· weather fair with variable cloudiness today; high, 5o-j5. filr tonight and tomorrow. low...

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Weather Fair with variable cloudiness today; high, 5O-J5. Filr tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight. Mi.' High tomorrow, mid-40!. See weather, page I. BEDBANK 1 Independent Daily f I MONDAY THtOVOHrUDAY-tST.im j REGISTER Distribution Today 17,675 SH 1-0010 VOL. 83, NO. 180 bund atliT. Umttr tarouis Friday, ••coal Ciut Poitw PaU tt K»d Buk *n4 u AdOIUosil lUUlnt OBICM. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1961 7c PER COPY 35c PER WEEK BY CARRIER PAGE ONE Prof, Students Join Fray at College Council Tables Administration. Censure Move By PETE HOFFMAN WEST LONG BRANCH — Ac- tion to censure the administra- tion . of Monmouth College was Initiated by the Student Council Monday night A resolution was offered stat- ing that the Student Council, as representatives of the student body, "no longer has any confi- dence in the ability of the pres- ent administration . . ." Tabled Action on the measure was tabled 'unW tt* "entire-report by the American Association of Uni- versity P r o f e s s o r s published Monday could be studied by the council's executive committee. In the wake of the report and the council's action, many stu dents expressed the fear that the controversy between the ad- ministration and the college chap- ter of the AAUP might lead to • loss of accreditation for Mon- mouth College. This is of particular importance to education majors whowill be seeking teaching posts and sen- ior* planning to go on to grad- uate school. True Report The censure resolution, intro- duced by Donald Ambrose, treas- urer, cited published accounts of the AAUP report in itsTpring bulletin. Mr. Ambrose said the charges of the AAUP were "severely crit- ical" and the report "does great damage to the reputation of Monmouth College and hence to the student body" and called for (See STUDENT, Pg. 2) Dr. Teeters Is Appointed To Board NEW SHREWSBURY - Dr. D S^SSS 2 W 2 'h Shrewsbury Board of Education. He wiU fiH the unexpired term of Harrison A.-Hubbard, who re- •lgned last month because her is mov4ng away from the borough. Dr. Teeters is employed at Bell Telephone Laboratories, Whip- * 274 t0 pany, in electronics switching systems development. He is a Commander in the Naval Reserve. Born In Michigan, the new board member has a Bachelor's degree from Oregon State College and an M.A. and a Ph.D. in physics from the University of California at Berkley. He is a charter member of the committee of Boy Scout Troop 100, and of the New Shrewsbury Library Association. He has been a board member of the Parent- Teacher Association of Shrews- bury Township since 1959. Dr. Teeters and his wife, Doro- thy, have two children: David, 14, and James 12. COLLEGE CONTROVIIlSr Thr« cartoon by Mike Pa- lumbo, cartoonist, in currant istua of Tha Outlook, Mon- mouth College newtpapir, shows student awareness of tha turmoil involving the faculty at th» college. Red Bank Teachers Get $200 Pay Hikes RED BANK — The Board o Education last night approved new salary guide calling for $200 across-the-board increases fo teachers. The new salary ranges are BA degree $4,600 to $7,500, MA - $4,900 to $7,800, PhD - $5,200 to $8,100. Tile schedule also calls fo $300 increases for the superin- tendent and the board secretary. The superintendent will recelvi a salary of $14,000 and the secre- tary. $7,700. In the high school/ the principal will receive a $283 pay boost to $11,232. One vice principal will be raised $252 to $9,828, the other $220. to $8,580. The Mechanic School principal will be upped $234 to $8,775 and the River Street school principal 2W2 'the V* to mm. The River Stree Township District vice principal will receive *8,250, an increase of $550. Other payboosts: Custodian of school monies, up $50 to $5,500; physical education supervisor-ani athletic director, up $730 to $9,- 625, and guidance director, up In a letter received by the board last night, the welfare com- mittee of the local Teichers As- sociation requested a meeting with the board's personnel com- mittee to discuss salary propos als before contracts are released Speaking for the teacher group, Miss Elisabeth A. Kelley, asked that the meeting take place prioi to April 1. Henry A. Stevenson, head of the personnel committee, said that other commitments pre- vented the full committee from meeting with the teachers until early April. Miss Kelley said tha matters the teachers would like to take Planners Ask For a Delay On Law Limiting Stations RED BANK- - The Planning would favor including a provision Board last night asked the Bor- ough Council to take no action on a proposed ordinance to limit the number of service stations In the borough until the board can give the matter further study. , Board members voiced disa- greement with provisions which would prohibit replacement, ex- tension or addition to present stations. It was pointed out that if a service station is destroyed by fire, it could not be rebuilt under the terms of the proposed ordi- nance. Question of Limit In addition, the board couldnot agree on what limit to place on the number of service stations and public garages. On Sept. 10, 1958, the board had voted to place a limit on the number of sta- tions, but no further action was taken. George Sincox, MiJdletown, appeared last night representing the Petroleum Industry Commit- tee. He said the proposed ordinance "would discriminate" against the Industry. Mr. Sincox offered the "ser- vices of the committee..... to help you write the kind of ordinance you want, but not wipe us out completely." It was pointed out that if traf- fic patterns changed and shifted away from present service sta- tions, the proposed ordinance would not allow for relocation. Bernard Kellenyi, board chair- man, said, "I would like to limit the number of stations to the number there are now." Different Views He was.. Joined in this feeling by Domenidc C. Pingitore, build- ing inspector. Both «ajd they and health inspector, $1,000. to allow for relocating stations Mr. Pingitore said he believes there are fewer than 30 service stations now. ' Mr. Pingitore said that in ad- dition to the present number o service stations, applications are in the works for building permits for four more stations. J. Daniel O'Hem said he would not favor "an arbitrary limit' to the number of stations. The Borough Council had asked for action by the planners prior to either the March 20 or April 3 meetings of the governing body. Board members said they would want to meet with Urban P'anning Associates, New York City, the borough's master planners, and the Petroleum Industry Commit- tee at its April 11 meeting be- fore coming up with any specific recommendations. Propose 5% Pay Raises At Matawan MATAWAN Borough Council last night introduced an ordi- nance providing 5 per cent pay raises for full-time borough em- ployees. Public hearing was set for March 28. The proposed salaries: Clerk, $2,650; deputy clerk, $3,- 900; treasurer, $2,006; tax asses- sor, $1,008; tax collector, $2,447; magistrate: $1,590; water rent col- lector, $2,003; borough superinten- dent, $5,670; court clerk, $212; water department foreman, $4,- 647; water department workers, $1,070 and $3,600; street depart- ment workers, $3,214 and- $4,284, up with the committee were "urgent." When questioned about the urgency by Edmund J. Canzona, board president. Miss Kelley did not elaborate but said the sub- ject would be fully explained in a letter to the board." No indication was given that the board would delay sending out the contracts until after the meeting.' Little Silver Moves 5% Pay Boosts LITTLE SILVER - An ordi- nance raising the salaries of bor- ough officers and employee, "about 5 per cent" was intro- duced by Borough Council last night. The ordinance, which will in- crease salary appropriations ap- proximately J4,74O, will receive a public hearing March 28. The council had previously allo- cated an additional $9,700 for 15 per cent police salary hikes ap- proved by the voters in Novem- ber, i This year's total salary ap- propriation is $109,280. Councilman Raymond E. Gam. son said after the meeting that the salary raises represent a general increase of "about 5 per cent." Mr. Garrison said only the po- sitions named in the ordinance received raises. Positions and salaries named in the proposed ordinance are: Borough clerk, $5,397; asses- sor, $3,400: collector, $5,397: borough clerk's assistant, $2,- 052.75; assistant collector, $2, 052.75; treasurer, $1,207.50; mag- istrate, $1,850; police clerk $1,312.50; librarian, $1,638; as sistant librarian, $862; first road man, $4,704; second road man $4,160; third road man, $3,900; court clerk, $735; janitor, $1,160; health inspector, $1,500; Board o! Health secretary, $300; emergen- cy operator, $1,870; office clerk, $651; Planning Board secretary, $200; fire company engineers, $400; eight fire inspectors, $200; first aid engineer, $120, and school patrol officers, $6 per hour. The council also held for furth- er study a proposed ordinance regulating and controlling the ex cavation of soil. The ordinance, said Mayor P. Paul Campi, is designed to elim- inate problems similar to' the flooding situation described to the council last night by several residents on Branch Ave. The residents said that fill dumped into a creek behind their homes had caused the creek to overflow into their backyards. The council accepted with re- ;ret the resignation of Mrs. Wil- iam Sawyer, 76 Silverton Ave., rom the Recreation Commission. INDEX Page Amusements . .. 10 Births _ 2 Jim Bishop—Go With God « Hal Boyle '. 6 Bridge _ 18 Classified It Comics 18 Crossword Puzzle _ 18 Editorials 6 Hcrblock 6 Kitty Kelly 16 Movie Timetable .... ..10 Obituaries ..: : . 2 Sylvia Porter 6 Radlo-Televlslon ...... 10 Social 18-17 George Sokolsky 6 Roger E, Spear 3 Sports .,.:. .20-22 Stock Market ,. S \ - AAUP Rapped; Confidence Vote May Be Asked By BOB GALLAGHER WEST LONG BRANCH — A Monmouth College professor openly blasted his colleagues yes- terday for bringing "unwalcome, embarrassing, unhelpful, and ad- verse publicity" to. the college Tlie public attack came as re- ports circulated at the college that a motion calling for a vote of confidence in President Edward G. Schlaefer's adminstration will be introduced at tomorrow's fac- ulty meeting. One campus observer of oppo- site leaning predicted the con- fidence motion would be defeated if the faculty is permitted to vote by closed ballot. Yesterday's developments fol- lowed in the wake of a contro- versial report issued Monday by the American Association of Uni- versity Professors in Washington. Would Hold Off Local AAUP officials,, however, are said to be working against any expression at this lime by the faculty until the report is distributed, studied and discussed. An AAUP spokesman at the col lege said his group hopes to keep the door open for possible im provements in the faculty-admin- istration dispute. The report, which strongly criticizes tire college's adminis- tration and board of trustees, i scheduled for discussion at the national AAUP convention In Bos- ton April 21-22. Such reports in the nast have usually resulted In "a vote of censure" by the AAUP of the college's administrative leaders Privately, some faculty mem bers and students expressed con- cern that the possible failure of a vote of confidence might imperi the college's accreditation with the Middle States Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools Dr. F. Taylor Jones, Middle States executive secretary, pre- viously told The Register tha his organization would be "con- cerned" with anything that dis- turbed the effectiveness of thi faculty. Under Study Middle States is reviewing Mon- mouth's accreditation, and an (See AAUP, Page 2) Man's Sneezing Spell Results in Accident RED BANK — A coughing and sneezing spell resulted in an ac- cident yesterday for Allan A Cole, 55, of 2 Lippincott Ave., Lit- tle Silver. Police Capt William F. Patter- son, Jr., reported Mr. Cole was heading east on East Front St., when he started to sneeze. He lost control of his car and it hit a utility pole at Hubbard Park Mr. Cole was treated in River- view Hospital for a mouth injury He was charged with careless driving. To Paint Ocean Gaelic ASBURY PARK (APH-Thxce lakes and 1,900 feet of ocean front at Aabury Park will take on the hue of the Emerald Isle come Sunday. The city fathers will tint the waters with dye along the length of the boardwalk In cele- bration of St. Patrick's Day while a band dispenses Gaelic airs and vendors hawk green Jelly apples. The dye to be dropped In (he ocean and Deal, Wesley .and Sunset Lakes, Is the same type used by downed military fliers to mark their position. fn Its powder form, the dye Is orange, but when it hits the Fight Impact Area Aid Cut water It turns ; ous, green. bright, lumln- Farrell Says Sea Wall 'May Topple' State, County Put Up $150,000 For Repair Job SEA BRIGHT-Mayor Thomas Farrell announced last night that while state and county officials have agreed to raise to $150,000 their appropriations for sea wal repairs, damages may be more extensive than previous estimates have indicated. He told Borough Council (hat it will be necessary for Borough Engineer Otis R. Seaman to make a new "foot-by-foot" ex- amination of the wall on both the North and South Beaches be- fore drawing up a set of specifi cations to be submitted to the slate Department of Conservation and Economic Development. "I want Council to study those plans," he said. Warns of Condition "We could not stand another northeaster here without having the sea wall near the Ship Ahoy Beach Club topple. The wall there has no foundation any more," the mayor said. He told of having received as- surances from Mr. Seaman tha (be state and county both havi agfejd to put up $75,000 in a match-fund program instead of an originally planned $50,000 apiece—for damages first caused by Hurricane Donna last Septem ber. "The borough's cost will be $1,500 in engineer's fees," he said. "But," said the mayor, "we have not yet heard anything about our request for $50,000 for jetties. And, if that wall- is to be protected, we must have Jetty money." Drainage While expressing gratitude to Freeholder Director Joseph C Irwin and his board for the "ful degree of co-operation extended to us in this program," Mayor Farrell won council's endorse- ment of his recommendation thai] the freeholders be advised to quickly attend to drainage trouble (See SEA BRIGHT Page 2) SPACE DOG ON SOVIET TV Chernushka, right, the dog which Russians (aid orbited the earth in a satellite this month, is held by girl along with Tiihka, a pup of Russia's earlier space dog Strelka, during appearance on Moscow television show last week-end. Tass News Affects School Districts WASHINGTON (AP) — The Kennedy administra- tion came under growing pressure today to abandon or soften its proposal to re- duce thegovernment's pay- ments to school districts crowded with children of federal workers. The proposed reductions, which would approximate 50 per cent, are tied to. the administration's controversial school aid bill. The overall school bill calls for a three-year, $2.3 billion program of federal assistance to. the pub- lic schools only. Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., chairman of the Senate education sub-committee conducting hear- ings on the bill, said yesterday he has asked tk& administration I to reconsider the provisions which would reduce the impact payments. Federal Raises These are payments provided Agency did not identify the girl. (APWirephoto) Russia Asks Congo Debate Immediately Oasis to Replace Service Station RED BANK-A small "oasis" in the "asphalt desert" is j against planned here form of George Sincox, MJMietown, representing (he Petroleum In- dustry Council (old the Plan- ning Board, 4Sst night the land now occupied by a vacant Esso service station bounded by West Front St., Riverside Ave., and the extension of Pearl St., will be donated to the borough. Bernard Kellenyi, board president and an architect, has prepared a drawing showing a small park In the triangular plot, Firm to Buy Historic Inn ATLANTIC TOWNSHIP — The historic Colts Neck Inn. cur- rently operated by William Ca- shion, will be sold this month for $110,000 to Tall Timbers Inc., headed by Joseph and Arthur Ruffalo, Atlantic Township de- velopers. The Ruffalo brothers, who own 52 per c?nt of the corporation, have announced that the sale is scheduled for closmg bythe 28th of this month and the inn will be open under the newmanagement by Easter week-end. Joseph Ruffalo said yesterday hat the corporation plans to ren- ovate the property, keeping the colonial features and atmosphere and.eventually adding a dining room for 200. The old inrj.'at the intersection of Rts. 34 and 537, dates back to 1717. During the Revolution it was a rallying point for local pa- triots and was used bj» Captain Joshua Huddy was as his head- quarters. Mr. Ruffalo said a gift shop will be added, and the inn will specialize in steak dinners and a smorgasbord luncheon. The upstairs of the inn will be remodeled to provide private dining rooms, Mr. Ruffalo said. Other members of Tall Tim- bers Inc. are" Anthony C. Nanna, Shelter Cove; Henry G. Vltiello, Belleville, and Patrick Filipelli, Little Falls. The Ruffalo brothers are the developers of Ruff Acres and Tall Timbers in Atlantic Town- ship, both- custom-built homes developments. Joseph Ruffalo also owns Ruff Acres Farm where he breeds and trains thoroughbred horses. Mr. Ruffalo has built a one-mile training track for his stable there. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) —Russia pushed today for imme- diate General Assembly debate on the Congo to gain a wider learing for the Soviet blasts the new confederation government developing in the chaotic African territory. After a week of marking time since It resumed Its session, the Assembly showed signs of getting down to work. U. S.-Soviet nego- tiations to trim the agenda collapsed yesterday, with the Sov- iets adamant in their rejection of an American proposal to post pone most items on the agenda —and chiefly disarmament—until the fall. The United States in turn rejected a Soviet proposal to drop the Soviet . complaint against U. S. reconnaissance flights if the charges of Com- munist suppression in Hungary and Tibet were dropped. Soviet delegates roamed the UN corridors seeking to lipe up Asian-African support for an im- mediate Congo debate. The Sov- iets charged that the agreement by anti-Communist Congolese po- litical leaders meeting at Tanan- arive, Malagsy, last week to re- place the federal form of ROV- ernment in the Congo by a con- federation of semi-independent states was a Belgian trick to break up the new African nation and keep a foothold in rich Ka- tanga Province. .The Soviet charge was echoed by the governmenl-controlled Cairo press, which said the United Arab Republican would request an urgent session of the Security Council to "discuss the :onspiracy to "dismember the Con- RO-" by law to reimburse school dis- tricts for part of the cost of edu- cating the children of families who live or work at federal in- stallations. (A number of Monmouth Coun- ty school districts which receive children of personnel at federal installations—notably Fort Mon- mouth—receive such federal aid.) Morse told a reporter the leg- islative history of the impact-aid program indicates Congress nev- er viewed it as a temporary measure, but as a continuing program. Dr. Charles-H. Boehm, Penn- sylvania' superintendent of pub- lic instruction, raised one of the few voices at the hearings from outside the administration defend. (Se'e SCHOOL AID, page 3) Demolition Of Dweffing Is Ordered MONMOUTH BEACH — The Board of Commissioners last night introduced a resolution call- ing for the demolition of two buildings on the estate of Patrick Sheeran, 40 Ocean Ave., because of extensive disrepair. The complaint against the "dan- gerous" state of the one-story barn and. the two-story dwelling was made by Building Inspector William Hansen. A contract for $735 was award- ed to D'Orsi and D'Orsi, Inc., West Long Branch, to tear down a building south of theMormouth Beach bathing pavilion that had been purchased bv the borough. The contract calls for the dem- olition to be finished by May I. The lot will then be converted into additional parking space for the pavilion. HANGS UP LOS ANGELES (AP) — Tele- phone operator Mrs. Marcella Wainscott. 30, won a divorce yes- terday from accountant Lester Wainscott, 40, on testimony she married "a wrong number." LANDMARK CHANGES HANDS —Colts Neck Inn, with a history going back to 1717, will be purchased this month fcy Tall Timbers Inc. from the present operator, William Cashion, for $110,000. Tall Timbers it a development firm headed by Joseph and Arthur Ruffalo of Atlantic Townihip. The .firm has announcod that it plans to renovata the old inn, keeping fh» tha colonial atmosphere. If will bo open' under the new management on Eastsr week-end. Board Says of Tuition: 'NothingWeCanDo' RED BANK - "There ir. noth- ing we can do about it" was the answer given by the Board of Education last night to a letter Sees Upswing TRENTON (AP)—New Jersey's economy is probably heading up- ward, Govr*Robert B. Meyner says, but he wants to do every- thing possible to accelerate the recovery pace. Meyner devoted his cabinet meeting yesterday to a discus- sion of how to combat the reces- sion. His officials reported 294 million dollars in state and local construction contracts could be let before the end of the year. "The feeling Is that we've turned the corner, but our im- mediate problem is to help those who are without jobs," Mcyner told newsmen afterward. from Shrewsbury board asking a reduction in tuition costs. In its letter, the Shrewsbury school body stated that ' Red Bank's 27 per cent tuition in- crease was a factor in the 2-1 defeat of the Shrewsbury school budget Fob. 14. The letter went on to say that there was apparent "voter resist- ance to the tremendous increase ' in high school student costs." Tlie Shrewsbury board went on record as registering protest against the increase. Current per-pupil tuition is $605. Next year is set at $768. Local board members Fflid that (here was little they could do to reduce the tuition since the money was needed to maintain the high school program. The pcr-student cost increases are caused by the many students who will leave Red Bank to it- tend Monmouth Regional High School in September.

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Weather

Fair with variable cloudinesstoday; high, 5O-J5. Filr tonightand tomorrow. Low tonight. Mi.'High tomorrow, mid-40!. Seeweather, page I.

BEDBANK1 Independent Daily fI MONDAY THtOVOHrUDAY-tST.im jREGISTER

Distribution Today

17,675

SH 1-0010

VOL. 83, NO. 180 bund atliT. Umttr tarouis Friday, ••coal Ciut PoitwPaU tt K»d Buk *n4 u AdOIUosil lUUlnt OBICM. RED BANK, N. J., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1961 7c PER COPY 35c PER WEEK

BY CARRIER PAGE ONE

Prof, Students Join Fray at CollegeCouncil TablesAdministration.Censure Move

By PETE HOFFMAN

WEST LONG BRANCH — Ac-tion to censure the administra-tion . of Monmouth College wasInitiated by the Student CouncilMonday night

A resolution was offered stat-ing that the Student Council, asrepresentatives of the studentbody, "no longer has any confi-dence in the ability of the pres-ent administration . . ."

TabledAction on the measure was

tabled 'unW tt* "entire-report bythe American Association of Uni-versity P r o f e s s o r s publishedMonday could be studied by thecouncil's executive committee.

In the wake of the report andthe council's action, many students expressed the fear thatthe controversy between the ad-ministration and the college chap-ter of the AAUP might lead to• loss of accreditation for Mon-mouth College.

This is of particular importanceto education majors who will beseeking teaching posts and sen-ior* planning to go on to grad-uate school.

True ReportThe censure resolution, intro-

duced by Donald Ambrose, treas-urer, cited published accounts ofthe AAUP report in itsTpringbulletin.

Mr. Ambrose said the chargesof the AAUP were "severely crit-ical" and the report "does greatdamage to the reputation ofMonmouth College and hence tothe student body" and called for

(See STUDENT, Pg. 2)

Dr. TeetersIs AppointedTo Board

NEW SHREWSBURY - Dr. D

S^SSS 2W2 'hShrewsburyBoard of Education.

He wiU fiH the unexpired termof Harrison A.-Hubbard, who re-•lgned last month because her ismov4ng away from the borough.

Dr. Teeters is employed at BellTelephone Laboratories, Whip- *274 t 0

pany, in electronics switchingsystems development. He is aCommander in the Naval Reserve.

Born In Michigan, the newboard member has a Bachelor'sdegree from Oregon State Collegeand an M.A. and a Ph.D. inphysics from the University ofCalifornia at Berkley.

He is a charter member of thecommittee of Boy Scout Troop100, and of the New ShrewsburyLibrary Association. He has beena board member of the Parent-Teacher Association of Shrews-bury Township since 1959.

Dr. Teeters and his wife, Doro-thy, have two children: David,14, and James 12.

COLLEGE CONTROVII lSr — Thr« cartoon by Mike Pa-lumbo, cartoonist, in currant istua of Tha Outlook, Mon-mouth College newtpapir, shows student awareness oftha turmoil involving the faculty at th» college.

Red Bank TeachersGet $200 Pay Hikes

RED BANK — The Board oEducation last night approvednew salary guide calling for $200across-the-board increases foteachers.

The new salary ranges areBA degree — $4,600 to $7,500,MA - $4,900 to $7,800, PhD -$5,200 to $8,100.

Tile schedule also calls fo$300 increases for the superin-tendent and the board secretary.The superintendent will recelvia salary of $14,000 and the secre-tary. $7,700.

In the high school/ the principalwill receive a $283 pay boost to$11,232. One vice principal willbe raised $252 to $9,828, theother $220. to $8,580.

The Mechanic School principalwill be upped $234 to $8,775 andthe River Street school principal

2 W 2 'the V* to mm. The River StreeTownship District v i c e principal will receive *8,250,

an increase of $550.Other pay boosts: Custodian of

school monies, up $50 to $5,500;physical education supervisor-aniathletic director, up $730 to $9,-625, and guidance director, up

In a letter received by theboard last night, the welfare com-mittee of the local Teichers As-sociation requested a meetingwith the board's personnel com-mittee to discuss salary proposals before contracts are released

Speaking for the teacher group,Miss Elisabeth A. Kelley, askedthat the meeting take place prioito April 1.

Henry A. Stevenson, head ofthe personnel committee, saidthat other commitments pre-vented the full committee frommeeting with the teachers untilearly April.

Miss Kelley said tha mattersthe teachers would like to take

Planners Ask For a DelayOn Law Limiting Stations

RED BANK- - The Planning would favor including a provisionBoard last night asked the Bor-ough Council to take no actionon a proposed ordinance to limitthe number of service stationsIn the borough until the boardcan give the matter furtherstudy.

, Board members voiced disa-greement with provisions whichwould prohibit replacement, ex-tension or addition to presentstations.

It was pointed out that if aservice station is destroyed byfire, it could not be rebuilt underthe terms of the proposed ordi-nance.

Question of LimitIn addition, the board could not

agree on what limit to place onthe number of service stationsand public garages. On Sept. 10,1958, the board had voted to placea limit on the number of sta-tions, but no further action wastaken.

George Sincox, MiJdletown,appeared last night representingthe Petroleum Industry Commit-tee.

He said the proposed ordinance"would discriminate" against theIndustry.

Mr. Sincox offered the "ser-vices of the committee..... to helpyou write the kind of ordinanceyou want, but not wipe us outcompletely."

It was pointed out that if traf-fic patterns changed and shiftedaway from present service sta-tions, the proposed ordinancewould not allow for relocation.

Bernard Kellenyi, board chair-man, said, "I would like to limitthe number of stations to thenumber there are now."

Different ViewsHe was.. Joined in this feeling

by Domenidc C. Pingitore, build-ing inspector. Both «ajd they and health inspector, $1,000.

to allow for relocating stationsMr. Pingitore said he believesthere are fewer than 30 servicestations now.' Mr. Pingitore said that in ad-dition to the present number oservice stations, applications arein the works for building permitsfor four more stations.

J. Daniel O'Hem said he wouldnot favor "an arbitrary limit'to the number of stations.

The Borough Council had askedfor action by the planners priorto either the March 20 or April3 meetings of the governing body.

Board members said they wouldwant to meet with Urban P'anningAssociates, New York City, theborough's master planners, andthe Petroleum Industry Commit-tee at its April 11 meeting be-fore coming up with any specificrecommendations.

Propose 5%Pay RaisesAt Matawan

MATAWAN — Borough Councillast night introduced an ordi-nance providing 5 per cent payraises for full-time borough em-ployees.

Public hearing was set forMarch 28.

The proposed salaries:Clerk, $2,650; deputy clerk, $3,-

900; treasurer, $2,006; tax asses-sor, $1,008; tax collector, $2,447;magistrate: $1,590; water rent col-lector, $2,003; borough superinten-dent, $5,670; court clerk, $212;water department foreman, $4,-647; water department workers,$1,070 and $3,600; street depart-ment workers, $3,214 and- $4,284,

up with the committee were"urgent."

When questioned about theurgency by Edmund J. Canzona,board president. Miss Kelley didnot elaborate but said the sub-ject would be fully explained ina letter to the board."

No indication was given thatthe board would delay sendingout the contracts until after themeeting.'

Little SilverMoves 5%Pay Boosts

LITTLE SILVER - An ordi-nance raising the salaries of bor-ough officers and employee,"about 5 per cent" was intro-duced by Borough Council lastnight.

The ordinance, which will in-crease salary appropriations ap-proximately J4,74O, will receivea public hearing March 28.

The council had previously allo-cated an additional $9,700 for 15per cent police salary hikes ap-proved by the voters in Novem-ber, i

This year's total salary ap-propriation is $109,280.

Councilman Raymond E. Gam.son said after the meeting thatthe salary raises represent ageneral increase of "about 5per cent."

Mr. Garrison said only the po-sitions named in the ordinancereceived raises.

Positions and salaries namedin the proposed ordinance are:

Borough clerk, $5,397; asses-sor, $3,400: collector, $5,397:borough clerk's assistant, $2,-052.75; assistant collector, $2,052.75; treasurer, $1,207.50; mag-istrate, $1,850; police clerk$1,312.50; librarian, $1,638; assistant librarian, $862; first roadman, $4,704; second road man$4,160; third road man, $3,900;court clerk, $735; janitor, $1,160;health inspector, $1,500; Board o!Health secretary, $300; emergen-cy operator, $1,870; office clerk,$651; Planning Board secretary,$200; fire company engineers,$400; eight fire inspectors, $200;first aid engineer, $120, andschool patrol officers, $6 perhour.

The council also held for furth-er study a proposed ordinanceregulating and controlling the excavation of soil.

The ordinance, said Mayor P.Paul Campi, is designed to elim-inate problems similar to' theflooding situation described tothe council last night by severalresidents on Branch Ave.

The residents said that filldumped into a creek behind theirhomes had caused the creek tooverflow into their backyards.

The council accepted with re-;ret the resignation of Mrs. Wil-iam Sawyer, 76 Silverton Ave.,rom the Recreation Commission.

INDEXPage

Amusements . .. 10Births _ 2Jim Bishop—Go With God «Hal Boyle '. 6Bridge _ 18Classified ItComics 18Crossword Puzzle _ 18Editorials 6Hcrblock 6Kitty Kelly 16Movie Timetable .... ..10Obituaries ..: : . 2Sylvia Porter 6Radlo-Televlslon ...... 10Social 18-17George Sokolsky 6Roger E, Spear 3Sports .,.:. .20-22Stock Market ,. S

\ -

AAUP Rapped;Confidence VoteMay Be Asked

By BOB GALLAGHER

WEST LONG BRANCH — AMonmouth College professoropenly blasted his colleagues yes-terday for bringing "unwalcome,embarrassing, unhelpful, and ad-verse publicity" to. the college

Tlie public attack came as re-ports circulated at the collegethat a motion calling for a vote ofconfidence in President EdwardG. Schlaefer's adminstration willbe introduced at tomorrow's fac-ulty meeting.

One campus observer of oppo-site leaning predicted the con-fidence motion would be defeatedif the faculty is permitted to voteby closed ballot.

Yesterday's developments fol-lowed in the wake of a contro-versial report issued Monday bythe American Association of Uni-versity Professors in Washington.

Would Hold OffLocal AAUP officials,, however,

are said to be working againstany expression at this lime bythe faculty until the report isdistributed, studied and discussed.

An AAUP spokesman at the college said his group hopes to keepthe door open for possible improvements in the faculty-admin-istration dispute.

The report, which stronglycriticizes tire college's adminis-tration and board of trustees, ischeduled for discussion at thenational AAUP convention In Bos-ton April 21-22.

Such reports in the nast haveusually resulted In "a vote ofcensure" by the AAUP of thecollege's administrative leaders

Privately, some faculty members and students expressed con-cern that the possible failure of avote of confidence might imperithe college's accreditation withthe Middle States Association ofColleges and Secondary Schools

Dr. F. Taylor Jones, MiddleStates executive secretary, pre-viously told The Register thahis organization would be "con-cerned" with anything that dis-turbed the effectiveness of thifaculty.

Under StudyMiddle States is reviewing Mon-

mouth's accreditation, and an(See AAUP, Page 2)

Man's Sneezing SpellResults in Accident

RED BANK — A coughing andsneezing spell resulted in an ac-cident yesterday for Allan ACole, 55, of 2 Lippincott Ave., Lit-tle Silver.

Police Capt William F. Patter-son, Jr., reported Mr. Cole washeading east on East Front St.,when he started to sneeze. Helost control of his car and it hita utility pole at Hubbard Park

Mr. Cole was treated in River-view Hospital for a mouth injury

He was charged with carelessdriving.

To Paint OceanGaelic

ASBURY PARK (APH-Thxcelakes and 1,900 feet of oceanfront at Aabury Park will takeon the hue of the Emerald Islecome Sunday.

The city fathers will tint thewaters with dye along thelength of the boardwalk In cele-bration of St. Patrick's Daywhile a band dispenses Gaelicairs and vendors hawk greenJelly apples.

The dye to be dropped In(he ocean and Deal, Wesley

.and Sunset Lakes, Is the sametype used by downed militaryfliers to mark their position.fn Its powder form, the dye Isorange, but when it hits the

Fight ImpactArea Aid Cut

water It turns ;ous, green.

bright, lumln-

Farrell SaysSea Wall'May Topple'

State, County

Put Up $150,000

For Repair Job

SEA BRIGHT-Mayor ThomasFarrell announced last night thatwhile state and county officialshave agreed to raise to $150,000their appropriations for sea walrepairs, damages may be moreextensive than previous estimateshave indicated.

He told Borough Council (hatit will be necessary for BoroughEngineer Otis R. Seaman tomake a new "foot-by-foot" ex-amination of the wall on boththe North and South Beaches be-fore drawing up a set of specifications to be submitted to theslate Department of Conservationand Economic Development.

"I want Council to study thoseplans," he said.

Warns of Condition"We could not stand another

northeaster here without havingthe sea wall near the Ship AhoyBeach Club topple. The wallthere has no foundation anymore," the mayor said.

He told of having received as-surances from Mr. Seaman tha(be state and county both haviagfejd to put up $75,000 in amatch-fund program — insteadof an originally planned $50,000apiece—for damages first causedby Hurricane Donna last September.

"The borough's cost will be$1,500 in engineer's fees," hesaid.

"But," said the mayor, "wehave not yet heard anythingabout our request for $50,000 forjetties. And, if that wall- is to beprotected, we must have Jettymoney."

DrainageWhile expressing gratitude to

Freeholder Director Joseph CIrwin and his board for the "fuldegree of co-operation extendedto us in this program," MayorFarrell won council's endorse-ment of his recommendation thai]the freeholders be advised toquickly attend to drainage trouble

(See SEA BRIGHT Page 2)

SPACE DOG ON SOVIET TV — Chernushka, right, thedog which Russians (aid orbited the earth in a satellitethis month, is held by girl along with Tiihka, a pup ofRussia's earlier space dog Strelka, during appearanceon Moscow television show last week-end. Tass News

AffectsSchoolDistricts

WASHINGTON (AP) —The Kennedy administra-tion came under growingpressure today to abandonor soften its proposal to re-duce the government's pay-ments to school districtscrowded with children of federalworkers.

The proposed reductions, whichwould approximate 50 per cent,are tied to. the administration'scontroversial school aid bill. Theoverall school bill calls for athree-year, $2.3 billion programof federal assistance to. the pub-lic schools only.

Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore.,chairman of the Senate educationsub-committee conducting hear-ings on the bill, said yesterdayhe has asked tk& administration

I to reconsider the p r o v i s i o n swhich would reduce the impactpayments.

Federal Raises •These are payments provided

Agency did not identify the girl. (APWirephoto)

Russia Asks CongoDebate Immediately

Oasis to Replace

Service Station

RED BANK-A small "oasis"in the "asphalt desert" is j againstplanned here f o r m o f

George Sincox, MJMietown,representing (he Petroleum In-dustry Council (old the Plan-ning Board, 4Sst night the landnow occupied by a vacant Essoservice station bounded byWest Front St., Riverside Ave.,and the extension of Pearl St.,will be donated to the borough.

Bernard Kellenyi, boardpresident and an architect, hasprepared a drawing showing asmall park In the triangularplot,

Firm to Buy Historic InnATLANTIC TOWNSHIP — The

historic Colts Neck Inn. cur-rently operated by William Ca-shion, will be sold this month for$110,000 to Tall Timbers Inc.,headed by Joseph and ArthurRuffalo, Atlantic Township de-velopers.

The Ruffalo brothers, who own52 per c?nt of the corporation,have announced that the sale isscheduled for closmg bythe 28thof this month and the inn will beopen under the new managementby Easter week-end.

Joseph Ruffalo said yesterdayhat the corporation plans to ren-

ovate the property, keeping thecolonial features and atmosphereand.eventually adding a diningroom for 200.

The old inrj.'at the intersectionof Rts. 34 and 537, dates back to1717. During the Revolution itwas a rallying point for local pa-triots and was used bj» CaptainJoshua Huddy was as his head-quarters.

Mr. Ruffalo said a gift shopwill be added, and the inn willspecialize in steak dinners anda smorgasbord luncheon.

The upstairs of the inn will beremodeled to provide private

dining rooms, Mr. Ruffalo said.Other members of Tall Tim-

bers Inc. are" Anthony C. Nanna,Shelter Cove; Henry G. Vltiello,Belleville, and Patrick Filipelli,Little Falls.

The Ruffalo brothers are thedevelopers of Ruff Acres andTall Timbers in Atlantic Town-ship, both- custom-built homesdevelopments.

Joseph Ruffalo also owns RuffAcres Farm where he breedsand trains thoroughbred horses.Mr. Ruffalo has built a one-miletraining track for his stablethere.

UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP)—Russia pushed today for imme-diate General Assembly debateon the Congo to gain a widerlearing for the Soviet blasts

the new confederationgovernment developing

in the chaotic African territory.After a week of marking time

since It resumed Its session, theAssembly showed signs of gettingdown to work. U. S.-Soviet nego-tiations to trim the agendacollapsed yesterday, with the Sov-iets adamant in their rejection ofan American proposal to postpone most items on the agenda—and chiefly disarmament—untilthe fall. The United States inturn rejected a Soviet proposalto drop the Soviet . complaintagainst U. S. reconnaissanceflights if the charges of Com-munist suppression in Hungaryand Tibet were dropped.

Soviet delegates roamed theUN corridors seeking to lipe upAsian-African support for an im-mediate Congo debate. The Sov-iets charged that the agreementby anti-Communist Congolese po-litical leaders meeting at Tanan-arive, Malagsy, last week to re-place the federal form of ROV-ernment in the Congo by a con-federation of semi-independentstates was a Belgian trick tobreak up the new African nationand keep a foothold in rich Ka-tanga Province.

.The Soviet charge was echoedby the governmenl-controlledCairo press, which said theUnited Arab Republican wouldrequest an urgent session of theSecurity Council to "discuss the:onspiracy to "dismember the Con-RO-"

by law to reimburse school dis-tricts for part of the cost of edu-cating the children of familieswho live or work at federal in-stallations.

(A number of Monmouth Coun-ty school districts which receivechildren of personnel at federalinstallations—notably Fort Mon-mouth—receive such federal aid.)

Morse told a reporter the leg-islative history of the impact-aidprogram indicates Congress nev-er viewed it as a temporarymeasure, but as a continuingprogram.

Dr. Charles-H. Boehm, Penn-sylvania' superintendent of pub-lic instruction, raised one of thefew voices at the hearings fromoutside the administration defend.

(Se'e SCHOOL AID, page 3)

DemolitionOf DweffingIs Ordered

MONMOUTH BEACH — TheBoard of Commissioners lastnight introduced a resolution call-ing for the demolition of twobuildings on the estate of PatrickSheeran, 40 Ocean Ave., becauseof extensive disrepair.

The complaint against the "dan-gerous" state of the one-storybarn and. the two-story dwellingwas made by Building InspectorWilliam Hansen.

A contract for $735 was award-ed to D'Orsi and D'Orsi, Inc.,West Long Branch, to tear downa building south of the MormouthBeach bathing pavilion that hadbeen purchased bv the borough.

The contract calls for the dem-olition to be finished by May I.The lot will then be convertedinto additional parking space forthe pavilion.

HANGS UPLOS ANGELES (AP) — Tele-

phone operator Mrs. MarcellaWainscott. 30, won a divorce yes-terday from accountant LesterWainscott, 40, on testimony shemarried "a wrong number."

LANDMARK CHANGES HANDS —Col ts Neck Inn, with a history going back to1717, will be purchased this month fcy Tall Timbers Inc. from the present operator,William Cashion, for $110,000. Tall Timbers it a development firm headed byJoseph and Arthur Ruffalo of Atlantic Townihip. The .firm has announcod that itplans to renovata the old inn, keeping fh» tha colonial atmosphere. If will bo open'under the new management on Eastsr week-end.

Board Says of Tuition:

'NothingWeCanDo'RED BANK - "There ir. noth-

ing we can do about it" was theanswer given by the Board ofEducation last night to a letter

Sees UpswingTRENTON (AP)—New Jersey's

economy is probably heading up-ward, Govr*Robert B. Meynersays, but he wants to do every-thing possible to accelerate therecovery pace.

Meyner devoted his cabinetmeeting yesterday to a discus-sion of how to combat the reces-sion. His officials reported 294million dollars in state and localconstruction contracts could belet before the end of the year.

"The feeling Is that we'veturned the corner, but our im-mediate problem is to help thosewho are without jobs," Mcynertold newsmen afterward.

from Shrewsbury board asking areduction in tuition costs.

In its letter, the Shrewsburyschool body stated that ' RedBank's 27 per cent tuition in-crease was a factor in the 2-1defeat of the Shrewsbury schoolbudget Fob. 14.

The letter went on to say thatthere was apparent "voter resist-ance to the tremendous increase 'in high school student costs."

Tlie Shrewsbury board went onrecord as registering protestagainst the increase.

Current per-pupil tuition is $605.Next year is set at $768.

Local board members Fflid that(here was little they could doto reduce the tuition since themoney was needed to maintainthe high school program.

The pcr-student cost increasesare caused by the many studentswho will leave Red Bank to it-tend Monmouth Regional HighSchool in September.

2—Wed., March 15, 1961 RED BANK REGISTER

Third OrderHears AboutSt. Patrick

RED BANK — At * meetingof the Third Order of St. Francis Sunday afternoon in St. Anth-ony's Catholic Church, Si. Pattick, apostle of Ireland, was des-cribed as "a missionary whopracticed the same Christianprinciples as those exemplifiedby St. Francis of Aisisl MO yearslater"

Joseph F. Odenbach of LittleSilver, prefect of the St. Anthonyfraternity, exhorted the group"to become as well informed aspssible about the Catholic faithand to read the lives of thesaints.

In keeping with this, he gavea resume of the life of St. Patrick and spoke of the virtue ofthe people of Ireland, which re-flects on their apostle. St. Patrick planted the seed of faithamong the Irish people fn the SthCentury, he said.

"He was born near the closeof the 4th Century in a villagecalled Bonaven Taberniae, whichIs now the town of Kilpatrick onthe mouth of the River Clydein Scotland. He considered him-self both a Briton and Roman.His father was of a family namedCalphumius and was a residentof a nearby Roman city. Somesources called his mother Con-chessa, niece of St. Martin ofTours."

The prefect also pointed outthat the feast qf St. Joseph, pa-tron of the universal church, willbe celebrated. Sunday.

The reading of the Office ofthe Passion was followed by bene-diction of the Blessed Sacramentand the imparting of an indul-gence blessing by Msgr. Salva-tore Di Lorenzo, director of thefraternity.

The next Third Order meetingwill be held April 9.

RiverviewMr. and Mrs. John Douglass,

11 Hubbard Park, Red Bankson, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Costine,169 Hudson Ave., East Keans-burg, daughter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Roslyn,Jr., 35 North Bridge Ave., RedBank, daughter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Martin Foley, 11Willis Ave., Keansburg, daugh-ter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. George Brooks,Lennox a n d Lakeside Aves.,Rumson, son, this morning.

Monmouth Medical CenterMr. and Mrs. Alfred F. Hodges,

920-B Springwood Ave., AsburyPark, son, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gutowitz,242 Oxford Ave., Fair Haven, son,yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Brown,18 Avenue A, Freehold, daughter,yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Howard,93 Lippincott Ave., Long Branch,daughter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. John J. Lorenz,6 Rutgen Dr., Fair Haven,daughter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mulhol-land, 171% South St., Freehold,daughter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Bran-nan, 31 Oceanport Ave., Ocean-port, daughter, this morning.

JohanssonHas BiggerFi>ht-Taxes- '

MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - The Fed-era! Government hit heavyweightIngemar Johansson with a $1million tax bill moments after helost Monday's fight to championFloyd Patterson and told himnot to leave the country, it wasrevealed yesterday.

Federal, authorities »ald theSwedish fighter was met in hisdressing room at Miami BeachConvention Hall by an immigra-tion agent and two deputy mar-shals. The immigration man followed Johansson from the ringand handed him a temporary pre-vention of departure notice.

The deputy marshals servedsubpoenas on the defeated chal-1 e n g e r for the heavyweightcrown. He was ordered person-ally, and as agent for • Swissfirm, Scanart S. A., to appear to-morrow at the Federal ouildingin Miami.

Johansson, accused by the gov-ernment of falling to pay $598,181en 1960 income, was told thathe is being sued for another$411,620 — bringing the total billto <1,009.801 - on Ms 1961 in-come.

An internal revenue service of-ficial explained that Johansson's1961 tax year — on which apayment normally wouldn't bedue until April' of next year —was being closed as of midnightMonday and that the tax wasdue immediately.

The (411,620 included taxe* onhis earnings from Monday night'sfight, plus whatever else he hasearned this year.

Meanwhile, airlines at IdlewildAirport In New York Tere toldby the Immigration Service thatany attempt by Johansson toleave the U.S. was "to be pre-vented."

The lines were informed thatthey would be subject to penal-ties — including seizure of theirplanes — if the order is violated

The order wds issued 'n a letter which indicated that steam-ship lines were being given thesame instructions.

Tools /TakenFrom Airport

NEW SHREWSBURY - Statepolice at Shrewsbury barracksare investigating the reportedtheft of 1650 worth of airplanemechanics tools from the RedBank Airport.

Trooper Investigator WalterKing said a shop at ShrewsburyAve. and Apple St. was brokenInto early Monday morning aftera window was broken and a doorunlocked from the inside.

The loss was reported by a me-chanic, Edwin Brown, when hearrived at work.

Traffic Toll DownTRENTON (AP)-New Jersey's

highway death loll so far in 1961Is down a dramatic 37 per centfrom last year's figures.

Attorney General David D. Fur-man said today there had been86 people killed in traffic acci-dents through March 12, com-pared with 136 in the correspond-ing period a year ago.

Much of the decline is attrib-uted to the bad winter weatherwhich cut traffic and drivingspeeds. Furman said that therehas not been a corresponding de-crease Ip pedestrian deaths, par-ticularly among elderly people.

It pays to advertlie in TheRegister.—Advertisement.

AAUP(Continued)

association representative isscheduled to make a routine en-campus visit next week.

Yesterday's assault on theAAUP report, its method of pub-licizing it, and the motive* of N l v y W i n \P n w t u > e ( l to defendsome faculty leaders was madeby J. Thomas Kelsey, a memberof the English department.

Mr. Kelsey'* broadsidecontained in a letter posted bythe associate professor in the lob-by of the main college building.The letter, which was addressedto Quentln Keith, AAUP chap-ter president, attracted largegroups of students and faculty.

Mr. Kelsey charged that theactions of the AAUP chapter, ofwhich'he was a member, "havenot been beneficial, unselfish, orpracticable."

(The chapter voted 31-11 lastspring to request an investigationby the AAUP's Committee Tof faculty-administration relation-ships here. The vote was takenafter a sudden flurry of facultyresignations, including several bydepartment chairmen.)

•Union* MethodMr. Kelsey compared the AAUP

procedures to "a union investi-gation by union leaders of unionmen's grievances against a capitalist employer . . ."

He said the present course ofAAUP at the college was'march to ruin" and asked if

the Atlantic Coast during WorldWar J.

Meyner said yesterday it wouldtake 90 minutes to get from Lake-hurst into New York Cjty bycar. A Jetport should be only 20minutes away, ha - said, 40 atmost.

The governor noted recent gov-ernment specifications for the de-velopment of Jets that can takeoff within 6,000 feet instead ofthe usual two miles. He said thenew planes might be a factor Inthe jetport site sought by thePort of New York Authority.

the chapter was attempting "ed-ucational suicide."

The professor, a teacher atMonmouth since 1945, Mid hewished to disassociate himself"from the actions and activitiesof the chapter and the nationaloffice — all of them shrewdlyplanned by a few and naivelyfollowed by many.

"I sympathize with my friend,Dr. E. G. Schlaefer, In another ofhis hours of trial and contumely— his reward from many whomhe has helped during 28 or moreyears of unstinting service toMonmouth College — years inwhich he has demanded far morefrom himself than from membersof his staff or faculty," the let-ter stated.

Mr. Kelsey contended that DrSchlaefer had been "buffeted bymany in his long career: needier*and meddlers; roistering, hysteri-cal student mobs; associates abet-ted by an. irresponsible localpress."*i Hit* Practice

Mr. Kelsey said, "I detest thepractice followed by both thechapter and national office of'airing one's dirty linen' beforethe lay public."

As for the final AAUP report,Mr. Kelsey said it contains "theold, the borrowed, the distortedthe incomplete, the slanted, thepretty. It is the work of cleverhands committed minds."

Adding:"I say this — the truth, bare

and objective. Is not in the report."

Mr. Kelsey said he hoped thechapter would make recommendations "wisely formulated to endthis endless bickering and vaguecomplaining — as well a* to pre-clude two things: (A) a censure;(B) loss of accreditation."

Mr. Kefth said he did not wishto comment on Mr. Kelssy's let-ter.

Eddie Donovan'61's Top Coach

NEW YORK (AP) — EddieDonovan of St. Bonaventure yes-terday was named college bas-ketball's "coach of the y;ar" bythe Metropolitan Basketball Wat-ers Association.

The Bonnies completed the reg:ular season with a 22-3 recordand drew an invitation U> theNational Collegiate (NCAA) .tour-nament. They were runnerup toOhio State in the Holiday Festival at Madison Square Garden,losing to the unbeaten Buckeyes,84-S2. They were No. 3 in theAssociated Press.

Donovan, a former St. Bona-venture player, is in nis eighthyear as coach of the team. Hesucceeds Pete Newell of Califor-nia, who won the honor last year.

WeatherNew Jersey — Mostly fair to-

day with some early cloudinessand just a chanc* of a briefshower over hilly areas. Hightoday ia the 30s. Fair and Cooler

tonight w i t hlow in the 30s.Thursday, fairwith high inthe 40s.

MARINEBlock Island

to Cape M a y -Westerly windstoday becom-ing northwestt o n i g h t andn o r t h e r l y

Thursday. Speeds 10 to 20 knots.Visibility 5 miles or more. Mostlyfair weather but with soma vari-able cloudiness today.

New England StormCHICAGO (AP) —The remants

of a storm that dropped between} to ( inches of snow on NewEngland yesterday continued tolay a white blanket over partsof Maine today as it blew out in-to ,die Atlantic Ocean.

In the storm's wake ' snowsturned to flurries and rains most-ly to drizzle from New Englandthrough the Great Lakes. Muchof yesterday's white c o v e rmelted under a combination ofwarming temperatures and rain.

Sees ObjectionTo LakehurstJetport Plan

TRENTON (AP) - The Lake-hurst Naval Air Station wouldmake an ideal jetport, accord-ing to Gov. Robert B. Meyner,except that it's too far awayfrom Manhattan.

Washington has said it maysuspend operations at the air-field—once the site of • huge

Civic AssociationSchedules Dance

RARITAN TOWNSHIP — TheUpper Raritan Civic Associationwill hold its annual St. Patrick'saffair Saturday night at Bachstsdt's Hall, East Keansburg.

In addition to dancing and re-freshments, the chairman, JosephJ. Casey, 6 Surrey Dr., hasplanned several innovations. Onenew feature will be a half-hourprofessional variety show. Also,corsages will be awarded to allwomen who bring i party of sixor more, and there will be anumber of contests and gamei.

Music will be provided byRay Richardson and his orches-tra.

Members of the dance com-mittee, In addition to Mr. Casey,are Ralph M. Cerame, 26 SurreyDr., George F. Heller, 8 CoachDr; Nelson O. Miller, 14 SurreyDr; Richard M. Walters, 186Middle Rd; Mr. and Mrs. JohnMcDonald, I Coach Dr.; and Mrs.Roslyn Barr, 19 West Susan St.

AWARD — Lt. Col. Edward N. Jenkins of tha OfficersDepartment at fh* U. S, Army Signal School at FortMonmouth, awards a hockey puck to John M. Cain,Fair Havan, director of operation!, New Jersey Divisionof Civil Defense, for hit contributions as a gueit speakeron civil defemepcivil emergencies and disasters to theCareer Officer^tudents. The award, which has theU. S. Army Signal School emblem engraved On it, ispresented to speakers who address the students five ormore times. During his lectures, Mr. Cain discusses themethods used in Civil Defense operations in the State ofNew Jersey.

Term HazletRail ServiceInadequate

HAZLET — The Holmdel-Rarltan Railroad Commuter Serv-ice Committee yesterday ap-pealed to the state for addedservice at the Hazlet railroad sta-tion.

The committee, organized Imonth ago with the backing olRaritan Mayor Philip J. Blanda,Jr., and Holmdel Mayor JamesH. Ackerson, released its initialstudy report to the Division olRailroad Transportation, stateHighway Department.

The report* points out that in1955. Hazlet had a population of1,500, with about 90 commutersAt present, the population is13,000 with 1.225 commuters.

Three trains of the CentraRailroad of New Jersey makestops at the station.

The - committee asked that,during the summer, on a "trial"basis, the number of stops (be;tween 6:08 a.m. and 10:42 p.m.)be increased to 10, two of whichwould be Pennsylvaniaroad trains.

Weiss Lured Out of ShortRetirement by New Club

MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP) -The new'National League team inNew York yesterday made itsmost important move since itsorganization last year by luringGeorge Weiss out of retirementto serve as its president for thenext five years.'The famed baseball executive,

who as general manager of theNew York Yankees, was respon-sible for the creation of 10 pen-nant winners and seven worldchampions in 13 years, will as-sume duties immediately althoughthe dub will not begin operationuntil 1962.

Weiss, 66-years-old last June,was originally contracted lastFeb. 22. He accepted w.th thefull approval of Dan Topping,president of the Yankees, wimwhom Weiss has been serving asconsultant since his resignationlast October.

Weiss is still under salary bythe Yankees on a carry-over con-tract which has five more yearsto run. Asked whether he could,under baseball law, receive anIncome from two major leaguedubs, Weiss answered-.

"I see no reason why not aslong as one is not dependent onthe other and there is no con-flict of interest. Actually my in-come from the Yankees is at areduced scale and represents de-ferred compensation. It Is moneyI earned the previous year. Thatincome will be further adjustednow that I'm with another club."

Weiss disclosed that a clausein his contract with the Yankeesstipulated that he could.not ac-cept a Job as general managerof another major league dub forone year.

Donald Grant, who steppeddown as president of the NewYork National League team tobecome head of the board of di-rectors, emphasized that CharlesHurth would continue as genera)manager of the club.

TO ADDRESS TAXPAYERS

LEONARDO — Township Committeeman Paul Pandolfi will ad-dress the Leonardo Taxpayers As-sociation Saturday at 3:30 p.m.In the Brevent Park fire house.

His subject will be the develop-ment potential of the Bayshore

Floyd Patterson Plans NextTitle Defense in New York

MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Heavyweight champion FloydPatterson, bruised In flesh andpride, planned yesterday to makehis next title defense for the re-organized Feature Sports Inc. InNew York in late Summer.

Britain's Henry Cooper, EddieMaohen and Sonny Liston werementioned as possible opponentsby the promoter.

The 26-year-old boxer fromRockville Centre, N.Y., empha-sized that he will call the shots inall future dealings. He taid heexpected to fight at least twicea year.

"As far as Cus (D'Amato) andI are concerned," said Patterson"He still is my manager. He willget one-third. We are as close asever. But I am making the de-cisions on which direction I willgo. Cus will negotiate some thingsand he'll come to me to see ifit Is all right."

Patterson bounced back fromtwo first round knockdowns Monday night, floored In^emar Jo-hansson in a wild first roundand knocked out the Swede In2:4S of the sixth round ol theirtheir third and possibly laM meet-Ins --•-

The bout drew 15,000 people,naylog $500,000, at ConventionHall. An estimated 417,500 nnldM.437,000 in theater TV »nd M00.000 came from other supplementary rights.

Patterson is expected to windup with around $900,000 and Jo-hansson with {700,000 from allpreceeds.Hasn't Figured Next Opponent"I haven't figured out my next

$ t , " said the championconference, peering

swollen and batteredleft eye. "I have decided to waituntil my eye goes down.

"From what I hear, all of theop ten (contenders) are lequest-

ing a fight with me. I can fightonly one at a time.

"Feature Sports will promotethe next fight also. I have foundthem fair people. I like Tom Bo-lan (new executive director) andhave leaped to like Roy Cohn(a leading stockholder)."

Patterson said Bolan had sug-gested two or three names aspossible opponents. He didn'tname them but Bolan faid hetalked of Cooper, Maohen andListon. Bolan said he wanted topromote the fight in New Yorkin late August or September.

When Uston's name was men-tioned the other day, Pattersonsaid he wouldn't fight him until Liston "got rid of some of thepeople around him." He refusedto identify these men again yes-terday.

"They know who they are," hesaid. "They'll have to take aback seat."

He added with a half-smile: "Iam not looking to get humpedoff."

Patterson planned to leave forNew York late yesterday bytrain. After a 3-week vacation,he plans to return to work atNewtown, Conn., but not In thesame camp where 4ie preparedfor his second bout with Johans-son l»st year.

As for the fight itself, Patter-son was dlsapoointed.

"I thought I looked terrible,'he said, "but I am very, veryhappy that I won. I showed noskill at all, only determination. Iknew my reflexes and coordina-tion were off. I don't know why.I hav^no excuses. The weljjht(194%. heaviest of career) didn'thurt me. I think maybe hisweight (Johansson's 206"helped him.

Had to Gamble"I knew I'd have to" gamble

like he was doing. He jumpedon me in the first round. I knew

t had to take punches to landmine."

Patterson was asked for histhoughts on the knockout in thesixth. Some ringside observersthought the Swede just beat thecount. But referee Billy Reganand timekeeper Sootty Lang insisted he took the full ten.

"When I hit him and he wentdown, I thought he was makingan attempt to get up," said Pat-terson. "I thought, for a'momentthat he was going to make it.I don't follow a referee'^ count

the referee waveThen I sawhis arms.

"I always tell my brother (Ray-mond, a golden glover), not topay attention to boos. But thoseboos from the crowd affectedme."

Patterson thought the automa-tic 8-count knockdown rule helpedboth men. The champ, was up atfour the first time and at threethe second time he was floored.Johansson got up at two In thefirst round, Each time they hadto take the remainder of'an 8-count under Miami Beach BoxingCommission rules.

"I think even without the 8-count I would have been ableto handle myself," said Patter-

on,Asked why he got up so quick-

ly, the champion said: "I hadforgotten about the rule. I justdon't like the canvas."

Irving Kahn, president of theclosed circuit television company,Tele Promp Ter), said the supple-mentary rights, Including theaterTV, movies and radio, were sureto top 3 million dollars and hada very good chance of hitting3'/, million dollars.

He estimated that Pattersonwould get between $700,000 tnd$800,000 and Johansson about$600,000 from these rights, plustheir $100,000 from the gate.

OBITUARIES

Rail-

(Continued)"a change in this administra-tion. . ."

The resolution also said theStudent Council found the reportto be a true account of incidentsbetween the administration andfaculty.

Gerald Melnlck, council parlia-mentarian, seconded the motion

After discussion and the pro-posal to review the entire reportRussell Volckmann, vice presi

MRS. KATHRYN VAN WAGNERFAIR HAVEN — Mrs. Kathryn

VanWagner, 72. of 66 Kemp Ave.,died in Riverview Hospital Mon-day night after a short illness.

Mrs. Van Wagner was born InGreen Kills, N. Y., daughter ofthe late Jacob and Mary SticklesFields, and had lived here threeyears. She formerly resided inHyde Park, N. Y.

Mrs. VanWagner was a member or the Washington-HeddingMethodist Church, and Betsy RossCouncil, Sons and Daughters ofLiberty, both of Poughkeepsie,N. Y.

Surviving are three daughters,Mrs. Helen Falkner, with whomshe lived; Mrs. Hazel Gallowayof Hyde Park, and Mrs. DorothyApplegarth of Staatsburgh, N.Y.;

son, Donald VanWagner of Cuy-ahoga Falls, Ohio, and eightgrandchildren.

The funeral will be Friday at 2o.m. in the Auchmoody FuneralHome, Poughkeepsie. Burial willbe in Poughkeepsie Rural Ceme-tery. The Worden Funeral Homeis in charge of local arrange-ments.

quired Mr. Weiss,"'he said. "Wefelt it necessary for us to have r__a thoroughly versed man and dent, moved to table the resolu-we feel we could not have made uon and Mr. Ambrose secondeda better choice. He will have asfree a hand as any man couldhope for.".

Grant said that his originalchoice for president had beenBranch Rickey but that he hadwithdrawn his offer to the formerhead of the ill-fated ContinentalLeague when Weiss became avail-able.-

Weiss, Who said he acceptedhis new position because he want-ed to remain active In baseballand because his roots were inNew York, said he would 'mmed-lately begin organizing a scout-ing staff. He himself will spendthe next two weeks visiting the13 major clubs training in Flor-ida.

On the subject of a manager,Weiss said he was in no hurry toname one. Asked specificallyif Leo Durocher or Carny Stengalwas under consideration, Weisssaid:

"Both have been very successful at one time or another but weare not considering anyone yet.We feel we have a full year tothink about it. When the timecomes we will give them consid-eration as well as others, de-pending upon their ability, ex-perience and availabilty."

Weiss would not venture aguess as to how long it wouldtake him to gather a representa-tive team.

it.Student reaction to the AAUP

report varied from staunch sup-port of the administration tosimilarly strong backing for thefaculty.

John McCarthy, a senior, wholives at 51 Hollywood Ave., saidof the report, "It means nothing.It just means that some of theteachers who left last year arebitter. I'm getting out this year.I don't want to change anything.'

Students who spoke out in sup-port of the faculty generally didnot want to be identified publicly.

However, one senior student, JB. Hunt, a history major, said inthe college newspaper. The Out-look, that one improvement shewould like to see Is to "re-evaluate the faculty-administration re-lationship so that Monmouth Col-lege will become more attractiveto qualified professors."

C fsasse faculty members of thelocal chapter of the AAUP saidthey realize that any withdrawalof accreditation by the MiddleStates Association of Colleges andSecondary Schools would havean adverse effect on the studentbody. Monmouth College's ac-creditation is being reviewed bythe Middle States group.

Those faculty members now atodds with the administration areaware that their fight could beone of' the ingredients whichmight lead to an investigation olthe institution by the MiddleStates Association.

Such an investigation holds thepossibility of withdrawal of ac-creditation.

Two other students who com-mented on the AAUP report wereMichael Primach. a freshmanand Roger O'Berc, a senior.

Mr. Primach said, "The ad-ministration is certainly muchmore qualified than the reportwould make lt seem. In somecases the administration can beimproved."

Mr. O'Berc said, "There's nothing new in the report for onething. I disagree with it."

Changes PleaIn Stock Case

CONCORD, N. H. (AP)-Samuel J. Nagle, 35, of Spring Lake,N. J., has changed his plea frominnocent to no contest in aFederal Court case involving analleged.$750,000 stock swindle.

Fred W. F. Hesse, 30, of Bayside, Queens, N. Y., another defendant, made the same switchyesterday. Eleven other defend-ants changed their pleas frominnocent to guilty. Two maintained innocent pleas.

Last June, 25 individuals andthree' firms were indicted in U.S.District Court here and all originally pleaded innocent tocharges involving stock sales InMonarch Asbestos Co. Ltd., ofMontreal.

The government said the stockwas worthless and was not reg-istered with the U. S. Securitiesand Exchange Commission, Theindictment alleged the stock wassold In 47 states, Including NewHampshire, through Philip New-man Associates, Inc., a NewYork brokerage firm.

Change DateOn Car Bids

MIDDLETOWN — The Township Committee will receive bidson new police cars at an ad-journed meeting at 5 p.m. March

Bids on the new cars were tohave been received March 22

The bids will cover seven stand-ard model vehicles. The townshipplans to trade in six cars.

After receiving two sets of bidsand rejecting both, the governIng body has decided againstpurchasing compact cars.

Both previous proposals covered the purchase' of »t leastthree compacts. ,

JOHN GASPERONEKEANSBURG — John Gas-

perone, 77, died yesterday in hishornet 60 Waackaack Ave., aftera long illness.

Born in Italy, he had lived here1 years.Mr. Gasperone was a retired

construction worker. He was amember of St. Ann's CatholicChurch.

Surviving are, two sons, FrankGasperone of Phoenix, Ariz., andAlfred Gasperone' of this place;two daughters, Mrs. Mary Perist-elli and Mrs. Elizabeth Tipito,both of Camden; 13 grandchildren, and three great-grandchlldren.

The funeral will be Friday at8:30 a.m. from the Ryan Funeral Home, followed by a highrequiem mass at 9 a.m. in StAnn's Church by Rev. StanleyLevandoski, assistant pastor.Burial will be in St. Joseph'sCemetery.

MRS. GENEVIEVE S. CLARKLITTLE SILVER — Mrs. Gen-

evieve S. Clark, 33 North Sun-nycrest Dr., died yesterday InRiverview Hospital, Red Bank.

She was born In New Lexing-ton, Ohio, daughter of the late"orin T. and Elizabeth Ferguson,and had lived here three years.Mrs. Clark was a member ofFirst Community Church of Co-lumbus, Ohio.

Surviving are two daughters.Miss Betty D. Clark, with whomshe lived, and Mrs. C. J. Cadyf Deerborn, Mich., and a son,

Earl Y. Clark of Columbus.The Robert A. Braun Funeral

Home, Eatontown, is in chargeof local arrangements.

Harold L. HollywoodLONG BRANCH - Harold L.

Hollywood, 59, of 31 SeventhAve. died yesterday in Mon-mouth Medical Center. He hadbeen In failing health for threeyears.

Born in New. York, son of thelate Christopher and ElizabethTurner Hollywood, he was a resi-dent here most of his life.

Mr. Hollywood was a signal-man with the New York andLong Branch ^ Raiilroad for 42years. He was a member of theRailroad Signalmen's Brother-hood,

He was a member of Star ofthe Sea Catholic Church hereand the church's Holy Name andSt. Vincent de Paul Societies.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Ethel I. O'Connell Hollywood:four sons, Thomas J. Hollywoodor Middletown, R. I., PhillhiHollywood of Hyattsvllle, Md.Harold Hollywood of this placand Alfred Hollywood of Neptune:two sisters, Mrs. Marvin Beeg'"of Neptune City and Mrs. Aj-thuWilke of New York, and ningrandchildren.

The John W. Flock Funern'Home is in charge of arrangements.

CHARLES F. KR1EGERATLANTIC HIGHLANDS -

Charles F. Krieger, 85, of 15Simpson Ave., died yesterday inthe Atlantic Highlands NursingHome.

Born in New York City, he. hadlived here V/% years.

Mr. Krieger was a retired fore-man for the Central Coal Co.,New York. He was a member ofSt. Agnes Catholic Church.

Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.Emily Junkelman of this place:a son. George Krieger of NewYork City; a sister, Mrs. Eliza-beth Schneider of. Pfalz, Ger-many; a brother, August Krieg-er of New York City; three grand-children, and two great-grandchil-dren.

The funeral will be Saturdayat 9:30 a.m. from the Condon Fu-neral Home, followed by a highrequiem mass at 10 o'clock in St.Agnes Church, offered by Rev.Michael J. Lease, pastor. Burialwill follow in Mt. Olivet Ceme-tery.

Today inWashington

Associated Press 'President Kennedy holds a

news conference.SENATE

Continues voting on depressedareas bill.

Education subcommittee contlnues hearings on aid to education.

Labor subcommittee works onminimum wage bill.

Finance Committee continuesmarkup of jobless pay bill.

HOUSEConsiders routine legislation.Banking Committee considers

area redevelopment bill.L a b o r Committee continues

hearings on school aid.Administration Committee con-

siders b/wst in members' officeallowances.

Sea Bright(Continued)

developing near the Sea BrightMotel on the South Beach. ,

There, yesterday, cars wereslowed to a crawl as waterflooded Ocean Ave.

"Complaints have come infrom the Chamber of Commerceand many individual suggestingthat the drain system must havebroken down," the mayor said.

Councilwoman Ceclle FrankeNorton, finance chairman, whohas a home on Ocean Ave. in theSouth Beach area, said she sawsome county workers arrive in aprivate car to attempt to dcawith the problem but they weretoo few and did not bring in theequipment needed for the job.

"Somebody had better put a'snake' in the drain to find oulIt there is a break," she said"Something very serious iswrong and we need a proper fulcrew sent here to deal with it.'

CRITICAL CONDITIONLONG BRANCH - Mrs. Ethe

Bott, 75, of 311 Branchpoint Ave.reported missing from her homeat 11:30 last night, was foundat 8 o'clock this morning appar-ently unconscious on a sidewalknear her home, police reported.

She was taken to MonmouthMedical Center for treatment.

Her condition was reportedcritical. Police was said therewas no evidence of violence andthat an Investigation is beingmade.

DAD'S, INC., TO MEETFAIR HAVEN — Plans for a

water safetya^tP^rn will bediscussed at a meeting of Dad's,Inc., tomorrow at 8:30 pm. inthe Yoath Center. Other plansfor the Sea Scout program alsowill be outlined.

CLIFFORD F. GORDONNEW MONMOUTH — Clifford

F. Gordon, 73, of Keyport-NewMonmouth Rd, died Sunday inhis home after a long illness.

He was born In Brooklyn, andlived here 23 years. Mr. Gordonwas a retired telephone engineerfor the American Telephone andTelegraph Co., and was a mem-ber of the Telephone Pioneersof America.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Efiel B. Gordon; three sons, Don-ald'R. and Rodney W. Gordon,both at home, and Bruce J. Gor-don of Cincinattl, Ohio; three sis-ters, Mrs. Lillian Lcnahan ofWashington, Mrs. Jean Scribnerof Huntington, 'L. I., and Mrs.

eorge Thompson of Massape-qua, L. I., and two grandchil-dren, i

The funeral will be this after-noon at 2 o'clock in the ScottFuneral Home, Belford. Burialwill be in Bayview Cemetery.

HOMAN INFANT- "LONG BRANCH - Eileen Ho-

man, three-week-old daughter ofWalter and Rondelein ReldeifHoman, 451 Hampton Ave., diedvesterday in- Monmouth MedicalCenter.

Surviving, besides her-par-ents, are a brother, Walter W.Homan, at home; her maternalgrandparents, Mr. and Mrs.Henry Reldeif of Brooklyn; hermaternal sreat-grandfather, Lou-is Pond of Jersey City; her pa-ternal grandparents, Mr. andMrs. Rudolph Homan of thiscity, and her, paternal great-grandmother, Mrs. Jenny Walkerof Blnphamton, N. Y.

Burial will be today at 2:30o.m, in Woodbine Cemetery.Rev. J. Courtney Hayward, pas-tor .of St. Luke's MethodistChnrch, will officiate. The Da-miano Funeral Home is incharge of arrangements.

OZZIE J. CANADAFREEHOLD-Ozzie J. Canada,

44, of 30 Avenue A, died yester-dav in FitWn Hospital, Neptune.

He was born in Fort Valley,Ga., son of the late David andMary Canada.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Lottie M. Canada; two brothers,David and William Canada, anda sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Moss,all of this place.

The W. H. Freeman and SonFuneral Home is in charge ofarrangements.

TRACY ANN BURNETTEMADISON TOWNSHIP - Tra-

cy Ann Burnette, two-month' olddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. War-ren Burnette, Rt. 9, died yester-day in New York Hospital.

Also surviving are a brother,Allen Burnett, at home; her ma-ternal grandparents, Mr. andMrs. Richard Schnuck of Cheese-quake; her paternal grandmoth-er, Mrs. Mary F. Burnette, also

1 of this place; maternal great-there grandfather, Max Jensen of Clilf-

wood; paternal great-grandfath-er, Charles *A. Wilson of thisplace, and paternal great-grand-mother, Mrs. Ethel Burnette ofYork Village, Maine.

The funeral will be tomorrow atII a.m. In #the Bedle FuneralHome, Matawan, with Rev. Hen-ry A, Male, rector of St. Mary'sEpiscopal Church, officiating.Burial will be in Shoreland Me-morial Gardens. .

Successful InvestingBy ROGER E. SPEAR

Suggest Five Stocks ForConservative Investors

Q) "I want to invest a fewthousand dollars in a limited num-ber pi conservative stocks. I'mnot especially keen on bonds orpreferreds. Can you help me?"C. B.

A) M a n y ofmy r e a d e r shave sent insimilar q u e stions lately. Tomeet your re-quirements, Iam happy tooffer an invest-ment packageof five com-mon stocks.

These issues,SPEARin my opinion, will' provide (1reasonable yield under presentconditions; (2) moderate growthsufficient to offset Inflation to iconsiderable extent; and (3some ability to resist market decllne.

Here they are: Com Product(NYSE), a leading food package;

Slight DipIs RecordedIn Market

NEW YORK (AP) - The stockmarket declined irregularly yes-terday as volume dipped belowthe five million share level forthe first time in two weeks.

Lockheed was the sensation ofthe day, spurting 7% to 42% on• delayed opening block of 140,000shares before being cut back acouple of points. General Electric(ex dividend) and WestinghouseElectric lost l'/i each on news ofthe Federal Government's firstdamage suit resulting from thprice-fixing conspiracy.

National Airlines rose 2>/2 amDelta 2% on word that they hadbeen awarded major-transcon-tinental routes by the Civil Aeroaautics Board.

The Dow Jones industrial aver-age dropped 3.36 to 661.08.

Volume of 4.9 million sharescompared with 5.08 million Mon-day and was the smallest sinceFeb. 20 when 4.68 million shareswere traded.

Nine of the 15 most active•locks advanced and six declined.

Lockheed's 140,000 share open-ing was the largest single trans-action since Feb. 10 when 215,000shares of General Electric wasold in a block.

Lockheed was the most activitock, rising 5ft to 40 on 211,000shares. Trading was halted dueto selling, pressure and was re-lumed at the close when blocksof 50,000 and 2,000 shares wentraded at 40.

Second most active was Am-pex, up */t at 25'/8 on 172.30Cshares. Third -was Sperry Rand,up V, at 2S% on 158,800 shares.Next came Falrchild Engine, up1% at 10, and Brunswick, off V/2at«3.

Douglas Aircraft, one of thefirms beaten out by Lockheedfor the pig contract, dropped 2'/5in active dealings. Boeing, an-other also-ran, managed tcadvance %. In the same category, General Dynamics lost %

American Telephone was sold•ctively, losing 2'/, at 112. LittonIndustries dropped 5»/«, AmericanMachine & Foundry 2'^, Air Re-duction 2, Republic Steel l>/«,Radio Corp. VA. Texaco 1V4 andMetrc-Goldwyn-Mayer (ex divi-dend) 1%. Revlon advancedUnited Aircraft 1% and Anaconda

* •Yesterday's closing stocks:

ACT Ind

Air ReduoAll*»g CpAlien MidAlleC PwAllied ChAIMS Chal

45%

6314«*

421443145926%7114

Am Alrlln 22Am BrK Bll 45Am C«n 3814Am Cyan 44Am MAFdy 107^Am Motor! 1814Am Bmelt M'-iAm Btd WO.Am TelATrt 112Am Tob 7314Am Viscoaa 40%Amp Ino 7SHAnaconda 50T4Armco 8tdl; 74Armour & Co 45%Armit Cfc »6VlAshl Oil 2714Atchlson 2414All Re tin 53%Avco Corp 18%Bibcock * W 41%Bald Lima 14Bait It Oh 3414Bayuk Clg 34%Bell ft How 5714Bendlx 6.1Beth Bteelloelng Airlortlenlarg WarnIrunswlckluckeyo Fllucy Erielulovalurl Inrl

Case. J ICater TraoCelaneseChes * Oh ,ChryslerCltlel SvcCoca ColaColg PalmColum GasComl BolvCon BelliCont CanCorn PdCrown ZellCruo StlCurtlss WrPel k HudPent SupPoug AlrcI>ow ChemP u Pont-Duq UEast KodEnd ,JohnErin LackFirestoneFord Motden cigarden Dyliamaen ElecG«n' Fds ' "Gen MotorsOen Pub UtO Tel*Eloen TiraGilletteOlen AidaoodrlenGoodyearat A * POreyhoundlOulf oilHammer Pap 3D%Hero Pdr »3<1m Cant 3714Int Bui Mch 700Int Harv *»%Int Nick G8';iIM Pap.r 31%lnl Te l ixe l 6»

31(437%2D%

I-T-B CM Brk 21!Johns Man 67",'Jones t U 60VJoy Mfg 4S-HKaiser Al 40*Kennecott 83(:Hoppers 431,Kresse, S3 301Kroger 31 liLchlgh C4N 13CLoh Fort C 30VLeh Val Inci l ' iLeh Vnl RR 5(,•LOF Olnss 56MLib McN*L mLlgg * My C2MLukens Stl 6£>'.iMack Trk 41 !iMartin CoMerckMetro OMMinn M*MMo Pac AMont WardNat BlicNat DairyNat DistillNat QypsNat StoolNY CentrnlNla X PwNo Am AvNor PacNwst Alrlin -Norwich PhOhio o nOulb MarOwens III Gl 102",P A W Ai 10%

8R-MB7',S81(140* .31%8268'428 (I59'S85%18(541(1

Penney, JCPa PwftLtPa n RPepsi ColaPhil ElPlilll PotPit BtrolPut) Bv E4OPullmanPure OilncAReading CoRepuu StlRevlon•Rcyn MetRev TobRob FultonBt Jos LeadBt Reg PapScars RoebBbell oil

nclnlrBmlth, AOSoconySou PacBou KyBperry tUlStil II randBid Oil CalBtil Oil NJmud rackTeinenTex Ot ProdTonlronTlilewat OilTransamerUn CarbideUn PacUnit AlroUnited CpUB Lines

. PlywdUS llnli

itim BunVan Al BllWnlwortliWarn II PicWest Un TelWests' SIWhite MotWoolwortli

3014(4

341135!i57'4l<Hi6014

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i115(148U43",

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4027(426 %3114

12831U

County PTALeader AttendsFounders' Day

LAURENCE H,AHBOR—Found-ers' Day was celebrated at the

. . . ... . . . last meeting of the Laurencewhich will soon enter the domes- Harbor-Cliffwood Beach Parent-ic soup market. A 2-for-l split T e a c h e r Association. Mrs. Freds planned this spring. DuquesneLight (NY^E) is-lessening its de-pendence on the steel industryand has raised its dividend inseven of the last nine years. In-ternational Textbook (OTC),yielding 5.3 per cent, seems as-sured of a good demand for itscorrespondence courses for yearsto come.

Earnings of New England Tele-phone (ASE) are advancing,helped by rate Increases. Thedividend will be Increased to}0.«!4 quarterly in June. RalstonPurina <QTC) has had slow butconsistent growth. Dividends ofthis leading cereal producer havebeen boosted seven times since

At recent levels the averageyield of the five^stock packagewould be SJ'per cent.

Q) "I'm planning to start in-vesting in General Motors sharesthrough, the Monthly InvestmentPlan. Shall I take the dividendsin cash or reinvest them?" N. P.

A) By all means reinvestthem. The more shares you ac-quire through MIP, the more di-vidends will accrue, and viceversa. Almost 90 per cent of the101,000 people who use MIP havetheir brokers reinvest dividendsautomatically. This builds iiptheir holdings faster. MIP isnot designed for persons needingcurrent income but is Ideal forinvestors with limited ,sumsavailable for regular investment

Mr. Spear cannot answer almail personally but will answerall questions possible • in hiscolumn.

Radges GoTo 13 Troop247 Girls

SHREWSBURY — Second Classbadges were awarded to 13 mem-bers of Girl Scout Troop 247 althe meeting last Thursday in theschool! '

Receiving the awards wereJeanne Feitt, Kathy Jones, AmyChristensen, Ellen Meyers, CarolKessler, Kathleen Morris, ChristaWarwick, Nancy Flood, CharleneNil], Patricia Johnstone, CarolMundico, Elena Oddo and Soret-ta Rodack.

Mrs. Edward Meyers, Mrs.Philip Morris and Mrs. AllanWarwick, troop leaders, wel-comed Diane Bruton, who was in-vested into the troop.

By way ot completing their in-ternational friendship require-ment for which the girls choseFrance, Mr. J. J. Shibla'of theAsbury Park Travel Agencyshowed a film on that country.

Ladies9 NightFor Kiwanis

LINCROFT — The LincroflHolmdel Kiwanis Club heldLadies' Night last week in Lin-croft Inn. Thomas Kejsey of Holm-del, a teacher in the Englishdepartment of Monmouth College,gave a talk on the North American Phalanx Association.

This week the club will holdan interclub meeting with thLong Branch Kiwanis Club, al-so at Llncroft Inn. Bother Ber-nard of the Christian BrothersAcademy will be tne speaker.

Present last week were Mr. andMrs. Frank Ashworth, Mr. andMrs. Leon Rosen, Mr. and MrsJohn Zoller, Mr. and Mrs. GusPellegrinelli, Dr. and Mrs. Howard Tarabour, _ Mr. and MrsGeorge Coulson, Mr. and Mrs.Donald .McClintock, Mr. and Mrs.John Brockwell, Capt. and Mrs.Wesley Besse, Mr. and Mrs.Harry Seylaz, Mr, and Mrs. Ga-briel Molnar, Mr. and Mrs. Ar-thur Williams, Irving Van Brunt,Theodore Heimelman and JohnJohnson.

MarketNEW YORK (AP)-(USDA) -

Wholesale egg offerings light toadequate on large; increased onmediums and slightly heavy onsmalls. Demand improved onlarge; quiet on mediums and satsfactory on small yesterday.

New York spot quotations folow:

Mixed ColorsExtras (47 lbs. min.) 40-41; ex-

ras medium (40 lbs. average) 3637; smalls (35 lbs. average) 3-f/j-35ft; standards 38^-39'^ checks37-38.

WhitesExtras (47 lbs. mln.) 40-411$;

extras medium (40 lbs. average)36-37'/j; top quality (47 lbs. min.)40ft44iS; mediums (41 lbs. av-ft/S (erage) 36-37J4; smalls (36 lbs.average) 34^-36.

BrownsExtras (47 lbs. min.) SDft-il;

op quality (47 lbs. min.) 41-43;mediums (41 lbs. average) 37-

I4J4-38.smalls (36 lbs. average)

MEETS GOLDBERGMATAWAN — Mrs. Helen Pok-

illus, 258 Harding Blvd., atten-ed a cocktail party and meeting

with Arthur J. Goldberg, secre-tary of labor, Monday at theBarbizon Plaza Hotel, New York

ity. An employee of the Newersey Bell Telephone Company

Mrs. Pbkallus was oneV the rep-„ resentatives of Local 1009, Com-

BQ*T loan municatlon Workers of America.

Grimes, county Founders' Daychairman, spoke.

The candtelighting service washeld with the following membersparticipating- Mrs. Vincent Bush-man, Mrs. Tod Krumenaker, Mrs.Vincent Applegate, Mrs. CharlesDevecka, Mrs. Evan Schufelt,Mrs. Charles Thompson, Mrs. Da-vid Boyd and Mrs. .WilliamLoughlin.

Mrs. Armour Ashforth, the firstperson to receive a life mem-bership from the PTA, wasamong the guests. Other guestsincluded Dr. William Sample, su-perintendent of schools; ClarenceRidgeway, assistant superintend-ent of schools; James Maloney,principal; Mrs. William Weeks,Mrs. Russell Macdonald, Mrs. Jo-seph Mollis and Mrs. CharlesThompson.

Kenneth Smlda, principal of theMadison Township High School,discussed the progress of the highschool building and the curricu-lum. He told of the eagerness andanticipation the future studentsof the school related to him duringtheir interviews, and expressedhope the children would continueto have this interest during theirhigh school years.

Mrs. Joseph Deerln, President,presented a life membership cer-tificate and pin to Mrs. JosephMollis, Laurence Harbor. A let-ter from the National Congressof Parents and Teachers explaining the honbr of receiving thisaward was read by Mrs. WilliamWeeks. Mrs. William Becknerdescribed the projects Mrs. Mol-lis has undertaken in the organi-zation.

Mrs. Deerin announced that 21members attended the countyFounders' Day luncheon. Therewill be a1 workshop for countychairmen Wednesday in Trenton.

James Cannon presented acheck for $100'to Mrs. WilliamBeckner, secretary-treasurer ofthe Madison Township Scholarship Fund. This money was do-nated by last year's graduatingclass from the Memorial Schoolto help promote the scholarshipprogram.

Mrs. Krumenaker, parent andfamily life chairman, announcedthat a discussion on "allowances"will be held at her home, 428 Bayview Dr., Wednesday at 8 p.mAll interested members may attend.

A nominating committee waschosen to present a slate at theApril meeting. Serving on thecommittee are Mrs. BushmanMrs. Schufelt, Mrs. Harry Johnson, Mrs. Alexander Kappererand Mrs. William Loughlin.

A film was presented by Mrs.John Windas, afternoon kindergar-ten teacher, of the Christmas op-eretta. The theme of the operet-ta, "Santa Claus in Mother Goose-land," was composed of childrenin the afternoon class..

The PTA agreed to donate $10to the Toni Marie Fund. Thiswill be taken from the child wel-fare account.

The attendance award was wonby Mrs. Windas and Mrs. CarlMetiers, third grade.

Agent SaysHam PerfectFor Easter

FREEHOLD — Ham fulfills alof the qualifications for a quickand easy, but delicious, main dishfor today'ssays Mrs.home agent for Monmouth Coun-

busy homemakerLorna K. White,

ty-She adds: "Ham is extra-spe

Cial for Easter dinner. Its flavorblends well with many well-likedfoods — apples, sweet potatoes,cranberries, pineapple. Ham isversatile, serve it hot or cold,sliced thick or thin, as the maindish for dinner and in sandwichesfor next day's lunches.

"When you buy ham, you maychoose between fully cooked andcook-before-eatlng types. The la-bel indicates the type. The fullycooked type will cost.more perpound but may be served withoutfurther cooking, or furthershrinking.

"To bake a ham that requiresfurther cooking, place it fat sideup on a rack In a shallow roast-ing pan. Do not add water orcover, and do not baste. Bake ina 325 degree oven until your meatthermometer shows an internaltemperature of'160 degrees F.

"If you want to serve a fullycooked ham hot, heat it until themeat thermometer shows 125 to230 degrees F."

To Begin FondDrive for Scouts

KEANSBURG — The localBoy Scout fund-raising campaignwill start Saturday.

Under the chairmanship ofCouncilman Louis Collichio, lead-ers, committeemen, parents andscouts will participate in thedrive.

There are seven active scoutsunits here composed of 200 boysand 50 volunteer leaders.

The funds from the drive willhelp defray the cost of camps,field service and training.

IRISH HOPRIVER PLAZA — The River

Plaza Boys Club will hold an"Irish Hop" on Friday from 7:30to 10:30 p.m. in the local school.

RED BANK REGISTER Wed., March 15, 1961—3

KeyportHigh SchoolIssues Honor Roll

IN APPRECIATION — Red, Bank Police Chief George H. Clayton, right, receives aplaque from Francit J. Bolduc, executive vice presicfont of the Community Chamberof Commerce at a venison dinner latt night in Sal's Tavern, given for the police de-partment. Frederick Schlotser, vice president of the chamber'i board of directors,lookt on. The dinner wai given in appreciation for police protection in the borough.

New JerseyNews Briefs

Associated PressCAMDEN—Two former Radio

Corporation of America em-ployees from Camden have beenfreed in $500 bail each oncharges of income tax evasion.Released yesterday were LeroyF. Nevin, 59, and Frank R. DiBenedetto, 47. Nevin is chargedwith evading $650 in taxes in1954," While Di Benedetto is ac-cused of failing to pay $740 thesame year.

NEWARK-Sharon Ligon, 5,was killed yesterday when shewas struck by a truck whilecrossing the Intersection of 15thAve. and S, 18th St., <in herway to kindergarten class. Shewas the daughter ot Mr. andMrs. James Ligon of 519 S.18th St. Police identified thetruck driver as Alfonse Mala-fronte, 35, of Brooklyn. *

HOBOKEN — Adelaid Gosselin,42, of 128 Madison. St., was fa-tally injured yesterday when hewas hit by a car while loadinggarbage on a truck on ParkAve. Police said he was struckby a car driven bv Carmine Pas-quale, Jr., 25, of 526 JeffersonSt. Pasquale and a passengerJoseph C6ndellon, 28, of G4 Washinijton St., were hospitalizedwith head Injuries when Pas-quale's car smashed into twoparked cars after hitting Gosse-lin and the garbage truck. Theywere reoorted in fair pnnditionin St. Mary's Hospital.

NEW BRUNSWICK—A Ger-man-born New Brunswick youthwho surrounded himself withsymbols of Hitler's Germanyand Immersed himself In stu-dies of weapons has been ar-rested for stealing rifles andolstols, police said yesterday.Police searched his room yes-terday In connection with thetheft of a pair of antique pis-tols from the New BrunswickPublic Library last Wednes-day. They found the uis'o's,five rifles, swastikas, Nazi ln-slgnlas, pictures of Hitler andnotebooks containing designs,specifications and other dataabout various weapons, accord-ing to New Brunswick PoliceLt. Claude Colllgan. The NewBrunswick youth, 16, and a 17-year-old companion from SouthRiver, will be brought beforeJudge Aldona Apoleton in Mid-dlesex County Juvenile Courtnext Mondav or Tuesday, Col-llgan said. The South River ladnarticlpated with the NewBrunswick youth In stealingfive rifles from the CausewayMarine Shoo In South RiverFeb. 8, police said.

TRENTON—Luke A. Mulliganof Leonia and John A. ICinczelof Trenton, were named to thestate Board of Medical Exam-iners yesterday by Gov:'1 RobertB. Meyner. Mulllpan ruooeedshimself, and Kinczel replaces El-mer P. Wiegel.

BERLIN—U.S. military au-thorities said today thai Rob-ert E, Cumings, 21, of Mont-clair, N. J., committed suicideIn a West Berlin Park Mondaynight. West Berlin oolice foundthe youth's bodv In the parkearly Tuesday. The Army saida suicide note was found onthe bodv, but Its contents werenot disclosed. Cumlntts was theson of Mr. and Mrs. EdearCumings of 14 Afterglow Ave.,Monlclalr.

SOMERVILLE - Dr. Earn S.Barkulis. of CIBA Pharmaceuti-cal Products, Inc., Summit, last

,n'»ht biKame the winnerif Hie Selman A. Waksman hon-

oran' lectureshiD award for outstanding contributions to micro-bioloav. The award, conferredannuallv. was oresented by theTheobald Smith Society. NewJersev branch of the Societv ofAmerican Bacteriologists, a ' its

annual banquet in Far Hills

TRENTON-Low bid «r $69,-468 has been received on thecontract to rebuild Green Ser-geant's Brld.ee In Sergeantsvllle•-the last publicly owned wood-en covered bridge in New Jer-

sey. The 200-year-old bridgeacross Wlckeckeoke Creek InHuntcrdon County was dam-aged by a truck In 1960 andthen dismantled. Area peoplecalled for its restoration andthe state Highway Departmentfinally took on the task. J. F.Chapman of Hillside submittedthe low bid to the departmentyesterday. The historic bridgewill be rebuilt using much ofthe original lumber. It willbe supported by concealedsteel girders and will providea • 12!4-foot wide roadwaystrong encuRh to carry 20-tontrucks. It will carry westboundtraffic. A parallel bridge willbe built to carry eastboundtraffic.

WASHiNGTON-Sen. HarrisonA. Williams, D-NJ, yesterdayvoted against an amendment bySen. A. Willis Robertson, D-Va.,to knpek out of the depressedareas bill direct treasury fuiancing for the $300 million of loanfunds. The Senate defeated themeasure, 49-45. Sen. Clifford P.Case, RrNJ, was not listed amongthose voting.

School Aid(Continued)

ing the impact aid cuts. He saidthey are "justified . . . althoughI would prefer that the reduc-tions not apply to the 1961-62 fis-cal year but to the followingyear."

Tuition Plan

TB ConfabConsultantIs Named

TRENTON — Mrs. DorotheaK. Holmes of Ocean Grove hasbeen named by Dr. Roscoe P.Kandle, state commissioner oflealth, as a consultant on new

aspects of tuberculosis control atthe annual conference of stateand local health officials to beheld April 6 and 7 in the WarMemorial Building.

Mrs. Holmes is assistant to thedirector of Monmouth County Or-ganization for Social Service andtuberculosis nursing supervisorShe is in charge of the coordina-tion of the tuberculosis contraprogram in Monmouth County,which is conducted by MCOSS inits role as the tuberculosis as-sociation.'

Others who will serve as con-sultants include Dr. WilliamDougherty and Dr. James Peter-son, state Health Department;Miss Mary E. Roe, executive di-rector of the Union County Tu-berculosis and Health Associa-ion, and Geroge Laubach, health

officer for the city of ElizabethEmphasis will be placed on

tuberculin testing, prevention andthe distribution of drugs.

Mrs. Holmes, before her ap-pointment as assistant to the di-rector of MCOSS, was a staflnurse in Neptune. She previouslserved as supervisor of the Mont-clair Community Nurse Service,

Boehm also suggested it mighbe more equitable to substitutesome system of federal tuitionpayments.

The subcommittee heard newrequests from Roman CatholicChurch leaders that parochial andother private schools be declaredeligible for low interest federaloans if such loans are approvedfor public schools.

Morse proposed assignment obipartisan Senate-House group toexplore this touchy problem. Theadministration is seeking to fendoff any parochial school aid or.civil rights amendments to theneasure.Morse said he agrees with the

administration that any parochia!school aid amendment would killthe entire bill. But he said heknew, of no constitutional bar toa separate bill proposing federalloans to private and parochialschools a t no cost to the govern-ment.

6 ChurchesTo JoinFor Service

MANASQUAN — Six churcheswill participate in a union Lent-en musical service Sunday at 8p.m. at the Methodist Church,iouth and Church Sts.The program will include an

organ recital by Olga D. Lewis,and the cantata, "On the Pas-sion of Christ" by David H. Wil;Hams.

James Robinson Scull will di-rect the cantata and Janice Ma-dole will accompany on the or-gan; Soloists will be Mary Eirich,soprano; John P. Schoening, bar-itone, and Richard Olmstead,tenor.

Alice Meyer will play the of-fertory, "Pastorale" by AlecRowley.

Participating churches aroFirst Baptist, Shiloh Baptist.Evangelical Lutheran Church ofthe Holy Trinity. First Presbyter-ian Church, and the MethodistChurch, all of Manasquan: andtho Reformed Church of Brielle.

A reception will be held inTellowship Hall following the ser-

DE MOLAY ELECTSKEYPORT — Howard Odell

was elected master councilor ofAberdeen Chapter of the De Mo-lay of Keyport. Also serving willbe David Rinear, senior council-ir, and Paul Stames, junior

councilor.

INEXPENSIVE PARTIESTo keep party expenditures

down, entertain at a buffetlunch or dinner, or a holiday>runch party.

K E Y P O R T — George D.Search, high school principal, hasannounced that 62 students haveobtained high honors and 133 onthe honor roll making a total of195 for the third marking period.

The honor roll:Ninth grade — high honor —

Virginia Adler, Mary Chinery,Patricia Erickson, Henry DePolo,Theresa Genovese, Jose Perez,Harriet Snyder, Kenneth Thomas,Jo Ann Tobia, Sandra Hunt, Mi-chael Harris, Christine Lo Paro,John Kitson, Charles Nation, LoisVanderpool, Barbara Waffenfeldand Maureen Wolfe.

Honor — Patricia Blazo. GailBennett, Walter Aque. Holly Al-ger, Barbara Boyce, Nancy Cox,Leslie Eley, Vita Genovese. Do-

lores Graser, Arlene Galetti,Elizabeth Havens, Olive Hugenin,Ronald Gilmartin, Anthony Gra-:iano, Nancy Kinkade. Joan Kite,'atricia Kua'rloyg, Charlotte La

Sala, John Johnson. Nancy Lear,Ethel Motylenski. Nicholas Ma-riolis, John McDonoueb, JudithNatarola, Thomas Nobile, MariePisoitelli, Cachlin She-ldon, Samuel Robinsfon, David Seigel, Son-ia Singlev, Richard Spencer, Judyerry, Lois Vanderbilt, . Judy

Vecohio, Diane Whenfield, JanWilding. Susan Williams andKathv Winter.

Tenth grade — high honor —Josephine Gillum, Ralpli Foss,Sue Frank, Spafford Lewis, AlanMeny, John Shayner, WoodrowSullivan, Carolyn Strouse, Mi-chael Weeks and Donna Thieme.

Honor — Alexander Austin,Wayne Beyer, Audrey Barber,Betty Baylis, Charles Collard,Edward Crossley, Marie Cnrdelfe,Charles Craig, Marlene Cohen,Rosemarie Cresci, Nancy Diamond, Marietta Dietrich^ Patri-cia Dowd. Amelia Gettis, LauraGillespie, Roseann.Grasso, Phillipiatti.-Cari Henry, Lynn Howard,

Rose Infanti, Mary Ann Kurim-sky, Donald Kress, GeorgineLetts, Pamela Ori, Barbara Kur-pell, Albert Kingeter, Jerry MaiLean, Marcel Mol, John Obuchowicz, Jo Ann Matthews, Joy Neilsen, Lynn Neilsen, Mary Paris,Barbara Post, John Stultz, KarenSellick and Susan Wire.

Eleventh grade — high honor —Donald Bottger, Ed George Bro-berg, Richard Bryson, JameBurket, Kathleen Bosley, JoyceMaley, Joanne Mahawage, Ca-rolyn Meier, Harriet Mordecai,Diane Nicholl, Evelyn Olsen

Mrs. SchanckIs Elected ByFire Auxiliary

HOLMDEL — The Ladies" Aux-iliary of the fire company mellast week. Hostesses were MrsMichael Harmyk, Mrs. W. J. Duncan and Mrs. Daniel Ely. Elect-ed were Mrs. George Schanckpresident, Mrs. Albert Niehaus,vice president; Mrs. Robert Clau-sen, treasurer, and Mrs. WilliamBecker, secretary.

The installation dinner willheld in Old Union House, RedBank March 28.

Plans were made to hold aarty following the April meeting.

On the committee are Mrs. Jo-seph Phillips and Mrs. RobertVoorhees.

Also present were Mrs. Har-old Braun, Mrs. David ClausenMrs. Taylor Hance, Mrs. JohnHolmdes, Mrs. John HulsebosMrs. Robert Lawrence, Mrs. Mar-garet Ryder, Mrs. William Stev-enson and Mrs. Walker Sutphin.

Man Fined $50As Disorderly

SHREWSBURY-Arthur Kaney,21, of 43 Foster St., River Plaza,'esterday wa s fined $50 for dis-irderly conduct.

He later said he would appealthe decision of Magistrate Whit-ney Crowell to the County Court.Mrs. Gwen Methot, 63 White St.,signed the complaint whichcharged Kaney created a disturb-ance on her property at 5:30a.m. March 5.

Kaney also was fined $10 fordriving without a license in hispossession.

Willie McDaniel, Bangs Ave.,Asbury Park, was fined $105 fordriving while on the revoked list.Magistrate Crowell also addedIwo months to McDaniel's licenseiuspension.Others fined were William J.

"rank, Elberon, $25, and James>. Murphy, West Deal, $20, bothfor speeding and John H. Kou-ly, $10, driving without lights.

Mutual .FundsDiscussion Set

EATONTOWN - A discussion>f mutual funds will be presented>t a luncheon meeting of theNew Shrewsbury CommunityClub tomorrow in Crystal BrookInn.

Mrs.

ost, Claire Schulz, Peggy Shee-nan, Loretta Terry, Bonnie Wal-

Claudia Witte, Linda Waf-'enfeld, Vincent Vassallo, Doro-hy Winebrake and Felicia Young.

TwelfUi grade — high honor —eorge Collard, Philip Cum-

mings, Judith Alpine, Jo Annpplegate, Ann Bottger, Carolorveleyn, Candi Davidson, Don-a Goldstein, Anthony Infanti,eter Mariolis, Carol Septen,arbara Rothbart and Muriel

Wilson.Honor — Donald Buhler, Ray-

nond Burgess, John Croes, Ka-en Bilderback, Rose Marie:olavito, Anita Fair, Ellen Ger-lann, Mary Gregory, Iris Galetti,ohn Heil, Kathleen Hedigan,andra Jordan, Mary Ann Ka-

diinsky, Douglas Mac Ewan, An-elo, Masia, Harold Me Murtree,arry O'Niel, Linda Notarcola,

*oseann Prusik, Alex Peters,Raymond Rainville, Ronald Ran-lolph, Patricia Rapp, Carolchultz, Marybelle Rnyder,

Charles Sakin, Anthony Serpico,Richard Silvestri, Francis Smith,Diana Wayte, Jane Wuestefeld,and Marilyn Young.

Cynthia Connelly, John II Car-man, Frank Fetta, George HenryJohn Gilbert, James Houston,Carol Lawrence. James Nappe,Zenalda Perez, Kerry Taylor amMargo Wilding.

Honor — Lester Brown, Miaha el Baron, Louise Bulger,Roseanne Cavall, Barbara Cham-bers. Charlene Davidson, SusaDi Marco, William Grim. JudithKennedy, Dennis Kiley. Constan-tino Lambros, K. Meir, SandrtMonahan, Margaret Prinz. Caro

ChaplainAddressesLadies' Aid

LINCROFT — The speaker ata meeting of the Ladies' Aid So-ciety of the Presbyterian Churchlast Thursday night was Rev.Raymond Foley, chaplain at FortHancock.

He showed colored slides ofKorea, and told of the peopleand their faith and hopes for thefuture.

Elected were Mrs. John Flock-hart, president; Mrs. Philip Eisen-hart, vice president and programchairman;secretary.

Mrs. Harry Seylaz,and Mrs. James

Pemberton, Hedy Potts, Pamela Burgess.

Owens, treasurer.Members will attend a circle

meeting April 3 at the Middle-own Westminister Presbyterian

Church.Mr. and Mrs. Harris Gregory,

who have traveled in South Amer-ica will give a report on thecountry.

Hostesses at the meeting wereMrs. Seylaz and Mrs. CharlesSchwartz.

Plans were made to serve aturkey dinner April 15. Mrs.Flockhart is chairman.

Also attending the meeting wereMrs. Ralph Layton, Mrs. GlennRichards, Mrs. John Mauser,Mrs. Robert Kurtz, Mrs. WilliamMills, Mrs. Alan Speck, Mrs.Elsie Taylor, Mrs. Frank Bluhm,Mrs. Stanley Stilwell, Sr., Mrs.Stanley Stillwell, Jr., Mrs.Holmes Burton, Mrs. CharlesConover, Mrs. Alfred Folsom,Mrs. Isabel Harris, Mrs. NormanVan Emberger, Mrs. ThomasBreckenridge and Mrs. Loretta

Television

Hazards of TV

Robert M. Rooke and Rob-:rt Weston of I. George Westonnvestment Co., Long Branch,vill speak.

Mrs. Russell Bcntz and Mrs.Martin Nelson are in charge ofthe luncheon.

By CYNTHIA LOWRY

NEW YORK (AP) — The waythings are going, if won't be loTigbefore television-watching becomes more dangerous than bath-taking, currently the most perilous household activity.

After all, a person in the aver-age television home devotes morethan five hours a day to watch-ing the small screen — morehours than is spent on any ac-tivity except sleeping and work-ing. And a little medical libraryis beginning to shape around itsoccupational hazards.

Recently the Journal of theAmerican Medical Associationjravely reported on an epidemicof "Dodge City syndrome," gun-shot wounds in the right feet ofyoung American males. It iscaused by practicing western-style fast-draws with loaded re-volvers and bad timing.

TV Elbow

Now comes a University ofSouthern California neurologistwarning about "television elbow."This, explains Dr. A. A. Marinac-ci, involves painful nerve injur-ies caused by resting the elbowson the arm3 of a chair for pro-longed periods while TV-viewing.If the practice continues withouttreatment he warned, it can evenlead to paralysis of the hands.

Actually, the most commondanger of TV-watching is caloric.Frequent trips to the refrigeratorhave become the viewers equiva-lent of the seventh inning stretch.Researchers last season made astudy of TV snack-habits andfound that the favorite nibble ofthe nation consists of potatochips, although nuts, candy, softand malt drinks were all high onthe list. All these may be deli-cious, but they are also fatten-ing.

DeafnessThe other day an automobile

executive warned a group of ad-vertising executives about a dis-ease he cal'ed "mass psycholog-ical deafness to TV commercials.While harmless — in fact oftendelightful — to the viewer, it isextremely painful to the sponsor.

There are still other hazardousareas yet to be authoritativelyexplored.

My mother, for instance, hadher leg broken by the GarryMoore show. Her foot went tosleep anile she was watching inrapt concentration. This resulted

in a nasty fall and six weeks Ina plaster cast.

And, on the other side of thecoin, there are more and morepeople complaining that they findTV better Vhan a sleeping pill: i"I just can't seem to keep myeyes open," is the complaint.

A few final (one hopes) wordson the Sullivan-Paar imbroglio:If anyone emerged the winner,an over-night rating by the Amer-ican Research Bureau indicatedit was Paar.

Last week, if the bureau'sseven-city sampling of audienceswere projected on a nationwidescale, the average Paar showwas seen by some 10,800,000 view-ers in 5,400,000 'homes.

While Paar was on his showMonday night, this audience justabout doubled. He equalled andmay even have topped the aud-ience watching his return to TVlast year after his well-publicizedwalk-out. j

But after Paar turned overMonday night's show to HughDowns and the entertainers, about7,000,000 people gave up and wentto bed.

Recommended tonight: • PerryComo Show, NBC, 9-10 — withguest stars Don Ameche andFrances Langford recreating ra-dio's old "The Bickersons"sketch; Circle Theater, CBS, 10-11 — "Minerva's Children," con-cerned with the problems of ed-ucating gifted children.

GuadalcanalCoastaliersPlace Fifth

MATAWAN TOWNSHIP — TheGuadalcanal Coastaliers . ColorGuard placed fifth in the Easternstates championship Saturday;sponsored by the Emeralds ofSt. Joseph's Drum and BugleCorps, Toms River.

The guard, sponsored by Guad-alcanal Post, Veterans of For-eign Wars, will compete Satur-day in a contest in Perth Amboy,sponsored by tho Metndearj ofSouth Amboy.

Also appearing for the firsttime will be the Miniature ColorGuard of the Coastaliers JuniorDrum and Bugle .Corps. ••- ^

4—Wed., March 15, 1961 RED BANK REGISTER

University to Honor LochnerWith a Doctorate Degree

MADISON. Wis. — touis P.Lochner, 32 Buena Vista Ave.,Fair Haven, N. J., winner of thePulitzer prize for distinguishedforeign correspondence, will re-ceive an honorary doctor of liter-ature degree from the Universityof Wisconsin here June 5.

His intimate inquiry into thelives, personalities, habits anambitions of Adolf Hitler and hisNazi associates, gained as a re-porter and later Berlin bureauchief for The Associated Press,made Mr. Lochner one of the bestInformed German experts injournalism. His authoritative- dis-patches brought him worldwldirespect.

Mr. Lochner, distinguished asthe author of several best-sellerbooks, as a war correspondent, asa radio news analyst and com-mentator, twice was the presidentof the Overseas Press Club andis a life member of Sigma DeltaChi.

Born in Springfield, 111., Feb,22, 1887, Mr. Lochner grew up inMilwaukee. He received his Bach-elor of Arts Degree from theUniversity of Wisconsin In 1909.

After having served as editoiof the Wisconsin Alumni Maga-zine from 1909-1914, he went toEurope as a free lance newspa-per correspondent. In 1924, heJoined the Berlin staff of the As-sociated Press. He was chief o

11 MonmouthLawyers JoinMitchell Group

NEWARK — Eleven MonmouthCounty lawyers are among 105In 12 counties who have notifiedJamej P. Mitchell, Little Silver,that they actively are support'Ing his candidacy for the gov-ernorship in the 1961 election.

They are James D. Carton, Wil-liam Nowels and Thomas F. She-bell, Asbury Park; Henry J. Sal-ing, 95 First Ave., Atlantic High-lands; Julius Grayer, Belmar;Irving E. Keith, Bradley Beach;Jerry Sokol, 76 West Main St.,Freehold; William E. Russell, 34Crest Dr., tittle Silver; 6wen B.Pearce and Richard A. Maguire,Manasquan. and Michael 1. Bar-nacle, 11 Holly Ct., Middletown.

Organization of this lawyers'committee, said Mr. Mitchell, theformer U.S. secretary of labor,represents "an excellent start andan aggressive program." WillardG. Woelper, Newark, heads thegroup. Leonard I. Garth, Pater-son, is its secretary-treasurer.

Louis P. Loehner

tha Berlin and Central EuropeaBureau of AP from 1928-19*when he and other American coirespondents were Interned :five months at Bad Nauheim.

Mr. Lochner visited Germanrepeatedly under the old moiarchy. He was there almo:steadily during the republiiregime. He observed Hitler's ris<to power and lived under Nairule from its inceptionJanuary, 1333, until 1942. Then,he and other American newsmwere exchanged for Axis internees.

It was In 1939, when the N«war machine was being maready for launching that he wo:the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished foreign correspondence

He was a hews analyst aniradio commentator for the National Broadcasting Companfrom 1943 to 1944; when heturned to Europe as a war cor-respondent. He remained over-seas until 1946.

After the war, Mr. Lochner waselected president of the OverseasPress Club in 1950 and again955. He was awarded a brow

plaque by the club in 1951 fo"Services Over and Beyond th<Call of Duty." He has been a litmember of Sigma Delta Chi glnci1943.

In 1958, he received a testimonial from the university here fo;"Distinguished Service to thiProfession of Journalism." A citation of special merit waiawarded to Mr. Lochner in 1951by Concordia Theological Seminary. That year, he also receivedan award of merit from theLutheran Laymen's League.

Mr. Lochner now is a speciacommentator for radio statiot

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WQXR-FM, New York, andregular contributor to BroadcastEditorial Reports, • journal aboutradio newscasting.

Hs is the author-of *'America'sDon Quixote," 1925; "What AboutGermany," 1942; "The GoebbeliDiaries." 1948: "Fritz Kreisler,"1*51; 'Tycoons and Tyrant,"1954; "Always the Unexpected,"• book of memoirs, 1956; "NewYork," I960, and "Herbert Hoov-er and Germany," 1960.

De MolayReverenceDay Sunday

MATAWAN - Paul W. Morich,district deputy, has announceda church service of the De Molaywill be held Sunday at 10:45 a.m.in the Baptist Church, Livingstonand Hale Sts., New Brunswick.

The combined membership ofRarllan Chapter, New Bruns-wick; Aberdeen Chapter, Key-port; Washington Chapter, Eaton,town, and the Trinity Chapter,Spring Lake, will attend.

Mayor Charles E. Applegate,Keyport, has proclaimed March12-19 "International DeMolayWeek" in Keyport.

The Order of DeMolay is com'posed of young men from 14 to 21years of age "seeking, to becometomorrow's better citizens by de-veloping better character and pre-paring to shoulder the responsibilitiea they will assume as adultcitizens of our great country."

The order was founded 42 yearsago in Kansas City, Mo., byFrank S. Land in observance ofthe seven cardinal virtues of theorder.

The Aberdeen Chapter of Key-port observed Its day of rever-ence Sunday at the Belford Meth-odist Church. The following daysof the week will denote filial love,courtesy, comradeship, fidelity,cleanliness, patriotism and rever-ence.

Aberdeen Chapter Is sponsoredby Caesarea Lodge, F & A.M.,Keyport. and is under the super-vision of Arnold E. Wentworth.

Couples' ClubSets Date ForTurkey Supper

HOLMDEL—The Couples' Clulof Holmdel Church met at Fel-lowship Hall Saturday night,when plans were made for theannual turkey supper, to be heldSaturday, April 29. Mrs. WesleyBuck and Mrs. William Niehaus

re chairmen.Servings will be at 5:30, 6:3

nd 7:30 p.m. Revervations musl>e made.Attending the meeting were Mr.

nd Mrs. Richard Schrank. Mr.and Mrs. William Boychuck, Mr.and Mrs. Joseph Philipps. Mr.and Mrs. John Jeffery, Mr. amMr*. William Stevenson, Mr. andMrs. Douglas Fromm, Mr. anMrs. Anthony Dwomakowski,Mr. and Mrs. Walker Sutphin,Mr. and Mr*. Wesley Buck, Mr.nd Mrs. Harold Braun, Mr. and

Mrs. Robert Cluseii, Mr. and Mrs,Herbert Stewart and Mr. amMrs. Mark Crook.

The host and hostesses wenMr. and Mrs. Boychuck, Mr. andMn. Schrank and Mr. and Mrs.:rook. '

GERONIMO! —Monty Jura, 16, right, appears anxioutfor a favorable braeie in Dallas, Tex., to send his pal,Benny Cordes, 16, holding rope and on bike, rollingalong in a new (port "Chute-a-biking." Excited neigh-borhood kids aid them. Monty cautioned any otherwould-be enthusiasts not to attempt the sport "unlessyou have a let of friends, because i t sure can get awayfrom you." (APWirephoto)

Red BankerAboard SubMother Ship

HOLY LOCH, Scotland — Fire-man Apprentice Wesley $, WainWright, 18, is sharing in Ameri-can history by serving aboard theU.S.S, Proteus, mother ship ofPolaris-carrying nuclear subma-rines for the U.S. Navy. He isthe son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl S.Wainwright, 45 Spring Ter., RedBank, N.J.

Shooting BanTo Continue

SEA BRIGHT — There's notgoing to be any skeet shooting

round here.Borough Council last night

latly rejected a request byiperatorj of the Surf Rider andhip Ahoy Beach Clubs that their

members be permitted to shootlay targets at times when neith•r bathers or boats might be inhe way.Councilman John S. Foreman

won quick agreement from May-r Thomas Farrell and fellow:ouncil members In his observa-ion that "we have an ordinanceigainst shooting on the books,md it should be abided by."tfayor Farrell said other suchequests had been denied.Council agreed to re-employ

.Irs. Lillian M. Lutz as managerthe Municipal Beach and park-

ng lot for the period May 1 toct. 1.It denied to Charles F. Hem

id, operator of a shop at 1060)cean Ave., permission to place

Individual one-hour parkingIgn in front of his establishment,is was permitted two years ago.ecommendation, however, wasade to residents and others to

se the municipal parking lot—ee of cost In winter—across

'romlheplace." Separate sifins,said, represent a law violation.Council was invited to sendipresentatives to Little Silver

a meeting at Borough Hall8:15 tonight to hear a discus-

on on mosquito control. An-ther invitation was to the Firstid Squad's dinner at the Wit-

St. Joseph'sFestival IsSold Out

KEYPORT - Tickets for theSt. Patrick's festival and danceSaturday In the auditorium of St.Joseph's Church, Keyport; havebeen sold out. No tickets will besold at the door.• Four hundred people will beon hand for Irish entertainment,which will feature Miss Rose Mc-Donald in a presentation of bal-let and modern dances, FrankHughes with his Irish songs, sing-ing waiters, quartets and otherentertainment.

John O'Brien will be master ofceremonies, Tommy McDonald'sorchestra will provide the music.

Corned beef sandwiches and re-freshments win be aerve<|.

The festival is sponsored by theHoly Name Society, with the Rev.William Bausch in charge.

Because of an expected lastminute request for tickets, thechairman suggests that the onlyones available might be obtainedfrom some early purchasers whomight find It Impossible to at-tend.

Assisting Father Dausch areCharles O'Hare and James Gath-ercole, chairmen; John J. Walsh,Walter Foley, John Ge lger ,Charles Vena, Michael Rickey,Joseph Howard, John O'Brien andAnthony Troncone.

Mrs. Frank Letwenske, decora-tlons chairman, will be assistedby the ladies of the parish.

INFANT BLESSINGLINCROFT — Glen Louis Dur

that he finds "the people of Scot- bin, adopted son of Capt. andland very friendly and Holy Loch Mrs. Glen Durbin, 52 Harvey Ave.

i

an extremely beautiful spot."Wesley, who graduated from

Red Bank High School last June,

Great Lakes NavaJ Station. Sail-ing aboard the Proteus was hisfirst assignment.

was blessed recently by Rev. Ar-thur J. St. Laurent, pastor of St.Leo the Great Catholic Church.

joined the Navy in July and re- Mr. and Mrs. Durbin entertainedceived his boot training at the Mr. and Mrs. Elmer J. Bauer,

proxy godparents for the child,and their son Michael at a din-ner following the ceremony.

Hunt for War Loot

To Drain BunkersWARSAW (AP) — Elaborate

plans are being made to drain avast network of, flooded under-ground bunkers built by Nazislave laborers during the war.There is speculation that someof Hermann Goering's stolentreasures way lie there.

The newepaper Trybuna Ludugave this description:

The Germans began buildingthe bunkers almost immediatelyafter they overran Poland in1939.

Concentration camp prisonersworked five years to build thesystem of tunnels and subsidiarybunkers around two main shel-ters, each about 1,200 feet long,

The two massively reinforcedunderground command post* arelocated in Spaia and in Konewka,four miles away. It is believedon» of the flooded tunnels con-nects the two shelters,

Shelters FloodedMost of the bunkers were blown

up in 1945 during, the SovietArmy'a January offensive. Butthe central shelters were floodedby German groups.

Polish attempts to drain thetunnels after the war failed forlack of adequate pumping appar-atus.

Frogmen sent down to explorethe flooded sections found that'only the upper stories of the un-derground shelters are inundated.They discovered an airtight steeldoor leading to lower level bunk-

's.In a previous report, Trybuna

Ludu said: "Valuable machinery,documents or art treasurers, loot-ed all over Europe, might havebeen hidden in these bunkers.Goering was, as Is known, one ofthe most notorious robbers of alltime."

Goering was Adolf Hitler'srighthand man. He killed him-self in 1946.

The Poles have not been able todetermine the depth or the ex-tent of the underground construc-tions. Villagers say tons of earthexcavated from the diggings wereused to fill in two lakes in thevicinity.

ENDS COURSEKEYPORT - Robert H. Wells,

son of Mrs. Mabel J. Wells, 40Broadway, has been graduatedfrom recruit training at the Na-val Training Center, Great Lake,111.

It pays to advertise la TheRegister.—Advertisement.

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In agreement with Britain, theUnited States recently activatedHoly Loch as the first Europeancentral base for operations of themissile-packing subs. It is beingused because of Its proximity topotential target areas.

Shortly after his arrival here,young Wainwright wrote home

PTA MeetingIs Tonight

NEW SHREWSBURY — J. C.Shagg, field representative of theCommittee for School Support,will be the speaker at a meetingof the Shrewsbury Township Par-ent-Teacher Association tonightat 8: is in Tinton Falls School.

The Committee for School S)(r>port is a state-wide group dedicatcd to broad state support forschools. It is comprised of rep-resentatives of the League ofMunicipalities, the New JerseyEducation Association, the statePTA, the League of Women Vot-ers, the Association of School Su-perintendents and the New Jer-sey Federation of District Boardsof Education.

Mr. Shagg will present an II-lustralcd lecture on tax prob-lems. Following this, a panel willanswer questions from the au-dience.

Panelists will Include MayorKarl K. Baron, Dr. Richard W."Iwenson, president of the boardof education, Adm. Andrew

and Mr.ihepard, tax assessor,ihagg.Mrs. Max Klein, program chair-

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Mr. and.Mrs. .Sydney H. Me-.can, Oak Hill Rd., have returnedrom a Florida vacation.

a r c h 25- , ,.Mr. Forsman, the police comilssloner, warned that anyonermitting dogs to stray will be

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Mr. and Mrs. George Davis,,Walnut St., have .aiovlsitors their json-in-law and daughter. Mr. andl,Mrs. Robert E. McGee and chil-dren of New York City.

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Fish for Friday? TherKTry These TricksPish night can b« any night of

tht week, it me young home-maker is ingenious about devilingWays of preparing fish.

The individual who says "1don't like fish" probably hasn'tbeen exposed to the pleasures offish casserole augratin, foil-bakedfish, and the many other waysthan frying to prepare this de-licious food.

Try baking a bluefish or amackeiel with a bread stuffing•ad liberal sprinkles of lemonjuice during the baking.

The old—and usually inexpen-sive—standbys of haddock andhalibut also take kindly to bak-ing, if. covered with evaporatedmilk and onion sllcea.

Broiling is the technique forof salmon and swordfish steaks, first

spreading them lightly with but-ter and lemon juice.

For foil-baked fish, ,wrap in-dividual portions in foil, first top-ping them withiseasonings, lem-on juice and' butter.

Flaked cooked fish (or canned)can be used in » fish loaf, made

exactly like a meat loaf. Bestserved with hard-boiled egg sauceand more lemon juice.

Another good use for cookedfish — fish croquettes, againserved with an egg sauce. Or ifyour hand is not too expert inshaping neat croquettes, try pack-ing the mixture into well-greasedmuffin pans.

RED BANK REGISTER Wed., March 15, 1961—S

A patent for the first type-writer was-issued to William A.Suit of Mt. Vernon, Mich., In1830. It proved to be a failure.

ONMOUTH MEAT!110MONMOUTHST. SH1-5292 RED BANK

OPEN FRIDAYS TILL 9 P. M.

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CORNED BEEF 6 9SWIFT'S PREMIUM SHOULDER OR RIB mr j ^

LAMB CHOPS 6 9BONELESS—AGED and SEASONED ^ ^ ^ ^

EYE ROUND ROAST 8 9LEAN—RIB HALF MM ^ | W

LOIN of PORK 4 9

S E T T I N G U P S T R E N GTH — Steelworker. set reinforcing b»n in wall* ofunderground Atlas missile emplacement before concrete pouring. This "silo," near Salina,Kan, is one of many Atlas launch facilities nnder construction -across the United States.

Some JapaneseGive Edge to U.S.

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By RENE-GEORGES INAGAKITOKYO (AP) — Soviet space j

II accomplishments place the Rus-sians first scientifically in the

I minds of many Japanese. But theUnited Stales is given the edge

I when it comes to standard of liv-II ing—for the time being at least.

While Socialist leaders and Ja-il bor organizations denounce "U.S.1 imperialism" and "Americanj warmongering," few individualI Japanese can be heard privately

running down America or Amer-|| icans.

For example, none of the per-il sons questioned in a series of

random interviews felt the UnitedStates is more interested in prep-

I arations for war than in a searchII for peace.

Still Dominant"There are many problems to

|| be overcome within America toI attain world peace," said Goro

Saekl, 40, a writer for a big To-

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$20 per mo. upCor. Broad * Reckl.Ji, R. B.

kyo newspaper, "but it seems tome the United States is ultimate-ly seeking peace."

Saeki added: "I think Americais still the dominant country inthe world because the number offree nations still exceeds those ofthe Communist bloc."

What is the first thing thatcomes to the mind of a Japanesewhen the United States is men-tioned?

What They Think"The cold war," said the news-

papermanAbraham Lincoln," said Mas-

ao Nakamura, a 24-year-old fac-tory worker.

President Kennedy," saidMari Sawada, 17, a high schoolstudent.

Its richness," said truck driv-er Tsuyoshi Nakano, 27.

'I think of America as theleader of the Western allies,"said Tsutomu Kameda, a 46-year-old physician.

I think it is a wonderful coun-try—but I only know it throughthe movies," smiled Kudo" Kia-doaka, 21, a shoe tales lady.

Places to VisitWhat places would they mos

like to see in America?"The Empire State Building oi

Niagara Falls." replied a 3B-year-old taxi driver, Noboru Sawada

"Hollywood," said a bright-eyed girl student. Other choicesincluded the Grand Canyon,typical farm and the road sys-tem.

Hisayo Miki, 26, a pale, a ser-ious-looking office worker stoppedon a busy Tokyo street and summed up her feeling about Amer-ica In this way:

"I am most interested in tinrational way of life in Americanamilies. I am most impressed

by the frank and open human re-lations among peoples in Amer-ica.

"And at the same time, life Inthe United States is too mechan-zed."

What They LikeAnd what do the Japanese on

the street, in shops and restau-rants like best about the UniteiStates?

Newspaperman: "Its youthful-ness In doing everything, especially as seen in the recent presidential election, and the Ken-nedy administration's positive attitude toward the Soviet Union."

Doctor: "The people's way oiife."

Taxi driver: "Americans dcnot have a strong class consciousness as you find In Japan."

Girl student: "The frontier spir-

Factory worker: "Its spacious-ness. I Would like to live in theWest."

Shoe seller: "The way everything is done in a big way anits roominess—not crammed Ilkin Tokyo."

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SHIRT STUFFBuying shirts for your mate'

They're usually sized as S, M,and XL. Called skip sizes, thesigarments wil shrink considerablymore than marked sizes unlescertified washable. So check Bielabel.

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WEDNESDAY. MARCH 15. 1961

Houses Mean Schools

The recent announcement in! Matawan Township Mayor PeterMatawan borough that a developer | J. Waters has quoted Mr. Levitt asplans to build some 315 houses there) saying that he, as a developer, isleaves one big question unanswered

— what aboutschool system?

aid ..for the local

FRAGILE: HANDLE WITH CARE

cognizant of "a builder's responsi-bility not to wreck a local schoolsystem" by putting up hundreds of

These 315 houses, if constructed j houses and leaving the taxpayers—and the local Planning Board hasalready indicated its "informal" ap-proval of the project—will, accord-ing to recent population studies ofthe county Planning Board, mean600 to 700 new students for the lo-cal school system within three tofive years after the development iscompleted.

to scratch for school constructionmoney — or put classes on halfsessions.

For the ratables a town gets ouof new houses do not start to coverthe cost of new school construction

Builders in Madison Townshipare contributing for school con-struction.

That means the Board of Educa- j Raritan Township's school sys-tem has perhaps been hit the hard-est by mass developments—but eventhere, the municipality is getting it:"builders' school."

It is to be hoped, for the sakeof the education of present and fu-ture school children in Matawanborough, that the Planning Boardand Borough Council will carefullystudy and weigh all facets of theproposed project before approval ofsubdivision maps and issuance ofbuilding permits.

Adequate education for our chil-dren is not to be compromised.

— out of the pockets of localtaxpayers—will have to spend some$600,000 to $800,000 for one largenew school or two small schools (atleast 20 classrooms will be required)to educate these students—or put alarge part of the school system onhalf-day (double) sessions.

Handling a large housing subdi-vision is a new experience for Mata-wan borough.

But it is not new to many neigh-boring municipalities, some of whichhave had to learn the hard wayabout the effects of mass housingprojects on the school system.

There are lessons to be learned jfrom some of these towns, such asMadison, Raritan, Middletown andMatawan Township, to name a few.

The proposed Levitt project inMatawan Township, if it goesthrough, will include financial aidfor the school system, or actual con-struction of schools, by the builder.

A scowling look is altogether un-natural. When it is often assumed,the result is that all comeliness diesaway, and at last is so completelyextinguished that it cannot be againlighted up at all.

— Marcus Aurelius (121-180)Roman emperor

Poor Man's Philosopher

Are Americans Losing Their Bite?By HAL BOYLE

NEW YORK (AP) — How surela man in trouble he won't for-•re you of your own teeth?.Nearly 22 million Americansdon't have teeth, about 13 percent of us all.

The t o o t hyou may saveb y brushingcould be yourown!

Here's an oldreminder of apresent truth:

One marriagein four ends in

get you—the next time he's introuble.

Happy anniversary! . . . Itwas just 60 years ago that—inWichita, Kans., — Cary Nationmade her first hatchet raidagainst a saloon My. youjust hardly never see girls like

The next problem' is to explainto it why it Is all worth while.

Funny Discovery

Here's a funny discovery:Psychologists have found thatstudents who have the highestI. Q. and make the best gradesalso generally have the widest

that any longer, although here a n d readiest sense of humor . .and there you do encounter one M o r a l : " y° u w a " t betterwho attacks a bar with abroken martini glass while cry-ing for more.

A nice hope: The average baby|

Moral:grades, laugh harder—particular-ly when the professor tells aloke.

How much do you dream?—

BOYLEcan expect to live half again as

1900

CARMICHAEL

divorce.I a m in - j O ng as one born in

formed that ifyou melted the Statue of Libertydown, you could make from theCopper of it 30 million pennies. . . But since the old girl hasgiven 10 times that many goldendreams, it is likely we can con-tinue to afford to keep her onher same old stand . . . A betterInvestment.

Can you name four animalswhose names end in "x"?Don't overlook ibex, lynx, foxand ox.

Quotable Notables

The stronger sex: Five yearstfter cancer is recognized inwomen, 37 per cent of them arealive. Of men, 26 per cent en-dure.

Someone has figured out that81 per cent of new car buyerslive in the suburbs. . .As a con-firmed 'city dweller we like tothink they keep a steady bail-out supply of gasoline in theirtanks at all times, in case theywant to return to civilization.

Our quotable notables: "Did'you ever know a woman who}was ruined by a book?"—ex-Mayor Jimmy Walker.

Nature note: The snail, oftenrebuked for its slowness, has a!top speed of three inches a min-ute, yet retains an overlookedvirtue: It is strong . . . It canpull up fo 200 times its ownjweight. ~ j

Bad insects make us neighbors!. . . Japan is troubled with anInsect pest (here called theColorado beetle. Here it is calledthe Japanese beetle. . !

Old truths worth remembering:,_ \finger Enro Stuart! says you canbet on one thing: If you Help 0—Wed., March 15,

born in the United States today|A s l e eP. science has found, about

FEEL THE AMEWAV .WHEN I 6 0To THE P C

20 per cent of the timeAwake, on ths job? . . . Well,what does your boss think ofyou?

A medical journal reports that"at about 40 years of age thereis a sudden acceleration in sen-sitivity to glare." A henpeckedhusband of our acquaintance askswhat normal miracle will doctorsfind out about next.

Sing-song: A Chinese laundryon the West Coast has pipedinChinese music for its employees.

Personalities: TV actress Juliatyeade takes her infant daughter,Caroline, on most of her cross-country hops . . . At 16 monthstlv? kid had logged nearly 100,-000 miles, equal to the lifetimejourneys of perhaps 50 pioneermothers in the last century.

The average American house-

These Days;

SOKOLSKY

A Monument to GoodnessBy GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY

Everyday something comes in here that is inter-esting, exciting, dull or hateful. An interesting lettercame from Sam Engler to remind me of the EducationalAlliance, a Settlement House on the lower East Sideof New York which produced, over the, years, a galaxy

of valuable citizens, many of whom,s,uch as Eddie Cantor and David Sar-noff, have become household names.

As I look over the list of young-sters of my time who found their ca-reers and personalities in the Educa-tional Alliance, there stands Sir JacobEpstein,, the great British sculptor. SirJacob was an East Side boy who cameto the Aliianpe to draw and scuipt.

These were poor boys^all of them—and our parentswere immigrants from Eastern Europe which was asdisturbed then-as it is now.

In the muck and truck that was the East Side ofNew York, which mothered gangs and mobs, therestood this building where anyone who wanted to ex-pand his personality and give vent to his talent hadan opportunity. .-..-

There are youngsters these days who talk aboutthe breaks. None of us had any breaks. None of us hadany economic security or expected ever to have. Wehad our choice as children to play on the sidewalks,to join gangs, to steal and burgle or to go to some suchplace as the Educational Alliance and do somethinguseful and exciting.

One thinks, for instance, of Eddie Cantor as anactor. I never do or can. I think of Eddie Cantor as aperson who devoted his life to good works. We werkids and the summer was hot. We had never seen grasexcept in a city park and although we knew what milkis, we had never seen a cow. Some of us were askedif we cared to go to the country for two weeks. Therewere no charges but the expenses were high, as we hadto buy a toothbrush and toothpaste and bathing trunks.This all costs money and it took some negotiating toget the dollar or two that was required for expensesbecause none of us had dollars.

Whenever I hear these days of the underprivilegedwho get free milk and free orange juice and perhapsa hot meal at school, I wonder how anyone can beunderprivileged who gets so much. For us, there was ajoy in the discovery of new worlds and the camp upon Surprise Lake was something never to be forgotten.We slept in tents and ate on a pavilion and had to dothe chores, but at night we sat around a camp firesinging songs. And perhaps we were a little afraid ofthe darkness and the quiet and the hoot-owl, becausewe were accustomed to city noises.

It was this camp that had the most profound .in;luence on my life and I know what it did for Eddie, aubercular little boy who slept in a cellar. It made of

him a philanthropist because Eddie's work has beento keep this camp growing and expanding. Eddie hasnever forgotten the day we took a train up to ColdSpring—far from the East Side and we saw our first

Lenten Prayerfrom

wife carries out about i.oflo snake and caught our first cat-fish.p o u n d s o f g a r b a g e y e a r l y . . . T . . . . , . , ,

Have you checked your own wife Everyday we lived intensely and everyday we.disIs she doing libr I covered something new over at the Alliance. For inlately?

duty?

It was Joseph Hergesheimerwho observed, "So long as youare' learning, you are' not grow-ing old. It's when a man stopslearning that he begins to growold."

Ohio State University says aslnrt pole, a line with or with-out a bobber and a hook baitedwith minnows or rcdworms is allthe equipment needed for fishingthrough ice.

Department of Agriculture testsshow that hens getting too muchlight at loo young an age comeinto production late and arc in-ferior in body and feather de-velopment.

stance, one day; a man dressed in white came to seeus. We were told that he was famous. He amused usand we laughed. We had given a performance of a playhe had written, "The Prince and the Pauper." We weretold that his name was Mark Twain and so ws cameclose to the hem of authentic greatness.

There is so much to tell of the Educational Alli-ance and of those early days, more than half a cen-tury ago when we were small children, unafraid, sureof ourselves, possessing few of the material things oflife, but grateful to have a place to go where therewere books, and, games and art and clubs and all thedoors that opened new worlds to us. The old buildingstill stands but they are going to enlarge it. A newgeneration of youngsters is ready to march throughits portals to discover that life cari be full and rich.

GOWITHGOD

by

Jim Bishop"Thank God every morning

when you get up that you havesomething to do which must bedone, whether you like it ornot. Being, forced to work, andforced to do your best, will breedin you temperance, self-control,diligence, strength of will, con-tent, and a hundred other virtueswhich the idle will never know,'Charles Kingsley wrote. Klngsley(1819-1875), English clergymanand novelist, is best known todayfor his historical novels "West-ward Ho" and "Hereward theWake," and his children's book"The Water Babies." He was oneof the initiators, of the Broad-

church Movement in England andstarted the controversy which ledJohn Henry Newman to write hiscelebrated "Apologia pro vitasua."

Jesus, He loves one and all,Jesus, He loves children small,Their souls are waiting round

His feet,On high, before His mercy-seat.While He wandered here belowChildren small to Him did go.At His feet they knelt and

prayed,On their heads His hands He

laid.

Came a Spirit on them then,Better than of mighty men,A Spirit fit for king and child.A Spirit faithful, pure and mild,Oh! that Spirit give to me,Jcsu, Lord where'er I be!

—Charles Kingsley' " • y 1 " 1 ^ from the nook. Go Withmission «f 11,, book'a publlahera, i lc .P"""-HII1 Book Co., Inc., Copyrl.ht'?> M * "y Jim Bishop.: DlslVlbufe™by King Features Syndicate.)

In prayer it is better to havea heart without words thanwords without a heart.—JohnBunyan.

A single grateful thoughttowards heaven is the most com-plete praycr.-Gotthold E. Less-ing.

Your Money's Worths

PORTEH

Expense' Loophole Is ClosedBy SYLVIA PORTER

(In collaboration with the Research Initltute ol America)

The Treasury is not only spotlighting extravagantexpense accounts and fringe-benefits by requiring busi-nessmen to show these items on the face of their re-turns, as I reported yesterday." It is also taking the im-portant step of tightenfng. up on the expense account

"loophole" which the Treasury itselfcreated. All employee^ who get and allemployers who pay. expense accountsshould read the following points withutmost care.

Generally, an employee doesn'thave to report his reimbursed businessexpenses or his reimbursement on hisown retutn if he Is required by his em-ployer to "account" for these expenses

and he does so. In this case, an employee's own returnis clean in the sense of not showing any questionableexpense account items on its face.

Some employers give certain employees expenseaccounts without caring particularly how the moneyis spent In order to permit these special employees tocome under the general rule of not reporting such ex-penses, the employers set up a casual accounting sys-tem which they don't actually intend to use as a checkon expenses.

This "loophole" is now being closed. When anagent examines an employer's return, he is instructedto examine the type of "accounting" which is requiredfrom employees whose expenses are reimbursed. Ifthe agent feels that the employer's accounting require-ments are not adequate to insure that only legitimatebusiness expenses are reimbursed, he will check outthe employees who received reimbursement for pur-poses of auditing their personal records. Where theemployer's accounting requirement is not adequate,the Treasury expects the employee to have his ownrecords to support his expense account deductions.

You, as an employer; can help your expense ac-count employees steer clear of Treasury trouble bysetting up a good accounting procedure. For example,employers should require employees to submit support-ing dates such as bills, stubs, tickets, etc., wheneverpossible.

You, as an employee, can protect yourself by keep-ing full and adequate supporting records of both reim-bursements and actual expense outlays. You shouldnot fail to do this if you think your employer's ac-counting requirements may be considered inadequateby the Treasury.

You must be careful about the following specialtravel and entertainment expense problems. Agentshave been told: '

Not to consider any credit Card as automaticevidence of a deductible business expense. You willneed supporting evidence showing who was enter-tained, why, when, etc.

Not to accept an expense diary as proof ofa deductible expense unless the amounts are relativelysmall, the so-called "light" diary. If the diary listsheavy expenditures, agents must ask for supportingdata.

. . Not to permit deductible car expenses to becomputed merely on the basis of yearly mileage timesan estimated cost per mile. You will have to proveactual business use, including where the car was used,when, etc'

Not to accept checks made out to cash'asevidence of deductible expenditures.

One final word of caution on T & E deductions toowners of closely held corporations. If you havethought of cutting corners on T & E expenses, thinkagain. If the Treasury disallows the corporation a de-duction for such payments to the stockholder-officer, -t also usually taxes him on the same amount as a divf

dend. Depending on the tax brackets involved, a totalextra cost to the corporation and its owner can cometo more than 100 per cent of the disallowed expenses.

In one case last year, the tax was 131 per cent ofthe expenses disallowed.

Tomorrow: State sales tax deductions.

And fools, who came to scoff,remained to pray.—Oliver Gold-smith.

Health HintsThis is the time of year Vhen

people start working to maketheir winter dreams of summergardens come true. After a sus-tained period of Inaction such aswinter imposes upon most of us,there is danger—especially forpeople in their middle years—insuddenly undertaking work of astrenuous physical character.Amateur gardeners should keepthis in mind: The aim

ould k4s to dig

flower beds, not graves; the re-sult should bo a summer of flow-ery pleasure, not an eternity of

3 n o s e . • •

Heart specialists give terse andsage advice to all who are oldenough to bf candidates for someimpairment of heart action. Theysay simply, "act your age," irn-

lying that with increasing years—and weight- we should leave in-tense and swiff-paced activity tothe younger people who i/e phy-iically conditioned to sustain it.In gardening us in all living, formost. of us the adage is "easydoes i t" . V '. "A garden is alovesome thing," as the poetsays. Be wise — pace your ac-tivities so that you may live to

njoy Its serenity.— Michael S. Ncwjohn, M. D.

"Goodness, Are You* The Beat And Angry YoungMen I've Heard So Much About?"

n

Focus on Health: Today's Business Mirror

Cause For HopeBy The Associated Prcti

Mongollsm and a cause forhope; dogs and heart attacks,common colds, and sharp razorsare subjects with a Focus onHtalfe:' {Razor Wades take oft four toU.times as much skin as electricroors, say Boston researchers.,

Seven times as many com-plaints of after-shave bum comefrom razor users as from elec-tric shaver users in tests on 249men and, 120 women, indicates areport tin OP, journal of theAmerican Academy of GeneralPractice. '

Once a person learns to usean electric shaver properly, thedifference In closeness of shavecompared with a razor is almostnegligible, the doctors said.

Hop* for MongollsmA young French scientist who

has found a strange error inthe body chemistry of Mon-goloid children now says:

"There Is no reason to saythat Mongollsm b definitelyincurable."

- Teats on Mongoloid childrenindicate the error may affectproduction of a key brainchemical, serotonin. The dis-covery comes from Dr. JeromeLejeune of the University ofParis who also found the chil-dren possessed an abnormalnumber of chromosomes—thosedelicate strands of genes thatdetermine what we will be.

Dr. Lejeune recalled an ex-periment 23 years ago In whichfruit flies with abnormalehronosomes suffered fromsmall, slllted eyes. When fedcorrective material, the fruitHies became normal again.

So far Dr." Lejeune has beennosuectssful in finding an an-swer to human Mongollsm, re-ports Medical World News. Infact, Dr. Lejeune says, the er-ror may not be the only or theresponsible one In Mongolism,bat It It a lead. .-

Dog With a HeartDogs often fall victim to one

of man's big enemies, heartdisease, a new report shows.

A study of 3,000 dogs by Uni-fersity of Pennsylvania veterinarians found 290 with reliablesigns of heart disease and 322others with suspected disease.

sites found responsible. The an-swer may lie with as yet un-specified bacteria or viruses.

Men between the ages of Mand 50 are the most trcquentliars about their agea, a studyshows. But women, althoughthey lie less frequently, tell thebigger lies.

Jim Hudock, 6-foot-? basket-ball player at the University ofNorth Carolina,' was well rec-ommended to the school. Hisfather played basketball years,ago with Coach Frank McGuire.

Am tffwHn Km*«tvn!«y, Monk I I , IM1.

Wfikt to .Unit.

Foreign ImportsNEW YORK (AP) - Among

our depressed areas one particu-lar type is perhaps more resent-ful of its fate than the others.This is the community where a

chief naustryhas been hurtby losing itsmarkets to for-eign Imports.

It r e s e n t sboth the eco-nomic toll injobs and in-comes but alsowhat it believes

their foreign competitors usenew plants made possible bypast monetary aid from U.S.

Others decry thefrom lower paid

DAWSONto be thejustice of

plight. Some companies charge

low of cheaper foreign goods.Some say they are In danger oflosing all their markets, heie andabroad. The cry for protectionIs rising higher—and the wide-spread stagnation In Americanindustry has helped to sharpenthe outcry.

taxpayers.competitionlabor.

Many communities and indus-tries as well as labor unions areurging Congress to grant relief:

High tariffs, strict import quo-tas, buy-American rules for gov-ernment agencies. At least onelabor union has called forboycott of foreign goods of thekind it makes—and some com-munities have taken the samestand.

Many industries say thsy havebeen seriously hurt by the In

TheImports Fell

latest Department ofComerce figures won't allaythis. They show imports fell inJanuary to the lowest level innearly two years (exports weredown also to the lowest volumein 14 months). But in spite ofthe drop in import totals therewere irises in the Inflow of tex-tiles and many metals and manufactored items. And these arefields where the bite of foreigncompetition has been most re-sented.

"Some form of temporary re-strictions may be necessary."concedes the staff of the Senate

Commerce Committee in a reporton the whole problem.

But it liopes that -this govern-ment can induce competing na-tions to place a voluntary limiton their sales here, rather thanimpose import quotas. It wantsany trade restrictions to continueto be handled through the TariffCommission, with Congress hav-ing veto powers if the Presidentoverrides commission rulings.

The plight of areas and indus-tries depressed by foreign com-petition, the staff report holds,calls for other measures thantariffs and quotas.

It proposes low interest rateloans finance new equipment toput American plants on equalbasis with foreign competitors,and also special depreciationon plant Investments for tax pur-poses.

Retraining ProgramsTo help workers laid off be-

cause of foreign competition, theSenate staff urges managementand labor to join with federal,state and local governments inretraining programs.

These would help the joblesslearn new skills to go with thenew machinery and tools u. theirrefurbished old plants, or to findjobs in still growing industrieswhere foreign competition isnonexistent or unimportant

For longer range benefitstechnical assistance is proposedfor research programs set up bylocal governments; management,labor i or universities. Apendesknown as regional productivitycouncils would take part Theaim would be to make Americanfactories so much more efficientthat they could compete onprice basis with goods from otherlands.

Industries and communitiesmay welcome this plan for long

term betterment. K remains tpbe seen if it win take off any pitthe heat for immediate relief inthe forms Americans alreadyknow and have used-tariffs, im-port quotas and buy-Americandecrees. Or maybe even privateboycotts.

PLAN SHOPPING

Never try to,jot down a shop-ping list just before going shop-ping. Instead keep a pad handyin the kitchen, and note suppliesas you start getting low on them.

The English word; "Eastej"derives from.an old ijlorse wordmeaning "the season ol newWith." I

It adds up! More and morepeople use The Register ads eachissue because results come fas-ter.—Advertisement

Common, Common ColdThere may be no practical

vaccine against the commoneold. The Reason:

There are just too manykinds of common colds.

Researchers report several,perhaps many, viruses causeeolds. And the prevalent vi-nisM In your neighborhood arealways changing. Chances areIf you pick up a particularcold, you won't catch the sameone a;aln that season, sincethe body builds up defensesagainst that virus.

Tourists' ComplaintWhy do so many tourists come

down with digestive disorderswhen they travel abroad? Doc-tors Just don't know. The com-mon bacteria known to causesues problems in the UnitedStates haven't been found In astudy of Journeying Americans.Nor were other common para-

Newest of the New

fA new note in quilts—colorful

1'Ickrack lends a different Jook.Use your favorite colors.

Rtckrack, an optional detail,strikes a clever contrast on thiscolorful, 4-patch quilt. Pattern913: chart; patch patterns; yard-ages; directions.

Send 35c (coins) for this pat-tern—add 10c for each patternfor lst-class mailing. Send toLaura Wheeler, care of The RedBank Register, Needlecraft Dept.,P.O. Box 161, Old Chelsea Sta-tion, New York 11, N. Y. Printplainly pattern number, name,address and zone.

JUST OFF THE PRESSI Sendnow for our exciting, new 1961Needlecraft Catalog. Over 125 de-ligns to crochet, knit,' sew, em-broider, quilt, weave — fashions,komefurnishings, toys, gifts, ba-«ar hits. Plus. FREE—instruc-tons for six smart veil caps.Hurry, tend 25c now)

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56 NEWMAN SPRINGS RD.T RED BANKOPEN SUNDAY —9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Final Week! While They Last!KING SHE

TRAY TABLE (STORAGE RACK

JO comm YOUR snWITH YOUR

PURCHASE OF. .

$10.00 OR MORE"

with purchau m Aof $5.00 to $9.99 I « A

99, cEACH

with putdma | mftof I.. . Hunts 00 • • * » »

YOU'VE NEVER SEEN THEM PRICED SOIOWI OUR FINAL OFFERI COME IN TODAYI

YOU'VE SEEN THEMADVERTISED FOR$9.98 OR MORE

FOR A SET OF FOUR

March 15, 1961 RED BANK BEGISTER

F0R Championed Brussels SproutsGuess Who

•ppeared on some of our best-setholiday tables, but not enoughcooks know it. Here's the recipe:

BRUSSELS SPROUTS WITHCHESTNUTS

2 packages (10 ounces each)frozen Brussels sproutsj cup butter

Yt cup flour2 cups milk

teaspoon celery saltWhite pepper

cup shelled cooked chestnuts(quartered)Cook sprout* according to

package directions with the boil-ing water and salt called (or;drain. Make a white sauce of thebutter, flour, milk, celery saltand pepper to taste. Add sproutsand chestnuts; reheat. Makes 6 to8 servings.

Creamed JBnissels sprouts and chestnuts served with ham or. turkey. '

By CECILY BROWNSTONEAssociated Press Food Editor

IT TOOK a president to makethe Brussels sprout memorable.

When Franklin D. Rooseveltwas in the White House, he toldSir Winston Churchill's wife thathe did not want to visit Englandbecause he disliked the way hercountrymen cooked vegetables.

In particular. FDR elaborated,the British b o i l e d Brusselssprouts 'and sent them to thetable in their unappetizing cook-ing liquid. In America, heaverred—imaginatively and rash-ly—broiled Brussels sprouts were

favorite dish.By this time his listener was

incredulous but undaunted—andso was FDR.

When Lady Churchill returnedto England she straightway askedJohn Winant, then .our ambassa-dor stationed in London, how tobroil the sprout. Mr. Winant,startled but grave. Improvised ananswer by saying that he knewnothing about cooking but wouldbring her the recipe.

Back in Washington the ambas-sador confronted FDR with theculinary tempest. The Presidentanswered by offering to create aSecretary for the Brussels sprout.

A cousin of FDR's. Mrs. Ker-mit Roosevelt, writing in a maga-line (Harper's), reported howwith a twinkle in his eye FDRhad told her this story, and howshe had offered to gather recipesfor cooking the sprout from allover the United States to be re-layed to 10 Downing St.

Actually: It's the French whohave contributed one of the bestways of treating Brussels sproutsby coupling them with chestnuts.Over Hie years this dish has

'fit LOOKING FOR

a locksmith to repair

the lock on the door

to my son Dennis'

room which has been

jammed) for the past

three days, ever since

Dennis stuck a pencil

in it. Wa\'re both

getting and of

passing food and toys

and thingp back and

forth through the

window..?

LOOK HERE

to find any smith...

Ye/hyvPages

SEE: Locksmiths,Gunsmiths, \Silversmiths, \Blacksmiths

Casual Bags'Spread Out1

Whether traveling to town orcrosscountry, the newest hand-bags are oversize and organized.The bigger they are, the moreimportant.

Coupled with emphasis on sizeand shape is an Increased inter-est in materials. Fabrics are dif-ferent and expensive-looking andleathers, richly mellow.

The horizontal line appears in•leek and trim shapings withroom for everything: These areusually well "handled" withdouble or fairly-wide straps foreasy carrying.

Richly pointed tapestries andother novelty patterns are usedover and over again in springhandbags and however elegant,their interiors are roomy and of-ten exceptional capacious.

iWell. no wonder they keep com- the advice eolumnUts have beenJiru un and uivino vou fuiinv se- telling me I should never try to

s-tr• . . i i not taking theexpedition tariomly.

ing up and giving you funny se-cret handshakes. Take tff that

|! fez, they think you're a Shriner.

Pear George:Since 1 was 16 years old, all

(Do you leel inferior? Write toGeorge, c/o this newspaper, andbolster your ego! He's even morecontused than you are.)

Dear George:I won't be content until I find

an old fashioned girl. Where, bhwhere, can I find one?

LonesomeDear Lonesome:

Joe's Bar & Grill, second stoolfrom the end, but I warn you:Three old-fashioneds and she'lltalk your ears off about her firsthusband.

Why don't you leave theselushes alone and try some of theshindigs down at the "Y"?

telling mekiss a girl on a first date. I am.now 48 and my trouble is this:I've never had a second datawith the same girl.

LET ME GET YOUGOOD TENANTS- FASTI

Start the New Year by tearIng up your "F<)r Rent" wgns.I'm 0. Howie Hustles, a RedBank Register Classified Ad —and your best bet to quickly fillthose vacancies with responsible

Confidential to King F»rouk:| renters. Start me looking now.

What should I do?

Dear Henry R.:Quit reading.

Henry R.

BUTTON, BUTTON

There ire two kind* of but-tons — the kind Out s a y on andthe kind that come off. Formaximum durability, c h e c kwashable garments to make surethe buttons themselves can belaundered w i t h o u t rusting,cracking, peeling or melting.

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S e l e c t Ho yourtastt from * tastyvarieties.

DELICIOUS ORCHARDSSCOBEYVILtt. NEW JERSEYColts Neck-natoa Falls County Rd. 517

Salesroom Opt* M M . thru Sot. 9 to 4

It Pays to Advertise in The Register

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' For gals on the go this spring.new soft lightweight leatherluggage is *s fashion-minded

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_ cases, overnight bags, week-end'bag), train cases, fitted make-up

casei and attache cases are

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crafted in soft lightweightleathers with a minimum offramework.

Spring pastels — gray,- blue,tan, olive, coral and others —are increasingly popular' inleather luggage for women. Amatched set of three or four

A .modern woman's luggage isin airline weight leather, even ifshe travels by train, bus, orautomobile. Luggage side* aresoft to eliminate the weightof stiff backing materials,leather is extra durable and scuffresistant.

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Interiors tend to plush quilt-ed linings and large mirrorsset in satin draping in train casesand overnight bags. In the 20",24" and 27" sizes, various softlining materials that are kindto your clothing are used." Inmany of the new pastel bags,the linings are in colors that

Tv5'match the leather exteriors.

GINGER By Getterman

"Ones a plan* takes off, it doesn't turn back if it findia stowaway on board, does it?"

The World Today

Nixon's FutureBy JAMES MARLOW

WASHINGTON (AP)-The onlything clear about Richard M.Nixon's political future is that itisn't clear at all, even to him.

The former vice president madea statement to Republicans whichhas been interpreted as meaninghe won't run for governor in Cali-fornia in 1964. *

There is one simple rule fordeciding when a politician willnot run for office. That's whenhe says: "I will not be a candi-date under any circumstances."

Nixon's didn't go hat far intelling California, Republicans hewill not be Democratic Gov. Ed-mund G. Brown's opponent in1962.( ,.

Wnat he said was:. "I am nota candidate. I have no intention

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be i candidate or institute adraft."•Having no intention now and>eing persuaded later to run arelot the same thing. And, while

he. said he would not start amove to draft him, he didn't sayhe would turn down a draft ifsomeone else started it.

And he was even less preciseabout his ideas on running forthe . presidency again in 1964 or

168, and understandably so.No Plans

The New York Times reportedhe told confidants he had noplans at present to run for theWhite House again.

But he conceded, the Timessaid, that his making a secondtry was not beyond the realm ofpossibility.

There is a simple interpreta-tion for this: Right now he's notsure of his prospects in 1964, sohe's not sticking his neck out.

It's questionable that he wilbe in a position to do any picking or choosing in 1964 for hemay be in the political discardby trten. .

He indicated In California hemay take an active leadershiprole in the party. As the 1960 defeated presidential candidate he

the. so-called titular head ofthe party anyway. That couldand may become an empty title.

When he spoke of his leader-ship he qualified it by sayinghe'd lead only "to the extenthat fellow members of my partymay desire me to do so."

Already there's some questionabout how welcome his leader-ship is.

GoldwaterSen. Barry Goldwater of Ari-

zona, most vigorous spokesmanfor the Republicans' extreme

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Wed., March 15, 1961—9RED BANK REGISTER

t

right wing, apparently isn't will-ing to let Nixon call the shotsjust because he's, supposed to behe leader.

He said if Nixon wants to bea power in the party he shouldrun for something. Goldwateradded: "Until he gets elected tosome position, he's jusUgoing tobe a Republican lawyer. I

'If Gov. Nelson A. RockefellerOf New York is re-elected nextyear he will be in a much bet-ter position to win the presiden-tial nomination in 1964."

So, before-Nixon has had time:o look around, he's been toldin effect: "Anything you get,you'll have to fight for."

Rockefeller, Nixon's only realrival in 1960, will, if re-electedgovernor, of New York next year,be in a prime spot to grab forthe big jjrize in, 1964;

In one election after another,with only a couple of exceptionsin the past two decades, votershave rejected the Republicans'conservatism.

Judging from this past experi-ence the Democrats figure to winagain in 1962 and 1954 unless1 theKennedy administration turns butdismally or unless the Republi-cans get more progressive.

And Rockefeller, not Nixon,represents the progressive wingof the party.

APPROVES TRANSFER

FAIR HAVEN - The BoroughCouncil Monday approved thetransfer of a plenary consump-tion liquor license from the At-lantic Hotel, 121 Fair Haven Rd.,to Bruno and Rosa Gaglioti, sameaddress.

It adds up! More and morepeople use The Register ads eachissue because results come fas-ter.—Advertisement.

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'Red' Skelton BackWith an Old Friend

By HAL HUMPHREY

HOLLYWOOD - Hardly any-one watching Red Skelton and EdWynn d* that marvelously^ goofyone-act pantomime on Red's CBS-TV show last night would knowbow tar back their staunch friend-ship goes.

It began almost 33 years agoIn Red's hometown of Vincennes,Ind. Wynn had Just arrived fora one-night stand with his ownroad show.

"What do you do for excite-ment in this town?" Wynn askedthe news kid on the comer.

"Well, sir, we've got a big showcoming into file theater tonight.Yon could go to that." said thesews kid.

Hie Flnt MeetingWynn asked the newsie if he

were going and bought out hisstock of newspapers to insure hishiving enough money for a seatIn the balcony.

"I'll never forget," says Red,"how surprised I was that nightto see that the guy who hadbought all my papers was the•tar of the show.

'I went backstage afterward tothank him again and teU him thatI was going to be on the stagesomeday, and he patted me on

the head and said, Remember, dojust comedy1"

'Do Just Comedy*Just a few years ago, when

Wynn was neverously rehearsinghis first dramatic role in thePlayhouse 90 production, "Requilem for a Heavyweight," Redcouldn't resist sneaking up be-hind him and whispering, "Re-member, do just comedy."

. . . . __.._. TheArmy," starring Academy Awardnominee Jack Lemmon and RickyjlV.Nelson is the feature attractionthat will be shown for an entireweek starting Wednesday, March

LoeVs '35* Drive-In|

_ Ridge," an actionthriller Is the associate feature.

The Patterson vs JohanssonChampionship Fight films will beshown as an extra added attrac-tion.

15th, atTheatre.

"Sniper's

Red and Wynn were doing a l l |^;of this reminiscing at the pre- *taping of last night's TV show inthe old Charles Chaplin studio.

bished and equipped for three-and-half million bucks.

It was Red's first show sincebeing hospitalized last Decemberfor that major diaphragmatic op-

RED BANK REGISTER

10-Wed., March 15..1961

which he had borrowed. OnceWynn got a wired plea for K -000 from Ziegfeld in 'San Fran-cisco. Wynn wired the moneyand found out later that Ziegteldspent $3,900 of it for a privaterailroad car back to New York.Wynn still refers to him as"Mister Ziegfeld."

One DisagreementRed .recently bought an old

comedian's Joke file for $25,000and then discovered that mostof it was comprised or old Ben-

l. Cantor and Hope Jokes—even some of his own were inIt I

Wynn says that Red was thewhich Red bought and refur- only one who would give him

(Wynn) a job a few years agowhen "Madison Ave. had decidedI was through."

Red says this isn't true.Wynn says he has to work his

eratton. He has lost some weight v e r y hardest when working withand has a scar running almosthalf-way around his mid-section,

Falls or TonicTen years ago Ted made his

debut on TV, and one of the big-gest laughs came at the end ofthe show when Red was grabbedby the ankles from behind thecurtain and dragged backstage.As Wynn says, it was falls likethat which helped cause Red'sinsldes to become disarranged.

Red, "because he's so good—thebest."Red says this isn't true.

Red added with ahis early days with

laugh'thatmedicine

show didn't help any either. Healways seemed to be sufferingfrom diarrhea, and it was a long

the Hot Springs System Tonic hewas hawking was the cause.

"It was made out of brownsugar, epsom salts and boiled wa-

to have to siphon it out of five-gallon cans into the bottles witha rubber tube. Well, I was swal-lowing a little of the tonic eachtime, and when I wasn't doinjthat, I was headed for the bath

Hal Humphrey:

Shows toWatch

TONIGHT

10:00 — (Ch. 2) Circletime before he discovered that | Theater — The unusually bright

child is being given the chanceto develop his potential to thefullest, thanks to schools devotedexclusively to such children. One

ter," Red recalls, "and I used|of the educational institutions ofthis kind is in Bloomfield Hills,Mich. Its procedures are prac

be shown on this pro-George Roeper, t h efounder, Is* a special

gram.

room."Similar Routines

Despite ths disparity In theirages. Red at 48 and Wynn at 75traveled much the same routeto their comic greatness—medi-cine shows, radio, the stage and

RADIOWABC

WHIGWNBC

771an1411

AFTIRMOONBC Chailla G n s

Nw e s t N.WI« r i m Monmouta-OeiaB

Nawi SummaryWMBC Nawi; Jim Low*WOH Nawa. John Scott

Ullt—WOI Tha FltwraldiWCU ParlaBaporl

Ul»—WMTO Coonlj t m l' WCU Allan Gray

ISlSt—WHTS Nawa:Relaxing laualo

U i l l - V a W K n i ! Farrall SmithWNBC Emptaaala

IrM—WCBS NrwaWMTO. Haadlinal. fen, Prteai, Muale

WNBC Nawi! Jim Low*WOK Nawa

Ill*—WCBS Man «nd Wittllta—WCBS BobDlxon

WOM Carlton FradarlckaIlia—WHTO Nawai

Ralulnil MoiloIlia—WABC Nawai fuT. l l Emlta

WHBC Emuhuli|lt«—-WCBS Nam; Woman'!

Haport onWalblntton

WHTO Haadllnai. MmloWHBC Nrwn Jim Low*WO* Nawa, Lea Smith

t l l a — W C U Bob DlionWOR Gain D n k l

aisa—WHTS Nam;Ralaxlne Mualo

a i l l — W U C N n i : Jack CarnarWHBC Emph.ill

| I H - W C U H » I : Paraonay StoryWHTO Haadllnai. MotloWHBC Nam; Jim Low.WOU Nawi; Lrla Van

SltS—WOK Arlana FramelaWCB» Martha Wrliht

SlSa—WMTO Nawr,Ralulol Mnala

SlIS—WABC Nawi; Jack CaxsarWNBC Eraphaali

4l*a—WC*S Nawi; InformationCanrral

WHTO Cloilnl StockRaport; Hutlo

WNBC Newi; Art FordWO* Nam-, John Wlnawti

alia—WC*S Kannith BinrtartWOR Radio Haw York

4lla—WHTO N.wi: R* lu lntMnaio

4ISI—WABC Nawa; Jack CttnirWHTO Fort Monmouth

NamWHBC Emphaala

| l ( l — W C U New.; SldallghtaWHTO Monmtrath-Oce.o

Nawi SnnunirrWKBC Nawa; Art FordWOR N.W.: John Scott

• l i t—WCSf K.nneth BingharlWHTQ Dow Jonaa AvarlgaiWOR Radio N.w York

Bl»—WHTONewa: RelailntrMnslc (aiffn off8:00 p.m.)

• •(S—WABC NawiIVININO

•Kt—WABC Jack CirnayWCBt NawiW H I C K n i i SportiWOK N.w; Lyl . Van

•i l l—WCBS Sporti; Bob CooVaWHBC Art FordWOR Nawa: John Wlngati

•lla—WABC Paul Htrvar«ltt—WCBS Nawi; Bnalnm

WABC Nawi RaportaWOM Nawi:

Ifanrf Gladaton*ai«t—WCII Fin.ncl.l N.w.

WNBC Financial N.wa•I4f—WABC Howard Coaell

WCBS tawal) Thoraaa

WNBCThra. Rt«r Extra•ISI—WCM Rporta Tim.' • »—"*•« ^ iVd P- Morgan

JJJ£»» Naw/i lnt.rvl.waWNBC Nawa: Warn. HowalWO» FQlton L. , .1 . .

»lla—WABC Chnek DUT,«W. ,WOR Daalnaaa: Nawa

Tlla—WCBS New.; Ed ]Oycm

guest.8:30 — (Ch. 2) — Wanted. Dead

or Alive — John Randall (SteveMcQueen), after a couple of sea'sons on TV, has suddenly foundhe's "not wanted" any more.This series goes off next month.But that doesn't prevent himfrom assisting a Japanese Geishagirl find her lost American boy-friend. This is still a western,isn't it?

7:30 — (Ch. 7)-Hoog Kong -— Scenting story,- newsman

Glenn Evans takes Joan Caul-field (she's the guest) to Macao

Lto search for her estranged hus-feld died owing Wynn $10O,0O0|band. After a separation of four

^ years, her husband sends forher. But instead of meeting heras he had promised, they dis-cover he has gone into hiding.This is the night for missingpeople.

10:00— (Ch. 7) — Naked City

— "Vengeance Is a Wheel" isthe title of a story from the cityof a million stories. A water-front watchman is beaten bythieves, and his two sons spurnpolice aid to track dowrrthe rob-bers. Good over-all productionssurmount some occasional talkyscripts.

Both men are generous to afault. Red buys matching RollsRoyces for himself and a formerpartner, sends gifts to people whowork on his shows and general-ly treats money as if It wereabout to go out of style.

Wynn will do anything for thoseha regards with respect. Flo Zieg

WNEWWORWPATWQXR

UtO711110

15(0WNBC ttorian B.ittyWOM Nawa:

Cabrl.l HaatarriSf—WOR Capitol Cloat-lTpTi4a—VVNBC W . j n . Uowall Show

WOR Carlton FradrlekaTlSC—WABC Nawi; Chock

Dunaway•>••—WCBS World Tonight

WNBC Nawa: W a n .Howall

. WO* Nawa. World Today•l l*—WCBS Ed Joxea• 110—WOH Sport*•IIS—WO* My Trna Starr•••(—WABC Nawa: Chock

DnnawarSiOft—WNBC Nawi; Bob Hiymaa

Won N.wa: MeCsllough—Eliot

WCM Nawi: World OfMollo

• HO—WOK Nawi; McCuUough£ Eliot

• ill—WABC Nawa: Scott MaultOiO»—WCBS N*wi

WNBC Nawa; Bob HarmaaWOR Nawi: U i Smith

ieu«—WOR McCallongh A Eliot• WCBa Dane* Unalo *

10l4t—WOR Bibla Raidinglona—WABCN.wj; Bcott Mnnll l l t o - W C B S Nawa

WNBCHawi: Bob H«rn>aaWOR Nawi

11US—WCBS Burllght SalataWOR Jain Sh.pard

llllO—WCBS Mmlo 'Til SawnIlllS—WABC Nawa: Happlnaia

EzcfaangalaiOO—WNRCN.oa; All Night In

N.y.WOR Long John

MORNINO PROORAMITl»»—WABCR.tb Oicar And.non

WCBS Jack SUrllngWHTO Monmouth-Oc.an

N.wa SamaryEgg Prlcca

WOR Nawi:John Gambling

WNBCN.wa; Bllt CullasTUO— WHT0N«wi:

Wika tip to Mnalo*|4«—WHTQ Civil Sarrlca NawaTill—WABC Newa;

Herb Oacar And.raoiaiOO—WCBS World Nawi

WHTOII.adllnai;Wala up to Mualo

WOR NawaWNBCN.wa: Bill Cnllan

ailB—WOR Dorothy and DickWCBS Jack Starling

•HO—WHTO NewaRelaxing Maale

Sisa—WABC N.wa:Herb Oicar Andenos

•ISO—WCBS N.wa; Jack StarllnrWHTO H..dllnea:

Strictly for WomanWNBC Newa: Bill CnllenWOR Newa: Galen Draka

•ISO—WHTO Nawa:R.laxlng Muilo

• US—WNBC EmphalllWABC Newa; Br.alfait Club

SOlOO—WCBS Newa:Arthur Godfr.y

WHTO lleadllnei: HoaloWNBC Newa: Art FordWOR New. Iteporti

10il«—WOR Martha Daan*1OI1O—WMTO N.w. :

Relating MmloWOR Inurvlawe,

Martha TJaanalOlStw-WABCNewa;

Charlie GraarWNBC Bmphaala

lttOO—WCBS Newa: Honae PartyWHTO Heidllnaa: MmloWNBCNewi: Art FordWOR Newi

Il l lS—WOR McCanni at MonaIlllO—WCBS Carry Moore

WHTO. Red Bank B.glaUrN.wa. Pete HefMlan

tSt4S—WCBl Croiby-ClooniyIl l lI—WABC Nawa

' WNBC Emnhaalaima—WHTO Midday r

TELEVISIONWEDNESDAY AFTERNOON

12:M— (J) Love of Lite(4) Trutt or

Consequences(7) Camouflage(*) Guy Madison •

(11) Japanese BrushPainting

(IS) Don't Call UsU:»— (J) Search For Tomorrow

(4) It Could Be You(5) Cartoons(7) Number Please(.)Meet Corliss Archer

(II) Science and HumanResponsibility

(IS) Mike Wallace12:43— (2) Guiding Light1Z:SO—<1S> NewsII: SS- (4) Newi1:00-(2) News

(4) Dr. Joyce Brothers(5) Cartoons(7) About Faces(•) Movie

(11) Fun At One(IS) Betty Furness

1:05— (2) Bums and AUen1:25— (4) News

(S) News(7) News

1:30— (2) As The World Turns(4) Italian Telivision(5) Movie(7) Susie

(11) Our Number System1:50—(11) Adventuras En

Ejpanol2:00- (2) Face the Facts

(4) Jan Murray(7) Day In Court

2:10—(11) Exploring Sciencei:»~ (2) House Party

• (4) Loretta Young(7) Road to Reality'(•) Star and Story

(11) Mathematics Club<1S) Movie

2:5J— (5) NewsJ:00— (2) Millionaire

(4) Young Dr. Malone(5) Dateline Europe(7) Queen For A Day(>) Film Drama

(11) Teaching ForeignLanguages

l:l<y- (2) Verdict Is Yours(4) From These Roots'(5) Doorway To Destiny(7) Who Do You .Trust?(I) Movie

(II) Star Performanca4:00— (2) Brighter Day

(4) Make Room ForDaddy

(5) Douglas Fairbanks(7) American Bandstand

(11) Abbott and Costello(IS) Cartoons

4: IS— (!) Secret Storm4:20— (2) Edge of Night

(4) Here's Hollywood(5) Mr. District Attorney

(II) Laurel & Hardy(IS) Studio 99'/$

4:55—(11) Spunky and Tadpole5:00-(2) Life of Riley

(4) Movie(5) I Led Three Lives(9) Mischief Makers

(11) Bozo .the Clown(IS) Citizen Soldier

5:25—(II) Clutch CargoS:St— (2) Movie

(5) Texas Ratigers(7) Lone Ranger(9) Movie

(II) Three Stooges(IS) Teen Quiz -

_WCBS-TV-WRCA-TV

-WNEW-TV

WEDNESDAY EVENINGI:N— (4) News and Weather

(S) Felix and Friends(7) News

(11) Popeye(IS) Highway Patrol

I: ( S - (4) MovieI: I S - (7) Q. T. Hush«:25— (4) Report from Rome• : M - (4) Local News

(5) Our Gang(7) Tommy Seven

(11) Brave Stallion(IS) Movie—1957

Young and Dangerous• : « - (4) Weather»:4S— (I) Governor Rockefeller

(4) News7:»0- (2) News

(4) Death Valley Days(5) Tombstone Territory(7) Paris Fashion Show(•) Terrytoons

(II) News7:05— (2) Local News7:10- (2) Weather

(11) News7:15— (2) News7:J5-(U) Weather7:30- (2) Malibu Run

(4) Wagon Train(5) Sergeant Dekker(7) Hong Kong(I) Movie—1951

Behave Yourself(11) Honeymooners

8:00-(5) R.C.M.P.(U) Bold Journey(IS) Mike Wallace

8: !&-(») Dialing the News8:S0— (2) Wanted—

Dead or Alive(4) Price Is Right(5) Award Theater(7) Ozzie and Harriet ,

(11) M Squad(IS) Play of the Week

8:00- (2) My Sister Eileen(4) Perry Coma(5) Movie—1948

A Double Life(7) Hawaiian Eye(I) Long John Nebel

(II) Trackdown» : » - (2) I've Got A Secret

(11) CaUrornlans10:00- (2) Circle Theater

(4) Peter Loves Mary(7) Naked City(I) Harness Racing

(II) High Road10:SO- (4) Johnny Midnight

(0) Movie(II) Wild Cargo(IS) Playback

1O:S5-(1S) Movie-1949Thieves Highway

11:00— (2) News(4) News(5) News(7) News

(11) NewsU:1B- (2) Weather

(4) Weather(5) Movie—1948

Coroner Creek(7) Weather

11:15- (2) Movie—1947Possessed

(4) Jack Paar(7) Movie—1937

Nancy Steele isMissing

(11) Weather and Sports11:20— (11) Movie—1942

Berlin Correspondent12:00— (I) Movie12:50— (5) News; Calll to Prayei1:00- (4) News

Cfcaand

Elizabeth Taylor speaks h*r mind to Laurance Harvayin MGM's "Butterfiald 8," daring Cinemaicopa andcolor drama. Starting Wednesday at th* Baronat,Long Branch.

Special ShowAt Carlton

RED BANK - A special chil-

tain Kangaroo television showill appear before the specimovie;

The doors will open at mxand 500 children will receimagic tricks, The special til

dren's program will be held in w i U •» " M y D o « Buddy."the Carlton Theater Saturday.George-Sands, magician and pup-

steer, who appeared on the Cap-It pays to advertise in Tl

Register.—Advertisement.

announcing the

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MEDICALMEMOS

• y H. L H«na*»nsohn, M.O.

Rear-facing seats in planeswould be a great safety boon toiviation if the public would agree

to this sitting arrangement.

Fortunately, take-off and land-ing accidents have been rare,considering the many thousands>f flights which take place daily.

But when these mishaps do occur. it is estimated that 75 oerjent of'the injuries could havibeen avoided or minimized If thenassengers had been in seats fac-ing toward the rear of the planeinstead of facing forward.

When sitting backward, thebody is protected by the back o!the chair which absorbs and c'ush-on* the force of Impact. Whenfacing forward, a person Isthrown forward Btriking the seaahead.

Even' in automobiles, whenhead-on collision seems Inevit-able, If Hie passengers In thback seat have the quickness olthought to sit on the floor, theyare In less danger of being serl-ouslv injured. Otherwise the;could be hurled forward throughthe windshield or thrown out olthe car.

Some station wagons have backward-facing passenger scats Thisis an excellent safety design

•OfflCIAl

PATTERSON »JOrl,

ftMON' M

WABOTVWOR-TV

_ WP»:WNTA-TV

(7) Evening Prayer1 : « - (4) Dr. Brothers1:1»- (4) 13th Hour1:15— (I) Almanac Newsreell :J0- (1) Movie—1939

Miracle* for Sale(I) News and Weather

2:45- (2) News\- 0 ) Give Us This Day

THURSDAY MORNING5:51- (4) Sermonette«:«©- (4) Continental

Class room0:15— (2) Previews1:20- (2) Give Us This Day

My Fair Lady IsThe Golden Girl'EDITOR'S NOTE—For some,

Broadway may be paved witrleartbreaks, as an ancient cliche.as It, but then for others it's?aved with solid gold. Take thejackers of "My Fair Lady." Eachbuck invested in that lilting mu-sical five years ago has spawned,8 more.)

1:30— (I) Sunrise Semester(4) Continental

Classroom7 : 0 0 - ( ! ) News

(4) Dave Garroway7: I S - (S) Call to Prayer

20— (7) Morning PrayerSO- (5) Debbie Drake

(7) Pip the Piper7:45- (S) News8:«0- (2) News

(5) Sandy Becker(7) Little Rascals

1 0 - (2) NewsIS— (2) Captain Kangaroo

8:30—(IJ) Religious Program1:00- (2) People's Choice

(4) Family(7) I Married Joan

(13) Jack LaLannel : i S - (5) News0:30- (2) My Little Margie

(5) Topper(7) Memory Lane'

(13) Moviet:50—<U) Our World Neighbors10:00- (2) I Love Lucy

(4) Say When(5) Movie

0:10—(11) UnderstandingAlgebra

0:30- (2) Video Village(4) Play Your Hunch(7) Ray Milland

0:40—(11) Science Horizons11:00- (2) Double Exposure

(4) Price Is Right(7) Morning Court

(11) New Adventures inMusic

11:20- (>) News and Weather(11) Exploring Science

U:2S— (5) News11:30- (2) Your Surprise

Package(4) Concentration(9) Romper Room(7) Love That Bobl(9) Family Living

(13) TV Bandstandl:40-(H) Our Number System

By WILUAM GLOVERAssociated Press Drama WrlterlTwo

MEW YORK - There is noth- 'ing like a dame—named "MyFair Lady."

In celebration of the anniver-sary of the musical's, debut fiveyears ago tonight, the sponsorsdisclose formidable evidence ofher unfading charms.

The still-running Broadway pro-duction and others around theglobe have amassed a gross ot$48 million. This has returneda XI million profit on a 400-thous-and buck Investment. .--•>

• Viewed by l.OOO.OMThr biggest chunk of coin has

sme In at the Helllnger Theaterirlginal, where three million

jpectators thus fur have paid $17million. An equal number have

iltnessed the national touringcompany.

Piling up the revenue, Londonhas contributed $6,330,000. TheScandinavian take is U million.

Australian companies addmother $4.6 million.

Foreign language versions,controlled by Lars R. Schmidt,

MOVIE TIMETABLERED BANK

Carlton—Where the Boys Are2:00: 7:00: 9:25.

EATONTOWNDrive-In-.Where the Boys Are7:05; 11:05; Patterson and Jo-hansson Fight 9:00; The Plunderers 9:25,

HAZLETLoew'f Drjve-kt—Cartoon 7:00;Fight films 7:05; 10:20; Wackiest Ship in Army 7:25; 10:40;Snipers Ridge 9:20.

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDSAtlantic—Marriage Go Round7:20; 9:20.

KEYPORTStrand—The Wackiest Ship inthe Army 7:16; 9:22.

LONG BRANCHBaronet — Butterfield 8 2:10;7:10; 9:15.

ASBURY PARKLyric—Savage Innocents 7:20;9:30.Maylair-Go Naked in theWorld 2:45;' 7:20; 9:30.St. James—The Alamo 2: OH8:00.

Spencer Tracy, Hurt LancasterWon't Fight Each Other for Oscar

By BOB THOMASAP Movie-TV Writer

HOLLYWOOD — Some daysyou just can't make a buck inthis town.

Hear me out. There is this Os-car race, see, and a couple ofguys in it named Burt Lancaster way; it doesn't matter to meand Spencer Tracy. The gim-mick is that they're both workingon the.same picture right now,"Judgment at Nuremberg."

So what would be more natur-al than a feud between these twohot contenders?

Mutual RespectI tried it out with Lancaster.

"Pretty hammy guy, this Tracy,huh?" I said insinuatingly.

What's that?" he answeredblankly.

'I mean he's quite a scene-stealer."

"What are you talking about?"Lancaster inquired. I confessedmy, mission and he said sadly,'Things are pretty tough in yourracket, huh, kid?"

Failure. Okay, I tried it withTracy, who can be counted on togrowl or grouse on any topic."Quite a ham, that Lancaster,"commented offhandedly..

Could Be Triple Winner"He's a fine actor," Tracy cor-

rected. "I think he might walkoff with the Oscar this year.Either him or Jack Lemmon.Me? I. ain't got a chance. Theywouldn't give it to me again,"'ve had It."

win them all. Anyway, I got achance to sit in Tracy's dressingroom and hear him grumbleabout his old pal Oscar.

As every film historian knows,Tracy has a couple of them, dat-ing back to 1937 ("Captains Cour-ageous") am* 1938 ( " B o y s

the husband of Ingrk] Bergman,have carried "Mv Fair Ladv"across Europe. The Stockholmversion is in its third year, andthe Amsterdam incarnation Is thefirst for an American musical InDutch. Additionally the show hasexhibited in Mexico City and vis-ited Moscow.

Other IncomeThe box office receipts aren't

all of the musical's swag. Otherrevenue has come in from fsale of 3,200,000 original castbums (an all-time record)from license fees for commercialtieups with the show's title andsheet music sales.'

The Columbia BroadcastingSystem financed the show andshares the profits with Broadwayproducers Herman Levin; Fred-erick Loewe and Alan Jay Lern-er, composers of the score; andthe estate of Bernard Shaw, sireof the play "Pygmalion" uponwhich the work is based.

Already the biggest Broadwaymoneymaker 6f all time, "MyFair Lady" is shooting now. forthe performance champion.

Heading for RecordCome June 13, the musical will

click off its 2,177th perfortnance.According to Richard Maney,

the Golden Girl's rugged publi-cist, this will break the record of"Oklahoma!" — a point disputedby the supporters ot the Rodgers-Hammerstein classic.

In the record books "Okla-homa! " stands at 2,249 pirform-ances. This, replies the cham-pion of Broadway's Golden Girl,includes 73 free benefit perform-ances for soldiers on leave dur-'ing the World War II years andthey shouldn't be counted.

But if "My Fair Lady" rolls onfor another nine weeks and twodays past that June 13 date, therewill be no more worlds for herto conquer.

Town.") He could be the firslstar to hit a triple, since he1;up for "Inherit the Wind."

Not Worried"I'Jrnever make it again," he

Insisted. "I don't really care. Notabout the final award, any-

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what the 2.400 members of theAcademy think. But I am pleasedwith the nomination, because thatis voted by the actors only. Thatmeans something."

Will he attend the festivites thisyear?

"Hell, no, I didn't even gowhen I won," he replied. "Well,I did go one time. The oth6r timeI was in the hospital having ahemia operation."

Tracy's feelings about the present state of Oscar will not pleasethe Academy management.

Illusion Needed"I've said it before and I'll say

it again," he remarked. "I thinkwe're nuts to give our biggestshow to our greatest competitor-television.

"I'm against movie actors ap-pearing on television. Why shouldwe give away what we're tryingto get people to pay to see?This whole business of exposingactors to the public makes mesick. Nowadays they send littlestarlets out on personal appear-ances and try to tell people 'ThisIs a movie star.' It's ridiculous.

'"Stars should remain hidden,Sarah Bernhardt,didn't give her*self away, nor did Elanor Duse

Double failure. Well, you can' t^ey" remained mysterious andyou had to pay to see them,That's the way It should be withmovie stars Leave some illu-sion."

The United States contributesnearly one-third of the UNbudget.

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Fair Haven ReadersPay $384 in Fines

FAIR HAVEN — A loUl of28,020 books went out over thecounter .of the Fair Haven Pub-He Library during 1960, accordingto a report by'Col. C. R. Maig,who served last year as libraryboard secretary. This was 6,279wore than in I960;

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is not recorded, but fines paidduring the year totalled all of$384.28.

This plus out-of-town'member-ship dues and other tevenuestotalled J447.27.

New bookST purchases andgifts, totalled 1,035.

Roll of readers Increased by391-131 were adults, 234 werechildren and 11 were out-of-townmembers.

The library is open rrora 9a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday throughFriday, from 7 to 9 rJ.m. Friday,and from 9 a.m. to 12 noon Satur-day. It is staffed by volunteerson Friday nights and Saturdaymornings.

The 1961 library board is head-ed by Mrs. Edward D»uben-Schmidt, chairman. Other boardmembers are Mrs^_Cr-OonaldEnglish, in charge of volunteers;Mrs. Harold Haas, purchasing;Col. Hals, publicity and building;James A. Robottom, secretary;Mrs. A. B. Sickles, treasurer,and Robert A. Matthews, councilrepresenative. |

Mrs. William B. Dodge is li-brarian.

JacobsenTo Retire

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OAKHURST - A. CharlesJacobsen, treasurer and veteranof more than 30 years'with theWalter Reade organization, willretire April 1, It was announcedtoday by Walter Reade, Jr.,president.

Mr, Jacobsen will continue toserve the company as consultant.

Mr. Jacobsen started with theWalter Reade organization in1922 when the circuit's home of-fice was in New York City.

He moved to Wanamassa in1952, when the company estab-lished its headquarters here.,

MorganvillePTA HearsDr. Zinke

MORGANVILLE — Dr. MyraZinke of Matawan was the speak-er at a meeting of the Morgan'vilie Parent-Teacher Associationlast week. A film on rheumaticfever was also shown.

Robert Sena, superintendent ofschools of Marlboro Township,also spoke.

At the'business meeting whichfollowed, Mrs, Alfred I-aMura,president of the association, gavea report on the Marlboro Town-ship Board of Education meeting.The membership voted to senda letter to the board requestingapprove) of the teachers' requestfor a revised salary guide.

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The executive committee report-ed two record players had beenpurchased, one for the second

rades in the fire house and onefor the school.

Mrs. Joseph Brace and Mrs.James Denton volunteered toserve on a committee for amagic show to be held in CentralSchool April 8 at 2 p.m.

Mrs. Joseph LaMura, Jr.,Mrs. Lawrence Youngman, Mrs.Joseph Bruce. Michael Rynie-wicz, and Robert Jones werenamed to the nominating com-mittee.

It was decided to accept aninvitation to join with the CentralSchool Parent-Teacher Associa-tion in a covered dish supper.

The attendance award was wonby Mrs. Robert G. Parker'sfirst grade.

The next regular meeting ofthe association will be heldApril 3. Election of officers willtake place and the program willbe "Knowing New Jersey" pre-sented by Bell Telephone Labora-tories.

Er Ribs BEEFEDELICIOUSLONDON Pot Roast 69S>

Senior Pete Chudy set a Syra-cuse University single gamescoring record this season whenhe tallied 41 points against Al-fred.

Bob Stewart, director of ath-letics at St. Louis University, isa former Syracuse University

j basketball star.

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Take Over RacewayWill Retain Personnel, Track's New Owners Say

NEWARK (AP) — A NewYork-Milwaukee group took overthe operation of Freehold Race-jyay today, ending Its 18 yearsunder the ownership of Fred Fat-zler.

Fatzler sold the raceway, theGarden State's only trottingtrack, to a group headed by Ber-nard M. Kahn of White Plains,

N.Y., yesterday. The reportedprice was $5.05 million.

Kahn is expected to hold halfthe stock in the track. The otherowners are Bernard J. Sampson,40, and his brother, Harold, 42,both of Milwaukee; and FredLandau, 63, of Harrison, N.Y.

The sale of the racway wascompleted yesterday in Newark

'Package Insurance' PlanDraws Favor at Resort

SEA BRIGHT — A package in-wrance plan which would savethe borough $1,084.62 a year onpresent costs and still broadenpresent protection was receivedwith immediate interest by thegoverning body last nighf. It wasIdentified as the plan that Rum-ion has accepted.

Councilwoman Cccile FrankclNorton, a new member of theboard and the 1961 finance chair-man, asked that Borough Councilwait for another meeting to de-cide upon acceptance.

But two unidentified agents,laid to have been given herword that no contract will beagreed upon until they have achance to bid, were given onlyuntil the next meeting date,March 28, to come up with competitive figures.

Warning by AxelsenArthur O. Axelsen, the borongtt

assessor and, privately, a realestate and insurance agent whohas written policies for about athird of the borough's insurancefor more than 30 years, said thatThe Insurance Company of NorthAmerica, which made the offer,stands alone in the field of pack-age protection of the type putbefore the officials.

He warned, however, thattrouble could occur if, as theresult of heavy liability lossesluch as have been experiencedpreviously, the company shoulddecide to cancel its protectionand make the borough be ac-cepted by another insurer as an"assigned risk."

But Andy Keating, a local•gent and a competitor to Mr.Axejien, agreeing with the as-iesor"i statement that "insurancecompanies are out to earn mo-ney," said he saw little reasonto believe that the firm he rep-resents. The Insurance Companyof North America, would findcause to drop the borough fromits rolls.

The complete package offeredcalls for premium payments of$10,088.40 a year, compared with$11,173.62 being paid now, undera variety of policies. It wouldraise from $15 to $40 a week theamount paid to disabled boroughemployees through unemploymentcompensation and would give pro-tection against suits for false ar-rest and other damage action, aswelt as extend coverage to bor-ough property not now protected.

New CoverageParticularly, said Mr. Keating,

Immediate coverage would go tothe Recreation Center (the oldSurf St. fire house), the buildingand equipment of the sewage dis-posal plant, employees who useother than borough owned vehi-cles for work, bonded employeesfor duty performance as wellas honesty, and to the borough,In general, for such operations asthe municipal beach and parkinglot.

General liability coverage, helaid, would be raised from $110,-000 to $212,000 with larger amountsbeing allowed for liability protec-tion In the operation of motorvehicles.

Another feature of the plan,laid Mr. Keating, is that thecompany's package price wouldstand, without auditing, should theborough decide to expand cer-tain of its facilities. Asked bya reporter, to explain this, hesaid that should, for example, aiwimming pool be put on theborough beach this would be ac-cepted as a part of the generalbeach facilities.

Evaluation SystemIn his investigation, he said

he found that at present the hookand ladder truck of the Fire De-partment has not been coveredwith full compensation insurance,nor has the street department'swork truck. He said the sewagedisposal plant is not covered andthe Recreation Center and itsequipment would be- better pro-tected under his policy.

Further, he said, companyagents would evaluate not onlythe present worth but replace-ment cost of borough-owned proprerty to have figures available tomeet whatever claims may beentered, and the company wouldmake "whatever recommenda-tions it could" to lower Insurancecosts according to Rating Bureaustandards.

Mayor Thomas Farrell andmembers of council, however, ex-pressed keen interest In the newplan and decided they did notwant to wait beyond the nextmeeting night to vote for sometort'of a change.

Mayor Farrell said the suggest-ed policy "will save us moneyand will cover things never cov-ered before," And Mr. Axelsen

said: "No one can compete withthis."

Mr. Keating said that as theresult of pro-rating and shortrate policy changing, the bor-ough will find itself with some-thing of an insurance surplusthis year and next if the changeis made. However, he also saidthat because borough policies havebeen written with expiration datesfor "almost every month of theyear" some losses are to be ex-pected in certain cancelations

New policies, he said, wouldbe written to expire at the endof the year so that when renewed all would start off at theJan, 1 date, making ths budget,appropriation easy to reckonwith.

Mayor Farrell congratulatedMrs. Norton for her efforts tohave the borough's insuranceproblem thoroughly studied.

O'ReillyResignsBoard Post

RED BANK — The Board ofEducation last night accepted theresignation of Edward L. O'Reil-ly, a member of the board forseven years.

following approval of the trans-action by the state Racing Com-mission.

The new owners stated that "Thetrack will be run on a highethical standard and for thebest interest of the people andthe state of New Jersey."

Fatzler expressed confidence Inthe purchasers who, he saidwould operate the track with thesame personnel as now. TheMaplewood contractor said hesold the property "with a greatdeal of reluctance" after receiv-ing many offers for it.

John D. Cronin of Short Hills,xecutive vice president under

Fatzler, will continue in the job,it was announced.

Assistant Attorney General Da-vid M. Satz Jr, counsel to theRacing Commission, said lettersapproving the sale were sent outMonday.

The purchase application wasmade by the Samber Co. of theTime and Life Building, NewYork City. The firm was formedFeb. 13 by Kahn and HaroldSampson.

The reported sale price included$1 million in cash and a $4.03million loan.

Loan FirmThe purchase application pro-

posed that the Mastan Co. ofNew York make the loan to thiSamber firm.

The proposed division of stockwas: half to Kahn, who is hi theinvestment business IS per centfor Landau the other half wouldbe split equally between Haroldof Kahn's share would be heldand Bernard Sampson, who op-erate a chain of retail stores andan investment business.

Satz said the state police.asrequired by law, had checked In-to the backgrounds of all par-ticipants in the firms involvedin the purchase.

Edward L. O'Reilly

In his letter of resignation, Mr.O'Reilly said that expanded busi-ness operations would requiremuch traveling abroad, and thathe would not be able to devotethe necessary time to boardduties.

The board also received theresignation of Mrs. BernadineWeigand, kindergarten teacherat the Mechanic Street Schooltffective April 1.

Hired to replace Mrs. Weigandwas Mrs. Hazel Jeffry, Little Sil-ver, at a salary of $6,700 pro-rated.

Hire ThreeThe board approved employ-

ment of the following:Miss Joyce Andrews, Long

Branch, as a kindergartenteacher in Mechanic Streetschool for 1961-62 at a salary of$4,600.

Miss Elizabeth ThompsonHolmdel, as secretary in theguidance office at a salary of$3,122.

And Miss Helen Hoffman, Rumson, as clerk in the office of ele-mentary school nurse, at $2,236

An industrial arts teacher,Thomas A. McNulty, has beenchosen to represent the Mon-moulh County Education Associa-tion at the Northeast RegionalConference of the National Edu-cation Association, April 27-29 atMt. Snow, Vt.

Mrs. Mary Diggins, mathema-tics teacher, will participate witha group of teachers and adminis-trators in evaluation of HalstedSchool, Yonkers, N. Y., April 19-21.

Open BidsIn other business, the board

received bids for Janitorial sup-plies and athletic supplies, andreferred them to appropriatecommittees for action.

The secretary received per-mission to advertise for bids ongeneral supplies, office andduplicating supplies, home eco-nomics supplies and equipment,industrial art supplies and equip-ment, library books, art supplies,and kindergarten supplies.

The board approved a recom-mendation by the building andgrounds committee that it enteran agreement for rental ofbusiness machine equipment forthe next school year. A total of$4,600 is allotted in the budgetlor this program.

Cops to GetNew BenefitsAt Matawan

MATAWAN — Borough Counciapproved a resolution last nighsetting forth several benefits foimembers of the police department.

Policemen will get seven paiiholidays annually, or if they woron the holidays specified they wi!get paid extra for that work

The holidays are: New Year'Day, Easter, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day,Thanksgiving and Chrstmas.

Other benefits:1- A family medical-surgica

hospital insurance plan, paid foby the borough.

2- A 40-hour work week.3- An annual uniform allowanc

of $150.4- Vacation time'of two week:

after a year's service, and threweeks after IB years' service.

5- Sick'leave (with pay) of ufto 13 weeks after one year's serv-ice, and up to 26 weeks after. 1years' service.

6- Accident leave (with pay) o:up to one year.

In other business, CouncilmanEdward E. Hyrne reported "pro-gress" on plans for the proposed$1,100,000 sewer project and saidthat the plans will be formallypresented to the state Depart-ment of Health in Trenton Aprii15.

Mayor Ralph R. Dennis an-nounced a new telephone num-ber, LO 6-2113, for complaints. Hesaid any resident may call thdeputy clerk, Mrs. Margaret Vie-brock, at that number duringbusiness hours and that she willrelay the complaints to the pro-per borough official.

7 ChildrenDie in Fire

EXCELSIOR SPRINGS, Mo.,(AP) — Seven children rangingin age from 19 months to 1years died last night in a firethat destroyed the Ralph Floydhome in a village near Excel-sior springs.

The Highway Patrol said thfire apparently started between10:15 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. TheExcelsior Springs Fire Depart-ment received the alarm at 12:1'a.m.

Troopers said Mr. and MrsFloyd had gone to ExcelsloSprings for the evening and re-turned to find the homo in flames.They said the children had beenleft In the charge of the oldestboy, 11-year-old Arnold EugeneFloyd. Sheila. 9; Kathy, 7; Wiley,6; Roxy Anne, 4; Mona Lou, 3.Glen Douglas, 19 months, amArnold all died in the flames.

Cause of the fire has not beendetermined.

The Floyd home Is at Vibbard,a community of 15- or 20 person!four -miles east of Excelslo:Springs.

NoticeJosephs Restaurant, West Lon;Branch will be open 7 days .week from now on.—Advertisement

Expect Kennedy to AirBroad New Farm SetupMoment of SilenceGreets Tuition Bill

NEW SHREWSBURY — TheShrewsbury Township Board ofEducation greeted a $12,410.23bill from the Red Bank Board ofEducation for increased tuitioncharges for last year by a mo-

25-YEAR MAN —Samuel Liboviky, right, of the RedBank Community Chamber of Commerce, congratulatesPolice Capt. Frank J . Mazza who marks his 25th anni-versary on the force today. Capt. Mazza wasiappointeda probationary patrolman March 16, 1936. He bocamoa regular patrolman in 1937; sergeant in 1951; lieuten-ant in 1955, and captain March 17, 1958.

TestimonialDinner SetFor Woolley

WEST LONG BRANCH — J.Russell Woolley will be honoredby a group of citizens at a tes-timonial dinner in Joseph's Res-taurant Sunday, April 9, for his40 years of service as i boroughclerk here.

Meyner Invites LawmakersTo Recess Until Primary

TRENTON (AP) The NewJersey Legislature, back Mondayfrom a one-month recess, hasvirtually been invited by Gov.Robert B. Meyner to go on va-cation again until after the April18 primary.

At a news conference yester-day, following Monday's legisla-tive deadlock in the Senate, Mey-ner said:

"I told the legislative leadersmaybe it would be better if theydon't come back until after theprimaries. Then they could meettwo or three times a week andget their work done."

Meyner said he felt guberna-torial politics had pushed someof the lawmakers into a warinessabout passing bills, and he citeddelayed action on the EssexEast-West Freeway as an exam-ple.

Meyner blamed neither partyfor the impasse. He said it wasnatural since some of those in-volved "are fighting for their po-litical lives."

The Legislature has set anoth-er meeting for Monday and Sen-ate Majority Leader Walter H.Jones, R-Bergen, a gubernator-ial candidate, told newsmen ifthe deadlock wasn't broken thisweek, he'd recommend anotherrecess.

A party-line split over a bill togrant an $800 property tax de-duction to homeowners over 65with limited incomes has tied upthe Senate.

One resolution it did pass Mon-day brought criticism from thegovernor.

The Senate condemned Charles-ton, S. C, for refusing integratedhotel accommodations to Negroeswho want to participate in CivilWar centennial ceremonies therenext month.

Meyner said the Senate waswilling to stand up for civil rightsin the South, but not willing topass a bill to ban racial discrim-ination in the sale and rental ofprivate housing in New Jersey.

"It's a little ironic," he said."I think they're guilty of 'Afghan-

istanism'. I detect a variety ofthat virus here."

He defined the malady as over-concern about faraway problemsto the neglect of local ones. "It'smuch easier to talk about SouthCarolina than to tend to our ownaffairs," he said.

Man HeldIn Assault,Tipsy Driving.MIDDLETOWN - Edward A.

Halligan, Jr., 34 of 27 Glen OakRd., New Monmouth, was heldin $275 bail last night on chargesof drunk driving and assaultingtwo policemen.

Halligan was arrested last nighton Rt. 35 by Patrolman HermanGrillon.

When brought to headquarters,police charged, Haliigan becameabusive and assaulted PatrolmanGrillon. When Desk Sgt. JohnKelly came to his assistance,Haligan also assaulted him, po-lice said.

The motorist was examined byDr. C. Malcolm B. Gilman, whoruled that he was unfit to oper-ate a motor vehicle.

A 'hearing has been set forMarch 23.

Take $72 From HomeWhile Family Sleeps

KEANSBURG — Police report-ed today that someone brokeinto the home of Allen J. John-son, 204 Forest Ave., early thismorning and took.$72 in cash.

According to police, entry wasmade through an unlocked frontdoor, while the family of fiveslept.

Police said $60 was taken froma pocketbook belonging to oneof the daughters and $12 fromthe wallet of a son.

The pocketbook and walletlater found on the rear porch,police said.

J. Russell Woolley

Henry Shaheen is chairman ofthe dinner committee. He is be-ing assisted by Harry Vogel,Clarkson Fisher, CouncilmanGeorge Conway, Miss FrancesTownsend and Miss Jane Holland-er.

In addition to municipal offi-cials, members of the Board ofFreeholders and other county of-ficials are among the invitedguests.

Mr. Woolley also is the Mon-mouth County clerk and is chair-man of the county Republicanexecutive committee.

Board OKsSubdivisions

RED BANK — Two minor sub-divisions were granted last nightby the Planning Board.

One was for Coast YachtWorks, 142 Bodman PI., to ac-quire additional water front landsfrom William T. and MargaretM. Jones to construct more boatslips.

The other was to Genola Build-ers, Inc., to divide a 97-foot lotinto two parcels, one 50 feet andthe other 47 feet wide.

Board chairman Bernard Kel-lenyi renamed James Wolcottchairman of the minor subdivi-sion committee. Also appointedto the committee were Mrs. Lau-ra Rudolph and Richard L. John-

ment of dismal silence last night.It was broken by Emerson Plat-

to, who said:"This is a perfect example of

why a school board ought to re-tain a surplus."

The additional charge wascaused by the fact that last year'scosts at Red Bank High. Schoolwere higher than estimated inadvance. This board paid tuitionfor high school students at therate of $591 per pupil. Actuacosts, when they were totalectil the end of the current schoocame to $604.93 per pupil.

No Protest DueThe board agreed not to pro-

test the bill, but to hold it until the end of the current schooyear and then pay it from surplus.

The board also heard a letterfrom H. P. Schlander questioningplans to build an addition toSwimming River School.

Mr. Schlander asked if the cur-rent recession, which he saidmight cause a declining birthrate, and the lower rate of residential building in the boroughmight not leave empty schoorooms in a few years.

Building PlansThe president of the board, Dr.

Richard Swenson, said:"Our building plans are based

on several years of study, whichhave given us good reason todisagree with some of Mr.Schlander's conclusions."

At the suggestion of membeAnson W. Peckham, "the boarddecided to invite Mr. Schlandeto become a member of a fu-ture citizens' committee on build-ing plans.

Dr. Swenson 'said that four ar-chitects have been interviewed itconnection with the building project. No definite decision as tithe number of rooms to be conslructed, or as to a date forreferendum, has yet been made;he stated.

On Federal AidBoard member Miriam I. Har-

ris reported on the prospects foifederal aid to this school district in terms of various pro-posed congressional bills. .

Whether the aid bill current):under consideration in Congress,or some other bill, passes, thisdistrict can probably expect lesifederal aid next year than nowshe told the board.

Mrs. Norma Kohn, co-chairmarof the education study committeeof the Parent-Teacher Association, reported to the board on th(subject of closed-circuit educational television.

The board authorized the NewShrewsbury Library Associatioto proceed with painting and alterations of the Tinton Fall;School annex for use as a community library.

OK CalendarOver ProtestOf Teachers

RED BANK — The Board 0!Education last night decidecagainst recommendations of thelocal Teachers Association anapproved the 1961-62 calendar submilted by the superintendent.

In an effort to have the schooyear end earlier — June 15 instead of June 20 — the teacher!asked the board to consider threichanges in the calendar: eliminate professional day for the staf:Sept. 7, and hold classes on Columbus Day and Washington':Birthday, both now listed as hoidays.

Representing the Welfare Committee of the teacher group, Mis:Elizabeth A. Kelley pointed outhat the number of schedulecteaching days has steadilycreased over the past few years

She termed the 188 days scheduled for staff members in th<1961-62 schedule "far in excessof requirements.

Board members replied thaextra days were needed to mcesuch emergencies as the snestorms created this winter.

Similar requests for shortenin,the schedule have been made bjthe welfare committee in pasyears without success.

Growers ToWrite OwnPrograms

WASHINGTON (AP) —'resident Kennedy is ex-ected to ask Congress to-

morrow to approve a radi-ally new farm setup un-er which growers would

write their own crop pro-rams, subject to legislativeteto.

Congressional sources said the'resident will seek a broad dele-jation of powers to him and toiecretary of Agriculture Orville

Freeman to deal directly withfarmers in forming programsEmbracing kindred and compet-ing commodities.

The farmers themselves woulde asked to agree on the type of

federal controls, price supportsand other government propsthey believe are workable forthe particular group of growergInvolved.

GroupedAs an example, growers of

wheat, corn, oats, grain sorghumand kindred tcrops would bssked to form their own pro-

gram. Another group might in-,dude producers of cotton seed,soybeans and peanut oil.

The hoped-for result would beto take out of the hands of Con-gress the job of having to draftintricate and controversial legis-lation covering the diversifiedfield of agriculture.

This would apply to the farmproblem the same principle in-volved In Congressional grantsto the President to reorgariiregovernment departments andagencies.

As in legislation of this lattertype, Congress would retain aveto over the decisions of theindividual farm groups. Thesegroups could put their programsinto effect by a two-thirds voteof the growers involved.

Congress VetoBut if Congress decided withinspecified time limit—probably

60 days—that the particular pro-gram failed to fit the over-allagricultural patten* or involvedtoo large expenditures, it couldkill the program, by a malori'yvote.

Kennedy, who has made itdear in the past that he doesnot regard himself as a farm ex-pert, was said to have approvedthe principle of the new pro-gram after some rather despair-ing efforts had been made todraft an over-all legislative pro-gram.

Under the new plan,. Congresswould be asked to vote authorityto the President—which he inturn would delegate to the secre-tary of agriculture—to us- all ofthe agricultural props now avail-able.

These would Include compensa-tory payments to growers, directpayments, ctop loans, purchasesand others.

In essence, the new programrepresents a refinement of pro-posals offered in previous Con-Rresses by Sen. Hubert H.Humphrey, D-Minn. He is knownto have had a hand in draftingthe new program.

MUSIC, MAESTRO — Gathered at the side of Leopold Stolcowski', the distinguishedconductor, Is this group of Rumson Cub Scouts. The teens it Bookbinder's Restau-rant in Philadelphia, where the youngsters whose days of Cubbing are ending, weretaken by Mrs. William H. Glover, Navesink River,Rd., on an outing Saturday. Theboys, left to right, are Harvey Glover, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Glover; Arthur.Pisani, son of Dr. and Mrs. Anthony Pisani, Bellevua Ave.; Andrew Patey, Jr., sonof Mr. and Mrs. Andrew S. Patey, Rosalie Ave., and Jonathan Lawrence, son of Mr.and Mrs. Ralph W. Lawrence, Jr., Ridge F(d. After chance meeting with the con-ductor, the quartet, all members of Don 5, Pack I I , climbed aboard a locomotive inFranklin Museum to ccrry out a railroad project. All soon wil^be Boy Scouts.

DRIVERS CHARGEDLITTLE SILVER—Both driven

in a two-car accident wencharged with careless drlvinjyesterday.

Patrolman Alan Wright reported a car driven north orSeven Bridge Rd. by Robert Lillie, 18, of Ward Ave., Rumsonhit the left rear of a car drien by David Henderson, 35, of 17Winding Way, Little Silver,Mr. Henderson made a left tunonto Winding Way. No one waiinjured. •

Gang ChasedFrom TavernBy Dougherty

SEA BRIGHT - Police Capt.leorge Dougherty last night was

praised for his skill for clearingSullivan's Sea Bright Inn of agroup which Police Commission-er John S. Forsman said weremen who later caused a disturb-ance in the Bayshore in whicha man was injured.

James Sullivan, proprietor ofthe local tavern, wrote to Bor-ough Council to express his grati.tude for the way Capt. Dougher-ty handled the Sunday night situ-ation. "A gang," he said, "wereon the prowl and were set tocause trouble."

"But," said Mr. Sullivan in hisletter oF commendation, "Mr.Dougherty had no trouble In send-ing this gang on its way." Hesaid the officer deserved histhanks.

Mayor Thomas Farrell said ofMr. Sullivan's letter: "This isnice indeed. It always Is good toget in a letter of congratulationsfor our police instead of somekind of a complaint about some-thing."

At t h e recommendation ofCouncilwoman C e c 11 e FrankclNorton, council directed that aletter of commendation be writ-ten to Capt. Dougherty with ac o p y , expressing appreciation,forwarded to Mr, Sililivan.

14_Wed, March IS, 1961 RED BANK REGISTER

Overseas ArmyNo Cut Seen in U. S. Forces

WASHINGTON (AP) - Secre-t t ty of, the Army Elvis J. SUhrsaid yesterday the necessity to beraady foreither limited or gen-eral « i r mikes it obvious thatth» United State*, mujt«m»rnulncombat-ready farces overseas.

The comment was made ia aspeech prepared for a meeting ofthe Electronic Industries Associa-tion. It apparently was a furthereffort to quiet continuing specula-tion that the United States mayreduce its forces supporting theNorth Atlantic Treaty Organiza-tion.

Such reports have been deniedby various top U. S. officials.Stahr put it this way:

"The American serviceman onthe ground is > living symbol of quire* response by far more pre-our readiness id contribute to thecommon defense—« symbol that

cise and limited means thatstrategic bombers or long-rangenuclear missiles."

2. "We are much more likel]fective deterrent against limited to find ourselves in situations o

allied people and the aggressorscan both visible and ef-

aggression and an indispensableelement in meeting it if itoccurs."

The opinions St«hr expressed inhis speech follow closely thosehis predecessors and most of tinprofessional high-ranking Ann]officers.

Further CommentStahr said that:I. While he is convinced of th<

necessity for "massive retalialion if the true occasion forshould develop," he is equal);certain that such retaliationonly one element of the poweineeded. He said that "many se-rious acts of aggression whichmight be perpetrated against usor against our allies would re-

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so-called limited war In the yeanjust ahead than in a actuation ofall-out thermonuclear coaflict."

J. The United States must "con-tinue, as a matter of high prior-ity, to- develop an effective anti-missile defense."

The Army has been seeking,without success so far, to obtainpermission to start production ofparts needed for its Nike Zeusanti-missile missile—before full-scale tests are completed. A newrecommendation to that effect isnow awaiting decision in the De-fense Department

Advice GivenOn Benefits

ASBURY PARK — The SocialSecurity office here has advisedpersons who became eligible forbenefits as the result of 1960amendments tto regulations tobring in their necessary proofs ofeligibility the first time they Tilea claim.

Benjamin Sandberg. districtmanager, suggested that a tele-phone call to his office be madein advance of the visit to leantjust what proofs are needed. Re-quirements, he said, include proofof age and the amount of 1960earnings. Documents suggestedfor use are birth certificates,baptismal records, marriage cer-tificates or data from old insur-ance policies and either the I960°orm W-2 (withholding state-

ment) or income tax return.

Memorial BandTo Play Tonight

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS—TheBob Bberie Jr. Memorial Bandof Asbury Park American LegionPost 24 will play tonight at 8:15o'clock in Atlantic HighlandsHigh School.

George Coleman will be vocalsoloist. The concert Is sponsoredby the Atlantic Highlands Recrea-tion Commission.

Program will Include marchesand musical comedv selections

EVCT HAPPEN TO YOU? By Blah

SITUATIONWEREREVERSEP-

Short Skirtsall for Well

Groomed LegsThese days a gat hasn't t leg

to stand on, from a fashionplattstandpoint, unless her gams anicrupulously groomed! Sheer Hoiiery, dainty shoe styles anshorter skirts focus attention oilegs.

So, here are some quick-tip;from the Lady Remington Beauty Institute: Once a week giviyourself a pedicure — from toeito knee-cap. Use all the trim-mings: fragrant bath oil, pumicistone, nail polish and skin cream,And, be sure to defuzz legs. U Kin electric shaver, of your own,to eliminate nicks and scrapesthat can mar the good looks

i Arhif*smooth luffs

than Mother used

PHOTO Br c o m

Vegetables retain their nourishing goodness

FLAMELESS ELECTRICBecause little or no \tater is neededfor surface cooking «n a modern

' electric range, vegetables don't losetheir vitamins down ithe drainthe way they did in mother's day.Then, too, since cooking units,are in direct contact with potsand pans, little or no heat is lostand there is precision control.

Cooking is easier, cleaner andcooler the flameless way. So nonatter how good a cook yourmother was, she would have been(ven better — and happier, too—with a, new matchless, flameless

COOKING

tvy with outwore* fr»m ywr' total HaMyHtewtMllMbr

wh* displays Nib •mUtm.

J C P & L J«n«.C«tnl Fftmr *-Li>U

Take advantage, too, of newspring hosiery shades to flatteryour limbs. Rosy shades, warmbeiges'and tan. tones will roundout the shape of a thin leg vis-ually. Darker tones will tend tominimi** plumper limbJ.

Lastly, keep shoes in ship-shapecondition; to complete that band-box appearance — from foot toh e a d . - • • . . .

From Brazil to Africa

Hand of FriendshipRIO BE JANEIRO, (AP) —

President Janio Quadras Is ex-tending "a hand of friendship toAfrica. .

Brazil has 'millions of citizen'swith African blood ties and Isgeographically closer to the darkcontinent than any nation in thishemisphere. It. is less than 2.000miles from Brazil's northeastern

Youths EnjoyWell-Dressed LookOf Handsome Hats

Heading Into spring to giveyoung men that finishing touchwhen dressing for a special oc-casion and the wearer a senseof pride — is a brand-new groupof smart hats.

New this spring are fabric hatsIn madras or batik prints match-ing jackets of 5-me fabric. Alsoseen are solid fabric hats withprinted bands and brim welting.Smaller shapes with narrowerbrims are predominant.

Three popular new styles inbrushed wool are the taperedf pork pie, the soft pinch

model, and the centerfrontfrontcrease. While these have • def-inite sporty air, they are equally

i t f b ' d

bulge to the westernmost edgeof Africa. v

In line with Ms announced in-tention of strengthening ties withthe new nation of Africa, Quad-ros has ordered foreign' ministerAfonso Arinos to attend indepen-dence ceremonies in SenegslApril H . He also ordered Arinosto enter into talks with Senegalleaders for setting up a BrazilianEmbassy in Dakir.

Past Brazilian administrationskissed off African ceremoniessuch as Senegal's by sending anambassador from AfricaEurope.

Quadros also has set up a pro-gram of scholarships to Africanstudents. Twenty will come tillsyear, 40 next year until the quotareaches 100 by 1965.

ATTENDS SEMINAR

NEWARK — Bert S. Morgov-sky, 185 Shrewsbury Ave., RedBank, was among 73 pharmacistsin the state who attended the 17thannual seminar series for prac-ticing pharmacists of the Northern New Jersey Branch of theAmerican Pharmaceutical As-sociation and Rutgers Pharmaceu-tical Extension Service at theState University pharmacy college here last month. The four-lecture series included sessionson the latest developments in

appropriate for boy's dress-up oral poliomyelitis vaccine andoccasions.

He has ordered foreign minis-try experts to start thinkingabout putting Brazilian embas-sies throughout Africa.

Africans came- to Brazil 400years ago as ilaves of the Por-tuguese. Slaves were freed in Hie19th century. But Afrfcins andwhites have Intermarried over theyears and almost four out of fiveBrazilians have Negro blood.About 10 per cent Ire pure Neg-ro.

African customs still exist inBrazil. For example,- the Ma-,cumba religious sect, a tort ofvoodoo sec that the Roman Cath-olic ohurch frowns on.

efficient nh»rm*r" m«i i»ii

NOTICE TO ninDERsTUHNS111F o r MIDULETOIVNmONMOUTII COUMTV, N. J.

NOTICE M HIRESY GIVEN ihilsealed bldi will be received by theTownship Committee of Uit Townihlnol Mlddletown, Kid blda to bt rectinSet an adjourned meeting of the Town.thlp Committee of the Township of Mid.dlelown to be held at the MlddletownTownship Hall, Mlddletown, N j ,'Frfdsr, March It. 1M1. at B:00 pmand opened In public In the said meet-ing, the said bids to be for tha fur-nishing of automotive equipment' forthe use of lbs -Police Department ofthe Township of lltddletown.

Complete specifications and tormMof bid sre on file at the office of theTownship Clerk of Ins Township orUlddlelown, copies of which may hereceived by prospective bidders uponapplication.

Bids must be made on standard pro-posal forms In the manner designated(herein and required J>r lha specifica-tions, must be enclosed In sealed en.velopee besrlnf the name and addressof the bidder, and accompanied by acertified check drawn to tbe order ofthe Township Treasurer for not lestthan ten per cent (10%) of the amountbid, and delivered at the piece endhour above mentioned.

Right Is reserved to reject snr andor all bids If deemed to the interestof the Townahlp Committee- to da so.

By Order ot the Township Commit-tee of the Township of Hlddlctown.

Dated: .March I, 1MLHOWARD W. ROBERTS.

Township, Clerk.

- - ' • '* • nn

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to darkened beigeg

entice every costumel

New pace-setters by

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carved in rich leathers,

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added touches in deeper

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'IT

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MAIL PRDER8. ADD SB* POSTAGE. (C. O. D. POSTAL CHAftOM AR.E EXTRA)

BED BANK REGISTER Wed., March 15, 1961—15

* Ideal

Tuna FishSolid Light

7 ox. eon

Lifebuoy

Soap

3 Zt 32«Lifebuoy

Soap

LuxBath Soap

Lux

Toilet Soap

AllLiquid"

Fluffy All19oi. n n .

pkg.O0C

3lb 77cpkg.//C

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3i««. 59c

PraiseSoap

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Rinso Blue

54oi. O /

Silver Dust

98 ox.pkg.

Lux Flakes

laviei.

Surf18 ox. O C

PKg. 0 045V5 ox.

pkg.

2461

All49 or.

101b. o 1~7pkg.Z 1 /

Lux Liquid12 oi. o r ,

can O«J

22 ox.

Wisk Liquid

Vfc .39

SIRLOIN

PORTERHOUSE

Fresh Fruits & VegetablesGolden Ripe

BANANAS. . . .-10cIceberg

LETTUCE. . . . 2 - 2 5 cNew Green

C A B B A G E . . . . -5cAcme is Headquarters for Gardening Needsl

Garden Jumbo Rose

Lime *•">•*•« 39c Bushes •«h98«Penna. Dutch 5-10-5 Genuine Michigan

Fertilizer *£ I 5 9 Peat 1 0 £ PAND YOU GET S4H GREEN STAMPS TOO I

All advertised prices effective thru Saturday, March 18th '

TASTE THEDIFFERENCE I

PROPERLYTRIMMEDBEFORE

WEIGHING

Lancaster Brand EZ Carve Oven Ready

Rib Roast 69'Lancaster Brand - Bone In Shoulder

Veal Roa$t 49C 59Lancaster Brand Boneless Brisket

Corned Beef 69Lancaster Brand

Veal ChopsLancaster Brand Sliced

Bacon 3 3 '

Shoulder 79< 89<Of

Veal

Loinb.

Breati Of

99<

33<Frozen Fish

SHRIMP5-lb. box$4.39

Fancy

Sea Scallops *< 55C

Sliced

Cod'Steak lb 39«Sliced-

Halibut Steak ^55^Sliced •

Salmon Steak lb 99«Taite O'Sea

Fillet Sole lb 49C

Frozen Food Sale!Birds Eye

FRENCH FRIES . .... 6Birds Eye

SPINACH f*-*«Ideal Brand

BROCCOLI

9-oz.pkgs. 1.00

stioo•4.W

Morton'*

MacaroniTree Tavtrn

Pizza Pie

Speart

and .. O 20 01. $iOOCheese Opkgi . I

66 rl.00

Big PiePi<«. 59«

AllVirginia Lee10 Varieties

Shenandoah Rack Gam»—2 Ib. average

Cornish Hens 49 2 1.00Tllli 4 PlCli Breast o'Chicken ° As^ozA f i l lI UII If T lOll Light Chunk H 1 anS | a | | | |

BN,BC,BD Drinks 3 1.00Allsweet Margarine 2 47Princess Margarine 4 69Macaroni & Cheese - 2 33=Planters Peanuts 3 89Cat Food • 2 33Bisquick Biscuit Mix 39Premium Saltines ^ 25Graham Crackers ^ 33<norniel Spam

GREEN STAMPSWilh purchate of Meat totaling $3.00 or more and coupon

GoldenFluffo

l ib. Q l . 31b.can vJ I can

Crisco

'133c *

Lestoilpint O"7r quartbot. O / bo)

Vigallon -I.25can I

LestareDry Bleach

o( 10 envs.

Free SOhiIn addition to regular stamps with tha purchase of meat totaling$3.00 or more and thli coupon. Limit 1 Coupon Per Customer.

NAME

STREET...

CITY

This Coupon Expires March 25th

16—Wed., March 15, 1961 RED BA>j[K REGISTER

Middletown QOP Women

Long Addresses 1-5-8 [ClubMIDDLETOWN — Junes Long.

teeCTUv»_«rector of fte FamilyBad Children'* Service of Mon-Bouth County, explained the

tary; and Mrs. Monte B. Jones,recording secretaiy.

Mrs. Daniel Higgim, vice pres-ident, presided in the absence of

•ervieei of the organization to Mrs. Whitney Crowd), president;tnember* of tin 1-54 Women'sRepublican Club Monday night.

Attending LuncheonMembers will attend the testi-

The meeting was held in Baptist monial luncheon to Mrs. Geral-dine L. Thompson to be given bythe Monmouth County Federation

from the audience. He was Intro- of Republican Women tomorrowfaced by Mrs. Robert Wood, pro- at the Shadowbrook, Shrewsbury,

ram chairman. - It was announced that Mrs.The following officers were Alice Maxwell of 1-5-S has been

Fellowship Hall.Mr. Long answered questions

gelected: Mrs. Joseph Scott, andMrs. George Hoftoire, Jr., vicepresidents; Mrs. Th Mford. treasurer;

elected corresponding secretaryof the county federation.

The club voted to purchase aThomas Mor-Mrs. Herbert $10 advertisement in the State candidates Spoke.

McNally, corresponding secre- Federation convention1 program.

Kitty Kelly:

Parental Frankness• Needed by TeenagersDear Kitty:* You frequently publish lettersfrom teenagers who complain thattheir parent* lacfc courage, to dis-tuss the facts of life with them.

Reading these letters I oftenthink of how important it is forteenagers to learn about sexfrom those who should be best"qualified to inform them—theirparents—and at home, surround-ed by the love and understand-ing so essential to the right in-terpretation. For sex is certainty

can say that such corporal pun-ishment didHowever, I

me lasting good,would recommend

trying other measures firstPersonally I believe that if the

youths of our country who areclassed as delinquents had beentaught sterner respect for author-ity with "the hickory stick,"there would be far less defianceof law and far less crime.—V.Eugene Johnson, Lake Lillian,Minn.

Dear Mr. Johnson: Sorry,/L wonderful thing when the right, ''•" still unconvinced. ReadingJime comes along to fully express; 3"""" I e t t e r reminded me of ajt and that time is marriage—p.S. Ontario, Canada• Dear S. S.: What you say is{true but, unhappily, most peo-•ple. especially women, havebeen conditioned to regard sexas synonymous with sin orsomething to be furtively men-tioned behind closed doors. Ifwe women were franker aboutIt, tiiere would be fewer di-vorces.

Dear Kitty:Why do so many husbands ne-

glect to give their wives a nightout with them?

Mos? husbands have an eve-ning off at least once a weekbut do they take their wives?No. I'm 63 and so by now should!know something about the mat-'ter. How would you solve thisproblem?

I read your column every nightand hope to see an answer.—Ma-bel Smith, Tacoma, Wash.

Dear Mrs. Smith: One of thegreat fallacies of life is thatthe meek shall inherit the earthThey won't A put-upon wife isalways put-upon. Unless she(peaks up for herself, no oneelse will. A wife, like a top•ergeant, should demand andget attention.

Dear Kitty:I strongly disagree with you re-

garding corporal punishment. Ibelieve that the Scriptures justifycorporal punishment. "Do notwithhold discipline from a child:If you beat him with a rod, hewill not die. If you beat him witha rod you will save his life fromSheol" (Proverbs 23:13-14).

: When children are surroundedwith love and properly taughtwhat they must do and must notdo, yet to assert their own will

^ deliberately disobey the reason-able commands of their parents

jor guardians, they need more'than verbal reprimands. They:need corporal punishment, not ad-: ministered in a fit of anger but•with love and firmness to teachjthem that they cannot with 1m-•punity disobey their superiors.

• In certain instances withdrawal:of privileges and liberties may•suffice as discipline, but whenthe boy or girl defies such re-strictions a "birching" (as theEnglish call it) is not only nec-essary but it would in my opinion

• be » neglect of parental duty to: withhold it. From experience I

story my former husband, thelate John Erskine, told as an il-lustration of the best way for aparent to discipline a child. Hewas' opposed to corporal pun-ishment.

The parent was John's un-cle. Bishop Scarborough of NewJersey, the child, John's fav-orite cousin, Bess Scarborough.At the time of the story, Besswas four and the Scarboroughfamily living in the EpiscopalBishop's house at Trenton. Johnused to point the old mansardroofed mansion out to me fromthe train window whenever wewent to Philadelphia. "There,"he would say, "is where Bessgot her first lesson in disci-pline."

The occasion was a familynoonday meal with John, thena small boy, as the guest ofhis young cousin. Bess, seatedin a high chair beside her fa-ther, suddenly began bangingit with a porridge spoon as theBishop was talking to his wife.He reproved her quietly andwent on talking. Bess bangedaway again. The Bishop tookthe spoon from her and con-tinued talking. This time Bessyelled at the top of her lungs.By now she had the attentionof the entire family, especiallythe children. Plainly the Bish-op's reputation as a discipli-narian was at stake. If she wonout, the others would sei2e theadvantage.

The Bishop stopped talkingand without a word, grimlypicked up Bess and her highchair and marched out of thedining room, up the stairs andinto the nursery. When he de-posited the now throughly sub-dued Bess, he closed the door,returned to his place at the ta-ble and • resumed conversationwithout further reference toBess. The incident was closed.

It made a profound impres-sion upon John. That was thelast time Bess ever dared defyher father. She and the otherchildren realized once and forall that when he asked for obe-dience, he wanted it and mostimportant, he didn't have tohit them to prove it.

Send your problem to Kitty Kel-ly. Enclose a stamped, self-ad-dressed envelope and address hercare of The Register. Helpfulleaflets available. Write for"Manners and Young People."

Member* frill attend the south-eastern regional meeting of NewJersey Republican Women April6 in MedforJ Lakes Lodge ,Med-ford Lakes. Counties representedwill be Burlington, Mercer, Oceanand Monmonth.

It was announced that Mrs.Morford was the subject of ifeature article in "The ElephaniTrail," the State Federation'snewspaper this month.

Mrs. Morford reported on thelegislative luncheon hel8 Mondayin Trenton by the State Federa-tion and attended by 650 women.All Republican Gubernatorial

Former Secretary of LaborJames P. Mitchell will be thespeaker at a Candidates' Nightsponsored by the Fairview Re-publican Club of MiddletownTownship April 7 at McGuIre'sGrove.

EpiscopalCanon ToAddfess MS

FREEHOLD — Canon GeorgeA. Robertshaw, rector of StGeorge's By-The-River EpiscopaChurch of Rumson, will be guestspeaker at the Central New Jer-sey Chapter of the National Mul-tiple Sclerosis Society annualmeeting Saturday at 2:34 p.m. inthe American Hotel.

A medical report will be givenby Bernard A. Hirschfleld, chair-man of the chapter medical ad-visory boaid. The annual reportfor I960 ant! plans for 1961 will bepresented l>y James A. Arnold,Jr., president of the chapter.State Sen.'Richard R. Stout iscounty chairman for the chapter,

Mrs. Torrald Ueland of Middle-town is program chairman. Pres-entation of awards for campaignwork and other volunteer servicefor multiple sclerosis will bemade.

Circle Holds14th MeetingHIGHLANDS - Members of

the Golden Circle of the Method-ist Church met recently in thehome of Mrs. Sivert C. WalstromFifth St., with Mrs. Henry M.Fehlhaber :and Mrs. Alma Big-nell as hostesses.

Mrs. Minor Johnson, BarberieAve., was welcomed as a newmember.

Mrs. Deborah Bogue, FourthSt., was welcomed back homeafter spending the winter at Jupi-ter, Fla.

This was the Uth meeting ofthe group, which was organizedin January, 1960. The member-ship at present is 23.

Transportation to the meetingfor the members was furnishedby Fred Koch, Mrs. HowardParonto and Mrs. Billie Camp*bell.

The meeting was opened witha hymn sing with Mrs. Johnson,at the piano. Mrs. Walstrom wasin charge Df the devotions. Mrs.Bogue led the prayer.

Members were asked to bringold pictures of Highlands and itspeople to the meeting April 5.

Mrs. Bignell, who celebratedher 77th birthday at the meeting,was presented a birthday cakemade by Mrs. Howard Paronto.

Others present were Mrs. KatieEilenberger, Mrs. Bogue, Mrs.>ace Cottrell, Mrs. Helen Cor-son, Mrs. Ada Deck, Mrs. Fehl-haber, Mm. Johnson, Mrs. FredKoch, Mm. Clarence Matthews,Mrs. Laura Rubtey. Mrs. LydiaSchmitz add Mrs. Walstrom.

Auxiliary to MeetHIGHLANDS — Mrs. Hubbard

Stiles, 66 Navesink Ave., will behostess to the Women's Auxiliaryof St. Andrew's Episcopal Churchat a meeting tomorrow Inhome.

her

^ k*

- I DAR Chapter to Back7 for Citizen Award

RED BANK — MonmouthChapter, Daughters ot the Ameri-can Revolution, will sponsor sev-en senior high school girls in thestate DAR "Good Citizens" con-test to ba held tomorrow in Tren-ton.

The National Association ofSecondary School Principals has

RUMMAGE SALE jpomored by th» Unitarian Women's Club of Monmouth Countyit discussed by Mrs. Warren Sawyer, left, Little Silver, chairman, and Mri. BlairBurch, Fair Haven, president of the club. The sale will ba held Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Masonic Temple, Bergen PI., Red Bank. Mrs. Robert Creager,Lincroft, it co-chairman.

Engagements Announced

Miss Elizabeth Norrls

NEW SHREWSBURY — Mr.and Mrs. Edmond J. Norris, 7Wyckham Rd,, announce the en-gagement of their daughter, MissElizabeth Norris, to William AlanGoldsmith, son of Mr. and Mrs.Bernard M. Goldsmith, Little Sil-ver Point Rd., Little Silver.

Miss Norris is a sophomore atPembroke College, Providence,R.I. She Is the granddaughter ofR. P. Westaway of North Holly-wood, Calif., and the late MrsEvelyn Westaway.

Mr. Goldsmith is a sophomoreat Lehigh University, Bethlehem,Pa., a member of Tau Delta Phi.He is the grandson of Milton Ad-ler, Springfield, and the late Mrs.Florine Adler. He is also thegrandson of Morton Goldsmith ofNew Orleans. La.

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — Dr.and Mrs. Robert S. McTague, 37East Washington Ave., announcethe engagement of their daughter, Miss Carolyn Elizabeth Mc-Tague, to Edmund Francis Mc-Mullin, Jr., son of Mr, and Mrs.Edmund F. McMullin of MountAve., Atlantic Highlands.

Miss McTague is a graduate otAtlantic Highlands High Schooland attended the College of StElizabeth. She is an alumna ofDouglass College.

Mr. McMullin is a graduate otCroydon Hall and La Salle Col-lege, Philadelphia. He is enrolledat the Marine Officer CandidateSchool in Quantico, Va.

The bride-elect's father is may-or df Atlantic Highlands.

Miss Carolyn McTague

Bride-Elect HonoredAt Surprise Shower

SHREWSBURY — Miss Stephanie Romeo, daughter of Mr. andMrs. John Romeo, 280 Pearl St.,Red Bank, was honored at a sur-prise bridal shower Saturday byher bridal attendants. The part,was held in the home of thibride-elect's aunt, Mrs. SalvatonRomeo, 112 East End Ave.

A buffet supper was servedDecorations in white includedwhite lace umbrella.

Miss Romeo will become thjbride of Howard Snow, sonMr, and Mrs. Clarence Snow, Independence, Va., April 15 in StAnthony's Catholic Church.

Attending were Mrs. John Ro-meo, Mrs. Peter Romeo, Mrs.Claude Borchardt, Mrs. Domenic~igaro. Miss Dolores Ferrogine,Mrs. James Mannello, Mrs. Ray-mond Thompson, Mrs. WilliamWalker, Mrs. Joseph Benlncasa,Mrs. Joseph Sidoti and Mrs. Richard Owens, all of Red Bank.

Also, Mrs. Val DeFazio, MrsSalvatore Romeo, Miss Barbar,Wolff, Shrewsbury; Miss CarleeGlatto and Mrs. Carlo Giatto, Belford; Mrs. Casimo Vasto anMrs. Rose Harper, Atlantic Highlands; and Mrs. George Coulsoi

• • • ? * ' • *" ' , -:-

IT TAKES PLANNING —Members of the Ladies' Auxiliary of th» Little Silver FireCompany meet to plan for a dinner they will sponsor tomorrowiat 5:30 p.m in thel i ra house. Standing, left to right, are Mrs. Hazel Tetlay. ticket |hairman, and Mrt.Edward Grum, dining room chairman. Seated.-left to right, are Mn. Lilian Lovekinmenu; Mn. Joseph Bacigalupi, hostess, and Mr«. George Darragh| dinner chairman

Club InstallsNew Officers

KEYPORT—The newly-electedifficers of the Maggie Jiggs^ootiette Club 51 of Monmouthbounty were installed recent!;it a meeting in Keyport Vetirans of Foreign Wars Hall.

Mrs. Grace Hoff, past stateI president, and Mrs. Frances Ne-pus, past state secretary, were[installing officers.

New officers are Mrs. Antoin-ette Schmld, president; MrsFlorence Lambertson, senior vicepresident; Mrs. Elizabeth Hubertjunior vice president; Mrs. Ne-bus, treasurer; Mrs. FriedaWinkelman, chaplain; Mrs. RuthWilliams, conductress, and Mrs.Josephine Dilks, guard.

Mrs. Pauline Tuzeneu, Mrs.Laura Pelose and Miss EllenKelly were nimed trustees. Mrs.Rose Pouzenc will serve as themistress of ceremonies; Mrs.Williams, publicity chairman;Mrs. Hubert, hospital chairman,and Miss Kelly, covcrette.

Mrs. Rita Civitan was wel-comed as a new member. Acovered dish supper was served.

and Mrs. Joseph Romeo, Lin-croft.

Also, Mrs. Robert Rugg, NewShrewsbury; Mrs. Claire Calafato,Fair Haven; Mrs. Louis Angeline,Rumson; Mrs. Alfred CeppalunI,Portaupeck; Mrs. Michael Delia-

SamMrs.

placedproved

the contest on the ap-list of national contests

RBC TeamHas DebateFor CDA

fcED BANK — The ForensicTeam at Red Bank Catholic HighSchool debated at. a meeting ofCourt St. James, Catholic Daugh-ters ot America, last week in theparish room* of the school.

The topic was "Resolved;Should the UN be SignificantlyStrengthened." For the affirma-tive were Robert Dalton and Vic-tor Lorch. For the negative, Wil-liam Juska and James Kenny.

The timekeeper was Lawrencethe judge wasJanssen, and

James Spaeth. Director of thegroup Is Sister Mary Vincent.

The CDA annual Communionbreakfast will be. held May 7 atthe Willowbrook, Fair Haven.Rev. ' Lawrence Everitt willspeak.

Mrs. John Shuster was namedchairman of the CDA's annualdinner April 11 in Joseph's Res-taurant, West Long Branch. Thedinner'will honor MissLang, district deputy of

HelenCDA.

Mrs. William Hoffmann, Rumson,is vice chairman of the event.• Miss Lang is In charge of res-ervations for the state CDA re-treat April 7, 8 and 9 at GeorgianCourt.

The next meeting willplace May 11.

take

and activities for 196M1. Ap-proximately 130 girls from asmany high schools are compet-ing.

Each "good citizen" receives acertificate of award from theNational Society DAR and a goodcitizen pin from the sponsoringchapter.

The girl chosen as state GoodCitizen receives a $100 govern-ment bond, or a scholarship ofJ75 from the national society..

New Jersey State Society DARgives a savings bond to each ofthe two alternates and honorablemention to the third. A nationalDAR Good Citizen will be chosenfrom the 50 state winners at theContinental Congress In Washing-ton next month.

Local contestants are MargaretDiNaples, Red Bank High School;Carol Thompson, Hoffman HighSchool, South Amboy, Sarah food-dings, Matawan High School; Mu-riel Wilson, Keyport High School;Janet Turner, Rumson-Fair Ha-ven Regional High School; Bar-bara Evans Middletown Town-ship High School; and LouiseWisnlewskl, Sayrevllle HighSchool.

The girls and their parents willbe guests ot the chapter at itsmeeting March 23 at 8 p.m. inthe Woman's Club of Red Bank.

Attends PartyFor Goldberg

MATAWAN — Mrs. Helen Po-kallus, 258 Harding Blvd., at-tended a cocktail party and meet-ing with Albert Goldberg, secre-tary of labor, Monday in the Bar-bizon Plaza Hotel, New, YorkCity.

An employee of the New Jer-sey Bell Telephone Co., Mrs. Po-kallus was the representative ofLocal 1009 of the CommunicationWorkers of America.

Miss Carol Cobb

NEW SHREWSBURY — Mr.and Mrs. Robey Cobb, 1009 Syca-more Ave., announce the engage-ment of their daughter, Miss Car-ol Lynn Cobb, to George C. Gas-kin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Georgelaskin of Long Branch.Miss Cobb is a graduate of Red

Bank High School and is em-ployed by her father.

Mr. Gaskin is a graduate ofLong Branch High School and at-tended Pennsylvania State Uni-versity. He is a business associ-ate of his father.

A spring wedding is planned.

Will' SendStudent ToGirls' State

RED BANK — The AmericanLegion Auxiliary will send a RedJ21.Bank High School girl to Jersey""iris' State in June.

At last week's meeting the aux-liary voted to donate to the Bris-

Library Aide NeededLITTLE SILVER — Mrs. Kar

Jacobi, president of the Friendsof the Library Association, calledrecently for/an assistant librarianurnthe Little Silver Li-to serve ibrary.

At last week's meeting of theassociation in borough hall, Mrs.Jacobi announced that since bor-ough council has approved the

Auxiliary PlansSquare Dance

NEW SHREWSBURY — Plansfor a St. Patrick's Day SquareDance were made at a recentmeeting of the Northside FireCompany Auxiliary at the firehouse.

The dance will be held in thefire house Saturday from 8:30 to11; 30 p.m. Caller will be BobSellman. The women of the auxiliary will serve midnight supperfollowing the dance.

Hostesses for the meeting wereMrs. Denise Hunt and Mrs. Rus-sell Pendell., The next meeting will be March

Fave, RiverM a s s a r o .

Plaza; Mrs.Oceanport;

Charles Lerner, Wanamassa;Mrs. Louis Romeo, Vineland, andMrs. Jack Witkoski,, Tuckerton.

bane Child Treatment Center foran Easter party. Donations werealso approved for the Chapel of

I Four Chaplains at Philadelphia,Pa., and the American Red Cross.

The auxiliary will be host tothe county auxiliary April M.

Attendance awards were re-ceived by Mrs. J. E. Boskey andMrs. Harold Ely.

The group will meet again April13 In the post home.

Figaros HonoredOn Anniversary

RED BANK — Mr. and MrsDominic B. Figaro, 419 River Rd.,Fair Haven, were guests of honorrecently at a party for their 25thwedding anniversary. The partywas given by Mr. Figaro's moth-er, Mrs. Jennie Figaro, in herhome at 13 Willow St.

The younger Mrs. Figaro is theformer Rose Forderaro, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Leonard For-deraro of Long Branch.

Council Studies Activities AbroadRUMSON — The Greater Red

Bank Section ot the NationalCouncil of Jewish Women willmeet Monday at 1 p.m. in Con-gregation Bnai Israel. The pro-gram, under the chairmanship ofMrs. Harry Swartz, Middletown,will stress council's overseas andnational activities.

Mrs. Swartz will make an in-troductory speech on the fourmain points of council's programs

Mrs. MaireEntertainsFor Auxiliary

MIDDLETOWN — Mrs. PaulMaire, Cooper Blvd., was hostessat a meeting of the First AidSquad Auxiliary last week in herhome. Co-hostess was Mrs. WalterPatterson.

Mrs. Charles Doscia wasnamed chairman of a clam chow-der sale which will be conductedMarch 22 at the Middletown FireCompany, Rt. 35.

Mrs. Doscia also Is in charge•t the auxiliary's new ways and

means project, assisted by MissCatherine Coyle and Mrs. Lion-

l Simon.The First Aid Squad has invited

he auxiliary to attend its an-l dinner Saturday at 8 p.m.

in, the fire house.'Mrs. John Timldaiski of Mid-

letown was a guest at the aux-liary meeting. A

ld at the nextsocial will bemeeting April

13 at 8 p.m. in the fire house.The event is open to members andguests.

abroad. She will cover 1) Ship-A-Box program; 2) interest andfinancial support to the JohnDewey School of Secondary Edu-cation at Hebrew University iIsrael; 3) the Volunteer Fellow-ship Program by which leadersin education and social'welfarein foreign countries - are broughlto the United States to furthertheir studies in leadership andservice organizations; and 4) theScholarship Program, w h i c hbrings advance leaders to theUnited States for formal trainingin graduate schools.

The highlight of the afternoonwill be a talk by a council fellow-ship student, Miss Miriam Roth,one of nine in the United Statesat this time.

Miss Roth is a leader in Child-hood Education in Israel. Herfield is the nursery school andshe has written numerous booksand articles on the subject. Sheis currently studying at the BankStreet College of Education andat Teachers College, ColumbiaUniversity.

In addition to the program

BookmobileTomorrow

NEW SHREWSBURY - Thebookmobile will "visit here today.

The route Is as follqws:Stonehaven at Mulberry, Parm-

ly and Thayer Rds,, 9:45-11 a.m.;Branford Cir. midway aroundcircle, 11:05-11:30 a.m.; Shrews-bury Park Section 2, 11:40 a.rn.-12:30 &m. Ranch Manor at Stev-ens,Ave., 1:40-2 p.m.; SwimmingRiver Acres, Riveredge Rd. andBraeburn Dr., 2:05-2:30 p.m.iShrewsbury Park Section 1,Stratford at Wyckham Rd., 2:35-3:45 p.m.

there will .be displayed a boxsimilar to those which areshipped in the Ship-A-Box pro-gram. The boxes are shipped onceor twice a month. Currently thecouncil is shipping arts and craftmaterials and games to needychildren in Israel.

proposed budget for next year,the association can now go aheadwith plans for expansion of hoursat the library, adding Wednesdayfrom 2 to 5 p.m. to present hours.

She said anyone interested inassisting may contact her or Mrs.Harriet Balkan, librarian.

Mrs. Philip Branch, chairmanof the nominating committee, sub-mitted the following slate of offi-cers for next year: Mrs. G. K.Priddy, recording secretary; Mrs.William Towers, correspondingsecretary; and "Mrs. H. A. Gelb-haus, treasurer.

Borough HistoryMrs. Jacobi also asked for vol.

unteers to serve on a committeeto gather information from o'd-timers in Little Silver for a per-manent file of Little Silver His-tory. In connection with this somemembers of the audience re-called the following items: thatRiverview Hospital was original-ly located at Holly Tree Farmin Little Silver; that the oldestshrine in Little Silver is EmburyMethodist Church (1869), and that.Borough Hall was built as. aschool in 1899. Mrs. Neil Smithshowed an old vinegar jug thathad come from a store namedBrown's on Church St. about 60years ago.

Summer ProgramMrs. Neil Smith announced that

the Little Silver Library will havea summer reading program forchildren, beginning July 10 forfour weeks. Children will be re-quired to read at least six booksduring that period and give oralreports on them. Certificates andribbons will be awarded.

MIB. W. H. Thompson intro*duced Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Hallo-well, Little Silver, who presented.

film "Birds of Coastal NewJersey" with a commentary. Mr.and Mrs. Hallowell said they haveidentified 33 different species attheir own feeder this year.

The board will meet March 22at 8:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs.>lbhaus, 6 Silverton Ave.

A film. "Books for AH" show-ing the Erie County (N.Y.) Li-brary System will be presentedat the annual business meeting.

WOMEN'S EXCHANGE —The new president, Mrs. C.F. Andrews, Fair, Haven, left, and Mri, Kingtley Norris,« board member, cheek the recently expanded line ofclothat handled by the non-profit organisation at 32Church St., Little Silver. Hand-made itemi, home-made froian foods, including caiterolet, pioi and calces,are received oh consignment from residents who dependupon sale of t h ^ goods at the (hop for Income. The shopit open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.

'Americana on March*Is Theme of LuncheonRUMSON — "Americana on the

March" 1i the theme of the an-nual benefit luncheon and fashion•how of the Navarumsunk Aux-iliary of Family and Children'sService of Monmouth County,Mn. F. Don Chapln is genera!chairman of the event which willbe held Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. InDeal Country XluK Deal. ~

American designer fashioni willbe shown from Bamberger'g Mir-ror Room, Eatontown. Mrs. EdnaSchack will be commentator.

Assisting on the committee anMrs. William Ryan, vice chairman; Mrs. Jolin G. Stewart, co-ordinator; Mrs. Robert Bernard,tickets; Mrs. Philip B. Coan, rei-ervations; Mrs. Patterson Hum-phrey, awards; Mrs. C. L. Simon-son and Mrs. Gordon Montgom-ery, special projecls; Mrs. D. C.

' Butt/ield, posters, and Mrs. JohnThorpe, publicity.

Family and Children's Servicewas founded,in 1909 in Lonj.Branch. Today, the agency serv-ices all residents of the county.

Services of the agency includeservice to unmarried' mothers,foster home care which providesa substitute home for a child un-til he is returned to his ownhome, or through adoption findsa permanent home; family coun-seling: adoption; travelers aidservice and homemaker service,

MembershipTea ForDeborah

LDJCROFT — The HarmonyChapter of Deborah will hold amembership tea tomorrow at 8:30p.m. in the home* of Mrs. WalteiFredericks, 252 Harvey Ave.

The hostess will be Mrs. Theo-dore Wlllner, membership chair-man, assisted by Mrs. DavidRosenberg, Mrs. Frank Sy4ve»te:and Mrs. Royston Walters.

Guest speaker will be HartleySchine, New Brunswick, a formerheart patient at the DeborahHospital at Browns Mills.

Mrs. Norman Schantz, Hazlet,is president.

HSA PartyNextTuesday

SEA BRIGHT — The Honvand School Association will holda card party and fashion shownext Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Drift-wood-by-the-Sea, Ocean Ave.

Proceeds will be used to helpdefray the cost of spring classtrips for the upper grades of theschool.

Mrs. Robert F. Norton is gen-eral chairman, with Mrs. GeorgeBetz, president of HSA, and Mrs.William T. Sawyer, principal, ashonorary chairmen.

A collection of spring and sum-mer fashions will be shown byEthel Krauss Shop, Sea Bright.Furs will be from Gloria, WestLong Branch.

Children's PlayIn Tinton Falls

SHREWSBURY. TOWNSHIP -The third performance of theChildren's Theater Hour seriessponsored by the Parent-TeacherAssociation, will be held Satur-day from* 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. in theTinton Falls School auditorium.

The program will feature"Chief Ironhorse and His Indi-ans."

Students ushering will be JanetHenck, Janet Kappmeler, BettyCallaghan, Kathy Pickerel), AnnKorbes, Kathy Suter and SandraFuller.

Eighth BirthdayMATAWAN — Rod Harris,

eight-year-old son of Mr. andMrs. W. Edward Harris, 20BeechwoodTer. was honored ata birthday party in his home.

Attending were Gail Caley, Ber-nice Heyer, Claudia and DebbyRiegert, JoEllen Meyers, MartinDevino, Thomas Casagrande,Brent Lassen, Lloyd Coffey, MarkCarter, and William Smith, Jr.

CORRECTIONRED BANK — The annual

luncheon, fashion show and cardparty.of the Episcopal ChurchWomen of St. Thomas EpiscopalChurch will be held Saturday,April 8. in Crystal Brook Inn, (.._., , ,Eatontown. It was Incorrectly parliamentarianprinted as April 18 In yesterday'ssocial page. Mrs. Marshall Jonesof Fair Haven is chairman of theevent.

COMMUNION' MATAWAN — A second com-

munion breakfast will be held bythe Altar and Rosary Society olSt. Benedict's Parish, Holmdel,on May 7 in Shore Point Inn, Rt.35. The breakfast will follow 8a.m. mass in the Holmdel Ele-mentary School.

which Is a special professional so-cial service designed to help whenillness or disability or other fam-ily emergency disrupts the home.

FCS has seven auxiliaries.

MigrantsDiscussionThis Sunday

RED BANK - Rev. ReinhardtVan Dyke, director of workamong migrants of the New Jer-sey Council of Churches, willaddress'the last of a series offour "Christian Outreach" meet-ings at the Methodist ChurchSunday at 7 p.m.

Rev. Mr. Van Dyke's subjectwill be the ministry of New Jer-sey churches to the-21,000 sea'sonal agricultural workers thaicome into New Jersey each, sum'mer,

Rev. Mr. Van Dyke is pastoiof the Presbyterian Church, Clayton. He holds a master's degreein sociology from Drew Univer-sity.

Rev. Reinhardt Van Dyke

The meeting, open to the public,will be held in the FellowshipHall of the church. The serieshas featured speakers represent-ing various phases of mission-ary work at home and abroad.

A question and answer periodwill follow Rev, Mr. Van Dyke'stalk. The meeting will be spoil'sored by the Methodist Men anddevotions will be conducted bythe Wesley Fellowship.

Teachers'AssociationIs Formed

NEW SHREWSBURY — Theorganization of a Teachers' As-sociation of Shrewsbury TownshipDistrict -schools was announcedat last night's meeting of theBoard of Education.'

Up until now this has been thonly school district of "its sizwithout such an Organization.

The board applauded the for-mation of the group, and mem-bers said they look forward tccooperating with the association

George C. Matone, superintendent of schools who as an administrator is an honorary, non-voting member of the association,said:

'I believe much good can comfrom this group, which will servas a morale builder, and as umeans for offering support tocommunity projects."

"Too often," he added, _teachers' association Is regardedonly as a pressure group to getmore money for teachers, I hon-estly beUeve this group'stprimaryinterest is in professional stand-ards and advancement."

Eugene Camarigg, sixth grad.teacher at Tinton Falls School,has been elected the first presl-dent of the association

Other officers are: vice president, Alma Carhart, first gradeteacher, Sycamore School; secre-tary, Ruth Glover,' fifth grade,Swimming River School, andtreasurer, Alice Ferguson, firstgrade, Sycamore School.

Rikcr ParticipatesIn UN Program'

HOLMDEL — William CRiker,' Longstreet Rd., a studentat Oregon University, EugeneOre., recently participated as a

at a modelUnited Nations program at theuniversity.

The program was put on by500 high" school students la Ore-gon.

A sophomore majoring in polit-ical science, Mr. Riker will par-ticipate in a similar program onthe college level in April.

It adds upl More and morepeople use The-Register ads eachissue because results come fas-er.—Advertisement.

Michael Burnett to WedEmporia State Student

EMPORIA, Kans, — Dr. andMrs. Merritt W. Sanders of thiscity have announced the engage-ment of their daughter, MissMarjorie Ruth Sanders, to Mi-chael Howard Burnett, son of Mr.

She is the granddaughter of Mrs.L. M. Holly of Madison (N. J.)

Mr. Burnett was graduatedfrom Middletown Township HighSchool, class of 1956. He attendedRutgers University ancf Is a sen-ior at Emporia State College. He

Bayslde Dr., Atlantic Highlands,Miss Sanders is a freshman stu-dent at Emporia State College.planned.

Mrs. J. Howard Burnett, 28 is a member of Sigma Phi Ep-silon fraternity.'

A November wedding it

Qentle Reminder

A List for President KennedyBy FRANCES LEWINE

WASHINGTON (AP) — Mrs.ranklin D. Roosevelt gave Pres-

ident Kennedy a three-page listof women she said are qualifiedfor top government jobs.

She spent about half an hourwith the President in his WhiteHouse office Monday and whenshe left told reporters she hadleft behind the list.

Asked if she felt not enoughwomen had been appointed bythe Kennedy administration shesaid:

"Some people feel that way,"and she thought Kennedy didn'thave a list. She said her list

ASSIGNMENT CARD fARTY — Committee members meat to plan the Annual Sisters'Card Party to be held April 13 by ths St. James Parent-Teacher Association. Leftto right are Mrs. Martin Scott, anittant chairman of the tickets committee; Mrs.William S. Anderson, atiiitant-chairman of the eventvMrs. James F. Clark, chairman,and Mrs, Louis Gulfor, ticket chairman.

Easter Hat Contest Scheduled" For Annual Sisters' ^Card PartyRED BANK — The $t. James

School Parent-Teacher Associa-tion will hold its annual Slaters'Card Party April 3 at t p.m. inthe school cafeteria.

The annual event' providesfunds for summer college coursifor the teaching sisters.

Women guests who arrive weaing their Easter hats will be eli-gible for the Easter Bonnet Con-test. There will be categories foiflowered hats, tailored hats, teen-

Etnilli

,agers'hats, and others.

Judges wilt be Mrs.Mustillo, proprietor of Mof Red Bank; Mrs,cSichard Cob-leni, millinery designer, and Mrs.Harold H. Hart, Jr., artist.

ChairmenMn. James F. Clark Is chair-

man and Mrs. William S. Ander-

33 OfferHelp AtBloodmobile

SHREWSBURY - When theNew York unit of the Red CrossBloodmobile visited Fort Mon-mouth last Thursday, 33 volun-teers from the local county chap-ter assisted.

Mrs. J. Stewart Farrell of Mid-dletown was coordinator. She re-ported the women gave 164 hoursof"service.

They were Mrs. James Beattiof Fair Haven, Mrs. Harold Rine-hart of Shrewsbury, Mrs. MartinJ. Ryan of New Shrewsbury,and three Junior Red Cross mem-bers from the Long Branch Sen-ior High School (Judy Zeilinger,Lois Pisdtelli and Nancy Gaug-han), canteen service volunteerswho served refreshment to theblood donors.

Mrs. Nellie O'Hare of Rumson,Mrs. John Tack and Mrs. Ed-ward W. Rottman of Little Sil-ver and Mrs. Simon Duhan ofEatontown, Gray Ladies.

Mrs. Richard Doelger ofShrewsbury was motor servicecourier. Mrs. Clara G. Meyer ofMonmouth Beach served asvolunteer registered nurse.

Mrs. Guy Brannon, Mrs. J. C.Davenport, Mrs. E. E. Davis andMrs. William Klser of Eatontown,Mn. Charles J. Kronke of RedBank, Mrs. Russell G. Canfieldof Tinton Falls and Mra. G. L.Weston of Middletown served asstaff aide registrars.

Mrs. Richard Ashley, Mrs. JaneC. Danneberger, and Mrs. WandaM. Richmond of Little Silver,Mn. Monica Cook of Shrews-bury, Mrs. Laura Hartwell, Mrs.Sally Mack and Mrs. Rita Dubeof Asbury Park, Mrs. Alfred'onne and Mrs. Robert Morris

it Sea Girt, Mrs. Edythe OpsaJ>f Red Bank and Mrs. Philip

Coan, Mrs. Noel J. Lartaudand Mrs. Raymond Laurence o""air Haven served as volunteernurses' aides.

Corned Beef SupperPlanned by Demos

UNION BEACH - The Demo-cratic Club will sponsor a St.Patrick's Corn Beef supper Fri-day from 9 p.m. to midnight atPete'a Hall.

Richard Shannon Is in charge)f arrangements Mr. and Mrs.

Russell Hicks, Mrs. HarveyErlksen, Mrs. William Rodgers,Mrs. William Novick, Mrs.'rank Cozens and Mrs. Albertiurgess will assist.Herb's Restaurant, Front St.,

will cater the affair,Irish songs will be featured,

'avors will be presented to each;uest.

Squad Auxiliary

To Hold SupperKEYPORT—The first aid squad

luxiliary will hold an anniversaryovered dish supper March 25

the scfiiad building, Broad SF.Mrs. Seabrook Smith was wel-

comed as a new member at arecent meeting in the building.Mn. Malcolm Mosher and Mrs.Leo Scully were hostesses. - !

son is assistant c O ^Louis Gulfo is ticket chairman.She is assisted by Mrs. MartinScott.

Other committee members areMrs. Edward Dibble, Mrs. Wil-liam Hofer, Mrs. Joseph Buegler,Mrs. William Duffy, Mrs. GeorgeCardarelli, Mrs. Arthur Fenton,Mrs. Vito Perillo, Mrs. CharlesTruax, Mrs. Charles Friedrich,Mrs. Michael Rafferty, Mrs. Ed-ward Kelly, Mrs. Matthew Hus-son, Mrs. Francis Kineavy, andMrs. Michael Carotenuto.

Also, Mrs. Joseph De Clerk,Mrs. James Cronin, Mrs. FrankSagurton, Mrs. Nicholas Barbato,Mrs. Howard Colmorgen, Mrs.Robert Mautner, Mrs. GrandinJohnson, Mrs. Richard Marclck-lewicz, Mrs. William McDermott,Mrs. John McLaughlin, Mrs.James Buckley, Mrs. John Pet-tit, Mrs. Theodore Moss, Jr., Mrs.Edward T. Healy, Jr., Mrs. Ed-ward Hanlon, Mrs. Walter Maur-er, and Mrs. Gerald Wyndorf.

The organization committee In-cludes Mrs. Horatio Firth, Mrs,Hugh Bowie, Mrs. James Fergu-son, Mrs. Joseph Quigley, MrsPeter Scales, Mrs. George Ka-sino, Mrs. Theodore Labrecqne,Mrs) James Devltn' Mrs. MichaelGuadagno, Mrs. Edward 'Ken-nedy, Mrs. Pettit, Mrs. ThomasSalmon, Mrs. Henry Sohl, Mrs.William Sullivan, Mrs. MichaelTorpey, Mrs. Robert Byron, Mrs.Victor Leiker, Mrs. Warren Coll-ville, Mrs. William Elphick, Mrs.Horatio Firth, and Mrs. RoseGehrig.

Children on the committee areJohn Ambrosia, Michael Bowie,Michael Ferguson, John Gehrig,Michael Gehrig, Robert Labrec-que, David Labrecque, MarkQuigley, David Clark, MarkScales, Peter Scales, Paul Scales,James 'Buckley, Harry Copper-thwaite, Vincent Lloyd, JohnGolden, William Sullivan, Robert

topher Collville.

RED BANK REGISTER d., March 15, 196J—17

included "qualified people" and it government jobs.

contained only women's namesable to fill all types of jobs.

Ony NineA count of Kennedy appoint-

ments so far shows there arenine women among the 240 peoplechosen.

Mrs. Roosevelt did not saywhat else she had discussed withthe President.

Earlier, at a news conference,Mrs. Roosevelt had reported herhusband, the late Franklin D.Roosevelt, had a list of womenfrom which to choose appointees.She said it was supplied by anofficial of the National EducationAssociation.

Mrs. Roosevelt said men some-time need to be reminded thatthere are women qualified for top

Dana Ovestrud NamedSmokey Bear Winner

NEW SHREWSBURY — DanaOvestrud, daughter of Mr. andMrs. R. M. Ovestrud, 186 Clover-dale Cr., has been named winnerof the Junior Garden Club ot

Two To ServeAs Nominators

SPRING LAKE — Mrs. GeorgeJ. DeGarmo of Red Bank andMrs. Frank K. Priebe of FairHaven will serve as a nominatingcommittee for the auxiliary oithe Monmouth Society of Profes-sional Engineers.

The committee was named ata recent meeting in the home fMrs. George E, Brown, SpringLake.

Mrs. Lawrence Adams of SeaGirt was welcomed as a newmember. The special award waspresented to Mrs. DeGarmo.

Attending were Mrs. Odd Albelt, Belmar; Mrs. Lewis S. Har-vey, Mrs. Lester Clarke and Mrs.A. E .HarryMrs. Charles W. Trafford, Man-asquan; Mrs. William Whitneyand Mrs. William Schaptiorst, At-

Palm, Middletown; Mrs.A. Martin, Shrewsbury;

Byron, David Leiker, and Chris- lantic Highlands, and Mrs. LeoK. McKee, Llncrott.

Mew Shrewsbury Smokey Bearlontest.This contest was held in cooper-

ation with the National Councif State Garden Clubs, Inc.Awards were presented by Mrs.

William Hardin. Runners-up wereRichard Ruda and Sheila Neil.

Mrs. W. J. McClelland will con-duct an illustrated program onbirds and their habits at the nextmeeting of the club TuesdayMarch 21 at 2:30 p.m. in the Syca-more, School. Mra. McClellandalso will take the group on a fieldtrip, weather permitting.

Attending last week's meet ing ,were Vicki Taylor, Sheila Neal,and Gayle Bulaben, MargaretHull, Cosanne Meckus and SusanCreelman, Jenny Wood, RobertHochreiter, Richard Ruda, Linda •Wright, Louise Capriglione, Made-line Ambrosino, Iva Jean McClin-lock, Diane Henesy, Janet Cura-tolo, Michele Tryon, Dana andRichard Ovestrud, and Betty AnnSchlander.

There has been some criticism,largely from women, of PresidentKennedy's record of feminine ap-.pointees so far. None of the nine.-women picked has been chosen-for cabinet rank or a high policy;level post. -

Breaks GroundKennedy has broken ground

with the appointment of a wom-an as White House physician, DrlJanet Travell, and by naming]former congresswoman Reva Bo*sone of Utah as judicial officerof the post office department. *

His latest feminine appointeeis Marie McGuire of San Antonio;Tex., to be commissioner of pub-lic housing.

Mrs. Roosevelt herself is a newKennedy appointee, one of threewomen assigned to U.N. posts.Mrs. Marietta Tree of New YorkCity was named to the'HumanRights Commission of the U.N.,and Mrs. George Tillett of NorthCarolina, to the Status of WomenCommission.

Kennedy also has named Eliza}beth Rudel Smith as U.S. Treas-urer, Mrs. Esther Peterson ashead of the Labor Department'sWomen's Bureau, and career for-eign service officer Frances Wil-lis to a new post as ambassadorof Ceyion from her previous am-bassadorial post in Norway. •

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ia_We<}., March 15, 1961 RED BANK REGISTER |

CROSSWORD PUZZLE A ntw.tr to YtstertUy't Puul

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HI6HLIGHTS IN SUIT SHOWINGS:

Light Airy Fabrics;Relaxed. Easy Lines

' Spring tnd Easter officially ar-rive ftw many fashion-consciouswomen when there's a brand-new•nit in their wardrobe.

What * wonderfully excitingsuit season lies ahead! Fortravel, for town, for any dress-up occasion, suit fashions areeminienUy suitable to the oc-casion.

Necklines create a focal point— especially In cardigans andthe stand-offish wedding ring coltors.

Buttons that took like jewels,Hke marble or bits of sculpturegive a new interest and appealto the jacket Sleeves arechopped off at the elbow, or go•lightly below or gently wan-der down to bracelet length fromtheir dropped shoulders for asubtle look of width.

The skin-tight sheath suit skirtIs pushed from the scene by soft-ly, eased lines that create asmart dressmaker look or givea whlrlaway fullness withflurry of all around pleats.

Topping these gentle skirts ared d i j k t s Eton

p p gc r o p p e dlengths

d

gdemi-jackets, Etonothers that usuallylengths an s

end a hairline below the natural_ LEGAL NOTICE" " t-JM

HHEIUFs"3 8AI.K•CPEBJOK C4IIKT OF SEW 4EESEV

CHANCEBV DIVISIONMONMOLTII COl'NTVDocket Ko. r 37049

William H. Snetlleld. Jr., * DoreenC BijJmel", His wile. PlaJnllifs v.:Anna Moon, Single) Defendant.

By vlrtua ot a writ ot exech »lio»e lul

le) Defendant,writ ot execution in

di- the above Mated action to in* di-rected X tball expose for sale at pub-lic vendue, at tha Court House in theBoroiUfc ot Freehold, County or Mon-mouth New Jetiey. on Monday, the» u i day o* March, 1M1, at 2 o'clock,P.M. Prevailing Time.

All the following tract or parcel ofland Hid premises, he re in alter particu-larly described •ttu&te, lying ana beingIn toe Borough of Rumson m the Coun-

Sf oC Monraaitth and mate ot Newmnty:BEG1HNUJO at a point m Uie eaitcr-

ly line ot Ward Avenue saidbeing distant 2J..U6 suutiieny ••

point

monument standing at the Intersectionof the easterly line ot Ward Avenueand the aoutheriy line ol HarunorneIjjane; thence U> Nurtn a? u^ii.'jcs lJi•olnutea east, making a new linethrough lands ol uie party ol trie firstpart and along the souuierly line ui1 01 2 as shown on a certain surveymade by Henry P. lAurecque, u. £.,i i d B J it J dated January lyit«d BanJt, Jtf. J., dated January11*63, 320.00 feet to a point; UicnceNona 2d<ing a Dew line throuicli lands of theparty of the ItrK pan, and *ull alongt&a lOuUierly Une o/ Lot 2 as sliownon the aforesaid survey, HO. tJ feet toA point; thence (At North hi* decrees3A minute* East, DHUtlng » new lineIhroufh lAuda of the party of theUrn part, ami still auong me touthetiyline ot Lot 2 as ihown on the alorc-aaui luney. 340.0O leet to a point;tiience (•<> North 0 degreei i'5 jnmutt*Weil, maJtlng a new line through lamiaof the party of Uie first part, ana stillalong lue southerly line of lx>t 2 a»•bown on th« aforesaid aurvey, 20,00leet to a point; thence (0) JS'prth Sitdtgreei 35 minutes Bait, making aMw hoe through lands of tha partyof the flnt part, and itlll alonR Diepoutherly line o( Lot 2 u ihowa on 'aforesaid survey. 243.24 feel, more

-' l«a, to a point on th« top or Uie h Ikhtad on the westerly bank or itfiOutft aSflrcwATDury lUvcri t^iciico 0Southerly along the- aforeme tioncbulkhead, 190.66 feet moro or lea ta point; ,thencf i7) Btiuth 60 degrrrW mlnutei West, 73 'eet, more or lessalone the northerly Line of land of JK. Talcott to a point; thence ialong the land! of i. F. Talcott, North19 degreei 51 minutes Writ, 81 feelto ft monument Blandlng In the eaaterly Itne of VV&ni Avenue; thai CP jNorth 3 d u r e f i 33 mlnutu Weit alo %th« eaaterly line of Ward Avei tic 4fe«t to Uia point and plsca of PL0 INN ING.

The above described lands and prr ni » i are all of Lot 3 In Block 46shown on the aforesaid survey.

Tht aforesaid description la 1 ...cord with said survey made by Henrv F. Labreeque. C. 13, Ued Hi k

- N J.. dated January 10, 1055.Together with all Uie rlcht, til lr am

Interest of the mortfiagor, if s j liind to the lands lyl^g to the < itand contiguous to the above describei«nd< tnd under th« waters or th<louth Bhrewsbury Hlver whether &clulred by riparian erant or otherwise.

Being intended to describe', nil nfLot No. 3, block No. AQ, as ahown ont "Map of Property of J. FranklinDorsey and Lillian Dorfey, I.QrouRhrr Rumson. Monmoum county, Newersey", dated Jun*r 29, l!»M by Henry

f. Labreeque, C. E.. Red Dank. Newlenry, and approved by the Mayortnd Council of the Borough of Rumso1"m June 22, 1&54.

Suhjcct Co covenant*, conditions andrettrfctlona of. record, ir any.

Subject to BUCII Bt&tR of facia 1iccurate survey may dlaclosp.

Subject to municipal liulldinR andtoning ordinances und reRtilatlons,

Subject to a. perpetual easement .„lerved by the Krantora above, on over,throuch. and under the InndiSeBcrlbfd for all water, pas. electricand other utility lines an theyrxlst to and for the benefit of Lot

Together with a perpetual eaaementto the grantees herein above, on, over,through and under the land of LotNo. 2 aforesaid for all water, rat•leetrie and other utility lines as tl.*ydow exist to and for the benefit oC theland herein described.

ft Ward Avenue«mnd li known 11 "Lit.Ue View' Rumson, New Jersey

The approximate amount of the Judg-ment to be satisfied by said sale iitht gum or S22.fiOO.0O together with theMMts of thf.* sale.

IRA E. WOLCOTT, Sheriff,P*Ud P«bruarr 1; 196LFfBBk J. VaJeentl, Jr. , Atty.

ftfr, 23-Mmrcb 1-S-lS

waistline with an unconfined loo]and easy-going freedom.^Fitted suits — with longer jack-ets—are nipped-in but not hug-ging; use bias bands, pockets andother detailing to heighten thfitted illusion.

The walking costume with its32" and 40" coat takes on nedirections for early spring oveiskirt or skirt and coordinate*overblouse.

In fabrics — the standoutthe comfortable, very smart amsmooth looking double knit iitone and tone patterns, tweedyjacquard and surface texturecreatments.Smooth silks and neat worsteds

are elegant and so-ve.ry right fomore dress-up occasions whiltweeds, looped mohairs, muteiand textured tweeds, as well aswonderful line-up of hard finislworsted are smartly right fodaytime wear.

Suit colors too, are absolutel;uninhibited in color. You'll finithe whole rainbow just crowdeinto the suit racks. Like pickingposies out of a spring garden —you'll want to make up a suibouquet in strawberries and aza1

eas, violets and periwinkles, pupie pansies.and jonquils, goldenrod and morning glories, apricoland buttercups and on and on—in sparkling brilliance.

Crisp, stark blacks lead in thEaster parade, but thanks tcrisp touches or sheer, airy fatrics they shed warm sun rayand continue smartly and cooclear through the summer foeverywhere wear.

A clearer, brighter navy, mosloften white accented, finds smootlsailing in spring suits for '6Goldened neutrals such as strawsaffron, caramel and flax are thnewest of the new in suiting neutrals.

So whether you are about tisuit yourself smartly for thiEaster season, for a wcck-en<trip or a world cruise—a suit fothe office, a special-occasion su

r a suit for suit's sake—re-member the newest are destinefor round the calendar, round truworld, round town and for goinjround in the smartest fashiocircles—with ease, grace and ele-

The Ethiopian Church, relatedto the Coptic Church of Egypt,holds to the doctrine that Crrislhad a single nature instead obeing both divine and human.

SO VERY GROWM-UP is tholook and elegance of her newOrion and viscose-blend glenplaid suit. The popover middyblouse reflects the adult trendin young wearables and is ex-tremely flattering to young

isa.es misses.,

Bridge ColumnBy ALFRED SHE1NW0LD .,

At some stage of the biddingof any hand you should considerthis question; Whose hand is it?If the hand belongs to your sidedon't let the opponents get awaywith any nonsense.

Many players would be tempted to reopen the bidding with theNorth hand. This is a poor ideabecause you don't expect to makea game against a strong notrumpIf your partner has a couple ofhigh cards, you will pick up anextra hundred points or so inpenalties. But if your partner has

poor hand, which is just aslikely, you stand to lose four orfive times as much as you couldpossibly gain.

That's just what happened inthis case. South tried to get ouof trouble by running to twoclubs, but West intervened witha very intelligent double.

West found the double by count-ing .points ' and discovering thatthe hand belonged to his side.There are only 40 high-cardpoints in a deck of cards. East'sopening bid showed 16 to 18points. West counted 7 points inhis own hand.

West could tell that his side hadat least 2] points and that theopponents had at most 17 pointsWhat's more. West had enoughin clubs to feel confident that theopponents couldn't make theircontract with a mighty trumpsuit.

The play justified West's rea-soning. West held the first twotricks with the queen and jackof diamonds. He then shifted tothe jack of hearts. East won afinesse with the king of hearts,caused the ace of diamonds, andled a law club.

The defenders eventually tooktwo {rumps, three diamonds, twohearts and two spades. South wasdown four, for a loss of 1,100points. And all of this on a handthat coud have been passed outat a contract of one notrump!!

New ForSpringtime —

Muumuus are here to stay, be-cause of their wonderful versa-tility and comfortableness! Theyserve as a duster, housedress orpatio lounger, all-in one. Springversions of the muumuu are againbrilliant with exotic Hawaiianflower prints and often are car-bon-copied in a smaller size fordaughter.

In line with the ensemble tookfor Spring, two classic outfits areoffered in two new collections

. a silk surah print dress,topped by a slim wool coat, linedto match -its dress . . . and athree-piece silk costume, jacketand skirt in solid color with printoverblouse. Both are firm foun-dations on which to build a springwardrobe.

Imaginative DetailsAnimate Active WearApparel for Sports

Boy's jacket's for spring willreally be most notable. There'san introduction of fairly newstyling in the nautical theme.All the basic classical jacketsare taking on the 'yachting* lookwith new dashing interest, sureto please every boy.

These up-dated classics featureboth good looks and" function.Fresh interest includes underarminsets for freer movement ofarms; fancy rope tic, closingsthat replace the zipper; revers-ible jackets that turn about withgay new season fabric linings;new two-way collars and lightouter fabrics with warm liningsor no linings at all.

For the boys who are sailorsit heart, and those who just

want to look nautically nice, thisthe season with their right

fashions.

The HandEast dealerBoth aides vulnerable

NORTH4 K I 9V A Q 7 4• K $ S* ' • 2

m• 10 6 5V 9 8 3• 5 3 2• Q 10 9 4

DAILY QUESTION

Partner opens with, one club,and the next player passes. Youhold: Spades-K J 9 Hearts—AQ 7 4 Diamonds—K 9 8. Clubs—J 8 2. What do you say?

Answer: Bid one heart. Youcan make a jump bid in notrumplater to show your strength. Ifyou jump to 2 NT immediatelyyou may miss a comfortablegame or slam in hearts.

Be HelpfulTo Oldsters

DON'T FORGET Grandma andGrandpa at the wedding! For theolder folks deserve their shareof attention at the festivities.

It's up to the bride and hermother to arrange for the careand comfort bfgrandparents. Thisis A thoughtful duty that can bedelegated to a responsible mem-ber of the family who will fol-low through in:

—Seeing that Grandma hasflowers and Grandpa a bcgi-tonniere.

—Making sure they have trans-portation to church and re-ception.

—Introducing them to other•wedding guests.

—Looking after their refresh-ments at the reception.

Such courtesies go for grand-parents of both bride and groom.Ftew things reflect less Credit ona young couple than a hint ofneglect in this respect. So do yourbit in helping your grandfolk tohave weddingtfun too.

STEVE ROPER SAVNDERS and OVERGARD

IF MlSCVtA WXINKA IS

D0MM EXPECT ME 10TRAP HIM?

1OU SMtWTHlB.' YpuHE IS TEACHM6CIASSBACK AWAY FROM A

DARE/•CHAK.5TSW HBOJUMP A r m CHANCE FORWBtlOTyWTROOFt

By WALT DISNEYMICKEY MOUSE

oweautWiSTEPonthe

THE PHANTOM By Lee Folk and Wilson McCoyWECANTGOANyFARTHER WITH

THS TRUCK-ANDWU CANTUIDEIT— BUT WEU NEED

EXTRA GAS AlOAUMO-

WE CAN CACHE fTMERE AND COMEBACK WHEN WE

NEED MORE.

OKrW-UTS6ETMCMNS.

/NOTKN0WWHAT M KXttlFIND

VKHPIANTOPG, — "

MARK TRAIL By ED DODD

LAWRENCE/WHAT ARE YOU

POING?

NUBBIN By JIM BURNETT and GEORGE CRANDALL

FOR GALS ON THE GO—A-smart oyster beige man-styledcotton and Dacron rain coatthat's impervious to both oiland water stains. Thanks to itsnew "Scotchgard" stain re-peller treatment, this coateliminates further waterproof-ing after cleaning, and will looklight and bright for a long,long time.

"ASTRO-GUIDE" By Ceean

For Thursday, March 16

Present—For You andYours • • • Buy or sell, but becertain of the true value of whatyou purchase. This it a friendlysort of day. It's a good time toget out of the home and dosomething different. A changewilt help you. ,A litte trip iswarranted as travel is still favor-ably aspected and money shouldbe no problem at this lime.

Past • . • Although we complainabout high taxes on income dur-ing recent years, it is a fact thatmore men have become million-aires in the U.S. since 1945 thanin any other 15-year-period inhistory.

Future • • • Within a couple ofmonths, a deluxe edition of"Gone with the Wind" will bepublished in honor of the book's25th anniversary. Up to thepresent, more than 9W millioncopies of the book have beensold!-

The Day Under Your SignARIES (Born Msrch 21 to April 19)Don'l Become lenic over, problems ofolhers. Trf to manage your own.AURUS (April 20 fo May 20)

Disafrreemtnta between parent anil cMMaccented. Try not to be domineering.GEMINI (May 21 to Juno 211Don't brood' over past mfitalcei. Ite-solve not to repeat them, then go tot-

CANCER [ J u n . 2 1 to July 21)lon't nick too date to tedious Jobi,

LIBRA (Stpt.21 toOct. 22)Negative outlook gets 00 your ntiTry tn ita something to rtrl*x.SCORPIO (Oct. 21 to Nov. 21)He c*utlotia about commitments .mittsyou »Te certitn you can meet theni.SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Die. 21)Peaceful domestic relation* are rot «the picture. Uttter ipend time alone.CAPRICORN (D«c. 22 to J«i. 20)Others may not agree with you. but

" :, No •'don't loie your temper.>nla ll.

t one elle

LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21)Your mental attitude isn't *hal ItihouH ht. Feeling §orry for youmlf,perlispi?/IRGO (Aua. 22 to Sept. 22)'live help wnen aiVed, but ooo't cm-

an a perion bf otfeffa* it firit.

p y («n.2lfo Fsb. 191Put on s ehcrrfu! front even if youdon't feel like it. Your mood sffectsother I.PISCES (Fsb. It >' March JO)Procrastination robi you of lucceis.Force youiaclf to keep at the job.

e 1561, Field Enterprises, Inc.

THE &tPHAHi*-»L -rue

l

MARY WORTH

K M MWHE.-DIDVOUWRITE "FORBIDDEN FIRE5"

J U 5 T - FRANKLY-TOGET RICH ?

•8UT, I IDO HOPE,

IN MY NEXTN O V E L - .

MARK TWAIH ONCESAID IF YOU D0NT

WRITE FORMONEyYOU'RE A FOOL!

By ALLEN SAVNDERS and KEN ERNST«OW,«JREIY,HW1N6 FOUNDU H - P A Y DIRT,YOU'U NOT -

ABANDON YOURGOLD M I N E f

i THAT B N t FAIR, MARTHA!IN SPOTS, FABLE'S NATUR-iAL16M 15 IN THE FINE

TRADITION OF ZOLA, ORDR.EI5ER!

REVEREND By BILL O'MALLEY

THE RYATTS By CALALLEY

WELL,THE PHOrJE WASM'T.PUSY/HOW WAS I To KWOW>

T

RED BANK REGISTER, Wed., March 15, 1961—19 New RankFor Payne

FORT.M0NM0UTH - A for-mer staff officer of the U. S.

Army Signal School here has beenpromoted to lieutenant colonel.

U. Col. Irving P. Payne, nowassigned in VJet Nam as com-munications officer in the U. S.Embassy, was promoted this pastweek.

He left Fort Monmouth

tober for hit present assignment]after serving here two-and-one-half years in the school's TablesReview Division and the Plansand Operations Office. He also at-tended the Command and Gener-al Staff College at Fort Leaven-

last Oc- worth, Kans,

Col. Payne's permanentdence Is 7 Walnut PI., West LongBranch. He was bom in Wav-erly, N. Y., and has 24 yearsArmy service.

former VirginiaLong Branch.

Clerk, West

the planning of a developmentprogram for the academy.

Mr. Robinson also will serveas director i of admissions. Mr.Robinson is a former assistantto the director of admissions and

executive vice president of the alumni field secretary «t Rut-gers University.

GETS ACADEMY POSTNEWARK — Paul Busse, prcsl

dent of Newark Academy, has an-nounced the appointment of

Col Payne is married to the Frank S. Robinson, Metuchen, as

board of trustees, to assist with

$

ADDED QUARTERS — Robert Anderson, owner of ASBBoat Sales, Rt. 36, Belford, stands amidst a bevy ofcraft in the new addition to his showroom. The 70x50foot addition was completed recently, making the firmthe largest outboard sales firm in i\\a state.

Dix ReplacesPine OnSchool

Jury AcquitsMan On

Board Check CountFREEHOLD TOWNSHIP-Earl

E. Dix, Jr., was appointed lastnight to the Board of Educationto serve until February, 1962.

Mr. Dix, 32, of Ramon Blvd.,replaces M. Stanley Pine, whoresigned last week for "reasonsof health."

The new board member is agraduate of Rider College andfa contract administration man-ager of Air Cruisers Division ofthe Garrett Corporation, jjeimar.He and his wife, the fornfer MaryFrances Vanderveer, have onedaughter.

Mr. Pine, manager of GardenState Fruit Growers Inc. of Rt.Rt. 33, has served, on the boardfour years.

Board president Hugh Oakleyappointed Mr. Dix to the finance,personnel and public relationscommittee.

Charles Elatchley, chairman ofthe property committee, reportedthat the new Burlington Rd.School is two thirds completed.He reported that he was "pleasedwith the progress" and told theboard that the builder wouldsoon be ready to put the glassexterior i)Hck in place.

Howard Vanderveer was re»hired as bus co-ordinator at asalary of $1,500.

Miss Frances Thompson ofMaine was hired by the boardto teach French next year at asalary of $5,100.

The board adopted a calendarfor the coming school year whichprovides for 187 school days.

Bids will be accepted at thenext meeting for a new schoolbus.

FREEHOLD — A MonmouthCounty jury yesterday found EarBurgin of North Bergen not guiltyof a charge of obtaining checksunder false pretenses.

According to Assistant Prose-cutor John A. Petillo, EdwardFinley of Highlands had pur-chased a shell-type home andasked Mr. Burgin to finish build-ing it.

Mr. Finley claimed that hegave Mr. Burgin nine checks to-taling $1,280, and signed a cer-tificate of completion. Mr. Fin-ley claimed that Mr. Burgin, how-ever, never finished the job.

Mr. Burgin was represented byVincent Jennings of Newark inthe trial before County JudgeJohn C. Giordano.

AcquittalIs DirectedBy Judge'FREEHOLD — County Judge

John C. Giordano directed a ver-dict of acquittal yesterday foAlexander Watkins, 50, of 180Spruce St, Long Branch, whohad been charged with open lewd-ness.

The directed verdict was or-dered by the judge on the groundsof insufficient evidence. i —

According to Assistant Prose-cutor John A. Petillo, Mr. Wat-kins had been charged with opelewdness before several sma!children Sept. 16 in a woodetarea of Middletown.

Mr. Watkins was representecby Ira Katchen, Long Branch.

Diamonds Still in First Place

An Important decision Is being made by a young man choosingJust the right Jewel.

Though a few girls r.iay be-come engaged without benefit ofa ring to mark their changedStatus, the majority take specialpride in displaying that diamond,no matter what its size or shape.

Diamonds continue as the num-ber one choice for engaged girls.Pearls and birlhstones are otherChoices, and occasionally an heir-loom ring is reset to make amodern engagement ring.

Most popular stone is the roundcut diamond, but oval-cut andheart-shape diamonds are fa-vored dioices too. Other dia-monds may be cut in oblons;shape, Known as the emerald-cut; a boat-shaped cut, calledmarquise, and a cut which iswide at one end, and Uperingto a point at the other, calledpearl-shaped.

When cut for fullest fire andbrilliance, the diamond has 58exactly frfaced facets, in an ex-act, mathematically calculatedpattern.

For the budget minded, thereare settings designed to make• small diamond appear largerthan It Is by using tiny diamondsor built-up metal rims on the

side to create an illusion setting.Metal can also be faceted to re-semble baguettes on either sideof a small center diamond.

More than 80 per cent of mar-riages now are double tins cere-monies. The bridegroom's ringIs a slightly larger duplicate ofthe bride's.

When rings are engraved, usu-ally it is with She couple's Ini-tials and the date of the mar-riage.

During the wedding ceremony,the bride wears her engagementring on the light hand so thewedding band can be placed onher left hand first.

For according to an old super-stition, the vein of the fourthfinger, left hand, leads directlyto the heart.

Halle Selassie of Ethiopia,whoso titles include that of Con-quering Lion of Judah, keeps -40lions at the imperial palace.

The wombat of Australia has apouch, spadellke fingernails anda friendly disposition.

FOR BETTER MEALS AND BIGGER SAVINGS MORE OFTEN.. .

T BEST miff APIAnn Page

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Ann PageSpaghetti Sauce

HeinzSweet Gherkins

BoseoMilk amplifier

CandyCoated Chocolate

Plainpig.

Mania Oil ,For cooking, salad*, baking

Swift's Meatsfor Babies

KaiserQUILTED

Aluminum Foil •7 inch widt OflO

20 ft. roll MM

~~ OCel-0Cellulose'Sponges

Bandedtogttlnr of 4

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£1.39° • < £ » •£1.Trend

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Pact plaitlc

Mr. CleanAll purpoit liquid eltantr

39° £r69eISot.boh

Ivory SnowForwalhingfintfabrict

l.rga M ( giant "?7cpkg. * * * 'p'j-

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4701.770> p k g "

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FRESH BROILING or FRYING

CHICKENSU.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED

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c . W.11 wi* cMckm . . . Cranberry Sauce iss 2 '££ 39c

WHOIE

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Something Different and Delicious- "Super-Right"-Whole or Piece v

SMOKED PORK LOINS 69cIb.

"typfr-Rlgfel" Qnallly—Boutins "Super-Rlght" Qualify

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bot.TOMATO KETCHUPDEL MONTE SPINACH 2 * 37< f l FORSTRING BEANS ^Z"LIBBY'S SLICED BEETS

lesser quantities sold at our low regular prices. Stotk your pantry now!

Your Choice

Fresh Fruits and Vegetables fK M Crop . . . Tindir Grein Sptirt

Fresh Asparagus to35c

Florida floldin

Sweet Corn 4«»29e

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Iceberg Lettuce 2.3.25'U.S. No. I flndi

Yellow Onions 3 14C

Jertey — flolden

Sweet Potatoes 2 23C

Fall ol laics Bif »t I • * { •« I I

Fresh Lemons 25e 49e

Swttt Juicy Ib. 1 O C

Red GrapesJane Parker Baked Goods!

PEACH PIE r r srRhubarb Pie ^ « •Danish Butter Pastry Ring 39'Fudge Gold Square Cake 43°100% Whole Wheat >-<• ',0'.

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Baby Food e-w.ClOrox Bleach

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Kretschmer WHEATNestle'sKretschnYum Derry

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INSTANT COFFEEWith l

pkgi. * *l2oI-flQCpig. * *

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THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COMPANY, INC.

BABY FOOD Chopptd

Clapp's 6 79C

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Danish Blue Cheese2 c,n:650 Swiss Rose Gruyere2 ""> 37s Natural Sliced Swiss2 ^ , 3 5 c Sharp Cheddar *&£&£. "£**2 i6« 250 Muenster Slices ASPB--1 '^35°21? 1 31c Frozen Food Values!

7 >b-83°Importad " " *

Imported O ° I . O E Q

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pig- '

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cam6armicidal Datargant 4 OLWith "Tamad lodino" bot.

With 5c 12 01.

off label plaitic

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25,40,60,7B or M t h

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pig. '

2 '^49« Green DeansKraft's Deluxe Margarine 'PV;;39C Baby Lima Beans ^ ^Pancake Flour ^ ^ ^ p\;M4e Broccoli Spears «»,.* 'p

0-i9«Ravioli * f f i " "£* Orange Juice £SL 2 t.0;. « •Tuna Fish' ^ £ £ 5 4/r31« Hawaiian Punch c — * - 2 "Z 37°Cod Fish Cakes G ^ X d °i0123« Libby's Green Kale 3 ' £ 49«Tree Tavern Pizza p« ™« X 59° Libby's Baby Okra 2 p£r43°

CIIDDADT L ibby 's Asparagus JumboS>>"r> ' - " 4 9 °

Red ^ Cross

Prices effective through Saturday, March 18th in Super Market* and Self-Service ttorei only.

Libby's Red RaspberriesDinner Redy Turkey SlicesBanquet Dinners Turk<;Crestmont Ice Cream

cup w "sr39«

All '/a«'MFi*vori eonf.

121 Monmouth Strnt. RED BANK *Complete Liquor Department In This Store.

Opea Mon. and Ttmw. 'til 9 p. m. Frldaya Until 10 p. m.

Route 35. EATONTOWNTuesdays and Thursdays '111 9 p. m.

Fridays Until 10 p. m.

Highway 36, KEANSBURGOpen Mondays, Tnesdays, Wed., Thun. 'til 9 p. m.

Fridayi UntU 10 p. m.

Prospect Ave. & Church St.. LITTLE SILVERPopular, Brands of Beer and Ale In This SupermarketOpen Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursday*

UntU 9 p. m.; Fridays Until IS p. m.

. Highway 34. PORT MONMOUTHTuesdays, Wednesday! and Thursdays UntU • p. m.Mon., Wed., Thurs. 'til 9 p. m.; frldays '111 19 p. m.

159 Newman Springs Rd., SHREWSBURYFridays UntU 10 p. m.

at Shrewsbury Ave. i

20—Wc<L March 15, 1961 RED BANK REGISTER

Police Quintet, Upper RaritanStill Tied in Cage League

RARITAN TOWNSHIP — RariUn Police and Upper Raritan re-mained tied far First place, and highlighted Norgate's squeaker

over Woodland Park. Bill Fash

Two of the season's most out'standing individual performances

Norgate Manor moved into a «,^. ..„„.„...„ . . . . . . . „..,fourth place tie with Foxwood in of Woodland tossed in 41 points,

second highest total in the leaguethis season. He was almostmatched by Norgate's MikeLotosky, who hit for 35. Loloskyholds the league's single gamerecord — a 42-point production

feature contests of the RaritanAthletic Association BasketballLeague.

By luck of the schedule, thetwo first place occupants meeteach other, and Norgate battlesFoxwood the final week of reg-ular season play.

The Police. Upper Raritan andNorgate all had close calls lastweek. The Lawmen nipped Hid-den Hills, 47-45, Upper Raritandowned Foxwood, 63-59, and Nor-gate outlasted Woodland Park,67-64.

But for a wild pass and somepoor foul shooting, seventh placeHidden Hills might have had aVictory over the police team,which has now won five straight.Trailing by two points with onlya few seconds remaining. HiddenHills had a man free under thebasket. The feed pass, howevertailed out of bounds as the finalwhistle sounded. From thepenalty line, the losers cashed inon only seven of IS shots.

Teachers, who seemed like a,sure bet for the point title the Iprevious week, scored only 13,points against Harmony Park ,This reduced his margin overFash from 36 points to eightFash had the top average — 20points per game — followed byLotosky at 19.3.

If this week's contests producea tie for second1 place between

against Upper Raritan aweeks ago.

With Fash and Lotosky con-stantly exchanging field goals,the lead switched hands manytimes. Norgate gained its win-ning margin in the first half,leaving the floor at halftimewith a 36-33 advantage

few Harmony Park and the loser ofthe Upper Raritan-Police game,next week-will be used to play-

For Norgate, the win climaxed|P lace n e x t

off for that position, and theleague's post season playoffs willbe held the following week..IfHarmony loses to Woodland Parkthis week, there will be no tie,and the regular playoffs will take

a long- uphill battle for a spotin the first division. Last year'sregular season champs lost theirfirst six games of the season,then, with the return of Lotoskyto the lineup, won eight of thenext nine to become one at the]most potent teams in the league.

In the loop's other game lastweek, Displayland's HarmonyPark nailed down its playoff

High man was Charlie Schenkiberth with an easy 6!MG triumphof Hidden Hills, with 22. Jake|over Raritan Teachers. Four of

Haitian Pol. 11 «Up. Raritan 11 4Harmony Pk ,.-10 4Fo*wood 8 7Norgste Man. R 7Woodland Park 5 10Hidden HiUs 4 11- • ra . . 3 II

LEADING SCORERSP13.

Benetsky, Tcbrs 26*Kaall, ' Woodland 260Helfrich, Police 225Nicolay. Up. Har. 215Bunln. Harm. rk. 207Schenk, HltJd. His. ........SIBHoehn, Foxwood , 171Noonan, Vp. Rar. 158Lotosky, Norgate . ...151WelU, Norgate 1(9

Helfrich pumped in 15 points forthe Lawmen, 11 in the second*

Walling and Hankl hi double

half. JerrySpringsteenfigures with

f h

galso hit12. and 10, respec-

lUvely for the Police. The losersled «t the half, 24-23.

Upper Raritan (Floyd's Bar)held the lead against Foxwoodmost of trje way but never bymore than seven points. SalLesser paced the winners' firsthalf offensive, scoring 12 of his17 points. Upper Raritan was up33-20 at intermission.

In the high-scoring half, JoeKuhl and Rod Gunther put on ablistering shooting display thatpowered Foxwood into the leadtemporarily. Upper Raritan re•.ponded with some rapid fire ofits own and was able to hold ondespite continued heroics byKuhl and Guntner.

Guntner ended the night with19 points, 14 in the second half,while Kuhl accounted for 18markers, IS in the second half.Bill Noonan led the winners with13.

Bruce KentWins FoulShooting

MIDDLETOWN — Bruce Kent,(hooting in the 13 years of ageclassification, tied ail records forall divisions in the MiddletownTownship foul shooting contestlast week.

Kent shot 21 of 25 shots toequal the past records and tiedlast year's mark, whichposted by Kevin Truex.

Mai Martens, shooting in the16-year-old bracket, dunked in 20t>i £5. Other sharpshooters werePete Burns in the 14-year-oldclass and Bob Williams,' 15-year-old division. They each dunkedIn 18 of their 25 pegs at the hoop.

Youngsters John Tarpey andTom Reilly did well in the 12-year-old bracket with 11 and 10«hots, respectively.

Thirty-six boys competed in thecontest. Dave Wirth, coach ofthe Middletown High' Schoolbasketball team, presented tro-phies to the winners.

Jack W. Moody, recreationsuperintendent, was in charge ofthe contest. The Recreation Com-mission furnished the trophies.

Trophy winners:T i f A

T12 T

Tarpey,flOI

nersof Are —Vir.«l — Joli

(11): Second — Tom rtcllly.f lO.

13 YeMM tit Ajte — FJiat -- nKfnt, (21); Second — Howard Magulre( l i t .

14 Years of Age — First — PrteBurna, (IB); Second — T>av;<l Nesblu(16«.

15 Year* of As* — Flnst — BobWilliams, (18i; Second — Vlnce Call,(Ui .

1« Years ol Age — First — llel" " (Mi; Second — Donald Du-Broaky US)

IT Years or Ace — Writlfajn*nlary. (17?; SecondO'beary, (16>.

the Harmonies hit double figures— Sol Bunin, 19, Ken George, 16,and John Fromm and Fred Kluin,12 each. The Teachers' BillSysgm paced all scorers with 23.

The race for individual scoringhonors took on a different light

result of Fash's 41-pointspree. Tony Benetsky of the

8-12 LeaguersTo RegisterFor Baseball

RARITAN TOWNSHIP — Sat-urday will be registration day fortownship youngsters wishing toplay in the 8 to 12 BaseballLeague at 3 p.m. It has been re-quested by league officials thata parent accompany each boy ashe registers. There will be nopractice on this day.

The 10 teams to be formed andhe place of registration are:

West Keansburg Fire Company,at West Keansburg Fire Com-pany field: Veterans of ForeignWars at West Keansburg Schoolyard; Keansburg Park, at Mid-dle Road Shopping Center, LaurelAve., and Middle Rd., Yankees,at Fleetwood field; Tigers atMiddle Rd., and Union Ave.,Shopping Center.

Hawks at Beers Street field;Haziet Fire Company, at HazletFire Company field; Flyers reportRd.;Middle Road School,-and Cardin-als at'the Fleetwood field.

Flyers will be distributed atthe schools with complete detailsof district zones and' the placeof registration for each zone. Allparticipants will be covered by agroup insurance plan.

It was also announced thatplans are being made for theannual danco to be held May 13in the West Keansburg fire house,Harry Wolfereberger, 12 BcdleRd.. Hazlet, is chairman of theaffair.

A.H. Yacht ClubCommitteesMeet Tomorrow

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS—Twocommittees of the Atlantic High-lands Yacht Club will hold initialmeetings of the year tomorrow inthe club's leased quarters in themunicipal harbor administrationbuilding.

The house committee, head-ed by D. A. Caruso, will meetat 8:30 p.m. to discuss food anuother planning for upcominjevents.

Members of the committee includ Edwin Shelly of Navesink,Cliff Albertson of Leonardo, Vic<Commodore Robert Renner oMiddletown, Herbert Carusoe oLittle Silver- and Robert Doug

to Airport Plaza, MiddleWoodland Park, registers

Bucs to JoinSoccer Clan

RED BANK - Red Bank HighSchool, will have a varsity soc-cor team next fall and will par-ticipate in the Shore Conferencesoccer league.

The Board of Education ap-proved the recommendationmade at its meeting last nightby Stuart A. , Edington of theboard's athletic committee.

Mr. Edington said that the addition of Red Bank brings thetotal number of teams in theloop to eight. He said that sev-eral other schools are also con-

Pet..T«0.7*0.667,5H:333.333.240.200

A T ' ,=0.015.016.311.918.311.813.:18.3

RB LionsHonorCagers

RED BANK — Red Bank HighSchool's basketball teams do nothave to show undefeated records,or gather championships, to b e ,honored at a banquet

The Buccos had their annualtreat last niRht at the Molly Pitch-er Hotel when the Lions. Clubplayed host to the varsity teamand cheerleaders.

The annual event came with a6-9 record, and not even a quar-terpiece of a title.

The dinner was short and sweetwith the speeches beinr in thesame category. Coach Bill "Was-We" Sweel was credited with thelongest of the evening, and that"was short. Coach Sweel extendedhis thanks and appreciation tothe tions for their efforts inhonoring high school teams, es-pecially when they don't win atrophy.

Other guests Included StuartEdington and William Magee ofthe Board of Education* WilliardBrowning, vice principal, and

R. B. H. S. BASKETBALL TEAM HONORED— Red Bank Liont Club, not coniidering records. l«»t night feted Red Mary Larseitf coach of the cheer-Bank High School's basketball team and cheerleaders at tha Molly Pitcher Hotel for their efforts during the1960-61 season. President John V/arren, second from left, congratulates William Falvo, one of* the outstandingplayers of the squad. Looking on, left to right, are Frank J . Pingitore, chairman of the dinner; Alan Klatsky,aggressive guard, and Coach William Sweel. The Bucs finished with a 6-9 record.

Langhorne StartsDrag Racing

LANGHORNE, Pa. — The 1961drag race season opened Sunday

on Langhorne Speedway.'s fastmacadam drag strip, with a ca-pacity turnout of both contest-ants and spectators. Mike Drillof Cram Lynne, Pa., topped all

of the modified classes in an "A"class fuel dragster, while FloydSmith of Levlttown, Pa., annexedtop honors in the stock classes.

The season drag race competi-

tion will continue Sunday, andevery Sunday thereafter, withregistration and inspection of carsfrom 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. andspectator admission starting at 11

leaders, freshman coach TomPhipps and JV coach Tony Mill-er.

Frank J. Pingitore was chair-man of the dinner, and toastmas-ter. Mr. Pingitore also is ath-letic director at Red Bank HighSchool.

Larry Jansen and WesWestrum, former New YorkGiant battery, will coach for theSan Francisco Giants this year.

Albert Wright, Henry Stadand Donald Caruso of At

(antic Highlands.The publicity committee wi

meet at 8:15 p.m. to discuss pro-motional and public relationsprojects for the year. Membersinclude William Black, HarrejBowtell, Mr. Douglas. ReameiKeller, John McClear, Billy Wenzel and Andrew Duncan, all olAtlantic Highlands.

YAA SchedulesThree BaseballRegistrations

NEW MONMOUTH — The NewMonmouth Youth Athletic Associ-ation will hold baseball registra-tion, starting Saturday, froma.m. until noon, at the O)d Vil-lage Fire Company headquarters'on Rt. 35.

Two other registrations an.scheduled for Saturday, Marcl25, and Wednesday, March 28The only difference in time wilbe at the Wednesday registratioiwhich will be held from 7 top.m.

One of the requirements is thaevery boy that comes to registeimust be accompanied by at lea:one parent.

These will be the only dates oregistration. "No applicants wilbe accepted at any other time,'states Rocco Palagano. treasure)of the association.

ELECTED^ PRESIDENTNEW YORK (AP) — Frank C,

Rand, Jr., of Santa Fe, N.M.,was elected president yesterdayof the Turf & Field Club at Bel-mont Park, Aqueduct and Sara-toga tracks. William C. Mac Milen of Cedarhurst, N. Y., waselected vice president. All other

sidering varsity soccer programs, officers were re-elected.

THIS KNOCKDOWN WAS THE FINALE — Challenger Ingemar Johansion nose divesinto canvas as he is floored by Floyd Patterson in sixth round of heavyweight titlebout at Miami Beach, Fla. Referee Billy Regan motions Patterson to a neutral cor-ner. Floyd retained his title when Johansson failed to regain his feet at the count• f ' • " • (APWirephoto)

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Mat. Tear Model PriceStt^debaker —'47-'M—Chamolon- S.MChevrolet '41-'53 6 7.49Chevrolet 'S4-'S0—« and B— ».!»Ponllac '83-'S4—t and 8— 7.11Old< 'Sl-'M s ».»»Buick 'iO-'M 8 ».»»Buick 'S3-'M B 1«.«Cad. llronll—'S3-'M S 15»»

Mat. Tear Model Frl.eCad. (rear)—*Ba--"56 8 7.11Cad. Ifront)—*S7-'6O 8 u. t lCad. (rearl— '5T-'eo 8 13.11Ford r-'«a-'S3 1 and S— 7.OFord 'S*-'60—-« and •—M.IIDodge '«9-'M— a _ _ tilDong. -w-'ra—— B —11.11Plymouth '42.50 a and «— ».M

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200 Club—Harry Greenwood 300, 214:Bob Worden 210, Demile Arnone Z10,Joe Tomalno, 8r. 310, Tony Damtauo223, Pete DeGerO-imo 331, Nell uettll3l«. Chunk Y-kow 210, Don Holdrldge207, Angelo Murdleo lot, Joe Plammla201, John Oatta 200, Atman Crupl 200,Dink Allen 312, Fred Longcoy 200, 211:

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600 Series—Harry Dwlrht 2.2, 233188-M4! Joe Marehettl 2.7. 214. 190—

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112.Perrlni 213. Willie Kornek 212, FrankPavllck S03, WaM Fink -03. FredChunbrone 502, Jim Ralllgan 202, TomMahler -02. Tony Belleiza S01, "Foo"Marehettl 201, Ritchie Merker 201,Andy Kornek 200, Jonnny Montaldo300, Frankle Pln|o 200.

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22-Wed, March 15. 1961 RED BANK REGISTER

Splits andMisses

By

PAUL A. ALBRECHT ,

The women are still at it. This time it is EdnaMorson, perhaps the county's top woman kegler, whoset the Matawan-Keyport alleys ablaze. Edna gave noindication in the first two games that things were goingto get hot as she opened with a 203 and came backwith a 189. The last game started with a double, aneight pin fill, the spare and then nine more strikes fora high 278, the highest game by a female kegler thisseason. The grand total for E4na was 670. Edna rolledthis big series in the Matawan-Keyport Sunday NightMixed league and loop secretary Joyce Paris, reportsthat this is the highest series ever rolled by a woman

Fine Pitching, Defense, Strong BenchYankees Use 4th fa * Row

O 1 T i m* i o T . ^ i Losing to Braves, 4-1Should Make bt. Louis a Contender

in the shore area. Nice going, Edna,you can make it all the way next time.

Here's hoping

In the same league and the same night Tom Paristried to match Edna but fell 10 pins shy in his lastgame for a 268. Tom's first two games were 211 and212, so he had a higher, total for the night, 691. Ednaand Tom are the average leaders in this league with170 and1 193, respectively. .,

In addition to the two 600 sets there were 19double century marks. Jerry Hcttrick had 211 and220, John Cecere 220, Tom Leavy 213, Fred Irons212, Bill Strong 217, Steve Slovens 207 and 218,Harry Stover 23S and 201, Len Waltsak 214, CliffMorrison 214, Paul Prestl 203 and Mike Halloran201. '

The national WDBC tournament has a new eventtills season, calleti the Queen's Tournament A totalof 122 women entered this event which will bewhittled to 32 in the first qualifying round. These

V 32 will then roll eight games across 16 lanes, fouren one day and four the next. The rules for win-

• oing a n a bit complicated but this should prove in-teresting and draw many more entrants next sea-son. This could very well become THE woman'sindividual tournament of the year.

Tie women have control of Elm Lanes these week-ends. The Women's County Tournament is in fullswing and when we checked Sunday night The FiveSports of Neptune were showing their heels to the restof the contestants. Ruth Hindley had 468, Rose John-son 388, Helen Redding 374, Marge Bennett 450 andDoris Brown 485, for a team total of 2,165. Add 528pins handicap and the leading total is 2,693. ShiblaHeating of Wall Township is next with 2,671, followedby the Wanamassa Spare Shooters — 2,657, the 3Msof Bradley Beach — 2,643 and the Bendix Bowierettesof Elm Lanes with 2,635.

Hazel Monahan came up with a 501 in the doublesevent asher partner, Maureen Walling, both from Mid-dletown, rolled a 496. This total plus the 189 pinhandicap added up to a leading total of 1,186. MaryStout — 565 and Marge Bumen — 551,. put LongBranch in tiie news with an 1,167 second place total.Third fa Belmar's Evelyn Clinedinst — 519 and PatDaniels — 545 — 1,139. Asbury Park is up there withAdeline Juliano — 409 and Dot Flynn — 506, for 1,134.Long Branch is back again with Nancy Harvey — 452and Lola Williams — 512, for 1,132. Keyport finallyentered the lime light with an 1,131 by Grace Kipp —511 and Berte Forse — 461.

Fair Haven is rooting for Evelyn Trepp and her571 plus 57, for 628, to stand the onslaught ofthose who have yet to roll. Keansburg's JesseHayes just missed a tie with 507 plus 120. RedBank's Anne Albrecht is the last gal over the 600mark with 535 plus 66, for 601. Mary Stout andDelia Webb keep the top place in the northern partof tha county, Mary from Long Branch with 595and Delia Webb of Freehold, with 593.

Evelyn Trepp rolled a neat 246 and now leadsboth the scratch and handicap high game races witha grand total of 265. Marge Bumen is next with a221 scratch game. Mary Stout has the highestscratch threesome with her 565 in the singles.

There will be two more week-ends of this tourna-ment with the last one using only Saturday, March 25.So you people who wish to see what the finest in thecounty can do, be at Elm Lanes the next two week-ends. It will make the ladies roll a little better if theyknow that the rest of the county is taking an interestin them.

While we are with the ladies let's see how theyare doing with their national tournament The officialcount is that 3,330 teams have entered, the fourth larg-est In the history of this event This year's tournamentis being waged in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and 41 states,Alaska, Washington, D.C., Canada, and Puerto Ricowill be represented. This will be the first time that ateam from the new state will roll and appropriatelyenough its name is "Alaska 49th Star" team. This isalso the first time a team from Puerto Rico will be par-ticipating and with a team averaging 814. The captainof this team, Providencia Acosta, did a great deal infounding the Puerto Rico Women's Bowling Associationand was first secretary. They may be heard from inthis tournament

In all there will be 5,877 doubles and 11,754singles. Of the total number of teams entered2,844 are from out of the state of Indiana and 540City Associations will be represented. The largestwomen's tournament was held in Detroit, Mfchi-ganj in 1953 when 5,000 teams were out at the foulline. Syracuse, New York held the second largestwith 4,538 and Buffalo, N.Y. the third largest with4,491 teams. Just another proof that the East isa hotbed of bowling. This is no more than rightas this great game originated here in the East.

Monmouth County could take a page from theChicago bowler's book. They recently held the32nd annual reunion of the Quarter Century Bowl-ers Association. At this affair most of them rolledIn the National Old Timers Tournament One par-ticipant was 83-year-old Art Shogren, with 64 years•t the game.

• v . • . J

EDITOR'S NOTE — This Isanother in a series on the ma-jor league teams. Others willfollow on this page daily.

By WALTER L. JOHNS

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -"This is the best ball elubever had. We have a real shot a!the pennant this year."

The speaker was Solly Hemus,the one-time infielder who isbeginning his third season asmanager of the St. Louis Cardin-als and one of the league's heroeslast year when he brought thdub in'third after a couple oflean years.

Pitching, very good pitching,is the key to the Redbirds whohave a pennant spirit in campand have gone all out to makesure the players are well-condi-tioned for the big year ahead.

The St. Louis University -pro-fessor of physical education, Dr.Walter Elberhardt, is on handagain and giving the players theircalisthenics and Sonny Randle,the St. Louis pro football end, ishere' to teach some running tech-nique. A d d i t i o n a l l y , MarryMarion, the old Cardinal short-stop who has sold his holdings inthe Houston club, is working witha couple of the youngsters to gethem ready.

Hemus,' the scrappy little ex-player, admits that "we will haveto have some bats in the out-field" and feels that "we'll haveto work out a defensive unit togo with the offensive group forthe team to finish 'way upthere."

THE CARDS made a go of Itlast season, after' dropping toseventh in 1959, and a late sea-son bad spell in which theydropped three in a row to thePirates and then three more tothe Giants killed them off whenthey had fought their way up tocontention.

The Redbird pitching could beone of the best in the league. InErnie Broglio, a 21-game winnerlast year; Larry Jackson, CurtSimmons, Bob Miller and RaySadecki, the Cards have solidstarters.

"I look for Bob Miller (4-3 lastseason) to have a great year,"said Hemus. "In fact," he added,"he could be one of the best onour staff.

"Simmons was good. His rec-

Stan MuilalI (Outfielder)Is

{Photos by Frank Kuchirchuk)

ord (7-4) wasn't too good butit didn't actually show what hedid for this ball club. Lindy Mc-Daniel is the best relief pitcherI've ever seen and I'm thinkingof guys like Clem Labine, too.

"We've got some great armsamong our young pitchers," Sollycontinued, "but it will be toughto break them in. A! Cicotte (16-7) from Toronto could help us,and so could Mel Nelson, ClintStark and Harry Fanok.

"Nelson won 13 for Spokaneand Stark was a 12-game win-ier at Tulsa."Fajiok, on the minor league

roster, is described by Hemus asbeing "faster than Ryne Duren;ver was."

The Cardinals' have one of the

best defensive catchers in theleague in Hal Smith and Hemuslooks for him to bit more. Othercatchers are Carl Sawatski andtwo youngsters, Chris Cannizzaroand the bonus beauty, Tim Me-Carver. Cannizzarro was withRochester and McCarver hit .347for Memphis.

An infielder, Gene Oliver, isan all-around man and could beused behind the plate Or in theoutfield. He was at Rochesterlast year.

Bill White, Julian Javier,Darryl Spencer and Ken Boyermake up. the Cardjnal infield.Spencer has a lot of power fora shortstop, and Boyer, who hit32 homers last year, may hit asmany as 40 this season accord-

ASS0CIATED PRESS

The world champion PittsburghPirates dropped their first grape-fruit league exhibition game andLos Angeles won its first whilethe American League championNew York Yankees lost theirfourth in a row yesterday.

The Dodgers beat Pittsburgh,8-3, combing Vinegar Bend Mi-lenn for four runs in the firstInning. One was a bases emptyhomer by Frank Howard. SmokyBurgess hit a 2-run blast for theBucs in,the third but anotherDodger run In the seventh andthree In the ninth ended thePittsburgh win streak.

Milwaukee defeated the Yank-ees. 4-1, with Hank Aaron's dou-ble scoring two runs in the ninthto assure the victory.

The Chicago Cubs won theirthird exhibition in four startswith Don Ziramer's two homerspacing the attack for a 0-5 vic-tory over the Los Angeles Angels.Third baseman Ron Santo oloutedtwo doubles, and eight of Chi

Charley James, who had serviceat Rochester, Charleston andwith the Cardinals last year.

Two others, J. Beauchamp, andD. Taussig, on the minor leaguelist, are good-looking center fieldprospects.

Also in camp are two oldsters,pitcher Maury McDermottInfielder Red Schoendienst.

and

ing to Hemus, who was a bitupset when somebody wrote thatBoyer wouldn't get 25 this sea-son.

Infield replacements couldcome from George Crowe, JulioCotay and Alex Grammas, wit;a youngster, Gerald Buchek, oi18, tabbed as the "player" of thefuture. Buchek, signed for anestimated $80,000 bonus, has hadonly one year of pro ball. Meplays shortstop.

Stan Musial, the old reliable,and Bob Nieman will share theleft field duties. Curt Flood andDoc Landrum will be in center. II

There are several bidding for Ithe right field spot including Joe ICunningham and Walt Moryn and Ithe former Missouri footballer,

CASING THE CARDS

Definitely a pennant threatoff their third-place finish lastyear. Good pitching, headedby 21-game winner ErnieBroglio, good defense, goodbench. Needed are some batsIn the outfield.

NEXT—The Milwaukee Braves

cage's 13 hits were lor extrabases.

A three run rally in the ninthinning gave the CWcago WhiteSox a 5-4 victory over the Minne-sota Twins. All three were un-earned due to an error by JoseValdlveiso. A bases-full single byLuis Apariclo won It for Chicago.

Homers by Frank Robinson,Gus Bell, Gordon Coleman andEllo Chacon powered the Cincin-nati Reds to a 7-4 victory thatended the Detroit Tigers' grape-fruit victory string after threestraight. It was Cincinnati's firstspring victory after three losses.

Tha Washington Senators1 threegame victory streak was brokenwhen Kansas City won, 2-1, on5-hlt pitching by Jim Archer,Dick Hall and Bob Hartman.Kansas City scored its runs on awalk, Lou Klimchock's single, anerror, and another single byHank Bauer in the third Inning.

Clarence Coleman, rookje Phil-adelphia catcher, bit his fourthsingle in the ninth inning withtwo out and the Phillies downed.the St. Louis Cardinals, 8-7.

The Boston Red Sox defeatedthe^San Frandsko Giants, 8-5.when Billy Harrcll walked In thelast of the ninth with the basesloaded. Giants rookie Bob Bolinissued the walk. There were three2-run homers, one by Jackie Jen-sen of the Sox, with Willie Maysand Bob Farley connecting torthe Giants.

JOCKEY SUSPENDED

MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — JockeyJames Drfecchino was suspendedfor 19 iftys by Gulfstream Parkstewards yesterday for "care-less riding" aboard Valerie Joanin the third race Monday. Val-erie Joan finished second butwas not disqualified. The suspen-sion begins tomorrow and endsMarch 26.

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GUARANTIES jLOWEST PRICES! •

Mf42 W. FRONT ST.

R E D B A N KOpen' Every Evening Till 9

Phone 5Hady»lae 1-3440

Other Stores in Perth Amboy,New Brunswick, Trenton.

Elizabeth and Newark.

RED BANK REGISTER CLASSIFIED RATESIDayS Day* Consecutive4 Dayi Consecutive5 Day* Consecutive

10 Days Consecutive19 Days Consecutive ,

_48c Line_32c Line_3Qc Line-25c Line_24c Line_2Jc Une

Blind a d l tulDg Tbt lutf*-.**"., P. 0. Box 280 tztri.

Yearly Contract Rates on RequestftUnlmom tniertloa ThrM Una

Right to cuu l ly , «dlt or r«]ict in» «dT*rtlitniinl la r n i m lbf Th» RsKtii*.e'.

W* wiu not 0* rcipooilbU tor errors, unltii UMT tr* dtuctaAbtforc Ui» atonnd tmartlon.

No cucalltt loni will ba accepted or changes mt4» 10 advertise.naaJa ©oe bour afttr receipt at office.

DEADLINE 5:00 P.M. Day Bofor* PublicationCUISSUUED O1SPLAX

1:00 *.M. D u Before rabllntloa with proof tire tars before(Obllc»Uo».

CaU Classified—SH 1-0010 or OS 1-0525NIGHTS, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

Dial SH MHOCalla on private* telephones are toll-frse to OB 1-0535 from the

lolloKlni nations; LOwall «. COIlu 4. ; n (Ketntburg) WHltntr 6.' Calla o n ' private MLepuonei are toll-free to SH 1-0010 from tbt

following autlona: ATUutlo Highlands 1. CApltal 1 and », Libert? 1Highlands i. OBborne 1, RUmiQQ U BE* Bright 3, and SHadyald* 1and T. '

ANNOUNCEMENTSLOST AND FOUND

LOST — Brown, black and white wirehalrad ttrrler, March 7, in Mid diet own.Wo a tin* t chain choker. Reward. OS 1OHO.LOST —• Sapphire and diamond heir-loom engagement Hn*. Vicinity RedBank, Reward. BH 1-0012.I/>BT — in SUbouctta B&liroom duringcommunion breakfast, man's too coat,ebarcoal. 8H 1-8703.

PUBLIC NOTICE

AUCTION SALE130 Woodbrids* Ave.. Highland park.CH 9-6363. Saturday 1 p.m., March 18.Unclaimed rug* and carpets, ilk* new.Repoiaeied carpets. Used rugs, run-ntr* and throw rugi .New carpet tern-nanti suitable for wall-to-wall and roomlisa ruga. Large full roll* of carpetand half roHi. Suitably for motels andhotelf. Auctioneer! B.G. Coat* and EarlItelnir- KB 1-3451. Inspection of c a r

r lO a.m. - S p.m. Friday J iarch1961 By the order of Raritan Rug

Cleaning Co,

MARINE: SUPPLIES-B-v«rythlng For The Boatman, NewJeriey'i largest marine supply houi

Bvlprude Sales and SarvlceTUB BOATMAN'8 SHOP

24 Wharf Ave. lied Bank6H 1-5760.

Open Sundays and HollQijre

TRAVEL - TRANSPORTATIONPERSON CURRENTLY COMMUTING

. to Trenton dafly to deliver email pack-age, Leaving Red Bank about 7 a-io.SH i i mWANTED — Ride to and from RodSank am) Colta N*ck a.nt. and p.m.Monday through Friday. Call HO 2-

AUTOMOTIVEAUTOS AND TRUCKS

ARB YOU OETTINU^ ALL THECOMFOnT, SAFETY AND ECONOMY

FROM YOUR PRESENT CAR?1H9 PLYMOUTH iportl mbutban1»9 PLYMOUTH convtrtimeUS8 CHRYSLER nlne-paaieng«r

auburbanUMOEIIMAN FORDMC8 DEaoTO four*door bardtop1(67 PONTIAC four-door HardtopU5J CHRYSLER four-door aedan1KS7 PLYMOUTH two-door hatdtopIBM CHRYSLER four-door aedaa1S5« PLYMOUTH two-door sedanUS< CHIVROLIT

Maurice Schwartz& Sons

DIRECT FACTOR* DEALERS forfcYUOUTH. VAUANT. IMPERIAL.

CHRYBIJCR.t i l Watt Front St. Red Bank

BH*dy»U. 7-0787O P E N M D B I I

FORCED TO SELL — Death In family.1438 CUmrolu Bel Air four-door bard-top, two-tone aqua, fully equipped, Infoot condition. Alklni (1099. CA »

-IMS PLYMOUTH — aood tranapona-tlonl JO37 N»«Jl coup*; U3t Ford tno-doof sedan. Inquire 32 Ttnton Av«.,Xaumtoxn.DODOS) PICKUP TRUCK one-ton Ex-pren, U5S. Call

AT 1-07(8U5T OODOB SIERRA atatlon waibn,pint puseager. Power ateerlnc andorakaa. Original owner. Excellent con-«IUW. AT VozM, after 3.1W1 BUICK — Hydramatlo, radio,Iieater. nott

1959 KEKAULT DAUPHINK—Sunroof.radio, heater. whlt«wnll Urea. Excellent•ondlUoo, ntueate. rri». SH 1MM6.»1<M _ Takei IBM Ford. Radio, heater,new battery, cood tlrei, needa motorwork. HU 11891.

J9S» FIAT «00. Perfect condition, apol-laa, 16,000 miles. Ideal for commuting

•r abopplnf. .40 miles per gallon. Bestntfer near IBM. OS 1-2633.I960 RAMBLER — Two-door, black se-dan. Automatic Radio, heater, white-wall!, perfect condition. *U50. CO 4-78-411»55 OODOE TRUCK — Dual, one tonItake, low mileage, perfect. Seen atPorter 'a Garden Center, Ave, of Twoftlvera, Itumson. 4

US3 PONTIAC Catallna. Radio, heater.eri«lnal owner. 1290. Owner SH 17531avenlnia or Saturday.1953 CHEVROLET'1%'-ton truck, 14'steel riofly. Very good condition. CallHO J-3100.W57 DESOTO FIREFLIQHT hardtop,r u n power, very reasonable.

O8 1-34271854 8TUDEBAKER COMMANDERhardtop. Engine good, body needs at*

. ttntlon. AT 1-2865.1932 FORD COUPE for sale or tradefor Chevy V 8 engine. Call

8!f 1-74181B58 MERCURY BTATION WAGON,very good condition. Power brakes,•tearing, radio and, heater. HO 2-3(00.1960 CHEVROLET Bel Air four-dooreight-cylinder, overdrive, like new, prl*rate, J1JS0. OS 1-181)7.

WANTED—AUTOMOTIVEWANTED — 1(150-1953 Ford convertibleIn good condition. Call SH 7-5218'alter

BOATS & ACCESSORIESINSURANCE -MariDe. outboard-allforma. Rolston Waterbury, Realtor,since 1825. IS W. Front St.. SH 7-3500.

OARQAIN — Any Doat you want tawn. Low bank ratea, financing a r

rangvments completed la ona calt atany ot oui offices. TILE MOMMOUTHCOUNTY NATIONAL BANE. BH 1tooo.16' PLANK RUNABOUT — 15 h.p.Kvlnrude, Teenea trailer, 9(00 com.plcle. LO «-35».

LEFT OVER MODELSWHILE THJSY LA8T -

REDUCED PRICES1040 40 h.p. Evlnruda motor* '1960 Ondy.WhUe cllnVer-buIlt aklffsAlio lHl ' a In stock

NAVESAND MARINE BALES COH2S Ocean Ave. aea Brlgh:

SB 2-1101USED WOODFUSSY — Catboat class.Good condition and. good stall. IGfiOCall SH 1-1089.

BUSINESS NOTICESPAINTINQ — Paperhanglng, Interior,exterior. For a good, clean Job at rea-soluble ratea call SH 7-3191. Sd Zlnaer.FORMICA SINK TOPS — Conversionfront rotted linoleum, to beautiful for-

l s . . uur specialty. Linoleum and tilfloors. Ken Coakley. SH 7-0321.FOR TREE WORK. C t a tree service.Topping, trtmtoing, rsmovaL Call '

eovarace.ALL Forms ot Income Tax Prepared

BCHWEIZER AGENCY781-0121 or CO 4-6526

295 Main St.. Keanaburs. N. JWOOD — And kindling !<jr>eile. Base-meota. attics cleaned. Trees moved.Cement work. Llgbt taatulos. SH 7.1812.INCOME TAX RETURNS prapareCcompletely. Elevenub year tn are;Margery Trovato. O3 1-1283.

V1K1NO DOCK BUILDING, INCDocks straightened. Filings jetteidown. BE 2-2898. RU 1-2157.

:OJ1E TAX RETURNS prepared ayour homs or business by qu&llficaccountant. Reaaonabla rates, fin 7-2662.Or PR &-0339.CARPENTER — Paneling, attics, eellars, kitchens remodeled. Celling blocks

specialty. LO 6-3851,FEDERAL AND NEW YORK STATEINCOMJC TAX returns expertly pre*pared by qualified accountant. Toutboma or mine. CO 4-0845.GRABS CUTTINO —Call

SH 1-748S

and edging.

INDIVIDUAL i i n n tax raturns pre-pared by graduate' accountant, former.ly with national accounting .urar1. Byappointment, c. D. Dllwell, Red Bank.BH 7-:0S4.LAWN M0W1NO — Larga placesamali; With or without maintenance.HID Landscaping, SH 1-9752 or EH 18519.

HELP WANTED-FEMALECOMPANION AND LJOHT housekeeperfor elderly woman. Live In, own room,able to drive, car available. LittleSilver. Call SH 7-4011. i:30-9.30 p.m.

COMPANION-HOUSEKEEPER — Takecharge ranch home for oldrr womanseml-lnv&lid. not bedridden, Ulddleagedor up to late 60'e preferable. Sleep InCall 8|{ 1-8265. «

IEN to try out for American Legionrill team. 1S59 and 1M0 State Cham-

jlons, If men qualify and meet requirements. trip to National Legion Conven-tion In Denver. If Interested call AT 1-""" R. AT 1-2852. or OS 1-2455.

HELP WANTED-Male • FemaleGENERAL HOUSEWORKER — Rellable, efficient. Wanted for doctor'atome, own room, TV. Excellent salaryar right person. OB 1-3344.

GIRL OR WOMAN for llgbt housework. Help with children. Bleep la.Call KB 1-1051.PAYROLL CLERK—Ejperlenced. Somepiece work ratea, ability to type, fringebenefits. Canterbury Knitters, Ltd., Lo-cust St., Keyport.

REAL ESTATE SALESOpportunity for pleaiant, rewardingwork wlttt well t i tballihed real eitateoffice bandllnc residential, commercialand tnduftrlal properties. No experi-ence necesiary. Excellent opportunityto expand with active organization.Write giving detail* to "Active," Sox"11, Red Bank.

BOOKKEEPER •— Ex per lanced. Pref.erably automotive, Muit be good typ-ist and accustomed to detail, Havegood reference and good work record.Can LO 6-3100, a ik tor $!r, Foenterfor appointmentHOUSEKEEPER to Hvs In, care .orfour-year old nnd workhif couple. Ownroom, bath, TV. Uuat have reference*.Will dlJicuKs nalary. Call SK 7-5292.WOMAN (or credit office. Interestintwork, rive-day, no nights, full benefit*,21-40. Typing eieentlftl. High schoolgraduate. Write P.O. Box 148, RedBank:SECRETARIES — Permanent well pay.Ing position In a new modern plantlocated In Holmdel. Only experiencedsecretaries ahould apply. Call peraonnel Office, BH 7-5100.RECEPTIONIST — Five day«. RedRank office. Write giving experience,sge, e ducat inn and" telephone In ownhandwriting to "Receptionist", Box 511,Tid Bank.OENERAli HOUSEWORKER — Live In,recent references, fond of children.I.I 2-3923.STENOGRAPHER for law office. Prevloui experience legal wdrk preferred.Cali'SH 1-9401 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

COOK *™ w eCOOK — Family or one 165 weskCO OK—Temporary weekend „ 1(0 weekQENERAI, HOUSEWORKER

10-7. —- -GENERAL HOUSEWORKER-

Sleep In - JS5 w«*kGENERAL HOUSEWORKER —

COOK . Ble*P out 155 weekMOTHER'S HELPER -... *45 weekNURSEMAID—Experienced - $60 week

Posltfons In Rumson Estate AreaEDWARDS EMPLOYMENT AOENCY"" Broad St. Ked Ban:

SH 7-057Tk tor.

HELP WANTED-MALE

ELECTRONIC*

WantedENGINEERS

and

TECHNICIANSWith Radar and

Communication!Experience

CONTACT

PHILCOTECHREP DIVISION

8 West End CourtLong Branch, N. J.

Phone CApital 2-1877

WEEKDAYS: 8 a.m. to *:30 p.m.

HEAL ESTATE SALESMAN [or acllvaollica nltta good location. Real Saute

experience cot necessary, but you mustknow hoif to sell. Writ* particular* to

Estate" Boi OIL Red Bank. N. J.PROGRESSIVE REAL ESTATE com-pany needs the service ot one moresalesman. The aslllns season, la readyto start. Write "Progressive" Box 611.lied Bank.

"••NEW OPENINGSHen wanted for Job oprninca in threedepartments for our ELECTRICAL AP.TLIANCE OUTLET. ' • 'Permanent poiltlonj. Opportunity to.advancement. Age 19-36. Must beready and willing to work. CALLSH 1-4029.

SAURY $104

JKWELHY XUQDKBIGNBD— TranRlonyour gemi with aentlmental value towearable, up-to-date Jewelry. Free•ketches and estimate. Rcufslllea. 36Broa4 at.. Red Bank, N.J,ALL TYPES of alteration! on women'sand.children'! clothes. Trousers cuffed,drspts ahortened. Neat work. BH 7-3210.

WYNBERO TYPING SERVICEFor fast and efficient typing

Call SH 1-5195

EMPLOYMENTHELP WANTED—FEMALE

SEVERAL SECRETARIESSales — Engineer*

Good stenographic and, typing skillsneceaf&ry to «erv« as secretaries toexecutives. Car necessary.EDWARDS EMPLOYMENT AGENCY6» Broad 6t. R»M Bank

3H 7-O5T7HOUSEKEEPER - Full time, generalhousework, laundry, iom» plain -cook-inic. Must Hkt and ba experienced withsmall children. Sleep In or out. It outprovide own tramportatlon to Ltncrolt.Write stating experience, reforencea,qualification* to "H. K. / ' Box 511, RedBank.

BOOKKEEPER—Bxvei.ti.CAd. to takecharge of tooks In imali office of re-tall Btore, five-day week, no eventnga.Write it at Ing experience and qualifi-catlom In detail (o "Retail." Box 611,Red Bank.CLAIMS CLERK, stenographer. Goodtypist, fringe benefits. Canterbury Knlt-tpi«. Ltd:. Locust St.. Keyport,WOMEN — To work with prestige cos-metics In aales and public relations. Noexperience necpsaary. Will train, estab-lish clientele. Pull or part-time. .Execu-tive nnlnry and commission possible.SH 1-21&8 or TW 2-1381.

YOUNG MAN to learn stock brokeragebusiness. Write In own handwritinggiving full details of background, salaryexpected to P. O. Box 350. Red Bank.

SALESMAN — Must t>» good Closer.Knowledge or boat sales.

A & B BOAT SALES787-5000

good pay..— Kelly &. vertical. Steady

BH 1 0028CULLIOAN — The first In water con-dltlonlng; looking for ambitious men tosupport million dollar advertising cam'palgn; aeven qualilled men wilt b<given complete training. Age not factor.Top commissions paid. Phon* for ap-pointment In Princeton, N. J. WAInul1-8800, In Trenton Expor t €-8311.

TREE CLIMBERS — Steady employ,mentr Apply Porter's Tree Service,Ave. of Two Rivers, Rumaon. RU 1-233

ELECTROLUX CORPORATIONMEN wanted. Sales and service. Me-chanical background helpluL 50S Pros-pect Ave.. LIUli Silver Shopping Can*ter. SH 1-2070.

PHARMACEUTICALREPRESENTATIVE

Ethical pharmaceutical manufacturehim local established territory .avail-able. Experience desirable but noimandatory. Salary, car allowance M -lense, bonus and health Insurance plan.itust own recent model car Ny con-sideration given unless a complete con-fidential business and personal resume,emapshop (not returnable) and phonenurpber accompany first letter. Pleasre-read above to make certain youreply is fully responsive. Write "Phar-maceutical", Box 511, Red Bank.HEAL ESTATE SALES — We'll teachyou., Part or full time. Opportunity ingrowing organization. Call Mr. Fonrty.09 1-2727.

MAN with powffr saw to cut A mtmbenf trees hy the hour. WH 6-4718 between 9-10 a.m.

CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORYA HANDY GUIDE OF BUSINESS SERVICES TO SUIT YOUR MANY NEEDS!

Adding Machines—TypewritersADDINO MACHINES — Typewrllera•old. noted, repaired. Berplco's, 101Monmouift ex., R«d Bank. SH 7 )4SS

Appliance RepairsAPPLIANCE REPAIR and Installa-tion. Resldsntfst and commercial wlr.Inf. Allan Electric BH T-O«a

AuctioneerB. o . COATS — An sssentlal AuctionAppraisal Bervlca "anywhere." 288Norwood Avo.. Dual. Fhone IOEUogg

Auto and Truck RentalAVIS—Rent a new car or truck. Lowratea. Maplo Ave.. Red Bank. SH 7-030». PR 4U214. Dally T a.m.-10 p.m.

Building Contractor

DsSTBPANO CONSTnUCTION—Newhomef, aUarfttlont, repairs, time pay*m u t e Pnon* LJ 2-OESI-787-M:S.

NEW HOMES, alteration!, repairs.Hlibest quality work. For aitlmatescall Herbert Bigenraucn. SH 15201.

RED BANK ALUMINUM PRODUCTSStorm windows^ aldlal. awnlnga.SH 7-28S3 or BH M i l l

Cesspool Cleaning

SBPTI0 TANKS, dry walla ssnrlced.Leeching field added. Baekhos work.a H. Wilson. SH 1-1IH.

China and Glass Repair•XPERT MKND1NQ - Chins «lass,Mver rellnlahlng and plating. Therm*

Floor WaxingJ. TANNAHII.L — Floor wailng andJanatorlat service. Commercial, real,dentlal. Low ratsa. 787-2779.

Furniture RepairITIinNlTUItE Rtllnlihad. repaired,eanlnct . making. Free animates,pickup, delivery. W. Murray, 787*4677.

Fuel Oil — HeatingFUEL OIL A HEATING—CaU BI1 1-0610. Oil Delivery. Inc.. Service *Bales, 3 Herbert St.. Red Bank.

Home Improvements

D. PIUMERANO "T in Carpenter."Bipetlenced alterations, repair work,out-lnilde. SH m i l t BH 7-8(91.

WORIUMO MAM'S contractor—Altar*atlom. additions, palntlnj. masonrr.all Uiose little lobs. LO «17U.

Insurance

ALLSTATB INSUItANCIl CO.—Auto,aeddsnt, homa. flra' Insuranca.. Lowrates. Call Jons P. UoHugh. AteoLRU LlOBt

Landicaplng-Gardcnlng

LAWN MAINTENANCE!. Bototlllltlg.asor,. u j r t ^ ^ m

Painting and Decorating

LOUIS CABSAN-Painter, decorator,paparhugsr, 25 years experience, i tcaapln Ara I B 1*1701 attar • p.m.

Painting and DecoratingCARL B. JONES— Painting and dec-orating. Oeneral contracting. Freeestimates Cnll BH 1*4343. 24 hoursFINE INTERIOR and eaterlor paintIng. decorating, and paper haneln*.Estimates cheerfully given. IV. WStiles. HI 3.2551!.

Radio-Television RepairA. C. BADIO A TELEVISION C O -123 Shrewsbury Ave. SH 1-47C9. SERV-ICE WHILE YOU WAIT

Roofing, Siding and InsulationIMulatlon A Biding Corp. Certl'irrljolina-Manvllls contractor, PR Q-S407or Adam Llntm&yer AT 1-0302.OLSON CO. INC. — Roollng. Biding AInsulation. Installed and guaranteedfor 10 years. PR 50705—AT 10540

Tel. Anwerlng ServiceT1BD TO YOUR (elepnona? Let uaanswer (or youl 24 bour aervlce. Telophon« Anawsrlng Service, SH 1*4700.

Tils CeramicREMODffiUNO-nEPAlRS-AUDITlONS—New work, endofurea, all accessor-lea, floors, walls, celling. Decorativetiles to your order. Paul'a Tiling ServIce. CO 4-50.H.

Trucking1) A Q TRUCKING — Alt kind! oftruck Inc. Specializing In appliancedelivery. Pit 8-48U day or night.

Vacuum Cleaner Repair2 EMCTROLUXBalei Bervlce Supplies720 Manison Ave., AiBuiy Fatk. Forprompt homt tervte* or fr«« ctaeoltups i -rour Blwlroluz. call PR t-0681.

HELP WANTED-MALE

SEWING CONTRACTORS WANTED lorwork on chlldrens snow aults. car.coats, and dusters. Write "8EWINO"Boi 611, Red Bank...'LOWER DESIGNER — Experienced.Part-time, local flower shop. Write"Flowers", Box fill, Red Bank.ADVERTISING SALES PERSON —Part time. Promotion work.

SH 72534BARB EMPLOYMENT AOENCY

Qualified Personnel for o.uallty orders.17B Broadway. Long Branch. CA 2-4747.

CONSTABLE AUTHORIZESRelease of 28 rooma

of aood Used and NewFURNITURE

—For Unpaid Balance and Lena—From STORAGE WAREHOU8E

Delivery Cost $5 per load '

OUTFIT NO. 38 pc. Converttblt Llvtnj Room Outfit8 pc. Modern Bedroom Group& pc. Dinetto

PLUS — Renewed RefrigeratorUNPAID BALANCE $276t e r r a i ; 93 weekly, %$ dgwo

THRIFTWAREHOUSE

22 East Front StreetKeyport, N. J.

for appointment, dial CO 4-3023tort Hours: Monday thru Saturday9:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.U.Thundajr A Friday •venlngi 'tit 9:00

BLIP COVER OPERATOR — Expertenced only for fine nhop doing high-d a i s work. Pleaiant lunoundlngi.Good pay. Wrlt» VSlip,11 Box 811, RedBank.

TOP SOItr—Earicbed Nunery. $3.50par yard delivered. K ft H Construction.12 Broad St., Red Bank. SH 7-2300.

SITUATIONS WANTED, FemaleWILL HELP WITH PARTIES, d Inner*.or other occailoni. Babysitting alto,

t homekaeplnt. Call flH ISMLUISUABLB WUMAN wlIilM to Uk«

car* of ctilldrcD in tier Roma. 157-ple Ava 8H 7-2609- Will board.

TWO-PIECE living room suite ifoam lubber cushions, (272; FruKwoodchina breakfront, JZ4B; Hide-A-Eed|223; dry •Irk, |Sfl; nine-piece HeywoodkVakofleld rock maple dining roomlulte, W79; five-piece antique whitebedroom suite with canopy bed, $358.Albert Burdgo & Son (next to Stetn-bach'i parking lot), 21 Clay St., RedBank- Open dally 9-13, 1-5. Wednesday

nd Friday evenings, 7-9.

MATURE WOMAN desires part-timeemployment a i aecretary-itenogrtpher-typUt. OS 1-0005.

TALL BOY'S BU1T — Dark blue. Idealfor graduation. fl5. Call evenings,SH 1-7351.

TYPING DONE AT HOME, on IBMelectric. Call Mrs. Wynb«f,

SH 1-5195

OAS STOVE — Like new, reasonable58 Wallace St., R td Bank. 8H 73220.

COLORED WOMAN wlihea part-timejob. Morntogi. CaU 8H 1-5128. Calafter 5 p.m. '

BABY SITTERExcellent reference!

' Call 0 9 1-3068

SITUATIONS WANTED, MalePART TIME MULT1LJTH 1250 opera-tor. Xerography. Evenlngi and week-ends, fill M023 after 5 p.m.THREE RELIABLE BOYS availablefor yard, attic, cellar cleaning. Generaloutdoor work. Call evening!. SH 7-1869.HANDY MAN with pick-up truck, seekidally or weekly work. Alio clean:cellar*, garages, yardi , atttci. SH 7-2357FULL TIME LICENSED real estatetalesman available. Honmouth Countynative. Thirty yeara eiperleoce. Ambltlou*. likeable. Experienced RumsonFair Haven, Little Silver. ShrewsburyRed Bank. References. Phone RU 1I2fi2, or Write "Ambltloui" Box 511Red Bank.

FINANCIALBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

MAJOR OIL COMPANY has «ervtc«nation for leas* in Red Bank. Moderateinvestment necessary (or sotch andequipment only. Good opportunity lorsales minded person. Call MI 3-01009-5 p.m.. or BR 8-0388 after 7 p.m..MOBILE SERVICE STATION for leaieFront Street and Globe Court. RedBank. Reasonable rent. Limited Invest-ment. - Excellent opportunity. 9-5 callCA 2-80*9. after 7 call SH 7-5918,WILL INVEST — Or buy small busi-ness, with living quartern Write "Busi-ness" Box 511, Red Bank.

CAPITAL WANTEDNewly established electronic producmanufacturer seeks risk capital for mImmediate growth requirements. Dlrectorship or other form of partlclpation ponlble at this time. Send nameand phone number for a confidentialInterview with officer of corporation to•PRESIDENT," B o i 511, Red Bank.

ESTABLISHED reducing salon. Fullyequipped Shore area. Regultr client*)plus valuable distributorship. Owneisacrificing ror quick sale, PR 6-ZOW,S-5.TAVERN WITH INCOME PROPERTY— Four apartments, guaranteed year-round rentals. Living quartera for owner Bar, fixtures, equipment new. Hoiwater hea t ButldlnB nine years old.jiO.000 bays land, building, business.For information call Sehwelzer Agency,295 Main Sf-, Keanshurs. 787-0123.

'MORTGAGES

CASH NOWFirst. Second;, Third Morusfe i

Homs Improvement Loan,Ons Day Servlcs

AMERICAN FUNDINSSHa-l-fa'cla M702

Out Ptrsonal HepresmtaUT« WillCall At Your Horns

Wa Say Yes Whers Olhirs ran

INSURANCEDISSATISFIED with present InsuranceWant a better deal? Call Dunn Xnsurance Agency, BH 1-5533.

YOU'RE IN THE VJGR* BEST com-pany when you carry property insur-ance with us.

CROWELL AGENCY41 E. Front St.. Red Bank, SH 1-403?"Savings to policy holders ilnce 1870"

INSTRUCTIONELECTRONIC COURSES lor men amwomen and especially for men over 3yesra of age. Learn a skill which Ineeded in this modern age of ours. It'never too Into to better one's position 1life, Enron now and start clasieMarch 20th. For further Informationphone, visit, or write Electronic In-stitute of Efttontown. 216 Broad Bt,Batontowti. LI 2-4^53.

MERCHANDISEFOR SALE

HAMMONDORGAN STUDIO

of ASBURY PARKAll Models on Display

HAMMOND EXTItAVOICB S «!THOMAS SPINET ORGAN » 650

SEVErtAI. WURLITZEIt ORGANSAT CLEARANCE PRICES

SALES AND SERVICERENTAL AND INSTRUCTION

Open Dally Till 0 — Saturday Till 5:30COOKMAN AVE. AND MAIN ST.

PR 5-9300RUG3. NEW from Armstrong woolenmitle In original wrappings. Bolide andtweeds with non-akld foam rubberbnckK. TorrJflo savlnga. private home.SB 2-0540LAMP SALE—Discontinued numbersShowroom ot Tower Craftsmen, 10Chestnut St., Ked Bank. Open dallyWednesday until 0 p.m., Saturday untilnoon,TYPEWRITERS, ADDING machines,All makes new or used. Qu&ranteed.Low as |23. Serplco's. 101 Mon mouthSL Next to tbeatir . 611 7-O4U.UKLAX-ACiaOR — Hardly used,less than half price. CaU

BH 7-5852REDUCING MACHINE — Stauffer, liftaervlce. practically new. Cost |3 l5 willaccept $175 or best offer. SH 1-1636.UNPAINTED FURNITURE—Cash antcarry sale.- Floor models at half priceor less (second floor). Drawers, chests,book shelves, cabinets, etc, Red Bank.Lumber, 0 Wall fit., Red Bank. SH 1-5500.WE BUY AND SELL anything andeverything. Glva the higtiest prices.CaU William Let? Furniture. Inc., Hwy,35, Mlddlctown. BH 1-3213, Open eve-nings till 0 p. m.UPRIGHT PIANO — $30: small corktall p i ano / $300; five-piece, breakfaslBPAB. $25 to $50. Keivlnator refrigerator,$75; occasional chairs, $39, maplft bun Ibeds, $69; Hotpolnt refrigerator, (125two-plccn cherry living room suite. $00Albert Burdge * Son (next to Stein-bach's parking lot). 24 Clay Bt., RedBank. Open dally 0-12, 15, Wednesdayind Friday evenings, 7-9.

LUMBER SPECIAL(CASH AND CARRY)

3x4-6' . . '. . - 34c each2x4-7* ™ " —^.. . .T. , . , . - . ' 39o eaoh2x1-8' -.. ,~^—. « c each

B-lO'-ia'-l-i'-tB'-lS'-SO* „ „ . „ _ Oo'perunning ft.

SHELVINO - 1x12 any quanlty pickedup l iHo per running ft.

RED BANK LUMBER0 Wall St., Rtd Bask

EH 1-5500 '

FOR SALE

.KG ENla!) aftSunday.1731.

DESIRE STEADY TENANT for three-room apartment. FurnlAtjed or unfur-llshed, Suitable tor single person or;ou|)le. On hus line, hnlf inlte north

or Red Bank. Rent *T5 monm. Call811 1-8331.A1TRACTIVE UNFURNISHED modernrooms, heat. No PPti. Adulta only. Ret-•rencfH. SH 7-3633.^EANSBimo — Newly decorated 3'4-•oom apartment. Heat and hot waternupi-Ifeit. |0ri month. Inquire 114 Beach-way Apt. 6 rear.

ALTENBURGPIANO HOUSE

Rent A Piano$12 por Month

KNABB3, MASON-HAMLIN, aOHlIEn,CABJ-B-NELSON. KVERETT. 8TECK.Cookmaa Ave. A Main at., AtDury Pk.

Open dally till » 8aL tin 5:30PR 5-9301

CUSTOM CRAFT foldlog maple crib.Urge size, good condition, $33, Bee anyweekday p .m. 13B Crestvlew Dr., Mid-dletown facross from Ucdulre 'a OroveMrs. Salinger,TRADE IN your old nirniiure wim nodown payment and get a n t n t&rlofor dlnint room set at sale prices. Wll-lam Left Furniture Inc.. Hwy 35,

Middle town, SH 1-3213, open eveningtill 9 p. m.MA88AGK EQUIPMENT — For rentor sale. F r e e delivery. SOUTH JERSEYSURGICAL. 811 7-2611.HOUSE NEED PAINTING* Forget inow, and forever, let Frown's initalthe most durable, beautiful and care'free aluminum sldlnr in the world-Let Prown'a Install Hasting InsulatedAluminum siding. 10-year guarantee, nodown payment, take yeare to pay.Prown's, 32 Broad St.. 8H 1-7500.

ATTENTIONLUMBER BUYERS!

-.01 Vic lin. ft29c eacl:44c eachSQc eacl

SPECIAL2x1—8* Redwood _.G9c eacBUY THE PROFESSIONAL WAYSO lb. bag Oardtn TJme -...35c eacj

All Prices F.O.B. Yard

LITTLE SILVERLUMBER COMPANYSycamore Avenue Little Silver

(At The Railroad)

SH 1-7800HOUSE SHUTTERS '— B0 cents up,e tc Antique Shop. 117 Main St., (nextPort Monmouth Flrehouse).SLEIGH BED — Stx-drawer chestAntique mahogany. $30. 811 1-6392 afte5 p.m.FRENCH PROVINCIAL SOFA _ Foi__rubber, three-cushion, turquoise, Ilknew. Sit 1-4061.DIAMOND IUNO — Slightly over on<carat, platinum set tins: with two baguettes, $600. RU 1-1084.FIREPLACE 8CREEN — 38x31 willandlrona; 60" wood desk, playpen, carbed, IS q t . canner used once. 8H 7-0976.

NAUOAHYDEFOAMART

EATONTOWNPIANOS — Save $200 or more off lfiprice pn brand new 88 note spimpianos.'Ten year guarantee. Come «eand lava. We service what wo sell.Tenzer'i i lui io Etore, 306 Main St.,Lakewood. FO 3-2190.

TWO-PIECE living room set and eaichair, two sets Blip covers, coffee tabllamps. All for $50. 0 8 1-0122L0VE8EAT — Bought 195S for $149.Barrel bach, foam rubber cushions,beige, perfect condition, $76. AT 1-3579,TWO GIRLS' COATS, Blze 4, one blue,one rose; Navy blue suit, white com-munion coat, boy's, size 8. 811 1-208'30 GALLON HOT, WATER heater.$25. Space hrnter. hpats four or flv«rooms, $10. 50 gallon nil d rum. $5.C.in be seen any (fay until 5 p.m. ItOhio Ave. . E. Keansburg.

LIVING ROOM SET — Dining roomset, kitchen and three bedrooms. Musisell, Come lo 98 Blncham Ave.. Humson. Wednesday and Thursday 1-4 p.m

ALUMINUM COMBINATIONSTORM WINDOWS

F R E E INSTALLATION

6 for $77Thru-channel tilt, triple Insert, trlpitilt action ! PROWN'S 33 BltOAD 8:RED BANK. SHadyslde 1-7500.

SEWING MACHINE in cabinet $25TV In cabinet S10. Call

SH 7-0965CHEST type rreczor. 8'4" long. Flrslbuyer $100. Also pizza own. LO 6'212ft until 5 p.m.GE REFRIGERATOR 11 cu. ft. Bendli

'ashing machine. Two 9x12 BrowihenlllP TUBS. Call SH 7-5325.

KITCHEN BET -- Formica top, fouileather covered chairs, best offer. 81:7-1632.HAN'S BOWLING ball and b a j , $10;hoy's roller skates, size 11, $8. SH 7-2-110.o Q A N — Gulbransrn spinet. Transitorlzed, model B with percuBBlon, nverberation. chlmcn. Original ownooriginal price $1645. Priced $1000 foImmediate tale. Call 53-21917.

21" WESTINOHOUSR CONSOLE TV$63. Inquire service Department, Eatoitown TV. Hwy 35, Eatontown. LI 2-0400SPECIAL, $6.50-Permanent Cold Wavem i r coloring $5. Iris. f)9 MonmoutSt., \t<\ Bank. SH 7-1651. No appolmmrnti neersunry.

MACHINERY FOR SALE10" METAL CUTTINO LATHE, Johnaon Horizontal Jlnmlciw with bull Mcoolant pump, Arbor presses, gens It Idrill prenMtK. ISO amp welder, mlllinimachines, time clock, radio and benrraws, chain hoists., %" electric drJlvoiding gauges and torches, geart

motors and air tools. We are vacattnfpresent location, no reasonable offeirefused. Shore Tool Supply. 371 Broadway. Long Branch. CA 2-732B." KE 12540. •

MERCHANDISE WANTEDPIANOS - Hlehest prices paid. H. Ten

ler. 306 Main RL Lakewood or FOzoroft 3-2190

USEDFULL-RIZE CRIB

SH 7-4603OLD HOUSE SHUTTERS — Plctur*frames, oil lamp*, glassware, etc,Wrlla 117 Main fit.. Port MonmouthOLD FURNITURE - Antiques, chins

glassware, art objects anil brlc-abrae. Immediate cash for anything andeverything. Ruscll'a. 25 East Front St.- " 1-1603.

PETS AND LIVESTOCKPAIR O F RED DACHSHUNDS, . ISmonths, brother and "later. Pedigree.AltC rejgJstered. Excellent <H*p68IUtin.Inoculated. Bub-standard size. Ret!dachshund puppy, 4->i months. Pedl(tree, eligible for AKC. paper trainedExcellent disposition. Inoculated. Substandard size. Call CA 2-3D25.

OEitWAN 6HKIM1ERD puppies. AKCreglittred. C h a m p i o n blood line,Wormed, Inoculations, black and stiveBH 1-8300.

PETS AND LIVESTOCK;BAGLE — Eight month!. Male, pedl-•« . »10. -

fill T-4285• Papere, two year male, nine

nonthe male and female. Weekendsinrt after 5 on weekdaya. Kilmer 0-9770.

'UGa —onthi1 f

MGLISH KP1UNOER SPANIELS,ter & p.m. weekday"), all day

13 Brown PI., Oakhurlt. CA 2-

REAL ESTATE FOR RENTAPARTMENTS

fURNlSIIEO - ONE. TWO AND Threeildroom ap&rtmenu. Heat and waterupplled. CA 0-1553.

ItiVBK LOCATION — 311 room«, bath,susinesa couple. No pete. Unlurnlihed.ji»5 monthly BH 1-0076.

HOUSES FOR SALE

'UKN1SHED — Three rooms, bath,unities, Parking, pr ivate en t rance . Hwyl;5. Hlnglc person preferred, or businesi:ouple. No pets. $72 SH 1-7079

PR l N O T B S p A C B ~ A P A R T M E N T B —V/t and 4U rooms. March, April, Mayoccupancy. SH 1-4850.

ATONTOWN — Three rooms amiath. Pr ivate en t r ance , large yard . J65iniith unfurnished. Adults. Malms. LI

i-OOM. '

HOUSE HUNTING? STOP NOW

We have a three-bedroom ranchwith moijern equipment and allmodern conveniences. Full base-ment, attached garage, wall-to-wall carpeting, large lot. Beauti-fully landscaped. In a perfectlocation. FulJ price $17,500. 4'^%GI mortgage can be assumed and$108 monthly pays all.

HIGHWAY 36

House in commercial zone. Fullprice $8,800. Priced right forquick sale.

CALL NOW

MATTHEW J. GILL"The Broker

Who Knows Middletown"ighway 35 Middletown

iS 1-3200 CO 4-5432JNFURNISHED — Four rooms, bath,icat, electric supplied. Referenca re-lulred. Arter 6 p .m. AT 1-Z653, 7th andiilllslde Ave., Atlantic Highlands

••URNlBHEn APARTMENT — All utlll-.les Included. Phone

BH 1-I08RKEYPORT—314 rooms next lo SI. Joaeph'a Par i sh . Heat , hot ws t e r . Near

' ols, bus and shopping KE 1-1172.

T H R E E F U R N I S H E D ROOMS—Prlvfltfent rance . Call after 6 weekdays . Saturday, Sunday any t ime, a n 1-0708.

;OUR TWIN SIZE BEDROOMS

ipacious living room, fireplaceaay window, formal dining roomlarge size kitchen, den, recreationbasement, attached two-car ga-age, enclosed porch, select adIress, situated on park-likeirounds with many century oldihade trees. Amazing value ai29,50O.

WALKER & WALKERR E A L T O R S

Highway 35 Shrewsbury

SHadyside 1-5212

Open 7 DaysFOUR-ROOM APARTMENT —• Partlyfurnished. Middletown. Very nice. Chil-dren fnvlteri. Call liorothy Swartz 767-2703 after 3 p.rnATLANTIC HIGHLANDS — Three-room apartment. Available now. Allutilities. «»0 per montlr. AT 1-3051.FURNISHED APARTMENT — Threerooms, bath. Utilities Included. CallSH 7-3S76.THREE ROOMS —• UNFURNISHED

lent electricity supplied. Call 8H7-22B7.UNFURNISHED — Three rooms. Heatand hot water. J85 per month. Calafter 6 p.m. OS 1-28C5.

CAPE CODOnly $400 cash and $80 per monthmys cute, five-year bid, three-iedroom and finished attic 01.00x100. Screens and storms, iitcal at only $12,500.

BEACH AGENCYHwy. 35 Middletowi

OS 1-2727

THREE ROOMS — Furntahed. Electrickitchen, private bath and entranct, Aritllitles Included. SH 1-0106.

THREE ROOMS •— And bnth. unlnlihed. Utilities Included, privateranee. $90 per month. SJI I*55t>6.

FOUR-ROOM — Furnished apartmentCentrally located. Private bath and entrance Adults only, no peta, SH 1-2715.

UTTLE SILVER — Cape Cod. Llvlmroom, dining room, kitchen, four bedrooms. Near echool. $14,400 mortgageassumption, IWo Interest rate S19.&U1]

Schanck Agency

TWO-ROOM — Furnished apartment,Centrally located. Private bath and en-trance. Adults only, no I>etn. SIT 1-2715.PORT MONMOUTH — Four-room furnlihed apartment. Ail utilities, adultionly. 787-4156.NURSE AND SOLDIER husband lef

west. Threa roomi, bath, all Im-rementi. Car room. SH 7-0065. J-"

P.m.THREE ROOMS — Furnished. L l Lroom, bedroom, kitchen, bath. Separateentrance. 120 Wilaon Ave., Por t Mon-mouth. 787-1483.FIKBT FLOOR — Bedroom with Hide-A-Bed. private bath, full kitchen, brightclean, comfortable,' reasonable rate 02Wallace St. QH 1-5352.NEWLY DECORATED apartment, bedroom living room, kitchen, bath andprivate entrance. Hwy 35. Middletown.Couple preferred. BH 1-9431 after 5 p.m.

RED BANKDeluxe beautiful four-room (two-bed-room t. Immediate occupancy. |12fl.B0.Five-room apartment for May $140,New garden apartments. Lovely envronment. Spacious rooms and closetiFree parking.

MADISON GARDENS132 South St. •> SHarlyi-ildft 1-763:FURNISHED APARTMENT—Couple orBlngie. March 15. Yearly. 7 MnmnouttiRd.. MILLH0C8E. Oakhurst. PR 5-6547.THREE-ROOM UNFURNISHED apament. Good location. CaU 8H 7-0591 o:BH 1-2173.TWO OR THREE-ROOM FURNI8HED— Linens, utilities, parkin* Included.Desirable neighborhood. Adults. 89 Pro.pect Ave. SU 1-268B.

COMMERCIAL RENTALSSTORE FOR RENT

On White SLCall BH 71100

LONG BRANCH — O/fice apace, tltwo-room suites or pan be combineinto one. Will redecorate to ault. Extremely reasonable rent with ail mimic,•upplled. Excellent opportunity for anyone "trying to Bet started." Lncatnat 191-191 Broadway, Long BranchSAMUEL TEICHER, AGENCY, LI 23500 or U 2-3501.

BTORE FOR RENT — 2O'x30' In growInir shopping center In Haslet. CaHIHcreit 2-82S7.OFFICE — For business or profesBluse. on Hwy 35. Large parking area.Rent |175 per month. Call ShorewayRealty. CO -4-7010.

HOUSES FOR RENTWIDE SELECTION OF RENTALS -

Furnished ami unfurnished. Immedate occupancy. Samuel Teichar Agency,Oceanport Ave., Qpeanport. Cal) or dla,U 2-3500 or Llw2-3Sni.MANY FURNISHED RENTALS - Irall prices and sizes. Ella WiltshireA«ncy, 1460 Ocean Ave.. Sea, Bright.SB 2-OOOi Open leven days.flliltUWGDUItY Unfurnished. Fn.,bedrooms, two baths, living and dlninjrooms, nice kitchen, attic, banement,hot water oil heat, attached garage,nice plot. Iteferpncen required. LeaBeI1MI.O0 per month. Joseph G. McCueRealtor, HI! 1-0111.APPLEBItOOK -"-Three-bedroom rancmost (Iralrabln are;u March I occupan-cy J150 prr month. ThompBon & Bar-tell. Hwy IIS. Mirja!rInwjv_81IJ^COQ-

ngp

iWORioFlY COLONIAL -- Nealink River. Thrive liwlroomii, sunphot water oil heat, attached gaAvailable April 1. SH 7-IH1B.THREE-BKDHOOM hoiiiiei Av a 11 a hMay 1 Rent ?J25 montlily. 52 LocuAve., Red Bahk: Call TR 5-3900 for apolntment *~ —EAST KEANSniJRG -- Three roomiwith bath and gun heat. Adults pfprred. Call 7S7-:i5RC. ^ _ _ _ _

WANTED TO RENTCARRIAGE HOUSE—Or garage apartment two bed rooma required, preferably on ealate or near water. Rumson.Hod Hnnk men- Call 0-5. Donald Camphell. Df -t-2300. New York City.YEARLY RENTAL — RiimnOn. threor four bed rooma. around J200. Sweene;

•ncy. RU 1-14D2. ^________

FURNISHED ROOMSFURNISHED flOOMR

Callfill 7-26W

RED BANK — River location. Largefurnished room. (Jcntleman only. Convenicnt SM 1-0076.COMFORTABLE FRONT roam In prvote home. Wallace St. Suitable forbiialnens peraon. $10 week, SH 3--1S43.ROOM FOR RENT In aeml-privatfhninc. Nice nelghborlKtotl. Car accommoiiatlon. For information call SH10114.Ilir.llLANnS — Clean aiiiRle ruumn. $to *If> weekly, double KKMUB. $11 weedly. Cmnmuntty Ultrhrn^. Inisen pndoor MONMOIJTH HOTEL, ft NnvealnAVP. HI 3-1113. If no answer, call A1-0*88. __ELPKRLY PfiRSONfl~"'BOAlVn~~A"NCARE — Wayside renldpnce. West ParlAVP., Wayalrip. New building. Compeltlvft rfltPit. KE 1 -OSfO.31NOLE ROOMS Clran and comfort

able. Reasonable rote. Garage. GenHe men preferred. 02 Wallace S t BH *539Z

REAL ESTATE FOR SALEHOUSES FOR SALE

'-"IAN REN T"RumHon — Small cottage with riverights. Living room, kitchen, bedrqombath, basement. Taxea 569.50. Nice loJ8,M0.

The Dowstra Agency91 Bast Front St. Red Banl

BH 18700

S Linden PI.SH T43S7

IJNCKOFT — ThrcQ bedroom »plllevel. Near parkway, schools and ihojping area. Assume -I1', per cent morgage. Phono SH 7-3598.VAIL HOMES — Two-bedroom bung)

Oil heat, good -condition. Call Jt

I J M I G E FAMILY? Hera'a your hornFour-bedroom, aplit level, l',i bathiplayroom, dining area. Clean Interloend well landscaped, nice neighborhoodOwner transferred. Will iell lor 918,000811 7-085O.

ASSUME MORTGAGE: on eight-roomplit. Only $2500 down. M mile fro

Red Bank. Four bedrooms, two fu!baths, carpeting, recreation room, fbasement, storm wlndowi, attached grage. P r inc ipa l only. SH 1-2322.dlate occupancy, tow down paymeniSeven roomi. 1H baUi. enclosed Jaloale porch, attached garftie. Phon» O

OMO

MIDDLETOWN — Corner property 21!x 126'. Near new school, Ideal Tor professional man. Nino room, 1% bath«plH level. $2T.B00. OS 1-2843.NAVBSINK — EiRht-room house, goobasic coitdltlon. Keedi tome rep&lriOns heat. Priced lor quick sale. CAT 1-3604.TWO BUNGALOWS — To be moLocated 132 West End Avt.. LoBranch. Call CA 0-1415.TEN P E R CENT down payment, Mo<ern thren bedroom home, attached grage. Ideal neighborhood for youn,family. Spnclous living room, moderc&t-ln kitchen, tile bath, expansion ft

xtra bedroom. Low taxes. BhrcwsbuBorough. FHA appraisal ordered. An!Ing J15.900. Reasonable offers conshered. Hal] Brothers, Realtor*, 813 IURoad, Fair Haven.

LONG BRANCH •— Upper BroadwajDistinctive older home; eight roomithree baths, convertible for many puiposes. Excellent condition. Moving oiof state. Reasonable. CA 2-5724.MIDDLETOWN—New Monmouth areiSplit level, three lied rooms, playrool>4 hnthi. Two extra rooms and baready to finish. Carpeting. On ',4 acnHclmols almpplng near by. Principal

!ly. OS 1-2333.BUY rURECT from transferred. LI

ft owner. Must sell 3'4 year-old si:room ranch on. one acre. 20' bullt-lkitchen, separate dining room, threlargo bedrooms, two baths. Fine loctlon. SH 7-30DLVAIL HOMES — Three bedrooms, flmonth after down pnyment. Utllltleieluded. Call LI 2-3551.RED BANK — Foilr-bedroom home. SiJames Parish, on bus line. Lot 100x201Call SH 1-S970.SHREWSBURY -- Occupancy AprilModern two-bedroom Capo Cod, expnslfin atlic, attached earne**. Rnrllntit h'water oil heat. $101 per month Incluiinpr taxoH. SH 1-7851.

WE DARE YOU *~ Step ln«M« oilous IIVIDR four-be-1 room Colon!ic. You will not find another hon-

has low Uxcr Kooil locntlontime schools and low price of J16.B9Atlnihpil Raragc. ens hot water h«many extras. Prlnclpata only. BH7D60.

TWO-FAMILY house. H block to tovS12.000. Will tnke bnck small mortpaCall nt 29 Tlnton Ave., Eatontown.

DOWN PAYMENT Buys ttarming Cnpe Cod Colonial. Two IanI I rooms. Comhlnntinn kitchen dlnetinee for two more bedrooms ai

mth. Full dry hasruipnt. Wondcd lo'Solid Intilnnutahic vnlue nt J12.RO0. Rm

I] M. Itnrus RpnMnr.i, fiOO R1 * RFair Hnvpn. BH 7-4.W2.

IfAZLET - fllx-ronm ni'llt level Incellent condition. Three bedrooms,

it Ms, alumlnuni combination utorwindows ami clnnm, S700 mtniinunipayment. J1S.750, Carllon H. PoMniRealtor, SB Hwy 3f), Keyport. CO 4-191

RED BANK REGISTERWed., March 15, 1961—23

HOUSES FOR SALECOME PRODUCING COLONIAL —

right living room, dining room, TViom. den, heated sunroom, three bed-•orris, l ' i baths, screened porch,arrlage house with live-room apart-Lent, screened porch, <*arajje, Accel-iry building of two rooms with In-

potential. Acre of landscaprdds In West Lonj Rrancl^ $27,500.

awrence J. SchillingSpring St. Red Bank

SHadyslde 7-1121RUMSON RANCHER

Iking distance to ichooli. Thre*rooma, paneled den, ipacloui 11 v-room, modern kitchen with br*ak-

: arpa. Piaster walla. Only 12 yearid. -117,500.

A. Fred MaffeonEALTOIt

!wy 35 ShrewsburySH 1-9333

NEEDED, includes all for (hitozy four-bedroom home; larje livingaom, kitchen, full basement. Thisouse has been freshly decorated andi ready for Immediate occupancy, Itan be yours for only 3100. per month,rice. J11.500. HARRY A. KEARNEY

SO NEEDED for this charming' Cap*>d on this premium lot; four bed-ioms, wllii built-in shelves and book-is«s; large living room and kitchen;ill basement. Monthly payment* of109 Include* nil. Full price, $1-1,500.AURY A KEARNEY & CO., Rt. 35,[Mdlelown. OS 1-0600

1REW8BURY — Split level, cuitomillt. Corner lot 80x150. Three bedroom*t'lng room, dining room, modern kltch-n, larse family room, 1','j baths, fullellar and garage. Landscaped, split-ntJtnp. Near school, church and bus.21,500. Joseph Hoffman Builder. 62

•dins lid., Red Bank. 8H 1-1607.

MDDLETOWN — Seven-room 1!£ bathipllt. pver halt acre, corner property,^all fence, patio, two-car garage. GInortgage. $1B.9OO. OS 1-1441 or 7S7-1825.ARITAN TOWNSHIP — Custom-built

iome Two bedrooms, living room, ici-•nce kitchen, ceramic tiled bath, doublecarage. oil hot water heat. 5900 down.0-year loan available. $12,500. Carlton

[I. PoIInK, Realtor. 38 Hwy 36, Key-.ort. CO 4-1918. *

LOTS AND ACREAGEWEST END — Lot In smart neighbor-hood 100x125*. Priced right at i-i.OOO.Call CA 2-356*.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTYMODERN

BRICK FACTORY BUILDINGOffices, Showroom

RaJlroad aiding, truck platform. 50.000sq. ft. Ample parking. Bui ftCllltlei

DOWSTRA AGENCYRed Bank

HEAL ESTATE WANTEDLIST VOUR HOME WITH WALKER A

WALKER the otfics that offers com*pleto service. VV« ink* houses ID trade,w» tin ance, w« appraise, and Deil or ailw« sell. Walker A Walker. Real Saute,nsurance. Open 7 days. Shrewsbury

office. BH 1-621Z Rariun ofiici. CO 4-3212.

WANTEDLots, acreage, farms, hornet to HolmdalMarlboro and vicinity. Call or writeWalter J. Whalen; Real Eitate, 729First St., Weitfleld, N. J. AD 2-2729.

E0AL NOTICE

NOTICE OF BALKOn Thursday, March 23, l M l . ' a t 8:00

_ m . , I will Bell at public auction onbehalf of The Monmouth County Na-tional Bank a t S3 Broad Street, RedBank, N. J. ona 1D59 Ford G&l&xle,Tudor Convertible, Serial No. C9EC-197405 tor default In a. Chattel Mort-eaRe, made by Bernard Ward J r . Saidcar may be seen at 1-A Weit BergenPlace, Red Bank, New Jersey.

8 . P. BUCINA. JR.Collection Manager

March 15 " 12.70

9-300SIIKItIFI"S 8AL15

IOR COUUT OF NEW JERSEVCIIANCKUV DIVISIONMO.NMOUTH COUNTY

.Docket No. F 811-40Mainstay Federal Saving! and Loan

Association, etc.. Plaintiff v s : FrankW. Crawford, et als., Defend*nti

By virtue of a writ of execution Inthe above stated action to me di-rected, I ah all expose for sale at pub-lic venduc, at, the Court Houift In theBorough of Freehold, County ol Mon-moutb. New Jersey, on Monday, thnthird day of April. 1961, at 2 o clock,p . M, prevalllnB Time.

All the following tract or parcel ofland and the premises hereinafter par-ticularly described, situate, lylnc andbeing In the Township of Middletownin the County of Monmouth and Stateof New Jersey:

BEING Easterly half of Lot No. 76.ml all of Lots 72, 73, 74 and 75,

BEGINNING at a point In the south-irly line of Went front Street, said

point being 03.00 feet distant on acourse of North R2' Hi' 40" East fromthe Intersection of the southerly Una ofWest Front Street with tha easterlyline oT Dow Avenue aa shown on a••Map of Section One, Red Bank Man-or, Mldrtletown Township, MonmouthCounty, New Jersey" and filed In thaMonmouth County Clerk's orfice onJune 6, 192R; thence (l> North 62* 08'40" Eait along the southerly line ofWelt Front Street, D0.00 feet to apoint, said point being the northwest-erly corner ot Lit No. 71 as shown onthe aforesaid map; thencp (^i South27' 51' 20" East, along the westerly"ino of Bald Lot No. 71. 100.00 feet tohe southwesterly corner of said LotNo. 71. thrnec »3> South G2* OS1 40"West, parallel to ihe southerly line ofWest Front Street. 00.00 feet to apoint; thence (4i North 278 51' 20"Went, 100 00 fort lo the point andplace of Beginning.

BolnR Intended to describe all ofLots NOB. 72, 73, 74, 75 and one halfof No. Id nil as"shown on the above-mentioned map.

Being commonly knnwn and desig-nated as No. 63!) West Front St.,River Plaza, Middletown Township,Ne1 Jer*

Ths approximate amount of the Judg-ment tn be satlRMrd by nald snle Isthe sum or Sfl.K.'iOO together with thecosts of t'-'i sale.

IltA E. WOLCOTT, Sheriff.Dated February 21, 1D61.neinslHc. Cormvpl). Mausner *

Carotenuto. Attys.Mar. 8, 15. 22, 29 $42.84

QUICKIES By KEN REYNOLDS

"That cleaner in the Red Bank Regiiter Want Adt malcetma ilck—he never gives me an excuie to buy newclothej!"

24—Wea, M.rcl. 15, 1961 RED BANK REGISTER

Added Tuition Bill GreetedBy a Moment of Silence

RED BANK — Bills totaling$37,164.7^ {or additional tuitioncharger for 1959-60 have beennailed to the five school dis-tricts which send their studentsto Red Bank High School.

$4,401.79, and Holmdel Township,SU95.94. t

the number of pupils from eachdistrict attending the high school.

A two-year period is set duringAn additional tuition charge forj which the affected boards can

the 1958-59 year totaled $32,377.-07 for the same five districts.

Higher CostsThe additional charge results

from high school operating costsexceeding estimates, thus makingthe per pupil tuition rate higherthan originally set by the RedBank Board of Education.

For the 1K9-«O year, the tuitionrate was set at $561 per pupil.Following a local and stats audit,the final rate was found to be$604.93 per pupil.

For the sending districts these•re the additional charges'for

pay off the additional charge.In Arrears

William E. Fifth, secretary ofthe Red Bank Board of Educa-tion, said Little Silver andShrewsbury Township still have si year,not paid for additional tuition ratecharges for the 1953-59 schoolyear. In that period,' the auditshowed Shrewsbury Township'sadded charge was $10,879.63. andLittle Silver's was $10,722.54.

Additional charges paid by thej remaining districts were Shrews-bury, $5,349.18; Eatontown, H -249.54, and Holmdel, $1,176.18.

was raised to 4550.28 per pupil.Withdrawing

Both Eatontown and theShrewsbury Township school dis-trict will withdraw their highschool students—with the excep-tion of seniors — at the end ofthe current school year. The stu-dents will attend Monmouth Re-gional High School in Septem-ber.

j For the three remaining send-ing districts the 1961-62 tuitionrate has been established at S768per pupil, an increase of $163over the current rate Of $805.

Mr. Firth said the rate wasplaced at a high mark in anattempt to avoid additionalcharges to the sending districtsfollowing the audit for the I960-

1959-60. Little Silver $12,814.38; During the 1958-59 year, theShrewsbury Township, $12,410.23; j tuition rale was set at $510 perShrewsbury, $6,242.45; Eatontown, pupil. The adjusted rate was

HANGING PICTURESPictures should be hung as

near eye level as possible. If thereis to be a grouping of pictures,the bottom group should be ateye level.

LincroftRev. William J. Mills ot the

local Presbyterian Church andRev. Harlan Durfee of the West-minister Presbyterian Church ofMiddletown attended an all-dayconference at New BrunswiciMonday sponsored by the UnitedPresbyterian Church.

Harvey Ave., Is. spending . thespring Vacation' at home fromJohn the Baptist School, Mend-ham.

It adds up! More and morepeople use The Register ads eachissue because results come fas-ter.—Advertisement.

The Women's Association of theFirst Aid Squad is sponsoring aSt. Patrick's dance in LincroftInn Saturday, starting at 8:30p.m. The music will be provided N 'y]by Bud Dillon's orchestra. Mrs.H, Morton Jones is chairman.

The Holy Name Society of St.Leo the Great Catholic Churchwill hold a Communion breakfast

I Sunday after the 8 a.m. massin our Lady of Fatima Hall. .

Jeffrey Mangel, son of Mr. andMrs. Roland Mangel of NewmanSprings Rd., was « surgical pa-tient In Riverview Hospital.

Kathleen Lennert. daughter ofMr. and Mrs. Andrew, Lennert ofParkview Ter., celebrated herseventh birthday Sunday. Herguests were Roseann Onarato,Jane Stewart. Elizabeth and Kar- K L _en Colao, Nina Ward, Mary Rose KurtKotran, Gwen Walk, Laurie Dem-ko, Synda Persson, Patty Reale,Tim Fenderson and Drew Len-nert.

Diane Mutchall, daughterMr. and Mrs. Frank Mutchall of

id1"?

Mrs. Frank Studor of Syracuse,is spending a week with

her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.and Mrs. E. Douglas Brandt,Marlu Farm.

Mrs. Anton Kurt of Roma Courthaj returned from Jersey Citywhere she visited her sons andtheir families, Mr. and Mrs. Alvln

and Mr. and Mrs, Harold

St. John Island, smallest of theth'ree principal American VirginIslands, looks today much as it

when Columbus discoveredthe Islands in 1493.

of did

Farm LoansShow Gain

FREEHOLD — John P.nor. supervisor for MonmouthCounty, said there has been apickup in activity since the Farm-ers Home Administration added50 mlUiorradllarrlasTmqfiOi tofunds available for building amrepair loans which farmers canobtain at a 4- per cent interestrate, Pay back periods run aslong as 33 years. : : •

Mr. O'Connor said a log Jamof applications was broken 'the government made! the .—--money available. Throughput the njc|P?lnation, he said loans are beingprocessed at the rate of about 5million dollars a month—a speedexpected to be doubled soon;

The county supervisor said; lieexpects the main demand in Mon- »c i« lonmouth will be for loans for newconstruction. But, he added, farmers also may use this credit forrepairs and remodeling of homes,installation of pressure water sup- crestply and heating systems or new Coralbathrooms, and' alterations , to spent

bami uf l other service build-ings. " *;"••••

Owners of farms producing ttl«a»t $400 worth of'Commoditiesfor sale o* home use are eligible

O'Con- for the loam..

HolmdelLaurel Ave. win be closed for

_ TO months, starting today toraise the road four feet above itspresent level,' and install a cul-verts ..• , , . .. .. .

Members.of-this "township Com-'wheji rnlttee will attend a dinner meet-

M w ing-of the Monmouth'County mu-nicipal Association In Old Or-chard Country Club tonight.

Daniel S. Ely, township clerk,will attend a dinner meeting ofthe Monmouth County Clerks As-sociation at the American Hotelin Freehold Friday.

Mr.- and Mrs. Stanley Stilwelland son Edward Stllwell of Deer-

La., have returned fromGables, Fla, where they

a Week.' • ' ,•

Troop 110CommitteeHas Session

LINCROFT - The committeaof Boy Scout Troop 110 met lastweek in the home of AlbertAstrhan, Norma Ave., to'drawup the annual charter and regis-tration review.

Fifty scouts are registered*There are a scoutmastei, And-rew J. Lennert, and four assist-ant scoutmasters, George KraussGeorge Engeldrum, Paul Mofflerand John Flockhart.

The committeemen are Mr.Aszmtn, chairman; John L. Kelly,Jr.. Lester Moran, Chester Hum-lnski, Carl Rosen. Ernest Li-mann, Charles Ennis, Paul Mof-fler, Albert P. Aszman, GeorgeKrause, George Engledrum, LeonRosen, Henry C. Handleman,Harry" Seylaz, Richard Devlin,John A. Mulheron, Louis D. Es-posito, William F. Cunnane, Fred-erick W. Koch and Russell P.Lean.

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