MESSAGE FOR NEWSPAPER WEEK uifll^wiclijourncil · VOL. 15. No. 40 M. Martin Turpanjian, Editor...

4
VOL. 15. No. 40 M. Martin Turpanjian, Editor Entered as 2nd Class Matter WALDWICK, N. J. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955 Published Weekly A L L E N D A L E 1-3456 $2.00 YEARLY — 5c. COPY Wyckoff G.O.P. Overlord Lionized By Throng Wyckoff Republican League Honors Ken MacDonald In Ramsey At Testimonial Banquet As Doer Of Things And Leader Of Civic Pride Movements In New Jersey uifll^wiclijourncil A film through the courtesy of New Jersey Bell Telephone Com- pany was shown on the screen at the recent meeting of the Woman’s Club of Waldwick in he American Legion HalL. FROM NEWARK TO: Burlington, Vt. 70c Portland, Me. 70c Pittsburgh, Pa. 75c Montreal, Canada 75c Concord, N . H . 60c Boston, Mass. 60c Buffalo, N . Y. 70c 3 minute station rates after 6 PM and all day Sunday. 10% Federal Tax not included. NEW JERSEY BELL Under the auspices of the Wyckoff Republican League a testimonial banquet was tendered Wednesday night in honor of Kenneth Mac- Donald, Sr. as organizer, leader and exponent of civic pride movements as well as assessor and realtor in that township. Bell Phone Company Pioneers Meet Today People in many walks of life attended the dinner in a Ramsey night club and heard outstanding speakers compliment the guest of honor as a doer of things, states- man and business executive. George Gallant was chairman of the dinner committee and the big turnout was the greatest tribute for the popularity of Kenneth Mac- Donald, Sr. who has served the community of Wyckoff for many years as motor vehicle agent, and insurance specialist as well as being builder of beautiful homes. The honor guest was accorded a rousing ovation when he made a happy little speech which was list- ened to with rapt attention. The speakers included State Senator Walter H. Jones, Freehol- der Chester A. Smeltzer, Assembly-] man Arthur Verveat, Sheriff Mar- tin Ferber, Franklin Thurnall, secre- tary, Atlas Assurance Co., fotmer State Republican chairman J. J. Dickerson, Congressman William B. W idna’ll, and Bergen County Re- publican chairman Frank Walden The program started with the singing by the audience of the Star Spangled Banner. The Rev. Wilbur De Revere offered the in- vocation and the Rev. B. Harkins offered the benediction. The dinner served was the tas- tiest and the most delicious. Some 400 persons paid tribute to the honor guest whose business ad- dress as a coincidence also happens to be 400 Franklin Avenue. More than 1,600 members and guests of H. G. McCuily Chapter, Telephone Pioneers of America, will gather Friday, (Oct. 7) in Atlantic City for the group’s 23rd annual convention. The Telephone Pioneers arej members of a national fellowship | organization whose purpose is to perpetuate friendships formed in business. The McCuily chapter is composed of 6,830 present and re- tired employes of the New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. with 21 or more years of Bell System service. Highlight of the convention will be reached Saturday evening when the group gathers for dinner in the Convention Hall. William A. Hughes, president of New Jersey Bell, will be principal speaker. Otto R. Richter, ' metropolitan division plant manager and presi- dent of the McCuily Chapter, also will speak. The convention will open Friday night with a dance at the Chelsea Hotel. There will be a fashion show at the same hotel on Saturday afternoon. Convention headquar- ters will be at the Ritz-Carlton and Ambassador Hotels. Several persons were awarded prizes at the Waldwick Garden Club flower show last Saturday and Sunday at the local public school building. The annual political forum will take place Friday, 'October 28 in local public school at which time candidates for Mayor and Counci 1- men will address the gathering. BORO CHURCH NEW SFONSOR OF BOY SCOUT TROOP 88 Iheodore Lurie, Boy Scout troop committee chairman, has announced that the Waldwick Methodist Church will b° the new sponsoring organization for Troop 88. Committee meetings have been scheduled for the first Monday of every month in the Methodist Church hall at 8 p.m. Residents are being asked to save their papers for another Scout paper drive to be held on Saturday morn- ing, Oct. 15. if possible, the papers should be tied and placed at the curb for pickup. All money derived from the collection directly benefits the local troop. Mr, and Mrs, James Kerr, nati- onally famous artists, have retur- ned from an extended vacation in Canada. MESSAGE FOR NEWSPAPER WEEK Your "H ome T own P aper FBEEDOM OF SPEECH The sixteenth National Newspaper Week. which was opened in Hartford, Conn., was an occasion for declarations which concern every liberty-loving citizen. A Free press is the guardian of all the constitutional rights, which free men hope to enjoy. The independent press is the first target of dictators and tyrants, who could never exist under the spot light of true news coverage and enlightened public opinion. Well has it be said, and the truth must never be forgotten, that "a enlightened people is an invincible people.” By the same token, a corrupt press can become the instrument for enslavement of gullible individuals in blind ignorance by distortion, double talk and half truths, and also for arousing inflamatory outbursts of passion engine- ered by subversive bigots in our midst. It shoukl be the duty of every human being in civilized society to learn what is happening in his own community as well as every other part of the world. The remotest corner of the globe today is almost as close as next door, and what happens anywhere can effect everybody. No decisions can be formulated intelligently without a sound know- ledge of all the facts. Every legitimate newspaper aims to furnish the material cut of which decisions for the common welfare can be based. IKK ue Carieote AUTHOR OF “ HOW TO STOP WORRYING AND START LIVING” T F THIS has been a discouraging day for you, maybe you’d like to *■ know about a man who was “finished” at the age of forty. Yes. finished. He said so himself! He had been bom with what you and I would think was a silver spoon in his mouth. He had had everything. Position in life, a good family, money, every chance for an education. All he had to do to get it was to study. More, his friends were influential. But came a time when none of these counted. The silver spoon obviously had been plated warel And so he was finished I For fourteen years he had struggled, filled with ambition; he had worked hard; he had kept his private life above reproach. And he had an aim. Then at forty he was done for. He was in a Government position and had to face political Intrigue; honesty didn’t always bring the desired result. His story Is too long to go into deeply here—some of it you already know, mostly the successful part. He was sometimes admired, sometimes hated "the most hated man among all his colleagues”—but he was always re- spected. This man’ s Dime became known around the world—after he was torty. You know it—Sir Winston Churchill. I wonder if that fact mentioned above was not more responsible tor his great achievements than any other—he was always respected.

Transcript of MESSAGE FOR NEWSPAPER WEEK uifll^wiclijourncil · VOL. 15. No. 40 M. Martin Turpanjian, Editor...

Page 1: MESSAGE FOR NEWSPAPER WEEK uifll^wiclijourncil · VOL. 15. No. 40 M. Martin Turpanjian, Editor Entered as 2nd Class MatterWALDWICK, N. J. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955 Published Weekly

VOL. 15. No. 40 M. M a rt in Tu rpanj ian , Ed ito r Entered as 2nd C la ss Matter W ALDW ICK, N. J. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955

Pub lished W e e k ly A L L E N D A L E 1-3456

$2.00 YEA RLY — 5c. COPY

Wyckoff G.O.P. Overlord Lionized By Throng

Wyckoff Republican League Honors Ken MacDonald In Ramsey At Testimonial Banquet As Doer Of Things And Leader Of Civic Pride Movements In New Jersey

uifll̂ wiclijourncil

A film through the courtesy of New Jersey Bell Telephone Com­pany was shown on the screen at the recent meeting of the Woman’s Club of Waldwick in he American Legion HalL.

FROM NEWARK TO: Burlington, Vt. 70c Portland, M e. 70c Pittsburgh, Pa. 75c Montreal, Canada 75c Concord, N . H . 60c Boston, Mass. 60c Buffalo, N . Y . 70c

3 minute station rates after 6 PM and all day Sunday. 10% Federal Tax not included.

NEW JERSEY BELL

Under the auspices of the Wyckoff Republican League a testimonial banquet was tendered Wednesday night in honor of Kenneth Mac­Donald, Sr. as organizer, leader and exponent of civic pride movements as well as assessor and realtor in that township.

Bell Phone C o m p a n y Pioneers Meet T o d a y

People in many walks of life attended the dinner in a Ramsey night club and heard outstanding speakers compliment the guest of honor as a doer of things, states­man and business executive.

George Gallant was chairman of the dinner committee and the big turnout was the greatest tribute for the popularity of Kenneth Mac­Donald, Sr. who has served the community of Wyckoff for many years as motor vehicle agent, and insurance specialist as well as being builder of beautiful homes.

The honor guest was accorded a rousing ovation when he made a happy little speech which was list­ened to with rapt attention.

The speakers included State Senator Walter H. Jones, Freehol­der Chester A. Smeltzer, Assembly-] man Arthur Verveat, Sheriff Mar­tin Ferber, Franklin Thurnall, secre­tary, Atlas Assurance Co., fotmer State Republican chairman J. J. Dickerson, Congressman William B. W idna’ll, and Bergen County Re­publican chairman Frank Walden

The program started with thesinging by the audience of the Star Spangled Banner. The Rev. Wilbur De Revere offered the in­vocation and the Rev. B. Harkins offered the benediction.

The dinner served was the tas­tiest and the most delicious.Some 400 persons paid tribute to the honor guest whose business ad­dress as a coincidence also happens to be 400 Franklin Avenue.

More than 1,600 members and guests of H. G. McCuily Chapter, Telephone Pioneers of America, will gather Friday, (Oct. 7 ) inAtlantic City for the group’s 23rd annual convention.

The Telephone Pioneers arej members of a national fellowship | organization whose purpose is to perpetuate friendships formed in business. The McCuily chapter is composed of 6,830 present and re­tired employes of the New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. with 21 or more years of Bell System service.

Highlight of the convention will be reached Saturday evening when the group gathers for dinner in the Convention Hall. William A. Hughes, president of New Jersey Bell, will be principal speaker.Otto R. Richter, ' metropolitandivision plant manager and presi­dent of the McCuily Chapter, also will speak.

The convention will open Friday night with a dance at the Chelsea Hotel. There will be a fashion show at the same hotel on Saturday afternoon. Convention headquar­ters will be at the Ritz-Carlton and Ambassador Hotels.

Several persons were awarded prizes at the Waldwick Garden Club flower show last Saturday and Sunday at the local public school building.

The annual political forum will take place Friday, 'October 28 in local public school at which time candidates for Mayor and Counci 1- men will address the gathering.

BORO CHURCH NEW SFONSOR OF BOY SCOUT TROOP 88

Iheodore Lurie, Boy Scout troop committee chairman, has announced that the Waldwick Methodist Church will b° the new sponsoring organization for Troop 88.

Committee meetings have been scheduled for the first Monday of every month in the Methodist Church hall at 8 p.m.

Residents are being asked to save their papers for another Scout paper drive to be held on Saturday morn­ing, Oct. 15. if possible, the papers should be tied and placed at the curb for pickup. All money derived from the collection directly benefits the local troop.

Mr, and Mrs, James Kerr, nati­onally famous artists, have retur­ned from an extended vacation in Canada.

MESSAGE FOR NEWSPAPER WEEK

Your "H ome To w n Paper

FBEEDOM OF SPEECH

The sixteenth National Newspaper Week. which was opened in Hartford, Conn., was an occasion for declarations which concern every liberty-loving citizen. A Free press is the guardian of all the constitutional rights, which free men hope to enjoy. The independent press is the first target of dictators and tyrants, who could never exist under the spot light of true news coverage and enlightened public opinion. Well has it be said, and the truth must never be forgotten, that "a enlightened people is an invincible people.” By the same token, a corrupt press can become the instrument for enslavement of gullible individuals in blind ignorance by distortion, double talk and half truths, and also for arousing inflamatory outbursts of passion engine­ered by subversive bigots in our midst.

It shoukl be the duty of every human being in civilized society to learn what is happening in his own community as well as every other part of the world. The remotest corner of the globe today is almost as close as next door, and what happens anywhere can effect everybody. No decisions can be formulated intelligently without a sound know­ledge of all the facts. Every legitimate newspaper aims to furnish the material cut of which decisions for the common welfare can be based.

IKKueCarieote★ AUTHOR OF “ HOW TO STOP WORRYING AND START LIVING”

T F THIS has been a discouraging day for you, maybe you’d like to *■ know about a man who was “finished” at the age of forty. Yes. finished. He said so himself!

He had been bom with what you and I would think was a silver spoon in his mouth. He had had everything. Position in life, a good family, money, every chance for an education. All he had to do to get it was to study. More, his friends were influential.But came a time when none of these counted. The silver spoon obviously had been plated warel

And so he was finished IFor fourteen years he had struggled, filled with

ambition; he had worked hard; he had kept his private life above reproach. And he had an aim.Then at forty he was done for.

He was in a Government position and had to face political Intrigue; honesty didn’t always bring the desired result. His story Is too long to go into deeply here—some of it you already know, mostly the successful part. He was sometimes admired, sometimes hated "the most hated man among all his colleagues”—but he was always re­spected.

This man’s Dime became known around the world—after he was torty. You know it—Sir Winston Churchill.

I wonder if that fact mentioned above was not more responsible tor his great achievements than any other—he was always respected.

Page 2: MESSAGE FOR NEWSPAPER WEEK uifll^wiclijourncil · VOL. 15. No. 40 M. Martin Turpanjian, Editor Entered as 2nd Class MatterWALDWICK, N. J. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955 Published Weekly

page M i 7 - 19S S JERSEY PARADE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955

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AUTO SERVICINGA. & P.

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A R T H U R L. H O L L YHOLLY BATTERIES

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Page 3: MESSAGE FOR NEWSPAPER WEEK uifll^wiclijourncil · VOL. 15. No. 40 M. Martin Turpanjian, Editor Entered as 2nd Class MatterWALDWICK, N. J. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955 Published Weekly

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955s

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‘Operation Muster’ Planned by State Civil Defense HQ

TRENTON— The New Jersey “ Operation Muster” exercise which will be held October 27 will mark the first time in the his­tory of the state that State Civil Defense Forces and selected units of the New Jersey National Guard will combine in an “all-out” mobilization.

Major General James F. Cant­well, Chief of Staff, Department of Defense, and Thomas S. Dig- nan, Acting State Director of Civ­il Defense and Disaster Control, in a joint announcement said, “ This test should prove of ines­

timable value in establishing thecapabilities of both organizations to combine operations efficiently. It will also assist in setting up procedures which can be used in the event o f any emergency which might arise.”

From the standpoint o f the Civ­il Defense and Disaster Controlorganization, it will be the first time a statewide mobilization of the complete State CD organiza­tion has been accomplished, Dig- nan pointed out. He emphasized that the purpose of the mobiliza­tion is primarily to test the abil­ity of local directors to alert, as­semble and dispatch personnel and equipment to designated locations from which they will be assigned to emergency areas.

“The necessity of a test of this type,” the State CD-DC head stated, “ was illustrated graphic­ally during the recent hurricane and flood experiences. Had we been better prepared and organ­ized, assembly and movement of personnel and equipment to assist the stricken areas of the state would have been accomplished much more smoothly.

“ While our organization for the most part did a magnificent job, and I ant very proud of them, nevertheless the operation could have been performed much more efficiently and with less confus­ion if we had previously attempt­ed this type of an exercise.”

General Cantwell said he wel­comed this opportunity to join with the CD forces in the mobili­zation.

“ While the upper echelons of the Guard are familiar with the operation of the Civil Defense or­ganization, this test should be the first step in familiarizing Nation­al Guard units on all levels with Civil Defense and Disaster Con­trol operations.

Textile Workers To Get Pay Boost

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25 cent an hour pay boost over a three year period has been rati­fied by 16,000 textile workers in 300 plants located in New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania.

The pact reached early last Sat­urday was ratified by Dyers Local 1733, with more than 5,000 mem­bers in the Paterson area, at a meeting later in the day.

The contract, hammered out by employers and the CIO Tex­tile Workers, provides an imme­diate 12-eent an hour increase which ends the threat of an in­dustry-crippling strike.

Another six cents will be granted next Oct. 1 and the re­mainder the following year, ac­cording to reports. The employ­er-paid pension plan has been liberalized and an eighth holi­day —• Good Friday — has been granted.

The New Jersey dyeing and finishing plants affected are in Passaic, Bergen and Hudson Counties, where the present av­erage hourly wage is reported to be $1.67

Negotiations which began Sept. 7 had continued up to the strike deadline with little hope of a set­tlement in the eyes of union and management spokesmen.

A union demand for 25 cents an hoLir was countered by a company offer of anything over seven cents obtainable in other competitive areas. The union al­so sought increased fringe bene­fits and a lay-off plan, so-called.

Termed a “ milestone in labor- management relations in the in­dustry” by an employer spokes­man, the contract is the first three-year pact ever negotiated by the TWU for dyeing, printing and finishing plants.

A new era of peaceful relations will result, the spokesman said.

Members of the management negotiating team included: Da­vid L. Benetar, labor counsel; Irving Blank, president of the Ming Toy Dyeing Co., Inc., of Paterson, president of the Tex­tile Printers and Dyers Labor Relations Institute, representing the largest single group of em­ployers; Joseph F. Wildebush, ex­ecutive vice-president of the in­stitute, who served as labor rela­tions consultant; Harry Liese, representing machine printers; Nat Jones, of the New York em­ployers group; Nathan Caress, labor relations director of Wald- rich Bleachery.

Page 4: MESSAGE FOR NEWSPAPER WEEK uifll^wiclijourncil · VOL. 15. No. 40 M. Martin Turpanjian, Editor Entered as 2nd Class MatterWALDWICK, N. J. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955 Published Weekly

PAGE 40C17 1 9 5 5 JERSEY PARADE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955

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The annual "Back to School Night of the Ramsey Parent Teacher Association was held on Monday and Tuesday evenings, September 26 and 27, at 8:15 p.m.

To enable parents with children in both elementary schools to attend each child's class, the program was extended to two nights. Parents visited the school on School Street on Monday evening, and the Tis­dale school on island Avenue on Tuesday evening.

The purposes of this first meet­ing were to afford the teachers and parents an opportunity to meet, and to give the parents an opportunity to have the course of study and goals of their child’s teacher ex­plained to them.

Mr. Leslie D. Wilding, principal

of the School Street school, reported an attendance of five hundred parents the evening of September 26; Mr. Lloyd L. Taylor, principal of the Tisdale School, indicated that two hundred twenty-eight parents attended the Tuesday even­ing ’meeting.

After visiting their children’s classrooms, the parents and teachers adjourned to the cafeteria for a social hour and refreshments.

Wald wick Man Named Advertising Aide To Westinghouse Firm

sistant advertising manager, tele­vision-radio division, Westinghouse Electric Corporation, Robert M. Fichter, advertising manager of thedivision, here, announced today.

Johnson formerly was assistant sales promotion manager of the. Alien B. Du Mont Laboratories,! Inc., at East Paterson. Before that1 he was assistant advertising and sales promotion manager of the Fisk Tires Division, U. S. Rubber Company.

He majored in marketing at New York University; and later spent three years in Europe with the United States Air Forces.

cipal Michael Elia were introduced. S D e c f a l W h a r t o n to more than 500 parents present.

BORO PTA MEETING DRAW S HUGE CROWD

METUCHEN — Russell W. Johnson, of 33 Donald PL, Wald­wick, has been appointed as as­

A great throng attended the first meeting of the Waldwick PTA’s fall season last Wednesday night in local public school audi­torium.

Principal D. Frank Workman, Raymond Dugan, president of Board of Education and Vice-Prin-

Dr. John J. Finnessy, super, intendent of Waldwick schools, spoke to the parent? on the town’s present and future educational program.

The method of teaching reading in theschool was detailed by Dr. Finnessy in the program booklet.

He said that in Waldwick read­ing is an integral component of language arts which consists of spelling and writing together; that phonics are absolutely necessary for the teaching of language arts, not as a separate subject, but as needed and that a combination of teaching methods produce the best results.

Joseph Peters To Take

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Tract Exhibit To Go On Display

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Miss Mary Hovedell, of Oradell, will become the bride of Joseph Peters, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sal Peters, of Waldwick, Sunday, Oct. 23 at St. Joseph's R. C. Church, Oradell.

Miss Hovedell was guest of honor recently at a shower held in a night club in Paramus. Many relatives and friends attended. Nu­merous gifts were also presented to the bride to be.

TRENTON— New Jersey resi­dents wanting a first-hand view of the State’s newest and most important land purchase will find a capsule-sized segment of the Wharton Tract in the special pine barrens exhibit this month at the State Museum in Trenton. Pre­pared with the cooperation of the Department of Conservation and Economic Development, the dis­play will continue through Novem­ber 13.

The State has just completed its purchase of the 100,000 acre

! wodoland tract located in Atlan­tic and Burlington counties. Less than a year ago, about half of the

! area was acquired and the re­mainder was placed under option.

In Colonial days this was one of the busiest sections of New Jersey, with thriving big iron­works, lumbering, charcoaling and ship building. Samples of these ac­tivities are included in the Mu­seum show, along with pictures of deserted villages and hand­craft occupations which resulted when the industries closed or moved to other areas.