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|-V()[, XXXVI-NO. 32
WINGSOF
LIFE„, jfiLIAN POLLAK
, ,n cabinets in rnost],old pots, pans and an
,,.,, variety of kitchen
l v Our cabinets are,.',1 uilh box cartons filled,,, Mowing with old papers,promams, time tables, clr-
tax receipts, old love let-,. weil as rent, electric, gas:;,me bills.
,nl time to time, these pa-,,isrs are brought to light;,;.,(rri on the kitchen table., jiiuatioTi of discarding,,[ the voluminous accu-
•: n A good start Is made• some of these Items Intoi.ivicbasket, but the effort:.]y half-hearted. There
,i nostalgia and very.. destroyed.
Carterrt Top Advertising ResultsOur Family Of Over 9,000 Readen
Is A Valuable Market ForAll Our Admtiam
CARTERET, N. J.. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1957 PRICE CENTS
GraduationOn TuesdayFor AdultsCounty School Head will
Be Speaker at SchoolKxerriso
,. iTiininK the other night,were in the mood for a
,-ii-iiiuip Job. This did not:n pass, since we becamesrd in' the oldest box ofuch. And here's what we
: : • !
; import card for the thirdWe passed It by a hair
•ii).ierts were marked D• i.r exception of two. The
•xrrc marked E In red: Tlu.s report card has to:drii from Junior, We have, branded to him that all
. • i>nrt cards were markeditiniiK but A's, which or
•• ,• a f i b
. ••!•]-. deteriorated by ace:.' back memories of a•:.(t romance. The lady
Sorry, I won't bo able•.•mi any more. My mother
:hnt If I marry you. Ill•ii tnke In washing for the: my life."
:.• is a bill for J4.9S. It. 1 full payment for dam-,ione As we recall, Juniorj.:;ivins with a group ofnifl in some unexplained•hi baseball they used
(I in a nelphbor's livingNo one would admit
,!u: the, ball, but to keepAiih the neighbor we set-
Mi the shattered window
All) < Hl t l sn iAS (OTUI.ION:. SrviTiil reservations already have been received fur the C'arteretWoman's ('lull Christmas Cotillion to be held at St. Demetrius' Conuminily (enter, December 26.The list includes Mr. mid Mrs. John Lucas, Mr, and Mrs, Leslie Trinity, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ben-nett, Mr. and Mrs, John Ilila, John Ilila Jr. and finest, Mr. and Mr*. Harry Freeman, Mr. and Mrs,Michael Tr/.hir. Miss Jacqueline flilii anil Martin Bednarik. Fast Orange. I'hoto shows Mrs. Tezbir,
Mrs. Ilila ami Mrs. Freeman who are accepting reservations for the Cotillion.
Rev. Szigethy to :s/'/!r<1 (:r('st Vwrm»* I I n ' ' '°r ( l f rm Organization
Address BanquetCARTERET The Rev. Bela
Szigethy. Pastor of the HungarianReformed Church of Wharton,and IOIIR time editor of Evangeli-cal World Service will bo theprincipal .speaker at the 23rd An-nual Banquet of the Free MagyarReformed Church this coming'Sunday evening. 6 P.M. at Beth-len Hall
Rev Sziuethy who was one ofthe organizers of pasto'ral servicesfor refugees in Europe after WorldWar II .Parted a monthly maua-zine. Evangelical World Serviceafter comuiR to this country in1949, This paper which Mr. Szi-aethy edited ln partnership withDr. Andrew Har;-anyi. presentPastor of the Carteret ReformedChurch, served more than 20
CARTERET -- Plans arc bom-made to form an organizationamong residents pf the Shore Cre;;tdevelopment
Eugene DeVito, temporarychrtirman, has announced thin iimeet ing will be held at FnlronHail, Monday niRht, November 'M :at 3 P M . !
At that time it is expected thata nnme for the organization willbe chosen and officers will he:elected.
j$92,920 SavedBy School Pupil
General AmericanRaises Dividend
CARTERET — An incrense
CARTERET—The school savingsproKiiim initiated by the CarteretBank and Trust CQmpnny is nowin its 21st year.
Thomas G. Kenyon. cashier, said:oday thai a total of 1,430 studentsof the public schools and the HolyFamily Parochial School have totheir credit a total of $92,920.60.
Inaugurated in 1936, the pro-gram hiis encouraged school chil-dren in the wny of thrift. EveryTuesday is bank day. Pupils pre-sent their money to the teacherand Police Sgt. Edward Czajkow-
' ski collects the cash and brings iti to the bunk, whore it Is properly| credited. The class which has theI largest number of depositors wins
CARTERET — Commencementexercises for the Carteret Schoolof Adult Education arc scheduledfor Tuesday evening, November26 at a 30 P. M. in the local HtslSchool.
The guest speaker at the exor-cises will be Robert R. Blunt. Mid,dlesex County Superintendent oSchools. Mr. Blunt's topic will be"The Value of Adult Education.'
It Is expected, as In previouiyears, there will be exhibits owork by the Wood Shop class, tinCeramics class and the Sewingclasses.
The Adult Education Schoowill end its seventh rtmsecutiv.season under the Joint sponsorship of the U.S. Metals RenninCompany and the Board of Education.
440 StudentsThis year, the school attracts
a total of 440 students who tooadvantage of the 16 courseoffered. Dancing, sewing, typin;stenography and hobby paintlnwere the most popular sessions.
School Superintendent EdwinQuinn served as director of tl:school. The trustees comprLRichard A. Wetzel, clialrmaPrank Haury. both of the USMR.,
Kiwanis Plans Party for I New LawUnderprivileged Children
CARTERET — The CarterrtKiwanis Club at Its luncheonmeetint yesterday again decidedto sponsor H Christmas partyfor underprivileged children
The party is scheduled to beheld nt the Oypay Camp De-comber 26 nnd the new presi-dent, Ocwge Sentles has deslg-
Toth lo actnated MichaelSanta Claus
Christmas parties for needychildren have been lield by theclub since iU Inceptien of the
local unit The children nrepresented with gifts, candy andrefreshments.
Mr Seailes annmuved Hintplans are under w«y lor iheInstallation of now o (11 c e r .«which will b<> held in JanuaryA special priwum , will l>cplanned
-Because Thunksntntm l>nyfalls next Thursday, the wookly.lunchnHi, nipetmi! next week
will be held on Wednesday
BoostVoter ListMany NCHTOIIHTS to be
Klipiblr for B. of E.Votuifc in February
CARTERET - l Several hundrednew voters will be eliiflble u> no tothe pulls February 11. whtn theschool district hold* Its annual
Al the Oenernl Election holdearlier this month, Carteret had atotal registration of 8,758, accord-ing in the Middlesex County Boardof Elections.
A State referendum approvedoverwhelmingly has eased con-
CARTERET — Two thousand | mobiles Carey Cnuncil iilsn calls : Mdernbly the residence question ot:ards. bearing the slogan "Put ' Httpntl<.ii on the cards that H is ! v o t e r s- l n the past, a voter had to *
K. C. Council Cards SpreadAppeal In Christ Behalf
Christ Back Into Christmas" arcDoing distributed by Carey Coun-il. 1280. Knights of Columbus.The purpose of the Catholic
eroup Is to make a spiritual ratherthan a commercial holiday, ac-ording to Grand Knight Nicholas
Del Vacchio.For the first lime this yenr, the
«*»™tln8
r "' 1(>HSt onp ye(u ln tnp stat*of its' foundation Cards also are ! b e ,. l l l i lb,p t o v o t e U n d w t h e ^
being distributed lo busmen finis, ! law, the requirement has been cutdown' to six months in the State
cards are seen on the back of auto- I liclzrd throuuhout the nation
The Council began distributingthe cards nbout three or four yearsago. Acnirrimg to Mr. DelVacchlothe "Put Christ Into Christinas"theme is now being widely puo-
Projector to beGiven to School
CARTERET — At the regularmeeting of the Business and Pro-fessional Women's Club of Car-teret it was voted to present amoving picture projector to thespecial class in the Columbus
School Commissioners Alys Sheri-1 School.
Taxpayers UnitTo Attend ConfabCARTERKT The Cnrteiet
Taxpayers1 Association will be re-presented at the 27th AnnualMeetum of the New Jersey Tax-payers' As.s(H-latlon ul the Hotel
and fiO days In the county.As ii result of the change many
of the newcomers occupying hous-ing developments In the boroughwill be eligible to cast their firstvotes here, with the majority com-ing from the Shore Crest section.New voters can register dally from9 A M to 5 P M, at the office ofBorough Clerk Patrick Potocnlir.
This borough will elect threeschool commissioners In February.
I The terms of Thonva» Deverln,George Hell and Erwln Wantoch,will expire next February. Deverinis filling the unexplred term otMayor Edward J. Doliin.
rate and an rxtrn divi- ''he. Honor Roll banner. At the Holy
deiul has been announced by Gon-Amoiicnn Transportation,,,.„]
ui picture showed how wei >n arrival ln'thl* country
•••Mrs ago. It was taken• of those quarter-a-pic-.u.u'hines. We wore an.vi hat that came down
"vrs and the knot of the..•loser to the back than
•;i'.. A veritable museum
nroject had the backing of suchdenominations as the Prcsby-1
-:. oiir birth certificate,falling apart, we note
• •.'.•ere born on March 21,• day of spring, that thei' i:vered us at 11 A. M... ,-aw thp first light in a'iid not a hospital, and
'•!: Maria Regenthal, the:.• did the job.
• pages of old papersl :ndbeig kidnaping I June
• '•;". John DJHlnger, bankcaptured January 25,
' - i l Waif in Spain opened1936; Hitler took Aus-
: ••(h ll , | l938, and Frank-i eelected for a third
' n i i n b e r 5, 1940.
"ix us filled with lettersAC have been writing toMine he was born 16
.in-Each letter I* dated'ied. We asked Junior ifId be'Interested In start-
1 lead the letters. "Wait:"i -1." he saldl
! have a data with
thousand scattered Hungarian corporation following a meetingP r o t e M H n t r e f ii s e e s in 24 • Of the board of directors,countr.es of the free world. Their T h ( > b o i l l d v o t o r i l u r i l i s c the
regular dividend rate from $3.20•per share to S3 SO per share and
terlan Church. U.S.A. & U.S.. and 6vl,\.liV(\ a n extra dividend of 2ftthe Evangelical and Reformed; n , n l s T i , r m . w dividend rate willChurch. Mr. S/.i'jethy will speak j „„ j n t 0 ,,[fecl vi\.h the last quar-Sunday on the theme "What [oc\y payment for 1957. William J.Worth Huncamns in America?" , sttblti . president, said, and will jHe will speak m both languages.; )M. paj(i along with the extra divi-
Mini.'-tern and delr«!itions of all • dt-nd on December 18 to stoc-k-the sister clnirche.s in New Jersey holders of record November 29.will be present. Mayor Edward, & m i n , , s uf General AmericanDolan promised to attend the fo|. ljl(, [ u s l m m , months of 1957banquet. ; w r l R $[1,305,194 or $4.74 per share
Some Hiiiuiiiruin folk sonw and compared with $9,975,204 or $4.19a .<urpn.se number will ma.ke tip ; per share for the first nine munlhsthe sliort program after which! in 195'ti.dancing will follow The Interna-tionals will .supply the dancemu.sir. The dinner will be pre-pared h\ the Junior Woman's!Club of which Mrs. Betty Kuhnis president.
Family, pupils of the seventh andeighth grades servo as bankcashiers.
Aicordins to Mr. Kenyon manypupils start saving in the earlydays of their school career andkeep it up through high school,Some save for a college education.Others want to buy cars and stillothers have a nest egg to buy ahomo.
At our time. Carteret was secondin the nation in the average, num-b. i ol students participating in theschool saving program. Los An-geles, Cal.. was first.
dan and Adam. Szymborski, alsoMiss Daemar Koed.
Certificates of completion of thecourseR will be presented to thestudents on the night of the com-mencement.
The importance to the com-munity of the adult school pro-gram was emphasized today byMr. Quin, He asserted that "nextto the education of our childrenthere Is no task as important toAmerican a* adult education."
Mr. Quinn empnasized the im-portance of continuing education-al opportunities for those beyondday school age.
The presentation will take placeon Thursday evening, December19, at 7 P. M. Mrs. CatherineRuckriegcl, president announcedthat the parents of the children
i are cordially invited to attend.All members of the club will act
as hostesses, at a yuletide partywhich will follow the presentation.
A ftroup from the Carteret Clubwill attend a Christmas partyKlven by the Perth Amboy club onDecember 2. at the Rarltan YachtClub In Perth Aiboy. The din-
Essex House in Newark on Mon-dny. November 25,
This wa.s announced today byFrank Haury. President of thelocal association, who pointed outthat "this unique taxpayers' Ret-tnRether will provide informeddiscussion of many of the prob-lem.1; besetting us at the local,state und federal levels (if Rnvern-mrnt." Mr. Haury and Mr. Jo-seph Lamb. Vice-president, willattend the meeting.
Guides lo effective <• I I, i /, e naction ill local government will beof particular taxpayer interest at, p p
net-, will be followed by a play and j the afternoon session. A panel
Play Feature ofHadassah Session
Mfifiicittn tinHifih School Students
C A R T E R E T ••••• T h e
Chapter of HariassahCarteret
. , hold Uspaid-up membership meeting lastniKht in the Brotherhood of IsraelSynagogue.
A play entitled Life Witli Ha-
a
CARTERET - ••Piny for YourLife," a ma iic show, was pic -semetf al the I,lull .school a,s.*m-1 d l l , s a ] i w a s p l T . s ( ,n(c ( 1 i n c o s U | ,nebl.v today w U h l l u . f o n o w m K c a H t : B r t t y
K Jhomas Call of Ihe Liberty v . ( | , wallondael. Anne Isaacs, PayMutual Insurance Company ot K M l n i b , l u n i i Estdle Ulman. HelenKa.st Oraiwe, New Jersey, siro.swd ; J i l ( ,o l )y B r s s Hop|j, Flovyce Brown,
h f M o u n e v L u j . M ] l , u l m , m B(M1
yo[ F1() ] i n n v i l i l J c i l n P t t ( , Oroeu-or injury from lire wnii Ins liberal w ; i l d A n n r B r 0 ^ n i E c U U l Vo[U,]knowledge of magic M , u t v orcenwaki, Violet Levy.
Mr. Call, who has appeared M m K ] U i s M. iUi(> K]&m> A n n
many times on television, i.s a S i i r k h ( , l n i .Dorothy Chodo.sh, Oa-mtmber of the Society of Amen- ,fvlk F o X ] p c g ( , y KaL?i A m i u .can Magicians and was active in v i l / Es t (, | ,p. G o l l u e b i F i U u i y
USO work during World War II.. anmni S y K , i a B m m iUlcl t h e
director. Diana Stein.
the company".-, pnwriim ot loach-m« Ihe family to escape death
l
fr'''» Ends 'Navytraining Tomorrow
'"'••'•«• LAKES, 111. - J o h n B.
»n of Mr. and Mrs. John"[ 53 Roowvelt Avenue
1 N. J., is (dwduled t"'<• trom recruit training to-
«t the Ntyal Trainingt inut Lakes, 111.'I'iiduatlon exerc|*e», mark-" 'nd of nine weeks of'•iimp," will Jnclude a fullmuade and review beforev ulllcials and civilian dig-
" weeks of Initrufltlon. the' 'null" fe developed into a
kjfet, ready for dutyfleet,
RABBI TO SPEAKCARTERET •- Habni on the
meeting of the UnitedSisterhood, to he held
Schools.
Hebrewat the
The feature of the evenin? wafreport given by Mrs. Diana
:. vice4:ird
recently in Philadelphia.A social followed, with Jear
Chodosh, Estelle Ulman, RoseIlosenbaum. Anne Isaacs, Sophieand Helen Jacoby as
Children's PartySlated by Lions
CARTERET — The regularmretinc of the Lions Club will be
•Id Tuesday evening, ul 7:15M., at the Gypsy Camp. '
Joseph Adam, chairman of. thehn.stmiis Party for Crippled chil-ren and shut-ins, will report ofie progress bcuiK mudc for thisiiiiual affair.Postmaster Lester A. Sabo will)o\\ a film Men. Mail and Ma-lines, through thd courtesy of, the
'ost Oflico Department. According) the postmaster, the, film willlow the movement of mail andow it can bo speeded up from 30i ISO per cent by use of modernKichines.The second OpenitiK Night of
no blind seal drive will also takelace after the meetlnn. The chair-nan reported a favorable, response,nd ui^i'd those who had not yetiiiJdi1 their contribution to do so.
Mr. Stephen Fedlem, presidentTithe club. ui'Ki'd members of the
Board of Directors to attend thisnet tina.
Session is HeldBy Youth Group
CARTERET — Thc CarteretLive Y'ers held their monthlymeeting Tuesday evening at thcCarteret High School.
Mary Ann Hila, a Junior at'arteret High was the successfulandldate for treasurer. Her cam-paign managers were Judy Koblsnd Oeraldlne Ciko. The othercandidates were Beth Edmond,oseph Kasha and Carl- Kurtiak,Reports were Riven on theouth Conference held in Chat-
iam, by Judy Kobis, Margaret'oth. Barbara Pennlnston, Ken-
i Rocky and Kenneth Novo-
a sifib bag exchange."Mrs. Rita Barch was appointed
chairman of a benefit bingo partyto bo sponsored by thc club onApril 16, Members of the waysm\& mean committee will assisther ln preparing for this event.
Refreshments, were served fol-lowing the meeting by Mrs. M.McKay and her committee.
discussion of vital questions Inconnection with the current over-haul of New Jersey's assessmentpractices will follow. A public dis-cussion period will conclude theafternoon session.
Mr. Haury also announced thaton the local scene, the directorsof the Carteret association havebeen making an Intensive- study
Candidates seeking to run formembership on the board must filepetitions not later than 20 daysbefore election, according to Mrs.Josephine O'Brien, board secretary.New voters must register not laterthai! January 2.
Work on BudgetMeanwhile the board has started
its task of preparing the 1958-59school budget which must be pre-sented to voters in February forapproval or rejection.
The board will hold a conferencewith I he Carteret Board of Educa-tion Association next Mondaynight. The association representsI he teachers and other employes ofthe school system and the questionof salama will likely be the prin-cipal topic.
The next regular meeting of the | 0[ the current municipal budset.club will be held Monday evening, j He expressed the hope that theDecember 16. at Herm's Restau- j T a x p a y c r .s' Association wouldrant, Plainfleld. All members are j have an opportunity to present
Urges Caution In EffortTo Prevent House Breaks
(VO UNIT*'lih'RET—A Catholic Youth"m'-"tion has b«en formed at"•'I'h's church and the fol-lk officers have been elected:' v * n , p r e s e n t ; OunlelMc-
vice prenldent; Nancysecretary, arid Rose Pfov-
CARTE'RET -Because of the rc-ctjjit increase In house breaksthroughout Now Jersey and in thisarea, Police Chief Cieorsie Blieridaiitoduy urgwl householders to takenecessary precautions to thwartburglars.
ResldenUs noing oul for tlio eve-ire advised to leave a light
01, m the house and also one on
the second story if there Is i « .warned a;;ain.st
turn 111r leaving a key in the via',11-
box or under tt uiut.
-Be sure all doors and windo^iare securely locked,", the chielsaid. -'Clqse your garage doorsince open doors reveul youmabsence."
Anyone [joins awaj* for an extended period is advised to tell tilpolice department both the time o
i departure and the return, so that1 periodic check can be made.
Chief Sheridan suggested tinall inqiiey. jewelry and valuablarticles be removed and especlall:advised aualnst hiding valuableunder rugs. Instead, he said, remove them from the house tosafe depus.it box, '
"olumhus" ClevelandVTA Heiin Wilentz
CARTERET The regulamooting of the Columbus Cleveland P.T.A. was held in the Co.umbus School, Tuesday evenlnjwith Mrs. Helen Horvath,siding.
Warren Wilentz, prosecutor o:Middlesex County gave an inter
and enlightening informaltalk.
Mrs. Joseph Resko. membersljil:'hairman announced that a ne•ecord high w^s been reached foih.he current year. ,
IMvs. Turner gave a report oihe recent 'P.T.A. convention hell
in Atlantic City. Edwin S. QuinSuperintendent of Schools spoki'0 the group. The attendlnciiwards were won by Mrs. Ulman:lass of Columbus School and Mriiicharilsou's class of ClevelanSchool. The dark horse pruse was'warded to Mr. Robert Mullan.
* serial fiillowed the meetiiwith the. Sixtli Bi'udp ^mothers
ol huspitality.
asked to bring a gift for a child,| clearly marked whether it is forj a boy or a girl and Indicate thc
age.
liLsky.Joyce Kent gave a report on the
elp given to the Communityhest, by the club.Another Youth Conference will
'C held for Juniors and Seniors inDecember. Joseph Kasha is chair-man of thc affair.
Plans were made for a dancend a tiip to Camp Morris to beicltl son etimfj in the near future.
Ted Ressler of the Perth Amboy' spoke to the group about varl-us activities taking place at the
Y. and urged them to attend. He.lso showed slides on a youthconference attended by the offi-cers and a meeting' of the LiveY'ers ln action.
After ihe business meetingChristmas carols were sung. Thecarols will be sung at varioushofcpltals during the holidays, bythe group.
City I Ane Club Slate*Dance for Wednesday
CARTERET—The City Line So-cial und Athletic Club, Inc., willsponsor their annual Thanksgiv-ing Eve dance November 27 atBethlen Hull, commencing at 9P. M.
Continuous dance music will beprovided by two well-knownbands.
Patsy Shoul, chairman of theaffair, announced that entertain-ment will also be provided and alarge crowd is expected from theIndication of the large advancesale of tickets.
its recommendations for 1958'sbudget to the mayor and councilThe Directors will give an out-line of the proposals to the As-
at itsmonthly meeting which will beheld at Fire House #2. Wednes-day, December 4th, at 8:00 P.M.
soclntlon's membership
Hebrew Men's ClubTo Hear Dr. IF inklei
CARTERET Dr. Henry R,
TO HOLD BARECARTERET — The Holy Name
of the St, Ellas GreekChurch wil conduct a
Thanksgiving bake sale, Sunday,November 24, after both masses in
Legion Cites Progress1 /re Membership Drive
CARTERET—Joseph Cero andClarence McGlllls, membership co-chairmen of Carteret Post No. "J63The American Legion, have rrport-jd that membership lot- 1058 isconjlnu in at so level a rate thatthe 1957 membership will be sur-passed py mid-December at thelatest. ,
Membership In j the Let! ion isopen to all veterans, male and fe-male, who have served In the offi-cial dates of the beginning andending of World War I, World WarII, and the Korean Conflict.
David Schelfe. of 42 Arthur Avenue, and Bert Anderson, of 80Laurel Street, have been admittedas members, ,:
Commander 'Francis TomczukIssued an Invitation to all veteran;to Join the post.
TO TONIGHTO toKOT TOCARTERET ;-The Lady Craft
men Club will meet tonight ato'clock ln the clubrooms on ElnStreet.
Winkler. Prbfcssor of History ,itRutgers University wjll address theHiurew Men's Club at a breakfastthis Sunday mornini; .it 10 A, Mat the Concrri'iitlon of LovingJustice. His topic will bo The SlateUniversity.
Preceding the breakfast u shortmorninft service will be held. RnbblLewis Brennrr will deliver a briefscrmonetle before introducing theguest speuktir.
Members of the club are re-quested to be prompt.
P. (). (TOSKI) Till KSDAYCARTERH;T The Carteret
he church bascnient. Advance j Post Office will be cluswl on Thurs-irders may be made by calling day. November 28, Thiuikwivnii-1
U 1-7588. ' Day.
Milton J, Farr to RetireFrom Ainerican Oil Co.
CARTERET-Mllton J. Farr,Manager of Terminals for theAmerican Oil Company, and aformer resident of Carteret, wastendered a farewell dinner atElizabeth Carteret Hotel, Eliza-beth. November 19.
In attendance to pay tributeto Mr. Farr wore all his closefriends from the local plant andNew York office of tha com-pany, Enhancing the affair weremusical selections by the Cla-rence $herldan S.T.A.Q. Melo-Dalres. Mr. Fair will officiallyretire from the company on De-cember 31, completing 38 years,eight montlis and 27 days ofservice with Amoco, Mr. Fairoriginally started with the com-pany on April 14. 1919, at thelocal plant, became Lts AslstantSuperintendent on January 27,1B25, and on August 1,1933. waspromoted to ' Superintendent.On August 1, 1953, he left Car-teret to assume the position o|Manager of Terminals for allAmoco deep water terminals.
It is the intention of Mr. andMrs. l*'air U) leave fur PumpanoBench, MuriiiH, within the nextlew days lo sJslabhsh permanentrusicitiiict; iu the Sunshine State.
Minstrel ShowAuditions Held
CARTERET — Auditions wereheld Sunday afternoon at theCommunity Center, for the Min-strel Show sponsored by the St.Demetrius Planning Committee ofthe St. Demetrius Church underthe direction of Mrs. Kay Sym-chik.
The audition committee con-sisting of Peter Kosten. JosephLesky, and Gene Wadiak an-nounced that anyone who wouldlike to audition for the- minstrelmay do so by contacting eitherof the committee on or beforeNovember 25.
A general rehearsal will be heldfor nil specialty numbers as wellas thc chorus on Tuesday evening,November 2fi, at 7:30 P.M. at theCommunity Center. The choralaraup and end men are holdingrehearsals every Monday eveningut the Community Center.
Several professional speefallieswill be featured and will be pub.lished at a later date.
Anyone who would like lo iu jiHie qhorus group arc asked to•ontact Myron Wolaiisky or Mrs.Kay Symchlk,
Census Bureau Cots ,Facts on Einidoyniout
CARTERET-Facts on einnlnv-ment and unemployment will !;-•collected from a number of luvlfamilies during the week of Not-•mber 1,8 In the Current Popula-tion Survey, according to Super-•isur Edwin P. slabaunh of tinCensus Bureau's regional office hNew York City which will partici-pate In the survey.
The current Population Survey,conducted on a sample bas|s formore than a decade by the CensusBureau, provides up-to-date na-tional estimates on employment•ind unemployment and also re-lated population characteristics In-formation such as the number ofpersons who are not working be-•ause they are in school, retired orunable to work; the availability ofmunyower for both defefiae andilium production, and similar
facti I
Carteret Odd fellowsHold Session Tonight
CARTERET —'The second de-;itv will be conferred at tonight's'Heeling of Carteret Lodge 267,Odd Fellows. In Odd Fellows Hall.
Tomorrow night a large delega-tion will attend -the 110th anni-ensaiy of Lawrence Lodge to be
held at Ii'tyi Workers Hall. 482Market Street, tomorrow nifht.
The Craftsmen's Glee Club o/'••••- borough will entertain at the
v\r,?, FT?TDAY. NOVftMnfiR 22, 1057 <"Ar:Trr,r
hither and SonHeld in Break
r.MIWAY - Investigation byDfi' '!i\i ' Mj'.t. Aloyslus Nolan am'hi- r't.iil twilted in charge ofbre:ik:nn and entering attains1
Enii.nniii Phillips, father of Car.N^Nnii Phillips, 18, of 1501 Roose-M'lt A'.i-iiiip, Ctfrteret. The youfcrun' MM ruled at 15:30 A.M. TUPS-
d'iv in Die Joseph O. FkmularHinrmuoy, 254 E. Grand Street.I'dlliir and son face similarchili"!":.
Tin iiM-csl of tlie son van byPalvoliiifii Mciton Avery andJohn atffanlrk. aided by DeputyChit f Main J, Crntinn and SiftC'licii'T Kmitii. They were sent tof i e .'••(•in', when police In routineclic/'k of doors found the rear door(if fin1 pharmacy had been forced.YMIIIM! Phillips wns hiding In thewii -lirnom. they said.
Polr.-r siiid his father had beenIn ii pinked car In Montgomery
1 Klrrtt, II block fnJhi the pharma-c.v. Hr drnvi' away at appronch of])o!in\
Will n he telephpned to ask.'ibiiut his son, he was told he<ioukl yiv him at Police Head-quarters. He made the visit andupon ((iieslioninK readily admit-ted, pnlici' said, to his part in the
r.alhnlic Daughter*1*1(111 Christmas Parly
CAHTERKT — Court Fldplis,i3fi. rnihollc DniiKht.prs will hold'ts nniv.ml Christmas party at the-ohinihinn Club December 12.Irs. Wlllinm Bnblcs and Mrs."•hillp Pc« are oo-chalrmen.
The rourt, dprtdfd to dlwon-Inur the rxohiiru'c of gifts at the
Yule party; Intend members willbrink toys which will be dls-rlhutfd to tbp needy children ofhe uorouiih.
KASKIW IN HOSPITALCARTEHET — Vasyl Kasklw,
v^ Ppishino Avenue, is a surgicalwilent lit the Veterans Adminla-.ratiim Hospital in Brooklyn, N. Y.
iftaiiv Both signed confessions,police sakl.
Young Phillips admJtted he ison parole for an alleged burglaryn Union .six. months ago, policesaid. Mr. Ftomular told detectives he left dollar In change Inthe cash register. This was miss-ins and Ychmg Phillips Jiad nomoney on him when arrested. Thefather admitted, police .said, hehad received the money and wentto get a drink in a nearby tavern.
Neither ctf the men is employed,polire statetl.
Both are being held for theGland Jury.
Winter Vacation inMiami Beach, Florida
For Three Weeks, by TrainTrain will leave from Pennsylvania Stationin Newark, N. J., on Sunday, January 5th,ui 2 P. M. Cost of round trip, including yourslay in Florida, only $185.00 <F~- »•" *™l»w
For Details and Reservations
WRITE MRS. ROBERT McMAHON76 Hickory Street, Carteret, Tel. KI-1-7855
AlligatorGOLD LABEL
Aaurun'i Most Wa
Here's an nnmistakable «legumAbout Alligator Gold U b d tb*T»made this luxurious all wool
worsted gabardine the coat nxtlwear and enjoy moBt. In juat-tha>
tight weight for comfort, *ndwater rep .''.lent processed, y W l
live in Gold Label . -^tain, sun, cold)
!)1 Smith StreetPerth Amboy
Join Our 1958
CHRISTMAS CLUBThat Earns
DIVIDENDSRIGHT NOW
Each Week You Save November You Reqeive$ 50
1.002.003.Q05.00
10.00
$ 25.005O.ob
100.00150.00250.00500.00
Plus Dividends
First Savings& Loan Assn, of Perth Amboy
STATE STREET
HI-2-277O
Daily 9 A.M. to'4 P .M.
Saturday 9 to 12 Noun
Mrmlier Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp.
^iQPirflnQmrBiy^aB^-mriL
Donations VotedBy VFW Auxiliary
CARTERET — The LadlesAuxiliary V. P. W. held Its regularmeeting Monday evening In thrpost rooms. Mrs. Florence Am-brose, president, gave a report onthe recent spaghetti supper.
Donations were voted to the De-partment Cancer Research fund.Chriitma* Cheer, Roosevelt Hos-pital, Lyons Veterans Hospital,East Orange Hospital, Tubercu-losis League and the Hospitalquota was also voted to be pnld.
Plans were discussed for a^hrlstmast party.
The sliver offering was awnrdedto Mrs. Betty Slmko., At the next regular meetini; ofthe group which will be held De-cember 2 in the post rooms nkitchen shower will be featuredind all members ore requested Ubring a dish towel.
Mrs. Margaret Nemeth and MrsIrene Meyers were hostesses forthe evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rock. 6West Main Street, Farmlngdale,are the parents of a son, born No-vember 8. at Pltkln Memorial Hos-pital, Neptune. Mrs. Rook Is theformer Marie Johnson, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. William Johnson,25 Orchard ptreet, West Carteret.
Son born to Mr. and Mrs. Rich-ard Banta, 20 Tyler Avenue at theRahway Memorial Hospital, No-vember 13. Mrs. Bnnta Is the for-mer Jean Cooke.
CARD OF THANKSALEXANDER 8. BASTEKWe wish to express our deep
gratitude to our relatives,friends, and neighbors for theirkind expressions of sympathy,spiritual bouquets and beauti-ful floral tributes extented tous In our bereavement in thedeath of our dearly belovedhusband, father, grandfatherand brother. Alexander S.Bastek.
We especially wish to thankRev. M. A. Konopka; Rev. M.J. Kseniak; Rev.'Louis CortneyO.S.M.; Rev. Alyousis BolandO.S.M.; Rev. Victor GrabrianO.S.M.; Holy Family Society;Polish Aid Society; AmericanAgricultural Chemical depart-ment employees; Local 434 In-ternational Chemical WorkersUnion, A.A.C. Co.; CarteretP.B.A. Local #47; State PoliceTroop D, Newark; special po-lice patrol women; CarteretDemocratic Organization; Car-teret municipal employees;American Agricultural Chemi-cal Company; pall bearers;Carteret and Woodbridge po-lice escorts and the SynowieckiFuneral Home for satisfactoryservices rendefed.
Family of the late~ Alexander S. Bastek
dub PARKVIEW PATTER• MRS. DOROTHY HEPWORTH
CA-1-4.W
Son born to Mr. and Mrs. LouisBalka, 92 Louis Street at the Eliza-beth General Hospital. Elizabeth,November 15. Mrs, Balka is theformer Mary Harold.
Son born to Mr. and Mrs.,Stephen pastor, 108 WashlnjtonAvenue at the Perth Amboy den-ta l Hospital, November 14.
Daughter born to Mr. and Mrs.?rank Panek, 1164 Roosevelt Ave-lue at the Perth Amboy GeneralHospital. November ,14.
Dauphter born to Mr. and Mrs.Ernest Chizmadla, 28 Pulaski Ave-nue at the Perth Amboy Generallo.spltal, November 17.
Great!He — Miss Onthego, If you wish
to see nature at Its best youshould take a trip through the?reat pine woods of the Adiron-dack mountains.
Miss Onthego — Oh, that wouldbe great! I dote on pineapples!
CARD OF THANKS
ELIZABETH CHAMRA
We wish to express oursincere thanks to our relatives,friends, and neighbors for theirkind expressions of sympathy,spiritual bouquet* and beauti-ful floral tributes extended tous In our bereavement in thelass of our dearly beloved aunt,Elizabeth Chamra.
We especially wish to thankRev. L. J. Petrick; Rev. M. J.Kseniak; Rev. A. E. PollakC.S.S.R.; Altar and Rosary So-ciety; Jednota Branch #324;honorary pall bearers; activepall bearers; Carteret andWoodbridge Police escorts andthe Synowiecki Funeral Homefor satisfactory services ren-dered.
Family of the lateElizabeth Chamra
A regular meeting of the Park-view Democratic Club v»ill be heldTuesday evening, at 8:30 P.M. at'Falcon Hall. All members are In-vited to attend.
(ANGLES ON THEIR CAKESHappy birthday to Kathleen
Powers of 57 Arthur Avenue whocelebrated her -eleventh on No-vember 11.
Birthday greetings to theWarren twins of 47 Coolldge Ave-nue who pawed their first mile-stone on November 19.
Birthday congratulations toKrynn Slngdahleen of 114 DanielStreet who waa seven years oldon November 22.
Happy birthday to J o s e p hSillier of 93 Markowltz Street whois celebrating hi* seventh today.
VISITS FROM THE STORKCongratulations to Mr. and Mrs.
H. Hallgowski of 96 HickoryStreet on the arrival of a daugh-ter Louise, on November 10. atthe Elizabeth General Hospital.The couple have a daughter athome. •
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Walsh of104 Hagaman Street announcethe addition of a girl, ElizabethMary, on November 17, at theMargaret Hagtie Hospital in Jer-sey City. She joins two sisters anda brother.
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.Frank Nleder of 71 Marlon Streetin the arrival of a girl on No-vember 21. They have two boysind three girls at home.
Mrs. Robert Taylor ofMarion Street was guest of honori t a surprise stork shower givenher by Mrs. J. Patterson and Mrs.D. Barbella at 63 Hickory Street.In attendance were: Mrs. H. Free-man, Mrs. J. O'Donnell, Mrs. F.Bennett, Mrs. J. Lucas. Mrs. B.W. Harrington, Mrs, B. Fondi,Mrs. H. Keating, Mrs. P. Nallin,Mrs. N. Burke, Mrs. F. Silkowski,Mrs. A. Windsor, and Mrs. C.Yukalenich.
Select Your Holiday
LIQUORSFor Thanksgiving Entertaining
SCOTCH • RYE 0 BOURBONBRANDY • LIQUEUR • WINESDomestic aiul Imported CHAMPAGNE
Domestic and Imported BEER
HOLIDAY WRAPPEDand
FANCY BOTTLESMake an Ideal Gift!
VOGEL'S Liquor StoreWoodbridge82 Main Street
HI NEIGHBORWelcome to Mr. and Mrs. Vin-
cent Auralma of 70 HatamanStreet who have recently movedhere from Newark. The couplehave a three year old daughter,Susan.
Abo, welcome to Mr: and Mrs.Charles Yukalevlch of 31 WillowStreet who are formerly of New-ark. They have a seven year oldson, Charles Jr.
OUR BHORECftEHTNEIGHBORS
Mrs. William Flanagam of 10Dunster Street entertained thesewing group of Sadilc Court,Ladies Oriental Shrine, t h e troupraises money for shoos tnd brftcesfor the crippled children. Amongthose present were Mrs. E, Bogie,Mrs. A. Roth, Mrs. M. Babilya,Mrs. A. Dodson, Mrs. M. Jones,Mrs. 8. Laughlln, and Mrs. Wil-liam Luyster.
(,/u7r7 ] ittes DonationTo St. Elias Church
V
CARTERET - At themeeting of HIP at, Elins LndlwGuild held at the homr of Mrs,Robert Zalrski the chili voted a$10.00 Christmns donation to th<church. The members will alsoassist with the Christmas decora-tions In the church.
A game social followed themeeting with refreshments servedby Mrs. Zaleskl assisted hy MrsJohn Ladanyl Jr.
The next meeting of the groupwill be held Wednesday, De-cember 1, at 8 P.M. at the homeof Mrs. Joseph Klety. CarteretAvenue and will feature a Christ-mas party with an exchange ofBlfU. Hostesses will be Mrs. Mi-chael Bazaral. Mis. Geza Oaral,Mrs. Michael Toth. and • Mrs.Nicholas Barnyak.
- Brief & -Miss Wanda B. David antf Mrs.
M. Laubach visited the Belllnfratt]Gardens at Mobile, Ala. The Gar-dens have the world's largest ca-mellia collections.
The Polish-American Club'sLadles' Auxiliary will hold aChristmas party at the GypsyCamp, December 11 at 7 P. M.There will be an exchange of gifts,
St. Joseph's PTA SetaCpke Sale for Dec. 7
OARTERET—St, Joseph's PTAhas arranged to hold n cake salrin the church hall. December 7,when the mothers of the childrenattending the third grade will be Incharge.
Father's Night was markwi atthe last meeting. Rev. Alfred Meis-ter, of St. Mary's;Abbcy, Order of9t, Benedict, Moristown, spoke onresponsibility of parents to theirchildren.
Rehearsals are being held by St.Demetrius Community Center forIts minstrel show to be presentedDecember 7.
The Holy Name Society of St.Elias Greek Catholic Church willhold a Thanksgiving cake and foodsale Sunday from 9 A. HI. to 1P. iM. in the Parish Hall.
Elsenhower urges wider ex-I change programs.
It's Not Too Late to Knit That
PERSONAL
GIFT
FOR
CHRISTMASUse Jaybell or Fieisher Yarnsin Your Favorite Material and Color
• • •For the ladies interested in HANDWORK we haveKNITTING and SEWING BOXES and dozens of otherhandy and practical gifts.
The Sewing Kit(A Complete Yarn Shop)
73 E. CHERRY ST., RAHWAY .. FU-6-1673
GROUP TO MEETCARTERET—The regular meet-
ing of the Junior Judean Pioneerswas held November 14, at whichtime the new leader, Harold Rud-nlck, was introduced.
A report on the recent partywas made and reports on Sabbothwere made by Judy Breslow andRobin Porter.
Prizes will be awarded for thebest Chanukah picture poster contest which is now in progress.
The meeting was followed by asocial with community singing.
The White House is consideringa political strategy conference be-tween the President and Republi-can Governors, to plan an intenseeffort to recapture control ofCongress.
5HOOT IF V()i: Mi s r
tf during the oj), „ „,',,ihoot one of youi; f|lr]|,|he best intentloned i,,,,,,,,' \
occasionally u> do—it ,•.ourtesy, ns well a.-, i,Uvl'^'''lelf-protectlon. to k n , I T ,,'''"do about it. ' '"' '
For a penetrating \vi,«n,,.•hest, apply n thick, s ,
age over entrance and ,,V|, , "to prevent the- passn,.',. ,'."Always consider i,i)(. „„ . , J'.^bone fractures as well ;,. ,i ]to soft tissues. Coin nil' '',','•hage and profuse hi,.,,,,,' '•mploylng the rouihi< V ,'echnlquea.
T ranspo r t the victim •..,.:•,on a cot or improvised i i - (
Oet to medical aid qui v,- '•,'af ches t or facial injury ';„'•',breathing may beonnii.' ,|..9omrt lmes speed is ,„.,"/.'where there Is urinary | r : l . ,,age. Otherwise slow miri , ,'.rarusportatlon is desii-.m1,,. iby-pass local doctors T; : , ,!may need prompt [.,,,,t r ea tmen t , and rural |l;are generally experieivivi ,Ing with hunting n c r i d , ] /
Of course, IntelliKeni p:,Is the best of all proceriui,hun te r s are fur moVi d,,] ',t h » n t he animals tln-ysure of your quarry \,,•: .squeeze the trigger. T i i , , :
do shoot a hunter, ric,,him as such In nclv,,i; ,murder—and your hutn:,,i r e over.
Michael S. New j o ; -
ii.il
World shlpbuildlnu setIn third quarter.
NEW BRUNSWICK St.citi.TARIAL, ACCOl Ml \< ; \
PREP SCHOOLR e g i s t r a t i o n for I n t m - n . t ,C o u r s e s now n|M'n. \< t |it,,i>i;,-,,Clashes l imited .
110 Albany St. Ki ln , , i
Preparingfor tomorrowProviding their familieswith the daily necessitieswas.an endless taskfor the early settlers.They were thankfulto be able to set asideenough foqd for the winter.
st Americans todaycan prepare for the futurein a safer and easier way.A regular savings programcan mean lifetime securityfor you and your family.
Mt»doy-Tt>urid«y • A.M.. J ».*.
Safety for S#vJ«fi Sinet IMP
The PERTH AMBOY
Savings InstitutionAIMOT. mm mm
MIMIM HOUU MMtn MWtAMM
miMtua
Tell Santa now you want
A FINE PIANO FROM GRIFFITHSSanta can trust us with your secret, But it N >j"cret that the piano you select here will !•<* onr ol i'"'world's leading maLes, bearing a famous IIUIIHJ V I
can pay a small amount now and spread the Wdw1'to fit your budget. We'll make delivery any linn' \"iisay. No matter which piano you choose you K'H '""satisfied because every piano in the Grillitli 'i'"rooms is carefully chosen by us too. OIIHTUI-'1 itwouldn't be here. So come to Griffiths, the be-i |l '"in the Metropolitan District to choose ) cpiw'i- ""•tole or grand piano.
Here are some of the world-famous piano* you cm •" •'"'liear in North Jersey only at Griffith*:
STHNWAY . CHICKERING . WEBER •
WURLITZER • WINTER • and many oth«rt
AIHO, all five models of tb« HAMMOND ORGAN
HLL OUT-f-TIAR OUT-AND MAIIjTO US
wild me full infonnitioa on tfae followm); fi-h*-<-L :
Name.
AddreM
_ J. , Z«M
GRIFFITH PIANO COMPANYITIIMWAT IIPIIIIHTATIVII _
605 BROAD STRUT, NIWARK %, "iVi J" )|tfOKN WIDNIIDAY IVlNINOt UNTH. MNI A k '
rvr Church Scene ofHies - Kovacs Nuptial
FTfTT>AV. T\\OF. THREE
Thanksgivingr A i)i-fi.t.:
r KII v Magyar Rp-
, , Snlurday after-
; r.s Ethel Kovacs,V! nnd Mrs. Josephuinill Street.'became
ilvin Ray Nerttles, 19.•:HM\ son of the late
Marshall Nettles.](.-A' Hnrsanyl, pastori,rrfonned the cere-
by her father,:i i>nwn of Frenchh mi nnkJe-lennth.us arranged fromp ntid she carriedlids on a prayer
Mrs
served .»
ed schools here and in Lor* isl»J«ntgrdtacluir«d from ui u sArmy, he Is now employed bv r>.7
The European common marketwiled an Rid to the u. s
OUR NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
Keystone MOVIE OUTFIT
- ••-re K-« B«l A i lMaj i;.' . c Camera... loids in
nothing else to buyYOU GET AM. THIS
Service Sunda)CARTERET _ The Cnlvnry
B f l p t i s t Churrh will hold Its iThank.s(tivlnR Service Sunday all' ! A.M. The assistant pastor, >Homer Trlcule8. will deliver thesermon entitled Olvln* Thanks.>rie pnstor. Rev, Joseph Mntus,will conduct the service. Sundny"ralnR nt 6:30 P.M. in addition10 the presentation of coloredsHdes *hlch tell the story of theHook nf aenesls, a special service;if ThfinksgivinK will be held TheJunior Choir will Ring. Wednes-day evening In place of the usualMidweek Prayer meeting, theannual Thanksgiving eve servicewill be held. This service willbeRln nt 7 P.M., because of thisthe Calvary Choir will not re-hearse this week.
On Monday evening, the Dea-wm's meeting will be held at 730p M. at the church.
The church Is planning a spe-cial Thanksgiving festival foodoffering for the Wednesday eve-ning Thanksgiving Eve service.The congregation will bring spe-'•inl Rifts of all kinds of food tolay upon the festival table whichwill be in front of the church forthe service. These gift* will bedistributed to the needy by theDeacons following the service. Thepublic is cordially Invited to wor-
Rt this special service. TheChoir and the Junior
will sing. The CalvaryTeens will be host to the congre-uatlon for a coffee hour follow-ing the service, this will be held inthe lower auditorium of thechurch. Mrs. Rachel Mosconi, as-sociate advisor, will be in chargeof arrangements.
The building work on theparsonage continues each nightand Saturdays all day. All menare urged to give every available
CWV Installation Eastern Star to Entertain Thanksgiving DayTomorrow Night! Children at Yule Affair Marked at School
CARTFHET Mayor Edward J
SAM DONAIII'K
TO PLAY AT COTILLION —Sam Donahue and his orchestrawill furnish the music for theChristmas Cotillion of the Car-teret Woman's Club, December26 in the Ukrainian ('enter.
Ontoi) will be the principal speak- | tiict deputy of the Eighth districtjt>r ni the installation to bf he Id j w» s welcomed at a meeting or theI !>>• Si Elins Post. 791, Catholic CarterH Chapter Order ol Eastern
Star, held In Odd Fellows Hall.
Mr», Oliver Introduced her Olfl-cjal family including worthy ml-troni and worthy patrons of 9chapters throufhout the district.
Mrs. Bertha Relax, worthy ma-tron and Julius Relw.. worthy pa-tron, spoke to the group.
The presentation ceremony was
performed by the locnl officers
Three new members, Mrs. Allci'Powell. Mrs. Odessa Worthy andMrs. Sarah Ann Worthy, were wel-corned.
Mrs. Florence Rapp. associatematron announced that the chil-
CARTERET — The official vwlt ^hrUtirmt p»«rt* will be held onof Mrs Jean Oliver, worthy ills- December 16 at the Craftsman's,
] W.u Veterans. Inc., In their new-hibrnoms. Carteret and JacksonAvenues, at 8 o'clock tomorrownight.
Alex Fazekns will serve M postommander for the ninth year.lev. Augustine Medvlgy was re-amed chaplain.Other officers named were Oe».a
•ami. first commander; John, second vice commander;
ohn Kurtz, third vice command-er; Michael Uinisso, adjutant:George Toth, treasurer, and AlexKuzma, medical officer.
Other officers elected were John{olibnfl. judge advocate; John
Sees Yule Mail Rush
After Thanksgiving
CARTERET—Postmaster Les-ter Sabo said today that he ex-pects the Christmas mall rushto begin rlyht after Thanks-giving.
He suggested that parcels toto distant states be mailed notlater than December 10 andlocal delivery of Christmascards not. later than Decem-ber 16.
Fourth Degree Holds
Staff Installation
CARTERET— Officers of CareyAssembly Knights of Columtmrwere officially Installed by Wil-liam StHlwel, master of the NewJersey Second District and hisstaff.
Officers included: Alex S. Mos-cicki, faithful navigator; JohnD'Zurilla, faithful captain; An-drew H l l a . faithful admiral-Mitchell Bednarz, faithful comp-troller; John Koncz. falthfuscribe; Walter Glnda. falthfupurser: John Boze Sr., falthfupilot; John Kurtz, faithful purserJohn Boze Sr.. faithful pilotJohn Kurtz, faithful Inner sentlnel; Andrew Matrlska, falthfu'outer sentinel: and Rev. VlctoiGrabrlan O.S.M.. faithful friar.
A dinner dance followed thInstallation of the ColumbianClub.
All Fourth Degree members anasked to participate in full regaliaMonday at the commemorativiservices at the Knights of Columbus Home at 8 o'clock.
Plans are being completed foplacing a manger In front of thhome.
Club.Mr«. Agnes Malwitt: and Mr*
Bertha Mortfki are co-chalmifnof th* Christ hai canMy project.
SoioUt tor the evening was VisJoyrt Jontf, accompunitd at thepiano by Mr i. Anna Brown.
A covered , dish mjpper followedunder the Jlrertion of Mr* KRVJomo assist M by Mr*. Rose Zrrzn.Mxs. Helen, Sabo and Mrs. EmrrmBuriay,
(\ueit-s were: Mrs. MaijTRirtKoerber, • grand rrprrspntattve toCanada; Mrs. Lydi» Walllim.grand ;r*pr*»entative to NorthCnrollrai; Mrs. Mary DoUour
•preselltiUlve to Nova Sk-n-
Oavron, officer of the da ; John ! * « * C h r t o t m M P"ly will be h,Wwih,, ,,,»if.™ „«,„„.. in . . . . . . i on December 7 mid the adultMitro, welfare officer; MichaelSadowsky, service officer, and An-drew Kahoro, historian.
Named to the board of trusteeswere Patrick Potoenlg, chairman,three years; Frank Fazekas, twovears; Michael Puha, Joseph Ba-'aris, Stanley Mosclclk. and JohnKozar, one year.
Guests will include Dr. LouUangrosso. national medical of-
ficer of CWV; Mrs. GeraldlnePangrosso, state auxiliary presi-dent; Miss E. A. Steiner; countyauxiliary president; Edmund Ko-boski, county commander; Thom-as Hanley. commander of CarteretPost No, 1231, VFW; Frank Tom-czuk, commander of Carteret PostNo. 81, American Legion, and Jo-
CARTKKKr T V followinghankntUIti,; Uiv in-n-iam will be
presenter! hv Mis > M : H W I andMrs Oftllns Mi.;i ;:iv nfternnonc laws c[ ire fl>-..'i.,rnl School »tl :*0 P M m Fi.nm 2: lord'sPrnyer. Joycr SihnfThauwr; flag
l and lininii i ird. JamesDoyle. Jny Brir,' n m,ri ){onv\ld R M -ko; song America; welcome,Krynti Singda.hl.spn. play entitledThanksRiMim m Tlnv Town withthe following pa<ticipHitnv JudyLfon«\ Robert y .BUchoflDoleinr.ri-.rkn. Pn'ri.-ln•ri l,mfl<-mnMi!Vhomas
Ailnir Kurt/. MrtrllynSh.unn l!.:fni(l. Les*
Il.ruy.«ki. Rob-Prtersoln,Pelcrswn.
tla: Solomon Price, worshipful crmrle* p l w i . . . i - l p. n c y . Allan
seph Hayko, commander ofJames Post No. 615, CWV,
St
CARTERET— The Wash
TRAFFIC SIGNALS MIXEDROCHESTER, N. Y.—When a
mason, helping to remodel the of-fice of a traffic-control director,moved n switch to make his workeasier, he unwittingly set 46 trafficsignals haywire. The signals flash-ed crazily for more than fifteenminutes, giving motorists stopsand so's almost simultaneously.
3TH PHOTO SHOP(>1 Cooke Avenue, (iirterel
Phone KI 1-5219
^ANYTHING PHOTOGRAPHIC, WE'VE COT IT!
Look at the Back of Your Neck—Everybody Else Does!
IT PAYS TOLOOK :
I.IA1HUTV
Get Your Next Haircut to the Pleasant Strains ofHI-FI Music, Played Continuously at
ULIANO'S BARBER SHOP1176 Roosevelt Avenue, West Carteret
William J. Varga is
Engaged to Marry
CARTERET — Mr. and MrsArnald Schmale of St. LouisMissouri announce the engage-ment of their daughter, Jane toWilliam J. Varga, son of Mr. andMrs. William Varga of 115 Wil-liam Street.
Miss Schmale Is a graduate ofSouth West High School and theDeacanes Hospital School ofNursing in St. Louis, She Ispresently on the nurses staff ofthe Shriners Hospital in St. Louis.
Her fiance was graduated fromCarteret High School. He servedfour" years in the United StatesAir Force and is a Senior attend-ing the University of MissouriSchool of Mines and Metallurgyat Rolla, Missouri.
The wedding date has been setfor February 2.
Nathan Hale P.T.A. held tta regu-lar monthly meeting In theNathan Hale School, with MissBarbara B u r b a n k of PublicService Electric and Gas Compa-ny, as narrator of slides on SchoolDay Luncheon.
Mrs. Betty Rahoche, treasurer,gave a financial report on the re-cent card party.
Mr. Emerlc Holderlth. safetychairman, requested members tosign and return the safe drivingclub cards, sponsored by the Mid-dlesex Safety Council.
Mrs. Arthur Stupar. president,gave a report on the recent Con-vention of the New Jersey Con-gress of Parents and Teachers,held In Atlantic City. The dele.gates endorsed a resolution foran increase in the state aid toeducation. New Jersey can wellafford an equitable system of tax-ation, to contribute Its fair shareto the fulfillment of Its functionto educate its children.
Joseph Comba, Principal of theNuthan Hale School spoke on tliebooks on display In the SchoolLibrary, there are more than 3,-000 books to bo used by the stu-denLs.
Miss Katherine Donovan, Prin-cipal of the Washington School,thanked the parents for the tele-vision set which was pfesented tothe Washington School.
of Theodore Roosi-vlll j o n n s W l l , , , n A V , , , ! n , ,„ P n u l
lodrt. nnd Max Kraus. presidrnt stromlck, .Niclu.bs spolWnoOfCtiteret Craftsmen Club (Richard Sr!:nm-ilmsh. Mart*
Trmdway. Tutu hi FMIMS, Frances, Andres. Stephen M> Iknurs, LindaKish. Joseph Bnitiiiil'.i), Maria()KZti'!\RuiiH(7, Donim Klaiisman,Janet Soflelil. flltn Miller, PatriciaScott, Mary Pii.u n.d i.ynn Oural.
. \ . f j , '< Part II: sou A Turkey on agton TheUtteiulance p r i » was won , B,unyard Fen,,-, d -, ivcltation,
Washington -Nathan HalePTA at Meeting, Social
by M f V R u t h Q r a e m e s Seventh A T n i m k f l l l 0 ( ) , , v , , , ,V ( V S c h a f T .grade i i ^ d Miss Mllllcent Brown's h n u s p r , s o | 1 ( , R M ( | , s , v t ! l m T l w r f . ,
Second r r * d eA Bin Fai s Thankful
Umoreux;enterUlm at the December 18.!
s o n K ; i l K l [ ) i m i l , A | . l i m | ) k | n RanfX- • Awny, clus'- nc ic i ipn .ind exer-
change o ^ Christmas gifts will be cipo, Bmin-.i., .if ti.i' Harvest,held. . Cmol Mcvh.ii :. H Mi.iid Resko.
The dark horse prize was won Miehnel Quimi. P;i;n>-in Giles,by Mrs. Jo^n Rynn. ! Vlnrenl Zirpolo. Cin-li ton SasoveU,
Ouest forl the evening was Ml- ( Beatrice Hiliti«,k>, l a m Shivers,of the , Bivmln V.mdi'rpo il. Andrew Kelc-
mun: icrit;\!iiMi A 'I i'.atiksitlvlnnWish, Amln w IVl.'rawky. KevinKnight. Willium U:ilifkn. MicheleKorbnn; suni!, [•',it:;rr We Thank
t h e 3-venth grade chotr will ,,„. P B 1 , . m s [ j (, l l :uh
nterUlin at the DecembM1 ' "meeting at which time an
orl t:chael PusU'ln, a memberBoard of Education.
ThiM\- piny. A M»sic Pie,
LIQUOR SPEWING
The liquor Industry Is now In-
vesting more ttian $114,000,000 u
year in advertising and sales pro-
motion, representing an Increase
of more tlui.ii 50 per cent since
1950. Twenty-seven ptir cent nf the
budget goes ta national magazines, j Jnnct Maklmv. i *-i it at ion, Leslie43 to local newspapers. 10 por cent ; Pcckormiitito local outdoi)r and transportation jadvertising and 20 per cent to ; The hrih pay of .sti-el executivespolnt-of-purchase advertisliiK, ' is called l.ilinr road '
with followm • c;.st, Virginia Fe-dnk. Mmlftie Heisin.m. Jny Brown,Stephen Brc/:i. Ani-i-1 Vele?,, Ed-
' ward Ciiven. .i.mit". n.iyle, JanetJMaklary; soiu. \V.'. dive Thanks,Icliiss: suki. Audi •'•w Keleman.
We Carry AComplete Selection Of
IMPORTED & DOMESTICWINES & LIQUORS
Free DeliveryDIAL KI-1-5975
ROCKMAN'STAVERN & LIQUOR StoreRandolph St., and Pershlni Ave,
CARTERET, N. J.
Invite the Birdsto stay all winterrill your days with pleasure as you feedyour friends-the wild birds.
• Wild Bird Feeders
• Wild Bird Seed
• Suet and Peanut Cakes
• NovellV Bird Houses
' HAVE THEM!
WINEIBARRELS
' "I tu 50 Gal. (Wax)
>•• 15 Gal. (Charred)
SALT HAYFor Mulching and Covering
Up Shrubs an4 pushes
Will Presume Your PlantsDuring tl» Coming Winter
Months
FOR DOG BEDDING:Bags of Straw - Bales of Straw
' > <•! Cedar Chips - Bales of Cedar Shavings
We Deliver-Call HI-&-135O
ME5OY FEED andARDEN SHOP
Established 1919 - George W»lsh, Prop.
279 New Brunswick Avenue
PERTH AMBOY(Corner ol Oak Street)
Important Shop Ulk •Small Boy—
Big Boy—
Small Boy-
Big Boy-
Boy-
"Dad, doesn't the use of all those tools and thingsmake the cost of operating the house pretty high?"
"No — not at all. These tools — like that grinder— cost no more to operate than — let's »ay—thevacuum cleaner — or the refrigerator, Motor-drivenhousehold devices use very little current."
"But Mother says she pays Public Serv'c« m o r e l n a n
she did a few years back."
"That"* true, but we use much more electricity andgas to give us the comforts — and fun — we want."
"That must be why Public Service »ay«,
'Electricity and Gas do so much
and cost so little,'huh?"
SAVE20% to 50%
on
CORDLESSHEARING AIDS
by• OTARIAN • UNEX• DAHLBERG • GEM
Limited time only.
P. A. HEARINGAID CENTER175 SMITH STREET
Nnt to Royal TheatreVA-6-4888
our
REMINDER:If you haven't UA yH pickn! up
rlcuiiing ut ul\lartini/,in^" |ilrasi< dfi so
before 1 I*. M. Satiirday. Why? Your
ticket stub muy 1M1 worth $12..">O ui Martin
Lawrence Jewelers. So, pick tip your
pa mi cuts before the deadline ;cs you may
have the winning stub.
Winner will beWallace SterlingLawrence Martin
a w a r d e d a l i rau l i l i i lS l i v e r D i m i m v a i T \;ilinJ e w e l e r s . ( W i n n e r u i l l
in this paper November 27.)
I! -nirri'il lit SI
in' urn
set•.'..Mlnun
ofliy
•ed
MARTIN LAWRENCEJEWELERS
94 MAIN ST., WOODBRIDOE
Diamonds • Silver • Watches
A Small Deposit Will fluidAn; Hem Till Chrlstmns.
"MARTINIZING"The MOST in Dry ('Iriinlnir
97 Main St.. Woodbridge
FREE Tr.nrl(Inlcr
IMitstlr« l l h
SAFFIAN'SYouth Center
1543 Main Street Rahway
HUB a Wonderful Selection of
CHRISTMAS GIFTSior 'TOTS to TEENS'
ft-e-Holiday Special! v r
SUB-TEEN FASHIONS" OFFWe Carry Famous
"CHUBBETTE" FASHIONS
luy Chrlltmai
PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE!» SNOWSUITS
COAT SETS• COATS
Use Our Uy-Away Plan
Shop FridayEvenlnft
TU 9 O'CUKk
Shop Now and Save!
(IJRISTIV1AS
WONDKKLANDOl'
PAGE FOURn, i9.r>7
ALL ACMES OPEN M S . & WED. NOV. 26 & 27 UNTIL 9 P. ffl.
LANCASTER BRAND Top-Quality OVEN-READY
17 lbs.
and up
ALSO A LARGE SELECTION OF BELTSV1LLE TURKEYS At Special Low Prices!
Your Thanksgiving feast deserves the best - a Lancaster Brand"Broad-Breasted" turkey from Acme! Carefully selected from the finestflocks and marked exclusively for Acme. At just the right age (whenthey reach the maximum of tender, juicy, delicious meat) they'respeedily dressed, drawn and Cry-O-Vac wrapped to assure you of
'peak quality.
Lancaster Brand Ready-to-Eat Shankless Smoked
HAMS Wholeor either
Half Ib.Distinctive old-fa;hioned smoked ham flavor Fork-cutting tenderness Shank and excess fat removed. . . giving your more meat for your money.
Lancaster Brand FULLY-COOKED Smoked
Boneless Hams « Ib.
Thin Sliced g_0I
Sandwiches
CeleryAM)
CaliforniaPASCAL
Lancaster Brand " U . S. Choice1' Boneless
Round RoastAcme's own expert beef buyers arc sticklers for outstanding quality. They select only the finest cornfed cattle of specific age and weight for best value.
or Round
Steak Ib.
Cwnberriw Thanksgiv.ng menu, w i t h fresh "cranberries.n
LANCASTER Brand Fancy Jumbo
Canned Ham 1 * V Shrimp ; $ l 0 9 S $ 4 "Fancy • ^rt
Select Oysters «!' © 9 c9 9 c TAST* °' $EA Frosted **/%
Pollock Fillet 1. 2 9 c
WhHeOm«Br ,fresh Corn
FancyBoiler
m e Q l Top qual '^ 'V.rm,
TenderFlorida
lbs.
cjucrtbox
ears
HORMCL Virginia Baked
Canned HamDAIRY
10-lb.size
BAKERY
Virginia Lee French AppleFinest New York State
LANCASTER Brand TASTE 0' SEA French Fried
Sausage Meat ;, 5 3 c Scollops BT 4 9 c
CranberryStrained
Pies large srreSpeciall
49 C Extra SharpVirginia Lee IcedCinnamon Buns
pkg.of 9 43
Bread 100% WholeWheat loaf
Aged for
that superb
flavorIb.
Virginia Lee
fruit Cakec « $195
pkg 1
Alcoa-WrapAluminum wrap. Roast yoj
4,r turkey the aluminum-wrap way!
\
Our finest cookedpumpkin. No fno muss)
Famous Windermere Readers at aFraction of Their Regular Cost!
This Week's Book -
The Three MusketeersRegular $2.60
Value! on|y20,000 Leagues- Under the 5ea, [ Treasure Island,HeidL Swiss Family Robinson, Hans Brinker, Robin-sqn Lrusoe, King Arthur and His Knights, Gulliver'sTravels and Arabian Nights also available now.
Special Christinas Issue Just Out/
DECEMBER
Family Circle Magazine
Glenwoed
Bieu Cheese 69FROSTED 1 ODD FEATURES
Ideal Fancy
4 10-oz.pkgs.
See original dccomtionj fur your ham*,
menus, fgihiun gi tu! IO
Each package equals two lbs. of fresh peos in the pod.
Birds Eye Chicken, Beef or Turkey
Pies 4^99CGet FREE1 bsel or turkey pie by mailing chicken pielabel with special sticker to-Birds Eye Pies, Box 103,Kankakee, III.
.V<MI Ailvvrttieil Privet Effective thruSaturday, November. 'iO
A , , I1 :RKT PRESS
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1957
port Reading PersonalsPAGE
By MRS.JOHN T.
McDONNIXL15 Sixth Street
Port Reading
ME-4-4673
Told, ii imcmftiit of Miss Janice
(|;1ii|fh1ef of Enro Kollar,, .street., to John Seniak
,, of Mr. and Mrs. Johni k 74 Bucknell Avenue,iu |,! t\ was announced.
Kolliir is a graduate ofr:fiue Hmli School, cln.ss of
'",ul,l is employed at Publicll(.(' .Srwaren GoheratinR Sta-
HIT lian.-e graduated (com,,;(!•(• HlRh School with the,i HI54. He Is sell-employed.
MnUe Recording, |\iit Rending ladies, Mrs.
Wv.skowskl, nee Paulinr(-.•if Road, and Mrs. Joseph
I nd Avenue, have mede.;(i,ii:' on Broadway of two, , simss "Cry Baby" and
Your Teasing" for the. Hirord Company, under
i;1|l. of "The Working Girls."AuOliary Activities
,..,.. niii! of the Ladles' Aux-, ,. held Friday night in
:,.. ...iii.se. Donations were•,, 'ire Middlesex County[i imie and the Indepen-
; ..(in Christmas Fund.,\,::ve plans were made for
a Christmas party with Mrs. PeterDnsseim. chairman, assisted byMrs. Michael Sawn, Mrs. JamesCiardielln. Mis. Daniel Mlnuccl.Mrs. Dominic Coppnln, iinrl MrsPi'iink D'Apolito. Ho-piialiiy com-mittee for December Includes Mrs.Prank Bnrbnto. Mrs. SalvatoreMartlno, Mrs. .lames Ciardiello.Mrs. Joseph Covu<o>Mrs. AnthonyCovlno. anfl M w O p e d Cavallero.
Dark lioiwJ^prVe was won byMrs. Renaldo HAmbfudi. Socialwinner wa.'^JjH's. Julius Simeonc.
Election of ofTicl'i'fl was held usilhiw>: Pirsiclei/ Mrs Joseph
Shlllacl; vIcc-prOMdcnt.Mrs. JohnNardlello; secretary, Mrs. ArmandSimeone; flniyneial serret'ary. Mrs.John Surik; itrca.surer, Mrs. SahbyVInrtino
The new special project willtart, Jnnuaj'y fi N.imi'.s will hi
leccpted by Mrs. Sabby Martihochairman.
Change of AddressThe new tnailino address nf
Martin Martino is Pvt. MartinMartlno 164,1983. 3rd Guard Pla-'oon, Marine Barracks, U. S.Vaval Activities of Naples, Italy,"/, P.P. 0, Navy 510. New York,N. y.
Whoj) Suzy Parker returns froma vacation trip to Switzerlandhe plans to devote three monthso .studying with Drama CoachStella Adler exclusively. Then shevill do "Holiday For Lovers" at:0th Century-Fox. Evidently, Suzvread tlir reviews about herIn her latest picture.
Sunday ServicesListed by Church
Sunday nt'•;«l and 11 A.M. service atfirst Presbyterian Church
the minister will preach the ser-"»i The Church and You. At the"'v 'ervi-e the Junior Choir willni- We Thank Thee. At the 11M service the Women's Chorus
"I" sinn Thanks Be to Thee Misswill sinn the solo
Me To Pray. The Churchwill meet at 9:30 with
'lasses for all aces.On Thursday. November 28, at.
''' A M, there will be i\ service of
or. H»rMny, a,,, Shotsun Victim H.S. Class of Tl 'Sunday Sermon topic\ .»i .
Still Unconscious Plans for ReunionCARTERET — Do It YourselfIs the chosen sermon topic of DrAndrew Harsanyl, pMtor. for
OBITUARIESWOOnBRIDOE — Thirteen- CART EH FT •1 If Chv.
Sunday at the Free Magyar Re-. * m - o l d J o h n Brooks, son of Mr. n,38. cmteret Hiub s-lu.oj in iiformed Church. English service *",, » . " j W * r r e n ,Bro?*». 8 7 C o r ; moimis held it\ the post R0.mvwill begin at 10 A.M. with the; „ ." J ! 5 L , , :Church Choir singing. The sacra-ment of holy baptism will be ad-ministered at this servioe. Hun-garian service will be at 11 A.M.and Sunday School at 9 A.M.
Next week's schedule Jncludes:
withgun by 15-year-old Oerald Cam-
W"S ?h° l o f The Amman,shot- „,,„,,„,„ BlllWlm,l n
he
1 at theCilteii't! (HI thi
Committeechairman
nt the church.Members and friends of thehurch are unsed to expressHanks unto Cmd for this year's
Thn minister will'he sermon The Day of the
On Sunday, December 1,T,nrd
» «
GARAGE
ioth servers the sacrament' oflie Lord's Supper will be ad-
'TilnistercdTuesria.v evpiiinu. at 8 P.M. the
Vnmon's Association will meet to•ear a recorded Sermon of Billy"Jraliam. The monkey dolls will'ie completed for Christmas, Plan?vill be made for the Christmas'ableau to be presented at theChristmas party which will be'ield nt the December meetlnp.Geminations will be made for the'ollowlns officers, vice-president,'reasurer. Christian Education•liairman, and Fellowship chair-"nnn.
Gift to LibraryNoted by Board
ptglla, 21 Cornell Street, was still TwcntleTh Heunconscious and In a critical con- . pri,n.-is T Tnmrzukdltlon at Perth Amboy Oeneral s l ( , v p Lukasiuk. co-rhairmanHospital at press time. I C\n
The two boys, without the ^ i nj The two boys, without thedue to the Free American Magyar knowledge and consent of their
Z\T^T d l 'meeting there will be no morning after their eldersconfirmation classes this Mon-igone to work. They took a few K l t m .,.„,„,day. Confirmation classes will be shoQ nt some birds, missed and si l t, w l l | *bf,resumed on December 2. The returned to 'the Brooks home,:hurch choir will hold a rehearsal! where John made some tea before
J.. S Te ebtekl ^be v HIH Hoad ^
m.< williih cm-1Straw-!
WHO
MRS. (;RA('F. i:. TAYLOR . trrmrnt was In St Gertrudf'*CAIlTEnET - Mrs c»r«e* E Cemetery. Colonln
Tuvlor. 59. 11 1-areh Street, died Honornry bearers, all member*Wednesday at tin- Perth Amboy "f the AHar urtd Ro»ary Boclcty
i Ocneral Hospital , of the church, were Mr*. M a nSurviving me her husband Mores. Mr? Annie O r m r r t l . Mn .
i Charles H. Taykoi• Hr n dauihter. Suwiniie Nascak, Mm KathertMMrs Anna Adomr/yk. Avcnel. Mudrak. Mm Anna Oavallti and'Ix sons. Charles H , of Metuchen. M " M a r V r i ^ r A f t l v e Oe«™HRobert L. of Plalnfleld. Ronald *«'«- Julm Hellry. Stephen Btnlk.E, nf Brooklyn, Technical SRI 3CAW «'ianrr. O»bitel NfphtnaW.Ciilbrn I., stationed w«l\ l h c Jwcph Kubelnk ami Andrew Sivdn.
Is correspondniB secr-ttny In thrf N C . Airman First Cla'.i John
»•«•Mi-. John ,
Wednesday at 7 P.M.
iHoliStreet Cnrteret am! Mrs
1 r t l ls(1".- P
Mu$ir willn Feature Hebrew S
H sister Mrs. Emily — — i ,l i i d e l p l n a mid a CAKTERET on Tuesday
Thursday. ThanksalvlnR Day i nfternoon session.h ill b Aneni-ding to Su
| unUm s l w i C n r t e r e t am! Mrs yjschool which they attended In the j n m , . s Wood 'Helen Co'.mek ' i!7 l l n ; l u i 1 Wilmont Cruusr of Mid- evcntiv the Hebrew Frntfrnlly of
Fast Price Street, Linden. Also mi : d l l W X ' B m m l l t h Carti ret "\x-ill sponsor• . ••
'here will be services or Thank*-! Ancnrftng to Sgt. Kenneth Van l n c cliissmntc coinmuni .ltum S Funeral services will be held at Music Night m IU regular meetlniliving in Ennitoh at 9 A.M nnd P e l t ' h e v d n f t n e Juvenile bureau. coinmilte:v ;MV Andrew VII:IK 7B ! - p Nl tnmorrow ut the Orelner to be held ,it the Brotherhood o(n Hungarian at 10. I Gerald's story was that J*hn said , i f l n i ;f ( , i]o w _S[,.(,in .^m | s t )u>',., , . j Funernl Home. 44 Qreen Street. Israel Synaiiofjue at 9 P. M. W|VM
he was tired and stretched out on coidlnn secretary, and Louis M"'d-' VVotxIbrtdnr. Interment will be In ° ' I he members are invited to at-a couch In the living room. Gerald w l l^ ^bo L;on ATVIIUO, Perth Am- ; ClBvrrleaf Memorial Park Ceme-plcked up John's gun, took It apart t,ov , tery,nnd put. it Bftck together. John l ' '
k%.onfirnt-ation, BirthdayParty Held in Avenel
AVENEL — Mr, and Mrs. LouisKolesatich, 415 Tappen Street.entertained at a"T>arty In honorof their daughter, Arlene, whowas confirmed at St. Stephen'sChurch, Perth Amboy, and their
then asked to see Gerald's Run.M r m l v r s nf t h e c-l.iss a r e i e -
> " " ' ; ™ uk l " f" u c , " " " •; ""' ' ' ,quested lo funusli nny of 111- »bovo
which was brand n e w J o o k e d j i U t . ; , , , , ,h(i j i. 1 | l l w ll
I i a m r s l | f m i l l .BASTI.K HSJKRAL
AUTOPaintinq
ill:: 3 COATS ENAMEL::::: ,:•;':: Com)ilitelv Sanded
Louis,Ixth birthday.
Quests included
« moment and then put It on thefloor. Gerald then went over.picked his gun up and went to sit ,',,*" 1"'['. l " • ' ' " " " " " "on a chair when It suddenly.went m l t t r f : A n t h o n y PH)]! ' r h r
oft. Oerald said he "did not knowthe Riin was loaded" as he believed
CARTERET Many friends.
H,it)bl L*wl« Brenner will pre-sent cantortal rrcorde and recordsof Jew'Lsh interest
Following the meeting refresh-
ried women1, and uddrts?es IP'lee and rn'.rrtamnnMit com-'
hnirm.in:
relatives mil nelRhbois" attendedij m r n l s w l l l . _ ^ s n T ' d : .ihr funeral of Alexander Stefen
AVKNF.L A donation of $25
who celebrated his: he had removed all the shells.Young Brooks was struck In theface by the full blast.
Oerald said he tried to "Stop theblood and when he found hecouldn't, he ran to a neighbor whocalled the Avenel First Aid Squad.
The original Investigation WLIS
Mm. VioletMetuchen, isponaor
for Arlene: Mr. and Mrs. Steveurema. maternal grandparents;
vtr. and Mrs. Charles Jarema. andsons, Walter and Charles, Mr. and iMrs. Prank Boniewskl, Mr. and
Mrs Francis Medvet/,Zyski, Mr:.. John Kulnn 'Dor.il'iyRosunan'. Stanley Niemiec. and
i frnvm Wantoch| Co-treasurers are Klevi- Oiuhe-jenk, 19 GeOI'se Street, unit John
MNF. DIK IN CRASHWAI1ER. Tex -Nine person*,
LKeleliianf The i'(
Bastek. 7li Ciirteret Avenue, he!dSaturday morning. A solemn nqulcm lifvli iim?=?- was oflenvl in eiKivt nf whom wre passengers InI In- Holy family Church by Rev/one car. were killed when twoM. A. Konnpka, celebrant: Rev cars smashed together, throwingLouis M. Courtttev, l)8M , deacon all Uie victims but a 6-weeka-Oldand Rev, M J Kseniak. subdeneo.i . infant, fiom the twisted wreckal*
42 Clmus Stivt't. lnleimeat was in St, Stephens bt the almost demolished automn-I'onimitti'c li.is tempor.iniy 'Church Cemi'tery, Keisbey. near- biles Four of the dead were chll*
planned for a t-'piuu: reunion On of the Holy F.im- dien mid seven of the victims were
m a d P Robe.tand Robert Egan who wore de-
oooool
50
Ambov Avo. and Pfeiffer Blvd. Perth Amboy.
Nk6-9830
Kim Frank Barth for the buildingiiiv! was ncknowledged at n
•nei'tjii!.: of the board of trustees•f the Avrnel Public Library atlie l-.ome of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
K.a:;-e:i. Inman Avenue. MissMyrtle Verne, New York City,made a donation of several books,md Mrs. Frank Maz?ur said
• 'eieral new editions have been\ iiirchascd for the new library.
,1'he children's matinee Satur-day v;is reported a huge success,'lid ti'e Woodbridge Police De-•liii-lment. and A\(enel Fire Com-•liiiiy received n vote of thanksfor tli.ii" assistance. Plans foruioihrr matinee December 14were r'.is/usscd.
Tile board will meet December:\- m-tead of December 11 asorii'.nallv .-clirduled, and will havea vepreseiitative nf the StiVte Li-brary Association as guest.
A NATO report .says West facesrinitiiii' crisis.
Gerald. Roonis on Friday, November '•!!).Amboy: Henry Szczepanek and I tectWe Arnold HouBe™o«" o ed b i n s wl11 b P l u > w i ! t l h " I l > f : i o nsons, Dennis and Henry, Me- ' que-tionect D ,— t . ,„, „,.,,,„„ „„„„,„, ,0
tuchen; Mr. and Mrs. Josephlarema and children, Dolores and jJ o s e p h , Bound Brook; Mrs. '
Avcnel.
Someone Very Near.Fortune Teller — I see a creat
very
Navy lets $61,200,000 contract•>! missil*
near to you.Client — Er-yes-
its list ol far-awiiy-llvtTs are mem- " v S0l'i("'y WI'1T Anthony Tuehol- ; killed in.stHntly. The driver of thejberx in Indo-China Fnuu'e Call- s^'- Walter Tomczuk. Holrslnw nther car. Walter. 51, of Hemp*ifornln, and Wnshinstoii , Szulimowskl. Walter Frunkowskl, Mead, was driving alone in his C«r>| The' il"xt meeting of the com- ! A[ l f tn l Yiipczmski and Frank Pen- ' — —
kill. O i l K KR SIIOKTAOE" ~ "" The Army is facing a shortage of
MRS. (UAMftA RNKKAI, qualified young officers due W theCARTERET The funeral cf high resmnation rate particularly
JUS1 TO TOt" OFF Mis. Elizabeth Chnmra. 80 Fit.-li Hmons West Pointers, according toCity Visitor--You're quite wrung; street, was held Monday mcrniii':. a top manixiwcr officer. Lieut-
in eons:di'i-ii\R the birds a mil-- A solemn hmh mass of requiem Gen Diwuild P. Booth, the Army's;>y devour in.sccts and, was offered In Sacred Heart ol Deputy Chief of Staff for Peraon-
4ha t 'is, I'mafraid I shan't be able to pay
catcrplll:ir«. Jesus Chureh, with the Rev. I,. J nei. listed •mfttcrlil re-Farmer - Tlianks for tellim; me. pel I rick, celebrant of a solemn wards" In civilian life as a main
It's a great consolation to know High Mass, The Hcv. M. A. Kscniak . reason why Junior officers andyou; I find I've left my wallet at] that they eat my fruit, merely for was dent-on and Ihe Rev. A. E. Pol- some higher brass; are leaving th« »home. 1 dessert. lack, CSSR, WH.S sub-deneon In- Army
THE YEARS NEWEST CAR,THE NEWEST CAR IN YEARS
...'58 CHEVROLET!
Impala Convortibls-on* ol KM Mmsuper modolt in Ihs Bal Air SoriM wildBody by fisher, ol cour>«.
Join Our 1958 CHRISTMAS CLUBand Get A Check Next Christmas
( l , . i s l , ua 8 . " V m , « . pay <•«-
lo.lofc.wUhl j « . . . r I'
:.. a liUleu w r k . . . .ml b.» Sa
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<"'
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«xtr« for .. ,H-rs«..al
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Bet Air 2 Door Sedin-a beautifully moving thing 'new, sofef and smurt dual Keadlighti,
It $ett a new style in styling.tt tak^t a nm» approach to
. power. ffV MM rifkt downto the intooth tmi tolid wtyilride$!
It's long, low and luxuriously new- the beautijully moving 'Si Chev-rolet It's new front ride to roof, . . from its bold nqw grille to itsunique gull-wing rear fenclers. And
it offers quick-responding poweraplenty in any engine you pick—V8 or 6 ,NEW SILfiMJETTE; for '58 is dra-matically lower and~*wider-and afull 9 inches longer! 'NEW TURBO-THRUST V8«' withMvolutionary Wedge-Fire design fea-tures,' wedge «• shaped combustionchambers machined in the cylinderblock, to help achieve a new pin-nacle of performance.
Ntw 1 n i l COII- SUSPICION pro-vides cradle-soft action at everywheel, replacing conventional leafspring rear suspension.NEW AIR RIDK featuring level Airsuspension? literally carries you oncushions of compressed air, with all itsnatural shock-absorbing properties.
Your Chevrolet dealer is waitingright now .to show you the beautifulwuy to be thriftyr-the '58 Chevrolet.
'Optional at exirq cost
'58!cnmiwiiT
fOtWAW FROM fim
Onlyjnnchiied Chemhl Mm fajtay thii famoui trademark See Your Imal Authorized Chevrolet Dealer
?A«F. SIX FRIDAY, NOVF.MP.F.R V., 10f.T
\JvealHi
(ISeauta
u
Onr fif tlif finest boons tobeauty mid IHMHII is nvnllnbleeveryone and (it no cost. Plannedetercisrs tnkcn lor at least tenminutes I'flch <lny is the answer.
As' simple as this may sound,doctors Irll us tl'.;it this Is one ofthe hnrde.st pimcipl's of self disci-pline. Even propln who can stickto H strict diet find it impossibleto do planned exercises.
Perhaps the modern rush weall face each dBy sups so much ofour enerny that there is no energyleft to Uike exerci.'-cc. However, if
y o l i i ! r l n u n | l i e l i a l i l l i l l I ' X I T <•'•••,
I t w i l l ) I U T r , i . ' ; r y i i u i b , i r l < l i > o f
rnrmy.Kxi'l'i",1.!1 ini'i Tiisivs your .stimula-
tion, lours up tl'.c rnusclr;. and Im-proves I he »-olor. It will redistrib-ute weight or krrp pxcrss weightfrom forming on the undesirableparts of the body.
There HIT a number of bodilydisorders which respond to an In-rreased nmount of exercise. Ocourse, tlwre are many alimentwhich maJtc exerdse harmful. Vctlits reason, it Is a good Idea trconsult your doctor, If you are ovethirty-five, before' you bpf?ln 1111extensive exercises.
That's High dearTrafTlc Cop — "Now, Miss, whn
Rear were you in at the time othe accident?"
Demure Miss — "Oh. I had onft black beret, tan shoes and ntweed sports dress."
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PROTECT YOUR CHILDREN'S FEET...
SIMPLEX Wfcxies^ ^ i m vftllMr. >KlOt YOUNO F l i t
. . . bring yourdorter's pre-scription forchildren's shoeslo us. Wespecialize inthe very bestshoes...expertly fit toyour doctor'srequirements
let us fit your chilcPs growing feef with the approvedFlexi-pedic shoe designed by Simplex, accepted by doctors,and worn by so many children everywhere,
• Accurate records kept of your etyld's she.
• Reminder cards sent for free sbfc ehcck-up«.
Do be careful with growing feet — we always are!
FRIDAY EVENINGS TILL 9
SCHWARTZ SHOES151!) Main St., Rahway | ^ ^ H Phone FU-8-1055
\m VOl H CONVENIENT II^NIIM HAKCiK ACCOUNT
ISLAND IIISAITKAKINc;RIO DK JANEIRO I'miidart lv
land. In the Allnntlr iiboilt. fill,miles from Rio Or Janeiro. Islowly disappearing, nccordtns; tiDr Alphonse Richnrd Hoge of thiButnntn Institute. The island,ubnul fifty miles square, wns formr<\ «KPS ago in a volcanic upheav-al. The molten lavn cooled and be-came rock, which is now losing it:resistance and the sea is m:iklndangerous inroads:
DIES DURING MATCHBALTIMORE. Md—The excite-
ment of watching a wrestllnimutch proved too much /or -50year-old William Cody. Attendinn procfsslonal bout with his broth-er, Walter, Mr. Cody slumped un-:on.sdous in his seat. Taken to ihospital, he was pronounced demon tu'rival.
Reckon So!Mary t.ou Mother, do mis-
sionaries go to heaven?Mother — Certainly.Mary Lou — Do cannibals?Mother — I should thUik not.Mary Lou — Well, If a cannibal
cats a missionary he'll have to go,,on't he?
Give a Gift of
JEWELRYFrom
GLEN'SIN RAHWAY
TO IAY-A-WAYFOR CHRISTMAS
ONLY
WEEKS'Til Christmas
semember . . .
Your Creditis Good At—
GLEN'SJEWELERS
Main and Chen? Sts,, RahwayOPEN THURS. TILL S—FRI. TILL >
PHONE KU-8-SnS
FAIRY T A L E - This is n "lived hnppily over af ter" story from N K * Finnic The dog wasseparated limn ln-r pups itt bi i th. Tlir kitten iipjuuently was ;ibarn1i>ncd b) its n other So their
h d Lk lk "llcemmon wile w;is eiKUi|;h toWell that ends wcjl."
Tli kitten p j e y )them fort'i't the traJitiuiiiil eat-riug hatred. Looks like "all-s
Panorrtna Pictures Corporations> being surd for $75,000 damagesjy ^3ene Nelson, dancer-nctor.vho alleges he sufTered a frac-ure.d pelvis and other injuries
when he fell from a horse whileWoi'king for the company in a pic-ure called. "Nakhez Trace." Thextflr. who was making $2,5Q0 a*eek at the time, says hr has notaeen able to work since tlic ac-cident.
The NEW RECORDS
Another actress who is back be-;ore the cameras after a long ab--ence is Elizabeth Prazer. She.vill play her first movie role inJiree years in the M-G-M versionf the stage comedy. "Tunnel of
Love." She is featured with DorisJay. Her last acting assignment | out. Eve Boswoll does a good job,
In this column we'll try to catchjp with the newest forty-fives.Albums will have to wait untilnext time.
On-e of the best recent 45's Is anEpic release by Somethln' Smithand The Redheads, with Jay Rayedoing the orchestration. "EveryNiKht At Nine O'clock" is smoothind the other fide. "I'm Gonna'l a p Up All My Heartaches " isilsn jiond listening — or dancing
music.
Epic h.is 'wo others out we'llTifntion: a namber of old favor-'•fs on a one-smill - record al-'•iim. "Irvini? Berlin In RaKtime,"Mil - 'StH Guitar Rork, with good''•hythm. by Jay Raye and Ernie^Hi at the steel (ruitar.
CaDitol Ija.s a host of new ones,
vas a-S Miss Day's sister in "Youni:At Heart." made in 1954.
Wait Disney has announced.hat he plans to make a live -iction Irish fantasy next year un-der the title, "The Wishes olDarby O'Gill." The screenplay will
based partly on stories writtenay Hermione Templeton Kava-naugh and on material to bewritten by Lawrence Watkin, aDisney stall writer, on the basisof a recent trip to Ireland,
Esther Williams is back fromItaly and ha.s "S"nrj>ion'.s Reei'as the next fi'.m on hrr .•'dvdulfHer leading in .in had not bee:hoscn as this was written. Esther
by the way. vereived $10,000 foappearing on Dinah Shoru's ailov.on November 3.
In "If 1 Should Die." VirpinhF i e l d will play a night-:'lufcdancer, who is a Runnun's mollShe has the feminine lead nn-posite Jeffrey Hunter in this NewYork newspaper story.
Although Timex cancelled it-contract with Boh Hope becauseof his suestuiK on Prank iBu'.ovaiSinatra's premiere "on televisionBob doesn't have to worry. Hegets his pay from NBC regardlessof his having a sponsor. He won'thave to wait lbnu for a sponsor,either.
"; dies Reg Owen, with an old'ivorite, "It's Been A Long, Lone^imp," Les Paul and Marv Ford'••ave one their fans will 4ike ip"A Pair of FOQ!S." Tommy Sands•'nns n Preslev - type job on "Man,like Wow!" The young set may:o for this one.
Other Capitol releases to benentioned arc "Granada," a new•rrrineement of the {ireat song bvTli« Four Freshmen, definitely•il'erent. Joe "Fingers" Can' and"•ee Wre Hunt turn cit twotnnnth ones one disc with "Kitty"
'.nd "Always Fall In Love,"The Five Keys do a Capitol 45
::!l"tl "It's A Cryinn' Shame"h"t mnvs fast. Penny Lee :M.sill smooth listenins stuff cm "Lis-
ten To The Rockln' Bird, and rockand rollers who like them to movemight go for Vlnce Edwards'"Wiget" iJack Collier orchestra'.
Another rocker Is Federal's"Ring Around My Finger" iTlnyTopsy Rnd The Charms i. A good.=low listening piece is JimmyScott's "When Day Is Done" — aKlnu release. Federnl has anotherro°k number worthy of mention,"I'm The Jivin' Mr. Lee," byKenny Martin.
Rou!ctte has a comfortable lis-tpnlnif 45 in "Better Loved You'llNever Be." by Jimmy Roaers, Anew and crazy one is ATCO's"Sweet Georgia Brown." by TheCoasters. A good rhythm number's Ent-Wpst's "The Girl I Love,"by The Glow tones.
Imperial has a slow rocker In^rnie Freeman's "Riunchy" anda smooth oldie in Dorothy Shav's'"Feudin' and Fiahtln' " hnd a low-down ro"k in Bob Luman's "RedHot,." Atlanti-c has a good, new"St. Louis Blues" by LaVern" ^ e r , and a ?onci-beat 4S in
Yotiee-Yakee," by Tlie Drifters.
Atlantic also has an interesting••nd modifier! calypso in Ch'de Me-^hatter's "Rock and Cry," Mer--urv has three worthwhile 45Mbums (1 remrrii just nut: "L"t>Dance." by David Carroll, "Pirk-:p" bv Ralph Marterie and "Ha-
vana In Hi-Fi." by Richard Hay-man — good all.
The U S. is found to be popularbehind Iron Curtain.
Sisterhood Plans(llianukah Party
AVF.NKI. •- Mrs. Ell Cohen read'ihe ITVnr Torah nt ft specialj.^isln-hnod meetinfj of the Sister-
I.HKI of Crmerenatlon Sons ofliicnb at, the Avenel Jewish Com-munity Center.
i Mrs, Louis Cohen, ways andi mrnns chairman announcer! the
-ifTcr of two free tickets to theNnw Year's Eve party in Mchanjfffor $100 In journal ads, and one'ree ticket for »50 In adfl.
Plans were discussed to chanupiie repulnr meeting nlRht to thefirst Monday of each month. Inthe event of n drop In member-ship, the group will convene onthe original date.
Mrs. Milton Kushner, who rep-rpsfnted the group at the Natlon-nl Women's League of United3vnft(?osups of America, held inNew York City. Rave, a report oniirr attendance nnd stated thatthe topic was "Suburban M i r a -tion With Reference to RacialIntegration."
Mrs. Manuel Temkln, president,unpointed Mrs, Henry PinkUs as"hnlrman for the Chanukahchildren party.
A leter was read_ from Mrs.Lionel Conlsa. vice-president oflie National Woman's League of
United Synagogues of America,complimenting the Sisterhood onits bulletin.
Mrs. Temkin, Mrs. Abe Kramer,Mrs. Kushner. Mrs. R. O. Krutt*.Mrs. Plnkus. Mrs. Louis Baiter, iMrs. Edward Stern. Mrs. MiltonMedlnets, Mrs. L. Cohen and Mrs.Bresslcr, represented the Stoter-hood at a meeting qf the firstCentral New Jersey Branch Con-ference of the National Woman'sLeague of the United Synagoguesof America held at the TempleBeth Torah. Rahway, The theme
R 1 L V K , ! } S ! > | : ! - , , , ;
n o y M e n d e l s o h n i,v,i'. ,' . ' 'l n ' r f i " V I ' y e : , , - . . ; ; i , , . , • , ' , ' '
nois firm which ,vn •" i,':
ed of mail fraud i | , ,",' inches tal l - wen. ' , , , ' , "apr icot , near, r i , , , l n
T h f p l u m s i e i i l m • ,]-, \'ppie tree won barm','pricot tree gr,.v ,,,,, .
Mendelsohn's 9-yrai--'( \,\ed several and w r n ,',', ,the Montgomery COHU'I..them. They were hcinn |—not apricots.
of the day was, "No!Deeds." Mrs. Saul t etlonal proRi-am ohii,W o m a n ' s Leiigi,,.speaker for the IWhlfh wan devot^tlMusle."
Hostesses for tlwere Mrs, Sol, siotnman Plrkser, MrsMm. Robfvt Brossle
WILL TAKEYOU TOBaltimore, Md.Harriaburg. IVHartford, Conn.York, Pa.
BY PHONE3 min. itatinn rate f;,,,,,New Bnumi'irk nfti r i, I Mand allday Sundnv.10% tax not i
AIRLINES NEED YOU
WANTED • - Several young men and women v Ii
selected immediately for training for attractive :,.
salaried positions as hostess, reservationist, cumin,i:,.
tionist. station agent. Enjoy free travel passes, va ,
insurance, etc. Short low-cost training can qualify M .
be between 17-39. have high school diploma and pit-it •
personality. Includes special training in personal ('.••-...
opm'nt for women. Get the facts! Write, glvin;1. ail I
and phone number to National School of Atioiu,:.
Box 1, Carteret Press.
IPUBLIC NOTICE
SERViSOFT of WOODBRIDGEThe only locally owned and operated soft water ser-vice company in Middlesex County proudly presents
The AH New 1958
"Service Automatic"WATER SOFTENER
Fully automatic, with self regenerating
unit that requires no attention. Plus—this
unheard of tuarantee . . . .
Once a year replacement of tank and mineralfor FIVE YEARS! At the end of the fifth year, abrand new softener tank with fresh mineral!
After five years operation you will still have the equivalentof a brand new wftter softener.
COMPLETELY INSTALLEDAND GUARANTEED $299-00
If purchased on time, you don't'pay anything until pebruary, 1958.
IT MAY ALSO BE RENTEDAT LOW MONTHLY RATES.
741 St. George Avenue, WoodbridgePhone ME-4 1815
NOW OPEN"New Jersey's Most Beautiful and Modern Diner)}
ESTATE DINE735 Woodbridge Avenue Port Reading
Delicious, Quality Food Served24 Hours a Day at Reasonable Prices
* Spacious Pkved Free Parking AreaCounter Service and Family Sized BoothsMaster Chefs, Courteous Service, Elegant Atmosphere
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PEAKINGABOUT SPORTS
,,;i ,-iash with Perth Amboy in their "
FRIDAY. N"nVF\fffFn
,11 i M ' l
„ Day contest. A crowd of 6,000 r a n s is
to turn out for the all important game in u,,h additional temporary stands J n T n ' v ithe capacity crowd. ' v u u n i
McCarthy announced that no student th-kot,
„ t ° T* ° n l y general admis^™ prirpdticket will be available . t the gate, M c i r t l y
r,,tpret this represents a highly important gam,• will bo at stake. For Perth Amboy it w?, b
, : h,-r ball game since, the Panthers have won on],,. .,;,nifs this season and lost five. Carteret on the,,nd. has an excellent chance of annexing the,: Jersey Group II title with a win over Ambov At1,,,'nf writing, two other contenders in Central
,u...ely North Plainfleld and Highland Park both.,!..!, are In the running for the Group n ' title.i:teret. even though it has dropped the openin,:,;,* come a long way since then and on the basisMtigh competition played, stands an excellent;.. defend its crown. Neither North Plainfleld nor
,„,! Park has played anywhere near the opposition;i ; have faced this year.-.urk the Blues went down to Hamilton and after
first half exploded with two touchdowns in theA., minutes of play of the second half, one on a• urn by Theron Carmichael, to rout the homeThe odd part about the game was the fact that: Had twice as many fans on hand as Hamiltonhasn't won a ball game all season.\ u at the Amboy game and good luck, Dougy and
Office Beatslimns by 2-1
ucial MatchKT •-- In a highly cru-
tlie first place Main
• :••- defeated the secondi us in two out of three
.'•li.iY nifilH J t theAlleys. The leaders::ist uame by tlie nar-
: of 13 points. 848 to•• 'ions swept the sec-utner easily. 8B7 to
'-••• two tennis nil-even.•""i»-=- rallied lo lake ihe
flSJ (o 833.
Hues, tin- Tank HmiseI e,id Burners mid theNu 2 scored a cleani • Smeller. Two imme••<• scored by the Yard
'•1'i-huiilrs No. 1, Hit;:.< :y over the Mecliam-s
he Ousting over the
• Koczan and Mikei.ised over the 200
-.nil. Is with the Silver• '••• Mike u anchorman:ii:i<-s No. 1.
PinhmiU Win 2 ComesTo Hold H-Came lead
C A R T E R E T - Riding high,the pace-setting Flnheads wonanother match this week by beat-ing the last plate Eight Balls Intwo names to maintain a three-name advantage over the secondPlace Red Dots who also scored atwo-game victory over the Bumsin the P a r k v i e w CommunityBowlini! League at the AcademyAlley.s
In the final maU'h of the nightthe Pill-Ins won the odd gamefrom the Anchors.PinheadsEight BallsHcd Dots
, Pill - InsAnchors
'2l 763 834 785' l i 816 717 716'2) 794 787 786' 11 789 752 829< 2 • 721 142 773i l l 651 693 735
, HIM. BOWI. WOMEN'S LEAGUE'• TEAM STANDINGS
Won Lost25222019
11141517
Nut Medium?ile to uroceryma'n: ''I
.i pint of oysters,
small, madam?"'K-cryman.an unexpected decl-
mght a moment..'• reasoned, "they're• ih a size 15 collar."
props for O.I .be weakened.
Suto's LunchHill Bowl BarWalt & Gene'sHill BowlSltar'a Shop-rite 18'i 17*-aPetrocy Jwlrs. 14 4 214Muller's Ins. 13 23Sokler's Furniture 12 24HI GAMES AND SETS
B. Balewicz, Suto's Lunch 523 -165 - 203 - 155
V, Breuche, Sitar's • Shop-rite512 - 141 - 173 - 192
R, Kettyle. Muller's Ins. 519 -158 - 103 - 198
J. Ward. Hill Bowl Bar 194M. Sokoi. Petrocy Jwlrs 196J. Petrocy, Petrooy Jwlrs 195Three nam« winners, Sitar's
over Sokler's; Hill Bowl over HillBowl *Bar; two game winners.Suto's Lunch over Walt & Gene's;Petrocy Jwlrs over Muller's Ins.
|Ttirkey Shoot(Ag«s 10 to TO)
— TO BE HELD AT —
WOODBRIDCE POLICE RANGE
Sunday, Nov. 24thDonation $1.00
KOCEEDS BENEFIT of BUND FUND\ SPONSORED BY
Woodbridge Lions Club
earn to Play BaH DuringThe Winter Months
to fieM a n * feft the right w w'"d or the other feltem beta*
si"'«« traininf opitw. . .
^IKUCTlONg I* TIMES A WEEK(U Tlous * Monti)
Tuition Every 4th Week
[CUSSES BEGAN NOV. 11th»»d wU| oMtfoue »ll winter
ENROLL NOW!
*'U keep j»\) of tfc« >t(*tt> »* ' u u t
of miachltf)
Contact Lou Lucas or Louis LukaslukB j MMl or PbfDt:
"12 fyAHWAY AVENUE, AVENUE N- *l ) r c»U U£nsurr 4-UI7 betwwn 4 i
(»rohmanns Win 2To Take Lead asSloan Rolls 663
., . ~""u P l a (*. Placing the Hillits torrid pace by Bowl team was Jean Ward with a
weeping Pedlam's Market in j nifty 524 ,et. Mike Sawchukshire dose contests. Bill Koby led I fine keel ing (608. went forhe winners with neat 627 Set. Art naught
Windsor's 589 was tops for thelosers.
Hill Bowl kept pace with the'.eadcr.s thus week by taking threesames from Greenwald's In-surance. The sweep enabled HillBowl to take sole possession of
Allied Lumber Sets Torrid U.S.M.R. BowlersPace In Hill Bowl League !
lScore VictOrv inC A R T E R S _ Allied Lumber second place Placing the Hi l l ' ' « -«") in
Women s Pin LoopAl's Poodtown moved out
asHihker led the Foodtowners whileE
j CARTERET • For the secondof straight week Mary Killyk pounded
M R -
fAHTKHEr .. in „ fcntO f-.r
' " • k f i n Kinnes [r»m Ruui.-'s Fur-• ' ' ' n . !„ b r m k ,1 2-\v:iy dend'.nckI" ;-i ri'ii ih.' (wo teams ,iml nuivvT, II iiniiispu'eil p'tsspssiim of o-«i'• 'i!-" in tiic o w t e r c t Commercia l
Biivvlin-: U'unue at the Ai nclnnyAlli-vs . lie Britfowrt! helped t);1 iiiiiri-. i,v nvt rimiii'i :>ni for th r
' l i l m e i s
o l i ' i l i i"h scores were rolled us' ' ' <Yy I.lnt-. with ii r l r u n 3-«nnu'sweep ovei tin' Acnd'mv Alleys, hiMiTI in Ihe middle Kiiirir- fur n s'C-"iiil lilvth tenm mark. BUI Sloiin^Unshed the pins fur 065 to tic thf•ii find plncc in the sinnb-s dlvi-
Ion mid Hill Donovan lolled ,i Mili.M
In the final match Wall undfit-tie's icok the odii K;UIH- froirSabo's Sport Shop. Joe Rones*mil Tony Hkrypocski ltd (lie win-ners
The scores; —;i roll ma nil's ''21U.iblcs Furn. i li'ity Line <3>
%end. Alleys '0iWalt & Ocnes '2Sabo's Sport 111
PAGE SEVEN
6MO Expected At AnnualThanksgiving Day ContestWith Amboy Eleven HereCARTERET - Whfthcr or not II Central Jerory croun to Dou«y
Cmtrrei High Schools foi'ball , Klmi's bnyv even thoiiKlt txvh
nr^n I ' r 'TJ""/ d'"f<>nrt* i is N m l < n^*M «id HighlandOioup 1 Krld cismplonshlp ( w Park, are still boil. umMratnl In
jC.ntrnl ,le,wy will be decided n-xt Central .leisev Group 11 competl-. Thursday nftmionn ;,- tin- hi , . tinn. but neither one of UWM
Kings I, Kh-ildlnn eleven clasl-.^ . prtnion the Bhws hnvr ficed all| with Penh Amb.iv Htith. « Ormi|)' srawn lone
884 924949 HHIiB5B 1071823 1117885 901895 V[\\
1)8:90i94J
941'
Hill Bowl P i n n r l " s t o ll 2-1 f-'rtine victory overWeslvaco. The winners rolled a
By BENNYCarteret Hish school football
squad preparing for their AnnualThanksgiving Day game withPerth Amboy at home. TheRamblers must win the game inorder to have a chance of retain-
•!, the Central Jersey group 1Championship won last season.
At present there are two teamsin Central Jersey with cleanrecords, Highland Park and NorthPlainfleld, both have tough gamesto piny. North Plainfleld. whichbecame a «roup o team this sea-son, play.s undefeated Cranfordon Saturday and a loss would helpCarttret. Highland Park mustfac? North Hunterdon this weekand Metuchen on ThanksgivingDay. -Loses for these two teamscould mean the title for Carteret.In the final rating of the State,wlik'h yoes by the Colliton system,will nive Carteret more points andthe Championship, providing thatCarteret beats Amboy. . . .
Last Saturday at Trenton, Car-teret had an easy game, gettingH points to win from Hamiltonand the hundreds of Carteretfans Rot their money's worth asTheron Carmichael ran the 2ndhalf kick of! 90 yards for a scor-e.Most of the Jay Vees saw actionduring the 2nd half. . . .
Jay Vee team have their 4 gamewinning .streak broken by High-land Park Jay Vees 13-0. ThePark team are undefeated andunscored ou in 6 games. . , . f
Perth Amboy won last Saturdayover South River, getting their
'2i)d win of the season as against5 loses. This'Saturday, Jeffersonplays at Perth Amboy in a post-poned same. Most of the CarteretBoys will be there to see the game.
Season records are thrown outwhen Carteret and Amboy meetas it has proved in the past. Thiswill be the 31st meeting of the twoteams and Perth Amboy has won17, Carteret 12 times and 1 tie.The first name was played at theRailway field in 1927. Amboy win-ning 18-0 and in 1928 Amboy wonajiain in the last minute 7>-6 &sNiiuy intercepted a pass and ran98 yards to score.
The .first Carteret win came in1929. with Joe Medwick & Co.beating the present Coach JoeHeznichak & Co. 13-0 for theCounty title.
No students tickets will be soldat the gate. . . .
We urge all Boys in the gradesto take advantage of the Recrea-tion Saturday morning Clinicsand register tomorrow morning.Bring your sneakers to all theClinics. Boys in the 5th and 6thtrades are to come at 8:30 A.M.
to 10:30 AM- a n ( 1 a " 7 t t l a m l
8th ' graders will have ttlelr In-structions from 10:00 A.M. to12:30 P.M This Saturday's In-structors will head Coach WesSpewak and Freshman CoachRobert ODonnell, Midget!& Cubleagues will be picked fitom theClinics. •, . .
Senior league Managers areasked to bring their rosters, to thetneeting to be held tonijht at 7:00p. M. at the Borough Hall. Seniorleague games W start on De-cember 2nd.
All Sport fans will gather to-night at the Foresters Hall onChar t s Street to elect new officer*for the season. Also havt onedollar and twenty-five cent* forthe new button,
I'teh singles gamebeat D e - | o f 8 0 3- H(<1fn Barashke hit 190
for the losing team.In other games. National Lead
took Natvnr No. 2 over in twoiianies. Natvar No. 1 beat Koos-ctts in two out of three (tames and
HONOR ROLL _ Bill Koby - ^ S S S W°" ° ^200 - 249 - 178 :: 627, Mike S a w - u s ^ R (2chuk - 200 - 221 - 187 :: 608, Art Westvaco il>•Windsor - 204 - 207, Al OerRlts - Copper Heads .2224, Tom Douglas - 201, Tony Koos Kenlers <1 •Russo - 207. Mike Sokol - 200 - Natvar No 1 t2>200, Jackie Petrocy - 217, Ben Koos-etLs HiScriomaker - 221, Ed McDonough National Lead <2
212 • 217. Carl Gehrig - 201. , Natvar No. 2 11 >
Ed McDonough pacedBar
In a high scoring match. L e - J 2 2 5 0 s K » n d
bow's Super MarketBella's Construction twice. MikeSokol <561> and Jackie Petrocyi516i paved the way for Lebow's.Sam Salvagglo (563> was topsfor the losers.
Browns InsuranceRolls 1001 forNew High Mark
The opfUlliu kiikntT |NHI IP M wit;, a crowd of (1.000'-X|>eciecl lw tuni out U*v (hi* i!\-mportftnt contest AddMiiulemmrnry stands ur<" cxtwted to-•' f rei-ted in addition tn the p r vnt portiil'le st-.inds i-i order Io^commodHte the ovprflnw .rowdCiutcret will have cvr'rylh'ni; H |
'nkc in t i l s b«H i'Hm* A \ict')i>Mil im-an the return of th:- (iroup
Lillian's Dress ShopHowlers Win H (lumen
CAUTVUF.T The liivh-flylngi!li:ills Dress Shop bowlers con-nu'd on tli-ir meny winning
'••iiy* by swi'cpnv: the A and f\xxl Town in nil three B,inn-s inhe Academy VVomens
Itr other unmes the Koc'icrk^ook all three t;umes from Ted's"•nnret-tlnnrry while the WestCarteret Esso Bills scored a clennswee]i over Soklers Furniture.
The results tnllow:i'ihnis Dress <:\, 534 58-1 658
\&.F, Fooil Town 10 • 485 507 519Kdchccks 131 5G4 541 556Fed's Confeet. 1O1 45!) 637 477W. Cart. Esso ' 3 ' 511 .i&0 505Soklers 10• 492 453 483
699579601G47588635623
721632581621548605633
CARTERET Bia scores con-tinued to mark Ihe competition Inthe Carteret City Bdwlins; LeamieUP Brown's Insurance hit a 1001 inthe middle game to bent Stojk.i'sTavern in two out of three namesIn hitting 1001, Browns set a newleague hiah mark, toppiim theprevious high set by Falcon Halla week previous.
i Th° Falcon Hull came back" ' " | strong aioiin this week to slmol a ! Browns Ins. i2)772 988 in scoring a 2-1 win over 'Stojka's Tav. ' 11BOU Koke'.s Tavern. 'Brady's Tav, <2>551 In another mutch. Sundor's Sitar's Market 11604 Tavern continued in first place Sandor's Tav. <2>(iflfi with a 2-1 victory over the Slovak Slovak Club M>601 Hall. ' falcon Hall I2IliOl Ormy Mcl.end rolled B bis fi:!.1) Koke's Tav l
to lend Bt.idy's Tnvern to a 2-1 \upset over Sitar's Market, "Ziugy"-liomicki shot n 605 for the losers.
The results:-.->•< 75G 1001
i l l 790 837
rd in 1929. •ccordiiiR t«i my In*loinmnt Carh-ni won Uie flrstvaxt\r pUyfd in^urf^rci, by % ljwoicorp. Slncr thfn tltt' neriw Mk«t*n 30 mtnics in nil. wrh Perth Am>-i>ny vii-torioiiit' in .Tv«-niM»n andCftltcret in twelve, wild une end-LtiK i n a t i e -
Cnrt»rei's rfctud I Ills year h a tbeen most Impressive, even- though'he Blues loM the opoiwr lo R«h-vuy and t»o wrtks aVo tied Wood*-.rldftf. one of the bins in CentralI'rrt'v OI'OMP IV '-omuotition In
botwrren the Blues bent Unden,South RIVHI Mutmstiuan, Suyre-
illc und HmnlltonAmboy's rrcoici this year Is far
i from Imprf ssive The U'nm coochMljby d ie t Heylnchak. »ho inciden-j tally plnyed In the first Carteret-j \mboy i-'imr b.\;k in 1929. thisi mir wiin only two i-anies and tost
five. Tln-y Ix-Ht South River andlo.n to East Side. Trenton. Wood-Jiidt!*. Asbury Park and Plain-Meld.
Frniik McC'Hr;hy. director ofit'iieucs st C.irtcrft High a n -nouned yesierdny th»t all generaladmission to the Ctirteret-Amboyname wll !!>• $i n. with no stu-dent tickets sold nt the gsie. S tu-dent tickets muy be purrhased a tthe hliih school fur 50c per ticket.Students who inirt-hased seasontickets may use the stub for theAmboy same for adimssion.
it
A
THE NM'TIM'S
The Htomn-pu»ered submarine895 I Nautilus 1ms "scored another first'1
834 by trnvehiiK 1.000 miles under the845 893 911 Arctic ice pick m five and a half942 882 849 j days. nn-ordinK to Secretary of the845 896 809 I Nuvy Tl.oinus S. Cites. The Nau-811 791 840 j lilus was on a cruise testing equlp-893 779 988 , tneiU and machinery and iiather-793 831 841 in.; operationiil anil scientific data.i iU OJI D t i 111:; U[J11 ilUUIIJU illlll Mlr l lLI
Attention Advertisers:The size of this Special Gift Edition is limited,
NO COPY will be accepted after f riday, \Nov. 29th. Reserve Your Space Now! '
OVER 40,000 CHRISTMAS SHOPPERSWILL READ YOUR SALES MESSAGE!
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VMiK KKHIT FRIDAY, NOVKMliKK V,, l!).r)7
Top Teams Defeat2nd Division ClubsIn Hill Bowl Loop
, iteret's high-powered football mn-CARTEHET -• Monday night c h l n e mM(.A w l t h l w o m c h .
was a niaht In the Carlerct Com-jdowns within two minutrs nftrrmerdal mid Industrial Bowling . thr second hnlf stnrted to rout Ihr
Hill !ill. the Hill Bowlthr first division trams all
came throuKli and beat the seconddivision teams In thorough fashion.
Bubo's put the bee on Perry'sNews Service for a clean sweep usfour mrn hit 200 BWie.s. Paul
Blues Rout Hamilton By34-0; King Uses Reserves
CARTERKT - Held to a slnirle j Bucks — KostyrT. Carmichacl,touchdown by a weak Hflmllton! Pettus. Hmvkrs, E. Carmichncl,eleven durliiR thr first half. CHI-- Majors, Sltar, Mftdlcheck. Kon-
drak.HAMILTON TOWNSHIP
Ends Wood, Owr.ns.Tackles — Nlodt. Matzgrr.Guards — Denclvrnto, her.Crnter — HickmiinBncks — Qiddens, Lucky, Maccl-
arelll, Stilwfll.
Alleys i "OUth Jersey club by n 34-0 scorebefore a small rrowd at tho Ham-ilton Township fipld.
Not only did the Cartrrct power-house oiltnish and outpass thehome forces, but the Cartcret funs
Srore by periodicTouchdowns — T. Carmlcliael 2.
outnumbered the home fans by j Kondrak, Teleposky, Hawkes.more than two to one, by an exa*:t
Waaiowic;1, led with n 221-556, The count.. The Hamlltrih stands wrreWin enabled thr leaders to hold practically empty, in vi«w of theA two-e.ime margin over their fart that the homo, team hasn'tSecond place rivals, the Hill Bowl, won a ball same all season Ions.
Meanwhile the Hill Bowl tookover sole possession of secondplace as John Yustnk's fine pin-ning showed the house team theway to a three-name sweep overWaznee's Tavern. John had a 212-681 set.
The C & C Oil Jumped Into a tietor third place with Fedlam's. TheOilmen won three from Cutter'sbehind Bill Koby's 214-579.
Fedlem's slipped from second
Carteret broke the qume wideopen In the second half after adull and listless first half in whichthe Blues were held to a singlescore. Conservatively, the Bluesshould have rolled up four tou"h-dowris in the first two periods. In-stead they had to settle for a 6-0advantage gotten In the first periodwhen Nick Kosty passed to TheronCarmlchael and the latter run ashort distance unmolested for a
j touchdown. The play for the extra
Points after touchdowns—Rock,Kosty.
Officials — Ball, Shumberland,Gianbella.
position by losing the odd game toi 3 " ; ' " " " 1 ' , * ' - * " " —Mnkwinski Builders. Tony Buben- ' p o l n t f a i l c d ' A f(>w m i n u t e s beforeheimer's 260-593 set was notenough to stem the tide of RegstleJohnson's 217 and Ed Prokop's 208.
DcBclla's had a comparativelyeasy time with Aurlco, winning allthree names. Keptch's Service
f C l k 'Station took two fromService
Clszak'sSPlumbinu and the St. Demetriusbeat Metnl and Thermit In twogames. The J and G Televisionwon the odd same from the GemTavern in the flnnl match.
Team /Vo. 4 in SweepOver SiUtr's Market
CARTERET — Team No. 4scored a clean sweep over Sitar'sMarket In the Parkview WomensBowllnR League, winning all threegames by close scores at the Acad-emy Alleys. In other matchesTeam No. 5 beat Team No, 2 intwo out of three games, whileFrank's Dcpt. Store took the oddgame from Team No. 1.
The results follow:—
T e a m No 4 <3"> .
Bi t a r s M a r k e t «01
T e a m No. 5 <2i
T e a m No . 2 <1> .
F r a n k s D c p t . <2i
T e a m No . 1 il>
462432378363502476
452426387458445415
510469457443448474
Cuge (limes Start onSaturday at H. S. Gym
CARTERET — Tommy Cough-lin, Recreation director, an-nounced that the annual basket-ball clinics will begin tomorrowI Saturday i morning in the highschool gym. Boys from the fifthand sixth grades will be permittedto register between 8:30 A. M. and10:30 A. M.. while boys from theseventh and eighth'(trades will behandled between 10:30 A, M. and12:30 A. M. The clinics will be incharge of Joe Comba and WesSpewak.
Admission for AmboyGume to be $1.50 Per
CARTERET — Frank McCarthy,director of athletics at Carterethigh School, announced that thegeneral admission at the annualCartcrct-Pcrth Amboy gridironfcontcst to be played at the localstadium next Thursday afternoonwill be $150 per person and therewill be no _studa|t tickets sold atthe game. "stutrot tickets, pricedat S50c, may be purchased at thehigh school. Those with season
' tickets may use their Amboy stubs,Adult tickets may be purchased atSabo's Sport Shop, Suto's Luncheonette and Chodosh's News Standon the hill.
another Blue and White touch-down was nullified when the offi-cials ruled a penalty for illegal useof hands against Carteret.
Taking Hamilton's kiekofT on theten-yard line as the second halfopened, Theron Cnnnishael ranlike a deer behind perfect inter-ference the entire 90-yards for atouchdown, as the Carterct standswent wild.
Less than a minute later afterCarteret had booted to Hamilton,Mike Mandicheck recovered afumble on the Hamilton 25-yardline, Two plays Inter Steve Kondrksprinted from the eight-yard linefor a touchdown. Later in tlie thirdperiod Nick Kosty passed to JimHawkes, a sophomore, who scam-pered 20 yards for a touchdown.
After that Coach Dougy Kingused his second string men at regu-lar intervals and the boys showedup surprisingly well.
The Blues added another touch-down in the final period on a passplay from Ed Carmichael to JackTeleposky.
The lineups:—CARTERET
Ends •— Telopsky, Martiniak.Medvetz. Wiliams. Bordelon.
Tackles — Rock, Baker, Godder-stad, Hudak. Toth, Tobiasson.
YOUR NEWSOCIAL SECURITY
By ALLAN A. BASSDistrict Manager (
Q Because of my physicalcondition. I may have to applyfor disability benefits under thesocial security program eventhough I am only 56. years old.Would the amount payable to mebe reduced because I am under65?
A. Disability benefits are notreduced. If you are entitled todisability benefits, the amountyou receive etch month wouldbe the same at the amount nfthe old-nfe Insurance benefityou would receive If you wereace 65 at this time. It will hebased on the record nf yourwages and can be as little as {30per month or as much as $108.-5fl per month.
Q. A.s a practicing physican,may I pay into social security asa self-employed person?
A. No. Self-employed physi-cians are excluded from cover-are under social security. How-ever, physician! who are work-in*: as employeei are covered tothe extent of their salary up to$4200 per year, The Social Se-curity Act doei not provide forvoluntary coverage for physi-cians wlio4%c qhgaged In pri-vate practice.
Q. 1 am 42 years'Old. I amleaving my position which iscovered by ocia.1 security andentering employment which is not
Guards — Fedorako, Kukoski,: covered. Should I freeze my socialSosnowski, Koch. ! security account?
Centers — Resko, Bilalowarczuk,Schaffhuser.
HEAR HOWCHRISTIAN SCIENCE
HEALSWOR-TV 12:45 P. M. SundayWOR 710 KC. 7:45 P. M. Sun.
IRST CHUBcjl OF (CHRISTSCIENTIST
544 West Ave., Sewaren, N, J.A Branch of Tha Mother phurch
' Tl»e Plr«» Ohutch ol ChristSfjicuust in Boston, Mass.Sunday StrvlM 11:00 A. M.Sunday School 9:30 A. M.
Wcrtnd*i»y TestimonialMeettns if. M.
Thursday Reading RoomMull Loan library fatuities available1
2-4 V. M. In Church Edifice
WILL TAKEYOU TOAlloona, Pa.'Boston, Mass.Winchester, Va.Martiimburf, W. Va.
BY PHONE3 miii. Htutiou rate fromNew Kiiuiswuk after 0 P.M.
I uml ull duy Sunday.! 10%
A. There is no p r o v i s i o nwhereby an individual can
It's BARN DANCEtime again, so dos-a-dos
'n' stamp your feet—Swing your partner to
th' western beat
"TEX" WAYNE a ROVING RAMBLERSAt the
Metiiclicn Knighls of Columbus8th ANNUAL BARN DANCE
November 23SaturdayAt 9 P. M.
AdmissionAt Door
$1.25
V. A. W. - C. I. O.HALL
Vineyard RoadEdison
"Our LossIs Your
DON'T MISS IT ! !Starts SATURQAY
MORNING at 10:30Tremendous Savings (|ti Our
Entire Stock of Famous) BrandsSUNDAY 10 AM. to 5
NO EXCHANGES • NO ttWtlNI>SNO HAND1 ( IUHGK
WK lUSKKKVK THK KtiiHT T<>LIMIT QUANTITIin
S L O T S O F F U N —Tl:is i m i n e d ( l u m p is h.'iviilR "plot;: of fun"in a club :il Lake Tiilmo, New The clump, ;ip|ie;innj; ;it theclub, fell before the h u e of 1hr "oiii'-iiiiniHi biiiulib" lo provethat it's "monkey see, monkey do."
freeze his social security ac-count unless he is severely dis-abled. A switch in employmentwill not mean that you havelost social security protectionfor yourself and your family ifyou already meet the require-ments to be fully insured. Thisis 40 quarters of coverage or tenyears of covered employment inyour case.
These answers are provided bythe social security office locatedat 313 State Street. Perth Amboy,New Jersey. If you have questionsabout your own social securityrights and responsibilities, write,phone or visit your local office.
GOP NATIONAL COMMITTEE
The Republican National Com-mittee will meet in Washington onnprember 6 "to obtain a frank ap-praisal of the status of the Repub-lican party and its organization, ithns been announced by Mende Al-corn, GOP national chairman.'Inesc sesion&will be closed to thepress and the public.
Sgt, Babyak QualifiedRifle Firing Expert
BREMERHAVEN. Germany —Army Sergeant First Class GeoriteBabyak, son of John Bflbyalc, 45Perilling Avenue. Carteret. N. J..recently qualified as expert infiriiiK the M-l rifle in Germany.
Serftennt B a b y a k , a squadleader in Headquarters Companyat the U. S. Army Post of Em-barkation in Bremerhaven, ar-rived in Europe in April 1956. Heentered the Army in October 1942.
The .sergeant holds the CombatInfantryman Badge. His wife,Erna, is with him in Germany.
Movie rights to the Lloyd C.Douglas book on early Christian-ity, "The Big Fisherman," havebeen acquired by Rowland V. Lee.who plans to make the picturenext year. It will be released byBuena Visla. the distributingcompany formed by Walt DisneyProductions.
ST. DEMETRIUS COMMUNITY CENTER681-691
ROOSEVELT AVE.CARTERET
DANCINGEVERY FRIDAY
NIGHT
THIS FRIDAY, NOV. 22nd
Benny Johnson -• 12 pc. Orchestra^ m NEXT WEDNESDAY, NOV. 27th ^ ^
Hometown THANKSGIVING EVE Jamboree2 FAMOUS BANDS TO ENTERTAIN YOU
— Featuring —
Shorty Warren •• Western Rangers— Plus —
TV Dominos OrchestraWestern • Country Style t Popular • Polkas
Early Birds Door Admission
$1.00 $1.50
Special TEEN-AGE DanceThanksgiving Night (Thursday), 7:30 to 11:30
Admission at Door 75c
YOUR GARDENTHIS WEEK
RIRI) TALK
'For the birds" says a crypticnote I found by my batteredwriting mathinc.
Cnpsule criticism of a recenteolutnn perhaps? Or a reminder?
Let's call it a reminder, as theplensanter of the choices, andbesides, that's what it was—a re-minder to sumtest how you canimprove your crop ot birds in the(jarden this winter.
La^t year I mentioned thistopic, but rAthcr late in the sca-
n as It turned out, and so tht<in a sense an attempt to square
thing!! with any feathered friend?who may have Rone cold or hun-gry last winter.KEEP IT SIMPLE
It's not hard, nor does It costmuch in time or money to attract,vlld birds to your Harden Inwinter. Your ingenuity Is moreImportant than flxinp up specialwrieets.
For example, you can make aoole shelter from a piece of pipethat caU and squirrels can'tclimb, a flat board, nnd a frame-'vork of small branches to whichyou can attach burlap or ever-green twlgj for shelter.
But attractive bird neighborscan be particular about theirdiets, and you'll have to do betterthan toss out bread crumbs ifyou want to have the most fun.
Attracting winter birds is thesubject of a 32-page bulletin thatyou can get free. It has manypictures and sketches, even draw-ings of birds to help you identifyyour visitors.
Just print "Birds" and yourname and address on a card iindsend it to Garden Reporter. Col-IPSP. of Agriculture. New Bruns-wick, if you'd like a copy.
ANSWERING THE MAILMrs. E. R.. Brideeton — "I'd
like Information on a suitablecover crop for a garden."
From W. Bradford Johnson,vegetable growing s p e c i a l i s t ,^omes this reply: ,You could use'vinter wheat or rye grass, but Ido not believe the work involvedand the cost of the seed wouldwarrant using a cover crop in thegarden.
Manv home gardeners return tothe soil the leaves that fall fromtrees and the refuse from thesarden. I feel that the benefit tofhe soil will be just as great fromMils sort of treatment and thecost and labor will be much less
Work the leaves and carden re-mains into the soil this fall sothat it will be in a loose conditionover winter and will drain morereadily In spring.
P. C, Woodbrid«e "I have aclump of birches and each sum-mer the leaves get brown, andwhen I break the leaves in half I"»"H <nrw Mriri r>f insect, a littleworm, In the leaves."
Your birches have birch leaf• ' i n r " "r>iPi'- ".on* ml is explainedIn Leaflet 200, and any of your
Know The WeatherBy E. H. SIMS
Is lightning likely to approachlearer when you sec it to the
south, or in the southeast?
If you see lightning to the southor southeast, it is most likely topass you by unharmed in mostjnrts of the United States. In
lorida or in some deep southernstates—and even in other areas,occasionally — this rule will nothold true.
The dangerous lightning stormsisually come from the west, orthe northwest. If you spot light-ning in this direction, it would bewise to plan on its 'arrival andtake whatever precautions arewise This Is the prevailing di-rection of weather and lightningstorms follow the nomal drift ofhe atmosphere.
The lightning that strikes you,by the way, wHl never be seen, sof you see a liRhtninR bolt, or
flash, the time for fear has al-ready passed and you can relax.There is no need to think of thenext one — you wont see it,either. If it hits you.
SCHOOL KINDS
Federal aid for school construc-tion, turned down twice by Con-gress in tlie last two yenrs. hasbeen quietly ticketed for a Houselommittuc pheonholed at theomniB session of Congress. Poli-
tics, school-segregation Issue andDemocratic irritation with Presi-dent Eisenhower's school-aid bat-tle were all [actors contributing tothe decision, it is said.
COLD WAHThe time f,,, u ,ar is running ,,„• ',
of Soviet surrey „, ,nology, say i,,,,,, ,,8arnoff. He belim,, .a matter of iin1(.years and possibly *,..both Russia and nh \will have mass p,•,.,,'transoceanic mi.s.m!,will come "diTiuiiui .,
Joining Rosrni.it;her little sister. <;.,both busy on T,I,,brother Nick, wh,, ,„army, arrived m [',"'•it his s|<trrs iii' -role In "Mock TimKine and ho „,.„„,,,
Jnck Palance's first picture tobe made abroad will be "The ManInside." by David Shaw. In it.Jack will play a New York citypliiin-clothes man who tracks amaster criminal around Europe.They would like to get John Millsfor the bad man and Gina Lollo-
iUcla for the feminine lead.
friends who have the same trou-ble can get a copy by writing toGarden Reporter. College of Agri-culture, New Brunswick, or theagricultural agent.
RITl ThectrlCARTERET, v .,, R | , . ]
- NOW Till! I
Elvis I'rcsl,.
"Jailtiouse Rouk'— rius
Hownnl hi;;; ,
"SIERRA S T I ! \ \ i , | i;
Kiddle Mnlinr, . ! (
SUNDAY THRr m . ^
NOVKMHI i: M
"Until T h e y :i
:nllit! p
— I'llls
"CHICAGO CONHH:
Free Glui-swiMr :,, i
day and Tmv.il.p
W E D . TIIKI . \ |
.NOVKMRr.it •;: n,,,,
Thursday JUHI s . i i , , , , j , ,Matinrr ;it i i
Glenn Ford Y.m n, ,•,.,
"3:10 To Yuma— I'll lv
Ron <'a 1111,111, i
"DOMINO K in
' Frte AirlineInformation.
Tickets Obtained!It's more convenientwhen we make yourR i - e p r v B t i o n . y e t I tcosts no morel ActualtlcKet price Is all youpay. No charge for our
vice.
Cards that reflect ||S '•...* your good taste ...§
I BOXED ASSORTMENTS 88 +".:• «f i
I'll meet you at DOOLEY'SEVERY WED., THURS.,, FRI. from 6:30 to 9 P. M.
where I've landed with u full pack of the
greatest toyn and gatiM's ever for all ages.
Authorized Service Station for
American Flyer TRAINS
DOOLEY'SHOUSE of TOYS
MO2 Si. (.euro's Avenue \Y oodltridge
I
- FQRDS-PLAYHOUSE
HI-2-034R
WED. THRU SAT.NOV. 21-23
" jAPOUSE ROCK'jmtt Elvis f'roslcy
"GARMENT JUNGLE"
With Lee J. Cobh
Sat. e, Extra Cartoonsthe Children
SUNDAY THRU TUESDAYNOV. 24 - 26
"THE HELEN MORGANSTORY"
Ann Blyth - Paul Newman— Also —
"DESTINATION MOON"
EVERY WEDNESDAY
"HUNGARIAN SHOW"From 2 P. M. Continuous
GHRJSMS|GARBS * |PUBLIX I
PHARMACY ;I)I Main St., Woodbridge |
pen Kvcs. till 10, Sunday till 1 f.M.J
-STATE-ITHEATRE
Woodliri<k
WEI). m m • \iG e n e K e l l y . M i t / i ( . . ,
"LES GIRLS"— Co-Hit
D a n e Clark, K.n ( » : | |
"OUTLAW'S V M \
SPECIAL KIIHHI M \ l , \ i ; |
"OUTLAW'S (JGfi— IMuv - -
SEVEN (7) CARTOONSFRIDAY NiGi.n
SCHOOL .Ni.
SUN. . .MD\.. 11 i -
J o a n n e WIHIIIW.IMI -I
Nni lh in
"NO DOWN PAYMENT1• ' — C o - l l i i -
S c o t t B r a d y • A n n I', M.. I . . I : |
" T H E R K S T l . r . c s I ; > ; I I
WEI). T i l l ! ! * \ l
I l e n r ) Fond.i. Ami' ' K
In
"THE TIN STAR"_ C n - I l M -
A l a n I '<•'•
• • H O C K A i : " i i
i Continuous I'11: '
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5TONIGHT—K.(:. BENEFIT
SHOW
"The Brave One"and
" 3 STOOGES COMEDY"FRIDAY THRU TUES.
Elvii Presley in
"Jailhouse Rock"— Plus —
Victor Mature - Anita Eckbergin
"PICKUP ALLEY"
SPECIAL KIDDIEMATINEE
At 1:3« Saturday• BKi M.MUKKS
I'lu.,
5 CARTOONS 5
TIME FOR FALL RUG C p i— by New Jersey's — CW
Most Modern Equipped
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4th and tf. Stevens Avc. South Am1"" "" 1
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MADY MIXID
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any q u a n t i f y
THORN-WILM1BHDINO CO**'WILDOM COHCBXTI
OIVI1IONI OF WILDON MATimALl, INC.
IWDEN SCOTCH PLAINS 80.HUntr 6-4422 FAimd 24300 PLnfld 5-2
OTHER WILDON PRODUCTS: Croihed Sfon«« 8 (ack J°fl
Grav»f, Sand and Maion
( vRTERET PRESSp]i,;i,|H-d Every Friday by Cartcret Press
, I Roosevelt Avenue, Cartcret. N. J.
Telephone KlmbtUl 1-5600
Ch»rles E. Gregory
Editor and Publisher
iij.sr-i lptlon rates by mail, includlnci,;r. one year, $3.00: sljoimonths. $1.50-, months. 85 cents; single copies by
in cents. All payable in advanrr-
. ,-;,i-rirr delivery, 8 cents per copy.
.lt,.]Td as second class matter June fii ,,t Cartcret, N. J.. Post Office undn
U ! of March 1, 1879.
Ihiy Christrmis Souls
mal For t'v l A | ) P C l P C l to b e a b o u t n o r "ma>-Fo. those in Now England and in.
n » and the western parts of"• l h e l™porature is expected iabove normal.
r rest of the country, thel s wpected to be below nor-
— u will be below normal from rast-
'» Amnna, Utah and Colorado, alll h p *».v eastward on a Une moving
^ h ' . a s t until it reachcs V i , . g i n >
. , h n o I'ass" through Illinois in-
!" U ( l ' n " m r m ' " ^ half of Illinois in
I no below-normal area.
^infall is predicted to be above
normal in the middle
"HIE LITTLE DOG LAUGHED'
,,, the time it has taken you to un-i United States, except for Minnesota
,,•1 this paper and scan the front [most of North Dakota and the north
,,.,,,.. someone in the United Stairs! ™slrrn part of South Dakota and so
,,„ contracted tuberculosis. Every flvr ™- Proripitation will be above normal
n. inutrs someone breaks down with '« the New England States and as far
jnhciriilosis in our country. There I?
stl;! much to be done in preventing
t :-,. disease. However, it can be done : \vlvania.
to the Middlesex County In two
•outh as the top of Virginia, extend
K wrstward to include all of Penn-
y, irulosis and Health League.
would mean finding all active x 111 the
areas, precipitation is ex-
to bp below normal and that
e extreme southeast, taking ir
Li,i;;ious cases of TB in the popula j Southern Louisiana, Mississippi, Ala-
Georgia and a small part of,o that they could be cured. I|
,-,,M mean thorough education ant'.
,,i)ilitation of all former patients ir
!, r to help prevent relapse. It would
,!i safeguarding the health of those
:,aily Infected—and that means ap
:,i\imately one-third of the nation—
prevent them from breaking down
:T: active disease.
s idi a Utopian situation cannot br
,,wva\ overnight, but steady prog
; is being made through the efforts-
: 'lie tuberculosis association in co
•„ i,it ion with the health department
:,! other agencies concerned. In acldi-
,,n to its local program of case find
,_ rehabilitation, and health cduca-
,'!: the association joins with tin
• other TB associations affiliated
:;i. the National Tuberculosis Asso
;t.on in a program of medical re-
-.iivh. In time this research may lead
,i simpler method of preventing
iiuM'culosis infection and disease—a
.. /me or medication which can b<
,.ni to the public at large.
Meantime, however, the tubereulo
. association needs the support ol
:v citizen in its efforts to protec*
.: iionies from TB. You have leceivec
-, .iiter containing Christmas Seali
:. Mi the Association. Answer your let
••: aiul send in your contribuUor1 - i . l V .
'lama,p
oiitlieastern South Carolina, and allFin
•>el(jw
kla It is also expected to be
normal for the three Pacific
voastal states and for Nevada, Idahc
ind parts of several other states in an
m which reaches into Utah.
Cold and Stormy II cutlwr
i:n' official forecast is for cold anc
. :ny weathef for the next twenty
—or until about one-third of De-
:.ucr is over. '
•'•' are not expert weather forecast
:iut that ls the word from Wash1 m and it will be interesting to sc
••••• get the cold and stormy weathei
uc supposed to get. In addition U
•nltl and storms, most of us arc ti
' :uore than the normal amount ol
'.:.ill and some snow.
il' re is the way the weather is sup-
d to be, according to the forecast-
,II the next fifteen or twenty days:
Chrysler's Comeback
The Chrysler Corporation recently
declared an extra dividend of $1 pei
•iliare, m addition to the regular 7£
•nit dividend paid in each quartei
iincc September, 1954. The total ol
si 75 is payable December 13 of this
/car to shareholders of record on No-
vember 13 of this year
The Chrysler Corporation reported
•hat its earnings for the first nine
nonths of 1957 were $103,575,486
That amounts to $11.87 a share and i:
i whopping comeback when comparer.'
o lhe 72 cents a share earned in the
iame period of last year.
In short, this seems to be conclusive
'Viclont'c that the third member of the
Big Three in tho automotive field has
made a resounding comeback. Chrys-
'rr made its comeback at a time when
it either had to come back or perhaps
fare from the scene.
While we do not necessarily favor
Chrysler automobiles over Ford or
General Motors cars, or even those of
'.he independents, we think it is a good
thing that one of the Big Three die'
not pass from the automotive picture.
This would have caused widespread
unemployment and much painful re-
'ocation and adjustment in the na
•ion's economy. Tho automobile indus-
iry is one of the nation's major indus-
:ries and any hardship felt by a major
•iroducer will create repercussion.'
throughout the economy.
The 1957 record for Chrysler, then
is not only good news for Chrysler
-liarehoklns but is also good news for
most other Americans. It seems that
tlic
Nearly One Out of Every Five Republicans VotedFor Governor Meyner on November 5
VPRINCETON A p w i - r l r c , M". of 11-•- Independent vntr. Finally, nn examination of
ion alimysls of tlso way New m m to Meynei 37 r; , to |1 P w l y ji1P various occupa-
' tlnnal groups voted In the 1957Jersey citizen* voted on Nov- Fotlws
A conviini'iMiii itf t h e way
the No*1 Jersey vole broke•mber .i. 1957, main's clourUnit many population aeg-nents in the Stnte mndr pos- jdown by politlcnl purly affllln-ilble Governor Hobort, B Mi-y- | tinn in the lW.i3 Meyner.-•>er's-victory ovft Stnto Srn-[Tvoast ehvtmn brings out
Under the Capitol DomeBy J . Joseph Gribbins
TRKNTON New JtTI.C'.v'.s;hilcl labor laws may !>;• re-laxed by l.ht; 19a(i Li'RL'-latureLO help curb juvenile di'Hn-
The Froohold Racing Asso-ciation, which operates thelone harness track licensed inthe State, had 168.443 custom-ers who bet $10,896,333 on the
Under the present statutes.' sulky races.
Three will remain the Big
Three, and not become the Big Two, ir
the foreseeable future.living in the northern latitudes.
unions'of OthersOpi'1('"> AIMS ARAB i Those lit11
UliKKS? ' | R u s s i a n-illy a day passes when! didn't contribute•m- docs not trumpet its | Milwaukee ^Journal
about tlic,Uieir security j i n x ' s V.M.V (H'K
M'lfare. >1 Soviet k u s a l a has |
SHIRTS OS
The silly season
.sii1 echoes, tlie.iis we hasten about our neg->alelhte nations, •.lectcd tasks. There, are por-
cilher. - - ' tents enough in tlie heavqasoven though the moon doesi.ot spring into flame and the.stars (all out of their courses.Bu| we have hitherto endured
( „ p deal with a certain
parents nnd niinrdiims. are.'Oinpullnd to send children be-tween till' ajjl's of seven anduxtot-n yenrs to school eudi"lay or In provide for their in-itnictum at home or else-where. Legislation enacted in1940 tniik.es it mandatory forall children to attend schoolmill ihoy have attained thei!U' of sixteen.
However, because (if Lhe:rowth (if juvenile delinquencym '.ill purls ol New Jersey, anovemenl is now,, underway toxTimt b".\s and girl1; overniirlei'ii In le;ive school withhe approval .of the school.isy-hintnst and school prin-cipal and Ret a job. Studieslave shown it is usually the:>lder boys and Rirls, dissatis-led with school, who net into
trouble a.s juvenile delin-lents.Strici Siife-^uiu'its would be
ivr.ipppd aro'.md any new lawrlaxini; I.lie iirinciple that all•liildren must be educatedmtil they are sixteen years ofmo. Those above fourteen whodesire to leave school and be-
workiim would be Riven athoiuut'.h exuinination by theschool psychiatrist before be-ns given permission to work
In addition to requiringwritten permission from par-MHS or RiiardiHiis, approval ofthe school psychiatrist thechild would be required to se-cure wurkin:; papers winchwould restrict employment tocertain jobs. The purpose ofMew Jersey's child labor laws,s to prevent tile employmentof children at occupationswhich are unsuitable or in-jurious; prevent employmentof children who are too younnto work, and to provide safe-guards iiM.ain.sL excess hours,iimht work, or other harmfuliituaiions for those childrenwho are employed.
Although such laws haveif-en coiisiderifd sacred and
A tall three tracks, both at-tendance and the amount ofbets placed were higher thisyear than in 1956.DELAWARE RIVER: Bothattorneys general of New Jer-sey and Delaware have ruledthat New York City is cheat-inn on water flowins down theDelaware River.
Attorney General Grover CRichman. Jr. has ruled thatNew York City must main-tain lesal release flows ofwater in the Delaware Riverii times of drought. A similaruliiiK by the Attorney Gen-ial of the State of Delawareiame through on July 18 last.
New York City .has con-structed two reservoirs atNeversink) and East Branchon the upper Delaware and Isbuilding another reservoir atpermission from the UnitedCannon.sville. In s e c u r i n gStates S u p r e m e Court tobuild the reservoirs and drawnIT millions of gallons for apotable water supply, the cityagreed to maintain a mini-mum basic flow of 1525 cubicfeet of water per second atMontague. During last .sum-mer's
eri.ed by fellow Democrats inhe General Assembly to
•serve as Democratic MinorityjCnder.
In his capacity a.s HouseSpeaker, the Camden Countylawmaker will be the thirdhighest State officer and willserve as Actins Governor fora time in the year coming up.Under the provisions of theState Constitution, the Sen-ate President succeeds theGovernor durins his absencefrom the State and the Hou.seSpeaker becomes Acting Gov-ernor when both officials areabsent.
Usually, when the Confftr-"ice of Governors of theUnited States convene.1! atsome point outside New Jer-sey both the Governor andSenate P r e s i d e n t attend,leaving the House Speaker inrrmrpe of officialdom. Hyland
»tor Mnk'olm S Forbes jTo bcisln with, itenily nne |
)ut ot every five Republicansil9 r i i in the RUlo rust tJielrinllnts for Democrat Meyner;Therms only 7 out of every100 Democratic voters castiieir for Republican Forbes.
At the same limp. Independ-nts who votwt In November's
Kiibcrnatorlal election pre-'errcd Democratic cnndldnU1
Vlrynrr over GOP candidateForbes by a S to 3 margin
C o u r t will soon d e c i d ewhether the fourteen and fiveear f.wheat statutes of New
Jersey embrace t r a d I n Ritamps. , , . Superior CourtJudge Howard E w a r t , ofToms River, him submittedhis resignation to GovernorMeyner. . . . New J e r s e yi 6 u 11 r y products will beneatly advertised a.s the re-mit of a new promotion enm-•lalRiv . . . ^ e l f - l o c k Innfasteners on all automobiles*o prevent highway accidentsire recommended by Fred-erick J. Oassert. Jr.. StateMotor Vehicle Director. . . .This week Is being observedby New Jersey health au-' .hor l ta as Diabetes Dftec-',lon Week. . . . Tribute was•ecently paid to the lateSupreme Court Justice Jo-seph B Perskl, of AtlanticCity, in the New Jersey Court. . . Georsc T, DufThaus, of
more i-lemlv the imimrtanrrot fi:o Itepiihlicnn v.'ite m tinsnuini l i ' s i!ub<'i'iiAti<n.tl e lw-tion
For rxumpli' in 1:1M, i
elections showsthat Governor Meyner took63'; of the manual workervote (the unskilled and s«nl-
1 skilled workers; 58'" of thoskilled craftsmen vote, and
i hi"', of the sales clerical work-er- vote
j The Governor, however... ; lost the minority vote tn twotR !other
• X
but
•ind flic Kepublirnn vote. |Tn I9SH. the Governor lost \
i'", of the Democratic vote, jbul this your he lost V- »f the jNew Jersey Democratic vote.
And where.is fiemorrntMevner picker! up fi3''; of tlieIndependent vote this lime, he'ook R6'; of lhe Nrw Jersey
thoote and b"r'r of the
business owiwr - managerRroup vote
In ,195^. Governor Meynerpicked up 597r of the manualworker vote; 57r: of the skill-ed craftsmen vot<>. and 52%of the sRlcs-clrrical vote.
Independent vote four years The Governor, however, lostaRo. fthe majority vote in two other
A breakdown of I he vote by I occupational «roups. Repub-fiuciitional levi-l.s shows that | llcan Troast tnkuiR 54TJ of the
i8 r ; of all thn.se with nr;ule j professional worker vote and-cliool educations (adults who ; liT r of the business owner-
.••&
'lave never a t tended hluhschool or college i . 57'"!- of all•|<()se With lui'h si hool edura-
manaRer Rioup vote.The followinR table shown
how the various imputationlions ibut never attended col- j armvi [„ the stale divided on
Tuesday. November 5. 1957,and on November 3. 1953, for
'.ei:ei, and M'i of all thosewith eollcKc educations votedfor Governor Meyiwr thisyear.
years ano. Democrat
the two major candidates:
Maplewood, has been ap-oointcd inspector of beo cul-iure for the State Depart-ment of Agriculture. . . . TheNew Jersey LcRLslaturc is ex-nected to take action nextponth to permit the sale ofaspirin and similar homeremedies in food stores andmarkets. William P. Hy-land, 34-year-old C a m d e nAssemblyman, will be theyoungest Assembly §peakcrin history when ho. takes of-fice in January. . . . The Stateof New Jersey held $721,173.-850 par value of securities as
Meyner took !H!'i of the unideschool vote; 51'" of the hkithschool vote, and 49'", of thecollege educated vote.
In other words. Meyner didbetter this year with voterswho have attended hlxhschool and college than he didn li>f>3.
Analysis of the vote by asjelevels shows that the Governortook i>7r; of the 21-29 year oldvote; BO"! of the 30-44 yearold uroiip. nnd 49"',, of til*' 45yenr nnd older vote
In the 1O.)3 election. Meynertook ;ifi'i; of the 111-20 year oldvote: 55I'1; of the 30-44 yearold vole, and 4H'i of ihe 4ayour and older uroup.
IndependentsRepublicansDemocrat!)
i
(>r;irie. schoolMUh school .College
u|
u.1957
f, ~
6110(t^
585751
•<
3781
7
424340
• 3
1953
% "661106
62514»
•.»
43894
384»51
21-29 yearolds
SO-44 yearolds
! 45 years andolder
67 33 56 41
60 40 59 41
4!) 51 48 52"Continued on Page 12
of October 31. .ment of John M.
Appoint-Penton. of
Trenton, as chief of theBureau of Asrlcultural Sta-tistics, has been announced.. . . Gloucester and Middlesex
| counties have been certified
deserves such high recogni- »s brucellosis-free by thetion because, of hts faithful! State Dept. of Agriculture....devotion to duty at all times. |The Trenton and Hanisburg,
P Ai D f Filt C t r s
used
! ! •
• made a contribution j11 <l lhe relief or rqhabill-•» »f mor^ than BO0.000' "erugees of the Pale-
war. Thejettragic peopleiieen living In miserable
i ; i fringing Israel for111)1 a decaje. They subsist
"'lief from the United""is which averages *27
i>'Tson per ye»r.l!l1' issue came before tfte1 J"ain Just lftst month.l ; ; v R. Laboulaw, director
tram,
'", amount ofpvr I dcKi-oe of diRiHty. And there
weren't any sea .serpents bu t l^ A b o n d o f victory in con-kept seems thPm.AJll'st!tjnums our daily lives like
come in summer. There
peoplethe same. There are sjniUi'iks, j l " -unhappily In time, a s ' Mr ttom-wKhrusluhev bis - lieartcdlyi.iii.ijp.«ted. we are likely to
own up in
T»eedUN n\{et prof
the ^prertUigT
money. H |that hi* » | ency frasa humanitarian pne
'"••' h i 'd no polttlqal role.• l
qof |8(Hi million
quickly (received. The" l l r ( l states picked up' ;1"' cheok, u \t has from;"' start of the'" l l ( 'ally all the (r«e world
'""""tries contributed. Com-J " i s t Yugort»vtft i«ve 140,-
f H"1 from that • " g r e a t^ ' " " i " of the Arab p«opJ«s'^""'t Russia, there w u not" "ible or ovan t kopeck
iave some of our ...••• --.-what used to be ••ailedKkv But ihu* is no reason wl«S.shouldmi.sU.ke.hcauroniborealis for a Hussmn plot olttlf brother's red balloon f«
j men and womenand not like children in anursery f r i g h t e n e d by athunderstorm. Y kTimes.
h t e~ New York
wliy weand! assume
i [. can do
MOKK CHICKBNSMost people find it Quite a
chore A ~'to
fintastic dawthiit tlie Russians ;.more than ourselves or any
"•- world,on.
make sense out ofand financial
ry. This Is particularly so ina country such as ours where
ourtheenterprise capitalis
Thr
economy Ls influenced bymany facets of a free
other peo
Tiierefor complacency,
ple in thekeep our shirts
is
r c i.s certainly no reuson11 but neither
for sheer
panic-
there reifton fNothing is true today
about ourselves or thefiians th*t wnsi»t tiueday. We Just I
discussot ourtruths:
•Youpumps
pri.se pe following comments ofWarner & Swasey Co.ss one of the more basic
American economic
repair shoe*, "',„„„„ gasoline, I ral&
i h U ; e n s . We sell to eacother and to the man nexd o o l . ._ a retired school teacheion a pension.
•Somebody convinces memake just a*_ much fo:
on
.'Destiny breathw HotPAGE NINE
drought and probablyup to the present time, NewYork City has f o r g o t t e nabout the condition of thestream downriver.HYLAND: — AssemblymanWilliam P. Hyland, 34-year-old Cnmden Democrat, whowill become A.sse, m b l ySpeaker next January whenthe Legislature convenes, willbe the youngest lawmaker inthe history of New Jersey toserve in that capacity.
Hyland, a fine musicianstoured the country with namlbands during his youth,, bialso found time to attend anlgraduate, from the WhartonSchool, University of Penn-sylvania, and the Universityol PoHjisylvania ^ a w School
MINERALS: — Kasolitc, fcr-Kusonitc. polyerase and hut-tonite may not be known toresidents of New Jersey butthey have been present in the>"iarden State for many, many7.->ftrs.
to.-sepn E. McLean, StateCommissioner of Conserva-tion and Economic Develop-ment, explains they are fourrare earth minerals recentlydiscovered in New Jersey. Infact, they are .so new theircommercial value is still un-known.
To some extent the miner-als were uncovered becauseof theuranium
hectica few
searchyears
foraao.
Pa. Air Defense Filter Centerswill combine at Harasburi;beginning January 1.CAPITOL C A P E R S : - Asharp upsurge in citizen con-cern over Governmental costslmons those whose pocket-book nerves have been trig-gered by spiraling taxes, is re-ported by the New JerseyTaxpayers Association. . . .Eighteen bootleffRcrs werec a p t u r e d by S t a t e ABC"iffonts in New Jersey durincOctober. . . . With Governorand Mrs. Meyner abroad.State officials are relaxing thedaily Rrind somewhat at theState House,
Competence Creates Confidence'
Adi,( |U,ilf l i i : , i i r . in,-c I , ii p r o t f f l l v f s h i e l d . ; n i i r i i n i i ; i i ^ . n n . t
in.-, I rnin [Mi - , fn rumc v.lui-li l.s n i r r l y p r o d l r t u h l c i»inl u n l o r -
t u i i d i r l y i l u ' r i - i n r s i n k i ^ ^ H J i n u i w u f n l n n I n M i r i i n , ! 1 K n n : ;v
:u ; inmtc t> t h u i . u r h iH' i 'nts w i n n o t o c c u r b i l l it I S tit*- I ! I I M I ; S
l>v w h i c h fulkfc tn . iv he |>rolr r tp<l l iKdl l l i t n i i i n i r l n l IDHS t l IIII-V
s h o u l d In- v i c t i m * n( lypn nf d i s a s t e r o r a i i o t l u - r As mi
INDKl 'KNDKN 1' AOKMCY we u r r III n p u M t l n n t c J l l v W i- imi-
p r t r n i l y n n a ; i I L I U H T S n.i.so<-lat,cd w i t h y o u r u i su rL i t i c i : r c -
q i u r n m ' l i L - i ^
Friendly Service — As Near As Your Phone
W29
STERN & " D R A G O S E T
Jiloui'linble for many years,,he urowiui; problem of ju.ve-ile riehmpieiiry with its rc-ultant criminal aspects, mayause the 1SJ58 Legislature tolax thorn somewhat, par-
icuUuly for the benefit of.oen-a^ors who no longer can>cnetit from schooling.llAC'IN(j; r Potvsons who vis-ted Uvii Jersey race trackshis yenr plunked down $281,-.49,218 in l)e(s on horses and i.ii tin: betting process tnrnrd$^4,451,773.43 mto the StateTreasury to operate the State
luvcrnment.Thomn.s J. Bro:;ai), of I'ater-
son, eiuiirman of the New Jer-sey llai'iiiK Commission, an-nounced tiiiit 3.0154,908 per-sons vioitod the tracks thisyear to make it the greatestracing season since pari-mu-tuel wajieriiiR was legalized inNew Jersey in 1938.
Garden State Park, nearCaindc.ii, which has a .split 25-duy season in the spnna andfall, had greater attendanceand more bets placed thanthe dther tracks, People numbti'iny 1,106,43U placed betstotaling $100,428,678 at theCumden track. Tlie MoumuutliPark Jockey Club, which oper-ates the track near , LioivBranch, hiid 982.792 custom-ers who watered $91,e4l!.8S2on the horses. The AtlanticCity race track had mi.Tii
patrons who bet $7B,1BO,743.
During World War 2. heserved a.s Lieutenant <JGi,U. S. Navy, participating inAtlantic Convoy duty and theinvasions of Luzon knd IwoJimo.
During 1955.
Prospectors found radioactivedeposits in a least 30 locali-ties in New Jersey, Later in-vestigation by '-'.eoloKist.s ledto their correct identificationas, uranium-related minerals.JERSEY JIGSAW:— Higherunemp'loyment disability pay-ments for New Jersey worker.'"has been recommended bythe Advisory Council on Dis-ability Benefits in a reportsubmitted to G o v c n i o rMeyner. . . .' Certificate ofownership mail service ha-sbeen extended to BurlingtonCounty to provide greaterconvenience to auto dealersin transferrin:.', car titles. .
CHRISTMAS SAVERSTlie big 1958 Christmas Club is nowforming ot this 1bank. You decideIhe amount youcan sjave; regularlyfor a prepaid
: ' Christmas nextyear. Tjiis isone Club whereevery member [
B A N K I N G H O U R S : g e t s h i i " d u e s "M o n d a y T h r u F r i d a y . . . • . . ,
9 A. M. to % P . M . back m one b.g check
FHday Evenings fW Christmas
4 P. M. to 6 P. M. shopping.
Join Today, and start 01 you way.
1*11. llhii FEATUILS IVM'U'AU Ir.. *f»Lb IlliHll ILi t fcvu
"By golly, Miss Rembrandt, you can't even draw astraight line WITH a ruler!"
Paid on Savings Accounts
WoodbridgeNational Bank
Our New Buildiim, Corner Moore Avenue
uiui Berry Street iO|n». Town Hull(
Member: Federal Kt»erve Sytlem and Federal Deposit liuur^rne
\<\F, TEN FRIDAY. 10T.
THESCREEN
-Till- viOKY OF MANKIND''I i is film, tukinn Its title from
H'lrdn!; V.ni IXIOM'S well-knownI..'•':. 11.111mils to offer a panorama< ' HI iknirt'> pnicrcss from theis ' I.I (In1 ciivc-maii to tlio H-I .)'!•,! i I! hiilllliKlltx till' llVCS (if: iii . tiiMin-.v us Moses. CIcopnli> m :j,i])iUo!i. Muiic Antoliu'tt.Nun of Arc. Sliaki!H|X!are. etc..' :!';'!• fli'm; is ;/ '!. wo i;urss. to• ' iMibti Hii ivm us a high trilin-!.n! HI i t s ID flr'cnnlni! whetherrnun .• hmilil tot allowed to dtstrovi mi i-lf with the H-bomb or• ' h i i i ' r In1 Is worthy of bi<lnp
•ill i],i- Ucvil. ii suave fellowl y i n n i y r d by Vincent Pi icei , ar-' I I I ii• • ;t• 11:st tin- Liiw of man, whll.>•••• : ' i iuit of Man (portrayed byKuiii.i'J f'tfliiiiini nrnuns.ln his de-j1ii. '• In timii' n t tempts to win(;. ii H'.|i!-i-tive ruses, var ious ' tpl -(•'il',- In.MI PHM. human history,l:"i:i Liiii unit good, are reenacU'd..V'fj.t t,[ tiif»,c urc plnyed straightl.'i: iin . in some cases, uninlen-li»;i;,llv funny.
A':ii;tn; those appearing as vari-mi ii'.tables are: Marie Wilson.Id :•. I..:nn:irr. Charles Cobuni.I'-'t'i I.orr*1. Apnes Morfhrad, Ed-•,,.!..I Iv.-i'i-ctt Horton. Ri'j>|niildCr i i in . - r Vir"ini;i Miiyo and Sir( i ,:ii.- !I:irdwk:ke.
'inly v
weaviiimueh
(T
til]
( ; • :
"M.Ai:f;HTKK ON TKNTIIAVI M K"
I ' jminiscenl of "On Tlip Wati ' i-l;-"i. !)H1 without Marlon Biiinrio
. i Marie Saint, this film is Hly :ind interesting attempt toin cm the public's interest m
IJ'IIIMKS on the waterfront —I'.ii ii' ui.uly of New York.
i • . . 'I'lif is on Die Manhat tanv i1 ' : limit, where grim events meI' , i ) '! off willi the shooting of a; ,:. .,-iii);einun boss, who has beeni. av.i..1 tiiu crooks in charge, TVr-i i.!\ v.'iMinded. he manages to ktun-i h l:i:, fillers. However, taken to;. i ii-;>it;il wliere he lingers for:"• HIT• day*- '1( ' denies his oiigiiiiilMM'tinTit. Then, on his deathbed,hi ivii(;rt.s his identification.
A .YUIIIK" newcomer to the district;•: tin in y's office is assigned to ' the I
ease mid for n while, he can'•onviiic" die oidtimers Hint th•vnt: rfinn1 mi'i'dfir ran bp solved,Evnniuallr, hr qct.s the confidence• if everyone a ml manages to (Uill'ho murderers. The story is said tobe his'-rl on i;ctiiii] fuels.
Prominent In the civst are Rich-ard Faun us the rnisndirii? younRD. A \s asslslnnt; Jnn Sterling asthe tdiiiMi. hut wood-hearted wifeof th'1 sliun lomtshorcman: DanDniyiii ii.s ii clever, less-tlwn-ad-minil'.li' trial Inwyei1. who tries tofree iIn* H:|i-rt,; dud Walter Mat -))i'\\ :i: a el (Hiked lubui boss.
(• J/n ^ra5hIon flowL J• r*c 11:;>]*•• the, most extravagantivasli' ill ni'iney II toman can In
ip j :; a chiip tin coat. Notill it look .sorry for Its first
i!1 !mt it v.ill very noon looke IIMII full to provide
sufficient wiirm'li.
It is possible to purchase a goodcloth coal for the price of a cheapfur coat. Don't make the mistakenf tryinu to 'M more for yourmoney than it is possible to do.
If you linvc a moderate amountof money to invest in a fur coat,choose a coat made of a fine qual-ity of a moderately priced fur. Thebest bnv in fur seems to be musk-rat It Is warm. lonii-weariiiB andquite beautiful.
The workmanship of any ftir•ii.it iicciiunts for the variation in>rics found in the same qualityif furs. A let-out muskrat coat will•list, about one hundred dollarsmore' limn a seamed coat. Theadded beauty may or may not beworth the extra money to you.
The moft admired fur, exclud-ing :i few such as chinchilla, sableand ermine, which arc out of reachto most of us, is mink. Here again,(he besl advice is—If you can af-ford only a cheap mink — buy aRood muskrat.
The beM policy when buying afur coat is to purchase it from areliable dealer The furs should bepliable and have n high-naturallooking luster. The guard hairsithese an the long, silky hairslyinj: on the surface> should benmiu'joii and healthy looking.
HOLIDAY PARTIES COMING UP,<;el "SET" For \)w Fun!
Ii cost nn inure in have the pro-frvti(Hi:tl MTviirs of one of Union{'(unity's iculing h.ilrdrrssers in th(most modern hfuuiy parlor in theari'a. THU complete floors devotedtti ;ill |>h:is<-s uf ht-.iuiy work. PrivatepArlvtii ni our own area <U rear of
IKIDIUC NOW FEATUR-ING A CREMF. I'ERMA-NEXT WAVE I VALUE TOSI5.00) FOK ONLV ?8.50
FRKDRIC AND SEVENj OITKATORS TO SERVE YOU
U°"t>15D ELM AVENUE, RAIIWAY — TEL. FU-8-9883
Take Your Pick!TWO BRAND NEW
GULF Service StationsFOR LEASE
^1 -ROOSEVELT AVENUEs and PEKOLA TERRACE
CARTERET#2-ROUTE 1 apd
SUTLER STREETAVENEL
Modern 2 Bay StationsWUHALLFAOMTIES
• MINIMUM INVESTMENT REQUIRED• FINANCING CAN BE ARRANGED
• EARN VH1.LE YOU LE/\RN
Excellent OpportunityFor Right Party!
Call EL 4-2700I Kit ween it A. M, and 5 F. M. — A$k fur Mr.
Or Call
KEYPORT 7 - 5 2 9 5 - R
During Thanksgiving WeekOPEN LATE
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY
P^AIII*
fixin's for your Turkty!Stuffing BreadStuffing MixChestnuts T M 1 " »25«
luui-illrtllrMi
READY-TO-COOK ''„••.Our Lowtsf Thanksgiving Turkey Prices In 77 years!
TURKEYSSizes 18 to 24 lbs. i Sizes 8 to 16 lbs. i Uider 8 lbs.
36 40 47Holiday Fruit and Vegetable Buys!
CRANBERRIESGOLDEN CORNICEBERG LETTUCE
fm Jersey Farms -
PotatoesOnions 2
A&P Turkeys a n i l l young, top-grade and told with a double your money back guarantee!
"Super-Right" Quality
RIBS of BEEFREGULAR STYLE
7 INCH CUT
5 #bOVEN-READY
10 INCH CUT 7 INCH CUT
O# c
"Siper-Riglrt" Quality
FRESH HAMSSVMK HALF BUTT HALF
CRANBERRY SAUCE 2 - 3 545: 55: 49:
WHOLE
Tomato Juice - 2 ! : 55c Mince MeatFruit Cocktail - 2 .:43c Pillsbury Pie Crust 2:/. 33cOrange Juice JSSL 6 - 89c Ice Cream :d>" ,185cPeaches •«»-*— 2 « 4 5 c Sharp Cheddar J 5 L * 5 9 c$weetPotatoe$:-21tt41c Liederkranz«»«•*•• ;:39cAsparagus Tips " £ -29c Reynold's Wrap , : 29cOwpMI't Mushroom Soup 1 1 ' « , - « • Suuhini Hydrox Crackers -''" IJr 33«Small Stuffed Olivet ^-^ '£u~S9< Chocolate Chip Cookies — 2n ; 49«
2 1 : K« n.: » • Pfeffeniuesso m^1X:fu
'!31« JM:81« Anise Cookies W k —
!*11« 1 1 : » • Burry's Cookies • c « L'.a i I*: n« Dromedary Pitted Dates
,...._ , . . 'IT 17° Calimyrna Figs ]fcjieii Corn * M&™^Wt f 2 : : « • Plum Pudding »
Dromedary Peels l i S T 1 24o"
Bake Your Turkey with REAL BUTTER!
FRESH BUTTERSunr/field—Fincy CreaMery
Salt of l i b .Sweet brick
U !• V4 a.prints
pi , .
I!
Evirated Milk f ^ J ^f t
• it
SliMd«rll(i*ND.I Mont, or Ubb/i
Topatois o%
YnkHCInb
IpnleCider$,tya Col« f iNs-Oal Beveragesfirfpe Iniee
rtlonw'iof Vtrf-Rn» 2^27«SugarChooolate Thin Hints i ***** ™'jb-45Delson's Merri-MintsFrltos ' * : » $ uHoom *Potato Chips & j ^ w - t i ^ f
Diamond Walnuts 1 (Mtrtal Paper NapkinsKleenex Table Napkins
2 ± 23«
ijlhlriltBami
tegular Size ^
-Jane Porker Fruit CflhAnerici't lt»oril« , . , i w H buit* « d nuU
»H »««tffl»«, Lucky Mrita, OW M i fNB» M M * IARK FRUIT CAKE:: 2.75 -3.95
79c 2*1 U 9' t Mi* •ffNlirt
Danish Blue Cheese l°^M b83c
Swiss Cheese t ^ t : lb 57"Cream Cheese S; , ; ; . 2 ; ; .29 e
Borden's Egg Nog ^ £ « •KraH's Cheez-Whiz ' ^ l f »QllAAll Cllil** ASP brand I «L Vt»
dHCeOdWISS N , l u r . i c h . . l . P i f l.3'B
Frozen foods,1
1 Dole's Juice p^.PPi..Gf.p.f,Uit 2 '^ 33 e
Libby's Strawberries "«<< 2 ' ; ; ; 41 'Libby's Cauliflower . . : /23 'Libby's Cooked Squash 2 ; , : 29'Libby's Brussels Sprouts , 2 7 'Cheese Blintzes M"J- V; 37e
Birds Eye Pies J l i ' * X M e
—JontParker i
DUTCHAPPLE PIE
Layer Coke choe»ut« MI* 59cCrumb Square ciffM e ^ 35c
(001) l t l » l l l l . . . UNCI H »
Hrmb, Uti h h** Mtriwto ami UH-Ur,*, ton* Mty.
uper J^arketsim HUT «uuiii( • twiit n t <QWMW
A& P SUPER MARKET, 1,13 Main St., WoodbridgeConfiitably Air-Conditioned
Open Tuesday* & Thursday* Ti l 9 P. M. - FrldayB 'Til 10 P. M.
A & P SELF SERVICE-STOR540 New Brunswick M *
FORDS, NEW M l
•|,;HKT l 'RESS
L c Nominated[ (jv Avenel Lodge
.,ii First nomination ofl 'f 'N' Ij
.,. ,A:I? lu'ld by the Pride of',,,,-,(•>• Cotmcil Sons and,,,,.; of Llherty a t a meetlnR
v r n p| School auditorium.l!f
Hi,ymond Hancock, wasr" | r ( | ns councilor; Mrs.' i Wiit^rhou.ce, associat*1
"\ . Mrs. John Molmr.111 ' nr; Mrs. Prank Ben-
li- vice-councilor; Mrs.Ktilde; Mrs. Louis
side Rimi'd; Mrs. Engaoutside guard; t .
wikfii'ld, recording soc-; Adolf Elster. assocl-
,-ceirrlina secretary; OleK T financial secretary:*"l, flipssel,-treasurer; Mrs,. i; Sirssrl. 18-month
i,[i.< ,!ncob Hentinn, two-r),!rjrntat.lvn to the statei uid Mis. Benson,* two-
,cni ' ! l
rV M '
[•;;•Bun
• , rvi> madf by the group,j TlianksHivinn services at'•.. prcsbvterian Church."•'•H. 11 A. M .
; .intinn was accepted to, ;rn">tion in honor of the.:l|r Mrs. Henry Amman...!<( :ii the Bohemian Hall; l inth Avenue, Newark
•UTI; completed for tin
|.,..,, is < i-iokic baskets and pic•k.i'ls. which will be do
in the vicinity• ••!• direction of Mr. Brook,:;,i Mi Sipssel. who ro-,1 •', it the project be com-
, i:iil returns made at the
!&>,>.&, for the social hour,i:;(|, i ilie direction of Mrs.
Mr. BrookMeld.
| s IN RESCUE ATTEMPTTH-\NY. MO—After rescuing
;• half-brothers from their:;IM)W\ Dukie Cogdlll, 32.iii'd when he went back forand died alonn with himmot her, Mrs. James Cav-
• sons and two daughters(j;i; -
CALL FOR AND O E L M I
SICK IOOM NffOJ
VITAMINS
Mir smuts
PUBLIXIPHARMACY
ill Main St., Woodbrldje
I'hone ME-4-0809K M ' V i l l ! I l l , S u n d a y M i l i i ..•
l l ir I'\IIKIN(; IN HEAR
IEELLS:VERY-HING
FRTDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1957 PAGE ELEVEN
Sub-Junior ClubTo be; Organized
.WKNKl, --• In ronnection withtar entry of the Junior Woman'sclub of Avctiol in the communityachievement contest sponsoredluinlly by the General Federation
aylii!ht !.„in* establishment.
not a landingt " provide '
Fiance,'bank-
The PenaltyDad -- Son, if you're a Rood boy
and learn a lot you might somediiy become president.
Son — And what if I ain't aRood boy and don't learn nothin?
Dad -- You miRht be elected tothe state legislature.
Folsom says laxity threatensmedical progress.
of Women's Clubs and the Sear1
R o e b u c k Foundation, a film,"Your Community." was shown atTufsdiys meeting in the Flvsl AidSquad building. Mrs Hans Niel-sen, chairman, reported on pros-ITSS and further plnnlnng to.ikplace.
Mt.is Mary Lou Qalisin wasnnmrd advisor of B sub-jiniloiclub which Ls bclnR organizedwith Miss Joann Mohr as asslst-
I ijnt. Election of officers will befield tonight at a meetlnt! at thehome of Miss Marie Bronoroir.S8 Burnett Street. Mlsi IreneMayer will be ro-liostess.
7t was reported that the districtfall conference. November 8 nt theHntel Winflcld S'rott. Elizabeth,was iiltonded by Mrs, MnrtinKGutiiw.skl. Miss Wilmn Fioehlich.
Miss Oail Cooper. Mrs James EGordon. Whs O:\li.siti. Mrs. Carldloskey. Miss Mohv, Miss Carol-!\IHI Fiickron. a prospi-etlve mem-ber, and Mrs. fp^nii'l Levy ihlh:idvlsor. MKs Onlisln attended asn Ruest in the capacity of statechairman of clvtos, leKLilatlon and
ii'i defense Mr?' NieUen. MissOalisln and Mrs Outowskl at-tnided * meetliiK of the JuniorWoman'* club of Rii/.tihr(h onOctober 28. Mrs. Gutowski at-tended the Board of Educationnioctuv m Wiiodbiidsi' on No-vir.l)'1:' t! and miiuiuu-ccl she willpi^scnt !icr ruport in the dubnewspaper.
Mi. s Cooler, music chairmiin.viiliMiV-eird tn wive nr. district,h;iiniian for.' the first annualnuisle fcKllval tn be held by clubs
In the district Miss Cooper aLsodiscussed the possibility of mem-bers and guests attending thechildren's b a l l e t . The NutCracker Suite" in New York dur-m: the Christmas hnlidav
Mis« Anne Bamngiutm. Amerl-can home chairman, distributedbooklets entitled "The Heart o!the Home' published by theAmerican Heart Association Sheannounced a national fashionsewing contest open to all mem-bers and urned those.. Interested toask her for details.
Mrs Bruce McKer was namedriiaurann of nylon stockinus sales
cAn Invitation was accepted to' visit the Scotch Plains Junior
Woman's dub on November 20,D(!H:\!i"ns were made to theMiddlesex County TuiieivtiloMs
nnd the Avenel-ColoniaFirst Aid Squad A jubcrlptlon totlie New Jersey Club WomaniniKiuiiii' »;vi purchased
AM exerutive boAtd meetlnn w ucalled by tlie prosident for No-veml»T 29 at 63 Smith 8trwt.
it «a^ announced that t chil-dren's movie, sponsored by the l i -bra iv board of trustees for th*benefit of the library, will be heMSaturds?)' and sevetal member*of the club voluntercd to assist.
Co-liostc:-se» for the meetlni*i're Mrs Gutowski and MlsiIlodv Jnsknlka The next meetlni.November 26 at the Flrit AidSquad bjilldins will be cFPea>r«-tlon Nicht ' with Mrs. JohnMytiniiti. district advLwr. U
, KUi'st .speafrrr The sub-Juniorclub is ftiviti'd to attend.
• • any product, anyWe * the dealer who advertittt
he Ydlpw Pages.°* for Him underKleolric Applianoei
AntiquesWindows'—
ny category you want; i i
In the
YELLOWPAGES
of your phon* book
MUTUAL'S HOLIDAY FOOD
Fresh
Midget BOLOGNA or
SALAMI _
SAVING \ .
MUTUALSUPER
MARKETS
OPEN EVERY NIGHT
TILL 9
Fill. TILL 10
"S PtRK
SAUSAGE MEAT 3 9lb.
Jersey PORK LOINSRib End 2 5 LLoin End 3 5 L
Center Cut PorkChops or Roast
Yon (let \ton> for Your Money <tl Mat mil!
lb.
Another UUnfrom Mutual!
BeautifulImported Genuine
GLASSWARE
Wax Beans 2 , : ;33c LIVERWURST , 13c
_ vi ib. 13cLiquid STA-FLOW
STARCH 2J1 33c CHEESE: New! Allen's STRAWBERRY Sliced1 35c DUTCH LOAF 1Sc
Fresh Made
. 4 9 c COLESLAW
PAYROLL CHECKSCASHED FREE
iONlS . - O U R SYMBOLOf QUAUT1T FOR ?0 YfARS
S W E E T , JUlCYl, LAlt t iE
TANGERINES
I KCSH U1I1TK
CAULIFLOWERHt'ads llJc Ea.
Brusset SproutsFirm Little 1 Q -Green Heads Box LZ/*->
Fancy OolclcnSwcit Potatoes
Ocean Spray Cape CoilFjrcsh CranberriesLb. B6x
7c PeasFremQrange Juice
Each PieceONLY
with any purchaMl
First Quality51 Gauge IS Denier
MINGE PIEPUMPKIN PIEAPPLE RINGGINGERBREAD
BIRDS EYE
FROZEN FOOD SALESave 5Oc-Send 4 lobeli to Birdlty*and receive a SOc rvfund.
Your Choice
F r e n c h F r i e s 6for"89 ( EffectiveNow Thru
Sat., Nov. ZJrd
i RinsoSoap Powder
pint
New Detergent
Wisk39c , ,59c
Swih't
Peanut Butter11-OL
[ar
PLENTYof
FREEPARKING
Mutual Super MarketRahway Ave.at Main St.
OppositeTown Hall
Waldorf Tissue3 roiii Zoc
Detergent Surf BreezePV9 35c ff 81c
Silver Dustsr sic
Rinso BlueX 33c 81c 12oi.
CM
Lux LiquidU*/C cu
Lux Flakes
PAGE TWELVE
Olhrr Opinionsi From Kclitoi'isil P a K f
less work, so I rntop fewerchickens hut inciTBSP thel>rlcv of those I do rnisr.
•'But you arpn't Bolnu to rr-palr more shoes in cxchanR*1
for a chicken; lie isn't BOIIIKto give more jjasollne. for nChicken. It's the s.ime chlck-
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1957 f-ART];
en; I haven't made It worthany more to you. So all youdo U ralsr the price of repairwork; he raises the price ofgasoline. But the retiredKrhool teacher can't raise hispension: he just KIVPS lipchicken.
"So nil I've done Is lose onecustomer, and traded dollarswith I he others.
"If I hurt worked more effi-
ciently 'mayue invested in amechanical brooder* I wouldhave had more chickens totrade tpr more repair workand more gMollne. and bycutting costs and prices a bit.got two teachers as custom-ers instead of one.
•And more people couW beenjoying chicken." •— Pueblo'Colo.1 Star Journal.
BETWEEN TWO KVILSWhatever else It proves, the
Little Rock story shows 1"friRhtenlna clarity the thinline separating ugly anarchyfrom Jackbooted tyranny inthe pecular American govern-mental structure.
Whon President Eisenhower.sent the paratroopers I"'"1
aclion he suit! anarchy couldresult if federal court orders
were permitted to he limitedwith Impunity. On the otherhiind It's just, H.S apparentthat n central Kovernmentwhich sends Its uninvitedtroops into ft state for onepurpose could later use themin other circumstances forother purposes.
Federal troops used one dayt.i stump out racial discrimi-nation might be used another
day to enforce governmentalwage and hour decrees or toput down the black market-Ing that often renults frompolitical attempts to repealthe law of supply and de-mand.
At Little Rock It was sud-denly apparent that the dualgovernment of divided powersconceived by the foundlm?fathers was ns delicately con-
trived as a fine watch. Thisfinely balanced governmentalmechanism turns on the Dec-laration of Indpendence'istated principle that govern-ments "derive their Juflt pow-ers from the consent of thegoverned."
That understanding is themainspring of the federnl-state relationship. Without Itthe peculiar American ROV-
BUSINESS aridlSER VICE DIRECTORYFurniture • • Musi: Instruction • • Plumbing & Heating • • Roofing and Siding
HENSCITSAccordion School
172 Brown Avenue, Isdiji
Private Accordion Lessons(Given In Your Home ur Our
Studio)0 Complete Accordion Repairs• 8>lei, Rentals, Eulm lines• Pickups and Amplifiers Instilled• Music Rooks for Accordion
For Information (all
ME 4-5666
• Auto Washing •
NOW OPEN!THE ALL NEW, MODERN
WOODBRIDGEarts
CompleteHand Car Wash
lO-Miimte Service!
701 RAHWAY AVENl'EBetween White Cluirrli and
Avpnel SI reel
Tel.: MErcury 4-4333Open Dally 8130-1:! :M, 1-5 I'. M.Sunday 8:10 ,\, M. to 13:30 I". M.
(Closed Every Monday)
Tues. - Friday Sat, and Sun.Regular I.511 Iti-Kiil;ir 1.75White wall 1.75 White wall. 2.00
• Dancing - Twirling •BE SMART . . .
LEARN TO DANCE!
ENROLL INOW-• ALL FIELDS OF DANCING• TWIRLING INCLUDED• SPECIAL GKOI'P CLASS
FEE— Tor Further litformntion —
CAM. KI-l-52!)!>KAY SYML'HIK, Director
CARTERET SCHOOL OFDANCING
128 EDGAR STKKET. CARTERET
Delicatessen
TREAT SHOPPE613 Railway Ave., Woodbridge
(OPD. White Church)
• SALADS at Tbeir Best
• SODA FOUNTAIN «
• FBESH BAKERY GOODS
Open 7 A. M. to 10:30 P.M.
INCLUDING SUNDAYSCloseil Wednesdays All Day
• Mirrors and Glass
Drugs
Avenel Pharmacy944 RAHWAY AVENUE
MErcury 4-1914
PRESCRIPTIONSWHITMANS CANDIES
Cosmetics - Film
Greetlne Cards
RAYMOND JACKSONAND SON
Druggists |
88 Main Street
Woodbridge, N. J.
Telephone MErcury 4-0551
Funeral Directors
SYMWtECKl
Funeral Home
46 Atlantic StreetCarteret, N. J.
Telephone KI-1-5715
FLYNN & SONKDNKKAl HOMESfc»talili»bril .11 Ve"»lid Hast Avenue
1'n tli Awboyti loru Ave., lords
V» t, U.J5H
NOW IN OURNEW HOME!
• BKHiER VALUES!• MORE TOP BRANDS!• BETTER SERVICE!• LOWER PRICES!
WINTER BROS.WAYSIDE FURH. SHOP
Serving Woortbrldcf ResidentsSince 1917
St. George Avenue at U. S.Highway 1, Avenel
(At the Woddhrldfitriovrrleaf Circle)
Open 9 A. M. In 9 V. M.. Inrl. Sat.
Phone MErcury 4-6666
Furniture Repair t
SOFA $12-CHAIR $6REBUILT IN YOUR HOME
All Work Guaranteed• Springs
Retied• New Heavy
Webbing> New
Linings
SUNSHINE UPHOLSTERYSpecialists in Sagging Seat
BottomsFor Immediair Service Tall
FUlton 8-5280
• Liquor Stores •
Telephone MErcury 4-1889
WoodbridgeLiquor Store
JOS. ANDRASCIK, Prop.
Complete Stock of Domesticand Imported Wines, Beers
and Liquors574 AMBOY AVENUEWOODBRIDGE, N. J.
MILTON GLASS CO.W. DZURILLA-J. POLL, Props.
"Everything in Glass andAlum;n>itn"
Comb.Storm
Windows4 Heavy Gauge• 3 Panel Swivel'• 5 Years to PayAlso Comb. Doors - Jalousies
l l O R S"ustom-made touit your needs.
Shower DoorsCustom and
standardFree Estimates
I'onvenlcnt BudgetTerms Arranged
"Glass for Every Purpose"
79 E. Milton A/venueRAHWAY
ShowroomP> Block From
l'enn. R. R. StationFU-8-7373 — FU-8-1031
Moving tf Trucking
Complete Moving Job3 Room* S25 4 Rooms ?30S Booms $35 6 Rooms |4«All Loads Insured — 10 Venn Exp.
ECONOMY MOVERSNATION-WIDE MOVERS
Fulton 8-5914
48-StateMovingServiceAGENT
National Van Lines
A. W. Hall and SonLocal urn! Ions BUtiMice
Moving aud StorntfeNATION-WIDE MlilWEH* of
Household aud Office FuroiturtAuthorlitd Afont
Howard Van LlneiSeparate Itoonu for Storage(RATING • PACKING
SHIPPINGliiiiUliuril I uriiilnrc of Every
DeiUlytlouOffice and Warehouse
34 Atlantic Street, Carteret
T*l. KI-1-5S4O
Fnroll your childnow for prlvatr
TRUMPETGUITARACCORDIONSAXOPUONK
GIBSON • PIANOGUITARS • TROMftONE
and Amplifiers • D R U M s
STUDENT RENTAL PLANFor Information Call HI-2-69M
SAMMY RAY'SSAM LAQUADRA, Prop.
MUSIC and REPAIR SHOP467 New Brunswick Avenue, Fords
Slip Covers • • Printing
Learn to Play the Accordion
The Modern,
Easy Way
No Accordion
To Buy
On Our Easy Rental PlanInternational, modern and classicalmusic taught to beginners and ad-vanced students. Agents for all top-make accordions.
We carry a full line of MusicalInstruments and Accessories
Perth Am boy's Oldest F.stablishedAccordion Center
18 Years at tbe Same Location
EDDIE'S MUSIC CENTEREd Bonkoskl, Prop.
357 State St., P. A. VA-6-1290
Photography
SAVEUp to
50%By Ordering
'^AiC~ ' All Your
PHOTOGRAPHIC
CHRISTMASGIFTS NOW!
A Small Deposit Will Reserve
Your Selection Till Christmas
EASY PAYMENT PLANS
• Plumbing andHeating Satesand Service
• Oil Burners,Sales and Service
• ^URNACE CLEANING
KARMAZINPLUMBING & HEATING
• Commercial » Residential0 Industrial
18 MAIN ST. (Opp. Town Hall)MErcury 4-4765
t Pianos and Organs t
KODA COLORColor Film Developing
48 HOUR SERVICE
Black and White Film
Developing and Printing
24 HOUR SERVICE
BEST SELECTION OFPHOTO SUPPLIES LN TOWN!
GALLARD'S PHOTO547 Amboy Ave. ME-4-3651
Because we have practically
NO OVERHEADwe can offer low prices on
Pianos and OrgansUSED PIANOSBought and Sold
PIANO INSTRUCTIONPhone LI-8-2387
Edison Piano Co.1059 Amboy Avenue(Edison) Fords, N. J.
Piano Instructions
t Plumbing & Heating •
McGrath Bros.Oil
BurnerSALES andSERVICE
Free Estimates - ServiceComplete Installation
Cleaning— Phone —
ME-4-2J24 or HI-2-1182
WOODBRIDGE
Plumbing & Heating
• Remodeling;
• New Installations• Gas and Oil Burners
Call MK-4-3046, HI-2-13U
L. PUGUE8E • A. LIPO
Charles FarrPlumbing - Heating
Electric Sewer Service
Telephone:
MEraunr 4-0894
621 UNDRN AVCNUB
Woodbrtdge. N. J.
SEU IT I'Hktl Mfc
WANT ADS
We Specialize in
B E G I N N E R SPiano Instructions
Taught in your owh home
evenings and Saturdays.
— For Information Ca.ll —
MARK R. SIMON64 Mulberry Street, Carteret
KI1-2311
E &LROOFING
CO.Insured
Booting Installation andRepairs of All Trpet
• ALUMINUM SIDING• LEADERS • GUTTERS• SLATE REPAIR• HOT ASPHALT ROOFS
For Free Estimates Phone
VA 6-5616 or VA 8-9420
T.R.STEVENSRoofing and Sheet Metal Work
6S5 ST. GEORGE AVENUEWOODBRIDGE
Repairsof MlTypes
Alr-Condltlonlng - Warm Air HeatIndustrial BJtUH'.t System
Motor GuardsrOg. FREE ESTIMATES
Call ME-4-2IU or ME-4-52«S
Service Stations •
TOWNE GARAGEJ. F. Gardner & Son
485 AMBOY AVENUEWoodbridge
MErcury 4-3540
We're Specialists In ,• BEAR WHEEL ALIGNMENT
AND BALANCEt BRAKE SERVICE
Sewing Machines •
Carmella
Piano Instruction244 Benjamin Avenue ^
Iselin, N. J,
For Information Call
Liberty 8-0077
HOVANECSEWING MACHINE SERVICE
Frank Hovanee Prop.(J57 Roosevelt Avenue Carteret
PHONE KI-1-5450
• Machines Repaired andElectrified.
• Needles and Parts for allMakes.
• Expert Workmanship andPrompt Service,
• Shoe Repairing •
Radio & TV Service •
AL'S RApiO& TELEVISIONPrompt Expert Repairs
KCA Tubes and PartsBatteries
34 PERSHING AVENUE
CARTERET, N. J.
A. Kish, Jr., Prop.
Telephone KI-lf5089
MARTINSON STORE413 Lake Avenue, Colonia
(Next lo Shell Station)Phone FU-1-0114
• Shoe Repairing• Scissor and ke Skate
Sharpening• Radio and TV Tubes
Tested"Come in soon . . , you're only
a stranger here once."
SELECT NOW!Fabulous new 1!IM SlipCover Kkbrlra now Instock. We'll bring saplii to your home.
SERMAYANUPHOLSTERY SHOPS
C(t. 19*7RAHWAY t AVENEL
ME 4- 121Jrv-i-nu
• Sprtlftg Goods •
Bet That REEL FIXEDNOW!SERVICESTAflON
FORMITCHELL"RUMER""PENN"
"ALCEDq1, "AIREX", "CENTAURE1'
Home of Reel Parts .Wholesale and Retail
REEL REPAIRS A SPECIALTYALL MAKES
Reel Clucked, Cleaned,Polished, Greased and
[ Adjusted, for OnlyPlus Parts if Needed
• TROUT WORMS• WILDLIFE PICTURES
(framed)• HUNTING, FISHING and
MOTOR BOAT LICENSESISSUEDA»k How You Can Win
One of Our Trophies
RUDY'SFISHING TACKLEAND REPAIR
SPORTING GOODS256 Monroe Street, Rahway
Telephone FU 8-3894
Televisioi
For Expert
TELEVISIONSERVICE
at reasonable rates
Call
Herb Richman TVFurton 8-9164 '
•Venetian Blind Cleaningt
• Slipcovers - Draperies •
SET NEEDREPAIR?
CallME-4-4360
ART'S RADIOTELEVISION
—SALES and SERVICE—155 AVENEL ST., AVENEL
Antennas installed, Tubes test-ed free at our store, Car Radiosserviced promptly.
REPAIR ESTIMATES FREE!
• Roofing and Siding
Henry Jansen & Son
Tinning and Sheet Metal Work
Roofing, Metal Ceilings and
Furnace Work
588 Alden Street
Woodbridge, N. J.
Telephone MErcury 4-11H
CUSTOM-TAILORED
SLIPCOVERS• MODERN
• TRADITIONAL• PROVINCIAL
Choice of New 1958 PatternsSPECIAL!3-Pc. Set
Reg. $129.95
$89-95
Budget Terms
CUSTOM DRAPERIESNewest 1958 Pattern* «*-,
Visit Our Showroom-Open Daily 9:30 to 8,
Friday 9:30 to 9
.For Free Ettlmatei
Call ME-4-6410
RON-LENPECOByrQ&S, INC,
93 Main StreetWoodbridfe ^ L r f s ^
Have A Business OrService Problem??Solve It ThroughThe DIRECTORY
MACHINE PROCESSVENETIAN BUNDCLEANING
• Picked up at your home• Tapes, Cord* arid Slats
cleaned beautifully
• Delivered and RehjunfAll in Just 24 Hours
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HI-2^91261V91
ARCOVENETIAN BLIND LAUNDRY
223 New Brunswick AvenuePerth AMbdy
INSURANCE
CHAS. A. BOBKIERFinancial Planning Consultant
ESTATE ANALYSISBUSINESS AND GROUP
INSURANCE
Life, Accident, HospiUUxatlon
— Telephone —HJ-l-471* MA-l-MM
IS Hickory Koad UM Harmon*COLON1* Blvd., Newark
FOR QUALITY
Wonder - Worker
o u t f l o w — can you guaranteethis U)U-wrlnl<le oieam?
Assistant — Majlam, it wouldomooth w t corrugated lion,"
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MIDDLESEXPRESS
THE WOODBRIDGEPUBLISHING CO.
20 GREEN STREETWOODBRIDGE
G e o i 'w W;,.u"nk tin- ,„eminent, i,,.w o u l ( t last,Franklin \Vl,.c a l » r the ,,>indrrst.(in,|
RATKS -
, $ U " '"' I". «,,rd.
r » v . n , i , . ,„ ,;inii
Deadlini" f ( ) r ; l | K ^
10 A. M. for II,,. , „
NOTE:Norh , M | , , , |over phonr; mii-i i,,. l p j
Telephone .M,,,,,,-,
• I(Ut N
HALF I /3T M,:tpret. InquiiT w
9treet. South •%>•1-13B1
Foil M i l
THREE-P1ECK ::
win« ciinn. M.[ottoman, AIIXI-cembor 15. Call I '
• FEMALE l l l i |- \\
CASH IN on i...Chiistnias s,•:!:•
resentinn Avon rP. O. Box 70,'). i'PL-6-6655.
• MALE III I I- \\\\{\
SALESMAN MANV :jewelry store, <\>establishment, p.chain. Write i!, •newspaper, def-ence, etc.
• KOI! Kl \ I
FOUR-ROOM AP.\:, ;••.Thornal l H: :M- • .
derly couple. (';,:: K:
M I S C K U . W I i l l -
Tribes urges U. S. not to endcare of Indians.
Tobacco farmers are belifgsqueezed by acreage reductions.
New Jersey PolliProm Editorial Page)
Profeuionalworker* 46 54 46 54
Butlnet ownen-manacers .43 57 39 61
Safet-clericalworker* 51 46 52 4«
SkilledcrafUmen . 58 42 57 4S
Manualworker* 63 37 59 41.One other significant find-
ing revealed in today's poatelection analysis stydy it thatMeyner ran better among menthan i\e did among women.Among women, he received59% of the vole to 41% forForbes, but among the menwho voted In the November 5election, he was only able toget 53% of the vote to Forbea'47%.
The N. J. Poll correctlyIndicated that Meyner woijldbe the winner. Unofficialelection retu/iu abpw that theNew Jersey poll correctly pre-dicted tha winner within itsusual 4 per cent martin.
Tins newtpap«r presents thereports of the New Jersey Pollmliulvely In this area.
IF YOUR D W N K i v ;a problem. .V-
mous can help3-7528, or \v:;f<- ]'
• Sl'KVH I
HAVINO TROflii:sewerage? fV '
removes rout.'-, :.stoppage fromdrains and se»-i-i.- ".damages—rapid ,i:..;Tony's Plumb:n ..ME-4-8007
Chain o'liill
P a r k ltf|Mirj
— T l i e Ci . . i ! ! . -Club held ; '- ::T u e s d a y , at ti.' 1Clmrcli. IsiMi ••speaker. Mr .1",ber of the Hca,•:spoke on tin1 »•srum, which •>'•Chaln-o-Hiils v.
Many of llle ' ' :to work on tin1 <, —The Chum-'Dressins Club in-'home of Mrs. Dm..ington Avemii' i';
Jewkes. Lon.iim 'IDerrln. Jo emu:•••>mers, Jenny M" : 'feider and Riiuiw;<lire 'beinx iiw'l'1
material wlnrii >xcancer drt-ssiu-information, i>l'--> 'the above wonun
—Mr. and M'and daughter, wentertained -Vl :
Prler and fHini.h
Mr, mi Mrs t' !
daughter. Cok*. i—The Ch.tiii-" '
del club.met M»jthe llome of Mis
RivinBty;i stn-'iing will be hf|11 •Mrs. Mike Millai H
Xhwc is iif'1''in the chftiHro-1';1
Pack 138. Fur ;ttlon, p l«w '''WllHwn Do*'11 '•
—Anniversaryto Mr. and Mi
in'-11'
s i yean of
WilW'1" '
„• ^11!'^
fhorsen,bntad i
tovey tojjcMtthon,had their t
UKV PKKK.S
line Meeting|0!,| by Auxiliary
- ; . Mrs. Thomas..pinLed on the county
,,.. ,.|in'[ held at the First,n cluirrh of Avonel nt,,f i.hp Lncttes Atixllary,
-:. i.iorial Past V.P.W., in.,.iiii'i nt Club AvrnpJ.
,.. niiivd Fors lund. c h n i r -, Christmas candy sains,
,1 numbers to submitby Monday.
,, ih Axl was named us: : . r lo attend a tssti-MinT in honor of Mrs,
.1 ivhnMbcr. departmenti:,•usurer, Saturday, In
iwlindr award was won\Villliim Dragos and
• nc Mrs, Axt and Mrs,Hud.
FRIDAY. NOVEMBER
AVENFIAutumn Chill, Horn Recipe Whet Appetites
Chnpmnn,street, reported to the
-(l:i.v that his son's bikenff the porch,
l« »n3I tmid Of
licy'rt mid*I ,• 11 n r i • Jl
Now In o
H-foot »tyl
n Elasticlocking That
\ LookIs One
|c-> r\:'i * Blicfc. : ulltini 1O, .i on o n t..itiuui ovet-
Hump ME-4-080S
PUBLIXPHARMACYl M.iin Street, Woodbridge: I •• n i l ID. Si indHT t i l l 1 I 'M,
111 I P A R K I N G IN R E A R
>»• wi l l f n l ( T t . , i n .
Avenclite Marks«Oth Birthday
AVFNEr, - Tiie 801.1, birthday'" 1<(1»''rt Ciimpbell was cplr- j_ ' • l ••! a parly nt I he home of"•'' s n | 1"ii i-lan' mid dsiiinhter Mr Iuirl Mis Thomas Hill. 7'J Fleet- 'wind Uoiul. Wnocibfidpc
Ammi'i the ,ui..sts were Mrs AMiHdnrk, Trenton; Mr. and Mrs'W. B. CuuiKlrrs. Massachusetts-Mr, and Mr.s A Ciimpbell West
»e; and Mrs J, Campbell.iinrl M r s . Thomas Brown.
Elizabeth; Mr A Hill. Railway;A l s " Mr. and Mrs. w . Culk-n
Mr. and Mrs I) MiirArthur. Mr!mid Mr.s. Andrew Ciimpbell. Mrand Mr.s. Donald Campbell, Mr.nnd Mr.s David Cnmpbell, Mr nnclMrs. W Holrhki.ss, Mr. and Mrs.L Hoss. Mr. and Mrs A Mf-nenno l l . Mr imd Mis J. Syme
jMr and Mrs F I3mey. Mi. andMrs K Kersey Mr and Mrs H<"'"'l Mr and Mrs, T Price. Mr.iinrl Mrs A CiimpMl. Avenel;
Also Samuel Green, Philati 'd-»l»ia; Mr and Mrs A MiirArthur.Mi and Mrs s Malcolm. Kcarny;Mr and Mrs. M Cairns, Mr. midM n A Kici'. WooribrldKc; Mr.
md M:., H Kimdnd(!e, C'arlnTt.
( . I N l i l . A s r K i l l S HOY
•MI KSllUUV, Md, ••- WilliamII.my Bradford. 10. and his broth-• i. U H id L I T , M, missed iin early• • • l : i « i l b u s . i n , ! . w h i l e . W i i i t l i i u f o r
iln- ii' xt bus . iM'uan p l a y i n g w i t h
i r . ! - u : n i ' r s l i o l ' i m . T h e younui ' l '
JIIV nI .ihln-ti t h e biiiTel of t h e g u n
iield I)V :ii> b r o t h e r It d i . schar i i fd .
• i i K i n ^ t in ' boy in t h e c h e s t , in-
s la i i t lv killiiv.' h i m T h e b o y s ' p . i r -
i i l l - w e r e at work :it t h e t i m e .
BY DOROTHY MADDOX
A S ' h c d a y s Erow colder, w* alllike to plan more substantial
Here's a combination of [owlsalmost everyone in the family^ill rave jibout—grilled hams'«ik, sour cream gravy, butter-woiled sliced pineapple, boiledpotatoes, hot sweet rolls, butterpeach pie, coffee, milk.
Sour Crtam Gravy (1 cup)One cup dairy sour cream, 1
tablespoon chopped parsley, 1teaspoon minced union, '4 tea-spoon dry mustard, U teaspoonsweet basil.
Mix all ingredients together,Allow to stand at room tempera-ture for at least 30 minutes.Spoon onto hot grilled ham slicejust before serving,
Ham milk gravy is good, too.After frying ham, n-move from•iron skillet. To the drippings inpan, add at least 1 tablespoonbutter and H tablespoon flour.Mix well, then slowly stir inenough milk to make smootH andslightly thickened gr;ivy. Seasonwith mustard, salt and pepperand paprika. Serve hot in sepa-rate dish
Bolter-Broiled Pineapple Slices(6 servings)
One No. 2 can pineapple slices,drained; ',.. cup melted butter,whole cloves.
Brush pineapple slices liberal-
Council DiscussesSpecial Projects
John BAmboy.
Platw
PAGE THIRTEEN
Kitan pa*t home. Perth HTROMIK.R M.I VACUNK, . O r teioy L Bmney. U 8.
*""" f l i r l h e r P d f o r »'8urRroii-Oiii'rtil has announced •2 \ a t ffor Disabled Vet<-r»ns. mo,, p:,,«,f,,ifMenlo Park. Attendance awards
| AVENEt, — Special projects for were won by Mrs. Mary Pluta and! the ye«r and tin n.rmH mrmbrr-; Mm. M»r«e PaMor. i U b o d | , g l V f protection
ship drive were bvo of the subject* i ^ n l n M . ,h(, ^ , 0 8 , ^ „ „ ,discussed bv Mrs. John P. Osthofl.: rosMETirs INDUSTRY "f the people vncclnated. Uw «toc-eiKhth district president, at a : A ., with n bl« tor wld, but "by duublln* th« po-
, mectinn of the Middlesex Comilv A m " " B n * o m i " *"11 ' " " „,....„ ,,1(, ,.,„,.,,..,. „, w h t r h l t
'council of Auxiliaries held in the «ssl"< from men .... nrr experts p , " ^ , , " ; M , , Z i l ' S williniditoiliim of t r t First Pretty • to shell out so:\e 1'.. billion duilus up lo 95 p"r cftit 'terian Church with the Ladles''this ye.u fur coMnetics nud toil-
! Auxiliary. Avenel Memorial Pi»l firte.i. Tltfs tolul ! m doubted with- U, 8. syphiln raws IrtcreM*,7164 VF.W. netlU't as hftvtfs.s ,„ tl,e utsl Uu y^ur.-, revcrMliK trend.Mrs Dsihofl iufonied '.w gron'i
Grilled ham topprd with sour cream pravy will satisfy appetitesmade ravenous by the fuotball weather ahead. Pineapple bcolorful touch. >
Y' »
ly with melted butter and studeach slice with mie or two clovesJ'lacu on broiler ;iml broil until
liuhtly browned,pciii brovninu.broiled ham.
Turn and re-Serve with
IFomen s AU 2 7 d r e s ' s l n s s completed in five I Representative Price of Illinois.
t i f H it \
Christensen's"The Frinulh Slurr"
PiroueiM, my B«i! H « f •««ofi*>
lw»Ui-wilb (ulleiio^ h«oJ «nbioi-. . . «nd • colUr th.t
toct up « <Mn, II T»u< ' l n c»- w " h
il h*pplly, w(|tr it injwlwra — tbntgrceibla perlifrmer i» Inurtiwk Won'deripun Orion. SilM 3440. vAvailable In Kose C O f tand Aqua DtV°
To (iivv (>ijt$ to A galAVENEL — The substitution ot
Klfls to the Presbyterian Home forthe Awed at Belvidere for membergift exchange met with a favor-able vote by the Women's Associ-ation of the First PresbyterianChurch.
Seventeen new officers wereelected for 1958-59. with installa-tion to take place at the Christ-mas meetlii", December 10. MrsFrank Cenegy was elected vicepresident of the executive board;Mrs. William Ross, recording sec-retary; Mrs. George Becker,treasurer, and Mr.s. G. K. Young,financial secretary. Members tocontinue their second year on theboard arc Mrs. Arthur Peterson,president: Mrs. John tomkins,vice president; Mrs. CharlesKiihlman. vice president: Mrs.William Patrick, correspondingsi'cretary. and Mrs. Robert Toft,ways and means chairman.
Mrs Daniel Howell reported
meetings of the community cancerdressing group. The membershipwas asked to contribute pastel andwhite sheets and other clean.white, used materials to be usedby the committee which meetsWednesdny from 1 to 3 P.M.
Mrs. Frank Mazzur reviewed theexpansion program of the Wood-bridge School system scheduled forreferendum by popular vote. De-cember 11.
Ufi lasuruciSukntu and Accident InsiiraKiGroup Insuranc*
SEE F, M. SCiaAGETEK920 Yvonne PlareElizabeth 3, N. ,1.
Tel. EL-3-6452
THE PRUDENTIALIrariKi («npti| if Hiwrlci
t aufwol lift iluttt4*n
who hns just returned from Mos-cow, reported that a nuclear-powered plane would "soon" belaunched.
WOODDRIDGE DISTRICTN. J.
i hat tile membership drive will'•nd December 31. fin- ur |ed sup-port of the cystic fibrosls projectwhich was initiated by, and isiiudi'i the sponsorship of. Mrs •Ihomas Butler, department presi-dent Mr.s Oslhoft Riser reportedshe will officiate at lustitutlon ol 'an auxiliary lo l.t Howard DKittell #Post 5164. Snyveville, andin-itallatlon nf officers of the unit.November 30. 8 P.M. The cere-monies will take place in theRobert E. Lee Inn, Morgan.
PresidulK oflicer. Mrs. GrorgeGassuway, council president, paidtribute to all Gold Star wo'Vrs .and announced she and Mrs, AnnDowd will represent the councilat a testimonial dinner far Mrs.Raymond Schreiber, department isecretary-trea.surer, Saturday, inNewark. j
Mrs, Mary Thorn, pa.it countyc.ouncil. Installed newly electedtrustee, Mrs. June Svtrhn, Mrs.Thorn and Mis, William Dangcllwill act as chairmen for the dis-trict auxiliary and council respec-tively for the joint Christmasparty, December 13. at yw Sift.
TQ ALL MY FRIENDSI'd like to say "tliauk you, sincerely" (or your past
confidence in mo . . . and . . . let you know I still
specialize in Helling personally selected, nearly new,
late model "CADILLACS" for the most discriminat-
ing buyers. I'll wager I Unve one for VOl' tod.ay!
Please just phone. . . . ^
HAROLD SAYLES
PI-4-0700
(9 A. M . - 6 P. M.)
FV-8-H978
(Evenings)
NEWSHOE CLUB
NOW FORMING
JOIN NOWWeekly Drawings
GIDDEN'SJuvenile
SHOES:{()« Maple Street
Perth Amboy(Next to Post Office)
gasburner^^with a brain
an extra phonemakes life easier
FOODS'WONTBURN
Cook this new way. New gat top
burners are as automatic as today's
gas ovens . . . they make every typo
of clumsy plug-in cooker out-of-
date. A sensing element makes con-
tact with pan. Food's won't burn;
won't overcook or undercook. Only
gai makes all your pans automatic
became only gas responds instantly
with 1001 automatic cooking speeds.
. . . wonderful gas ranfe sales event!
Buy now, get the Burner with a
Brain range of your choice at a
Mving.
...for everyone in the family
'••* «ur convenient Lay-Away Plan. A small d ^ s i tw i " hold yopr gift selections till Christmas at
''vtl'< cost. '
- Store Hours: Daily 9 A. M. to 6 P. >[• .'•lay Till 9 P. M. — Closed All Day V T t u I
Christensen s97 \t,u\ snuw
Makes answering sujid calling easy,
an extra phone—especially in the
kitchen—saves miles of fetepa for busy
housewives.
Friendly relaxation . . . it's easier to
take time out to chat with friends if the
phone is always handy.
Offers extra privacy... this is especially
welcome to teenagers and a relief^ parent*.
Dad likes it for business calls top.
Yon atop missing calls . . . the
phone is always in earshot—6asy •
to reach without rustynf <
To order-simply call your telephone business office.
SEE JULIA MUDE DEMONSTRATE. MLATEST AUTOMATIC GAS APPLIANCESOVER "PLAYHOUSE 90" CBS-TV
Hpre Is Your Opportunity To S a c
On The Purchase Of A New Ran ;e
NOW is the right time to replace your old, out
of-date stove with a new automatic Gas range
Delivery, Installation and Ui>me Demonstratjor
Included •
Showrooms open Friday evenings andtsaturdays from 9 A. M. to S P. M.
ELIZABETHTOWN CONSOLIDATED GAS CO.220 Market Street, Perth Amboy, N, J
Phone III-2-S510
InURTKKN FRIDAY, NOVKMHKR 22, 1057
GUYSF R 0 M A H A R R IS 0 N
FORDS - WOODBRIDGERT.'tfo. 9, y 4 MILE from TURNPIKE EXIT
100 Yards from Exit 128 — Garden State Parkway
OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30 A.M. to 9P.M.
• ELECTRONIC*
TELE-TYPERNEW ELECTRIC TOY actually srnds andreceives TFXEGRAMS, NEWS, WEATHEKREPORTS . . . from House to House . . :4
Room to Room. Transmits and prints Mfs-sagos by Remote Control. Operates on HouseCurrent. *
Below Cost
Reg. 16.95 COUPON
WITH THIS
GOOD THROUGH NOVEMBER 24
DANCING DAN"With His Mystery.Mike1
l)AN('IN(r DAN . , . will dance i"
rhythm to your voice. Dan will also
dance to phonograph, radio or televi-
sion if you hold the microphone against
the speaker and press the mike button
down all the way.
BELOW COST — KEG. (i.!)5
WITH THIS
COUPON
GOOD THROUGH
NOVEMBER 24
NOTICE! All Church & Charity Groups - -• SPECIAL DISCOUNT on TOYS •
Bring Identification to Store Manager
CHRISTMAS TREE
LIGHTSString of 8 Series
ICESKATESBoys' and Girls'
Keg.8.95
- BONUS OFFER -
'AUDIOENGINEER1'
and
Trainman'sEmergency i
LANTERN
( - •
TOASTMASTERAutomaticPOP-UP
TOASTERWilhThis
tuupon
• Wllli .the purchase of any Lionel trainset or $15 or more of Lionel accessories.
#1B18 good through November 24
NATIONALLYADVERTISED
PORTABLE
TELEVISION
8.90 Down
- YOUR CHOIGE -Famous Name
9%Cu. Ft.
REFRIGERATORCROSS TOP FREEZER
or 9V2 Cu. Ft.
Upright FREEZER ••
ea.
12.95 Down
HI-FI HEADQUARTERS - RCA - ZENITH - EMERSON - WEBCOR
- TOP NAME -
HI-FI CONSOLERADIO-PHONOGRAPH
4-SPEED AUTOMATIC CHANGERi SPEAKERS 9.95 Down
54" Famous Name
CABINET SINKPorcelain Top — Fixtures Included
30 Gallon
HOI WATER HEATERAuto. Gas — 10-Yr. Warr.
Glass-Lined
- YOUR CHOICE -
5.95 Dpwn
"LAMBRETTA"
MOTOR BIKEA. Maximum speed: 31-34 miles per
hour
B. Fuel consumption; 225 miles pergallon
C. Air-Cookd Motor
11995Floor Sinnph' ll.!)5 Down
(•) PRICE DOES NOT INCLUDE SI KVH 11, DELIVERY, INSTALLATION.
FIBERGLAS DRAW DRAPESModern, traditional and floral designs on white bsirkground.48" wide per pair . . . 2H yards long.(Wash and DRIP-DRY, requires no ironing.) 5.9!!,<
FIBERGLAS DRAW DRAPESPinch pleat. Solid color.42" wide to the pair . . . 63" lone. .Colors: pink, turquoise, sreen, fold, whltr and cocoa.
SOLIDCOLOR 49
FIBERGLAS CAFE CURTAINS60" wide to the pair . . . 36" lonB,With brass rings. Solid color.Colors: pink, turquoise, jreen eold, white sand and cocoa.
SOLIDCOLOR
.9i:,.
Extra Wide - No Iron <n<mK-pCrm" IOHK-HMT pairFIBERGLAS CURTAIN /00' Ions—per pair
3.193.293.67 2.9
SPECIAL PURCHAof Christmas
Nylon Tricot
LINGERIE-Values to 3.98
.69
'\
^ • ' A
• ' * Vi
Nl
• Sheath and flare styles trimmed in luxurious
nylon lace and net.
• Machine washable—drip dry.
• White, pastels, black, in regular and extralarge sizes.
Ladies' Cotton
Challis GOWNS• Washable-Warm
Sleopwear
• Walts and LongGowns j
• Prints on White andPastel Grounds
0 Sizes 32 to 42.
/ H'
i \ .t i<
• • • % •
Lidies' Flannelclt'
PA JAM A SI• Ski stylet with cotton
knit cuffs
t Novelty and man-tailored styles
• All desirable colors
• Sizes 34 to 48
. 5 '
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