Bailey, Westfield, and the Rev. John II. Fowler, Lincroft.

Red Cross Instructor Speaks Tt> P - T A G r o u p

John DiGiovnnni, American Red Cross instructor and captain of the Laurence Harbor First Aid and Safety Squad,,was the guest speak­er at the recent meeting of the Parent and Family Life Education Committee of the Laurence Harbor- Cliffwood Beach ParentTeacher Association, at the home of Mrs. Tod Krumenakerr Bayview Dr., Laurence Harbor. -

He explained emergency first aid methods and showed and explained the uses of the resuscitators tor mouth-to-mouth artificial respira tion. ,

High school graduates—want to know how you can complete your service obligation through t h e Arniy Reserve . . . aImost_at your convenience. ‘Call HOpkins 2-2095.

Dr. Mark B. Muscarella O p to m e tris t

E Y E S E X A M I N E D

P R O FES S IO N A L ARTS B U ILD IN G

30 Main Street — Keyport CO 4-0999

Tht Specialized Job of Savingt and Loan Aaociatloni

G I V E Y O U R S E L F A L IF T

REFINANCE!W h e n home loan payments weigh too heavily on your income, it's time to ta lk w ith one cf our loan counselors, lie ’ll show you how re­financing here can reduce m onthly paym ents: —put y o u r budjj-eT back in shape, . '- T a k e the step tha t gives you a l i f t . A s k about our refinancing p/an today.

Liberal Building & Loan Association1 5 9 M a i n S l r e e l — T . I a l a w a ^

M b c r F o d p r o m o a n Bbnk Systern '

- AJ '

X * CULTURED PEARLS

$ 1 7 5 0Single strand

graduated pearls

W ith 1 4 K g o ld clasps a t u n u s u a l s a v in g s

G i f t B o x e d

/fere's the most exciting news abouf pearls we’ve had in years! Beautiful knotted single strands in your, choice ol graduated or uniform site pearls, each incredibly- low priced. Complete with' U K gold clasps.

Uniform Pcnrll SII.X. Price* plilJ faterai Ut

K E Y P O R T JE W E L E R S2 9 W . F ro n t S t, K e y p o rt

C O 4 ,2 0 0 8 O p e n M o n . a n d F r i. E v e s , 'til 9

In itia te d A s M e m b e r O f D e lta X i C h a p t e r .......

Miss. Margaret Anne Read, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Read, 18 Stork Ct., Middletown, formerly of Malawan, was initiated Saturday into Delta X i Chapter of Kappa Delta Pi national honor society in education at Kirkpatrick Chapel, Rutgers University, New. Brunswick. *

Thirty-two sludciits of the Grad- Qatc School of Education we/e wel­comed as members. M f, and Mrs. Read attended the initiation service and the dinner, which followed at the Rutgers Commons, with John Ciardi as the speaker. .

A t Colorado College ,Miss Barbara Lear Savage,-

daughter of M r, and Mrs. Thomas G . Savage, Box 78-M.R. 1, Mprgan- ville, presently-is attending Color* odo Woman's College in Denver, Col., where she is a member of the - froshman class. Miss - Savage is- majoring-in 4iberal_iirts____ ^

g ee triples

BlUt STAMPSredeemable for F R E E

G I F T S !

P O LIN G T E X A C O 74 Bethany Road

Hatlet -

give TRIPLE-S nu t STAMPS

redeemable fof F R E E G I F T S !

H I L L T O P C ITIES S E R V IC E

Holmdel and Bethany Roads

Hazlet

V A N S AGENCYMafnwan - L O t-1831

/ - 4 M S U R A N C E

M O R T G A G E S

A N D B O N D S

Cub Pack 66 Ends Meetings

Cub Pack 66, sponsored by the Matawan Grammar School Parent- Teacher. Association, held its final meeting of lhc,season Thursday at the Cliffwood t Memorial School, Cliffwood. The opening ceremony was conducted by Den 6 with Philip Cherry, Victor ArmcUino and John Geran taking part.

After an inspection report of un­iform and appearance of avery Cub Scout present, the following an­nouncements were made by Mrs. Thomas Siddons, cubmaster; Fly­ing K ilt Derby held Saturday In Holmdel ahd Cub Scouts march in Matawan Memorial Day parade on Tuesday,

Den 1 presented a skit,'“ An Old Indian Tale," with Howard Selin* ger, Earl Siddons, Donald Bardie, David Kaminsky and William Kee­gan taking part. The attendance award was presented to Den 5. Cubs presented their Webelos bad­ges in the Webelos ceremony were Ralph Bedle, Peter Bentley and Robert Schneider. In the kite judg* ing, Gary Giblock won a prize for the largest kite arid Leonard Stokes, for the smallest.

Awards PresentedThe following award? were pre­

sented:- Edward Black,' Raymond Carroll, Mrs. Olivet* Leifcste, Mich­ael Testa, Richard Brown and Mrs. Leonard Stokes, service star; Jack Shepherd, Carlo Vinci, denner; Jos­eph £iano, Henry Esposito and John Geran, assistant denner; Earl Sid­dons, lion, gold arrow, denner; Philip Cherry, wolf,^denner; Rob­ert Bentley, wolf; Randolph Bar­rett, fiold and silver arrows, serv­ice -star.

Also Philip Armellino, bobcat; HdwaVd Selingej* and Donald Hur* die, lion, gold a r r o w ; Richard Manvilleund Gary Giblock; denner, assistant dcnnct^Mlehael Ingram, wolf; William QulrcQ, two silver arrows, service star; Ceoniird Sto­kes, ’ sifter arrow, anniversary awurd; Frank Manzo, gold anrow; Robert Schneider, lion, two (gold arrows, and Edward Pearson, auar, gold arrow, service star.

The film, “ From This Land," bjf' Firestone was presented. The clos­ing ceremony was conducted -by Richard-Manville, Gary Giblock, Richard Giblock, Leonard Stokes. Alan Longstreet, Robert Muller and Robert Williams* Den . 8 ,

B a y v ie w C hu rch . Schedule F o r W e e k— Junior and youth, choirs .eL.tfio B a-y-v-le w_Presbyierian_Churcli». Cliffwood Beach, will rehearse to­day at 6:45 p.m .; senior choir re­hearsal, 7:30 p.hi.

Church school classes meet Siin* day at 9:30 a.m.; morning worship 9:30 and 11 a.m. when the Rev. Francis Osterstock, pastor, will speak on ‘ 'Spirit, Son and Father.1* Music wilt be by Uie.senior choir nt the 11 o’ clock service nnd the Sacrament of Infant Baptism will be administered. '

Brownie Troop meets Tuesday at 3 p.m.; Boy Scout nnd Explorers, 7 p.m. :

(Jirl Seoul, Troop meots Wednes­day at 3 p.m.; Dlblo Study group, 7:30 p.m. '

M a ta w a n P e rso n a ! Item sN«W| Ol V.u And Yiiui Kamil, u A ,pr.«'.tcr Al Ao> rim. ,

i. Jolin I . OfBrlen, c.. ciuertolnad Sat- i [of Ihelr daughter.

H A Z L E T ESSO S ER V IC E SlonoHond and

Highway 36 Hmlct

gIve TRIPLES W STAMPS;,

redeemable for F R E E V’ G I F T S / ?

BROWNS ESSO Itouto 34 and

Morristown Hoad Checscijuake

* - - . w l y p o l , c y \ ^

a 'o w y o u r whole fam ily can be covcrcd by .one life insurance po licy wi t h one lo,w prem ium , payable at convenient intervals.

A n d • • ' • • • • ■ev ery n ew a r r iv a l is a u to m a tic a lly in c lu d ed ’

' after age 15 d a y s —-at no in r r iw c in premium.

SEEY O U R P R U D E N T I A L A G E N T

- . abou ’P R U D E N T I A L ’ S F A M I L Y P O L I C Y

. OR M AIL THIS C O U PO N ----------- -— iT o — B o x N o . 5 - M id d le to w n , N . J .

YPltauUllmt mrc about I ’luJnitiql's Family Policy, jN A M E - — A D D R E S S -

. . . P H O N E -

RThe Prudential Insurant* Company of America- m Hi I*ihm« n» fwf ,

R E D B A N K D IS T R IC T .........M I D D L E T O W N , N . J . -

M r. and Mrs. Donald Collins. Lake Park, Fia ., were Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. L . Car­tan. Mrs. Collins is a former Mata­wan resident.

Mr. and Mrs. Rolph W. Herrick are spending several days ut their summer home in Pine Grove, Conn

Mrs. Grace DeMont, Mnln is a patient in IliverAJuw Hospital7

Mrs. Lydia Walling entertained at dinner Sunday when her guests were Mr. and Mrs. \tyilliam C.' liidi and children, William and Mary Barbara, Summit, and Miss Mar­garet Rogan, Metuchen.

Mrs. Conover Burlew returned to her home in Riverton on Thursday after a visit with her sister, Miss Irene Bolte.

M r . ' and Mrs. Walter Swanson were guests for several days of Mr. and Mrs. D . E . Swanson, St. Mary's, Pa,, who with Mr. and Mrs. Swanson, went on a trip to Niagara Falls, N .Y .

Mr.' and Mrs; - Julius - Flncken, Walllngfprd, Pa., were Thursday overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs. George L . Doublier.

M r. and Mrs* John J . Barrett en­tertained Friday orternoon for.their son who was celebrating his even< th birthday,. The guests were Rob- "erl WigficH, Mark Wojcik, Skippy Deitz, Thomas, John and Mary Jane Barrett. ” _

Mrs. Edward W, Currie and son,- David,-vlBited~Willlan»-£urriQ. Sunday at Blair Actidemy, Blairs- town. ;

Mrs. Monroe Watson, Milford, formerly of Matawan, was a lunch­eon guest Wednesdayof Mrs. Grace Curran. __ _

M r. and Mrs. William. C. Nod­dings, Mrs. William Helms and Mrs. Lydia Walling were Saturday evening dinner guests of Capt. Benjamin Dennis and-Mrs. Dennis, Keyport..

Peter Hansen jr.,'son of M r and Mrs. Peter Hansen sr., returned home Saturday from Riverview Hospital where he was a surgical patient... tyr. and Mrs. John J .

Washington' Ave, ‘ urday afternoon „ .Colleen, who was celebrating her second birthday. The guests wens' Mr, and Mrs. Russell Kennedy, Jersey City; Mr. and Mr#. Edward Mahoney, Saddle Brook; John jr., Thomas Brion, Kevin and James O'Brien.- M r, and Mrs;. Garrctt McKeen enlcrlained-Tuesday at -a -buffe t supper when their gueita.were Mr, and Mrs, Raymond White and chil­dren, Susan und Christine, Hoddan field; Mrs. Mae Black, East Or­ange; Mrs. Bertha Lamberson, Mrs. Blanche Ahern, Kevport Mrs. Letitia Cooper and Craig and Pamela McKeen.

James Brownlee, Belfast, Ire­land, arrived by plane Thursday (o spehd tho summer with his florin- Jaw und daughter, M r, and Mrs, Raymond Sasso, 292 Main St. -

Mr. and MrB, William J . Miller entertained at supper Friday even­ing for thejr son, Blair, who was calibrating his ninth birthday. Tno guests’ tvera ' Fred 'Trapnngcn, Cho rles Lockwood, GeorB© Bench. Robert Bentley, Allan and David Smith, William Leontine, Kimball Bceman a .id Barry Ward.

Mr. «nd Mrs. Thomas U. Frank jr. entertained nt dinner Monday fjvenlnj: whfcn tholr guests wero Mr. and Mrs- Thomas B. Frank sr., Roslyn Heights, L .I . ; Miss Louise Herminghausen, Miss Hen* rietto Hermlnghausen and Wil­liam Hcrmlnghausen, - Cinclnnuti, Ohio.

Mr. and Mtb. Bayard Lamborn entertained at a family dinner Sat­urday evening. Their guests were Mr. and Mrs, Norman Anderson, Kcnrny; Mr. and Mrs. James An* dcrson, Bloomfield; M r, and Mrs. Malcolm Anderson, Irvington; Mr, and Mrs. William Anderson, New­ark; 1 Mr, ond Mrs. Edward Morrl- son, Miss Jean Anderson, Union.

Mr, und Mrs. Ed^ar N . Pike en­tertained nt dinner Friday evening whc/i Ihelr fiuesls were Mrs, Al­fred Rough, DeUary, F la ., and Mr, und Mrf*. Louis Armstrong, Fords. Mrs. Rough also wns an.overnight guest.

Jac A, Cufilimtin returnw Solurduy from s 12-d;iy I trip to Phoenix, A riz„ Coronado Beach, Calif, and Miami, Flu.

Mrs. Richard Lewis entertained ut bridge on -Thursday evening when the prize winners wrre Mrs I.con Christinat nnd Mrs. John Kin­ney. Other fcueKls were Mrs, An- /jm,t Sclmjelinr;. Crawford's Corn­er; Mrs. Douglas V/ord, Mrs. Kvt-r* ell Carlson, Mrs. Wlllioin J , Milicr und Mrs. Howard Woolley.

M r, ond Mrs. Knrl Jleuficr sjHrnt Wednesday and Thursday In Can­ton, N .Y , Their son, Richard, who Js a sludent at St. Luwreneo Uni­versity, returned home with lh<*m.

Mr. ond Mrs. William M. Keller, Evnnston, Ilf., were gtif-sfs for eral days of Mr. and M ri. CuivJn Hell. On Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs. William llomer, Princrion, were dinnc-r guests of Mr. and Mri« Bell.

Mr. und Mrs. Frederick Wagner, Hasbrouck Heights, were weekend guests of their sori-in-lnw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. M o L . Kutledge,

Mr, nnd Mrs; Charles Ralnaud entertained at dinner on Sunday evening when their guefes wer« Mr. and Mrs. Jtafph Ranaria and Mr. und Mrs. Ronuld Rumfscy, Metuchen.

Mr. und Mrs. Charles Mjndovill^, Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Siddoni, Mr, and Mrs. Siocklon 11, Hopkins and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Cottrell at* tended the Wednesday evening per­formance of "The Unsinkablo Mol* ly Brown" in New York and had dinner at "Divan Parlslennc,*' ~ M fr and Mrs. Waltrr. Plk^emer- 'Ained al dinnrr Sunday evenihy, when their gucats were Mr, and Mrs. F . Howard Lloyd Jr., Mr, and Mrs. Jac A , CusJiman, Mr. and Mrs^Garr^lt-McKtcn andJ4r^-flnd Mrs. Wyman Bedle. •

Kenneth Pike, Chicago, HI., for­merly of Matawan was a Pr/day overnight guest of M r, and Mrs. Edgar N, Pike.

Mrs, Donald Robinson and. son, John, were Sunday guests of M r, and Mrs. Klchsrd Robinson, Leb­anon.

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond V. Sasso t'litertalned at supper Sunday even- »ng- Their guests were Mr. and Mrs. Carl Burlew and. children, Michael and Donna Marie, Old Bridge; Mrs. Mabel Pease, Mrs. Dorothy Carbone und son, Frank, Nelson' Whitfield, all of Elizabeth, and their house gues! Mrs. Sasso's father, James Brownlee, Belfast, Ireland.

Mr. and Mrs, Harry Wells, Mrs. Lydia Walling and M rs .. William Helms were Tuesday guests of\Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Hess, Mlilburn.

Mrs, Marguerite Luird entertain* ed her bridge club May 23. The winners were' Mrs. william R. Craig, Mrs. Leroy Sickels. and M p . Frank Bliss. Other guests were Mrs. Chanftlng’ Clapp, Mrs. Ralph Dcdle, Mrs. Charles E . Springhorn and Mrs, Elmore Kattner.

Mr, ond Mrs. Daniel P . Miller and children, Guy and Tracy, Hat* boro, Pa., were weekend guests of Dr. William H. Pengd mid Mrs' Fengel. .....

Mr. and Mrs. Edward W, Currie attended the Decoration Day for- !}linj dinner and dance Saturday ev­ening at the Manasquan River Gulf Club.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin II. Dominick entertained ut a picnic supper Tues­day when their guests were Mrs. Cora Dllllson, Paterson; Mrs. Hur* ry-O* Jones, Freehold, Miss .Mary Emma Stack and Mrs. Richard StajikrRejlh Amboy;-Mr* and.Mrs. F . Howard Lloyd jr., and children. Nikki, Richard and Deborah,

M r. and Mrs. Charles Manduvlllc entertained at brldgo on Saturday evening when their guests' wero M r, and Mrs. J . Paul Evans, Mid­dletown; Mr. and Mrs, I7, Howard Lloyd Jr., M r. and Mrs. Jnc A, Cushman, M r. and M rs. Herbert Cottrell and Mr. and Mrs. Baynard Smith. • ~

Mrs, Allan J , Morrison, attended a bon voyage party Monday eve­ning at tno home of Mrs, E , St.- Martin, Brooklyn, for Mrs. Frank Horan, Osprey, Fla ., and New York and was an ovornlght gueat of Mra. Horan in New York. Mrs. Horan will sail for Norway an Monday.

Mra, Edgar N . Pike. entertained at luncheon ond canasta on Thurs* day. when, hpr gliosis wero Mr#, David Martin, Mrs1. William Slavln, Mrs. Charles Barker, Mrs, Charles Frye, all of Matawan, and Mrs. James VanBrakle, Koyport. . .

Mrs. Koss Maghan was hostess to Iho Thursday evening bridge club when the prizo winners .wero Mrs. Hurry- pifeherr Holmdol^nnd “ the hostess. Tho other guests were Mrs. Arthur C. Hall, Mrs. Charles F . .Perrine, Mrs. Lawrence Le- malru, Mrs, Johnson Carlon, Mrs. Bayard lamborn and M m Allan J* Morrison, v . .

Mrs, Joseph Balor entertained at dessQrt-brldgo on Thursday afler noon. Tlie winners wero Mrs. Fred* w ic k J ; Noble; HolmdoJ; Mrs, Wil* Ham R . Craig and Mrs. Paul Egan. Other guests wero Mrs, LorOy Sickels, Mrs, Frank Uliss, Mrs. Gerard Devlin, Mrs. Hnlph Herrick and Mrs. Elmore Kultnur, ,. Mr, and Mrs. Richard Lewis, Mr, .and Mrs, John Kinney, M r.' und Mrs. Douglas Ward, M r. nhd M r*. Everett Carlson, Mr. and Mrs. Wil*

Sixth District VW To Install

The Sixth District- Veterans of Foreign Wavs uml its Ladies Aux­iliary will hold thoir first onhunl joint installation of officers and dmncr-duncc Saturday evening.

Preceding the. ceremonies, Iho Ladies Auxiliary \vlll lurid a dls* trict tnceling In the llplmar-Juneau Post Homo, Belmar. Mrs. Ralph Scarborough, Cliffwood Bench, Sixth District President, will pre­side. Memorial services for the de­ceased sisters will he held and election of district officers will bo conducted. 'Commander Oscar Me- ling of the Sixth District will pro- sido at the post meeting in the same building.

Dinner will be served «t 6 p.m. iu Ihe 0 ‘ lirien-MaJor Post Home, Neptune. Immeilliitely thereafter, the offioers will be Installed. Com­mander Moling and Mrs. Scarbor­ough will bi» the Installing officers, A military bad will conclude the duy's festivities.

Commltteo MembersServing-on the post committee

nre George Walker, Neptune, sen- lor vice commander of tho district, general chairman; Edward Duva, Middletown, senior vice command­er-of the Department, of New Jer­sey; Coimnitnder Moling, Oak* hurst; Vincent Hoyle, Middletown, lunior vice communder or the Sixth District; Moses Lewis, Katontown, district qnarlurmpster; .ljurryJjold* wyn, lleimur, past district com* mundor; Gourgo Button, Avon, De­partment of New Jersey lnsjttdor; Robert Mellng^Oakhurst, district

H I L L T O P c rriE S s e r v i c e

llolmdel end Bethany Itoadi

llazlet

chief of staff; Leo Cournoyer, Bel* mar Post 2G20. '

Mrs, Marjorie Concepcion, Cliff* ; wood, Past Department of New . Jersey President, is general chair- ’ lady. Serving with her are Mra. Scarborough, Cliffwood Beach; Mrs. Rosemary Sommer, "Keyport, and Mrs. Emily Levering, Port Monmouth, Past Department'Pres* idents; Mrs. Joann Hiller, Colti Neck, senior vice president of the district, and Mrs. Isabella Joha* &ton, Neptune, Junior vicu president of tho district.

In AppreciationI wish to express my upprcciatlon

for thu hcnutiful cards and presents I received during my recent cou- finenunt in tho hospital. The Amerl* can Legion Auxiliary Post 170, La­dles Auxiliary of tho Morganville Volunteer Firo Company No. 1 and tho Morgnnville Social Club. '

Mrs. Louis Lucbck

r u s t t c r a f t

G rad u a tio n

c a k p s

S U S S M A N SSTATIONERY

JJ Wi I'U O N T s r . . . K E Y P O R T

C a ll C O 4 - 1 0 3 0

U n til 9 p .m . _

Monday thru Friday, t o r p a s t • m i A H L c

T E L E V I S IO N S E R V IC E

Cot. II. Front St, and Uioad

T V A N D

A P P i l A N C E C O .; Koyporl

Ilim J , Mlllor. Mr. nnd M f«. Ltxm ■CJirlutlwit, Mtitawun, mnj Mr. anil M r*. August SchmPllnji, Cri,wloril'# Corner, iittondod b-IiuU?o ivannii'it Soturdiiy cveuin,' for Mr, nnd Mrs. Wllllsin Wilkins, Merccrvllle, lorin. crly of Mntawan, . . ci„

M u . Grace Curran ulUinded tli« wuildlnK Saturilay of her )|rolil- nuphnw, Edward Wiilloco Kennedy, Ktyjwrl, to Mins llelun Carlson, West Ki-uiiBburi!, at St. Jo ifph ', Cfiurrh koyport, «nJ tho reccntlnn wlilch followed *«t tlio lioiti#'or IK? brldu. • V ' '

Mrs, Gu«sle Dell was a wi^ki-nd fiiiest of Mr. and M n . Hon filllHirji, Avurlll Pork, N , Y ; , Oa Stttilnlrythey attended tlio niovlnn un exor-

' Dontnn Unlvemlty, Hinton, Mam. Mhi Ilnrbara Sl/borg it aitudrnl at the university. On Sun­day Mm. Dell ntlunilod ttjo (Indica­tion n( the Methodist Church, Avu­rlll Park.

Mrs.' l-rcd Hutlfcntlial, (;lilca«(i, III., upenl Tutndny an Iho niii'»t of Mr. /ind Mrs, Juy ft Jlonli'ltor.

[ O u l t t a n d in g S a lo jm a n ]

In Celebration of 22 Years In I5ii,smess

All Mcrcliandisc Will Be Offered;

A t 2 2 % D isco u n t

FRIDAY awSATURDAYAt 'I'lio

THE FRIENDL11 3 2 M a in St.

A . J , foimiM'lfoA. J , Tomu#<*IJo, MiHawjill, Mcrt*

rupfdiian Llfo Jnnufanfx-Coinmltnnl, In Is file out-ufandinK, Mefropoillttii Utc. kuUrfi- mnn for th« entire ihtyre, nrni. '

During Mr, ToinasHlo's nine y^nrn of fccrvhe with Metropolitan Life, he. confil«|enily h.i« hi’en n perenniiil leader, BpeclQli/lti in l;.»tate JManninn and Bunjnexft In- suranco. On ncvrrnl <Kxur>{(mn,'htt hao #/«!<{’« tin VMuic Phinnfn/j fclih* Jects lo various Metrojjolitan groups. •

11 is active In civk; uliuiit, nod service organizations, and presi­dent of the Malawan Boosters As-socialion, lric.7 of"Matawanr —

He oltributes hi* Aucms to ; know h'd^e nnd service lo thijj ^llcyholders, -.

W_i|llam W. Fulr tr ,, o|the Bed Bs/»]TT5i»TrKt Cffiujj^Tcrn thst Mr TomaiHIo Is onr Id th«; fesders in Ihe Jted Baok f)Ifi/e in all phases of Ihe insurance hull- ness. M r, Tomu^llo modestly af- tribult'f ib® unusual oc'.'omplnh menu to the fact thsl .he believV*: In giving'proper KfWcs la every (Mptct,

CARRYING CASHis an unnecessary risk

Carry » check book In- tlctd of c«»h. It.pln^ei fundi promptly ac yottt disposal wlicn needl'd, Hut il Itclpa you to avoid the lin/tmli of theft or xCjcldcntal loss, l'nr safety

. »uil fo/ivmii'iia', main­tain yotir Cheeking Ac­count at tills bank.

THE MATAWAN IBANKHATAW AN, NEW J K H S E V

f M Iw w w * C w rs ik e ••

Page 6: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

Page Six THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Thursday, June 1, 1961

Keansburg Couple United Saturday

Miss Rosemary Shea, daughter of M r. and Mrs. Vincent Shea, 1 Ma­plewood Ave;, Keansburg, became the bride of Allan Cofield, son of M r. and Mrs. Frank Cofield, 147 Seeley Ave., Keansburg, Saturday, May 27, 1961, in St. Ann’s Church, Keansburg. The Rev. Stanley Lev* andoski performed the double ring ceremony at 11 a.m. and*- .cele­brated the nuptial mass which fol­lowed. Mrs. Mildred Terwilliger was the soloist and she was ac­companied by John Cooper.

The bride was given iri mar­riage by her father. She wore a floor-length gown of Chantilly lace and tulle; The fitted bodice was embroidered with seed pearls and jridescents and had a Peter Pan collar and Jong sleeves. A cfown of seed pearls held her chapel- length veil and she carried a lace- covcred prayer W )k adorned with a white orchid and streamers of

..stephanotis... _ __ _Miss AliciaT'ShcaT Keafisburgr

was the maid of honor for her sis­ter, and the bridal attendants were

'Mrs.'Alfred Terry, West Keansburg; M r s . Edward Kennedy, Keans­burg, sisters of the bride, and Mrs. Vincent Shea, Port Monmouth, sis-

dv\ TRIPLES BLUE STAMPS

redeemable tor F R E E G I F T S !

LAKE SIDE AMOCO SERVICE

Route 34 and Middlesex Road

Matawan

(er-in-Iaw of thc bride. They wore French blue silk organza gowns ■tyled with sabrina necklincs, and cap sleeves. Four tier* of match­ing organza cascaded down the back of the ankle-lengtlr gowns. They wore matching band head­pieces and carried princess bas­kets of'gprjng flowers.

Sister Is Junior Bridesmaid ~ Elenita Shea, Keapsburg, sister

of the bride, vvas the^junlor brides­maid. A French blue silk organza cummerbund trimmed her white lace dress and she wore a match­ing headpiece, and carried a prin­cess basket of spring flowers.

John.Koelen' Keansburg, was the best man and ushering were David, Thomas and Kevin Cofield, broth­ers of the bridegroom, all of Keans­burg, ,

A reception followed in Duck Smith’s Restaurant, East Keans­burg,-after which the couple left for the Pocono Mountains, Pa. For traveling, the bride wore a laven­der and black printed dress with a lavender whimscy, patent leather accessories and a white orchid cor­sage; When they return, they willreside in SHcIionT Cohn. ~ -

The bride whs graduated from Red Dank. Catholic High School .and was employed as a laboratory technician by Johnson & Johnson in the Research Department New Brunswick.

T h e bridegroom was graduated from Middletown'Township High School,' and attended 'Donbosco College. Newton. He is attending the.. Bridgeport Engineering Insti­tute,' Bridgeport; Connv~ond it em ployed as a technical writer by thc Sikorsky 'Aircraft Co., Connecticut. He served four years in the U.S. Air Force, part of which time was spent In the European Theatre.

Combine coconut flakes, chopped or slivered almonds and maras­chino cherries with, enough evap­orated milk to moisten. Spoon over muffins, coffee cake pr cupcakes

Ibefyg baking. __________ __

-or any place else fn the Buffalo,-New Yoric. area. Just dial Aren Code Number 716', fhenth^

* number you want. Area Codes are the key to easy telephoning to *ny~place. Every area has a code. You'll find them In the front ~ pages of your phone book. Please use them for out-of-state calls. new jersey beLi

BUSES to NEW YORK CITY(Exp re ss V i a N . J . T U R N P I K E )

2 0 : ™ “ D A I L Ylo t Schedule end Rate Call CO 4-2222

B u y 1 0 T rip B o o k s MD S a v e

Rollos Charter Service For Groups

O f fe r s T h e Best In C o m fo rt a n d Exp e rie n ce

R O L L O B U S T E R M I N A L — SixCorners, KeyportA s b u r y P a rk - N e w Y o r k T ra n s it C o r p .

4 0 1 La k e A v e n u e A s b u r y P a r k

Miss Santa Maria Saturday Bride

Miss Marilyn Ahne Santa Maria, daughter of M r. and Mrs. Rocco Santa Maria, IM 10th St., Belford, and James Merrigan Jr„ son of Mr. and Mrs. James Merrigan, 2 Depot St., Keansburg, were mar­ried Saturday, May 27, 19G1, at 12 o'clock noon in St. Mary's Church, New Monmouih. The Rev. Dominic Turtoro, of St. Anthony’s Church, Red B a n k , Moderator of the Catholic Young Adult C l u b of Northern' Monmouth County, per­formed the double ring ceremony and celebrated the nuptial mass which 'followed. Vincent Porcelli, Red Bank, was the soloist.

The brTde was given in marriage by her father. She wore a gown of embroidered ivory crystalline de­signed with modified sabriQa neckline, long 'sleeves and fuJl chapel sweep. Her fingertip-length Veil of French illusion fell fr'om a drown of orange blossoms and she carried, a., cascade bouquet of gar­denias. .

Miss Arienc Santa, Maria, Bel­ford, was the maid of honor for her sister. She wore an orchid silk organza street-length gown. The fitted bodice had a sabrina neck­line and short bell sleeves. Her matching horsehair hat was trim­med with orchid roses and she carried a bird cage filled with American Beauty roses and ivy.

Two Bridesmaids."The"bndesnialds' wore the‘ same style gowns and hats as the honor attendant and also carried bird cages of American Beauty roses and ivy. Miss Carol Regan, Cliff­wood, was dressed in pink and Miss Ethna Patton, Long Island, mint green.

Anthony Bucco, Keyport, was the best man and ushering were Fred­erick Cestare, Little Silver and John O ’Sage, Leonardo.

Tlie bride’s mother wore a shock­ing pink organza street-length dress, a matching flower hat and a corsage of white roses. The bride­groom's mother chose a rose-beige organza dress trimmed with match­ing lace, a green and white flower hat,.bone_accessories_and a corsageof white .roses. ........ ;

A reception followed ln the Cabin-

in-ihe-Sky, Atlantic Highlands. For their wedding trip to Florida, the bride wore a white linen dress im­printed with red flowers, a white nat and accessories and a white orchid corsage. When they return, they will reside in Long Branch.

Both are members of the Cath­olic Young Adults Club of Northern Monmouth County. A graduate of Ferris High School, Jersey City, the bride is employed by the Mar­ine Midland Bank, New York. Her husband was graduated from Red Bank Catholic High School and the Northrop Aeronautical Institute, Hawthorne, Calif. He served in lhe U . S. Aici Forte and is employed by the Electronic Associates, Long Branch.

WANTEDL O T S a n d A C R E A G E

GOLDEN RULEC o n s tru c tio n C o .

R o u te 35 - H a z le t , N . J . ss. C O 4 -3 2 0 0

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M Y MONTHLY •

G I V E Y O U R H E A T I N G P L A N T A H A W D , USE OU R O IL /

I T S IW D E M A N D - /

The way to make sure you are getting tha best from your burner la to keep your fuel tank full of our high- heat Fuel Oil. Just dial CO 4-0200 today.

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G O O D

N E W Sfor the hard of hearing

with PHONE MAGNUC m # * . New JIX11U

i Miq m I im I i h 'I h Uph«in w T in iiw i

BirthsMurphy

M r. and Mrs. Thomajs Murphy, 123 .Crescent St., Keansburg, are the parents of a son, born Wednes­day, May 2\, 1961, in Riverview Hospital.

RosaloA -daughter was' Horn'Iri 'South

Amboy Hospital to M r. and Mrs. Albert Koeato* 22 Oak St., Key­port. . -• ...... .....................

ZUinsklM r. and Mrs. Alexander Zilinski,

172 Sydney Ave., Union Beach, arc the parents bf a-daughter, born in South Amboy Hospital.

. _ BoothA daughter was bom in South

Amboy Hospital to M r. jmd Mrs. Lansing Booth, 704 Columbia Ave., Union Beach.,

- EhrentrautM r. and Mrs. Karl Ehrentraut, 16

Lillian D r., Hazlet, are the parents of a son, bom Saturday, May 27, 1961, in Riverview Hospital.

Court e?A ion was bom in Riverview

Hospital on Friday, May 26, 1961, to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Courier, 4 Surrey Dr., Hazlet. .

Materno Mr. and Mrs. James Materno, 68

Hudson Ave., West Keansburg, are the parents of a son, born Friday, May 26, 1961, in Riverview Hospi­tal. ■ ■ ,. Ashmore

A. daughter was bom in River­view Hospital on Friday, May 26, 1961, to Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Ash­-more, 1303 Wesley Ave., Union Beach..

ParrishMr. ond Mrs. Frederick Parrish,

25- Orchard St., Matawan, are the parents bf a 6on, born Friday, May 26, 1961, in Monmouth Medicaf Center.

SmithMr. and Mrs. Robert Smith,

Wickatunk, are the parents of a daughter, l>om Sunday, May 26, 1961, in Fitkin Hospital.------------------ Davis--------------------

A daughter was born to PS/4 Ar-

Sk TRIPLESblue stamps

redeemable for F R E E G I F T S !

MATAW AN G U L F S E R V IC E 104 Main Street

Matawan

tfmr L . Davis and Mrf. Davii at tha~U.S. Army base hoipita), Ver­dun, France oa May 2t, 1911. The baby weighed seven pounds, five ounces, end has twen named Cora May. Mri. Davis if the former MisJ Katherine Walshe, of Keyport.

Wedding PlansHammlU-ReaiS/^

M r, and Mrs. Peter-Alvin Read, 18 Stork Ct., Middletown, formerly of Matawan, have issued invitations to the marriage of their daughter, Margaret Anne, to Jackson Ow is llammitt 111 on Saturday, June 24, 19GJ, at 11 a.m. at the Christ Episco­pal Church, South Amboy.

Acampora-WeozelInvitations have been issued by

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Wenzel, C Sixth St., Matawan, for the wed­ding of t h e i r daughter, Eileen Anne, to Martin Michael Acampoxa on Saturday, June 24, 1961, at St. Joseph’s Church, Keyport, at 10 a.m.

This week, why don’ t you look through thewindows of y o u r church . . . from the inside.

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redeemable for F R E E G I F T S !

E L L I O T ’ S G U L F S E R V IC E

Route 35 at Parkway . Keyport .

C o n te st Announced F o r Progress R e p o rt

Announcement of a new contest designed to encourage local govern­ments to prepare annual reports for taxpayers was made ly at week in the May issue of NewJersey 'Municipalities,’ ' publicationof the New Jersey. State League of Municipalities. The contest is sponsored by the league, the Rut­gers Bureau, of Government Re­search and the Municipal Managers and Administrators Association.

Annual reports may be entered in the contest by each of the state s

568 incorporated municipalities. En ­tries in the 1961 contest must have been issued between July l , 1950, and June 30 of this year. Individ­ual department reports, or the re­ports ot municipal boards, agen­cies, spccial districts or,authorities are not eligible entries.

The reports will be judged b y .a ' three-man panel on the basis of- content, undcrstandability, utility and attractiveness. Content, includ­ing Information about organization' and services and financial matters, has been accorded the most impor­tant position on the weighted scor­ing scale. .

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i A C M E G O O D W I L L C O U P O N t W i ’i ’i t m m m m m m m w m m m m w m m m m m m m m m m m w m m t t i t H

Worth■ I

Free reen Stamps

(• odditton to your rvgulor itomp* with pwrchot* W $ 1 0 m m r * « n d th U c o u p o n , l im it 1 p e r , e v i to m e r .C*vp»fi cipIrM Sotvrrfvy, l«n* 10th, 1961. ■

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Cheese Spread 2 Z 7 9 «STELLA W EDGES ‘

G orgonzola 3 9 eFROZEN FOOD

•l«OJ IYI CORN Ot - ------——;

Mixed Vegetables 3 '^ 55®MIlAOY . . *

Cheese Blintzes 21^59*WltH LEMONWelchade...ARCTIC SCAl

Flounder FilletRock oami

Cornish Hens

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CheeseburgersVIRGINIA l l i MATURES

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Pineapple Pie u 55 cVIKINIA til OUNOi KR) -

Chiffon Cake 59cT M n r l t l e O t l w l

GLASSAKE ^ i7H- s ------------------------ X t s U t t & l J t e n i _____

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■'.rtfRoute 35 and 36 Plenty Of Free Parkina

Page 7: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

• Thursday, June 1, 1961 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Page Seven

Miss Lake Weds John C. Benning

■ The Rev. Thaddeus Wojciehow- ski performed Uie double ring cere­mony which united Miss J a n e Lake and John G . Benning, and

. celebrated the nuptial mass which -followed at 11 o’clock in thc morn* ing, Saturday, May 27, 1961, in St.

_ Catherine’s Church. East Keans­* burg. The marriage of the daughter

• of Mr. and Mrs. Richard A . Lake, Richard -PI., E a s t Keansburg, nod the son ol Mr. and Mrs. Wil­liam C. Benning was witnessed ly Ihe members of The Sodality of the Blessed Mother, who were dressed in blue. Miss Florence Fal-

. Ion, cousin of the bridegroom. Jersey City, was the soloist and she was acctmpanied on thc organ by Mrs. Herbert Tombs.

The bride was given in marri­age by her father. She wore & full- length gown designed with a fit­ted lace bodice, scalloped neck- iine.and long tapered sleeves. Large appliques of matching lace trim­med the.full nylon tulle skirt which Terminated in a criapel-leflgth train. Her fingertip-Iength veil of French illusion fell from a half crown of se-

, quins* and pearls a n d she car­ried a lace-covered prayer book

adorned with a white orchid andstreamers of stephanotis.

All the attendant* in the Sodality . wedding were dressed in blue. Miss

Christine take, East Keansburg, w u the maid of honor for her sWetV anc|'the bridal attendants were Mrs. Clifford Morgan, East Kewtsburgr- Miss~Eileen - Gillette, Port Monmouth, and Mrs. Joseph Lake, Port Monmouth, aunt of thc bride. Their organza gowns over matching taffeta had round neck­lines, cap sleeves and street-length

, skirts. Circular veils fell over -r^rtieirmatOTtag fitted head*bows and

they cajffed old fashioned bouquets Qtymtk pompons. The honor at- -tefiaarit's bouquet was trimmed with.dark blue net and Streamers and the other attendants’ with baby

•blue and white net streamers.- Brother Is Best Man

William Denning, New Mon­mouth, .was the best man for his brother. ^Ushering were Sonar Seo end Class Richard Lake jr.. brother of the bride; Robert Ril^y and James Gardiner.: East Keansburg.„ For her daughter’s wedding,

' Mrs. Lake selected a white bacfc: ground. silk: dress imprinted with red roses, white hat and accessor* ies- and^a-corsage-of white pom-

‘ pons. :T h 3 bridegroom's mother chose "ajreggshoff silk sheath dress with orange., hat and accessories and ft corsage of white pompons.

After a reception at Bachstadt’s -- H * ! ! , ; East Keansburg. the couple

left for Niagara Fails and Maine. For (raveling, the bride wore a summer-white dress with red hat and accessories and a white orchid ’ corsage. When they return from

- -thelr Wedding trip, they will reside in Belford

• The bride was graduated “ from Middletown Township High School and is employed by the New Jersey Natural Gas Co. Thc bridegroom was graduated from R e d Bank

- "CatholiCf^ifiJjhSchool, and is em­ployed ,^r.tWi-AtJjptjtic ‘ Highlands

—-- Office. dfcrihQ .New - Jersey Natural ~ Gq,s Co*?#He served in the Army

ond is,a member of the Middletown Township Police Reserves.

Bride Of Matawan Man

MBS. E L A R 1 0 Al G A IU T OSt." Joseph's Church,—-Keyfort,

was the scene of the marriage ofMiss Barbara Eileen Ryan, daugh­ter of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Ryan, 624 Pinehurst D r., Cliffwood Beach, and Elario A . Garito, son of Mr. nnd M ri. Nicholas Garito, 60 High field _AVc;y\, Matawan, Saturday, May 27, 1961’.. The Rev. William Il a u s c h performed the double ring ceremony at 3 p.mi Miss Lor­etta Durante played traditional wedding musje.

Tlie bride was given in marriage by her father." She wore a formal gown designed with a Chantilly lace bQ i<;e, scoop neckline and crushed sleeves. Matching lace inserts trim­med the full imported nylon organ­za skirt which terminated in a chapeMength train. Her fingertip- length veil of English illusion fell from a crown of pearls and crys­tals and she carried a white mis­sal with a white orchid and-stepln anoiis.

Miss Janice Hemmerlin, Keyport, was the maid of honor. She wore a street-length gown of lavender silk organza with a matching, hat and accessories and she carried a colonial bouquet of pink chrysan­themums.

Three Bridal AttendantsThe bridal attendants were Miss

Carol Besse, Staten Island, cousin of the' bride, Miss Barbara Dugan, Cheesequake, a n d Mrs. Richard Currier, Keyporf. Their gowns and headpieces were styled like the honor attendant’ s in pink. Their fit­ted bodices had scoop necklines and cap sleeves. Their full skirts had back detail of perpendicular shirring and satin roses. Mftgching satin roses formed their he&dpicceft and they carried colonial bouquets of lavender chrysanthemums.

Cynthia Garito, Matawan, was

Laurence Harbor Girl Is Bride

tho flower- girl. The. niece of „lhe bridegroom wore a pink organza dress trimmed with w hit* lace, white lace-trimmed cummerbund and tiara of lavender flowers. She carried & basket ojj-miniature lav­ender chrysanthemums. -

Paul Mucci, Matawan, wns the best man and ushering were Rob­ert Rankl and Lopo Tomasello, Matawan, and Thomas Foti, Cliff­wood.

Thc bride’ s mother wore an af­ternoon dress of mint green organ­za with a matching loce fitted jac­ket, matching hat and accessories and an orchid corsage. The bride­groom's mother selected a light blue lace dress with a white hat and accessories and: an orchid cor* sage, — — - -— -

After a reception at tho Veterans of Foreign Wars. Memcrial.Homc, Cliffwood, the couple left for' Niag­ara Falls.- Eor. traveling, the. bride wore a light green knit suit, a white hat, white accessories anda white orchid corsage. When they return,, they will-rtesida on Texas Rd., Matawan. , - —

Both were graduated from Ma ta* wan High School. Class of 1960. The bride is employed as a bookkeep­er by Canterbury Knitters, Key­port. and is a member of Bela .Sigma Phi Sorority. The^bride- groom is employed by thc. Cities Service Oil Co. on the* New Jersey Turnpike.

MRS. JO S E P H E D L E Y J R .• Miss^ycan'tJicn, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph F . Bien, 213 Hill- crest Ave., Laurence Harbor, and Joseph Edley . jr., son of M r. and Mrs. Joseph Edley, 14 John St.,

_Carteret, were married'Saturday," May 27, 1961, at 3 p.m. in the Lau­

reate Harbor Community Church.The Rev. William E . Websler per-

-formed the double ring ceremony.Mrs. Clarence Corby played tradi­tional wedding music.

The bride was giVen in marriageby her father. She wore a ballerina- length gown of white lace designed With a square neckline and long tapering sleeves. The full skirt had tiers of accordloQ-pIeated nylon tulle cascading down both sides.Her elbow-length veil of illusion fell from a crown of seed pearls and sequins and she carried a. cascade bouquet of white roses. .

— MUs^Regina^BicaJvifthem aid Of honor for her sister. She wore > given organza ballerica-length (own. The fitted bodice over -matching lace had short sleeves

Their crowns matchcd their gowns and they carried cascade_bouquets of deep pink roses. .

William Parkstrom, South Am ­boy, brother-in-law of tbe bride, was the best man. Ushering were Richard Bien, Laurence Harbor, brother of the bride, and Stanley Masluch, Carteret. -•

For her daughter's wedding,

Obituaries,

Lillian (Najaoli) Baeri, Old Tennent' R d., Morganville, died Tuesday* May 23, 1961, at Perth Amboy General Hospital shortly after birth. 3

Surviving besides his parents are a brother, Paul, and a sister, Marl- jyn, at home, and his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Antoinette Na­poli, Morganville. ~— _

Funeral arrangements-were In charge of the Day Funeral Home, Keyport.

Alfred ViscountAlfred Viscount, 69, Lake Worth,

Fla ., formerly of Carr Ave., Keans­burg, died Wednesday, May 24, 1961, at his Lake Worth home.

M r. Viscount owned and operat­ed concessions on Carr Ave., Keansburg, for many years.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Mac (Hammersmith) Viscount, L a k e Worth; two daughters,'Mrs. Mac Meinecke, Toms River, and Mrs.

Joan Brower, Belford; three sons. Bertram, Alfred and Edward, all of Toms River; a sister, Mrs. An­gela Salvato, New York; 13 grand­children and six great-grandchil­dren.

Interment was at Lake Worth.Wiliam II. Smllh

William II. Smith, 37, of 270 East R d., Belford, died Friday, May 26, 1961, alter a short illness. 1

M r. Smith was bom in Keyport and whs the son o^_Mr. and Mrs. Jo?in J . Smith, Belford.

He owned and operated a riding sfabJe.

Besides his parents, he is sur­vived by three sisters, Mrs. Mae Mannion and the Misses Anna and Gloria Smith, all of Belford; four brothers, Theodore Smith, West Keansburg; Charles and Horace Smith, both of Belford, and John J . Smith jr ., Middletown.

The funeral was held Monday al 2:30 p.m. in the Ryan Funeral Home, Keansburg, wilh the Rev. John P. Euler, pastor of the Bay­shore Community Church, officiat­ing. Burial was in Green Grove Cemetery, Keyport. . . .. ■ .......

Keansburg Girl Weds Red Banker

Miss Beatrice Margaret Hart­mann, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Giese, Mominpside Ave., Keansburg, became (he bride of Richard C. Pharo, son of M r. and Mrs. Philip Schacfer, 39 Hillside St., Red Bank, Sunday, May 28* 1961, at 4 p.m. in the First Metho­dist Church, Red Bank. The Rev. Lowden performed the double ring ceremony. Roy Rebenstro.nB. Man* toloking Beach, uncle of thc bride, played traditional wedding music and accompanied Mrs. Ralph Vil- lars, soloist. ,

The bride was given in marriage by her uncle, Robert ftebenstrong. Point Pleasant. She wore u white silk organza gawradesigned with re-embroidered AlfncAn lace-trim* mcd bodice, long f^pcring sleeves, sabripa neckline' and chapeMength train. She wore a mantilla of Alen- con lace and carried a cascade bouquet of white roses wit-h a white orchid center.

Miss Daphne Wood, Staten Is­land, was the maid of honor, and Miss"3ane’ Coughlin-,-;West Orange, cousin of the bride, and Miss Ar­lene Stoll, Middletown, were lhe. bridesmaids. They wore orchid dot­ted swiss floor-length gowns over matching taffeta. Thc fitted laco bodices had square necklines and cap sleeves. They wore matching headpieces and atrrlcd spiral bou­quets of pink and orchid daisies.,

Cousin Is Flower Girl June Coughlin, West Orange, was

Jhe flower girl for her cousin. She was' dressed like the olher attend­ants, but wore a crown of pink and lavender-buds which matched her basket of pink and orchid daisies.

Wallace Zeuhl, Shady Lake, But­ler. brother-in-law of the bride­groom, was the best man and ush- crirjg were Robert Croker, Manto- ioking, cousin of (he bride and Da­vid Thorsen, Belford. .. •.

For her daughter’ s wedding, Mrs, Giese selected a street-length dress of seed-pearl embroidered turquoise organza with a matching hat and accessories and a corsage of. yel­low glamellias. The bridegroom's mother chose a royal blue chiffon street-length dress with a white hat and accessories and a corsageof pink glomeljias. ..............•

A reception followcdiit the Crys­tal Brook Inn, Eatontown, after which the couple left for Canada. For traveling, the bride wore a navy blue silk suit with bone pearl accessories, a green pillbox cover­ed with white lily-ol-the-vftlley and a white orchid corsage. When they return^jhey will reside at 45B Hawthorne D r . ,- Franklin Town­ship, New Brunswick.

Both were graduated from Mid­dletown Township High School. The bride is employed by House­hold Finance Co., Newark. Her hus­band attended Fairleigh Dickinson University, Monmouth College, snd is studying in Rutgers University Night School, New Brunswick, ma­joring in chemistry. He ia employ­ed by Bzura Chcmical Co., Key­port.

Married In St. Joseph’s Saturday

MRS. RICIIAKD W. W ILSONThe wedding cf Miss ’ Beverly

O'Connell, daughter of Mrs. *Arleno Murphy, 27 Osborn St., Keyport,- nnd thc late Thomas O'Connell, to Richard W. Wilson, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wilson, .459 Grove Ave., Metuchen, took place Satur­day afternoon, May 27, 190), at 2 p.m. in St. Joseph s Church, Key­port, The Rev. Alfred E . Smith of- ilciatcd. Wedding music wns pro­vided hy Miss Loretta Durante, church organist. 1

Given In marriage by her grand­father, J . Henry Poling, Keypori, the bride wore a wedding gown of Imported nylon organza and Chan­tilly lace. Designed with a fitted bodlcc, (he gown had a sabrina neckline, short sleeves and a bouf­fant skirt trimmed w ith-U coapr pllques. Her fingertip v e i l of French Illusion waa held In place by a coronet of seed pearls and she carried a cascade bouquet of white gardenias.

Miss Delores Manning, Hazlet, was the maid of honor. Her. cock- lall-lenglh gown waa mada of shocking pink nylon organza with a fitted bodice and.bouffant skirt.

She wore a matching horsehair bow hat and carrled « cascade of pow- dcr-plnk gardenias. -

Wean Powder-Pink . Tho bridesmaid was Miss Mich-

nclo McKeen, Hazlet, Her gown, styled the same as tho honor mold',, was in.powder-pink. She carried a cascade of shocking pink gardenias.

Robert Wllson. Tcrds, brother'Of the brldegrootii, was lhe. best man ond Eugene Voaacller, 'Metuchen, served as.the usher. -

After a reception at Peterson’* Buttonwood Manor, Matawan, tho couple left for a wedding trip to Florida. When they, return, they will reside at 37 Osborn St., Key­port, .--T h e ; bride - was-graduated from Keyport High School and Wilfred Academy o f Ueauly Culture, New­ark. SH Fis employed in Freclxild.

The bridegroom, a graduate of St. Peter'* IllRh Scnool, New Hrnimrick, attended Stton Hall, Newark.. He served two years In Ihe U.S. Army and Is employed nt Okonlto-Gable Corp., North Bruns­wick.

St. Mary’s Church Wedding Scene

Before nn nltnr decorntcd with white gladioli and Majestic daisies, Miss Uarburn Ann Vinilctti, daugh­ter of Mr. nnd Mrs. Harry R . Vlg- ilottl, 6 Woodridge Ave., Middle­town, became the bride of John Francis Kicly jr., Mm of Mr. und Mrs. John R Kiely, Queen Anne D r., Deal. -

The Rev. Robert Hulman, pastor, performed the double ring cere* ihoriy at ll a.m. on .Saturday, May Tit 11)61, in St. Mary's Church, New Monmouth, ami celrbrntcd thc nup­tial mass which followed.

’lhe bride was given in marriage by her father. She wore u formal gown of bouquet taffeta and im- jjo/ted re-embroidered AJrnnm lace. The fitted bodice had a kii- brina .necklinr and long pointed sleeves. The full bell hkirt had two medium-sirvd rosettes at the b n tk. wnistllrti? nnd « chapel-length train. Her imported French illusion full bouffant veil fell from a eiushinl silk organza rose hendpieee sur­rounded with imported French lily* of-tho-vailcy. She carried a prayer book adorned with ruhium lilies«nd phalaeiiop.sis. ................ 1 ■

Attended By Cliffwood CSlrl Miss Hetty Ann Krthrs, Cliffwood,

was the mold uf honor. Her malzo silk oigania cocklniHcngth gown was princess otyle. "Vhe fitted bod.

ice hnd u modified scooo neckline and short cop 6leeves, Site wore ft pillbox of matching lily-of-the-val- ley with a short face veil and matching accessories. She carried a cascade bouquet of yellow rub< rum iiJiea with a spray 0/ iweet* heart roses. — -

Miss Marigo Androi, Middletown, and Miss Dolly Deponte, Red Bank, served as bridesmaids. Their gowns and matching pillboxes wero tlyled like tho honor attend­ant’s and they wore leaf green and NHe grijen* respectively. They cur­ried cticfldtK bouquets of yellowrubrum JJIioa, ---------------. .....

Kathleen Stafford, Cohimbu*, Ohio, niece of tho bridegroom, was (ttm flower girl, She wore a white organza dross over a pale yellow Blip with a pale yclioW sash. Unis* lea trimmed her headband and she carried a gold and white basket filledjivith yellow and white petals.

Hobort Perri, Oceanimrt, was tho TieSTimfiTand usherifitt'WftTe''Terry Vigiretti, Mldd(etown, brother of tho bride; Peter Deppert, Husbrouck Jfcighl Branch.

B i r t h s -

Phillip 'M r. and M n . Jimmie Phillips, 77

Lenox R d ;, Cliffwood, are the par­ents of a son, bom Ita id a y , Msy 23, 1061, la Monmouth Medical Cenler, -----

Wfed A.t St. Jofi^ph’fi .Saturday

M R ., MRS. M ARIO AM BROSIO J R ,

Mrs. Mary Roberts KeeneyMrs. Mary Robert*-Keeney, #9,

of 2 Green Grove A ve ., Keyport;

In Sti Joseph’s Church, Keyport, Saturday, May 27, lOfil, Mis* Mary Gail Nefion, daughte. of Mr. and Mrs. E . John Nelson, 90 Main St., Matawan, became the bride of Mario Aftibrosio jr.V'son of Mr. and Mrs. Mario Ambrosio. J5 f Ander­son Ave., FairviewAThe Rev. Al- fr rJ 5/nith performed, the- ccre- mony at 10 a.m. and celebrated the nuptial mass which follWed. Mrs. Michael C o* was tbe. sohwst and she was accompanied on thKorgan by Miss Loretta Durante.

The bride was given in marriage ! by her father. She wore s white

Mrs. Bien selected a gold printed 1 died Monday, May 29, 1961 st her > silk organza gown fashioned with chiffon dress with a small white home. She was bora In Holmdel, a fitted bodice, scoop neckline and hat, white accessories and a cor-! daughter of lhe Ute Charles and ; shorl sleeves. Tafleta appliques sage of red roses. The bridegroom's ] Delia pisbrow Fardon. Mrs. Keen-, j trimmed the neckline and-bouffant mother chose a navy blue chiffon . ey. who would have marked her i skirt which terminated in a chap­. ... --------------•••'- 100th birthday Aug 26, had been a |e |.]cnKth Train. The >lbow lfnsth

resident of the borough for 62 j veil ot si Ik Illusion fell from a . . /crow n of pearl-studded organza

She was th« oldest member of = flowers and ihe carried * cascade Calvary Methodist Church, Keypori,. bouquet of white roses and babies’ - and Sons and Daughters of Liberty, breath.Keyport. j jvfiss Rose Mary Cox, . Keyporf,

^ ‘ •Keeney Is survived by one was the maid of honur. Her street-

dress with a sma)l white hat, white accessories and a corsage of red rcses.

Reception L i CarteretA reception fallowed in Club Mar-

k»y# Carteret. For their wedding trip to Wildwood, the bride woreaa fembroidered-green-chreked cot . „ , v W ,M1. . . . w"t6rt"'dre55‘ with-ti-elewAl*M.hadi£ejJLM'__Mil!*J5 . Roberts, _Keypor1;'! |/-ngjb dress of Cop#n blue silk or- and scoop neckline. White acces' i**® grandsons, HarrjJ F , Roberts - y»afii£~wss~design*rd’ w t h - a -lac£ series and a while carnation cor- -nd Milton S. Roberts, Keyport; ■ bodice, scoop neckline and short

w __ .................. . . . sage, completed her ensemble. I three great-grandchildren. : ileeves. She wore a matching or-,the Tull skirt fell over matching • When they return, they will reside Funeral services will be conduct- i;anu bow hat with a circular veil

taffeta; She had a matching crown [in Freneau. < from the BM/e Fuorrnt Home, 2nd carried a cascarfe foooquef ofcaFflga~»~gaiggdr-bopqngt-<»4—~The~bride-WaS-CraduatCd_frOflL!_>gPPyji ^his afternoon at 1:39 vhite rarngtinm with li|>ht__blue

ytlfow m d white roses._ Brideapudda Wear Piak

~ liiai Carolioe Beutel. VakmBeach, and Miss Elizabeth Edley, Carteret, sister of the bridegroom,

tbf bridesmaids. They wore

the Girls Vocational Sdxxrf, Wood^j p.m.. wilJTthe Rev..ft, T , WiUiams. ibhon,bridge, and is employed by J . J . ; pastor of Calvary Methodist.Church Wear U fb t Blu« OrgaaxaNewberry Co., Keyport,................... : officiating. Intermtnt will follow ir

Her husband was graduated from ; Ikdrodel Cemetery, the Boyi Vocational School, Perth

The bridal attendants were Mrs.

cascade bouquets of white carna­tions with Copen'blue ribbon.

Joseph Ambroalo, Fnlrvlcw, was the best man for his brother and ushering were Raymond DcSena, and Charles Maurice, E'airvicw. John D . Nelson, Matawan, brother of ihe.brfde, was the Junior usiier.

For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs. Nelson selected a toast silk organ­za over taffeta theath drcs* with a lilac hut and gloves, bone accrK- ftortos and a rorsage of white roses. The bridegroom's mother chose a powder blue embroidered httk or­ganza dress with a white hat and accessories and a corHt.j;o of pink roses,

A reception followed In Peter­son's Buttonwood Manor,' Matawan, after which the couplo left for Ber­muda. for traveling, the bride wore a green and white summer knit suit with a white hat and gloves, bone accessories, and a corsage of white roses. When they return, they will reside in Long Branch. -

The bride was graduated from Matawan School and Is em­ployed ss a' secretary In thc U.S.Arm y—Signal .Materiel SuppQrlAgency, Fort Monmouth. She waa a member of the choir of St. Jo­seph's Church.

The bridegroom was /-raduufrd froin ra rk School,Cliffslde Park, snd the Newark C olley of r~Agintrring, Newark. He h employed as an electrical

B sleatrlere

A daughter was born ln Rivcr* view Hospital on Tuesday, May 23, 1961, to M r. and Mrs, Eugeno Bsi- cstriere, 35 Hailet Ave,, llailet.

....... AfiftltaovlcbM r. and Mrs, Georgs Angellno-

vich, 4 Amherst Lane, Haxlet, are the parents of a daughter, born Tyesday, May 2), 1961, In Aiver- view Hosfeltali .

A daughter was bom In ftlver* vtewttopplt*! on W*<t<\e*iUyy Mny 24, 1061, .to M r, a n d ‘Mrsl Sleveh Fraiee, J7 S L John’s PI, Keans- burg. ,

KredV ..... ......M r. and Mrs. Joseph Kredl, 121.

Marlboro R d ., Old Bridge, are lhe parents of a daughter, uorn Tues­day, May 16, 1061, In Middlesex General Hospltttj^j________.

Amboy." and Is employed ja lheTlta k * lace ballefrtta-Itifgib* goww | Ouiet Coot AirCoftdHie»i»« Dtvi

wfth ronad neckline*, cap -skevee, | sum cf (be Ccnersao Rm&o aad bofeetf aad M l ailitt^i M m si|is>1^ . y W oettridy/ * * >

Brach, and M»i i Mary Ambrmlo.juries" If. Schwli, MoonWiuth 'ca^ineer. ifl-lh£_iL5«..Afmy Sigriaj' . . . - . . . . . Labor*

ehad at lhe tijfat price, Cooae ) blue organxa were like IhelAduU Club of Northern Monnwutii

■ rrh amt Development. . iterwrn. ~i»ry, Fo/i Monmoulk

Wa can supply—them -. Quickiy jTbeir -dm sei aad hats of Ii^ht ■ members of lhe Calbolic YoonHow about bus lam cards? ; Fairv/ew, sister of thr btiAtf.uMtm -lory, fn n Monmoulk Ikrfh were

« * d I f f * H , I honor atiemdaM's sod they carried County.

‘ H u ff ;■ . ‘• A daughter- was .bom in Middle* sex Genera) Hospital on Wednes­day, May 17, HMil, to M r, and Mrs. Frank RuU, l7 Bor.klcy _Hd.j Ord Bridge, . . \

' Kozak y.M r, and Mrs. Alexander K o u k ,

£8 Secpnd St., Old Bridge, are the parents of a son, bom Thursday. May 18,1961, In Middlesex General Hospital,

. - CapsrsroA son was born In Perth Amboy

Hospital on Saturday, May 20, 1061, (0 Mr, and Mrs, John Capararo, I Morrell P I., Old Bridge. .

DftleulM r. and Mrs. Rudolph Dotcul.

14 River R d., Old Driaue are the psrents^of a daughter, ix)rn in SI. Peter’s Hospital on Tuesday, May 16, 1061.

Maaterson - ..........A son waa born In St. Peter’ K

Hospital !o M r. and Mra. Edward Masterson, 23 Cajvin C l,, (Jld firfdge, on Tuesday, May IC, IW/f.

PowerMr, ond Mrs. HUhnrd Power, 25

Southwood D r.. Old Bridge, are the parents of a (linighter, fiorn in St. I’cter's Hospitul on Tuesday, May IC, 1WI, - 'rr .

HighlandA daughter waa bom In f>f. Pet­

er's Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. David IMhlthd, TM A!/'ha Ave., Old llridge, on Wednesday, May 17. IWl,

. TereiM r. and Mrs. CharJe# Perez, 14

Jrrrry Ave., Old bridge, are the parents of a daughter, born In St. Peter's Hospital, on Thursday, Mny 16, IM).

IJulkturA daughter was born In St. Pet­

r r's Hospital to Mr. snd M ri, Wy- nanl Buttcher, Ho* 224, Orcen St., Old Bridge, on Thursday, Mny M, 1061. . •

TehsaMr. ami Mrs. Tlwmss -Tehan,

17 Every St., Old Brldg#, sre the parents of a daughter, w rn ’ liTKt. Peter's IfoRpital,'on .*>atiirdflyf MaytO. Htfil. - .........—------ '.....

fileldf*Mr, and Mrs. Inward Steldle, 231

i-orilfard Ave,, Unhn Bearh, f f t <he-parefils-of-a—daugliUir—horn. Jrrjday, May;X 1061. in Riverview lloipitsl. ■ f

funeUeeA daughter waa’ ’U»rn in Mo»r"

mouth Medical C>«l#r on Wsdnes day, Msy 74, I N I , lo Mr. and Mrs. i tvdward l»velarer-47—

■*' - • ' !#f

Depp .Jlcighls and Louis Lerncr, Long

Koleela Bslga Nylon Jersey For her daughter's wedding, Mrs.

Viglletti-aelcctcd « bel^o nylon Jer­sey dress designed with a st’oop nccklinu and ai'mi ahefith skirt. Sho vyoro a matching orgaiutt full* length cont, shocking pink hat, beige accessories and ft eorsuRo ofpink rosea...............

The:brldcuroomVmothor chosc a navy blue dress of pure silk Uara- thca with insvta ol re-embroldered Alencon )ice, A navy bluw theatre veil, navy accessories and fl cor* psgo of pink camolllas comple­mented her ensemble. '

A reception from 2 to 8:30 P.m. was held in ihe Crystal Drook inn, Eatontown, altar which the couplo Jlew to Mexico/ l7or traveling, tho brld« wore a U\u«,Un«n suit, whlto hat‘and accessories. Whan they re* turn, they will reside on McCJclldft St., I^ong llranch.

The bride was graduated from Malawaji High School and attended Monmouth College. Sho Is empfoy- ed' bb a itenographer by the Ntw

-Jersey Bell Telephone Co., Red Bank, -

Tho bridegroom was * graduated from i.aSnllo Military Academy, Umg Jaland, and Villanovs College, Pennaylvanlli. Ho lOrved In tho U S'. Army and is aisoclate^ with the -J r -F . Klely .CunKltucthn* Co., loi)H Branch,

Area Girl Wed I11

Fort YjaudcrdaleMis* Ann O . Covet!, dsughlcr

of Mr. ond M rs.Jlcnry I). Covert, 4B4 South Laurel Ave., West Keans­burg, bocsme the bride of WlUlniti R, Wilson, son of Mr. snd Mrs. Georue B. Wilson, Fort Underdale, Pin., Saturday, May 27, HMil, al ii 30 p.m, In tne Oueen of Martyrs Church, Port Lauderdale, llto Rev. John Gunther pcrforrffld tiro double ring ceremony.

’Ine bride wore a while silk or* ganra.gown with a bow headpiece und (see veil. She carried a colonial bouquet uf whits rosea and CBrn*- ttons, . — -

M r.'and Mrs. Kenneth St. fler- msine, Port Lsuderdals, brothrr- in-law and sinter of Die bridegroom, were Ihe attendant!, A reception followed at the home M bride- gromn’s pa rent a for~lh#'‘ bridal i»uriy, family and immrdialo friends, -

Wlun they return from a motor Irlp, they.will reside In Tori Laud­erdale, "

lhe brido was graduated from lied linnk Catholic High .School arid was employed by tiie MetroiKJlilan

fioiorrtiKrt Co., Red liana. Her husband attended schools In Port j.audi’/dale and aervf’d four years with the ConM (iiiurd. H r and his lather conduct a niason business.

fi])rinn hrliH'H IhfiUnlits of novrl salads, lor, prettier aaiad plain* this year, keep gloany, .Tinf . oltvrs on hund. To k<*ep lh«'ir sFhuo, diy‘ olives well and roll In a little oil,

Engagements ...Bchr-Cllckittr -

M r. and Mrs. Ktlward J , Click, m-r, Reid’s Hill R d., Matawan, an* nounco the engaerment of their ilnuKhtcr, Mary-Ann, lo Robert ., Jen Ikhr, son ol Air. mid Mrs, AU

. MISS M A R Y A N N C LIC K N E Rleu lk-hr, 113 Mnln St., Matawan.

The bride-elect Is a graduate ot freehold RtRlonal lll|lh School, and 1s employed liy ‘.lie Mnry Carter Paint Company, Mutawan.

Mr. Dehr attended Keyport IIIrIi School, and Is employed by the Font Motor Cotnpuny, Metuchen,

An Oct, 14 weddtnit Is planned.LaPare-Hallrian '

Mr. and Mrs. Vincent IJ, Haller, nil, 1IHI lltoadw.y, Kt-y|»rt, an* nounce tho cnittiucmnit ol tliclr dauithter, Maureen, to Thnmas 1

MINS M A U K H E N IfA L I.E H A NI.nl’ m t‘ jr., son of Mr. nml Mm, Thomas I'. I.nl’ nre sr., S Vlaltlpa Way, Sea lltlulil.

Mis, Halleran In n uradualo of St, Mary's lllnh School, Smith Am* boy, and tlio Wilfred Academy ol llulr and llenuiy Culture, Newark. She )» employed by Ihe Tiara lleau- ty Salon, llitilfl.

Her flanco Is ii iiraduato n[ 1 -ouji Britnth llluh School, Class of 1WI, and Is employed by Vl>* U ,8 , PottOflliT, Kinn«o:i. : . .;........

Nn ilntc lins been set /or the Wcd- <lln«, ,___________ Cowud-Corrln*

Mr, and Mrs, Jolin Corrlne, Ten- . ni'iil Htl., Mnmanvllle, annoiinro (ho eniinBeitii'iil nf tlwlt daiidliti-r.

D R . L O U I S I . P R A G E RO P T O M E T R I S T

E Y E S E X A M I N E DO F F I C E IIOU H8

Dally aod flaturdayi I A .M . u I P.M .

Friday, I A .M . Is I P.M. O w ed AU Day Wtdntsdays

3 0 W . F ro n t S f . , _.K e y p o r f .......

C O i f a x 4 -2 0 2 0

MISH DI'.NINI! tO ltH IN I',Denise, to L i . Kred L , Coward 11L son nf Mr. and Mrs, Pred Cowan) irrr-^umter, S.C.

Tho bride elect, a Graduate of Freehold Regional IMrIi School, at* tcrtdrd- Berkeley School for . lbs .S’tw lftrifll. S>>e presfnlly is em­ployed ut Port Monmouth Procuro* ment Office, Port Monmouth,

iJ . Coward, a graduate nf Woke Forcat College, Wimlon • Salem, N r , prHentiy la assigned to (he U.K. Army Signal Radio Propaga­tion Nfdfforr, Middletown.

A military wedding will tuka oluce Aog, 6 at (.‘Impel No, J, Pori Monmouth.

SororiHP llie tonal! fry wMh a tiitti fruitll Jiiln- Mkk, CombTns i united fruit cocktail with orunga Juirt' and nour Intts pii|>rr cups nnd livi-/n uoill muhhy. loser I wooden

lick in center and freeze until firm. A nutiltlous ufter'Sthool treat for warm spring days. \

FORMAL WEAR

TO HIREW . S. W A L L A C E

c u r m i N u M m and Roys' l u , ^ . kl.es

X k*M : .......-----W. f in * U . ~ H n v w l

S t u d i o sSSMBI

CAN DID W ED D IN G S A SPECtAITVM M A IN f f l . T F J .C O M M i K K V P O N I 1

Page 8: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

Page Eight THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J , Thursday, Juno 1, 1961

Church Services Announced For Bayshore AreaFirst Methodist Church

•, 147 Mato St., MatawanRev. Frank E . Sweeten, PastorRehearsal for the Children's Day

progiam will be tomorrow at 2:30 p.m.; Intermediate Youth Fellow­ship, 7 p.m.; Counsellor Training at Freehold, 7:30 p.m.; ■ carriage house open ‘ to - receive items for rummage sale, 6 to 8 p.m.

Methodist Men .will sponsor rummage sale in the carriage house Saturday at 10 a.m.

Tfte_ Sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be observed at the di­vine worship services Sunday at 8:45 and 11 a.m. Music will be by tlie senior choir. Nursery and jun- for church wiil be held at 11 a.m. Church school meets at 9:45 a.m. Senior Methodist Youth Fellowship will elect of/icers and hold a pro­gram meeting at 7 p.m.

The Women’s Society of Christian Service will hold a covered dish supper and special program at6:4a p.m. Monday. " .....

. .. Counsellor. Training will meet in Freehold Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.

Prayer meeting is Wednesday at 7:15 p.m .; Methodist Men’s Club, 8 p.m.

The-final week-day Bible Study, for the .season will be held Thurs­day at 12:30,p.m. at. the home of Mrs. Otto Gaub, I I Ovcrhlli Rd.; dhancel choir rehearsal, 7 p.m.; senior choir rehearsal, 8 p.m.

Children’s Day program w/ll be ‘ " a n o : 30 a.m;-June-11.- - - - —

Vacation Bible School wiH be di­rected t>y Mrs. A . Wray Ingram starting on June 19. Registrations are being received through the Sun­day School classes. .

SL Mary’s Episcopal Cburcb East Front St., Keyport

Rev. Henry A. Male, Rector . St, Anne's Guild will hold a lunch­

eon meeting today at Ye Cottage Inn at 12 o'clock noon. In the even­ing at 7 p.m. the combined con­firmation classes and Boy Scouts, Troop 54, will meet and at 8 p.m., the stewardship committee,

"^tomorrow there will be HolyCommunion at 6:30 a.ijt. ......... —- Saturday thb 'confirmation class

will meet at 9 a.m. At 6:30 p.m. there will be the women’s bowling banquet, _ c _ ....... , .

Good Reading for theWhole Family> Nevis #) 'Fads •Family Features

■ *Th* ChfHUan Science Monitor . •, Ono Norway St:, Bfiton 15, Mou.'; Send ycyr newipaper for <h>t fjm« ,

cheektd.. Encbted find nt/ chock Of moniy ordt r. 1 year $20 Q /

. 6 monlhi $10 □ i month! $3 D

Sunday there will be morning prayer, 7.*-45 a.m.; Holy Commun­ion, 8 a.m.; church school and family service, 9:30 a.ia,: morn­ing prayer and address, .11 a.m. and Acolytes meeting at 7 p.m.

Intermediate choir will rehearse Monday at 7:30 p.m. ■'

Tuesday at 7 p.m. the Acolytes Training Class will be held.

On Wednesday the Altar Guild will meet-after the 9 a.m. com­munion service, fn the evening jun­ior choir and Brownies will meet at 7 p.m.; senior choir, 8 p.m. and A .^.s, 5 p.m. '

(Jolted Hebrew Congregation Broad St., Keyport

Rabbi H. O . H . Levina Sabbath Eve service will be field

.Friday, at 9:15 p.m. at which time Stephen Howard Rudnick will pro­nounce Kiddush. Oneg Shabbat hosts ore Dr. Joseph B. Rudnick and Mrs. Rudnick.. Sabbath service is held Saturday at 10 a.m. Bar~'MitzvDh ritcs-will take place for Stephen Howard Rudnick; Kiddush will follow. Pul­pit flowers arc being given by Dr. Rudnick and Mrs. Rudnick. .

The week of.May 28.will'be re­view in school; week of June 4, examinations.- Registration and re­registration will be June 4 and 11 from 10 a.m. to 12 o'clock noon.

First Baptist Church Main aod W. Third Sts.

7 1------------ Keyport-----------Rev, Maurice W. Phillip*. ’

* PastorSunday at 9:15 a.m. there will

be deacons’ prayer meeting; Sun* day School, 9:30 a .m ,;. morning worship service, 10:45 a.m. when there will be a special—speaker from Assam; Youth groups, 6 p.m., and, evening communion' service, 7:30 p.m. '

Mid-week service will be held Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in the chapel, ■ -

First Presbytcrtaa Church Route 34 and Franklin S L ,

MatawaaRev. Chester A. Galloway,

Pastor _ .Two morning worship - services

Sunday will be at 9:30 and 11 a.m. The Sacrament oi the Lord’s Sup­per will be observed and new members will be received during both services. D r. James H . Smyiie will fill the pulpit while the Rev. Chester Galloway fs recuperating from a major operation in Mon­mouth Medical Center. Sunday School meets at 9:30' and 11 a.m. Nursery care is provided for tots under three-years-of-age during both hours. Parents who desire to have their children baptized must attend a class an the meaning ot baptism at 2 p.m.

Boy Scout. Troop 73 meets Monday at 7:30 p.m.; the Session meets at 8 p.m. Brownie Troop meets at 2:45 plm. "

Intermediate Girt Scout Troop

City Zonfl Stat*fD-14

and PRICED to tm YOU M o ity.

IA W MI P H R /t r i m m e r

,4 Cpk I Irffft I t W*td*d iImI hovitof ' , • Wkfe.frMtl rubbw Hr* wftttfi ‘ t tfrh (pottfy sorbm «Ml Med*

■ . ■ ■ .U t M b ir * w r w o *W t y

Jebovih’s WitoetteiKeyport Congregation

_ Kingdom Hall, 53 Division SLThursday at 7:30 p.m. the mfnls-

try school Will consider the written test covering the matetial studied the lasfTdttr weeks, Tferrtaterfal was-takenr-from^the-^BIble aid books, “ Qualified To Be Ministers," "From Paradise Lost to Paradise Regained,” and,?'Jehovah'* Wit­nesses In the Divine Purpose," Tho second student will read from the Book of Ecclesiastes 1:1 to 1:18 and tho third wilt read Ecci, 2:1 to 2; 16. The service meeting will be at 8:30 p.m. The theme Is ' ‘Watch­ing Ourselves to Do Right Works/* taken from scripturo 1 Peter 2:12. This meeting helps publishers with their hbusc-to-house work. •

Sunday at 3 p.m. there .will be a public talk entitled, “ What Hope tar thq Living and the Dead?"

Tuesday at 8:15 p.m, there will be a Bibfe-study at all service centers using, the book, "Your Will Be Done On Earth.” The addresses are F . Anderson, 331 -Wilson Ave,, Matawan; J . Gondoly, 3 Atlantic Aye:, Matavvfari; R . Lbvcloco, P r p t pect'Ave,, CHItwpod; A . W / Palm­er; Middle R d ,, Box 290/ North Ccn- tervllle; \V. Waite, 8 'Mofltnduih

/Ave,, Port .Monmouth, and King­dom ffaff. ' ' ; -

Baptist Fellowship ' ' Port MonmouthRev. Gilbert Watt, Pastor

The, pastor wili bring the- mes­sage at the Communion Service at 11 a.m, Sunday. Bible School con­venes at 9:45 a.m. with classes for all ages. Youth Fellowship meets at 6 p.m. at the.home Of the pastor and Mrs, Watt, 105 Summit Ave., Belford, Evoning worship service Is at 7:30 p.m. with the pastor bringing the message. •

Bible Study nnd prayer hour. Ib on Thursday, at.8 p.m, The pastor wilj be In charge* , ' V,. Mornlng^wjprshipjsorvicejind^Ubla School are held at the Bayshore Gun Club, Harmony. Rd. All other services aro held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E . Mahoney, 11 Vermont Ave., Port Monmouth.

First Churcb Ot Christ, Scientist 84 Broad St,, Keyport

Sunday s c r v ice and Sunday School;"!} a.m. Wednesday, testi­mony meeting 8 p.m. Reading room Open Wednesday and Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. .

“ God the Only Cause and Crea- tora \is tho subject of tho lesson- scrriioh to be heard at all Christian Science churches Sunday.

Readings from the King James Version of the Bible will includo this verse from Rovelation (4): "Thou art worthy, O Lord, to re- ceivo glory nnd honour nnd power: for thou has crcatcd all things, and lor ihy pleasure they are and were created.'*

One of the. correlative passages to bo read from “ Scienco and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy states (p.207): ' ‘ There is but one primal cause, Therefore there can bo no effect from any other cause, and thero can bo no reality in aught which does not proceed-from-this great and only cause.’ *

Tho Golden Text ii from Psalm 72: "Blessed bo the Lord, God, the God of Israel, who only doeth won­drous thlnas."

St. Joseph’s ChurchMaplo P f., Keyport

' Rev. Cornelius J . Kano, Pastor Masses will bo hold Sunday

morning at 7, 8, 9, 10, I I and 12 o’clock. . '......

meets on TiTesaay~'at~9:30_a:m~At 8 p.m. there will be a Girl Scout Court ot Honor in the Fellowship Hall, j • ; . . ' . '

The executive board of the Men’s Ciub wiil meet on Wednesday-at 8 p.m.

On Saturday the Couple’s Club wilt meet at the church .a t 7:30' p.m,. and then go to Bahr’s Res­taurant in Atlantic Highlands for dinner. Members and friends 'of the church a rel n v i t e d t o J oi n J h e Coup-. Je’s Club for dinner.” ......

Calvary Methodist Churcb Third St., Ksyporf

Rev. a 1. Williams STD,. Pastor

—The Sacrament of-the-UoJy-Com-: munion will be observed at 10:45 a.m. Sunday. §unday School begins at 0:30 a.m; ‘

The official board will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m,

All choirs rehearse at the usual time on Thursday, June 8.

F in t Baptist Churcb 232 Main S t.; Matawan

, Rev. Robert W. Addiss, Pastor Thg Lord’s Supper Will b e o b f

served'Sunday at' both lO 'atid ll a.m, services. A nursery is open at-both-times Jor^pre-schQpl jJhll*: dren, Church school meets at 9:45 a.m. A vesper service will be pre­

sented by the junior choir at 4 p.m.' Baptist Youth Fellowship meets at 7 p.m. : . .

The final men's fellowship meet­ing for the season will be held Mon­day at 7:30 p.m. A film will be shown and Sgt. Joseph Moeller of the N .J . Motor Vehicle Depart­ment will speak. ’

Circle 1 of tho Women’s Fellow­ship will meet Tuesday at 10 a.m. Cars leave at 7 p.m. for Counsellor Training in Freehold.

The Board of Christian Education will meet Wednesday at .7:30 p.m.

Hour of Power mid-week service Is held Thursday at 7:30 p.m.'; sen­ior choir.practice; 8:30;p.m. .

Cherub choir practices Saturday at 0 aim? • ' * ; . . ' ' , .. •

•■’ Rev. Leon Ziriklef,'Pastor On Wednesday at 6 p.m, Ihe reg­

ular meeting of Olrl Scout Troop 03 will be held in tho educational building; at 7:30 p.m. senior choir will , rehearse in the dhurch. .

On Sunday at 9: JO.a.m , Sunday School will as held for grades one through twelve; al 11 i 'm . for;chl|- dren ages three through kii>derBar- ten. At 11 a.m, • regular morning worship will be held and the Sacra­ment of Holy Communion will .be celebrated. , • . . -; . . . ;

SL John ', Mcthtxllit Churcb South Malo St.,

Raritan Township Rev. Norman R.: Riley, Pastor Sunday worship services are ■

S a .m ,_ 8 ;3 a - a .m .- ^ £ J l J e u n .- . Church school meets at 9:30 and 11 a.m. The evening scrvlce Is teld at 7:30 o'clock. Intermediates meet for the sixth, seventh and eighth grades at 6:45 p.m.; Senior Method-. 1st Youth Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.; Post High School M .Y .F .,'7:30 p.m.

G E TRIPLE-S ^STAM PS’

r.wloom.-iuio ior F R E E : G I F T S !

C. AN D B. ESSO S E R V IC E

Highway 34 Matawan ■

give TRIPLE-S 8JM STAMPS

fodcyin.ible for F R E E G I F T S I

L A K E S ID E > AMOCO S E R V IC E

Route 34 and Middlesex Road,

‘ MatawanM c S

IT 'S E A S YkTO PHONE

C o n o ve r

(u m b e r C o ." " 1 0 0 Firs t S f ........

Keyport' ' *

C O l f a x 4 -0 5 0 0sp ■ s'MJ.vr:

—oranyplacoolsointhoOetrolt, MIcMgan oroa. Just diai Ana Codo Numbar 919, then, tha number you want. Area Codes are tha key to eaiy telephoning

lo'any'pTac*7Evefy'rfea'hai''fl"H code. You'll find them In the i u n t Pf^KflS of your Phone

Reformed Church of Keyport Warren St., Keyport

Rev. John H. Sharpe/Pastor Sunday School convenes at 9:45

a.m. Regular' v/orship service will be at 10:45 a.m. with a sermon by the pastor, Thtf congregation is in­vited to attend the dedication of the Faith Reformed Church in Haz­let at 3:30 p.m.

The regular meeting of the con­sistory will be. held Wednesday ai 8:15 p.m. at the home of Mr. and MrSf Richard Disbrow, 61 Chfnga- rora Ave. •

Children’s Day wili. be observed June 11 at 10:45 a.m.

The Sunday School picnic will be held June 17 and final session of Sunday‘ School for ‘ the summer June 18.

■ Church Of Our Savlotzr. Cottrell Rd .. . ___■ Cheesequake

-Rev. Heary A. Male, RectorRev.-Clarenct-A.—Lambe!e!;-Vicar

Sunday services are at 8:30 a.m,The first, third and fifth Sundayi, there 1j Holy Communion, and lie second and fourth Sundays, tnoro* , Ing prayer. Churcb' school meetr ' r at 9:30 a.m. K

Special service* will be held tr announced. - .

The Women’* Guild meet* the first TUesday of each month fa (he church hall al 8 p.m. Tlie Parent- Teachers Association ol the'churcb school meet* the final Tuesday ol each month at 8, p.m.

GetluenuiM Lutheran Chord) Maple PL, Keyport

Rev. Frederick Boo*, pastor Thera are two service* on Sun­

day: Matins at 8:30 a.m, and the regular service at II o'clock. Sun­day School begins at S:45 a.m.

Cllifwood Community Methodist Church

Rev. Lee Cotter, Pastor Sunday morning service will be

a. 9 a.m .; Sundsy School, 10 a.m M .Y .F , will be io the evening at 7:30 p.m. '

Choir practice will be held Thurs­day at 7 p.m.

Sayre Woods Baptist Churcb Route 9, Browntown

Rev. Ronald Robinson, Pastor Sunday School meets at 9:45 with

a class for each member of the family; morning worship, 11 a.m.; young peoples meeting, 6 p.m.; evening gospel service, 7 p.m.

Mid-week prayer and Bible Study Is held every Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. , ’

First Spiritual Churcb O l Divine Rose

;--------- 270 Maln S L , Bel/or(J_____1 Rev. Phoebe Dailey, Pastor

Services are held Sunday at 8 p.m. and Tuesday at 2:30 and S p .p.

St. Benedict’s Church Holmde] School

Holmdel Rd., Holmdel ' Rev. Edward P. Blaska, Pastor - Masses are held Sunday at 7 , S.

9, 10 and II s.m. and at 12 o'clock noon.

. Confessions are . heard In the parish home Saturdays between 1 and 9 p.m.

U orguville Methodist Chnrcb . . MorginvllW 'Rev. Fred H . Bowea, Pistar

Church service* are held an Sua- dsy at I a m aad Sunday School meet* at 10 s.m.

Union Bescb Full Gospel Chard) U l Park Ave., (Jnion Beach

Rev. Evan Seth Williams, Pastor Sunday.services are held at 10:4i

s.m. and 7:30 p.m .; Sunday School meets at 9:30 a.m. with classes for all ages;

Prayer meeting Is held on Tues­day at 7:30 p.m.

Mid-week service ts Thursday at 7:'OT p.m.

Pentecost Full Gospel Church Church ol the Living Cod 1S7 Main S L . Keansburg

Sunday School ts (ram 3 to * p.m.; evening service at 7:30 p.m

Prayer meeting is held Tuesdaj at 8 p.m. and Bible Class on Thursday at 8 p.m.

Saturday school for children Is held from 10 to 11:30 a.m.

Vacation Bible School will meet Monday, June 19, through June 29, starting at 10 a.m. dally. --Conv- mencement exercises will be held June 29 at 7:15 p.m. The theme will be "Around the World with Christ.” All denominations are wel­come.*

Browntown Community Churcb Browntown Union' Sundaj School

- Route 18, Browntown Rev. Francis Cantel, Pastor

Sunday School is held from 9:43 to 10:45 a.m. and the church serv­ice from 11' a.m." until 12 o'clock. Everyone Is cordially Invited to at­tend.'

. feotetostal Charch Uoloa aikd Sldaej Ave.,

Union 'Bescb ~ U r * . Herbert G . Wood, Pastor '

Worship services a n held Sun day at II s.m. and 7:4) p.m. Sun day School la at 9:45 a.m. '

Bible study group meets Tuesday »t 7:45 p.m. —

Thursday prayer meeting I* held at 7:45 p.m.

Emmanuel Assemblies Ol God Middle Rd., North Centerville

Rev. Timothy Adams, Pastor Sunday School Is et 9:45 a.m .;

morning worship, 11 o’clock; Evan­gelistic service, •r p.m. Tbe first Sunday ol each month, there Is s Communion service at 11 a.m.

Young Peoples service will be held Thursday evenings at 6:45 p.m., before tl)B regular Thursday service, Instead ol Tuesday eve­nings at 7:30 p.m. Thursday eve nlng, Bible study a n d prayer service Is at 7:45 o’clock.

Lather Memorial ■ J The Lutheran Church

Missouri Synod ^Tlnton Falls Public School

Rev. Daniel D . Reinheimer, Pastor Sunday School and Bible Classes

are held at 9:30 a.m. Sunday under the direction ol Arthur Bitter, su­perintendent. The morning wors -p wiD be held at 10:45 a.m. with ser. mon by the pastor. A nursery serv­Ice Is available. CommJnion serv­ices are held the first Sunday ol every month. •

g iv e TRIPLE SbM stam ps

redeemable for F R E E . G I F T ' S !

MATAW AN G U L F S E R V IC E 104 Main Street

Matawan '

H ere's lin e d innerw aro • ovenproof crazing • triple fired fo r durability

CHECK THIS CHART FOR YOUR SAVINGSIt's "almost unbelievable, bu t Iruel You con ob tain this beautiful D innerw are a l a cost fa r below the usual open-stock price fo r dinnerw aro o f this distinction! Imaginel You can build a cpm plefe service fo r 6, fl, 10 o r even ) 2 ol these aston ­ishing tavingi! . . . N O W n l your G ran d Union! ,

I SERVICE FO R N O . PIECES V A L U E Y O U P A Y Y O U S A V E6 4 2 $ 2 3 .4 0 $ 4 .6 6 $ 1 8 . 7 48 5 6 $ 3 1 . 2 0 $ 6 . 1 6 $ 2 5 .0 4

10 70 $ 3 9 .0 0 $ 7 . 7 0 $ 3 1 . 3 012 8 4 $ 4 6 .8 0 $ 9 .2 4 $ 3 7 . 5 6

, book. Pieoss uso thim Tor ouf' of-stato colls, new je r s ey b ell

:t»

All coftportillv* prlc.l art from r>. Sol.m China Co, lilt of r.gular prlcit.

■ F O L L O W T H I S W E E K L Y S C H E D U L E h

W IT H E A C H * 5 .0 0 P U R C H A S E

If your o rd e r is $ 10, you a re entitled fo 2 pieces a t 1 11 e ach — if il i t $ 1 5 , you m ay obtain 3 p ieces — and so on .

S t a r t Your* S e t T o c fa y !

H y

A d ifferent p iece will be -featured each w eeki W ednesday thru Tuesday, In th* following sequence. D on't a single w eek! Build a s la rg e a lervtce a i you wish.

ithViUK10" DINNER PUTEI f f volv* tnly1 1 C

I2(hWEI* COFFEE CUP.... I f f to)/m

9th,W IU Bread & Butter Plate IK 13th

win SAUCER. a. . i • • IKI0(hwlrt SOUP-PLATE . v « i I I I r i h M . . , 1 K

wiu FRUIT DISH. i . . . 4o< «riu«»>irll$■ . ' r—__ L . «J

win SALAD PLATE.Thar« will b* two 7*w««k p«r!edit 14 w««k» U oM lo c**pJ«Hr

—-— yBrar-jitrO»rrtn9rioelrp*Tlod-|h«-7“pltc»f-will-b»-«nrBiMrt»f*— lh* »o»* iiquinc* at outlined In lh» w#«kfy

MATCHING COMPUTER PIECES

O ve r 50 V . Savlngt• M E A T PLATTEB• V E G E T A B L E B O W l• S U G A R B O W l• C R EA M ER• SALT A K m M ...........

and other malching~|available at money-wvfn*

_ prlceil ■ 'Prices elfectlve at New Jersey, nnd Rockland end Orange County Grand Union Supermarkets thru Saturday, June 3rd. We have the right to limit quantitlM,

H i g h w a y 3 6 a n d M id d le R o a d .......... .............' H a z ie r

-------- ------ ------- N. J . State Highway 36, K e a n s b u rg...................................... Ketnsbuin store open Moo. thru Tliurs. 'til »- PJH . ~ -

, ' . F ri. ’ til 11 P .M ., Sat. 'Ul I P .M .Visit Voor IWple-S Redfemptloa C n l w a t W fi Majg Street, K e u u b t u i I - .O p * Friday Tfii » p .M . AH RtdempUon Centers Are Clued <T i

Page 9: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

Thursday, June 1, 1961'! i ■> ■ ' ' " . i l c » . V f. \ 1|>

T H E M A T A W A N J O U R N A L , N . Pag* Nin*

Services Held For Mrs. Haley

Funeral services were held Mon­day at 2 p.m. at the Mason-Wilson Fbnera) Home, South Amboyt for Mrs. Irene May Haley, 51, of 123

•Harbor Way, Laurence Harbor, who died Thursday, May 25, 1961, at her home. The Rev. William E . Webster, pastor ot the Laurence Harbor Community Church, offi- elated and interment was ia Christ Church Cemetery, South Amboy.

Mrs. Haley waa born in Belle­ville, and had resided in Laurence Harbor for 25 years. She war a

-clerk jn>the Madison Township mu­nicipal .office. She was a member ef the Laurence Harbor Commun- ily Church and its Mothers’ Circle, and a member of the Laurence Har­bor Republican Club.

Surviving. are her husband, James V .; one son, James M :, South Amboy; one grandson; two sisters Mrs. Grace Germain, Belle­ville, snd Mrs. Louis Breen, New York.

H U F F Y - P a rk la n e

4 9 ”

S o f t . . . DependableA perfect cut every time. Built to conform to safety standards established by Tlie American Standards Associ­ation. .

Ten Eyck _ .f5 g n *o n , Inc.Upper M ain S L M atawaa

M J . _______Funeral aervicca were held Sat­

urday morning at a.m. from the Kurzawa Funeral Home, South Amboy, and at 9 a m. a soleras requiem high masswaa offered in Sacred Heart Church, South Am­boy, for Paul J . 'Adamecs, M , of 507 David S L, South Amboy, who d ied W ednesday m orn in g , M a y 24, 1961, in Perth Amboy General Hos­pital. Interment was i/i the church cemetery.

Mr. Adamecs was an employee of the Pennsylvania Railroad for 40 years, retiriog 20 years ago. Bom in Austria, he had resided ia Slouth Amboy foT 50 years. He was a communicant'of Sacred Heart Church and was a member of its Holy Name Society; also of St. Jo ­seph’ s Society 514, of the Slovak Catholic Union, Perth Amboy.

Surviving are his wife, M r*. Theresa Adamecs; three sons, Thomas, South Amboy; Andrew, Union Beach; Bernard, Sayreville; a stepson, John Alena, Fords; two daughters, Mrs. Helen Chromczak, New Brunswick and Mrs. Margar­et Fierro, Morgan, and 12 grand­children.

Mrs. John B. lieppinstiiiFuneral services were held Fri­

day morning at-9 -a .m .-from the Flynn & Son. Funeral Home, Fords, and at 9:30 a.m. a requiem mass was offered in Our Lady of Peacc Church, Fords, for Mrs. Agnes K. Heppinstill, 116 Hamilton Ave.,

TRIPLES S W f STAMPS

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KEYPORT CLEANERS

191 M ain Street Matawan

V e t e r a n R e t ir e s

G E O R G E R . HUSHOURGeorge. R.'Hushour, 14 Eighth St.,

Keyport, yesterday retired from Jersey Central Power & Light Com­pany after 38 years of service. Mr. jfushOurwas a chief electric serV-- iceman in the company’s Bay Division. He was one of the original members of the company's mixed chorus.

Mr. Hushour is a veteran of World War 1 and is married to the former Miss Alice Gilson, New Yprk. They have three children, tivo daughters, and a son, George Hushour jr., who also is a JC P & L employee.

Fords, who died Tuesday, May 23, 1961, at Pinehaven Sanatorium, Pinewald. A native of Norwich, Conn., and a former resident of Perth Amboy, Mrs. Heppinstill had resided in Fords 28 years. Inter­ment was in St. Mary's Cemetery.

Mrs. Heppinstill was retired as a clerk at the Perth Amboy Post Of­fice,and was a member of the Re­tired Post Office Employees' Asso^

cUitan. She. vat a .communicaa* of Our Lady of Peace Church'and a member ct Court flan Salvador, Catholic Daughters of America.

Surviving are her husband, John B. Heppinstill; three sisters, Mrs, Marie Leavy, Matawan; Mrs. Hel­en Warren, Perth Amboy, and Mrs. Theresa Samsoe, St. Petersburg, Ffa., and a brother, Richard Shee­han, Fords.

Rudolph J . CherneyFuneral services for Rudolph

Cherney, 6J , of Route 130, Florence, were held Saturday at 8 a.m. from rhe home of his son, John Cherney, 15 Gerald Terr., Hazlet. A t $ a.m. a high mass of requiem was offer­ed at St Ann's Church, Keansburg. Interment was under the direction of the Day Funeral Home, Keyport. Mr. Cherney died Tuesday, May 23, 1961, at Burlington County Hospital, Mount llolly.

He was born in Yonkers, N .Y ., and was the son of tbe late Wenzel and Ann (Wesnk) Cherney. Ht.had lived in Union Beach for 35 years before moving to Florence four years ago. H e was a member of American Legion Post 321, Union Beach.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. An­na (McKenna) Cherney; three oth­er sons, Charles'Devlin; Brooklyn; Rudolph T . Cherney, Sayreville, and Francis Cherney, Cliffwood; three daughters, Mrs. Annabelle Breil, Mrs. Margaret Bothers and Mrs. Mary Jane Dictrich, nil of Un­ion Beach; two sisters, Mrs; Ann Patchey, Ossining, N .Y . , and M tt. Margaret Lusiano, Tucson, A riz., and 26 grandchildren,

Mn. Floyd L. MonaFuneral services were held Sat­

urday Afternoon- at 1-p.m. at the Scott Funeral Home, Belford, for Mrs. Gertrude E . Mann, 66, of 32 Holly Hill Trailer Park, West Keansburg, who died Wednesday, May 24, 1961, at her* home. Inter­ment was in Lake Nelson Memor­ial Park Cemetery, Middlesex.

Mrs. Mann was bom in Dunmore, PtL . ■ v ' • •

Surviving are her husband, Floyd H. Mann; two sou, William F .,

Belford, and Arthur L , BUuvelt. N .Y .; two daughters, Mrr. Gerald T . Swingle, Middlesex, and Mrs. Bernard S. Smith, Bloomfield; 4 brother, Frank Harper. Scranton, Pa.; twp ..sisters, Mrs. Samuel Black and Mrs. C. Albert Griffin, Scranton, and nine grandchildren.

Norfuan E . VanClielFuneral services for Norman E ,

VanClief, 73, of 14 Murray Lane, Keansburg, were held Saturday af­ternoon at 2 p.m. in the John J . Ryan Home for Funerals, Keans­burg, with the Rev. John Crum, vicar of St. Mark's Episcopal Church, Keansburg, officiating, fn- terment was in Fair" View Ceme­tery, Middletown. Mr. VanClief died Wednesday, May 24, 1961, at his home after a long illness. He was born in New York and had live d in Keansburg six years.

M r. VanClief was retired from the New York Post Office where he had been employed as a dis­patcher for 28 years. He Was a member of St. George Post Office Employees Association and a Ma­sonic Lodge in Jersey City.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Eliz­abeth (Murray) VanClief; three sons, Clu rence, Jersey City; How­ard, Ridgefield, and Norman E . jr„ Union City, and two grandchil­dren,...........................................................

This week, why don’ t you look through the windows of your church ,,. , . from the inside.

gVve t r if l e s

S JM STAMPSrerifMmiiible for F R E E

G I F T S !

KEYPORT CLEANERS

131 Main Street' Matawan

I 'hjbM , c m

choice 3 f o r $ l o o

R U IT COCKTAIL 3 ^ 1 °°V G U U I O t YHIOW —HAWAIIAN PUNCH 3 ~ $1°°GENUINE DILI PICKLES 3 ^ 1 °°CIANO BRAND ^IIQUID STARCH 3^ 41°°

£ 5 f o r $ I © ®

PEAS a n d CARROTSCIANO UNIONTINY GREEN PEASb a montc

CREAM STYLE CORN- CIANO BRAND "LIQUID DETERGENT

5^1®°5 ^ 1 °°5 ^ S | 0 0

52**1*

Frozen Foo' , • kitchen a to m \

Crinkle Cut Potatoes7 &5!00

T ^ d J f O O

3 te5l M t e 5!00 5 teV- S s t n 00

CAVATELLIknO€M CAJtOML I M A S roxsHooi■BDHYtC U T C O R N

T O ILE T 5 TISSUE 10 ^ 1°°

*t '

4 f o r $ l o o

KRISPY CRACKERSMtAKPAST Ol CXAMMONS '

WHEATIES CEREALCSAND RRANO

ALUMINUM FOILCIANO UMON *CAKE MIXES wan

44 ^ 1 M4 - 5!004 ' ^ S f O O

Your cho>oa 8 f o r $ l © o

8^ 51°°8“j* l° °8 u » .$ | 0 0

M t* |

AU FLAVORSPENGUIN SO D A -m uvak whou ot tuaoWHITE POTATOESofoou your rAVotniHEINZ BEANS ’S’ATSUNKKT ^LEMONADE

Top Qualify. Corn-Fed. Extra lean

C O M U H T I I U N A B R ID G EDT H E LIT T L E i t IVES

W EBSTER(DICTIO NARY

«*i m m itrutNct u im s* XtA*tncm.:.*n ascctiom a w b x

MJUiOMf or woui binMHtt humm Of THOI/1AM91 ot vocAMuar p n ato 32 *la>»Ur'l vvlwM*. Camel Bjtrllinfc tubilo defxitMnb JO- tiafeutiai LMiitfM iQu>tr*Ui«it

I W qlKrfltioOS » t YCMTSaftrtij* tl «r«ll bifatnfn wwdi aud r>i<r.Ks . . . •r-'tc tw Inre 90 muth at m ctfti

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POM IM IS2 7 3 9

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S I IH A lf . 3 9 *<114111 cut -OOPS « ROASt V 7 9 *

ruucnLOIN HALF

U .S . C H O IC E t A R M O U R S T A R , S W IF T 'S P R E M IU M

R I B S O F «

BEEF .4 9nmaJUKt

RIB STEAKS

6 5 <

B a r b e c u e T r o a f s I — , Slf“ -d . _ .S w o rd fis h A Q C

S te a k H y i hm £ M ~ 0f£fI£A M ,

. ^ S C A L L O P S 1 5 9 *JkW

l u i a n m m s n i i * oma M S io io o a n u K S l 79<

m

U n i C M O N M E A T30 UKA wilh Mb. flo. ;' O J U B D B M R A W S

H C E IS C IIIO Z EH

Twkcysiitts': 3 5 *Garden Fresh from Nearby Farms /

h o t h o u s e

Nancu Lunn muu nunOTU! autoAPPLE PIE 9*ftoiCWKUB BUNS « 37- m a r g a r m s ^ 2 8 *

TOMATOESRHUBARB

Finn Ripe BeautiesPerfect for Slicing

V/AJHtD —HADY 70 \JZt

M ® $ 0 1 Dairy Feafuros~m. a j

u l i /Ii i /i M j “ X V

2 5

vtivutA ;.’J3 !i 89*2 fc. E C We p ^ in w iM u ._ c$to Ms. ‘nl MOZZARUIA “£ 31*

ROMAINE LETTUCE ' 2 2 9 *kjmiuk . X . j , ifl Ci‘>m lAtCPtA 1 MOVOlONfSCALLEONS r b T

S A V E C A S H a n d T R I P L E - S B L U E S T A M P S A f G R A N D U N I O N. . . Prices effective at New Jersey, and Rockland and Orange County Grand Union Supermarkets turn Saturday, June 3rd. We have the ngnt to limit fiurinhtr■*

H ig h w a y / 3 6 o n d M id d le R o a d N , J . Stato Highway 36, Keansburg., . ■ " Un',!**............ Keatihtirn star* apra Ma«L Chm Tburs, .!tU I P.M.

; , 5 ; . r» t w n p.m., 'u h t m . ...........: ‘-'I:.!': Vtaki Ym t T ty M M tmjfam CtHet'uixiA MaJaSt/eri, XesMlMr# — Optil jPrUtf I p i t * fa Ceaters Art tU*e4 Maada^.

W ill R e tire

m m £ m ‘MRS. CLARA W. C O V E R T

Mrs, Clara W. Covert, who with her husband, Je$se, lives at 29 Spey- Icy Ave., Keansburg, "wiir retire from New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. tomorrow wilh 30 years of ser­vice. She Is being feted today at a luncheon , at Shadowbrook Inn, Shrewsbury.

Mrs. Covert, evening chief oper­ator, Red flank Information, pre­viously held the titles of operator nnd service assistant, She is a member of Red Hank Council, 11.G. McCully Chapter, Telephone Pion­eers of America, .

B O T T L E D G A SY o u G e t Clean, Q u ic k

H e a t F o r C o o k in g

P r o m p t, E ffic ie n t

S ervice

KEYPORT CAS (0 .Minim# a

KEYPORT LUMBER '& SUPPLY CO.

T e l. L O w e ll 6 - 1 8 7 2

' C lif fw o o d

S ta te W ill E v a lu a te L a k e B a th in g S ite *

For Ihe third consecutive y n r , th< Statt Department ol Health will provide dgni to Identify , like bath- In* place, which meet itandarda of the department. To be approved, a lake bathing area inust have good quality bathing water, good general sanitation, and mutt conform to aately requirement!.

Tha proprietor of the lake bath­ing place !• responsible for period­ic a a^lin g and bacteriological an- alyila of the bathing wateri. San­itation and ia!ety are evaluated by local health personnel and dlitrlct penonnel of the department.

Your advertliemeDt la thli pt* per will reach pnupectlva puft chaser. In every community In th« bayihore area.

give TRIPLE-S S JM STAMPS

M-iltvnuhif It1 r F K E E ' G I F T S !

CO LOTS TEXACO SF.RVlCB

MS Main Street Malawan .

R o ss W . M a g h an A g e n c y

SAVE with SAFECO

Real Estate—InsuranceM A T A W A N 13 8 Main S t LOwell 6 -0 0 0 3

O P E N F O R I N S P E C T I O N

GABRIEL BROS. ALL ELECTRIC HOME

Model Open bally Unlll 11 P .M . ............................ :

S h e ll* F ro m $ 2 9 0 0 u p - O n Y o u r L o t O r O u r t

R T . 3 5 A N D W O O D L A N D A V E . , M O R G A N R e pre se n ted b y Les M a g e e — P A 1 - 1 8 0 7

ENGLISH A G E N C I E S ..................

j ; F O R D , C O M E T , M E R C U R Y — L I N C O L N C O N T I N E N T A L

MOST ACTIVE USED CARIO T.................. IN MONMOUTH COUNTY l l

M o n m o u th Stre et, O p p o i i t e C a rlto n T h e a tre R E D B A N K S H a d y » I de 7 -4 5 4 5 - 1-6 0 0 0

fr t il lli f MOIf

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Page 10: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

Page Ten THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Thursday, June T, 1961

Keys Gain Final; Pietrewicz Fans 19

Keyport H i g h balltossers ad* .^•»nced to the fina] round ol Central

. '"Jersey, Group II, Monday, defeat­ing Lakewood 3-0 in a game at Freehold Regional field. In open­

’ ing round contests, Keyport had beaten. Crick Township'and lake­wood had humbled Matawan, the defending champs. The Keys will go against the winner of the High-, land Park-North Hunterdon Re­gional game for the district fitJe next week.

Alex Pietrewicz, Ie/thander, had , his best Jay for Keyport, fanning

J9 of the Lakewood batsmen. He made it spectacular in the first and fourth innings.. In the first, George Hayes, first tip /or the

' Piners, hit s a f e l y . Pietrewicz * fanned Joe Greene and Rein Man­

nik, but walked" Dave McKelvey end Ken Freeman, loading the sacks. But he poured the third strike through against Carl Moore, retiring-the side:.

-His pinch pitching was.eveii^et-. ter in the fourth. He fanned Free­

man first up, but a passed bat! on the third strike put the Piner first sacker aboard. Moore singled and Bryan Cherner was hit by a pitched ball, loading the sacks with no one out. Pietrewicz then fanned Joe Roth,. Marly Engel, Lakewood pitcher, and Hayes to retire the

‘ 6ide., No HU Yet

It was wclhbeTdid-for-the-Keyshad not gotten a, hit yet. Engel got two out in the bottom of the fourth, but then‘lost Dan Hourahan on four straight balls. Roth threw wildly to first on a pickoff play

- -and Hourahan moved to second. Ray Scuorzo drilled a hit into right field. Mannik' fumbled the, baft long enqugh for Hourahan to score. Pete Rothenberg also hit safely, but Chet Topolewski popped up to end the frame.

The Keys made it secure In the bottom of the fifth. Phil Cummings bunted safely. Bruce Jackson sent a fly i n t o right. Mannik mis­judged tha ball, and It went for

^Vfrree bases* Cummings scoring. Jim Wilson then sent a long fly to center and Jackson scored after the catch, j *

Champs Of Bayshore Junior High Conference Matawan Slumps Out Of Greater Newark, C-J, Group II, Tourneys

Players from the grammar school teams of Key­port, Matawan, Cliffwood, Union deach and Keans* burg, will shy away from looking at this picture o( the undefeated champions of their league, Middle­town Intermediate. They will say “ we have seen enough of them already.”

Tlio championship Intermediate School squad Includes: Kneeling, left to rljjhl, Barry-SIegfried, Bruce Kent, Coach Fred Gernsbcck, Bob~CapaIbo, Harvey Wilson; standing: Wayne Rogers, manager Bruco Bloxom, Phillip Malland, Mike Smith, James Griffin, Dixie Abdella, Bar{? Lombardi, John Turlato.

PfgiresWcz walked^aly-the twoin the first inning, four and walked one. The game made Keyport-16«3-on—the Season and Lakewood 10*5.

Keyport ())„ , ’ r Cummings, cf 3 13. Wilson, rf 3 0Uruce Jackson, U - 4 1PJetreivJcr, p - i 0Hourahan. Id t l :Scuorzo, 3b - -3 0P. Jlothenberf, lb 3 0Topolewski, m 3 0W. llyer, c J 0

Ukawottd (•) M S

Hayea, •« '• Greene, 3b Mannik, rf McKelvey, 36 Freeman, lb Moore. % - . Cherner, at - noth, a Engel,* £ ‘

ab r h 4 0. I 4 0 0 ♦ 0 1 S O I 2 0 ,0 1 0 2 2 0 0 J O 1 ''-J ' O' -0

M O I

f t o b e R u t K l M j i i s Opens On June 6

Bayshore Baba Ruth League starts its 'first season Juno 6, Al Caruso, publicity dircotor, an- nouiices. All games start at 8:15 p.m. The All-Star game will be played July 8, Tho playolfa start

■ AUg 1.................... .......... ...............^The; first'haU schedule, all June

dates,' Includes 6: Ramblers at R overs,;PAL at TiEOrs; 9: Jets at

-Acesr_llr'B r«ve s ' al “Hawks; 12;Rovers at Jets, Aces at P A L ; 13:Hawks at -Ramblers, Tigers at Braves; 15; Hawks at Rovers; 10;Jets at P A L ; Ramblers at Tigers,Braves at Aces; 19; Ramblers at

- AeiM 2 0 ;-P A t at Rovers, T l g « f r | ^ 'cullle“'at Hawks; 21; . Braves at Jels;23: Rovers at Tigers, Hawks at Aces, Braves at PAlj; Jets at Ram-

Ijlers; 26; Tigers at'Jets, Hawks at P A L ; 27;, Aces at Rovers, Ram­blers at Braves; 29: Jotnit-Hawks,Braves at Rovers; 30; Ramblers at P A L , Tigers at Aces.

The Aces and Jels are Keyport teams, the Braves and Hawks from Malawan; the Rovers and Ramblers /rom Raritan Township; the P A L from Cliffwood and the

■ Timers from Holmdel, Tho a*e limits are 13-1G.

Keys Win Game To Tie Norths

Keyport cleared away any linger­ing doubts about thQ Shore Con* ference "B ,” north contest, Thurs« day, winning their last regularly scheduled game in that league 9*2 over Hoffman High at South-Am* boy. The victory made the long' anticipated tie arid playoff with Matawan for the north *‘ B“ title

Coach Bob Zampelle had to call on his lefthander ace, Alex Pie* trewlc*,' to clinch the victory. Billy Jannarone, young righthander, started on the mound for the-Red and White but was too unsteady. He walked three Hoffman batters in a row with one out in the first. Paul Nagy singled to score John Jarusiewcz. with ft Hoffman run,: but a, good throw from center field by the Keys Bruce Jackson cut down Bob. Drill at third and saved the situation, ' .

In the bottom of the third another hit and walk with one out resulted in Pietrewicz being called in to fan two and retire - the rampant Hoffmanites, ■Kept In Check Fo r Three Innings ’ Ron Jur&kl Wept the KHS batters In check tor three Innings, but with the confidence gained by Pielre- wlcz’s .telucn to the mound, tha Keyport team broke Jooso in the fourth. Dan Hourahan hit a homer over the fence to tie It. Roy Scuor­zo and Pete Rothenberg hit safely and Chet-TopoIeWski bunted them aTong. Billy Hyer, who tooK over ns catcher with. Pietrewicz pitching, slngledj Scuorp' scoring. Phil Cum­mings'popped up, but Jackson ond Jim Wilson hit safely, running the RHS^core up,:t0 a safo five runs.

Hourahan nit another homer in the* fifth and Wilson one with two aboard in the sixth to make it a rout. Pietrewicz was troubled with men on bases each inning, but bad Hofiman base running eased’ his

BAYSHORE JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL CONFERENCE

The win made Pietrewicz 10-2 on the season. He fanned four but walke'd' five to create his own troubles. Jannarone walked four and fanned two In his two-and-one- third innings. Jurski Walked one and fanned tour.

Keyport (9)Cummings, ef. If, rf Bruce Jackson, cr, If 3. Wilson, rf. lb Pietrewie*, If, p IfouteliAfl. 2b Scuarxo. 3b e, lbTopoJruslcJ, a« Jannarone. p . •W, llyer, o VanPert, rf

ib r h 1 0 0 1 21 30 O2 21 2 1 31 .A 0 02 2 0 O

South Amboy (2) 34 9 13

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Poot-Kch. e Jaruslcwlrt* ofn. Drill, 3b.....Inman, nt Nagy, 3b Jurski, p J . Drill, tb Waliter, If 7 ':J. H/eck, rf

ab r3 0 2 1{ S4 03 0 I 13 0 J 0

21 a 50005 —£>lOOO 010-2

Acc ep t A p p lic a tio n s F o r S w im m in g P ro g ra m

Tho Holmdel Township Recrea­tion Commission announced thnt applications nre now being nccepl- (?d from ilolmdcl children seven- to-12 years-of-Uj',0 who wish to par­ticipate in the beginners and ad­vanced beginners swim course of­fered by tlio Camp Arrowhead YM CA Pool at Mcirlboro.

Approximately 50 children al­ready have registered for this sev­en-hour course, which will be con­ducted on Tuesday nflornoons from June 27 to Aug. 15, Arrnnj(2ments have been made by tho Kecreation Commission to have youngsters transported-to and - from- the- pool by school bus. ,

Swimming instructions will be given by certified YM C A aquatic instructors and, at the completion of tho course, certificates will be presented to ail participants. Also, awards will bo given to all young- slers who successfully complete Y M C A tests and parents will re- ceivo progress report cards. This swim course will be held In con­junction with tho Commission's Summer Playground Program, un­der tho direction of Mr. Allen Me* Quarrie and Miss Marilyn Young.'

Fill your service obligation In th$ Army Reserve. Call HOpkins 2-2M3 for further Information. '

The rest of the members of the Bayshore Junior High School Con ference continued to scrap It out for sefomd place with the undefeat­ed champions, Middletown Inter­mediate, having closed out their season. In their final game, Coach Fred Cernsbeck's champs never looked better, humbling Keansburg 7-1 on” a‘ three-hUter- b y - Chippie; Kent. A walk, an §rror and a sin­gle b y Bob Capalbo^ave Middle­town ttfo’ runs their first time up and It was all they needed with Kent spinning his spell over the Keansburg batters. 1 '

The only solace for the rest of the league Is that Middletown will lose by graduation all but three of its squad and all but one of the starting lineup. While Coach Gerns- beck Js doing a rebuilding job next season, somebody else, notably Keyport with plenty of holdover veterans, wilt have a look-in.

In the scrap for second place, Matawan Elementary split two games by halr-breath margins. They lost to Union Beach 6-5 and edged out ClUtwood Memorial 9-8.

Settled In Final Innlag, fThe Union Beach game -was set­

tled in the final inning when Frank D'ApoJito, Malawan pitcher, struck a wild streak, walking Mike Yuhas hitting Vic Tuberian with a pitch ed ball and then walking Lou Kal usziewski and Rick Rlccardl to force in the winning run.

D'Apolito also was unsteady at tho start, issuing two walks"‘ and hits hy E d Lewandowski, Larry Notarcola arid'Yuhas driving In three runs. Matawan’s trouble was producing long hits at tho wrong time. In the sccond they filled the bases on a hit by Billy Coon, a walk and a hit batsman, but tho best they could get out of it was one run on Tom Longette’s single. But In tho third, D ’Apolito and Steve Russell whacked out two of the longest home runs'"seta " on MHS field, all with nobody on base.

The Benchers turned three moro walks, a wild pitch and an error Into two runs in tho top of the fourth, but Ihe Matawan team came up from behind again on hits by Ronnie Gerlufsen and Georgle Barr and a walk to make it 5-5. But this was ail for naught, when the Beachors long-winded "walt- hlm-out" tactics paid off again in tho sixth.

In tho Cliffwood gamo Matawan -went way. out ahead and then tried to stave off the embattled Memorial School players. The Elementary School* team ran a 3-2 lead to 7-2 In the top of the fifth when! D ’Apo lito, Tom Devino and Rusrcll all hit safely and Coon followed with a blasting triple.

Cliffwood came back for a run in tho bottom of the fifth off Longctte on Walt Mltter’s hit and a two-base error. Then they chased the.Mata-, wan starting pitcher in the sixth when Wilbur Underwood, Billy Shortridge, Tom Green and Buster Franklin all connected and Mltter was hit by a pitch. It sent the Memorial School team into the last inning ahead 8-7.

In the top of the seventh, the Cliffwood team had a case of “ nerveH” and outs that should have retired the side became errors-put­ting two Matawan players oa buse. Pep Relth then came through In the pinch with a rattling two-bag­ger to send homo the runs to win tho game for Matciwan, But even then Coach John Lusczkovlch’s players needed two tremendous catches on long drives In,the bot­tom half of the seventh to isavc’ it.Middletown Intermediate (7)^ .... all r hGriffin, lb 3 2 2Abdulin, b s 4 2 1M, Smith, If 4 0 0II. Cap*Iho, c ~ 4 0 1Kent, |) 4 ■ ■Mallard."ID--------------------- 3Obarjtfldt, rf 2Lombardi, of ______ 3Selgfricd. 2b 2Ma*erlfiv#kl, rf 1

Kejmiburf (1) ab r 0Kalkliot, ss Connotlv, c( Beveridge, c ClnucoUii, 3b Florlo, rt Valll. If . Laniit, lb Pnrls. 2b Kftc, p

23 1 .1Af/rM/Wmvrf fnfornried/attf S02Z 010—7Keansbm-fl . OOQQ oot-l. Unlan Delicti (6)■ ab r bjllecardL H ’ 2 l I

1 (cbntinueil bottom next column)

I:

MHS Trackmen Sink Keyport

Matawan scored their expected win In the annual meet with Key­port at KHS field on (May to, 87'/$ to 29V4- Two firsts were captured by the Keys, Ed Scullion winning the mile and Larry.Poland the shot put. The other 11 firsts went to the Maroon and Steel. _

Brad Bradach continued his sen­sational performances, running the 440 on the not particularly fast Keypcn traclt in 50,5 seconds. RichBennett took both the dashes f(5r Matawan with Roosevelt Jef/coat and John Anthony comlng-on to shut out the Red and White's bud­ding star, John Williams.

Staple performances were turned in by MHS performers In winning their events es follows: Mike Cath- erwood, the pole vault and high hurdles; Rollie Peterson, the high jum p;, Terry Mugee, the javelin; John Hinds, the discus; Ken Riss- miller, the 880, and Rich Vena, the broad jump. Ken Morris pleasantly surprised Maroon and Steel Coach Barry RUro by going over tha low hurdles In 22.5 The HuBklea coach anxiously surveyed the per­formances of his field men after their paucity of points at the Shore Conference meet caused Matawan to lose its title. Magee and Hinds showed their best signs of im­provement in their events.

KHS Coach Jay Demarestj did not avail himself of the services of his crack half-mile^ John,Pote,, as he was resting this runner frofti thts effects of a cold to~get~hlnrready for Central Jersey, Group II , action at Asbury Park High Stadium held Saturday. ' •Tlio summary'. (M) tor Mnlawan, (K) for Keyport.100-varil dash*.— Bennett (M), An- thnny (M). Je/fcoflt (M). Time: 10.0 seci. 1 ”220-vord dash —.Bennett (M), Jeff- coat IM), Anthony (M). Time: 22.4 secs. .' 440-yard run — Bradach (M), Fler- r<)fl (M), Mol (K). Time: 50.5 decs.080-yard run — nissmlller (M). Kal- ma (M), Cort (M). Time: 2 mini., 07.B secs. •Mtle run -r- Scullion (K), Farrell (M), Wildman IM). Time: 4 mlna.,48.4 secs. 'laff-ynrd jdgh hurdlei — Cathenvood (W), lloban (K);:Worrl8 (M). Time:10.4 secs( .' IflO-yard Ww hurdles — ^ rrls (M), SulHvan ’ tKJirVena (M). Time:, 22.8 sees.Shot put — Poland (X), Kreutfer (M), Sakin (K). Distance: 42 ft., 3

Discus — Hinds (M), Bochlor (K), Hose (K). Distance: 128 ft., IV* Ins.Javelin — Mogde (M), Peterson <M>, Doerr (K). Distance: ISO ft., 10Ins.IliRh Jump — Potcrson (M), Mer­rill |M), Bogart <K) and ninenr (M), tied for third. Height: 0 ft., fl Ins.- Droad Jump •— vena (M), WIlllamB. (K), W. WatUlnglon• (M), Distance: 18 ft., ll ins.Polo vault — Cotherwood (M), Crossley (K), MacTague (M). Height: lt ft. .

Lowther, If. lb Lert'ancJowskl, 0 Notarcola, lb, p Yuhas, ef StrnHclU, 3b Bel), ksTti))crlnn, If, 2b Pruchnlk, p, 2b Nanpl, 21) KilJllzlrskl, 2b

22 eMatawaa ElemenUty (J)ab rI/inyotte, aa 3 0D’Ai>r»tlto, p 4 1T. Devino, If S OIttiSHL'l!. at) 2 1Coon, lb ' 3 1Woolley, cf 1 0Hucto, cf I OKihvavdH, cf 0 -0Keith, rf 2 1C3erlufsen, e 3 1G. Barr. 2b . 2 0Haminoml, 21) 0 O■. 21 B 7Union Beach , 3 0 0 201—flMatawan ; ' 012 200—3

Matawan Elementary (9)ab r 'l/mgotle. *4. pM n V i i " -HUMfcll.jio Oooh. ib . nelth, of Edwanla, 2b G. Dirr. rf nradley, rf Gerflusctt, c

a 1 0 1511

CJI/fwood Memorial (S)J. Williams, If Franklin, U _Cauiiby, rf Childs, p, lb 'llatnllUm, c .J . Jimd.1, (>, **Underwoml, %n, Ib Shnrtridse, 3h Green, cf Mltlrr, 3h '. ,

ab r 4 00 1

Ma(awan!s baseball season turn­ed to gall and wormwood Thurs­day. The Central Jersey, Group H , honors they won by such a valiant stand last year in that ever mem­orial game with Highland Park were swept from them in the open­ing round ot play this year by Lakewood, S h o r e Conference, South “ B" champs, The Piners let the Huskies lead all through the game only to common-in the last inning at (he Ocean County field to win G-5.~

So a Malawan team that had won 17 out of '18 games lost its three most important games of the .sea­son on consecutivc days, Left is only the dubious outlook of con­tending for the Conference title with Keyport and Lakewood teams gone rampanl.

It Is unhappily necessary to say the Huskies were lucky to come so close. Every inning Lakewood had somebody on base and ln each Inning-but the fourth a Lakewood runner touched third. Jack Yates, lefthander, pitched four-and-one- third innings for Matawan. He re­tired with the score 5-2 in Mata- wan’s favor in the fifth after a Lakewood batter had hit safely. MHS Coach George Deitz esteemed Yates was having too much trouble getting the ball past the batters, as he had recorded only one strike­out and one walk, and the Mata­wan outfielders were leg weary from chasing flics.. Bowie'Comes On Mound ...

Bill Bowie 'came on and the Piner sluggers took to his rJghthanded of­ferings better than to Yates. They were back in the ball game in no time and slugged their way on to win. Bowie also got one strikeout and one walk, .

But Lakewood pitching was noth­ing about which to write home, Marty Engel needed flashy field­ing plays to carry him1 along-after a spell of ineptness in the first inning. He fanned. seven' Maroon and Steel batters and walked two. All MHS runs were unearned, largely due tq Engel’s lapses.

In the first the Lakewood hurler presented* the Huskies with -a- Jat three-run lead they did little on their own to acquirer. With one out,~he walked Charley Wathtngton and hit Bob Jackson. Bill Bowie sent a bouncer to Carl Moore at short that got away and Wathlngton scored. With Jackson on third and Bowie on second, Moore uncorked a wild pitch into the dirt. Jackson scored. Bowie came on in and John Patterson, Piner catcher, tossed to Engel, who lost the ball in covering the plate. It was MHS 3-0. Rein Mannik slammed out a '400-foot homer in the bottom of the first for Lakewood. ' . .

Dribbles Chance Away The Piners had two men in

scoring position in the second but Engel dribbled the chance away. Bowie got one hit In the Matawan half of the third. An outfield error put him on third and Engel gave a gift run to Matawan again with a wild pitch. ■ • - • •

The Piners had a big chance again, in the third. George Hay?s led off with a hit but Joe Greene forc­ed him. Mannik was safe on an error. McKelvey lined out, but Ken Freeman singled Greene home and ho and Mannik were in scoring position. Moore, too, lined out and that chance was gone. Bryan Chcn- ker was safe on an error at the start of the fourth, but Patterson fined to Yates for a double play.

Then came another'gift run for Matawan in thfe top of the-fifth. j;acksori singled <o center and Chenker, Piner centerflelder, play­ed it so badly he gave Jackson a free run around the bases.

Leads Oft With Hit . In tho bottom of the fifth Hayes again led off with a hit. Wnen Greece skied out, Yates was waved off the mound and Bowie was pitch­er for Matawan; Mannik forced Hayes, *'but then Dave McKelvey doubled and Freeman tripled to make It only 5-4. But Moore grounded out and Matawan was spared for the moment.

Lakewood’s exasperation reached its height in tlie sixth when Chen­ker M/alloped out what locked like a homer only to be cut down ot the plate on a Flynn-to-CoIlins-to- Wathington-to-Garafano relay. ,

When Hay<?s struck out on a bad ball at the start of the seventh, the piner fans gave up. But they perk­ed up when Bowlo walked Greene on four straighte balls. Mannik beat out nn infield roller and they were cheering again. McKelvey singled home, the tying run' and they were roaring. Freeman was pnssed purposely, loading t h c sacks. But Moore got a home-run ball after two strikes and made the most of It. The Lakewood stands went into a frenzy as Man­nik coursed in with the winningrun. ,,. Matawan (5)Flynn, If C.-Wathlngton. 3b Bob Jackson, 2b Bowie, cf, p W. Collins, »a Yates, p, 2b OarafaiU), c Gregory, cf, rf Sutherland, lb, rf

’ aV

Lakewood (6) ab r 4 0

4 O3 O

MalavrAu Elementary , Cliffwood Memorial f ?j3t a 1 a in 10 402—0 11W 150—8

Hayes, If ,Qrecnc, 2bMn»»ik, rf .McKelvey, 3b Fri’miitin, lb ;Moora, ss Chenker, ef Patterson, c J « »Kngcl, p 3 0 030 6 10

Mata«-an - 3010 1W—5Lakewood 1010 202—0Eliminated From G N T

New Brunswick High’s balltossers ellmlnated-Matawan from the open­ing round of tho Greater Newark Tournament at Rutger* University field May 24 by ft score-of 7*4.. Errors were the undoing of the Huskies In * game in wnlch they outhlt their favored rivals.

Dave Gregory, lefthander, lost his first game of the season for the Maroon and Steel after putting away nine. Seven errors, three of which came in the., ninth Inning with the-score tldd al'fMr-all, ruin­ed a pitching effort In which he fanned six and walked three. New Brunswfcfr usfrd two pitchers to secure their victory, Walt ftrJcPeek and John Kish. This pair make up the top hdrlers or the Zebra staff, thcit last assignment being the 11-

inning game against G N T No. 2 team, Montclair.

The Zebras got away to a two- run lead in the opening frame oh a walk ta Bruce Nelson and a homer by Joe Adochio. The Huskies soar­ed back in the bottom half of the first against MacPeek. E d Flynn got a life to start it on a wide throw on his grounder. Charley-Wathing- ton and Bob Jackson followed with smashing hits to score Flynn; Jack Yates did the first of three fan­nings, but Billy Collins cracked out a hit and Wathingtofi and Jackson rode home on a wild relay in from left field. But Bill Bowie then drib­bled out and George Morrell pop­ped up to end the promising MHS first round. Gregory walked Ray Bascelli and hit Eric Sister with»a pitched ball to start the second, but - two strikeouts and a cutoff stalled the Zebras here.

Tate Lead In F/ffhTwo gilt runs-put New Bruns­

wick ahead in the fifth. With one out, Joe Tinley walked and Leroy Parsons was hit by a pitched ball. They worked a double steal. Nel­son bounced one to Yates who cut him off at first. But Yates was slow and low on.the throw home, Tinley beating it and then Parsons also scoring when the ball got away from' Charlie Garafano, MHS cat­cher.

Bowie smashed a homer, into deep left to tie the score in the seventh. The last Matawan chance eroded in fhat irinirtg wheirGara- fano hit safely and Gregory walked with one out. But Flynn popped up arid Wathington hit Into a force play.

With one out in the ninth, Col­lins let Sisler’s grounder roll too long and the Zebra sccond sacker was safe. Kish dribbled 'in^ffont of the plate and Gregory tossed wide to second, both runners being safe. Tinley then hit lo right. The ball bounced away from Morrell and both runners came in. Tinley wound up at third and he scored handily on a squeeze play. In those few, short moments, a New Brunswick team taking advantage of Matawan errors to the fullest forced the breaks to give them the game, It was, the way to play the game.

Matawan (4)/ ab rFlynn, If . . 4 1 0C. Wathlngton, 3b 4 1 2Bob Jackson, 2b 4 1 1Yat«4 lb ......... 1 0 0W. -Collins, m 4 0 1 1Bowie, cf . 4 1 1Morrell, rf 4 0 0Garafano, 0 . ' 4 0 1Gregory, p ' . I 0 '

KHS-MHS TodayPlayolf game between Keyport

tad Matawaa for ib a North “ B ’ V Shore Conference bueball title will be held at the Keyport High School field at 3:31 p.m. today. The two teams finished In a Ue? 11 wins and one loss ia the final standings, necessitating the play­off. This ls the third year ia a row such a coodltltra has per* slsted. . -

Alex Pietrewicz wili pitch for Keyport and Dave Gregory for Matawan. The winning team will face Lakewood on a date next week for the overall *‘ B” champ­ionship. The piners are southern “ B ” champs? and are also de­fending _oyerall 44B” champs. They thwarted Matawan’ s hopes of retaining t h e Group II , N JS IA A , title the Maroon and Steel won in 19C0. Last year both Keyport and Lakewoodjcompeted in Group III in the stated

High school graduates^-want to know how you can complete your service obligation through t h e Army Reserve . . . almost at your convenience. Call HOpkins 2-2095

New Druiuvlok (7>Tfn ley, of Parsoru. 3b Nelson, lb Adochio, a Catanese, If Terhune, as BaacelJi, rt CoLtxell, rf Tennei;elll, rt Slsler, ib . MacPeek, p

Kish, p

* 4 7ab ir h 4 2 - 24 1 1

. 4 i a 4 t 1 4 0 1 3 O 0 J 0-J>0 r t! 1 O 0 0 1 1 0

I t f I

N J S I A A T ra c k . > "M e e t A t R u tgers

N . J . State Interscholastlc track and field championships are to be contested all day at Rutgers Stad­ium Saturday. Matawan returns to competition after a year of suspen­sion, but does not get rated among the favored three to dethrone the defending champs, Highland Park. The top-flight rivals of the Owls are Edcewater- Regional, Clifford Scott of East Orange, and Point Pleasant.

Keyport, also in Group II , com­mands notice for tho first time in that group, in that the Keys have In Ed Scullion, mller, and John Pote, half-miler, athletes who have made times that give them an out­side shot at individual state titles In their events.

Best prospect for a state individ­ual title from this area is Mata­wan’s Brad Bradach in the 440. The Maroon and Steel’s Rich Bennett is rated a top contestant in the dash­es in that he. will be defending state A A U champion on June II at Clifton Schools Stadium.

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In d ia n H ill B o w m e n C o n d u c t First S h o o t

Tha Indian Hill Bowmen of Key- port held their first club shoot oa their range on Beers St., Sunday, There were about 40 members tak­ing part In the club shoot, which consisted of 14 animal targets and Ii hunter targets. The . members were divided in classes taken from their State Field Archery Cards.

Winners were Edward Lawton, with 399 in Expert A .A .; David Thomson, with 310 in Expert A .; ; Carleton Wharton, with 295 in E r - pert B .; Edward Spencer with 257 in Bowman; James Burlew sr. with 270 in Archer. „

For the women, Edna Wharton was first in Bowmen with 213 and Marie Koppenberger was first in Archer with JfH. In the junior class, Joseph DeMaio was first with 121). The course was jn excellent con­dition and many of the members spent the day enjoying the out-of­doors with picnic lunches.

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Donkey BaseballFinal plans have been made by

Washington' Engine Co., Matawan, to play the Hook and Ladder Fire Co. in a donkey baseball gome Sun­day, June U . The game is slated at 3 p.m. at the ,M aUwan High School field. All players will be mounted on donkeys for tho game. Tickets may be purchased from any member of the fire companies.

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Page 11: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

Thursday, June 1, 1961 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. JL Page Eleven

Mothers Club Model For State

Keyport High School Mothers Club held their 13th annual awards dinner for Keyport High School athletes, cheerleaders, twirlers and band members at the Crystal Brook Ion, E atontowti, Monday with 300 in attendance. John 0. Hartzler, superintendent, acted as master of ceremonies.

Stanley (Tuffy) Baker, director of athletics, describing himself as the *'only male member" of the Moth­ers Club, pointed out that the idea of a Mothers Club had originated at the and that the workof the Keyport Club led to the formation of Mothers C 1 u b s at many other high schools throughoutthestate. “ ................' George D . Search, principal, noted that the annualdinners had

: started with 100-in attendance, now there were double and more that number with the Mothers Club stiirprovidirtg the Catherines.c And the ^Iub was hailed by Basketball

-Coach Frank Zampello for having provided buses for the carrying of students when it became necessary to ploy home games at Convention Hall court, Asbury Park, this past winter.

Award To James WilsonMr. Search made the Mothers

Club award to James Wilson as that member of the senior class maintaining a superior average in studies^and *at t h e same, time

—engaging in the greater number of extracurricular activities. He was hailed as president of his senior class and a four-year man in base­ball and basketball. ,

The Bayshore Junior Chamber of Commerce awards in t h e safe- driving road-e-o were presented by Kobert'Benedickson, president-elect of the club, to Rod Croes, Donald Buhler and Harold Dolan, first, second and third prize winners re­spectively. •

The appreciatfon^of-s e r v l c e s award to a retiring Mothers Club

‘ P L A Z A S H E L L S E R V IC E

Route M in d . Middle Road

Hazlet

Candidate “Lines U p ” Bayshore Workers At Demo Women’s Convention

Judge Richard Hughes, Democratic gubernatorial candidate, is pictured with 0efTto right) Mrs. George Reseter, Hazlet; Mrs. Robert Norton, Sea Brght; Mrs. Harry Hill, president of the Women’s Demo­cratic Club of Monmouth County, and Mrs. J. Harold Costelli, n state women’ s spring convention held May J9-20 Id Hotel Claridge, Atlantic City. - I

Democratic women from all 21 counties were present at cut* ventlon, the theme for which was taken from President John F . Kennedy’s Inaugural address, "Ask not what your Country can /do for you. Ask what you can do for your Country” and was used as/the subject of a panel discussion. ' At the luncheoiv May 11, Mrs. Edna Howe Kuser was honoredwith a “ surprise program” , for her many years of service to the Democratic Wolhen of New* Jersey M d as a, former executive secret tary of the Women's Division. '

There were more than 500 women at the May 20 luncheon Honoring Democratic £tale Committeewomen. The guest speaker was Mrs.

Margaret Price, Washington, D C ., vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee.” • £

A highlight of the convention was a chronological review of 10 years of "Fashions and Politics” with'Mrs. Hortense Kessler pre­senting the history of Democratic women, as club members modeled the fashions of the times. Jn the review Mrs. Katharine E.-White, Red Bank, portrayed Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt; Mi’s. Costello, a retired school tcacher; Mrs. Reseter, a woman in service; Mrs. Norton, a woman in government. a -­

At the convention Mrs. Norton, Mrs. William Murray, Fair tlavea, and Mrs. Reseter were recorders for the May 10 session. Mm. Hlll« county president antj, newly-elected vice chairman of the executive committee w u y A M ^ c rv a jio ii chal/man for Monmouth County. Mrs. Gustavo J . ' secretary of the Monmouth CounlyBoard of I w ^ ^ P H v a s publicity consultant for tho ''Ea rly Bird” Round Table Discussions.

president was made by M r. Search to Mrs. Grace Stryker,

Letters, Awards . Letters and awards were matfe

as follows:’Football (Stanley Baker, coach)—

Wayne Bowne, Les Brown, Bill Hogan, Bob Feigenwinter, Mervin Robinson, Bob Rose' Rich Silvestri.

Basketball ( F r q n k Zampello,

COME SEE------

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i f : ». v j : ; j

Walters School of Dancing

K e y p o r t H ig h School A u d it o r iu m -

Tue&, June 6th and W ei, June 7th

_ C u r ta in T im e — 7 :4 5 F .M .

Adult fi.ea 1------------- , c u w w e

• T IC K E T S W IL L 'B E S O LD A T D O OR

coach) — Larry O ’Neil ((op, re­bounder), Jim Wilson (lop (out thootef), Don Buhler (lop assist), Bruce Jackson (top scorer), Larry Poland, Pete Rothenberg, Tom Uionardls, Les Brown, Tom Gev­as, Bill Jannarone, Skip VanPelt, Jim Stultz, George Henry, man­ager, .

Baseball ( J e r o m e Zampello, coach) — Alex Pietrewicz, Jim Wil­son, Ray Scuorzo, Chet Topolewski, Phil Cummings, Brucs Jackson, Billy Hyer, Dennis Duff, Bob Turn­er, Jim Stultz, Dan Hourahan, Pete Rothenberg;—Skip^a n Pe ltr-B illjr Jannarone, ^JTred Jones, ' Frank Teixeira, manager, --------- .

Track (Jay Demnrest, coach) — John Williams, Woody Sullivan, Ed Scullion, John fate; wed CrtutUyv Bob Rose, Ralph; Foss, . Larry O'Neil, Bill Boehfer, Jim Houston, Dob Moore, Fred Hoban, Lee Bo­gart, Ron Miller, Charlie-Sakinr Tony DiPaolo, manager.

Bowling (John Miele, coach) — Doug MacEwan, T o n y Inranti, Stan Hyer, John Gilbert, Bill Grimm. ■, ■ ‘

Cheerleaders “ (Miss Marian; De­Luca, coach)—Varsity (gold mega-. phones to seniors) — Co-cjplains Margie Dietrich and Carol Perry, Cathy,Hedigan. Iris Galetti, Mary Lou Sldlsen, Pam Rakolos, Joyce Maley, June Anne Kingeter, Caro­lyn Meir.

Junior varsity cheerleader, — Co­captains — Patty Schanck anil Julia Shumock, Loretta Terry, Marieta Dietrich, Rose Ann CavalH, Carol Hendricks, Jean Aumack, Barbara Post, Dianne Potts, Jeanne Ola.

Twirlers (Miss June Laughtln, coach)—Three-year pins to Barbara Davison, Barbara Hooley, Karen Bllderback, Jane Wuesleleld, In recognition ol three years work on the squad. Also letters to these girls and to Muriel Wilson, Connie Gevas, Marilyn Young, Sue Co­burn, Marcia Jannarone, Teri Megllo, Kerry Taylor, Candl Davi­

son, Cynthia Connelly, JoAnn Applegate, Carol Eckert, Cheryl Patterson, Kathy Woolley. Mar­garet Wilson, Anita pair, Judy Sproul, Donna Burns, Nancy Wil­liams, Diana Wayte, Linda Notar­cola, Sally Raynor, Sue ~ Stryker, Pat O’Dea, Fran Peters and JoAnn Mahawage. .

Band (Homer Gerlufsen, director)

—Medals to Frank Fetta, A n n Bottger, Pamela Posli Linda Fol Ion, Lorralno Worlock, George Henry, Donna Goldstein, Jeanno Mahawage. Letters to T o m m y Gevas, Ross Olcott, Rolph-Eois, Rlcliard Wilson, Charles Craig, Dottie Winebraker, Audrey Barber, Fred Behr, Arthur Silcox, Spafford Lewis, Thor Foss.

Bennett, Catherwood, Set C-J Marks; Scullion Gives KHS Mile Champion

Central Jersey track and field championship at Asbury Park Stad­ium Tuesday proved a gratifying occasion for. both Matawan and Keyport High Schools, even though Matawan was only third in point standings ahd the Keys had only one point-scorcr.

The Highland Park loam retained its Group II title by amussinf, over 43 points, while Point Plensont was getting 29 1/2 and Matawan 27. The Maroon and Steel would K&'vo come in second but for Hrad Uradach, thi>ir 440 record-breaker, sustain­ing a musculur knot in the running of the final in, this event. The Matawan star had to pull out of the race, throw himself on the cround and undergo finergonoy first aid treatment,

lint two of ttntdach’s^tcanimatps wore record brcnkors on Ihelr own, Richie Uennctt surpuss^d the mark of 10 seconds flat set by. Hob _ Pot- tils', Carteret, i n 1959, doing « 9.9 In the 100-yard dash in one. of the heats, lie took the final in 10 flat with plenty to spare ov<}r Metuch- en’s Bob O ’Connor.

' in tho 220, Bennett made the best time of his career, 21.8 secotida-to surpass the mark of 21,9 seconds posted by Peltus in 1959. Both ^lash-marks were set by Dennett with a strong wind blowing, so they will have to be reviewed be* tore theyjjecame official. Bennett is headed for'prown Unlverslty on a combined academlc»track schol­arship,“ AnothTr'r&iiOfdTetterforihe^Ma^

:roon_and- Steftl_waa-Mlke-C«ther^ wood in Ihe pole vault, The Madison Township boy at MHS had to share honors with Jim Bogacryk, Sayre* ville, at 12 feet, their mark surpas­sing the prior .record ot U ft., U J/2 Ins., posted-by Frank Mui* 2), Metuchen, in J934. Catherwood li a state scholarship recipient at Rutgers ahd will bo a candldato for the.'.Scarlet froah track team next spring, .

Catherwood emphosfzed his V«f« latllity as an athlete in breaking off in the midst of tils pole vault* ing to run the high hurdles In 16.0 to gain Ihe Huskies a third In that event.

Roflle • Peterson also went to a new high for his career in the high Jump, hitting 9 ft. 11 Ins., lying for top honors wilh Bill Mandy, of ^ayrovilliTbasKelbftH f«mo. Thli was an inch under tho mark set by Josh MacKenile, Mctuchen, In i o rISO.

For Keyporf7 ihe perforninnce'of Cd Scullion put Red anil White .track prestige back in the book. Tho Unioh. Beach boy ran a heady race in tho mile, slaying with tho leaders but not pulling up unlll on Ihe last turn to the homestretch

straightaway. He caught Lake* wood's Ken Hicks off ijuard and slipped by that rumi.er. Ohco out In front, Scullion lengtfrPrtfed his stride like an Olympian opjJ ,^von gojjjg nwpy in -4:43,8. This Is a nl'W Keyporl school record for the dis- lance; It was most grullfvlnji for Coach Joy Denuresl to have u Central Jersey, Group 11, mile clvampion <m his roster his first yeur us coach of the sport nt -Key­port. - , 1\ ;‘ .

Otherwise, the Keys washed out, John Pote, their 8H0 star, got away to a |>ud start and never did re­cover u challenging position. Woody Sullivan ran a hcut of tha IBO-yurtl lo-w hurdleB in 23.8, better time

than that of some of tho heat win* ....ners, but it was only, good for a third In his fast heat, paced by Carteret's Walt Waslyk.

John Williams ran fourth In his heat of the 220 for the Kcys.-Matu-_ wan had better luck, Rlcn F i c r j * * ^ ; picking up a fifth in the 440 after lirnduch was forced out. Ken Riss- miller {tamely hung on in tlie 880 for a fifth also after he turned a leg‘ muscle while holding ft good thlrd spot In the race.

Roosevelt Jeffcont pleasantly 6ur* ' prised MHS Coach linrry Hint) hy annexing a fourth hi the 100-yard dash and most observers at the finish line rated the Matawaner a third over Point Pleasant's Toni Dllutush. *

The successes of Tuesduy proved a hoRrtenlng stimulant to the track* nicn of both (lie local schools for a major effort ut the state meet at Rutgers Stadium Saturday.

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( and th a t ’s the ca r more peop le are b u y in g !) s p r in g a t each w h e e l, g e n t le s y o u p a s t a l l . t h e . T a k e t h o s e J u n e s k ie s a n d b r e e z e s . A d d a s p a n k i n ’ w r i n k l e s a n d r u t s i n t h e r o a d s (^ h e r e s e v e n an e w J e t - s m o o t h C h e v y . P r e s t o , y o u ’ v e g o t a ll t h e t e a m o f .o v e r T Q O b e h i n d - t l i e - s c e n e s , s h o c k a b *m a k i n g s o f a r o a m i n ’ h o li d a y . T h a t ” l o w - l o a d i n g s o r b e r a " to , h u s h u p r o o d s u r f a c e m u m b l i n g s a n dd e e p - w e ll t r u n k s w a l l o w s u p m o s t e v e r y t h i n g ' g r u m b l i n g s ) . A l l i n a ll , C h e v y ’s l i g h t - s t e e r l n , e a s y *y o u ’ d w a n t t o p a c t a lo n g ., T h e c a r e f u l l y ^ ^ ^ g o i a ’ w a y s j u s t d o n ’ t le a v e m u c h f o r y o u . c r a f t e d B o d y b y F i s h e r h a s y o u l i v i n ’ in ( t o . d o b u t fe e l g o o d . A n d t h a t s e x a c t l y i h ol u x u r y ( a n d i n c o m f o r t - h i g h s e a ts w h e r e w A v y o u r C h e v r o l e t d e a le r w a n t s y o u t o fe e l,

t h e s i g h t - s e e i n ’ c o m e s e a s y ) . T h a t J e t - s m o o t h C h e v y r i d e , w i t h a s i n e w y F u l l C o il

cmvnowPA Plainly ®ee beautifull Jun« buys he’s got.buBtin.’ out.all jpveri

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Page 12: Matawan Ceremony Marks Memorial Day Presented .God And ... · Hoboken whose combined gambling take was estimated at $12,000 a day. The Madison Township resident w a a identificd as-Frcd

Page Twelve THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J._ v*-

Thursday, June 1, 1961

Comnullces For Rebekah Lodge

■ - Mffffimmlttees for the~new year wero named during a meeting of

•the Lady .Colfax Rebekah Lodge held in the Odd Fellows Hall.. Named to committees were Mrs. Victor Bennett, publicity; Mrs, Al­vin Fitrgcra.ld and Mrs. Russell Wyckoff, flowers. and sick; Mrs. John Shuttenberg, Mrs,- Donald Burgess and Mrs. Gilbert Raynor,

entertainment; Mrs. Alfred Eck- man, Mrs. Fitzgerald and Mrs.

' Shuttenberg, visiting.' Mrs. Benneil. Mrs. Burgess and

. Mrs. Raynor, Past Noble Grands, -were electcd to represent the lodge •at the selection of a new district

. :deputy president of the Monmouth . District to be held at the Rosemary

-Lodge, Island Heights, on June 20.- ; lnvitei To Picnic

' - - t t was announced members of *"ito£4odge have been invited to at--

lend the Order of tlie Odd Fellows . annual family picnic to be held on

July 29 i t Spring Lake Paris, Wy­ckoff. V- r ’

June-14 was listed for the official visit of .Jane Meltler, Rebekah president, to the locat lodge. It also will mark the 65th anniversary of the lodge. A covered dish supper will feature the meeting.

The special. prize was presented to Mrs. J . K . Gessner. Refresh­ments were served under the sup­ervision of Mrs. Fitzgerald and Mrs. Daniel Clark.

Special guest was Mrs. Albert Klotzjn of the Navesink Lodge, Red Bank. Also participating were Miss Amelie Baumgartner and Mrs. George Porter, Keyport; DeWitt Carhart, Red Bank; Mrs. Carl Har­dy, Matawa/j; Mrs. Kenneth Smith, Atlantic Highlands;. Mrs. William Edmonds, Florida.

F a ir H a v e n C hurch . Pla n s F a ir S a t u r d a y - -

The second annuar fair d f the Episcopal Church of the Holy.Com*: munion, Fair Haven, will be held at the Fair KaVeh Firie Kouse on River Rd. Saturday from' 10:30 a.m. until -5;3Q p.nu

The commit tee, under the direc­tion of Mr. and Mrs, Howard J. Poduska, chairmen, has planned a' wjde*jelecUoa--QL.bcothsr. iand-.4ii^ plays, ranging from trash "and treasure, bargains through hand­made clothing,.(lowers and plants,- a parceI~:posti^auction*_JiQ)Tie made~ candy, hand-pairtted. furniture and novelties, pies and cakes, and take- home foods. T-he program for

chitdren^ill.Jn£lade_ga_mes^and contests,-pjus., pony -rideS and fiay’ rides/. Hamburgers' and -franks Will = be cooked over charcoal and served picnic/style, along with cold drinks and coffee. . 1

A c c o u n ta n t! G r o u p H o ld s O r g a n iz a tio n

The organizing committee of the proposed new North Jersey Shore Chapter of the National Association of Accountants held its first meet­ing at Buttonwood Manor, Mata­wan. The proposed chapter will be of particular interest to accountants and businessmen in Monmouth and Ocean Counties and the nearby area.

N A A Jf the world's largest ac­counting organization with over 49,000 members of 154 chapters, 1C accounting groups, and, residing in more than GO countries around the world, The Association, through its educational programs, research activities, publications, conferences, local organizations a n d various o t h e r methods of information exchange, is devoted to the better understanding of the nature, pur­poses and uses of accounting as applied to all types of economic

-endeavor. _A-preliminary survey has - re­

vealed that, recent expansion by commerce, Industry and business iiflfielproposed chapter area and the potential for future growth are helping to make the area increas­ingly important to regional econ- omyrThe “objectives-and services of an organization - like N A A will h e l p Individuals and companies

keep their accounting procedures and departments up-to-date and ef­ficient. Persons desiring to join the North Jersey Shore Chapter should communicate with Arthur D . Schwarz at COifax 4-7732 or Harold F . Millin jr., at Liberty 9-2651.

H ig h School G r a d s M a y < Jo T o A c a d e m y

Master Chief Michael Tcreo, in charge of the U.S. Navy Recruiting station in Red Bank, announces that all qualifying high school grad­uates enlisting in the U.S. Navy prior to July 1 now are eligible to compete in the preliminary written examination for the U.S. Naval Preparatory School in Bainbridge,

W A LL IN G ’ S ' T E X A C O

S E R V IC E . 78 Broad Street _ Keyport

Md. and if successful, have the sub­sequent opportunity of being select* ed for entrance to the U.S. Naval Academy at AnnlpoUs.

Applicants desiring consideration for this program must be enlisted in the U.S. Navy prior to July 1 and their.arrival at the U.S. Naval Recruit Training Center, Great, Lakes, III., should be expedited in order to ensure an orderly process­ing prior to the examination date of July 5. The recruiter will furnish information or assistance regarding this program to anyone desiring it on a non-obligated basis.

M S C S c h e d u le s 'A n n u a l P r o -A m A r t S h o w

Entries from both professional and amateur artists of Monmouth and Ocean-Counties and fro/ri North Jersey as well, are being re­ceived daily by Monmouth • Shop­ping Center, Eatontown, for its second annual art festival to be held Saturday, June 24, from 10 a.m. lo 6 p.m. ......

7)113 is an outdoor show, and art­ists will display their work on the malls throughout the center, and in special areas where peg boards

g o in g ou i o f m m s

U P T O 5 0 % D IS C O U N T SName Brand WATCHES DIAMONDS - RINGS

HOLDEN JEWELERS1 3 4 M a i n S t. > - M a t a w a n

will be erected. The show, spon­sored by the Monmouth Shopping Center Merchant* Association, will have cash prlies totaling >300. Bab-

ette Bauman - Edelstein, N e w Shrewsbury, will judge the profea* sional divisions, and John Angelinl. Livingston, amateur entries.

1961 R EN A U LT a t ‘ 1095O N E Y E A R G U A R A N T E E

A l w a y s 10 0 F in « U S E D C A R S T o C h o o s e F ro m

S A Y R E V I L L E M O T O R S ,

a -.-v, -j ■;>. plvmouth-Vaiia'nrwt N'.J * an*l rmsion R'i , . , Suvrevlki f v r Wwil Shoppir.ii t.er.u-r>« S tK * |>A i-vm * S(-rvit.c PA H « M

Jv'e TRIPLES s u n STAMPS

redcamablfi for F R E EG I F T S !

W IL L IE T E X A C O S ER V IC E

Laurel Ave. and Middle Road

Hazlet-

gTveTRIPLE-S W STAMPS

redeem able for F R E EG I F T S !

E L L I O T ’S G U L F S E R V IC E

Route S3 at Parkway

-"Keypori _

S A V E ' 3 0 0 0

(For Non-lot Owniri, U l Lltlinfli AvallabU)

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Choose from Scores of Quality Models!

Molly Pitcher Homes m thi Prtaetton— ATWtartWW

3-BEDR00M RANCH HOUSE*8975

COMPLETE FINANCINGN o P a y m e n t s f o r 6 M o n th s

•Ilk IMn0 l»an •*»0f0l» dining «r*o, 1 htlchen «fld both, cuit»m* kutil M r»w fauAdAtltn. Plumbing (Ihm • ft. *»t from foundation, Oarai* and brick front optional.

. Compare th a n "NO-EXTRA-COST" Faolur** with A n y O lh tr Home on th t Market Today I

* • 109 tap. t l * « Cotundc«nm(<- • Ha. UikffMfi. _ uiibiiiint . ItuUUwi

• S S S Uh" “"1 * Klnllll flMre• ColflndHunWni • OjmpUU InUilsi • All atmlM* -._..v.fUbir«i Wm dlndow* .

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Tw o Mora Models from Our W ide Variety

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MOLff PlTCHERlEvery floor plan designed (uiMht way you want it.

>Send for FREE Album i

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I m ytm 1st

M A T A W A N , N . J . . M ''"' COUPON TODAT

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B R A N C H ____R O U T E U

Vi Mile South of Main St. Traffic Light P H O N E LOwell 6-51M

: JlOUftSfltonilay to Friday JO A.M . lo I P.M.

Saturday and Sunday . 10 A.M . lo a P.M.V Olhrr llranol»«ji i t :WQOdbrldcf, Eat^ntnnn antf Toiqs fRirer , ,

riMollr Pitcher llbmr., P .O .< O o x .l l I , Malawan, N. 1. itend—m<r-your-fro*—■- I album of dramatic 1961 *'Ue- II signer Brrles*' Ilontri. || U i |I II;Wtiiro D.'.Jltima, — 1

11 AddfMt 11 •••* • -I 1KiUr ■ sw» 11 • •• • 1

Neet-Heat - Self Starting

C h a rco a l B r iq u e ts

3Oil and Vinegar

Kraft Dressing< BOttlO

Linden House

Instant Coffee

Linden-House

MAYONNAISEr Quart

- Linden I ouse..................

COFFEE2* 99-

Van Brode — Variety Pack ‘

CEREAL2 9 c

Linden House — AU PurpdS*

DETERGENTC Large Box

R ib R o a s t Oven Ready :

Boneless Brisket

S h o u ld e r P o r k C h o p s

S lice d B a co n 4 9 H

B o ile d H am 9 9 *

V e a l C u t le t t-w 99 !b

C hopped B e e f 3^ *1

N .B.C,

PARTY THINS 3 7 :

Sunshine

Krispy Crackers29lb. Box

TIDE GIANT72

Hoffman’s — Low Calorie

SODA2 “ 29

{Jchickhaus — Brown 'N Serve

Sausage Links49 Pkg.

Linden ifouse "

STRAWBERRY PRESERVES3i oi. Jar 49

AJAX2* 27c

BOND ROLLS1 Pkg. of 8

P in e a p p le J u ic ePINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT

G r a p e f r u i t J u ic e

P e a c h e s

P o r k B e a n s

Dei Monte and 4 6 o i CanLinden H v u m

Blue Bird 4 6 oiC an

Linden Houso Sliced - Halve* 29 oz Can

Linden Hofiso

Linden Hotise

Hanover

Light

4 0 oz Can

Evaporated

Linden House

M i lk ......

F ly h M o s q u it o B o m b

G r e e n B e a n s ~ o ° 1

83°3$1cans !

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q u a lity p roduce

B L U E B E R R I E S

49cC H E R R I E S

49*^ d a iry p ro d u cts

Mm! Mm! Delicious ; ..

C H E E S E C A K E

onlySara Lee "

P o u n d C a k e 6 5 *Borden's .

Cream Cheese 2 VcBreakstone . 0 . . . • •Yogurt Plain ■Van|,ta ? |O cLow Calorie — . . , W *

T O P Whip W hipp y K W l a g ^ J p *Fresh ... —g

Fruit Salad ~ <>L 37*Royal — Fresh Sliced : M

Swiss Cheese u «■ m Q7CRoyal 'Cottage Cheese n>. cuP J j c

fro z e n fo o d s

Lem o n ad e 1 0 8 9 "Linden Farms •

O ran g e Ju ic e 6 ‘ -“> 99‘Northland - Sliced -

Strawberries 4foro9c Morton's Pot Pie 5 ForSl°°Dird's Eye - ..............- _____ — ... — ^ k . .Spinach Leaf - Chopped • ,or

Cut Corn River Valley

Baby LimasR vW

- Tfp Top

i Valley 4 6 9 '

V eri Fine

Chef

W IS E P O T A T O C H IP S

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Linden HouseAssorted

FlavorsSODA5 ,£i“8 9 e

M A R K E T

126 MAIN ST., MATAWANO en 5 Nights A Week

Mon. thru Fri. to 9 P i/ L Sat. to 6 PJVL" ‘ P r i.tts E ffectiv e T h ru Saturday^ Jun e 1