KHS-MHSClashFor 22ndTime Thursday Zone Ordinance Is ...

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MOflUDUTH CO. HISTORICAL A S 3 : . . .

WeekOne Section

14 Pages

COVERINGTOWNSHIPS OP •

HOLMDEL, MUJ1SONMARLBORO, MATAWAN

ANDMATAWAN BOROUGH

92nd YEAR — 21st WEEK HunbetNational Edilorlml AznKtaUoa MATAWAN, N. I, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1960 Hombet

i i w y Pr«i« AlioctaUmt- - — Single Copy Ten Cents

KHS-MHSClashFor22ndTime Thursday

Matawan High School's footballfarces will invade Keyport'sJSelc^at 11 a.m. Thanksgiving Pay f o rthe 22nd contest of their rivalry.This,will be the fourth straight

• "year the game will be held at Key--.-.-: port, dup, to.-_tvlatawan no longer

wishing to harard another "mudT 7 fiithT for bolh players and" specta-

"•' tors after the experiences or 1954and 1956. Matawan hearts delightin the thought that two years fromnow. In November. lMJthegamSwiirb'e" played"*! Ihe" new Mp ta-wan High School field with theHuskies fine new high school thenIn operation.

As for this year's' game,. It willbe a Matawan "home" game inthat the arrangements are' in thehands of Maroon and Steel coachesand this is Matawan's turn to keepthe receipts. This.has not been a

•'. good year for "home" games foreither team, as the athletic direc-tors have sought to keep down ex-penses by playing "most gamesaway, letting the other schools putup the guarantees and take the

• risk of losses if the weather is bador attendance falls off for someother reason.• Matawan has had the more ex-

dting season due to the odd neces-sity of patching together a schedulelast spring after all other schoolshad set their lists for 1960.

Rivals Drop MatavanBecause .of tho bad playing sur-

face of the Matawan field, suchlong-time Shore Conference rivalsas Toms River, Point Pleasant,takewoodandOcean Central drop-ped Matawan from their Bcheduleswithout even bothering to servenotice en the Matawan school auth-orities that such was taking place.Accordingly, whea the time for ex-changing contracts came, Matawanlearned that they were being leftOut "in the cold" and would have

" t o scurry around the state to find

9:30 aH: This service will be ,45intiftiles^long in order 16 allow allworshippers tb : attend the annualMatawan-Keyport, football game, Ifthey desire. Participating churchesare the First Baptist Church, theH f s r M e t h o o l s r t n u r c h and t h eFirst Presbyterian Church, Every-one is invited to attend.

somebody to play.MHS Athletic Director Barry

Rizio succeeded-in listing BrickTownship, the top team at theShore Oils yearr Leonla, the GroupII itate champions of 1359; BishopEustace, a i|ew parochial hightchool at Comdeo, and PennsaukenHigh School, 2 irtWJiehool posset-ilng ona ol the liner athletic plantsIn th» »t«te. The. result was a high-

- If interesting. toptbaU *<e««)n» >«iMatawan with, the changes'bring-

(continued on page eight)'

Property TaxesUp In Bayshore

Total RevenuesHit New High

Local property t a x e s in eightbayshorearea communities, com-puted as of July 1960, totalled $5,'313,334, an Increase over propertytaxes levied in 1959 of $648,602. Theflgurei were disclosed in a state-wide study completed by the Newjersey Chamber of Commerce.

Raritan Township showed t h elargest levy increase In the bay-shore area, $324,913,- bringing itsnew total to $1,183,667. In Raritan,

.... (continued on page thirteen)

L. H. Community ChurchTo Install Chimes

Madison Township Committee, Monday granted approval for the

Installation of chimes at LaurenceHarbor Community. Church. Thecommitteemen held the churchneeded no official sanction for this.

Mayor John Phillips jr. reportedthe application for a sanitary land-fill operation at Oschwald Brickworks was no longer being consid-ered with the big industrial parkopening up nearby.

The committeemeni declined toact on a recommendation from thezoning board of adjustment for avariance for a professional build-Ing on Throckmorton Lane, SayreWoods South, as a non-conforminguse in a residential zone. ThePershing Park, -Inc., New York,application goes back to the zoningboard.

Edward Tiemey, Edgar Rd.,Leone Estates, was promised ananswer in 10 days on the WestburyWater Co-, by Harold G. Smith,township attorney.

. The mayor invited the leadersof both parties to name'three-mem-ber committees to work with thetownship committee in adopting achange in the form of local gov-ernment in the township.

Reports Few Familiesleft For ^Adoption"

""SMr», . William Widman. socialservice chairman of the MatawanPublic Health; informs The Mata-wan Journal that there still are afew families for "adoption"(heir Christmas program.

Mrs. Widman says, "If you.wouldlike to help us In I this yearlyproject for the needy families ofMatawan Borough and Township,please contact the Health Centerany morning from 9 a.m. to 12o'clock boon at LO 6-1095."

The chairman also stated thatany good clean used Hothing forchildren will be appreciated great

NewAMfc* ,

Vorfc ' Turapik* Expreubate*, fraqwat daily Krvlct from

. RoEo't. Commuter* boy W trtpbooks and save.C O i f n w a t '

Fondvsktkcmll

-Thanksgiving ServiceA Union Thanksgiving Day serv-

ice will be held in the First Bap-tist Church, Main St., Matawan, at930 aH: This s e i c will be 459:30

, Main St., Matawan, atThis service will be ,45

16 ll ll

Public LibraryFor CliffwooJ

Former Center AtSchool Restored

Restoration of "a public libraryfor Cilffwood got underway Mon-day when the Matawan TownshipBoard of Education voted to allowuse of the old cafeteria room forsuch a purpose. The New JerseyLibrary Commission is to be calledin by the Cliffwood Parent-Teach-er Association, which is sponsoringthe project, to certify that thequarters proposed would be, suit-able for library purposes.

There was a library in a1 roomat the school some years ago butthe press of mounting school en-rollment caused the room - to betaken over for school purposes.Those books then were distributedthroughput the classrooms of theschool which were considered to beof use in education! The otherswere returned to the MatawanFree Public Library.

The old setup now will bo re-stored, according to announcementat the board meeting. The books"will be recalled from Matawan andfrom the school rooms to reconsti-tute the Clitfwood Public Library.However, officials of the Joint town-ship-borough . library commissionsaid yesterday no approach hadbeen made to them as yet aboutt h e m a t t e r . . •••••..-.•>' - . , • • • - •> , O : - :

Eiplnlns Paying Off Bondingti l, ; lo obtajnias^passae

tiotr for constructionschool to accordancef O t 18 V i t C

e oti »m a

with tinM i

ghvota

ol Oct. 18, Vincent C. DeMaio, theboard's attorney, announced thatthe $2,137,000 bonding to be under-taken would be paid off at the rateof $100,000 each year until suchtime as the interest commitmentshad dropped to where the principalpayments could mount to $125,000per year. A 20-year term is esti-mated to cover the financing.

Mr. DeMaio, reported that nego-tiations still are lo progress to ob-tain options on two of the four At-lantic Ave. parcels of land needed,by the board. The two main par-cels already are under option.

Regarding the other property,Mr. DeMaio said, "We are close.I do not think condemnation willbo necessary." The attorney saidthe remaining options probablywill be signed shortly after com-

(continued on page thirteen)

Twenty-Two IncludedOn Petit Jury Panel~

Twenty-two bayshore area resi-dents have been chosen for theMonmouth County petit Jury panelwhich will serve from Nov. 28 toDec. 9. They include George Bolte,Keyport; Nicholas DellaVoipe, Un-ion Beach; John E. Donnelly, Key-port; William S. Gibson, Keyport.

Also Adelbert M. Glllen, Keans-burg; James P. Glessan, Key-port; Frank Gray, Union Beach;Frank Hertle sr., Hailet; JosephF. Ilubbs, Hazlet; Lawrence G.Jacquemln, Cliffwood; Joseph F.Konder, Union Beach; Edward J.Mearsheimer, Matawan; Elmer F.Mien, Keansburg.

Also Edward McElvalne, Mata-wan: Andrew L. Nagrosst, Keans-burg; Mrs. Mary Peterson, Key-port; Robert A. Preston, Keyport;J. Leon Schanck sr., Keyport; MrsJulia Sltek, Keyport; Frank A.Ward, Union Beach; Harold J. Wit-zlgman, Union Beach, and GarlandB. Wood. Matawan.

Matawan High School Band Ready,For The Big Game NY Bus Run InSWS Contested

Convenience OrHazard Debated

. Residents of Snyre Woods SouthWere asked by Mndison TownshipMayor John Phillips jr. Monday toappear at the Dec. 5 township meet-ih« propafotfTo jjlve" their1 view onaiproposor by which PubtlcServiceNew ..York-tP-Atlantlc City buseswould circuit through the development on Gaul)'am) ThrockmortonRds. rather than slopping only attturffntranco-ijawa-oirRmTte a iirth>so streets, as they do now.

John laconettl, president of theSayre Woods South Civic Associa-tion, lold the fpvcrninK body thathis group hns nsked the chanlto 'ortho honellt of commutors, UIIKPSwould slo]) every 10 minutes ateach'corner 0:43 a.m. to 7:45 a.m.and qvory two hours the-rcufli'r onroute to New York. On the returntho two-hour schedule would bumaintained durltiij the duy hutthere would lie turn-Ins and stopsat each corner at 20-tnlnuui tnlor-vula In the evenlnu. hours (or thosereturning homo tn>m work,

Soverul residents gave Indcpcii-dent views of objection, mainly thatit would brlnit. u ilnnnerotis ruii oltraffic into tho subdivision to en-danger children OITOSIIIB strct'tn t»t-ot to school. Also thut It wouldmake heavy traffic roads In sec-tions that havo lii'i'ii designated (orquiet nnu peaceful reiluVnttnl Uv-

Members ol Matawan High School Band, I Insure • Maroon and Steel victory. The annual foot.twirling squad and cheerleaders are-all «el to go I ball game with Keyport will beThanksgiving Day and will do what they can to I High School Held, with Iho kick-ot!

played at KeyportI time 11 a.m.

Authorize.-Tie-In'-To Storm Drains

Furniture Bids Also

i1 Matawan Oouncllmin Cyfur. K.BrownTuesday night reported thatresidents of the. Ravine Dr. sectionmay tie into a new storm draininstalled by Monmouth C o u n t ywork crews. Permission was grant-ed, he emphasized, for connectionof sump pump drains only.

He said the county, agreed to theplan to provide some relief forhouseholders provided t h e y firstmake application to the local healthboard, have work inspected by thehealth inspector and return thestreet to its normal condition afterthe installation.

Mr. Brown said special consider-ation must be given adetfOate In-spection of connecting lines in ordertht li dlineyfs connected

le-HSald the drainempties

that no sewageto the drain. - Iinstalled by the countyinto Lake Lefferts. " ' •-=....

To Supply Furnishings . . .Business Furniture. North Ave.,

Eiliflbethrwarawafded a'conlractto supply furnishings for the newborough hall on Its bid of 14705.

(continued on page thirteen)

Land Sold ToMiss Harding

Final approval was given by theHolmdcl Township Committee. re-cently to a map subdividing a 49-acre tract at the H. J. Vrodt farm,Everett Rd., from (he remainderof his property. The 40-acro tractwill be sold to Miss Laura Harding,Everett Rd, ,. : - •

The committee approved a SGOOmaintenance bond l o r DeercrcstDr. and Tanglewood Terr., built byStanley Stilwell.

The township attorney • was In-structed to draft an ordinanceadopting the state code, by refer-ence.

The committee agreed to pay a(26 claim submitted by iilmeiBahrcnburg, Ilolmdel Rd., cover-ing nine chickens killed by a dogrecently. :~rr

Zone Ordinance IsAdopted In Township

Voting unanimously, the Mala- representing a great deal of timewan Township Committee Mondaynight finally adopted a comprehen-sive zoning ordinance. The- zoneregulations, under preparation andconsideration for t h e past fiveyears, were trie first adopted in thetowruhip'a history-

Although there were no objec-tions presented when/called byMayor Peter J. Waters, a studyof the zoning map brought a pro-test that it was not dearly marked.. Another spectator suggestedthe proposal for zoning should havebeen submitted to the township voters'at a referendum.

Joseph Stehger, chairman of thePlanning Board, declared the mapwas prepared to show areas zonedit clearly as possible. TownshipAttorney WillUm O'Hagjn reported .there is no; provi»lof»?dn • thestatute regulating the preparationof the uuiing ordinance requiringi d submission to the elector*)'-for approval.< **A G—i

Maypt "Waters camnwnUd Ihemttmn t n "a tpod ordi<la««"

and work on the part of the planners.. He noted, however, the or-dinance will be changed to meetchanging conditions' in the townshipthrough amendments from time-to-time. vEven now," he said, "theplanning board is considering tomerefinement* and changes."

Four residential zones-are estab-lished under the terms of the meas-ure with the prime zone requiringa minimum lot size of 15,000 squarefeet. In addition, there are estab-lished highway business and indus-trial zones. '

The top residential zone, RIM.extends throughout» major portionof a largely undeveloped section ofthe townthip south of the GardenState Parkway tn the Church Si'Uoyd Rd. area Other rejldentia•<mra. in built-up uremol the town*hlp. require minimum Jot size*ranging downward from 'PflOO InT«0 square feet

ton Anas DnitmeiThr R-IW zone, reqtflrbig 1M fee/onae* *nd « njHt mu«nvfool

(coat'Dwd O* *M

"Pep Rally" ParadePermission for • "pep Rally"

parade Wednesday evening wasgiven by Ihe MiUwan Parade;'Commission lo the cheer leadenol tht MaUWan High School »t.«. sptclai meeting h«14.i» the

Thepa^dc itartcd a( 7 p.ni.at Mtmortal P*tk, M *l f l *i&Broad Sts., and proceeded to IboHigh School: field where the an-nual bonfire was Illuminated.

The activities precede the tra-ditional Thanksgiving Day foot-'ball game between Matawan HighSchool and Keyport High School.Permission also was granted fora victory parade on Thursday IfMatawan wins. T h e line ofinarch wi l l - s tar t at MemorialPark and end at Ihe High School.

of Foreign Wars and the FreneauFire Department attended Ih.especial session.

Score Delay QfSafety Devices

Grade CrossingsTopic In Township

Citing "increaied haiards" theMatawan Township CommitteeTuesday night directed TownshipAttorney William J. O'Hagan to In-vestigate the delay in Installationof modern safety devices at IheCliffwood Ave, and Gerard Avegrade crossings.

Ills action will follow up a town-ihip petition sent lo the Public Util-ities Commission early this year,seeking adequate safely devices at

(continued on page thirteen)

Tierney ResignsFrom Planning Board

William E, Tlcrncy K i l l e d Mon-day i s president of,tho MatawanPlanning Board and also as a mem-ber. He had been on the boardfor eight years and had served thelast two years us iti; president.

Mr, Tierney found tho pressureof business made it Inadvisable tocontinue and said he was reslitnlncat this lime *o that Mayor RalphR. Dennis could have a chance topick a successor in time for thereorganization of t h e municipaladministration Jan. I, 1961.

Mr. Tierney a l s o Is o formermember nf Ihe MaUwan TownshipBoard of Education.

The board approved a minor sub-division of a .65.09-by-Ul.W-foottract on Johnson Ave. for RalphRpblnson, The tract rightly is Inthe western half of a total lotrunning through from Johnson Ave.to Atlantic Ave. 'II adjourns St.James A ME. Zion Church.

The board tabled a letter • ofnotification f r o m the board ofhealth that no further use of septicI a n k installations would be »p-proved In a r e a s scheduled for

Opea Do»i PellcyA* Creative Hair Stylists, U Main

St., Keyport, Hair Styling, Color iing, PermjnrnU Appointment not!

(ust mm in. Opend F i 4 l J '11 i

To Reopen SpanTo Light TrafficJ Matawan Creek ^,

1 "The fijfaMw'an 'Creeilt'ib'rlilg'e,*'link.Ing Keyport with Matawan Township, which has been closed to alltraffic (or repairs during tliu pasttwo months, will be opened to HKIIItraffic beginning next Thursday,ItW td t d b J

gg yIt,Wus reported yesterday < by JHarold Hundrlckson, chairman oftho civic affairs committee of theKeyport Chamber of Commerce,

Mr. HcndrtcUson reported tho. opening of the brid|{i! to traffic

Representatives from Ihe Mat-/- Sjflitir^wns directed by Ahrum•wan First Aid Squid, the MaW VoorheesAa nxrtnber of the Monawan F i r e^Dcnrtment, this mouth Comity, Board of Freehold.American Legion, Jhtr-Vctenns ers. He said lllo contractor has

• - - ' ~ agreed In the plan which will main.tain the bridge for traffic throughtho month of December.

Following conferences by Mr.Hcndrlckspn's committee and theFreeholder, it was agreed to envploy tho full work force on the»pan on Saturdays as IDIIK as•WHnhcr permits to spcvjil completlon of repairs (d the'brld

Open For Ughl Traffic OnlyMr. liendrickson emphasized the

bridge will lid opened for lighttraffic only, Ho sold Ihe contractorexpressed fears for the safely oltho crew, working bennalh Ihobridge, If It wertt opened to' bunand truck traffic.

Mr. Voorlic.cn said Iho underpinnlngt of Iho bridge wero found lobo "very badly -deteriorated" andthat nine new pilings had lo bosunk ta firm bottom to support the

(continued 6n page eight)

mis.Lack Of Parking Arcu

Mr, Jaconoiti dofemled tho movob f ItW i k " f f

mJB ri'c|ulred buca'usu .of ItW iat'k"fifparkins ureit for cars at tlio Inter-sections of Tlirockraorton I-uno nnitCBUb Rd, with Koulo I). Tho <li«-mnco from Iho homos of renlduulsIn the more westerly smtlTOS of liresubdivision to tho Koutc I) bus »t»psIs lar loo latin (or them to aiiomplto walk It. When wives drlvu tlu'lrhusbands ,la Ihe bui stops, there IMgreat traffic ctmtjislon nnd iloluyfrom Iho clutter of cum. This ro-siills In Iho men golnii In work veryoften missing their hunus unilsuingbelnu tato, Mr, Jacoiu'ttl pointedout, henco Ihp petition by the civicassociation, Mr. Jnconctti disclosed.

Fred Kurtt, South Amboy, aclln«hi l i t d u t the

hd no,Lano or

,10«^filuWl^lM5%«Wt?^WiJir) township conimltlito hadlaxen ovor Tlirockmorton LanoOaub Rd. and tvould not do so un-til l)io successors to Cantor & Goldman, New York, (To developers,hod dlsclmr||ed all thulr obllgatlannfor Improvements In S^yro Wood"South under thulr perforniantubonds, Asked If the roads won IIIaland up under the added and fre-quent traffic from the heavy bust's,Mr, Kurtz declined to fllvo opinion

(continued on pup," clr.ht)

Lily-Tulip MiistWait "H" Rczonc

Paper Firm DocidosOn Holmdel Plant

llolmdi'l Mayor J nines II. Acker-eon uniiiiuiici'il 21 liours In advancou( ihii. livarlniv tin -the- rcvlwil ion-ln|j ordlnanco heforu Iho llolnulelPlaiinlnu Unnrd Tuosilux Him notii'tlllun or Intlur of opjMiiltliin hudbeen received, to presumably thomeasure seltliii! up on "11" Indus-trial zono In Ccnlcrvllli! atonxK on It 3.1 for tho Llly-Tullp Co. toerect a plant would pa**.

The action of Waller J.president of Ihe paper cup com-pany Friday, In announclnn thr/company would tuko up Its optionon 117 acres of Hut Arthur Farley-Ann Menoiiky'Thomas Salmon lands

(continued on pa|jo el||ht)

Mounting ProtestsMslawan Mayor Ralph R. Den-

nl> mid Ma>er Peter i. Watersof adjoining Matawan Townshipannounced Jointly Tuesday nightthey will appear at a hearing todlicun plans of Ihe Rollo Trans-It Corp., Asbury Park, to Endjillbui servlco In the bayshord area.*

The Public Utilities Commissionhas called „» hearing on Iho busftrnVs proposal to end all servicebvlwucn l'reneau and Rod Bank -nnd Matawan and I'rcdiold, et-Tccilviruecrsi; af the I'UC of-:

HcM Wcdiitrsday.'ProtetU attains! the proposal

•to mounting throunhoul tho areaal|ecledj)y thjD_firopo>cd_eni!jpi(.service. Tfio two m.iyor» Initnight Joined -with thoso In Key-port, Union Bench, KcaiMhurR,MUtdtt'lown Township and Hiulllmili. who already liavc Initlcalcdthey will aild thelr.iirolosl at IhoI'UC hqurlnn..

Trailer WeeklyFee, 50 Limit

Marlboro RestrictsPupils Brought In

Opposition Hus (liH'oluped to thi'ruilcr park provisions u( u /unlnn

nini'iillnu'iit on which iho Miiilboii)Township Commltti'niu'ii n r i'sctii'tlulL'd to net Dec. Tl. The trail-er BciMltin la huscil on nn nincitilcilt in i I IT ordinance In I'ltsl WliulmirTownship which Imposes i\ Jl \\v\week per lrnlh>r fi'o on nil tritlh'r.sIn trnjler parks, Mtiynr-TIIUIN (.'on-tiver, i-"iiNt Wlmlsori oxpliilncit re-ccnlly Ilir Idea uf tlil.i fon In Incover the- cost of tnlucatliiii cliiUtrcnlii(ui||lit Into Iho Kikvnnhlp hy tin1

Iralliir i«>al(Iontn.Couiiiillleeman Jiuupli A, l-un-

xuro iloelareil hint nlfthl ho WtiNn|:nliist u llmllntlon ol DO Irtillmsper trailer pnik cmrlud I thiimt'miiiKMit. Ho III'III'VIHI

d t l

In them H thin uu

unwnrruuted rcstt'tcllon on u trailerpark oiiotutot'a riKltt tu du liual-ni'sa when confrontcil with tho SIpur week fro on his trallort midun annual fix) under thu trailer or-tllimiicn "f flOO per 25 irAllera. -

Hit pointedI nut thero nre tmlythree trailer llcciws avallnlilo un-der llnvlrullcr ordlnnnco and twouro already tukeii up. Zoned for"t l l li tho urea alonu Houto ft

W W B l U i UWMWo

Madison High'sStudy Comics ;

57 Subjects, Many.Sequences Offered

. Dr. .Wtylim J. Sample, supurln-Iciulont, and Kenneth Kmlitn, hlgUschool principal, disclosed ut thqMtidlsou. Township Board.of Eilui-calldri ineetliiR Tuesday SMlL']!?—cttTtcuitmrruFTn'o. now .lownniiijihigh sclimit tu D]iim 'IIPH SSplem-ber. • .-. • ••' •

Mr. Sinlila slnlcs (ho.nwiulreiucntlor ttradtiut|oii_|o_liji i!.«_f'>!)asil.Allsluili'Vifit must JIUMJI "tlio iolinwUiK—*(our yi'iira of riniillsh; ttvi) y.i'Orlu! history; two yoara ol science;iwo year* ot inluhi'inutlcs; fouryearn ol physical education and *thrctvyi'ar soiiiii'iiwi In u mujoriirtMi other. Ilinn Lnnlish,

All Ntiiilt'iils will'carry four iifiijor '."Miliji'i'ta |iliis physical educationouch year. In nihllllun, eh'ullon ofone minor Is urjjvd. Students olproven ulilllty wilt In' piumHleo' tocurry live mujor miliji'cu, A totalof 84 croillu will Im ri'tiulml for)lirudiintloii. Mu|or subjocis ciini'pletetl eiich yistr euvn tivo poitltti,minors iwo-imd-nno-hatl points anilphysli'nl t'tlurntlrni onu |iiiliil.

I'lelitM (II Sillily

Thi' ollwliif.s In tin' fields ofMuily illi'

l'ji||llsh, four yours plus ".SpcKliKunil priiinntli.'H pliih Jiiuniutlrtinitwn yi-iiiH. ' • .

I•'111<• ii:11 l.iin.iiiinii1, fmir-yi'iir io<(|iieiH'0.i (>f l.nllii, Spmiltili, Goriltltliiintl I'reni'li,

Mnllu ninlli H, Al|;i'hui, t w oyeiiisj. I'lunu .Ueuiuulry; Mnlhein»»-... -..tiftil AmilynlK; lioiii'ifti' Mutlvfitna"Ill's, Iwo yeili'N,

Si'liiiico: litirth Soltmcu, Ulohmy, .Chi'iiilmry, I'hynlcii, Applied Hcl-

Sooiiil .StmllM, Wiiiltl History. . .vioilern lliilory, Thu lcli\r Had, !,«•In Amerlctiii Itlitury, U, S, Illnloty(two yearn ruqulrotl), World Gong-.mpUy. - . '. '

Uu«liu>iin, . liilroihittlim to Bull*i, Stimnitraphy, two yearn, Dot*-

keuplux, two yuam, Clorklnl l»r«c-tlco, Ofllco Praclici), Huslnesi Law,SDlvamanthln, Tyiiuwrlllnu, I W « -..-

(•nii,p.»lu}rt«trei n f l 34 withn UMll'rn Pint.

f.'nnncl Uxpmil Uno,Mr, I.niuuni points nut that OIIII

of Hie Irallur llci'nsim l> for a parkmil In lh<! prcscrlbi'il MIIII'.-I no Ina iioiiconfornilnit use Unit cnnnolhu expanded, 'I'IID thlnl licriiht*available now In gauiilil by thtcoappllcontH. Mr. [.unenro polnu outIhut there Is im limit tin Hi" nutn-her of trailers lo a trailer |)tii It Inthe Irnller oidlniincii llti'lf, mill hei)i'lli>vt'S Dint this ulnnlKi hi' uillirr-ed lo In view (if the HIIIUII IIIIIIIIII.'I

(ronllnui'il mi puuo llilrlccn)

Township Collector'sCar Hit In Borough

I'm! vonRoili'ck, OH, Kdvn 1'iirmltd., MiirituiwIIUi, wan llni'tt $:||| Imdriving with mi ouplrml ii'iil^trn-Hun mid Blrtkln/j n narked car, byMntfLilnit^ Jiimeit II, Murlln, Miit-awnn, Mnndiiy,

Mr."vonRoiiiick' wun IIIYUIMII tinIII" driver vyhn ulrtlok Ihii car olMrs. I'aiiilnn Delir, Cllflwoml, Mutnwnn 'I'nwniihip Tax Collector, Nnv,II mi Main St, 110 denied It wanmore than "a scratch." He WIIHnrrufiini'il hy Spi'did Officer I'riink

Danli'l I', Kriimw, 40, I'arllnrpaid 120 on o chuiK" of mii'lvsndriving resultlnit in an Occident,Mr. Kramer wan ulvmi n mmirMimiiby Sill, llnrvtiy Muncll an the ilrl-ver who run Into Ilio cur of JtckKifkpolilck, 10 Wilson Ave, Main-

yoam,Inilumrlnl .Arls, {Ctmiprelnmiilvn,

SIIOIIH), piawlnA and Doallin, Wonil.Induatrtal (;«r«ml», Mulol, Gra-phic Arl«ii'l'f»ntipt)rt9tli>n, (.'r«ll»,l i l i r i i l i ' J c I l y . , . .." > * • . ••' , ,;-.' ',

Finn Art*, A r t Apprncldilnn,wlim H tl >l I'nliillnii. IMsliln,(cimllntiod on ppgo cliini)

Appeal RcsullsGiven Mjirlboro

County Tax BoardDocidos 43 Catoi

Thu Miinnintith Coiinly llnurd ofTuxiitlon him iili'iiuril dt'clHlimi.ii'iu i\i'tl In ft uppniiln. fiiim I MpropiMty UHHI^NIIU'IIU filed hy 4)Miirlhoro Townnhlp properly IMII-

is. 1111 ii 11 n HI. WTII) hi'lil liy thoriiunly hiiitril lull' hml sunmiiT topi'inilt t)u> nHNOHmninit app'naU In

ariiud,Tin' fnlliitvlnit nppcu l l iClsl

wen; aiiniiiinn'il liy thi." homil:Moniiioulli linlii.itiliil I'nrk, Klo,I, hlhil,';»W,i)(ll)Hi $111(1(1, : ""Convent n(* (ioo-.l S h o p h n r tl,

Wlclialunli, linicl, $441)0 In (.1000AUKIHIIIIU (li'lchln, Wlckahmk,itUthiK, IIHOII lit lltillO,Dolnrt'i llr.idli-y, 3Htll (Irifutf

wiiod, IIIIIII, IIOII to f.HKI, Imllillnil,yum iii iiiiiHi,

Clinrli'« l''ru/eii, Uln 7D, Unil,J".l)0 in WiOl) pi'munnl, tHOI) in \M,.

(cuntImii'd mi pn||i< llilrli'on) " '

(Hiiro < )«*dThe nfflcn (if lltti llruwn I'ulilloli'

MM and I'rlnlliift Cn, will I;; cloitifilall day I'llilny, Nov. 'ti.

Slate CoinmiHBioiicr Sees Dirl Tiiiiud To Slaii MudiHon IndiiKtrial Park

hNwtnry. (u mm in OpenTruimday and Fii4»y nl«J)ti '111 i

miet CUtiortiue of ttie Brxjva Puutiili-

and Printing Co. will be closed- Nov. M

»jt>-*dv. U

M*ft '**> rUUfM Ir, inapt MM* th* flril sprnMul of HllttlHr pr«J»cl; Kichard Pliw, m»mb»r ami fsrintr pmldtnl »f UM |H>4I<ffiiuf Ml U».*MHtS,d>nwfd, >ll« tl Id* Celitn Clnl» Mwlrlal j son W W W J I Board «l VJutUhni MsvwfhllUiHi UUHtf A. t »P»rt M lit* MMcn Aitty met. TWi will murk In* sl*rl tf w»r* • ) , tempo, C«MmlM|«Mr />< lh» »Ul« DtparlftiMl tf (^nunsrtlw mt.Mtthw Ik* Orsl bHhttlritJ bulWai it «* up Is lh« Mrk. Th» wrk i> nt«»m\i 0«vttopm««l, ami Ilarrid O. Kmllh, Il*e mitw frm Kt C s n m , Ktyptrt, —t (MM BIIIM from Malawan " - " "• '» ' - ' - ' — - »

Ohwni*^ dw ttnmmy t i p a l d * mjMM* PnAM a* III wayI ut, Irf! to Hffcl, MtntaO Su*m, mm M Ik*

MayM l>WHi>«, CwiiinlttlPMr BtaltniM stud Jetulrwafs •* * • iWthlp ItNlutlrltl cOmoiliilHi, stll•i tht Mfr M «*t*Mttta •! am mum,-

Page Two THE MATAWAN JOURNAt, N. J.

Describes Keynotes Of Table SettingAt Meeting RJP.D. Garden Club-."FiuicUoaaUim, restraint andsimplicity ire the keynotes of anytable setting," said Mrs. ElwoodSnyder at the R.F.D. Gardca Clubmeeting Nov. IS, la FellowshipHall, Holmdel. Mrs. Snyder, WestOrange,-!; a national'flower show

" judge, landscape appraiser, a di-rector or the Board of Garden Clubaof New Jerseyj»State Flower Show

_ evaluation chairman^ jind .record.Tiig secretary of tSes-Sonth OrangeGarden Club.

Holiday table settings were ex-plained and demonstrated by Mrs.Sriyder, for Thanksgiving throughNew Year's Day. Thanksgiving fea-tured fruit and vegetables arrangedaround a piece of driftwood shapedlike a duck for one, and a largeglass; lamp chimney filled w i tgrapes and apples for another.

Mrs. Snyder set up four tablesfor Christmas: The traditional hollywith red carnations: gilded dry ma-terials on a two-tiered gloss cakeplate;-a si|yer and J)I)ie:aiian|er

•: rnent using small lamp shades wit--iDlofMTglass balls"; "a- "wliirhsfcal"

table selling featuring gilded drift. wood and. a. children's table .will

•evergreens; ;drlftwood and whltireindeer 'J'___'_ _•_ __•_

~ r Silver. Bills For New, Year'sThe New Year's table centerpieo

was composed of silver bells am- leaves in a silver compote. A1

these settings, were complemcnteby co-ordinating dishes, glasswan«nd candles.

After the demonstration Mrs.Walter Zimmerer, president, an-nounced the annual flower showwill be held June 2 and ) at theL i t t l e Red Sclioolhouse andBrasch's Barn on Nutswajnp Rd.,

- with Miss; Lillian Keney as chair-man.' Mrs. Leonard Reade, Fort DixGarden Therapy-chairmafi, hadcharge of making and distributing60 (lower arrangements for For

"^Hostesses were. Mrs. NelsonTodd, Mrs, J. Daniel Tullcr. Mrs.Joseph Estenes, Mrs. James War-neker, Mrs. L. J, Reade, and Mrs.Ralph Woodruff. The next meetingwill be Dec. 20 ot the Baptist FePlowship Hall, Mlddletown. featur-ing a Christmas party and cover-ed dish luncheon. Exhibits will be

—any-arrangement for the home. "

Shower Is Given ForMiss Carolyn Haseman

Miss Carolyn Haseman was guestof honor at a surprise bridal showergiven by Mrs. Fred Haseman jr.,at theJiomc of Mrs. Joseph Peterso n N o v V 1 1 . • •- w

Miss Hajeman was presentedwith a corsage of white mums. Thedecoratlo'ns were a white umbrellawijh blue and white streamers.Miss Haseman will become thebride ot Joseph Fedin jf-Xon pec.'

Other guests at the shower wereMrs. George Ellis, Highlands; Mrs.Roy Hammond, Itvlogton; Mrs.William, Wldman. Hazlet; Mrs..Theodore Hellcgard, Mrs. GeorgeChartler, Miss Patty Fedin, Cliff-wood; Mrs. Alberl'Hoycock, Mrs.Charles Haseman sr., Mrs. GraceFlood, Mrs. Harry FiUpalrick( Mrs.Fred Haseman sr., Mrs.' "JosephHasemann, Mrs, Charles Brown,'Mrs. James Benner,' Mrs. HarryCarlson- and Mrs. Bruce; Smith.

Gilts,were sent,by. Miss JeanFedin, Mra. Harold Deltz, Mrs.George Schomp, Mrs. Leo Serge-wich, Mrs. Jerry Nebus and Mrs.Harvey Johnston.

Lilac Grove 55Has Guest Night

Woodmen Circle, Lilac Grove 55recently held a guest night. Guest!were Past Stale President Elizabcth O'Connor, Elizabeth: P a sState President Julia Kcrr; StatTreasurer Katherlne Grimes; Fasl

" District President Cecelia Remoiii,Rahway; State President MaryHyer, Matawan; State Second VicePresident Pearl Caivano; DlstrlclChaplain Annette Myers; DlstrlclAttendant Lillian Sepesl, Elizabeth;First Vice President Agnes Nelson,Manchester Grove 8; Catherine H&bert, Pine Grove 13; Herbert Boslfield worker,

A Christmas party was planneifor Dec. 20 at 7:30 p.m. to be helin the Odd Fellows Hall, Koyporfor nil Junior members, ;'..—"

Concert Nov. 30r

A concert will be given by the25-voitfe Junior Choir of the Bay-shore Community Church. OceanAve., East Keansburg, on Wednes?d iht 8 Th bli iday night at 8 p.m.invited to attend,will be served.

The public isRefreshments

PineExprainsSchool Program

The Cliffwood Beach Democrat!Club has nominated a slate of of-ficers as Its first official act sinceits recent organization. AH actingofficers were named In the nomi-nating positions for permanent one-year terms beginning on Dec. 14,the date of the next monthly! meet-ing.

The nominees and their position:follow; Presldentr-Willlam-Lotigh-ifnj-jdcepresident, ,George~Swne;-ireasurer, Edward Windas; irepord-ing secretary, Mrs. Lillian Smalley:corresponding secretary, Mrs. JeanP i n e ; sergeant-at-arms, Jack .- —-. _- .—-Brown; trusteesJVilliam Dotyr-Pe- Garden_Club-for-19tl-«-a:meet»E-. ^. .. ... held In Vince's, Union Beach. Also

elected were Mrs. Rowland Vin-cent, vice president; Earl Benton,treasurer; Mrs. Bernard Dress, re-cording secretary; Mra. NormanNeilsen,* corresponding secretary.The new officers will be installedat the December meeting.

Mrs. Harry Ray, chairman of thenominating committee, presented

ter Olsen, Dorothy Hornleln.Richard Pine, former Madison

Township Board of Education president, addressed the 39 present onthe status, and future growth of thtownship educational system. Mr.Pine, who is in his fourth year asa member of the board of educa-tion and serves as the board'stransportation, school expansionand high school cafeteria chair-man, traced the growth of the sys-tem through the years and elabo-rated on many phases and prob-lems .which the board of educationwill face with the opening of thenew high school in September. Aquestlon-and-answer period on thesubject followed his address.

This was first of a series of ap-pearances by local, county andstate representatives to help fa-miliarize both new and old resi-dents of Cliffwood Beach with thecurrent municipal events which di-rectly concern the local citizenry.

Acting President Loughlin intro-duced Mr. and Mrs. William No-lan, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Flynnand Edward M. Zukanych as newmembers.

Mrs. J. LanzaroIs Club Hostess

Mrs. Joseph Lanzaro sr. waslostess to the Morganville Social:iub on Nov. 16. Games were play,d and most members attendingon a gift during the evening. Mis.

.lartin Smith jr. won the grandirlze of the evening.

The table, was decorated with aifee -turkey..» tall bouquet andighted canofes. At each v placei-»s « cornucopia filled wltlucandy.lans were made for Mrs. Lanzaro

to. have the next meeting also."* :

"Those attending were Mrs. Ed-vard Becker, Mrs. Harry Konowal-iw, Mrs. Louis Becker, Mrs. Rob-ert Owens, Mrs. Martin Smith sr.,Mrs. Donald Miller, Mrs. John Wil-son Jr., Mrs. August Boldt, Mrs.Martin Smith jr., Mrs, Leroy Van-Pelt, Mrs. Robert Seber, and MissSarah Ann Seber. •

Complete CastingFor Production! .__.XhC-second"arjd final casting ses-sion for theTiolmdel Players' forth-coming" production of "Goodbye,My Fancy" was concluded Wednes-day evening with the selection ofa cast of 20 amateur actors andactresses. An enthusiastic turnoutof pearly SO amateurs participatedin the casting sessions during whicha chorus of male and female per-formers as -well as a stage andechnical crew were also chosen.

The Holmdel Elementary Schooluditorium was ' (he, scene of the

:ryouts.- - ' - - '•'-A comedy in three acts, "Goqd-

iye, My Fancy" was acclaimedluring its long run on Broadwayis an amusing, likeable, adult play,t has been adapted' by Directorharles F.'Roesch to include a mil-leal format.Named to the leading roles were:

letty Baker, playing the part of atangrcsswoman who returns lo herild school as on honorary Visitor;Barbara Jean Krupa, as her ef-icient, but persuasive and schem-ng secretary; Robert Squire, as the

Theodore Morson has relumedhome from Rivervlcw Hospitalwh'erejhe-was_a sujgical patient..

The Ladies Auxiliary of the Mor-Eanvllus Fire Company held a reg-ular meeting on - Nov. 16. :•' Planswere made for a New Year's Eveparty, About 11' members werepresent. — .

Mr. and Mrs." Warren Hibbettsjr., Avon, were Monday eveningguests of Mr. and Mrs. CliffordRelchenberger.

Mr, and Mrs. Moro Trotter anddaughter visited Mr. and Mrs. Mar-tin Smith sr. on Thursday:

Americans have been eating vege-tables, excluding potatoes, at thirate of about 200 pounds per per-son per year during the postwaperiod, according to the U. S. De-partment of Agriculture. Flvo vege-tables have Increased In popularityThey arc lima beans, broccoli,sweet corn, cucumbers and toma-toes. •

, Heal Estate Listing Cards foisale at this office.

IF MONTHLY mortgage payments ate taking toobig a bite out of monthly income, consider refin-ancing t Well be happy to see if we can extendthe term of your loan and thus reduce the month-

, ly payments. And, -we can arrange to have your. , iMyments cover taws and insurance aa well as/^principal and interest That way, there are no« big Mia staring you in the face every year.

'-uf,"1'^- : ' ,

liKRAi Bviiom & LOAN ASSOCIATIONWain Street -

Root, Branch Garden Club Officers For 1961

Jack Yount, third from left, past president of (heRoot and Branch Garden Club, Is shown handing theRavel Icrthe new 'president. Vincent J. Schmidt, at arecent mwfln* of the-group "When- officers; w e r eelected. Other new officers.. In the usual order, are

''. Vincent Schmidt was electedpresident of the Root and Branch

the slate of officers. Assisting Mrn.Ray on the committee were Mrs.

Mra. Norman. NJelKO, corresponding secretary: EarlBen ton, treasurers Mrs. RoUndH. Vincent, vleepresident; Mn. ,Benurd_]rj,jJBrejSi_ie«irdliut.««si r e t a r y " ' : ~ ~ " - " ~ r - • :"" ' ' '

arrangements on the Thanksgivingtheme. Judges_ were Mrs. jLajv-

Harold-Bottgert-MrsrHarold-K(K Teiice' Saccbne H3~SJJ,.,Beni6n7toed, Miss Edythe Richards andMrs. TenEyck Ronson. A vote ofappreciation was given Jack Yountfor his splendid work as presidentof the clubTlurlnfi the year, Mr,Yount is moving from this area.-Mrs. Thurlow Harris,-Mrs.-LeoLammers and Mrs. Harold Bottgerwere ' awarded first, second' andthird places, respectively, for their

A Christmas dinner-party willbe held on Pec: 13 at The Button-wood Manor, Matawan, at 7:30p.m. Serving on the arrangementscommittee ere Mrs. Ray, MissRichards and Mr. Schmidt

Hostesses were Mrs. Lammers,Mrs. Walter Martin, Mrs. GeraldMcCaskey and Mrs. Henry Mcln-tyre.

icqualntance of t h ? , CpngreSs-ivbniah pursuing an elUslvb1 love af-fair. •• -••••• ••

Holding the position of stage man-ger is Frank Kinsley. Business

manager lor the organliotlon .isConnie Roesch. '

Initial rehearsals for the play willbe held Dec. 7 and 12 at Mr.Roesch's home, then will bo con-tinued on a strict schedule in-Jan-uary until presentation of the playIn March.- • ,

Give BenefitsAt YachrClub

A series of benefits "to get evenwith Donna" and to raise fundstoward rebuilding the dock de-stroyed by the hurricane on Sept12 were held at the Keyport YachtClub Saturday from 10 a.m. toa.m. Sunday, The committee, ofwhich Mrs. Robert C, Hostrup wasgeneral chairman, reported the af-fair a "tremendous success." Th<activities included a cake sale andchildren's auction, 10 a.m.; whiteelephant table, adult auction at 12o'clock noon; Junior Auxiliarygame room, noon; cocktails, 5 t8 p.m.; spaghetti dinner, 6 top.m.; boating auction, B to 10 p.m.anil.dunce 10 p.m. to 2 a.m. Refreshments were on sale during thi:day, . — •••

Committees In charge of..th<various events Included: Auction,Mrs. Hostrup, chairman. Mra. Al-fred Manville, Mrs, Covert Camp-bell, Mrs. Charles Sllcox, MrsVincent Applegate, Mrs. LesterChurchman and Miss Lillian Bey-er; auctioneers, Charles Silcox,Covert Campbell and Robert Kiss-inger; dance, Mrs. Gary Post,chairman, and Mrs. Harry Ross;cashiers, Mrs. George Totten amMrs. William Ormerod; cake comtnlttco, Mrs. Joseph Silvestrl, chair-man, and Mrs. Earl Huber.

Also; Refreshments, Mrs. Ber-nard Oclaney, Mrs. William Mor-decal and Mrs. Sidney Larnbertson;Junior Auxiliary, Ivlns Morse, skip-per, Ruth Ann Morse, chairman,Robert Morse. Bobby Hostrup, KajFischler, Richard Huber,- dlnneicommittee, Mrs. Charles Howardchairman, Joseph Siivesstrl, talscman, Mn. Morse, Mra. RoberlPryor, Mrs. William Spracue andMm. James Cadoo. Member* ofthe Junior Auxiliary served thedinner. , .,

Mrs. Wtllher HostessAt Membership Tea

Mrs. T. Wlllner. Hirvey Ave.,LIncroft, held a membership tea ather home Thursday when the workof Deborah Hospital, Brown's Mills,was explained to prospective mem-

Hn. WiUaer; Mrs. F. Sylvester,membership committee, and Mrs.N. Schtntr. pretMent. welcomedthe nests. Mrs. B. Flenstein, olthe Aihury Park Chapter, wasspecial

Hospital .AuxiliaryVotes Contribution

The regular monthly meeting ofthe Monrnouth Medical Center Aux-Iliaryof Matawan'was held Nov.1$ at the Matawan Health Center.The auxiliary voted to make a con -tribulion to the hospital.

Mrs. Charles: Woodman attendedthe executive meeting of the com-bined auxiliaries held in LongBranch Nov., 16. The annualChristmas party will be held Dec.I at Coils Neck Inn at 12 o'clock.Those attending the meeting were

Mrs. Woodman, Mrs. Bayard Lam-:born, Mrs. Edwin Domlnlck, Mrs.Clayton .ffoddlngs, .Mrs. Stephen'Thompson, Mrs.-ity.;:Rulon Smith,'Mrs. Johnson Carun, Mrs.' LeonBlumenthal, Mrs. Grace Curran,vfrs. Henry Zucker, Mrs. Albert\bell, Mrs. Sterling Thompson,Urs. William Lambert and Mrs,,'oseph Dietrich.

Yule Gifts ForGood Shepherd

1 MnV'i i i 1 Jta&en. vrt« serve aschairman for the'''a«nual specifproject o[ providing Christmas giftstor the. glHs at the House of the"iood Shepherd, Wickatunk. Shewill be assisted by,Vincent Gaunt,of Guadalcanal Post'4745, Veterans3f Foreign Wars, Matawan Town-ship. Mrs. Dorothy Schar presidedat the meeting of the Ladies Aux-iliary of Post 4745 in the post homeand welcomed Mrs. Kathryn Brazauckas and Mrs. Molly Fries asnew members.

Boyce Willard, junior vice com-mander of the local post, was aguest. During his brief message,he asked assistance for the NewYear's Eve social and Mrs. Scharappointed Mrs.' ' Gerry Fitzsim-mons, Mrs. Eileen Raimo and MrsRuth Williams to serve on thaicommittee.. • , ;

Final plans were made for mem-bers to attend the official visit tothe Department President, Mrs.Marion Jones, Cranford, to theSixth District Ladles AuxiliaryYEW Sunday. DinnerLwillhe.servred at 1:30 p.m. and the meetingwill start promptly, at 3 p.m. inBuck Smith's Restaurant, EastKeansburg. Mrs. Scarborough,member of the local auxiliary.Is president of the Sixth District.Olher local members, who areserving as district officers, areMrs. Edith Kern, secretary andMrs. Ethel Volpe, Patriotic In-structor.

Reservations for the Christmasparty Thursday evening, Dec. 22,at Buck Smith's Restaurant, willbe accepted by Mrs. Ethel Lovero.Secret pals will be revealed at thistime. Mrs. Josephine Bork wonthe special award, . •

The final business meeting of thiyear will be held Thursday even-ing, Dec, 1, in the post home. Re-freshments were served by Mrs.Nancy Iscman, Mrs. Gloria Llegel,Mrs. Alice Hausmnnn, Mrs. VeraGaunt, and Mrs. Bork.

Laurence HarborLions To Meet

President Casimer Samolyk ofthe Laurence Harbor Lions Clubannounced at. the meeting of1 theboard of direonJrs held at the homeof William Mteggison that'the nextdinner meeting of the club will beheld at Burlew's Restaurant, Lau-rence .Harbor, on Monday. Thewives and families of all memberswill be invited to this meetingwhich will consist mainly or filmsand -entertainment.

-William F. Ohjisman, chairmanof the Sjght Conservation and BlindCommittee, reported that six casesof eyesight correction had beenhandled during the past month.Welfare Chairman Arnold Lauerand his committee will' distribute

hanksgiving baskets to needy fam-ilies. The club voted to make a cashdonation to the Salvation; Army.

It-was reported that candy leftiver from the Halloween Party waslistrlbuted to the children in sev-ral nearby hospitals. Letters of ap-

preciation were received from theleads of the hospitals. ,T

It also was reported that mem-bers of the club hauled and deliver-ed ai:lde

..._. life-size figures, again will be erectedat the Laurence Harbor,Circle onRoute 35, beginning on Sunday,Ddc. H. James Coogan Is chair-man in charge of this program.

Celebrates BirthdayAt Ye Cottage Inn

VVicky Jones, daughter of Mr. and

Mrs. Howard Jones, Matawan, cel-ebrated her eighth birthday at aparty at Ye Cottage Inn, Keyport,on Sunday afternoon. ,

The centerpiece ol the table wasi> birthday cake and gifts were re-ceived,

Others attending were Nancy andKathy Smith, Marjorie Jones andDonna Koyi, Keyport; Cindy andVirginia Loosen,! Bonnie Sue Allen;Barbara Loosen, Mrs. Jones andMrs. Ctrl Loosch. ...

A gift was sent by her grand-parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Jones«., Keyport

The following guests submittedapplications for membership, MnL. DlGlovanni, Mrs. S. Amalo. Mr*:

Whether you make your own stuff-Ing tor turkey or buy packagedstuffing, you can idd chopped crsa-berries, chopped dried apricots,raisins or orange Juice to improvethe keeping quality ot the mixtureand give It variety in flavor. Astudy st the Cornell ExperimentStation shows these fruit ingredi-ents helped stuffing keep becauseot the nddlty they added. But even, G m l , Mrs. S. Amalo. Mr*. o t t ! » * * % «<ey added. But even

M. Peter*)*, Mn. A, DISanto, Mrs.' "W1 'Jwe additions, stuffing jhouldW F d f c , ' Mnf.I, ^raikevaj, «» refrigerated If you make It InMrs.vTviannii'an'diiral WVMaher' ndvancTof sromng'ancl bakTng'tliers. V. Vlanna and Mra, W. Maher.

Refreshmentswer«served. T h enext memberthlp tea wIB bo heldat tlie home ol Mtt. E. Fenn InDbDecember,

lurkey.

H a v e you readads?

U* classified

The -.annual' display jiif1 The••' Sfceije;>

Tells Of GrowthOf Boarding Home

The Baldwin Boarding Home,Partridge Rd., Matawan, was start-ed in October 1953 by accommodating two guests. At that time MrsHazel Baldwin, the owner, wasemployed at Lyons Veterans .Hos-pital in the oxygen room.

On arriving home one day, MrsBaldwin received an urgent callfor accommodations for threefliQre-guests.-TMrSi-Baldwin—saidthat she had as many as sevenguests in the original six-roomdwelling. •

The. business expanded rapidlyand Mrs. Baldwin found it neces-sary to enlarge the living quartersand facilities. In 1956, a wing tohouse 16 people was added. Mrs.Baldwin said the business keptgrowing and it; was necessary toadd a second floor to the new wing,with the same specifications as thefirst floor in order to double thecapacity. The present guest-patientcapacity is 28 with a section usedas a -dining-rootn^ ---^-~sry~zz

- The Boarding Home has beenvisited by various ministers, in-cluding the Rev. Robert L. Kcls'ey,formerly of Keyport, IMMLJIOW—of-KSselleVPark; the Rev. W. J.Hutchesoh, Matawan, and a Mr.Blandon, all of whom have givenservices from time to time. Alsothe Rev. Walter Slattery, LaurenceHarbor, who has given services forthe Catholic guests,

During the summer months, pa-tients are taken for drives to theshore and other parts of the state.The more active patients havechores to perform around the housegrounds.. For their entertainment,television, radio and various pub-lications have been provided. WhenMrs. Baldwin is on vacation, herdaughter, a registered nurse, hassubstituted. *

Mrs.' Baldwin ' particularly, expresses her appreciation to' theRev. Mr. Kelsey and his congrega-tion for providing Thanksgtvfilgdinnec with all the "trimmings"on3 year; various ladies groupsfrom Laurence Harbor for givingbirthday parties with gifts and re-,ireshments for everyone and the4-H Club- for carols and refresh-ments at Christmas time.

Marine CompletesRecruit Training

U.. S. Marine Pvt. LeRoy B.Smith jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Le-Roy- B.-Smith sr.,' 176 Second St.,Keyport, completed recruit trainingNov. 2at the Marine Corps RecruitDepot, Parris- Island, S. C-. Rela-tives and friends of many of thenew Marines were on hand to wit-ness the graduation ceremonies.

The 12-week training schedule in-cluded, drill, bayonet training,physical conditioning', parades andceremonies, and other military sub-

!?kA.1were..!rpent on

. . . . . . . . fin*struction in basic Marine Infantryweapons.

This recruit training preparesyoung Leathernecks for furtherspecialized Infantry training atCamp LeJeune, N.C.

WILLIAM F. KENNEDY

William Francis Kennedy, a lttVeral arts and science major from

'voted xepreseotative;ss-ihr:Sifidenf

Council at Potomac State College,Keyser, West Va. A Hack onthe Catamount football team, Mr.

Thursday, NdverftBer 24, I960

jaycecs DescribeVotingProgram

Members of the Raritan Bay AreaJunior Chamber of Commerce toldthe story of the "Election Forum60" at an interdub meeting withthe South Plainfield Jaycees. Thainterclub meeting was part of aprogram designed to cultivatefriendly relations and an exchangeof information among Jaycee chap.ters in the district.

The local Jaycees presented theirstory_graphically -and -verbally- apresentation that was consideredunique in the program. The mem-ber in charge of each phase of thepublic awareness project gave atalk while slides were flashed on ascreen. . .

The slides covered the newspaperportion of; the forum, in which thispaper participated, with photo-graphs of the forum columns andother news stories and editorialsrelative to the forum; the "meet thepress" forum presented at KeyportHigh School Oct. 2?jit..whiclrrepre-sentatives of the* Hazlet Herald,Keyport-iWeekijr,r; and fRed Bank : -Register questioned Marvin-Olirw —sky arid Francis Ludwig, candi-dates for Raritan Township Com-mitteeman;'and the "Get Out theVote" poster contest, sponsored by "

Bank Catholic High School. He isthe son of Mr. and Mrs. EdwardKennedy.

Cjub Art DepartmentVisits Pottery Studio

The art department of the,Woman's Club of Malawan, Inc.,attended an exhibit of pottery atthe studio of Mrs. Robert H. Tay-lor, Washington Rock, Plainlield.They had luncheon at the Clara

lise, Plainfield.T h o s e attending were Mrs.

Franklin Anderson, Mrs. DavidBruce, Mrs. -Robert Butler, Mrs.John C. Eggleston, Mrs, Johnson'Cartan,, Mrs. Clifton James, Mrs.Bayard T. Lamborn, Mrs;. Allan J.Morrison, Mrs. Frank Drogan, Mrs.Thurman C. Nealis, Mrs. WilliamOwen, Mrs. Charles Rainaud, Mrs.Donald Robinson and Mrs. MyraHolland.

If you need printing of any kind,we are here to serve you. Ourquick service and reasonable priceswill please you. . " ,

Kennedy-is-s~graduate--of-*ed the-Jayceesln- RHrirSn; HbTmdel,St. Ann's and St. Joseph's Schools.

Members Who ParticipatedParticipating were Warren Van-

Nosdall, president of the 'RaritanBay Area Jaycees, who introducedand later closed the presentation;Saul Waldman,"external vice presi-dent and chairman of the-forumproject; Paul McGinley, arrange-ments chairman for the "meet thepress" forum; Ben Petrillp, chair-man of the poster contest, and BobBenedickson, internal vice presi-dent, who co-ordinated the showing.Dan Maisnik photographed theevents and served as projectionistat the meeting.

The presentation, which lastedabout one-half hour, was warmlyreceived by the host South Plain-field Jaycees. Henry Henning, _president of the host chapter, de-scribed it as the "finest presenta-tion I have ever seen in this pro-gram." ,

DUFFY'S LOUNGERoute 35, Laurence Harbor

F e a t u r i n g •. . ;.- • '

The ViscountsWED - FRI. i -^T.^

' .. .Playing Their Latest and Greatest Release' ' •'.' . ' * . : ' j I F o r M a d i s o n R e c o r d ! ^ •:• ; , '•••':•.

"WABASH BtUiS"See The Viscounts On TV Channel 4

5:30 P.IVV On "Saturday Night Prom"

The new-size Tempest is primed..to scoot on less gas! Five hot

"versjpria of the Trophy 4 engine.: li() (to 155 h;p. Any choice willmove out in'a hurry; sail up asteep hill in. high iear, has thepower for quicker, safer passing.

Front engine is balanced byrear transmission. (Standardshift or Mtra-cost automatic.)Takes weight off the front Easysteering. Longer lire life. Addsballast in the rear. Improves

.traction and' braking. No big

floor hump. Foot room and leg. room' for six men. Independent -.

suspension at all 4 wheels. Mostother cars only have it in front.Wide^Tr^ck, too, The Tempest

—wheels are set farther apart thanthe wheels of other new-size cars!.Gives a solid stance. Secure cor-nering. There's a 4-door sedanand a station wagon.

Prices boms close—or evenbeat—the tags on Uie compacts.If you're figuring on a new car -figure on a new Tempest.

THE HOT TOPIC IS THE NEW

TEMPEST BY PONTJAC

THE NEW TEMPEST IS SOLD AND SERVICED BY YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALERSHIP

DOWNES PONTIAC, INC.SI.

• •

Thursday, November ,2.4, 1960 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Pag9 TJire*

Property Tax

* Of the *40,85i.838 property taxbill for I960 levied by the munici-palities within Monmouth County65.27 per cent is levied on reslden'tial property and the remaining34.73 per cent is levied on the various forms of non-residential prop-erty, according to a study just re-leased by the New Jersey stateChamber of Commerce.

The chambers study shows loreach municipality in the jtate theamount of the I960 property taxlevied on business real property,

' inventories, machinery and equip-ment; on farm real property, stockand machinery; on Class II (lo-cally-taxed) railroad property; onVacant land, and on residential realproperty, and household goods. Italso shows the tax value of the

iJVeWanT: exemptions. -";•-;-•• • •

Prepared by the State Chamber'sDepartment of Governmental andEconomic Research, the- study of-fers a broad and detailed picture ot

erty tax In New Jersey. It is tilled"Where the-Mohey Comes From."The.chamber recently published acompanion study "Where the Money

-Goes,"- analyzing distribution of theproperty tax for school, county andmunicipal purposes.

' Residential Pays One-HalfState-wide, residential property Is

paying about half of the 1960 levy,52 per cent, while 43 per cent falls

, on the various forms of non-residen-tial 'property. A breakdown of thenon-residential. category shows 42percent of the levy falling on com-merclal and industrial property and'large apartment houses (with morethan four families); less than twoper cent falling on farm property;less than two per cent on railroadClass II property, and three percent on vacant land.

In Monmouth County, industrialand commercial property and large

- apartment houses support 24.20 per__Cent of the levy; farm property

' supports 5.59percent; Class II rail-' road property, supports .17 per

cent, and vacant land supports 4.76per cent.

DR.LOUISI.PRAGER"""OPTOMETRIST

EYES EXAMINEDOFFICE HOURS

• Dally and Saturdays ,I A.M. to ( P.M.

Frldayi 8 A.M. to 9 P.M.Closed All Day.Wednesdays

30 W. Front St.,Keyport >

COIfax 4-2020

WHEELING

Prize Winning Brazil Nut Pudding

Miss Joan Kiillna. South Somerville, demonstrates 14-H Favorite Foods Context The 4-11 girls will be'batter form," left, and the hit, a Bratil Nut Pudding, practicing tomorrow off family critic* In preparation

which Won for her second prite lail year In"lhe3Uie1forlhe"»ei!rc0htesT"On"JaB;a7."™ ^~

Thanksgiving dinner tables, tra-ditional place for the best food anAmerican family has to offer, willprovide a proving ground for dishesprepared by 4-H Club girls in anumber of New Jersey homes. Butguests need not hesitate. These"trial" dishes probably will be thehits of the feasts, for they'll bethe dishes the girls plan to enterin the State 4-H Favorite FoodsContest on Jan. 27. ', The event has become the culi-nary Olympics'for the 3200 NewJersey girls who carry out 4-H Clubprojects In food preparation. Re-sults of district contests narrow thenumber of contestants down toabout 90. Once these finalists havefilled the War Memorial Building

In Trenton with mouth-wateringaromas, a battery of nine judgessample and discuss the-dishes, theselect the winners. Priies arawarded at a banquet In the Tren-ton hotel. .'This annual "bake off" is CO

sponsored by the Suburban PropaneGas Corp. of Whlppany and the Cooperative Extension Service of Rutgers University. No mere fudgmakers, the contestants whip upsuch dishes as roast goose withdressing, pecan pie, sweet and souimeat balls, chicken cacclatore amHungarian apple cake. Last year'sfirst prize winner. In the main dishclass was roast duckling with or-ange stuffing, a dish which receiveda perfect rating.

Capacity Crowd AttendsRomson Antique Show

A capacity crowd from NewYork, Pennsylvania, Northern andSouthern New Jersey-,;** well asMonmDuth County, attended theRumson Antiques show and saleheld at Holy Cross" School" Theshow 'was sponsored by the Par-ent-Teacher Association for thebenefit of the building fund for ad-ditional school facilities.

Twenty-one dealers participatedn the show and sold antique fur-

niture, decorative accessories andcollectors' items.

At the show there also was ondisplay a collection of Gothic andRenaissance art works includinga Rembrandt painting and a. Hol-bein portrait of Henry VIII fromthe Medina Galleries, New York.Another feature of the show wasa demonstration of the art of hook-ing rugs: in" authentic Colonial sda-signsby Alice Beatty "of Fanwood.Ar fihtjstriuts,' bazaar with giftshandmade by P-TA and parishmembers also attracted those, at-tending the .show.

A large committee was headedby Mrs. John K. Hanson who orig-inated the project of the AntiquesShow, the first given by the HolyCross P-TA and planned to be: anannual event. s" . .

E N G L IS HAGENCIES

FORD • COMET - MERCURY • LINCOLN

MOST ACTIVE USED CAR LOTIN MONMOUTH COUNTY

7 Monmouth Street, Opposite Cdrlton Theatre••;.-.'•. RED BANK

SHadyside 7-4545 —1-6000

No Aid Cutback

Despite personnel shortages be-cause of disaster assistance workalong the bayshore area-of thecounty, the Red Cross Home Setvice department.carried its"usucase load during the month ot Oc-tQber, accOrding~to• "a"report*' sillmltted to the county chapterboard of directors by Jacob (Herr, chairman at home service.

UAHN WHY YOU M M tUT 00 NOTUNDERSTAND WOKPS...

KEYPORT HEARINGAID CENTER

21 W. Front St. - CO 4-2M8

Dill ParscJJs,. , CO 4-ttll

B & BELECTRIC610 AUMACK AVE.

UNION BEACH

• COMMERCIAL• HOUSING

• INDUSTRIAL

WIRING. & REPAIRSNo lob Too Small

"With Grateful Hearts"

The first Presidential proclamation of ThanksgivingDay, issued by George Washington in 1789; announced"a Day ot Public Thanksgiving and Prayer to be observedby acknowledging with grateful Hearts the many SignalFavours of Almighty God."

Let us* observe our Thanksgiving Day in.this spiritof devout gratitude for our many blessings.

THE

FARMERS AND MERCHANTS_ NATIONAL BANK

Matawan

M n k n Tr4ml i m ti — —

AW.-

Not all dishes are so elaborate.Such simple ones as deviled eggsand baked apples have their placesIn the less advanced of the five di-visions. Biscuits or bouillabaise,each dish Is well rehearsed before-hand. In fact, |he' day of I ho bigcontest comes as a relief to manyfamilies who bave" eaten the samedish over and over and over againas their daughters perfected theirentries. f.

But the family of every winnerfeeli rewarded as the triumphantcontestants are called to the speak-ers' table by such personalities asEd and Pegeen Fitzgerald of W0Rto receive their modest cash prlrfs

State DepartmentWants Linguists

The United States Department ofState announces that it It seekinglinguists to act as escort Interpre-ters for foreign leaders visiting theUnited States under the various ex-change and technical assistanceprograms.-Applicants must have a broad

educational background, preferablya college degree, and must be flu-ewt;in" English und one or more oftntrspeclfled foreign languages. Ap-plication forms may be obtained bywriting to this United Slates De-partment of Stale, Division of Lan-guage S e r v I ces, InterpretingBranch, Washington 25, D. C.

Deadline for returning completedapplications Is Dec. 1, I960. Select-ed candidates will be Interviewedin New York and given the requiredoral Interpreting aptitude t e s tthere by Department of St»to ex-aminers. No previous Interpretingexperience Is required.

On Contract BailsSelected candidates may be em-

ployed on a contract basis «s need-ed to accompany foreign leadersand technicians on their travelswithin the United States and to actas their Interpreter at Interviews,meettngspetcr'Trra-worlrgenerallyIs on an Intermittent tjssls, withIndividual assignments lasting from,one to three months, usually sevendays a week.

Beginning salaries range from $19to $25 per day depending upon thecandidate's education and ex-perience and on the specific pro-gram assignment. Transportationplus an allowance to cover hotels,meals and incidentals is at, govern-ment expense while In travel status.

Men generally are preferred, al-though there arc some opportunitiesfor well qualified women who arefree to travel. United States citizen-ship is preferred but not required,except as noted, so lone is there llno legal restriction agalmt the nnn-

cltlien"earning money In the United!States.

There Is a possibility of this em-ployment leading to permanent em-ployment at $5355 to-$7 5C0 per an-num beginning salaries for a fewexceptionally well-qualified-Ameri-can citizens with special languagecombination! after they have dem-onstrated their ability on assign-ment. 01 particular Interest are,for example, persona with high-level proficiency In both Russianand French or in two or more ofthe Romance languages. •

Three Hospitals SeekFundsJFrojp County

Representatives of MonmouthCounty's • tlmte hospitals, Fltkln,Monmouth Medical Center andRiverview, conferred with the Mon-moulli County Board of Freehold-ers on ways and means of obtain-ing additional county funds. Free-holder Director Joseph C. lrwinsold, details of Jho.conference, willbe made known In a few days afterspqclllc requests can be analyzed.. The Freeholders last yeat-dlvld-ed $575,000, the.maximum pernilt-15fU)yJaW,. SffioSjul&e :iiaspffilsin reimbursement of free caro div-ert counly indlfiont residents, Mr.lrwin said requests taken underconsideration would be over andabovfr-grants-already-aHocatcd-onan annual basis and would bepermitted under other state laws,

Barnberger's ChristmasDisplay Unique :

One of the most unique'"fashion*exhibits to be shown during Univer-sal Christina) at Bamberger'i Is a-collectlon of historic shoes, shownIn this country for the first time,on loan Irom tho Central Museumof Northampton, England. Datingback to the early 16lh Century, thecollection includes men's, womufi'aand children's styles, tome simpleas a wooden clog, others elaborate,ai velvet sllppors with satin puffs.

One of tin) most spectacular ox-amples historically sm'uklnR,-ia atiny leather chillis shoe from thaearly 10th Century, which' escapedthe great London fire found on thesite of the London Wall, and wasintact. A pair ol women's shoes inflame colored brocade with lnlchetsfor buckling, Louis heels and silverbraid trimming might well h a v aserved as inspiration (or some ofour present after dark-styles, liventhe siiliello-pointcd loo, heralded to-day as this latest thing In footwear;traces as far hack as this earlyd l

:Mafiy.:Hiii:teLiimus|aIlyj.!!overshot!!, mndi! Id fit over the toeof the shoe, with nn attached strapthat merely circles tho heel of thoshoe, This, alsd, hui been copied In•SOIb"Genlury- rubber- rainwears-Po-licewomen ' are not now either, itseem), os tho collodion boasts a

Ross W . Maghan AgencySAVE with SAFECO

Real Estate—InsuranceMATAWAN 138 Main St, LOwoll 6-0003

boot for tuch a damsel from theyears 1910 to 1910. It's a hardystyle, covering the leg to tho knw,wllMront lactngt.

This week, why don't you lookthrough tha windows ol y o u rchurch . . . from tha Inside.

LEARNglBM

Enroll Now

School of Business Machines31J stato St., Perth Amboy

KOOSSlipcoverSpecial ^

CUSTOM-MADESOFA fr CHAIR

• — $ 8 8 T "OIIOOM from iiui nti Dublinoolltcllon: 30 prlnti , , , «uwtih ijifl inurt HiuiMfUUr*,thi »#»r ot oaillr llntnilWa'tl nln-lU kiid cut lour «llo-iiKtri rlnttt on >(illr tuinltura,«l« von tilrii mtid'. »mDtiPM. nudirat tcrati.

ShoD-al-Hama OnlyPHONE

Cl 947M - I R B4U1I'Ullon 8-37M

KOOS BROS.Rout* 71, SOB GirtRoute 9, Freehold

WANT MORE FOR YOUR MONEY...KEEP YOUR EYE ON GRANTS

Sotting nail to a bright new wln>tor — brilliantly colored Randomctotli, iiowcnt alurdy atiorUwwtfabric, Clillclroji'H ulncVj slso Inuntooii pnd tapontry wcuve,

IM ANT? 9-24 inai,

At Grants >.. It's tlio early Chrlitmai thoppsr whocatches lh» biggest bargains . : , potkeli 3 1 % t«20% lavlngi during Oranis Pre-Chrlttmai lolt,

U»» any Ont ol Grants 3 "Charge-ll" Plant, N»money down, take SO days., > or lake monlht lo pay.

ENTIRE STOCK2.79 COTTONS

REDUCED...

TO BRIGHTEN PLAY.. •COLORFUL CREW OFWASH 'N WEAR COTTONS

Hurry in for fresh nowstylos and glamorousprints. Savo on ma»chine-washable cottons,Sweeps, flares, coats,Btap-ins, tsipper stylos.Plenty of sizes 12 to 20,14^ to 2iYi, 40 to 52 Inthe group. Buy nowl

"ORANIUA" PUID•PO«r SHIRT!

BOYS' IASY-CARI1UXURY SPORT SHIRTS

Embroidered trim glvtithis rayon ihlrt * contlr

M I N I MOC UIPPIRINon-slip bouncy crop*«oUs| tomfort-fittlnv.Brown, Illatk. 0-12,

H i t a t

W U U I I I . I t IM Halall lilutlrt aiMMt mlmiMMky, ••««•« IMWI " I * «'» •«'* ' " I I "

LnlU II Mit l< *m*i,

NEW'SNOWFLAKE'

ORLON* ACRYLICluxury Io9k at low pr/e.

.tor cardigan or pullevtt

L44Napped pullover withcowl collar or cardlpmwith deep shawl collar,Lilac, green, gold or red,'with white. 31-40.

NYLON SUPS

&PETTISLIPSKlcb with Applique,Lac*, Imbroldity

Nylon Tricot Slips,White, black, bell*. 82.40. Satin Nybn or NylonTricot PettUllps. WhlU,colon. Small, m«<l,, large.

r$t$ MMMUtt MYtONfIN M W MCTUM PACKAOI

Boa-re*Iat. BMII er plain

Ummi» prle*.

WOMIM'tACITAnTnCOTrAHCYMItYlr»l»bwt.,,run-r»il»t,fullcut, trfn.f|ttlB» ruhlo

d

*!»" 3.67Kulirlo f romlfoiUnd I o»tr»full-cut, longslMvad rayon

OIRU' NIW DOUiUSKIUTID

Illuor iklrt ortr (Ujr-erlsppaiohmsnt) soft tricot top,bargain In ill nylon, 7-1*.

OMFriN'lHINIMAITNt'Ucim.irtd wild o»k. 4yollth wlon, i dauber**

MEN'S AND WOMEN'S

SWISS WATCHES | WAVAHRE |

. Haor wltkltmp utoni Jundl mr O O• U»th«ror.ipin«l»nb«tliJ. m*"**. ElwtricaUrtfiMd

S VnbrMlwble tijrsUli .

fibock mutant • Antl-mainetU* Somt with unbreakabl. nuluprbif*

SMART SAVINOS

ON 'HEIRLOOM' OIFT SMtlADfOvetrlay dwlgm *>iUm rfienlll*•Wblt* put*. Dwbl* or twU.ftrfped b d *to**+

wnuomui25 we«lh*r-proof, fad*-.rwndtntlf bumlnx bulbl,AJd-on connMtor. mvf

HOVBS:MW*. THRU FRL

11 TO*IAT. U T 0 «

. GRANT c

JPogt Four THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. JLThursday,NovemberM, I960

-ESTABLISHED Iff* "' 'OH COttU H N t - I. MABEL BBOWN, PUBU8BBB

PuMlibnf M e n n u n d u a t Keypart, Monmoutb County, N. 1.-BY SHOWN PUBUSHDja ttJp PWNTIKa COMPflW

J. Mabol Brown, Editor - Onaldliw V. Brawn, AMOCUU ltdltor"of th« people, by lh« pwptabeet lnteruU oi Miuwen am

Tb» U i l n r u Jouhu] U • i m p i p n of th« people, by lh« pwpta*nd for the people." Iti lira U to terve Ihe beet lnteruU oi Miuwen amvicinity: to pruent all oi the nawi ol th k i t h t bl j d lto • clean, sant, eoniervative manner, nipacttni U» tnallenaUeof our dUxciu, and thereby. maKlotf Itself worthy of their confidence.

e Ihe beet lnteruU oi Miuwen amthe week without blaa «r prejudlc

r, nipacttni U» tnallenaUe ritWlf w t h y of thir confidence

Entered aa »ecoad-claM matter at the pott office at Matawan. N.under the act oi March 3, 1870.

occupleiBeipmuiWlitrfor tyxiojTapUcalerrorj U BralUdto a e co«t oJ m e « • •upled -by Juen error. : "v'- '• . -

Subscription RateePayable In Advance.

On* Sear (within ttate)Three MosthaBlx MonlhaOne Veer (ooUlde ttate)One Year (outalde U. S.)

NATIONAL EDITORIAL

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1960

ITianksgiving PilgrimageJust as we.' have wholeheartedly endorsed reasonin

which geeks to put Christ back in Christmas observances," we urge all this year to return prayerful thanks as the

sound, single and rlogical'reason^Jer Ttoi&glvlng^ H jn»'• t l o n a l h o l l d a y r ~ " " ~ ' - • —,-•;-• : --.-- f.-.-.- ---.. — - - . . -

Thanksgiving is a t ime to gather together .with lovecones. A time to go to church with our families and t h e n

_ tQ.jom.ourjiejgbJ^.s_BJjriof grateful prayer, for all our many b less ing*

In the cabin of the Mayflower, before they set foot oiAmerican soil, the Pilgrims s igned a compact that begarwith the so lemn words, "In the name of God, Amen." Ino u t Declaration of Independence is embodied the principlesthat all-'-men. are "endowed by their Creator with certaininalienable rights." Our national mot to is "In God w eTrust." The words, "Under God" are included i n our Pledgeof Allegiance." • a * '

Thus'this"nation w a s founded upon faith in God. . ThisThanksgiving season, w h e n the whole nation has been calledupon to recognize our cherished heritage of religious free-dom, is a most appropriate time to be reminded of this truth:If our people march as a mighty pilgrimage to their housesof. worship, this faith can be re-affirmed.

_. 1--Thus, w e Americans may make, that i a i t h manifest againto a i l other nations. In a world torn b y international dis-lension, a world beset b y forces and ambitions that are god-Jess and evil, America still may-s tand revealed as the land.over which, In the words of Isaiah, "He will lift tip an en-sign to the nations from afar."

And if any men, anywhere, still wonder how Americastands, that ensign of God will testify that we stand a united

-natiotij-mighty in our material resources,- and mightier- stillin -that faith which is the very foundation of all that w e areand all that w e a s p i r e \ o be. ••"'••'.:.:

The Speed That KillsAn unrealistic driver attitude toward speed is a major and

costly factor in the increasing traffic toll. Only a handful ofdrivers have the matured and realistic attitude on vehicularspeeds. Most fall into one of three.classifications: The driverwho operates his car at excessive speeds regardless of condi-tions,'the slowpoke at the. other extreme and the driver whodisregards conditions to make time. All either ignore or dondt know the deadly role speed plays in traffic accidents.

Over the years spefid violations have.,been .factors inabout 30.per cent of the fatal traffic accidents. This statistichas been /airly constant and particularly so In the post warperiod; It represents between 10,000'and 15,000 "traffic.death* a year.. •' ' ," .''.'

, Speed generates the impact force that kills, It's theutter disregard of this potential that creates the danger.A 30-caliber.-bullet fired from a machine gun for example,strikes with an impact force of a foot-ton. Two cars collidingheadon at 30 miles per hour produce an impact force of slx-and-ohe-half foot-tons. -Ydu would get ihe same effect ifyour car crashed into a brick wall at 60 miles per hour. Asspeed increases, the potential impact force likewise goes up.

', The. National Safety Council in its 1957 report, pointedout that" the, chances of a traffic death are one in 300 if anaccident occurs at 25 miles per hour, one in 40 at 55 milespier hour and one in eight at 75 miles per hour. And acci-dents do happen, at a rate of a traffic death accident every

:—13-minutes and a:traffic injury1 accident every 33 seconds.Remember this during your holiday motoring.

.i.._.-., Storm Warnings Are Up"•••!-v "There seems.to be a point beyond which people sim-ply will not be taxed, and when a tax reaches that pointit becomes self-defeating." That statement comes from anarticle in a magazine published by the Sun Oil Company.It is substantiated by all manner of historical examples.In 18th Century France a tax was placed on fireplaces; sopeople stopped building fireplaces. In 17th Century Hollanda house tax was based on the number and sizes of win-dows, so windowless houses became) the yoguer England'sParliament once Imposed a tax on horses, "so farmers tookto riding cows. •

The present outstanding example would seem to be thegasoline tax, which now totals about 50 per cent of the re-tail value of the fuel, a percentage which isn't home byeven such luxuries as mink coats and diamonds, much lessany other absolute necessity. As the article puts the case:

"While It is too early to reach any categorical conclu-sions, we wonder if the storm warnings aren't going up,whether motorists haven't become fed up paying ?3 for $2worth of gasoline and1 whether we aren't now facing thefirst signs o$ a consumer revolt which could mean that anyfurther increnses in gasoline taxes actually will bring evenless revenues."

The signs are certainly there. According, to the NewYork Times, if the trend to smaller cars continues at thepresent rate, gasoline tax revenues by 1964 will bo $$48,-000,000 below what they ordinarily could be expected tototal. Here's a case of tax extremism in which everybniis the loser.

lUTImUSmt

MR. MILQUETOAST.'tR.CASPAR MILQUETOAST/

CAN YOU IMAGINEANYONE ANSWERINGTo W NAME OFMILQUETOAST? HAW,

HE MUST BE SOMECHARACTER/

,IMPORTANT PHONEMESSAGE —

• i V ' - V - '•• - ' • • ' ;

OtfwfExpress Their V i m

NEW YORK LIQUORENDANGERS NEIGHBORS

(New Brunswick Home News)New pressures are being placed

upon the New York Legislature toact on teenage drinking when,reconvenes in January.

New York Is the only one of the50 states which permits-youngstersof 18 to buy beer,.wlne and hardliquor. *,-

And In this respect, New Yorka very bad neighbor to New Jersejand other bordering states;

We see this bad neighbor policyworking right here. Area boys of18 go to States Island where thetaverns-pflze their trade. Then theycome driving back to New Jersey,endangering everyone.

The Christian Science Monlto:recently^ L highlights!.... thejroubjNsw. Yorkmakes tetltslnelghbpHThe newspaper reported that Inthree" months 10 youths under 2have been killed in two highwa.-accldent»-in.Connectlcut-4na..yer:mont. "All," say the Monitor,"were returning from drinking IiNew York." One. of the accidentwas the catastrophe in which seyeiyoung men from Wlnooski, Vt.,were killed. -

The highway menace here Isclear, andJihe Monitor says theNew York-New Jersey situation Isthe most critical of all.

But, as Gov. Abraham RIblcofof Connecticut says, there's morethan just the highway menace InvoIved.'The serving of liquor toany person under 21 years of ageis morally wrong and cannot beustifled on any basis," is how helutS I t . . . - - - . :-- .

THAT 15TH SEAT(Newark Evening News)

When New Jersey's surging popu-lation spilled over the six millionmark, it opened a political prospectreplete with bright • expectationsind expectant-.candidatesi-too;Politically, it means our state Is

entitled to a 15th seat In tho Houseof Representatives which, in turn,

leans ultimately the first reallgn-jeht of our congressional districtsnee 1931. That's when the Repub-con Legislature engineered a ger-mander which Was proof againstven the New Deal, and fromhlch tho Democratic party nevertirely recovered.But it) the light of our politically

livided Legislature, the chancesre that in 1962, at least, the 15thongressman will be elected In thetate at, large. In that event thetisslbillties would be as obviousmd.numerous aa<the"candidates.•at whoovtr went to the House oil

statewide election would certain-ly find hidden in the returns'a man-date to run for U. S. senator or,better yet, for Morven, where the

ring Is easy and the rent is free.Soon or late, a Legislature dom-lated by one or the other party,/111 rcdlstrlct the state along con-'entlonal lines. One proposal al-eady has emanated from Rutgers,t suggests that severed Middlesexihouid be consolidated as one dis-rict and so absorb the 15th con-xessman. As of now, Middlesex Isivlded between the Republicanhlrd and fifth Districts and such Isle size of the.GOP vote, in bothhat the Democratic majorities ofMiddlesex have been swallowed upis planned.

Of course,1 planning of the Rut-;ers type is directed primarily to-(dressing geographical faults andnumerical Imbalances. But In thesematters simple solutions-are-for-ever yielding to the practical. ThePolitical professors may think con-gressional redlstrlctlnB a m e r ematter of. correcting boundariesand adjusting to population shifts.The political professionals knowbetter. To t h e m , redlstrlctingmeans a chance to administer anelectoral transfusion where It willdo the party the most good.

WRONG WAY DRIVERS[The Evening News-Perth Amboy)

Disturbed over the frequency oficcldents resulting from motoristsriving the wrong way on the Gar-

den State Parkway, the N. J. HI "way Authority has undertaken .program of Improvement, replace-ment and addition of directionalsigns along the super highway

The trouble'spots are at entranceand exit ramps and at the park-way's service center. At least onedriver a day travels In the wronglane, and two fatal accidents haveoccurred recently because ot this.

More signs, larger signs and re-designed ones uro now being erect-ed at the trouble spots in on effortto keep drivers out of the wronganes. Colon are being changei

from white- on green to black onyellow tq moke them more visible

At service areas large red andwhite signs will warn motorists tostop and back up If they attemptto take the wrong lane onto theparkway.

The problem is serious, but Itapparent that the Highway 'thorlty fs doing everything it canto solve It. However, parkway of-iclals are aware that regardless otlow they Improve directional signs,they constantly will be faced withone factor which no sign can h'That is the drunken driver who ;onto the wrong side of (he (.*.*lighway despite the posted warn-ngs. How this can bo overcome

has not yet been discovered.

Looking BackwardlUau Abral WtOm Ami TU*M» W i l w w k n < l « i l | i

Fifty Year* Ago(Issue Thursday, Nov. 24, 1910)The Boy i Scouts of the. Presby-

terian Church held their, regularmeeting Friday evening and com-pleted the arrangements for the"Hare and Hound hunt," to takep l a c e Thanksgiving morning at9:30 o'clock. It will be a five milerun and papers wilt be used to des-ignate the trail. The hound cap-luring'the first hare will receivei prize. .There were no appeals from Mat-

wan borough or township beforethe County Board of Taxation atKeyport yesterday.

A short week and troubles In amechanical department the pastweek has: curtailed the usualamount of new matter set each

Iniely- matter on Thanksgiving,vhlch we believe our readers will

enjoy fully as rnqch as anythingelse we could have given them.

Game seems to be quite plentl-il hereabouts, In', spite of the fox-i which are heard barking occa-ionally,Tuesday of lost week Samuel

Thome was digging a well for J.E. Applegate and he and his helper

rore in somewhat of a hurry, owingo.other business. They had gonelown twelve feet and Thorne.wasit the bottom waiting for his helrj^r i tq; low« the buckets when •lan lost conjtrol .of (It and it ley,rlklng Thome .on the.head.apa

nocking him senseless. They, hadiiite some difficulty" in getting,ilm out, when Dr. Ervln was call-d, who applied restoratives andresscd the wound and he Is al-ight now. .. ' ;..T. Regan of Keyport has sold aaby grand Hazelton piano to Miss:iara Smith of Marlboro, teacherf music in the Freehold publicchools. He also delivered a Weserilnno to Ira Warn, Jr., of Morgan-Illelast Saturday. •The time IS here when wanner

clothing is needed for comfort bymany who are unable to' purchaseIt. There is many a home wherethere is clothing in good conditionthat has been cast aside, only toie eaten by moths. How much good

these cast-offs would do If properlydjsposed of cannot be foretold andthe suggestion Is made that the>roper societies connected with ourchurches make an appeal for thisclothing and attend to its distribu-tion.

boatiiouse is nearly ready for thefinished roof which will be of roughslate, similar to the roof on thegas station" near the railroad cross-Ing, just leaving Red Bank towardShrewsbury, which has been souniversally admired.

Carton's Department Store, ofwhich Johnson Cartan Is proprie-tor, Is moving over the week-endfrom, the stand of many yearswhere Mr. Cartan's father startedthe store to one of the new storesIn the Matawan Properties Blockjust being finished on the site ofthe old Matawan House.

Fancy string beans are twopounds for 17 cents at the GreatAtlantic &'Pacific Tea Co. thisweekend. Legs of spring lamb are25 cents a pound; fancy smokedhams, half or whole, 25 cents apound: Del Monte asparagus, tipsor lall, three large cans for 74cents. . . ,' _'.' .

Twenty Years Ago(Issue Thursday, Nov. 21,' 1040)On Oct. 3, the American Legion,

Matawan Post 176, of Matawan,protested an appeal to the Mon-mouth County Tax Board, relativeto the assessment on the land and

. Thirty Years Ago(Issue Friday, Nov. 21, 1930)The people of the Cliffwood sec-

tion will hold a meeting In theCliffwood fire house,. Wednesdayevening,.November M.Srt 8 o'clockto protest against the Owing ofthe .railroad station, at-CHffwood.

Matawan Free Public libraryKJ been the scene of great ac-tivity this week. Every evening,-children and parents have availedthemselves of the opportunity, toInspect the new and attractive ju-venile Books, arranged In groupsby gfadwu ; ;

A public reception in honor of:ongressmon-e!e,ct Captain Williami. Sutphln of this borough, will beleld in the American Legion Hallon Main Street tonight at 8 o'clock.

Monday night, a Community As-sistance Committee was organizednine Borough Hall at'a'.call Issued>y Mayor Christian Heuscr to alltho churches and benevolent or-ganizations In Matawan boroughand-township. The request, cameat.the suggestion of the MatawanPublic Health Association '. as ameans of helping to supply theneedy during the winter -as. theyhod found more cases than usualat this time of the'year wera needing assistance of a more substan,tlal nature than the "Health Asso-ciation was .organized to give.

The Rarltan Inn, Keyport, willservo a real old fashioned turkeydinner on Thanksgiving Day" from11(30 a.m,.to 9 p.m.for »f.5O.

One.ot the new buses of the RolloTransit Corporation was stolentorn the garage during the fog'lastFriday night. Entrance Is said tohavo been made by 4 former em-jloyee, who turned (he big $8,000MIS over to three men from JerseyCity. The bus was seen on WestStreet.In New York'the followingday, but since that time no traceof It has been found.

The placing of Signs with thenames of the streets at.all inter-sections with Main Street havebeen .completed. This Is a longtalked-of Improvement and nowanyone wishing to find any uftthetide streets branching off fromMain Street has but to ride throughtown and look for the street sign.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Schockarc erecting a boathouse an theirproperty on- Lake Lefferts, whichwould do credit to any" Bite. Tho

15, the Monmoutfi'Couhty Board'ofTaxation rendered a decision in /a-'or o( .the American Legion, Mata-

wan Post J76; ' . . • ' . .Several cases of chickenpox are

reported to have.broken out arhongschool children in the, Cheesequakesection ot Madison Township.

The four Matawan-Keyport bankswill release approximately $124,000to. Christmas Club depositors, nextweek,.according to.estimates ad-vanced by officials of the savingsInstitutions. . ••

Members of the Morganville In-dependent Fire Co., on the Free-iold-Matawan Rd., will institute aund raising drive towards .defray-ing the.cdst of the new.$5800"Macktruck recently purchased by the or-ganization.

A fighting Keyport High elevenwhich refused to give up camefrom behind Saturday to tie theirShore Conference opponents, t h eToms River Indians, before 400shivering spectator* on the K.H.S.field. •

With good weather Thanksgivingmorning a record crowd for anathletic event In Matawan is ex-pected to. jam the high school fieldorihasecond annual gridiron bat-

tle between those arch bayshorerivals, Keyport and Matawan, •"•'•'•"

Enough .turkeys to supply NewJersey families .with a holiday din-ner fo r either or both Thanks-giving Days were assured by theNew. Jersey State Department ofAgriculture today.: •-.•—.

Matawan High School's gridforces turned on the full fury of asweeping-attack Saturday, at PointPleasant; to account for their fifthvictory of the season against twodefeats.

»?•»••»! I I l | l »

' More Fruit QUMUOMNow that the garden rush has let

up, many gardeners have beenlooking back oo the season, won-dering what happened, if thingsdidn't always go right.

Letters that some of you havewritten show that thitjs true._Mrs. C. Jtj»SusseJt,_ior example,asks for a" copy of our "Bush FruitPest Control Chart" so that she'Bknow how to deal with pests nextyear. , . .

Mrs. C. H. writes that the ever-bearing red raspberry bushes whichshe, and her husband have in theiryaid get some kind of blight hi theearly spring. Then later in the sea-son more berries come oo, and theypicked, some beauties as late asNov. 3. , : : : •

AnthracnoseI put the problem up to Ernest

G. Christ, fruits specialist, who saidit siunds ta.him.as II the ,C. JL'sbushes jet a disease called anthrac-nose In the spring oh the 613' canes.'"Fall berries grow on new and un-infected canes,

The first thing to do, says Mr.h i t l t o e t o l * f r u l t i n g

One Good Turn Deserves A BlanketBy Mario Diller • .

(Peter Bartholomew Is ill)

OF COURSE, I DOIfT have the slightest idea who PeterBartholomew is, but it seems to be the vogue to have some-one write a column when somebody is sick. So, in an effortto cheer Peter, we'll try to keep this in a lighter vein thisweek. Better than thumping around in an artery anyway. . .

REPORTS FROM bt)T-OF-STATE . . ' i n Austin, Tex', Mrs.M. Alvin Pace owns what she claims is the cleanest cat inthe world. Her black cat, Lucky, jumped into her automaticwasher and got 12 minutes of wash, eight minutes of rinse

cones as soon as the berries hovebeen picked to cut down on diseasepossibilities.

Then apply a Bpray. Recommend-ed for early,spring, in the delayeddormant stage of the bushes, iseither 'dinitro w lime sulfur.- Forlater season sprays to beat t besame disease, use either ferbam orcaptan. . - .

Details about mixing the chemi-cals appear in the pest control chartthat Mrs. C. H. asked for.

L. ,. Apples Rot * /Another backyard frujt grower,

W. D., Old Bridge, has had troubleswith apples rotting on the tree.What makes this? . ,

Well, says Mr. Christ, he's neverseen such a thing in the commercialorchards that he visits. But then,the commercial men don't leaveanything to chance when they'retrying to make a living selling ap-ples.

The best thing for Mr. D. or any-one else trying to raise fruit in thebackyard'Is to follow the Rutgersspray schedule to the limit. Mr. D.now has some information that wesent him and let's hope he'has bet-ter luck next season. .

Strawberry "Vine"Also, asks this Old Bridge gar-

dener, what about this strawberryplant that grows like a vine?

Better stick to the recommendedstrawberry plants that you can buyit nearby nurseries, • is the fruit'specialist's advice. These so-calledstrawberry vines that he has seenhave had to be tied up to makethem grow that way. Really, thevarieties that have been tested un-ier our New "Jersey conditions arebest. . V . -- : ' ; ' 1

*""•' '"TO!.ConnorsTaise*;' ' j';..:•-" The • University "jamlly has beensaddened _byl, the •death"- of Dr.Charles H. Connors, retired orna-mental . horticulturist,, who wrote,this column several .years.,He did.much to make New Jersey deserveIts designation of "Garden-State."

Health HintsTHE .GREEKS HADA WORD FOR IT ' , :

By Michael S. Newjohn M.D.Occasionally we find that ancient

truth has very timely contempor-ary application. Thus, many of ustoday In our;search forhealth andhappiness, can benefit by consider-ing the maxim which was the guid-ing principle of all art and artistsin ancient Greece. "Nothing - toomuch" was its message. Nothingtoo much put in or left out; nothingtoo much done or left undone. Ex-actly and only enough to' achievethe perfection of balance and of har-mony, as we sea It In the Greciancolumn and in the simple loveli-ness of the classic Grecian dress.

For health, the rule is much thesame, nothing too much of indul-gence or denial, of working orconcern or disregard for self.' Justenough to • maintain the nice bal-ance of physical function which Ishealth. The same s'tanda'rtl appliedto our intellectual, emotional,* andspiritual states, and activities wouldadd much to the measure of ourhappiness.

The Greeks had a word for it.Nothing too much;" Perhaps

you'd like to give that expressiona place- In your vocabulary, andn your life.

KNOW YOUR NAVY"THE BIG EAR"

, NsaamasmiMOST TOVV«fW "CATIU THE UNVttSf. M "UG EM" IS AMUE TOnoutno SMCC it ma Mim THAN THE MMED MT. PAUMU*omcM SCOH, n HAS A nmcao* eoamtn pMMrra, ANmatAUJMA Of MOM THAN SOW ACU5. KNOWN QrrKUUrAS me NAVAL KSEMCH.SMnpN THE ENNK SIWJCTU1E WflCHJMOK THAN SO THOUSAND TOM. .

discovered hpr pet arid stopped the machine. Lucky was in acoma three days/ but is now healthy as ever . . . The YoungDemocrats Club at_Southwest Texas State College was'forced"to~elecra~new~vice presidenF when they dfceovered theirold one'was a Republican;. . . Mayor Elmer Lacey, Turkey,Tex., has Invited the mayor of Pie, West Va., to a joint cele-bration of National'Indigestion Week, which*starts whenThanksgiving dinner finishes. , .

MORE OF THE SAME..... In Fairfax, Va.; Paul A. Lain,peeved at a county tax. bill for $414.43, paid off with 405silver dollars, 52 dimes, 16 quarters and 23 pennies just toshow the county how heavy the tax is . . . In Ripley.-Tenn.,General Sessions Court Judge Odean Craig had the defendantbring out his Army papers to prove his name was Y. M. C. A.Perkins. Perkins, a transient, was taken into custody forvagrancy. Perkins explained to the judge that he was namedfor the Young Men's Christian Association, and his Armypapers showed the four initials . . .Christmas shopping forthe person Who has everything? What about spending $3000at Trefflich's Bird and Animal Co. in New York? For thatamount, you get one pair of Bengal tigers, two years *old,unrelated. They're;-perfect>

:-mQre.-or;.less.;;-;.E?ch'."bas".:">on*"broken t o o t h . . . . ':

DILLIES FROM DILLER . . . or my way of putting an endto the Kennedy jokes for a while . . . Did'ja-hear about thesmall college that decided to go coeducational? Having only,one dorm, they assigned boys to- one side and girls to theother and 'fainted a white line down the corridor. Onefellow, caugrnSacross the line was hustled before the deariwho explained such offenses are subject to fines, $5 for thefirst offense, $10 for. the second and so on. "Any questions?"asked the dean. ."Yes sir;" was the reply, "how much doesa'sfiasbn ticket cost?" . , ..An insurance'claim agentTOS,eaching hisfwiffeto;x3riye.whpn4he.brakes failed on a.steepiIbwnhill grade-. ...""Xman'.t stop,'lshe*shrllfedl'"what!ll Ido?"}

"Brace yourself," h'tibby ire^fte&i "alia"try. -to &t'somethfng:

cheap;. . ."' 'Part of insurance .questionnaire .". . whom doyou want notified in case of injury . . .matter of factanswer, "the nearest doctor . . . " Maybe we ought to goback to the Kennedy jokes again . . .

Famous QUOTATIONS by persons we know:

Charles E. Applegate: I will not sit'idly by.

E. Dalton Graham: The ones at the top didn't switchat the bottom.

John Marz jr.: 'I Shall Return . . .

Pat Nixon: I'll probably have to go back to teachingschool. : , ","•• - • '. , ..• ,-t.-.

Richard Nixon: It's only for a little while.

Louis Rollo: Walking is excellent exercise>...-. . i m -proves the health and dears the /runt], ;...:.„ '._

Bert and Harry Piel: . W?r> being replaced for a song.

Robert Strang: Decisions, decisions, decisions . . . "

Jack Kennedy: It must have been the excitement

A STORY IFOR

By Margaret A. Uavy

Too Much DinnerAlec helped his mother get-the

table ready for the big Thanks-giving dinner.

"I'm so hungry I could eat twoThanksgiving dinners," he said..

Alec's mother 6miled. "You caneat all you want," -she said, "butdon't cat too much. You know DadIs taking you to the football gamethis afternoon."

"Don't worry, I won't eat toomuch to go to the game," saidAlec This was the first time Dadhad taken Alec to the Thanksgivingfootball game, though his olderbrother, James, had gone manytimes.

A'ec set a_neatly folded napkinbeside each dinner plate. Then hecarried in two platters oi appetiz-ers and set one at each-end ofthe table. There was stuffed celery,carrot sticks, brack and greenstuffed olives, and two .kinds ofpickles. '.. . .

'Everything looked so good thatAlex, couldn't resist taking one'bfeach.: -.' i •

"Dinner, everyone!" Mother call-ed. Alec took his teat quickly. Ev-eryone smiled and rubbed theirstomachs when Mother brought inthe steaming bnnm turkey. Thenthey bowed their heads as Dadgave the blessing.

Alec could tardry wait for Didto finish carving the turkey. Heand his brother James got thedrumsticks. Alec finished hit in notime. Then he stuffed himself withcreamy mashed potatoes and gib-let gravy, cranberry sauce, cornand peas, and hot buttered- rolls.

When he was finished, AJec feltthat be couldn't eat another bite.

Mother cleared away the plates,.and served coffee. Theii In cametwo enormous pies and dishes ofice cream for everyone.

"Which kind of pie would youlike, pumpkin or mince?" Motherasked Alec

"Let me see,"' said Alec. "Ithink I like pumpkin bost. No.mince pie is my favorite. I reallylike them both. May I have a pieceof each?"

"I said you could eat as muchas you wanted," said Mother.

So Alec ate a big piece ot pump-. kin pie and a big. piece of mince.Then he ate every speck of icecream in his dish, l i -, "Now I know I can't eat anoth-er thing." he said.

Then he saw a big bowl of mintson" the. table, and another bowl otn u t s . . . ' ; • • • - . . . '

"I can'f let Thanksgiving go bywithout eating sortie "nuts andc a n d y , " h e s a i d ; •-•"-' ••'-•••

SJ he did. He ate nuts and candyuntil he xould cat no more.

Soon Dad rose from the table.""Come on, son, it's time to go tothe football game," be said.

"OOOOOMHHHH!" Alec put hish*nd on bis tummy. Me felt > painthat grew bigger and bigger untilAlec h»d the biggest tummy acbehe l a d ever had. ...•.,. .

Mother looked at hirri and shookher head. "I'm afraid It's bed foryou this afternoon, Alec, and nofootball game.-1 told you not tomake a pig of yourself."

Alec stumbled into his bedroom."Serve* me right for being sucha pig," he groaned. "Next yearI'll remember not to eat too mucband I win go to the football game."

Thursday, November 24, 1960 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Fag* Ftvt

pThe-Woman's Club of Matawan.

;Ihc: , r sponsored a Thanksgivingvesper service Sunday afternoon in

' the First. Methodist Church of Mat-awan. Those attending broughtcanned food to be distributed inbaskets to the needy during t h eholiday season. Ushers were Sirs.Donald W. Robinson, Mrs. WilliamOwen. Mrs. Peter TenEyck and.Mrs.jCharles RaiRaud;_ _•

•The program-included proces-sional, "Come, Ye ThankfulPeople," by Rodgers; greetings byMrs. Thurman C. Nealis, presidentof the Woman's Club; invocationby the Rev. Frank' E. Sweeten,pastor of.the F i f s t MethodistChurch; hymn;-anthem by senior

• choir; scripture reading by theRev. Chester A. Galloway, pastorof the First Presbyterian Church;solo, "Arise O Lord," by .Mrs..M a r 11 y n Thurkilsdeh; dialogue,Psalm 23, by Mrs. Peter A. Readand Mrs. Allan J. Morrison, pastpresidents of tte-Woman's Club:hymnroffertory prayer by~CafrollI^HallBiihop't;MMFln"G~~6T

Matawan High School Cheer Leaders

"I^HallrBiihopt;MMFln-Gnarao6TTrinity Church (Episcopal); duetby Mrs. Rhea VandermarkandMi*. Thurkilsdenj—"I Waited forthe Lord"; anthem by the com-

~bined~serllor" and""chapeT"^fiofii;"benediction by the Rev. Mr.Sweeten and recessional, "Postludein G" by Kem; , —

Miss S. Evelyn Allen, AsburyPark, is the organist-director of thechoirs of the F i r s t Methodist

-Church. : ::: . :

|Mala\yan Cubs,

Cub Scout Pack66, Maiawan,held a meeting at the MatawanHigh School gym on Nov. 17. Den1 reciled a poem, emphasizing, theletters in "America." There was-asalute to the flag. Den 4 won the

The girls from Matawan High "School who willcall for the-cheers tor Ihe Huskies and lake care ofmascot Mr. Huskle himself, are Frances Adler,captain, and 'Sharon Conover, co-captain, kneeling

Baptize Daniel KonishAt St. Joseph's Church

Daniel James Konl»h, son of Mrand. Mrs. Herbert Konish jr.; Ma-.pie Ave., Matawan, was baptizedon Sunday, Nov. 6, I960, at St. Jo-seph's Church, Keyport. Sponsorswere Mrs. George Brown, Keans-burg, and John Konish, UnionBeach, •• ~: After- the ceremony, a buffet din-ner was held at, the parent's home.Attending were Mr. and Mrs. An-Ihony Devlno and son, Thomas,Keyport; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert

i Konish sr, and children, Virginia,.; Peter, Robert and Pamela. Mrs.'

JMildred; Mills, Union Beach; Mr.. and Mrs. Thomas Slutter, Keyport;: Mr. and Mrs. George Brown, Mr.li*nd_Mrst_Georje_ Stover.lKeans-

burg; Mr and Mrs Francis Perryli*nd_Mrst_Georje_ Stover.lKeans-. burg; Mr. and Mrs. Francis Perry,

Trenton; Mr. and Mrs. Adam Szy-manski and children, Rita, Marion,Jimmy, Morganvllle; Mr, and Mrs.John Lenart, Mr. and Mrs: FrancisMacllk, South Amboy; Mr. andMr j . Joseph Spencer and daughter,Patricia, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ap-plegate, Perth Amboy; Mr; andMrs. Edward Kolus, Carteret. '

Gold Star MothersPlan Celebration

Gold Star Mothers', Inc., UnionBeach, held their regular meetingat Daughters of America-Hall, on

: Nov. 15. Mri. William. Relmer,president, opened the meeting withthe pledge and prayer. All of theofficers were re-elected at thj Oc-tober meeting. Plans were made tohold a fifth anniversary celebrationand installation of officers at BuckSmith's Restaurant. East Keans-burg, on Sunday, Dec. 4.

On Tuesday Mrs. Relmer, hospi-tal representative;-and a group ofmothers visited Lyons Hospital for> Thanksgiving party for 92 pa-tients. Games were played,• prices(warded, and refreshments: served.

At the meeting the birthdays ofMrs. Christine Gunsauls, and Mrs,Margaret Short were celebratedand each received a cake and giltfrom her secret pal."

, Hostesses.for the evening wereMrs. Alice Hasselt-and Mrs. Kath-erine Garnett.

On Nov. 15 the Maternity Aux-iliary of Monmouth Medical Centersponsored a ' luncheon-bridge f o rthe benefit of the nurse's home inLong Branch. Attending were Mrs.Marguerite R. Laird, Mrs. Wil-liam J." Rabel, M r s . Frank H.Bliss, Mrs. Gerard Devlin, Mrs,Leroy Sickels, Mrs. Edward W.Currle, Mrs. George Barbanell,Matawan, and Mrs. John C. Eggles-ton, Holmdel, Prize winners wereMrs. Bliss and Mrs, Devlin. *' Douglas Ward has returned homefrom the Vose Mountain Lodge,Kingfield, Me., where he spent aweek hunting.

On Thursday evening, Mr. andMrs. Edward W. Currle attendedthe New Jersey League of Mu-nicipalities dinner at Chalfonte-HaddonHalir Atlantic City.

On Saturday Mr, a n d Mrs.George L. Doublier attended theColumbla-Rutgers football game atBaker Field, New York.

Mrs. Gerard Devlin entertainedat luncheon-bridge on Monday. Herguests w e r e Mrs. J. FranklinDomlnlck, Mrs. Ralph W. Herrickand Mrs. Leroy Sickels. M r s .Sickels held high score.

Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Lewis cele-brated their fifth wedding anniver-sary on Saturday by having dinnerat the Cypress Inn, Wanamassa.

On Sunday evening "Richard Gil-Us, John Thaler, Joseph Rankl,Russell W e b e r , Bruce Mac-Cutcheon, Nicholas Francisco andGeorge Delta attended the'hockeyEime between the Ranger* andDetroit at Madison Square Garden,New York.T h e Good Neighbors Club met

Thursday afternoon at the home ofM r • . Russell Wilson. Attendingwere Mrs. Frank Gray sr., Mrs.James Benner, Mrs. William C.Nodding*. Mrs. George- Andrews,Mrs. George Wilson, and Mrs. Wil-liam Bowie. -

Clarence A. Towler is a medicalpatient In.the East Orange Veter-ans Hospital.

Mrs. Warren Donnell Is spendinga three-week vacation.at her homein Boca Raton, Fla. She expects toreturn to Matawan pec. 1.

Thanksgiving Services;• At Browntown Church

Thanksgiving services are beingheld at the Browntown CommunityChurch on Thanksgiving morningfrom S to 10 a.m. Sunday night thefirst of a series for teen-ager*'washeld at the church. The programswill include qulaes, movies andpanel discussions. A Sunday. Schoolteachers meeting was held Mondaynight at the home- of Mrs. Leo

"BurkeriTMabaliiie St" '"• - . . . • ^ t s-- - f •

Fred Gaub attended .the 25thmembership-dinner of the DuPont'iat Sayreville Nov. 16.

Mrs. Edward KiSmllne and daugh-ter. Miss EIna Komllne, Duriellen,were Sunday afternoon guests ofMiss Marie Gaub,-Route 9.

On Monday the two third gradesof School. 18, Sayre Woods South,visited the Newark Museum,

Daughter Born ToMr,, Mrs. Cressman

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Cressman,Queens Village, 1. L, are the pa-rents of a daughter, Cindy Gall,seven pounds, 16 ounces, bornThursday, Nov. 17,1960, in JamaicaHospital,, L. 1. The baby is thecouple's first child. Mrs. Cressmanis the former Miss Gall Gethard.Cheesequake, , .

: Boy Scout Troop 67 had as guestson Friday night Boy Scout Troop61, Sayreville, under the directionof Robert Carlftis, Scoutmaster.

The—Ladies Auxiliary of t h eCheesequake Fire Co. will hold amonthly meeting Tuesday at (t p.m.

Michael Mahoney Has6th Birthday Party

Michael Mahoney, son of Mr. andMrs. Joseph Mahoney, WoAdbrookDr., Matama, celebrated his sixthbirthday at a party on Monday. Acircus thane was used for the dec-orations. Games were played andeach guest received a favor.

Those attending .were NancyHughes, Cindy Lou Kiss,.Barbara

' Jastrab. Debbie Marvel, DebbieNeller, Kevin and Barry Edwardsaad Jimmy Colbdli.

Unable to attend were Karen and- i*y MeGeehaa, Jim Hooker and

Robert Woetta.

In front; other squad members, left to right. NancyIves. Pat Chapman, Diane Tomascllo, Pat Carbon,Joan Almenas, Donna Shepherd, Ton! DdlaPletro,S! ! P M A J W lS«!!.Y_ Mary.

Mat a wan P e r s o n a 1 11 e m s' News Of T»u And FOBX r a m n i la Appreolatea At Any Tim* -

demonstrated artificial respiration.Relay races - and story particlpa-ton were led by Den 9. All duns'ill design ond__make individual,left flags. The namo"6f"D"enn1s t i - fwmati inadvertently was omittedfrom the list of new Bobcats for:he October Pack meeting. Den 8losed the meeting with "Good

Might, Cub Scouts."The following Boy Scouts have

>ecome-Den Chiefs: Steven T«sto,Den 9; Billy H&fagcn, Den 1; El-mer Williams, Den 8 and DouglasHanna; Den 5. ."

Cub Scouts of Pack 68 partici-pated in the Get-Out-The-Volo enm-

ign by distributing door-boll post-ors throughout the borough. Thiswas part of the requirements forthc.SDth anniversary achievement

PotfT wVrYPwT fgiiHnd^iauT "offieneral Motors. In Linden Nov. 8,

On Nov. 19, Den 9 visited the CubScout-Boy Scout * Museum at Na-tioaal Boy-ScouLhesdquaners, NewBrunswick. They also visited the

nimal barns at the State Agricul-tural College,',

Mrs. John Tamburrl, Matawan,'and William Maddock, - KaritanTownship, were recent guests ofMr. and Mrs. Michael F. KIdtusand children. Ravine Dr., who tookthem to the uranium mine atStanhope, the first active uraniummine on the East Coast. FrankWarnett sr., of the Bemco Uran-ium Mine, took the group aroundand showed how deep in the earththe , mine went. Many specimenswere picked tip. Later the groupwent to Eranklin' and mct^manymineral collectors, all of whomwere searching (or the famousFrankljrtifluores'cent Minerals, thecolors of the rainbow.

Mrs. Gerard A. Devlin entertain-ed at-dessert-bridge at_a parlygiven by .the Women's Auxiliary olthe Beacon Hill Country Club. Prize.winners wereMrs. Richard E. Erd-manh, MrsV Frederick iCDederTcicand Mrs. James G. Nell. Otherguests were Mrs. Leroy II. Sickels,Mrs. Ralph W. Herrick, Mrs. Wil-liam R. Craig and Mrs. Paul A.

Mr.' and Mrs. Ralpn W. Herrickand Miss J. Mabel Brown spentSunday with Mr. and Mrs. FrankR. Valentine and Mrs. C, BradfordBrown In Tenafly.

Mrs"; F. Howard Lloyd Jr. attend-ed a recent matinee performanceof "Alda" at t h e MetropolitanOpera House. New York.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward W, Currleattended the Thanksgiving dinner-dance at the Manasquari River GolfClub on Saturday evening. .'

On Tuesday evening the Mathe-matics' Club of Matawan HighSchool honored Mrs. James Nod-dings, a former high school teacher,at a surprise party.

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas1 Wardcelebrated their 20th wedding anni-versary oh Sunday. They enjoyeddinner at t h e American Hotel,Freehold. .

Mr. and Mrs, James D. Carber,Vero Beach, Fla.; are spending IThanksgiving^ holidays with theirson-in-law and daughter, Mr. andMrs. Wyman Bedle and family.

Miss Ann Churchman entertainedher card club on Monday at whichtime the birthday of Mrs,. JohnKeptigh wai celebrated.

ffie

Mr. and. Mrs'. John B. Hostetterand children, Nancy, Andy, - Billyand Jean, South Hadley, Mass.. arespending this week with Mr. andMrs, Jay F. Hostetter.

Mrs. Arthur C, Hall entertainedat bridge on Thursday. Priio win-ners were Mrs, Arne Kalma andMrs. Johnson Cartan. Other guestswore Mrs, Bayard Lamborn, Mrs.Laurence Lemalre, Mrs. RosS W.Maghan, Mrs. Allan J. Morrisonand Mrs. Charles Perrlne.

On Wednesday, Mrs, Frank Grayr. entertained at a kaffee klatsch.juesls were Mrs. John O'Brian,

Mrs, William Allen, Mrs. RalphDuncan, Mrs. Antfrony Nucclo, Mrs.Richard Getshsll, Mrs. John Smoy-ak and Mrs. Wilbur Schneider.

Miss J. Mabel Brown entertainedat canasta on Friday at the homeo(. Mrs. Ralph W. Herrick. Guestswere Mrs. Harry 0, Jones and MissEllen Hancy, Freehold; Mrs. E.Murray Todd, Holmdel; Mrs. Ed-win H. Domlnlck, Mrs. J. FranklinDomlnlck, Miss Mary Llsk a n dMrs. Jay F. Hostetter, Matawan.

The Colony Club of Matawan fieldits annual buffet supper and danceon Saturday evening at The Oaks,Mlddletown. Approximately 50guests attended. A turkey was wonby Mr, and Mrs. Frank Matuch and15 other prizes were awarded.

Mrs. Conrad Sebolt entertained atluncheon-bridge on Wednesday. Herguests were Mrs. Duncan Black,Middletown; Mrs. Robert Erdmann,Mrs, Milton Gunkle, Mrs. HowanKrojh. Mrs.' Evertttl E. Carlion/Mrs. Winston S c h a f f e r , Mr*.Charles Lockwood and Mrs! RollinRlchords. : '".•••

Mrs. Douglai Ward and daughter, Joyce, spent Saturday In NewVork1

Mr. and Mrs. George L. Doublierwere Sunday supper guests of Mr,and Mrs, Harry Stelglcman, River-ton.

Mrs. George A. Deltz was theluncheon guest on Monday of Mrs.James Ledermtn, Woodbridge,' Mr, and Mrs. John L. Chamber-

lain entertained their bridge clubat dinner and cards on Saturdayevening. Guest* were Mr. and Mrs,Peter A. Read, Mlddletown; Mr,and Mrs. A. Edgar Palm and Mr.and Mri, Thomas M. Andenon,

Joseph EL PippeliDies In South Amboy

Jojeph E. Pippett, 76, of 349Fourth St., South Amboy, died Mon-i)»y, Nov. 2l,196tt,- at hi* home,-following a long illness. Ha wasborn in Swedesboro and had re-sided in South Amboy for 5} years.

He retired as a railroad conduc-tor eight years ago after 42 years ofservice with the Pennsylvania Rail-road. Mr. Pippett was a memberof S. 1. Stephen's Lodge F&AM,Trenton Consiitcry of .Salaam'Tem-ple. A,A,O,N,Mi -Shrin« and theRailroad Square Club. He was amember of the Retired Men's As-sociation - of the Y.M.C.A., SouthAmboy, and of the Brotherhood ofRailroad Trainmen. •

He is survived by his wife, "Anna;one daughter, Mrs. Peter A. Read,Middletown, formerly of Matawan;one. granddaughter, and two sis-ters/Mrs. William Owens and Mrs.Mary Williamson, Philadelphia.

Funeral services were.held yes-terday afternoon at 2 o'clock at theKurzawa Funeral Home, South Am-boy, with the Rev. Lee Cotter, pas-tor of Calvary Methodist Church,South Amboy, officiating. Intermentwas in Cloverlcaf Park Cemetery,Woodbridge. Masonic services wereheld Tuesday evening.

Legion Units To -Mail Nylons Now

Mrs. William Bridgeman, presi-dent-of-the Middlesex C o u n t yAmerican Legion Auxiliary, has is-sued a notice to all units in thecounty to send their used nylonsto Greystone Hospital by the pound,hereafter. It is estimated that 35pairs equal one pound. These usednylon stockings are sold to re-processing companies and themoney realised is used to purchasetelevision sets for the patients.

All units are also asked to do-nate cookies for the Christmasparty for the veterans! »t MentoPark, scheduled for Wednesdayevening, D e c 21;

The county banquet committeewill meet Wednesday evening, atthe Colonia Legion Home. '

Feb. 11 *a» been selected ai Ihedate for t h e Past Presidents'Luncheon at Oak Hill* Manor.

It you need printing of any kind,•re are here to serve you. Outquick ttrvitx and r«HMiabi( price*trill pbt** yog. ' '

New Uniform GroupFor Coastal iert

Mrs. Joseph Loeffler, presidentof the Corps Mothers of the Giiad-alcanaKCoastalieri Junior Drumand Bugle Corps, has appointed anew uniform committee. Mrs.Michael Lynch, chairman, will beassisted by Mrs. Mary Cassldy. co-chairman, Mrs. Joseph Smith. Mrs.Frederick vonRodeck, and Mrs.Frederick Hill,

Mrs. Frederick Hill was welcom-ed as a new member at the meet-ing which was held In the Veteransof Foreign Wtri Post Home onCliffwoocT Ave,

Twenty-three reservations havebeen received from the membersfor the Christmas , which willinclude dinner and a performanceof "Hit The Deck" at The Meadow-brook, Cedar- Grove,' on Dec. II.

Mrs. Michael Lynch reported ona successful trick or treat candysale and the date of Feb. 18 wasselected for the third annual Val-entine Dance at' the post home.Mrs, Joseph Smith was namedchalrlady.

The next meeting will to heldJan, 10 at the post home, ' '

Auxiliary PresidentAnnounces Chairmen1 Mrs. Anthony Guigliano, newly-elected president of the M, E.Haley Hose Co. Auxiliary, Mata-wan, announced her coramitleechairmen for (he corning year at ameeting held in the (ire house onMain St. . "

Mrs. John Rainko and Mrs. Jo-seph- P. Vaccarella will serve onthe welfare committee; Mr». Mor-ris Inguaggialo, publicity; Mrs.Frank Gray sr., Mrs. Frank GrayJr., and Mrs, Theodore D'AIoia,trustees.

Plans were made for the Christ-mas party which will be held Wednesdajr, Dec. 14. at Rollo's PostHouse, Keyport Secret pats will berevealed at this time. "

The special prize was . woo byMrs. Guigliano.

Attend Convention

Teen-Ageri ElectBoard Of Directors

The monthly get-together of theHolmdel teen-igers was held Sat-urday at the Holmdel ElementarySchool. The following high schoolboard of directors was elected bythe 49 students attending: Seniors,Carol Dueker, J u d y Skldmore;juniors, Louis Nanna, PatriciaKissel; sophomores, Carol Eckert,John Flemer; freshmen, PatriciaParker, sheri Thieme.

Final arrangements were madefor the muscular dystrophy drivewhich will be conducted In HolmdelSaturday. Approximately 20 teenage girls, from the canteen willparticipate, : : -

Plans were made far a specialChristmas party to be held Dec.17. Teen-agers are to bring itemsof food for baskets to be presentedat Christmas lo needy families inHolmdel Township,

The meeting was conducted byMr. a n d Mrs. Russ Lagattuta,chairman of Ihe P-TA sponsoredcanteen. Games and dancing woreenjoyed. Mr. and Mrs. FrankBurke, were cliapcrones.

Republican Club MeetsIn Cliff wood Beach

The Women's Federated Repub-lican Club held their regular month-ly meeting at Bayview Presbyterian CotUfiC, Cliffwood Beach, onNov. 21 with Mrs. Walter Edwards,president, presiding.

Hostesses for the evening weftMrs. Myndert Doncmina, Mrs. Ea-ward Milcolm and Mrs. VincentCardelfe,' Three new members,Mrs. J.,Tappan, Mrs. J, Grimmand Mrs, M. Ccist, were proposed.

Mrs. Cardelfe was appointedchairman of the Christmas party.Anyone wlihlng to attend theparty, !• advised to contact thechairman at LO 6-2SS2.

A special prize was, awarded toMfs. XjBk '

< Card *f ThanksThe family of the late Frank

Petroski with to thank all theirfriends and neighbors who called,

• * . . , L r ••• i. . « ! * * • ' flow* and ma«i cards durMr. and Mrs. John J . Mailer. 10 fag (heir rteent -bereavement. e«-

Liberty St., M»!«wan, attended Ihe peetally Ihe pi l lbearen, Morsm-New Jersey State League of Mu- v | l l e p i n t Aid, aU (he »Uff ofnlcipaUtie* CwiwntkM al Haddoji M t h M d l l C e t d Thnlci

U. Mr.

Jersey Sate L g u e o M v|lle pint Aid, aU (he »Uff ofUtie* CwiwntkM al Haddoji Moomouth Medle»l Center, and TheA U t i C l f y ^ v M «7 .«d; fJay Fo»er.l Jtome,

Isatpeetof torVMsUwmaThe Petroski Family

j,Ha«rfK*uum

ttendance banner,Thomas Siddoris, CubmasLer,

Delegate To 4-H Congressl~l 1 • ! •

William Aracc, 17 years old, son has been active In tlvo Mi programof Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas L. Arace, for eight yean. He has won 18Browntown, will be among 1200 out- county awards,. He has been astanding 4-H Clubbers from all Junior 4-H leader for three yearsparts of the nation who will as- and a member at the Drowntownsemhle in Chicago. Bill, named the Sodhoppers during which time hoState Safety Delegate, will attend has undertaken » varluty ot 411the National 4-H Club Congress in, projects, Including gardening, safe-Chicago from Saturday K) Ttiurs- ty, shop, hom«t»autlficatlon and

The annual Cub Scout candycampaign is underway.

The December Pack meeting willbe held Dec. 22 at Cliffwood Gram-mar School.

poultry. He has 200 chickens, nnd170 pheasants In hjs poultry projcct.

__Other..Projects-,BUI has completed 50,900 square

feet of g&rdciilim, raised 1748 birds,cioated 22 articles In shop andcovered one and a half acres'-offoirstry trees,

lie won the Stale 4-K pullet rals-liili contest, a flock : managementcontest and home grounds bcAutifl-Cutlon. Ho ulso scored at the tupIn a state poultry Judging contest«iiifw4s « MWfflo-Brat a team repicacitlnu t h o state at a north,eastern Poultry Producer's Councilcompetition. .„•

13111 is awing 17 delegates fromNow Jersey selected to attend theCongress on tho basis of l eadfMl '

d l t > I t ) I

day. He will make the trip by }ct graduated from Rutgers last Voar.ninnn Ho also was an outstanding 411orplane.

BUI, who has

Women Dems MeetIn County Saturday

Mrs, Helen Hill, president of theWomen's Democratic Club of Mon-mouth County, has announced thatthe regular monthly meeting willbo held Saturday at 1:30 p.m. atthe Hotel Albion, Asbury Park. TheWomon'a Democratic Club of "As-bury Park will be. the hostess, withMrs. Roland Arrlngton as chalr-

l a n , • .' -• •

Mrs. Angelo Bottono, Keansburg,chairman of the nominating com-mittee, will submit the report ofher committee which Includes Mrs.Kathryn G. Huber, West Keans-burg, Mn. Louis DeFndo, L o n gBranch, Mrs, Rudolph Kastncr, At-lantic Highlands, and Mrs. GustavJ. Froret,.Fair Haven, -Tho oltlcesof financial secretary and secondvice president are to be filled.Nominations may be mado fromthe floor and election will beheld at the January meeting.

Plans will be discussed on Satur-day for the Christmas party, whichwill be held Dec. 10.

.'rograrn for six years, as a 4-IIor Kress and a nrlie winner In stateand has corrected 82 haiards, is competition. Ho presently Is em-sponsored by the General Motors ployed by Johmon and Johnson andCorporation. • U an assistant laader of the Drown-

The Mttawan High School tenlor (own Sodhoppors.

Bazaar Dec. 2, 3At Bayview Church

The annual baiaar ot BayviewPresbyterian Chu/ch, CllltwoodBeach, will be held on Friday, Dec,3 '.trom 7- to 10 p.m.'and -Saturday,Dec. 3, from 2 to 7 p.m. Trie ba-a i r is under the leadership of Mn,iaurence' Fowler. T h o boothsare getting finishing (ouches underthe direction of E. Schawhl and hiscommittee.

Tho bazaar this year will featurehandmade a n d decorated Items.There will be, a surprise take forthe children to fish In. A fortuneteller will tell everyone's fortune,Refreshments will be served In thoBayview Coffee House. _. The members of the Women's As-

Mdatlon will offer mor* varietiesoT items for Christmas gifts thanever before.

60 Attend MeetingCounty Auxiliary

Sixty members were present at ameeting of the American LegionAuxiliary of Monmoulh County heldFriday at Highlands with Unit 143as hostesses. Mrs. John Marus,county president, presided -

Committees were announced andplans were mads for a Christ-mas party to be hold at tho Bris-bane Child Treatment Center In De-cember, i'-' It also w u announced that MrsMams and six past county prcsldents will attend the annual birthday luncheon to be held Dec. 8 atthu Stacy-Trent Hotel, Trenton.

In December the county meetingwill be held i t Leonardo Unit 338,when there .will be a ceremonydedicating and burning otd flag*;

njYdlfit6T;t7> p ) ; I x :tiire!«re io nttond UutRcr* Uivlver-ttlty whuro h" would Ilkis to studyIndustrial' arts'.' •

Hill, la following i> family trmll-lF6nrW'b'rother jrameVr'il, "was

Ho also was an outstanding •and was tv dolefjate to the 411 Con-

Select Cast ForFollies Of 1960

The bayshore ares wai well rep-resented Mondty evening at ' thotalent party hold In, Shore PointInn, Hatlel, as tho Carglli dlroctorselected tho cast for tho "Follies ofI960." There were 500 Invitationssent to prospective Intent fromPerth Amboy lo Asbury Park. Cof-fee and cake were nerved after thoauditions.

Those selected will know tho thrillof an opening night performance,professional costumes and perform-ing with Broadway lelllngir-T- h oshow will ho presented nt thrcoperformances In Kcyport 1HI;IIichool on Dec. 7, 8 and 10,

Tickets for tho show now aroavailable. Patrons' nam»s will ap-pear on the program, Announce-ment has beLMi mado of a changeIn committee chairmen. Mrs, Leigh-ton Levy Is now In charge olpostern and Mm. Joseph Jacnusen,costumes, Jack Kovoo took picturesof tho participants,

Announcement was made that thoMaharajah contest soon will get un-derway wllh.the winner achcduleito ba crowned at tl\o Fnllloi olIBM. Among trig contestant) report-ed ara Magistrate Alfred lien-nessy jr,, Vnlon "Beach; Council-man Louis" Colllchlo, Koantbtirn;Councilman Henri Hanson, Key-port; Dr. Ralph Herman, .Middle-town, and Ruiioll A. O. Stotler,Superintendent of Matawan Township Schools, Names of other coil'tcstants will be announced.

Awards GivenCub Pack 80

Tlio ' monthly pack mooting; oCub Seoul Pack 89, sponsored byIt, Joseph1) Church, Keyport, was'ifld Friday evonlng In Kt, Joaeph'i

Lt. Cattle To Speak OnCoast Guard Academy

Lt. E. 8. Castle, U.S. CoastGuard, will talk to Malawnn HighSchool Junior and senior boys at10:43 a.m. Wednesday, to explaintho advantages and opportunitiesoffered-by- tfio_U.S. Coast OtlirdAcademy at Now London, Conn,

This Institution Is (ho Smallest ofIhe armed forces academies withan enrollment ol approximately 500cadets, It Is tho only service acad-emy (o which appointments aretendered on Iho basis of nationwldo compellllvs examinations.

Graduates j f HID four-yearcourse receive tho Dugroe of llacli-dor of Science In Unglnciirlnit andare commissioned as enilgns In theU.S. Cont Guard.

Tim .American Cancer Soclclyslated, that one of Ihe deadliest ai>pecli of cancer cells la their abilityto grow Into surrounding Ilisiin orlo bo curried b; and bloodvessels to eolanfoe in other parlt ofIho body, This spread Is culled molastasli, •••

y g ,Annex. Cubmaatcr Chris R

the following awards toho Cubs: Lion badr.ei, Stejihoii

MiiRCorella, Jamoi llownnl, WllHam Vance; bear hndues, NlcholmPalermo, Kenneth Mlllcl; wolbadges, Paul Ksposlto, Joseph VII'la; dennor strl|H>, Stephen Muscnrt'lla,' Also gold arrowirPairlck TORUO,Daniel Hurster, Jamoi HowardNlCholaa Palermo, Kenneth Mlllcl,Mlcliuol Ksposim, Joncpli iunnoy;ilver arrows, Alan Ctitllc, Jamoilowarcl, Mlclmol /U-jilor, Nlclmlo

l'alonno, Kennclh Mlllcl; anoyuapins, Nlchnlos Palermo, Kfnnelhdlllcl, James Itohlm, Tlvoina

Uoss,T h o special 50th annlvursar;

Jlionhowor award was priucntoil tWilliam Vancu, Donald ThominoiMlchnt)! TaBunrt, naymonit Clros.holt, Michael IJspoiilo, Alan COBIIC,Daniel llurstnr, Stephen Muaca.rolls, Jarncn Howard, Michael 'U«uler, Derek Rowa, Patrick Konned)and Edward llurstcr.

Skin Pnwnttd 'fn kotplna with tha (homo "N«<

Woridi,1' • 1pJour«ey, to Ilia C«ntof Iho Earth" aklt was prosenliby Pon 1. Den 2 proicnlou "IfndmIho Sea"; Den I, flPlanoli"l Den 7,

Thanksgiving. U«y In Snaco" andDen 0 "The Cod Flail Uall.".Cubmailer Zloglor repnrlcd Iliahn recent trip to West Point wai

enjoyed by SB Cubs and parents nttending, and commended Urn boysOn tholr behavior. I In aim Ihnnkottho parenli who helped with Hitfootball Icam during the recent »ooton, especially Bay AngonbacWhu WMctha coach.'-Th«-parent* allmidanco bannei

ond achlevomont liannor was; woiby Mrs. U, Hunter's Den t, lluCub Scout ntliindnnco liannor wawon by MrtrUrOroshol£ii_p<>n, t,

Hold Capping ExerciieiAt St. Peter's Hospital

Capping exflrcliDi for 43 froth-lien at til. I'lUi-r's General llospl'ul School of Nurslnu, Now Uruns

wick worn Sunday aflonmnn In the•clinot. Tim Rev, Joseph J. Connolly, naitor nf Corpus ClirlatChurch, South Hlvcr, wai thejprnker.

The freshmen woro nreienltiwith plain white caps, io whlclIhuy will add * ftnld bund when tho;becimio Juniors, a blue band wiiflenlort and a black bund whoiKradualB nurses, . .

Tlioio c«i>[rt>d from tlili armwuro Miss Curols llackor and MlnMary Ullon Harris, M«law»n

Prom Monday r l6 .atawan High S c h o o I Parent- .

'eacher Association will be host tntraveling art exhibit, "How To.

.ook At Paintings," which is sport.red by the Junior Service LeagueRed Dank to intraducu art ap- .

ircclatlon (Q young people. TheKhiblt, lo bo sot up in the highhool library, consist^ of JB'titlnai paintinRs HnglnR "fromlh Century Dutch works to prl«eInning abstracts, on loan thrtiiuftli

ho ucnoioslty of collectors, as wells iho-Newark Musoum, Oov, Rob-rt Ii.- Muynor mid Mrs. Meyner,"li'st Notional City Dank nf New'urk uml Esquire Mainline. . '.Students of the hltth tchnal and

icnl arllsls nisi) will exhjblt theirorks, A vnrinly of coloryj print*rom Iho Metropalllai) Museum ofrl, Now York, wilt "be' on salaud orders also ear, be placed forrlisls' supplies, . .i .The exhibit will be open to tlw '...

lULilic until 5 p.m. each dny and oj»' h d l R l fr y y ; n n g ; : R ( i c ; : - : l E f a m ut o l O p m . Dec. 1 alKti Is "Dack>i-Sehool" nloht for tlio -parent) «frwlnnwi and sophomore studu'nts] Iho Jhigh school.'Tho nrt display in Iho first .of arlux of special prujticls planned

y Iho P-TA for tho tf)GO-Qt ichoolear. Included a r e a Matawanidonco I'Ulr in Kubruury and lira'slnlillshincnt u( a scholarship fari student entering Iho teachingirofesslon. .--!•

Announce ScheduleIn Methodist Church

Intermediate. Fellowship of thaFirst Mclhodlit Church of Mata-wan will (mid a skating party Fri-day 'at-'1:30 p.m. Th(K4unlor P»l>lowshlp will have a colored dlih ::

l u p p e r n t 8 : 3 0 p . m . • > • - • ;

Sundny, dlvlnn worship sorvlcel " 're hulil tit 8:45 ana II a.m. with ',i ucrinoii by ilia panloj" and muaiaiy Iho chapel and senior choirs,I. supervised nursery anil Junior•hurcli aro conducted nt tho sec-ind service, Church school Is <ll-reeled- by Howard A, llond»r»oit,iiiporlnleiidont, at 0:43 a.m.

Junior choir rehekraej Weilnps.Jay at 1:4S phi,; piaVoT iiiMlthJi •In the inncluary, 7:15 p.m.; soo-and- training aiiiilon- for -U.M.C.—'lalton, 8 p.m.Thursday, elinpol choir ralMiriu

il 7 p.m.: ifnlor choir, II p.m.

First Baptist ChurchActivities, For Week

Circle. 1 of Iho I'lrtl KaptlitChurch ul Matawan will aponior"Away. With Ahlialt" an I'rlday at7:30 fm. Miss Abbott will ilwwslides. Hofrcihmenti will bo »orvcd.

At Sunday services conducted byth« Rev. Don U, Maxllelu, liUBrtrnpastor, «t 10 And It a.m., Ihe Juniorand smilar chalra will rMrtfclpal*. •lllbls School mttcls al 0:49 a.m.tSnnlnr lll«h UaptlK Youth I'dluw•hip, iiltt p.m.; Junior IIIHII Hap-Hit Voulh Fellowiililp, 7 p.m.

Junior choir pracllcea Monday atp.m.Tim llniillst Wnman's Day ot

'rayer will ho held on Friday, Den,, al 1:30 p.m.'

Contpfefs ProjectTint llmwnloi ot Troop 39, Mata-

wan, am currently crmililnlnu. attv-rnl fliilila nf Inlereiil an they com-

plete a icrvlco project. Recentlynature walk through Iho Itavlnn

Dr., sccllon of Matawan provided•Giivlli«« -In -th«- followlii||-«ti1«l»"-*»f—Iho icnut priiHram, out ot'doori,community llfn and nalur«, 'Iliallniwnlei colh'Cli'd dried graamii,iced patli and r«otli which will haused tn (reato dncornllvo Imy fav-ors which will bo pr«anl«d l o • » - •nitarhy numliiK hriinii, Thin troopI) compinfd of older Drownlot whonrn worklnu and gaining ^xnor|nnc<ifur Ihitlr "fly-up'1 Into • Olrl Sa>ut ,Iroop, Mrs, Illchard Oolihall laeadiT ami M n , I'rank (Irny Jr,In a»l*lnnl IfKclor.

Long on looks AND OUT)

and livfelfer than ever!(•RMrtlonol ntw ptHarmmnfl Olilmri/il>lt«'a fullnlH304 oulikilnoh Itocknt Rnnin* puU more tip than «v«rto 11M Dynamic BH tlib yt«rf lunamvl Yuu pit Bumsnlbw p#r (ullon with llw Koon-0-Wny Carbureliir . . ,»«v« about a doU«r bill oa t n r y Ul bneaiiw tlw Itiwlio*rutM on loww-owt rojui.r ( M , fi»B-»ls» umfartl lilsww•loon for n»w M M of •n l ry , . . plus rr»or« hawtroom, U«.loom and limroora. BaMHyt (MumUU'i »llmmw,Uimum flfun oukM ilu> ityU Ut4*r on* of U>« ttmimthaodltof ear* «« (It* modi Try It at ytur rfwIarV « * '

PftV m DYNAMIC.Opth» DollarvSavlncj

61 OLDS MOBILE« 0 U ( atMNOIItl •MAUtT

JOHNSONGIBB MOTOR CO. 110 M * St. Miltwin 10 6-1040IN •VMf V I M «M NIC-fVI»

--4 i« •

— • —•«•

THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Thursday, November 24, 1960

Diocesan P-TA To-Meet In Keyport

The fall conference of the Moif' mouth-Ocean Region of the Dio-* cesan Council of Parent-Teacher

. Associations will be held on Wed-' nesday afternooa at St. Joseph's

School, Kojrport.The Solemn Benediction of the

Most Blessed Sacrament will bepronounced in the church at 1:30

• p.m. At 2 o'clock the group will' ~ meet fn the school auditorium wilh

the call to order by Mrs, JamesT. Buckley, regent; opening prayerby the Hev. Cornelius Ji'Kane^ pas-tor of St. Joseph's; pledge of al-legiance by (he assembly; Nation-al Anthem, St. Joseph's choir; wel-come by the Rev. Father Kane,and greetings to delegates by MrsEarl W. Buckman. president of St

_ Joseph's P-TA. Mrs. Buckley (hen1 will conduct regional business.

The Rev. Peter J. Teston, region-al moderator, will present a spirit-ual bouquet to Bishop James J.Hogan, Spring Lake, after which

- -the session will adjourn tojttend. workshop session^ _as followsj. Vo-

cations conducted by the Rev. CarlWagner, diocesan "Vocational, direc-tor! In Defense of-Childhood, bythe Rev. William Bausch, assistan-»t St. Joseph's, and Parliamentary

: procedure, by Mrs, Carl F. Schon-jar. Spring Lake,- a registered

, parliamentarian.Mrs. Buckley will give a resume

«f the workshops after they areconcluded.

St. Ann's, Keansburg, Launches $400,000 BiiUiling Campaign Sarioor

tO SUPPER W/TH

coca SAC WE;IS SUCH A USELESS

tBASEDY

Useless to have »o Ml turn-~Ke~="wRnoul "OUR regularservice nod OUR Fuel Oil!Fpr.REAL warmth — calfus today.

Church Services Announced For BaysHore Area

STULllM

- the RtReV.Mjgr. EmnwttA-Monahan, pastor «t-SL Jam ejChurch, Red Bank, gave the Solemn Blessing to each commlrteequmIn St Ann's Church, Keaubtirg, and the Rev. Edward A. Corrtgan,pastor rf SL Aon'* presented each with a rosary In commemorationof the bulMIng campaign. A total of IB men attended the service, all atwhom are serving on the memorial gifts committee. The campaignhas a minimum goal of C5MM to help defray part of the cost of con-slruclutf a new school addition which win provide eight more lanceclassrooms.'~In addition; the program also. provides for renovation«f the church, rectory, convent, present school and auditorium. Esti-mated cost will be HM.M9.

After only one week of solicitation, toe committee reported a total

of $5J,7» la subscriptions with'only •» per cent of the parish visited.The Rev. Father Corrigan annodnced the apptinfmeni ef Edward Qulx-fey as feneral chairman and John Price ai memorial «!«• oonanltteochairman. Also announced were the following Team Cantaina andCo-Captains: Team 1, Captain Chester GorskL Co-Captain KennethDevlnej Team I, Captain Jeremiah Wilson, Co-Captain Joseph Kennelly;'Team J, Captain Benjamin Lean, i Co-Captain Daniel Bonn; Team 4,Captain Thomas KIpp, Ce-CaphUn Robert Gdsler; Team 5. CantataFrancis Boden, Co-Captata Richard Forte; Team «, Captain JohnRegan, Co-Captain John Qnias; Team 7, Captfla WUUs WestendortCo-Captain George Fitaermriei; Team S, Captain WWiam Allan, Co-Captain George McGuirt, ".-r""'.' •"• - :

OIL BURMIHC COUiOilNT (. StaviC{ r\JtU- OILS • KtJJO>¥LNt • COAL.

Second Baptist Church2tS Atlantic St, Keyport

Rev. Nicholas J. Tate, PastorThanksgiving service was held

last night at 7:40 p.m. The publicwas invited to attend. All activitiesusually held were postponed due tothis special service.

A "Talent Program," will begiven Sunday at 3:30 p.m., for thebeaelitot "Christmas have Otter-ing Tor Aged'ahd~Wia«Ws."~SuJKday School convenes at 9:30 a.m.;morning worship, 11 a.m.; eveningservice, 7:30 p.m. Baptism will beleld after morning worship.Morning choir rehearses at 7:30

>.m. Monday and senior choir re-learscs at 8 p.m. Wednesday.Bible Study is conducted by the

lastor on Wednesday from 7 untilp.m.

• -Prayer service is on Friday from8 until 9 p.m.

Communion service is held•second Sunday of each month.

the

The Rev. Doctor E. C. HicksMaryland Baptist Church, Los An-geles, Calif., former pastor of Sec-ond Baptist Church, (1918-1921), de-livered the.sermon Sunday morn-ing. His text was: "She Gleaned inthe Field Until Evening." The Sun-day School Choir accompanied thepastor to Middletown BaptistChurch to participate In a "YouthDay Program" held Sunday.

Mrs. Garnett Lawson, Superinten-dent, of the Sunday School, wishesto thank members and friends forhelping to make, the cake sale heldSaturday, a success.

King Of Kings Lutheran ChurchBayview School

Leonardville Rd., MiddletownRev. C Roger Burkina; PastorSunday School meets at 9:30 a.m.

and the church'service is held at10:45 a.m.

Jehovah's WltnetaeaKeyport Congrtfatloa

Kingdom Hall, H Division StThursday at 7:30 p.m. the minis-

try school will consider Study 55 onthe article "Directing Interest ToThe Organization," taken from theBible aid-book, "Qualified To BeMinisters." The first student talkwill cover material from the Bibleaid book, iOnls;MeanJ EverlastingLife," Chapter 19, on "Subjection to.the Superior Authorities!" Secondstudent will read from the book ofPsalms, Chapters 140:1 to 142:7;third and fourth students will coverthe material taken from the Bibleaid books, "From Paradise Lost toParadise Regained," a n d V Je-hovah's Witnesses !'m The DivinePurpose." The service meeting willbe held at 8:30 p.m.

Sunday at 3 p.m. there will be apublic talk entitled, "Testing theHoly Trinity's Foundations," Thtquestions that will be answered are

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'•W'belief in the Holy Trinity es-sential. to salvation?" and "Hearthe Bible's answer." All Kingdom1

seekers are welcome.Tuesday at 8: IS p.m. there will

be a study in the Bible aid book,"Your Will Be Done On Earth," atall service* centers. The addressesare as follows: F. Anderson, 331Wilson Ave., Matawan; J. Gondoly,5 Atlantic Ave., Matawan; R. LOVD-Iace,-T-Cliffwood Ave.™ Cliff wood;A. -W. Palmer, Middle Rd., Box 290,North Centeryille; W.'Waite, 8 Mon-rriouth AvelV Port Monmoulh, andKingdom Hall, All are welcome.

Calvary Methodist Church -Third St.,Keyport'

Rev. H. T. Williams STD,Pastor

Sunday School convenes at 9:30a.m.; morning worship, 10:45 a.m.;Youth Fellowship, 6: IS p.m.

Junior choir rehearses Friday,Dec. 2." at 6:30 p.m.; intermediatechoir, 7 pm,

T h e official board will meet'Wednesday, Dec. 7, at 8 p.m.

Tho men ot Ihc church* and theirAtiVes, will. haVe. 4beir Christma*/upper on Vliur'sdoy/'Sec. 8, at 7!p m in the church . a

St. Benedict's ChurchHolmdel School

Holmdel Rd., HolmdelRev. Edward P. Blaska, Pastor

'Masses are held Sunday at 7, S,9, 10 and II a.m. and at tt o'clocknoon(

Confessions are heard in theparish home Saturdays between 7and a pro, '

Union Beach Full'Gospel ChurchUl Park Ave., Union Beach

Rev. Evan Setb Williams, PastoiSunday services are held

a.m. and 7:30 p.m.; Sunday Schoolmeets at 9:30. a.m. with classesfor all ages.

Prayer meeting Is held on Tues-day at 7:30 p.m.

Mid-week service I» Thursday tt: 10 p.m. '

Ckeesctjoak* .Rev. Henry A. Male, Rector

Rev. Clarence A. Uunbdet, VicarSunday services are at 9:30 sum.

The first,' third and fifth Sundays,there is Holy' Communion, and thesecond and-fourtb Sundays, morn-ing prayer. Church school meetsat 9:30 a.m.

Special services will be held asannounced

The Women's Guild meets thefirst Tuesday of each mouth i s thechurch ball at > p.m. The Parent-Teachers Association of the churchschool meets the final Tuesday oleach month at 8-p.m.

Flrst Presbyterian ChurchRoute M and Franklin SL,

. -.Matawan__ Rev. Chester A. Galloway,

' PastorTwo morning worship services

will be held Sunday at 9:30 and IIa.m.. The pastor's sermon topic isThe Road To Bethlehem—Making

Cod Matter," Sunday. School meetsat 9:3O and 11 a.m7 Nursery careis~provided for note under three-years-of'Bge-atboth-hours. SeniorHigh Presbyterians are inviting^young people from the communityto meet them at 7:30 p.m. for, aUnion"Thanksgiving UervTceJn "theFirst Presbyterian Church.

On Monday the United Presby-terian Women's Organization willmeet in the fellowship hall at 8p.m. Installation of officers willbe held. , The planning and evaluatlng committee, will meet at8 p.m.; the pastor and Session willmeet at 8 p.m. with those desiringto unite with the churcli

The Women's Bible Class willmeet on Tuesday at 10 a.m.; GirlScouts meet at 2 p.m. and theAdult Bible Class at'8 ptn).

The Couple's Club'will meet onWednesday at the home of Mr. andMrs. Rudolph Hedel, 7 Grant St,Matawan, at 8 p.m. Edward W.Currie will speak on 'WhereThere's A Will, There's A Way."

Trialf* Church (Episcopal)Mala SL, Maiawan

Carroll a Hal),Bishop's Man-ioOharge

Morning prayer on ThanksgivingDay will be at 9 a.m.

The first Sunday in Advent, ma-tins are- at 7;4S a.m.; Holy Com-munion78.a.in.; Holy Eucharist andchurch school, 10 a.m. The cele-hranrwlll be'tlie Rev.John P. Cuy-ler, or the faculty of Peddie School,Higlitstown. The 3 a.m. service willbe the traditional Men's and Boys'Corporate Communion, and will befollowed by breakfast In the parishhouse. The, Rev. Father Cuyler alsow i l l be the speaker at the break-fast Breakfast reservations shouldbe made by calling Mr. Hall's resi-dence, 1.0 6^363, by Friday. TheSenior Young Churchmen will at-tend the Monmouth Convocation at

.: the StrJames'.Chufch, Long Branch,on Sunday afternoon. There* will be

i t i rno service ot evening prayer normeeting of the J'putll, study grouptMn SunJoVi ./ • , . ' J -

it 7:30 p.m. on Monday.Junior .Young Churchmen meet at

7:30 p.m. on Tuesday.Choir rehearsal is Thursday eve-

ning at 8'o'clock.The Every Member Canvass is

being conducted between Nov. 23and Nov. 26. All pledge cards arerequested to be returned by Sun-day. . . , • .: •-

Gethsemane Lutheran ChurchMaple PI., Keyport

Rev. Frederick Boos, pastorThere are two services on Sua-

day: Matins at 8:30 ajn. and theregiirar service WTU o'clwlc'Sim-<!aySchool begins at 9:45 a.m.

- , SL Joseph's Church• Maple PL, Keyport

Rev. Cornelius J. Kane, PastorMasses will be - held Sunday

morning at 7, 8, 9. 10, II and Uo'clock. •

Matawah Lumber Co.]

I ChurchMerga

Rev. Fred H Boweo. PastorChurch service* are held on Sun-

cut? at > • m. and Sunday Schoolmeets at 10 a.m.

First Cborck Ot Christ, ScJentitl' M Broad St , Keyport

Sunday a e r v ice and Sunday,School, 11 a.m. Wednesday, testi-mony meeting 8 pm. Reading roomopen Wednesday and Saturday from2 to 4 pjn. • • . •!-•••

SpTij'taaT re]rmess"Di»se<f o n T Iunderstanding of Truth brings free-,dom from evil of every kind. Thistheme will be set forth at ChristianScience church services •Sunday.Introducing the lesson-sermon en-titled "Ancient and Modern Necro-mancy, alias Mesmerism and Hyp-notism,, Denounced" will be theGolden Text from Matthew (M:4);"Take heed that no man deceiveyou." " '.'"

Selections from "Science andHealth with Key to the Scriptures"by Mary Baker Eddy will includetffl-1): "Trtithinalces a new effe*iurerirrwhom-old things pass awayand 'A\ things are become new.'Passions, selfishness, false appe-ijtSs, hatred, fear, all sensuality,yield to spirituality, and the super-

todfbith sideofGod, good."

From the Bible will be read(Isaiah 1:16,17): "Wash you. makeyou clean; put away the evil, ofyour , doings 'from before mine,eyes; cease to do evil; Learn todo well." :

BrownUrm Ceromimltj ChnrehBrowntown Uolen Monday Sobeol

Ronte 18, Brewntnrai?ev. Francis Cantel. Pastor

Sunday School is held from 9-4Sto 10:45 a.m. and the church serv-ice from 11 a.m. until 12 o'clock,Everyone is cordially invited to at-tend. ' " 9 ,

Keyport .Reformed ChurchWarren St., Keyport

On Sunday, services will include-Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; organ re- .cital, 10:30 a.m. andi morning serv-ice and sermon, 10:45 am. Guestministers will occupy the pulpitthroughout November—and-begin-ning in December the R<:v; JohnH. Sharps *•'• be(°me t h e perma-nent pastor.

Grace MtthooTsl ChurchUnloaBeacb

Rev. Leon Zinkler. Pastor r—-Last evening at 8 p.m. the an-

nual Thanksgiving Eve worshipservice was held with special m * ,

(continued on page seven)

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Thursday, November 24,I960 THtrMATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J, PonStviff.

Chorus To GiveHandel's Messiah

. The Monmouth Civic Chorus nowia in the. final weeks ol rehearsalfor the forthcoming presentationof G. Handel's "Messiah" to begiven .Sunday, Dec. 11, al 3 amin the new auditorium ol the Rumson-Fair . Haven Regional HighSchool, Ridge Rd., Rumson. The120-vojce chorus, now in its 11thseason, once again will be underthe direction of Its founder andconductor, W. Gordon Pagdin,

. Little Silver, and will be accom-panied by- a~4£pleco "professionalsymphony orchestra.

Mr. Pagdin.staled that the choius will sing the "Messiah" in itsentirety, including the' famousChristmas and Ascension portions"This promises to be one of thefinest presentations of this, themost beloved and inspiring of all

I oratorios, ever heard in MonmoutJlCounty,"., Mr, Pagdin-said. -

The chorus, which last springgave the well-received Gilbert andSullivan operetta, "Patience," andsang Horatio Parker's "Hora. Nov-

__>sirna^_{h6_previous fall,.. is" com-_ Pri??d pf_ both professional and

gmateur vocalists from, the sur-rounding ".vicinity" They rehearseevery Tuesday evening in the Em-bury Methodist Church Hall, Little

....Silver, . . j;.A large and active organization,

the chorus is composed of manyvarious-committees which performair the functions for its operationfrom the- first duties of Ihe librar-ian in issuing music to the mem-bers, to the distribution of concerttickets. Most members, take an ac-tive part in the operation 'of thechorus, all working together (oform an energetic,, creative andstimulating group.

Reserved and general admissiontickets are available for the con-cert:

Additional StoresIsrael Tabor, manager of the

W. T. Grant store at Airport Plaia,Hazlet, has announced that hiscompany will open 20 new storesduring this month. Seven, wereopened Thursday. During the year,the company will have opened 79new stores, 76 of them in shoppingcenters. In addition, 10 stores wereenlarged. By th* end of the month.

. th_e_company. M l . have .871 storesin operation as a result of its con-tinuing expansion program.

this week, why don't you look, through the. windows of y o u r

church , . . from the Inside.

NOTESAboul Area Men and Women

ill the

Aimed Services1

Poling Is PromotedOn Oct. 1, Airman Chester Ralph

Poling,; son or MrraridMrs; Ches-ter Poling. 35 Fulton St., Keyport,was made Airman Second Class. He

CHESTER B. POLtNG

is stationed as a veterinary inspec-tor at the «20lh U .S . Air ForceHospital, Nellis, Air Force BaseNevada. His principal job Is theprocurement and Inspection of food"or the Air Force at this base.

Airman Poling, a-graduate ofKeyport High School, enlisted in theAir Force in August 1959.-He~re-ceiwd basic medical training atLacKland AF Base, Texas, and at-tended veterinary Inspector schoolat Gunter AF Base, Alabama. Hehas been at Nellis for the pasteight months, This base is betterknown as i h c home ol theU.S.A.F. demonstration team "TheThunderblrds." . ..:

Joins First Cavalry DivisionU.S. Army Sgt. Ira W. Gibbs,

son of Mrs. Catherine Gibbs,Merritt, N.C., recently was assign-ed to the First Cavalry Division hiKorea.- - - • -;-..... . - . . —

Sgt. Gibbs, a gunner in BatteryA of the division's 20th Artillery,entered the ArffiylrrJanuary 1934and arrived 'overseas on this tourof duly last September. He Is theson of Malachl Gibbs, Cliffwood.

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BRANCH OFFICES: -.!'••?Monmoutb Road, OaUrars*, H. J.

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Graduates From Recruit Training._ Donald L-Yiihasi, son ot-Mr. andMrs. Louis Kashey,1 Line Rd.TTMal-awan, graduated, from recruittraining Oct. 22 at the Naval Train-ing Center. Great Lakes, IU.

The graduation exercises, mark-ing the end of nine weeks of "bootcamp," included a full dress par-ode and review before military of-ficials and civilian dignitaries. 1

In nine weeks of instruction, the"raw recruit" is developed Into aNavy Bluojacket, ready for dutywith the fleet.

-Attends School — -. ~-B/Sgt: L a w r e n c e McGrogan,

US.A.F.-, is at Sheppard, Tex.,where he will attend missile schoolfor 18 weeks. Sgtr McGrogan, Mrs.McGrogan-and.their-son,—RobertMichael, returned to the UnitedStates Sept. 27 after three-and-ono*half years In England where Sgt.McGrogan was stationed at Scul-thorpe Air Force Base.

Mrs. McGrogan is the formerMiss.Jennifer Reid, Norfolk, Eng-land. Mrs. McGrogan and son oreresiding for the present at the Mc-Grogan home, 140 Campbell St.,Union Beach. Tlrey will join Sgt.McGrogan after he finishes schoolwhen he will be assigned to LowryAir Force Base, Denver, Col.

Graduates At Parris IslandU.S. Marine Pvt. Richard K.

Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs.Donald Anderson.. 407 HarrisonAve., Union'Beach, completed re-cruit training Oct. 26 at the Mar-ine Corps Recruit Depot, ParrisI s l a n d , S. C . ' " •• ; •

Relatives and friends of many olthe new Marines 'were on hand towitness the graduation ceremonies

The 12-week training schedule Ineluded' drill, bayonet training,physical'conditloning, parades andceremonies, and other nillitarysubjects..Three.weeks were spentOn the rifle rango where the re-cruits fired the M-l rifle and re-ceived instruction In basic Marineinfantry weapons. '

This recruit training preparesyoung Leathernecks for furthespecialized Infantry trainingCamp LeJeune, N.C.

Emmaauel Assemblies O! CotMiddle Rd-, North Centervint

1 Rev. Timothy Adams, PastorSunday School la at t ; i :a .n l . ;

morning worship, 11 o'clock; Evan:gelistic service, 7 p.m. Tho firstSunday of each month, there is aCommunioa service at 11 a.m.

Young Peoples service will beheld Thursday evenings at 6:45p.m., before the regular Thursdayservice, .Instead of Tuesday eve-nings at 7:30 pm. Thursday eve-ning, Bible study a n d prayerserviceJaiai-7:45_o'£lo<:k.

CUffwood CommunityMethodlJt Church

Rev. Lee Cotter, PastorSunday morning service will be

a.i 9 a.m.; Sunday School, 10 amM.Y.F. will be in the evening at7:30 p.m.

Choir practice will be held Thuri-<iay-at:7 p . m . — » . _ . . : ;.-..

David's Tabernacle* CUffwood

Elder James Moss, PastorJJunday School Is al 10 j y n T

morning "worship, ltai,rS. ' '•"•'-•On Wednesday evenings the tarry

service is at 8 p.m.

First Spiritual ChurchOf Divine Rose

- HeMain^Sl., BelfordRev. Phoebe palley. Pastor

Services are held Sunday at Ip.m. and Tuesday, at* 2:30 and tp.m. '

St. John's Methodist ChurcbSouth Mala St., "

Rarltan TownshipRev. Norman R. Riley, PastorSunday worship services arc tta.m., 9130 a.m. anc 1' a.m

Church school meets at 9:30 and11 a.m. The evening service is loir)at 7:30 o'clock. Intermediates meelfor Urn sixth, seventh and eighthgrade! at 6:45 p.m.; Senior Method-"1st Youth Fellowship, 7:30 pm.;

Lather MemorialTbe Lutheran Church- Missouri Synod

Tintoo Falls PnbUe SchoolRev. Daniel D. Relnheimer, Pastoi

Sunday School.and Blbla Classoiare held at 0:30 a.m. Sunday undeithe direction ot Arthur Bitter, su-perintendent Ttio morning wors...will be held at 10:45 a.m. with ser-mon by the pastor!. A nursery lorvlea Is available. Communion serv-ices are held tho first Sunday olevery month. ,

United Hebrew Congregation—__BroaA.St».Keyport— :....

Rabbi H O. H LevinsSabbath eve services will be held

Friday "at 9:15 p.m. "Baal ShemTov" will be the sermon topic.Kiddush will be pronounced by An-drea Rosenthal. Oneg Shabbat willfollow. Hosts will be Mr. and Mrs.Abraham Kamlnsky and Mrs. S.Zolna.

Sabbath morning service Is heldat U.o'clock. ...._ .

Hanukkah will begin Tuesday,Dec. 13, and end Wednesday, Dec.21. The annual school celebrationof Hanukkah will take place Sun-day, Dec. 18, from ltra.m; to 12o'clock noon. "Tlrer programs willopen with candle lighting followedby a candle dance by the primaryclasses. The operetta, "The SevenSons," is under the direction ofMrs:~Renee~TcfiHenbaumrs5ststedby Mlra Karp. A gift exchangewill be a part of the program.

Tbe Faith Retermtd CtockNorth CentervUle Fire House,

Middle Rd., Raritaa TowaihlpRev. Theodore C Muller, PastorSunday worship services will be

held at 11 a.m. in the North Cen-tervllle Fire Ilnuso. Sacrament otHoly Communion will be given.Nursery caro. wlll^be provided atthe home of Mr.'and Mrs. JamesBarrett, 27,/Cornell Dr. SundaySchool wlllbe held at 9:30 a.m. inthe Middle Rd. School. SeniorYouth Fellowship will be held atthe fire house at 7 p.m. AdultBible Class will meet at the par-sonage at 8 p.m.

Continuation. Class J ^wiil -meat,at 7 p.m. and Cqnflrmation.Clasg IIwill meet at, 8 p.m. on Mondayevening.

On Wednesday at 8 p.m., thoBoard of Christian Education willmeet af the home of, Mrs. GeorgeMarshall, 1! Bromley Dr.

The Guild for Christian Service111 meet at the parsonage at 8

p.m. Thursday. Tho program Is''It Is Christmas."

Bsyviewr Presbyterian ChurchClllfwood Beach

Rev. Francis Overstock.•..-.-:. _ , , . . . ^ Pastor i — - - - >----•-••-A community Thanksglvlngser.

vlco will be held at 9:31) a.m. withthe coiiKregatlan and choir of MtMorlah llaplist Church, along withtheir pastor, tho Rev. James Car-

The Jesters .will meet Friday at7 p.m. In the basement of fellow-

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ship lull under the direction o(Kenneth Krafft and Harry Dulour.

Brownies Troop 110 meets in thobasement Saturday at 10 a.m. Mm.Peter Medwlck is lha "leader..

Church school classes from nur-sery through Junior High meetSunday at 9:30 a.m. Morning wor-ship services the first Sunday InAdvent are held «t 9:30 and IIa.m. At tho early service, tho jun-ior choir will furnish the music andat II a.m. the senior choir willparticipate. A preparatory classfor church membership will beheld In fellowship hall from 3:30la 4:39 p.m. -

Thi) monthly meeting ot th« Ses-

sion wilt be held Monday at 7 31p.m.

Boy Scout Troop 10, ExploringPost 10 and Wcbelos Pack m mTuesday at 7 p.m. - <

Tho monthly meeting ot the dea-cons will be held Wednesday at7:30 p.m. Hurry Korn, vlco mod*-.erator, will preside.

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"Blue Christmas"The senior class of Hoffman High

School, South Amboy, will present"Blue Christmai," a dance to beheld Dec. 9 In the school auditorium.

Church Services(continued from page six)

sic by the choir. The sermontheme was "Thanksgiving: A Markof Characler."

On Sunday at 9:30 a.m. Sunda;School will meet for grades ,hrough 12. At 11 a.m. the regular

church service will be held and thesermon theme for the first Sundayin Advent will be "Prison Barsand Dancing Feet." A nursery willbe provided for all'children whoare not ol church school age. Alsoat 11 a.m. Sunday school will beheld for three-year-olds "throughkindergarten, Youth .- Fellowshipwill meet at 6:30 p.m. In the EdU'catlonal Building. : •-••-•••

Pentecostal ChurchUnion and Sidney Ave.,

Union Beach -Mrs. Herbert G. Wood, Pastor

Worship services are held Sunday at 11 a.m. and 7:45 p.m. Sunday School is at SM5 a.m.

Bible study group meets Tuesdayat 7 :« p.m. ' '

Thursday prayer meeting Is heldat 7:45 p .nv .V ' .' • ;

Fourth Mt. Pltcalrn -. Spiritual Churcb

208 Shore Rd.; Union BeachRev. Katherinc Miller, Pastor

Services are held on Sunday aThursday evenings at 8 o'clockand on Friday afternoons at ] p m

Penlecoil Full Gospel ChurckChurch ol the Uvteg God

1S7 Mala SI., KeantburfSunday School Is from 8 to

p.m.; evening service at 7:30 proPrayer meeting is held Tuesd.a

at S p.m. and. Bible Class , oThursday at 8 p.m.

Saturoay school for children ttheld (ram 10 to 11:30 a.m.

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Page Eight THE WATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. 24,j?60

Accepts Call ToReformed Church

The Rev. John H. Sharpe has—accepted a call to become pastoi

of the Reformed Church of Keyport. ' He and his family will airive In Keyport oil Dec. 1. ThiRev. Mr, Sharpe weceeds the RevRoderick N, DeYoung, now pas-tor of the East Orange Reforme'Church.

The Rev. Mr. Sharpe has beenpastor of (he Reformed Church o"the Boght, Cohoes, N. Y., for thpast four years.; During his pa

" "torafifa new"JW0<rC6nS"electriorgan has been Installed and paiifor and at the time of the church'175th anniversary celebration,$5000 remaining debt on a m o r igage was cancelled and burned.

Also during that period the wornen of the church redecorated theSunday School rooms and kitchen,Allans were provided for the Sunday School departments, an electrimimeograph machine and nevvisual ala equipment were putchased. A memorial of 100 hymnals was received and a bequest of$2000. ^ new roof was put on thi

REV, JOHN H. SHARPE

chapel and the entire church build-ing hat been painted.

• The new Keyport minister, hiswife and two sons, four and sevenyears old, will, reside In the par-sonage, 125 Division St.

The Rev. Mr. Sharpe was gradu-ated from Hope College, Holland,Mich., and from the New Brans-

—wick-Theological -Seminary. - H ehas ' his Bachelor' of Art' and

- Bachelor of .Divinity Degrees. -

NY Bus Run In(continued from pag« one)

offhand In that they were not town-ship approved.

Under- query from one residentabout the use of Eushnell Rd.,Mayor Phillips gave assurance thatroad could not be used by thebuses unless the slate and countyhighway departments approved ofuse by the vehicles of an old bridgeon this road. The mayor and Mr.Kurti did not believe any such ap-'proval would be given, - ••:

<The Pitts Of Rutgers University'W%$^;0%?£$$!1"

- i - j p h s -Lawrence ^{Larry) _PJtt. .JMJ,. R J L t x t x r .gr(idB»le,-ihnw» class photo (see J « e O of his father,Sherman Grant Pitt, 1888 Rutgers graduate. J » his

in Lawrence Walters Pitt (left;, a 19M graduate of

Don Lawrence Pitt's "officialarrival" on the Rollers"campii;early in September was about a:unexpected as the nrrival of fall icouple of weeks later. Don Pitt,y o u see, is probably the firsfourth-generation Rutgers man inhe University's 194-year history.

Don's father, Lawrence WaltersPitt, a 1939 Rutgers graduate andcurrently a teacher and freshmanlacrosse coach at the University,recalls a family motor trip throughNew England in the summer of1959 when "we gaye Don~a long,hard look at a dozen other col-leges" to counterbalance "the in-fluence he was bound to get athome,"

"We wanted the choice t>f college;o be left completely with Don,"he father said. Don Pitt, 18, whov a s graduated last June from

Highland Park High School, didmake his own decision, and it was

:utgers all the way, but associates5f his father would have been se-verely jolted If the choice had beenny thing else.'.^.ji '"

Known As "Mr. Rutgers"It i s sot without good cause that

Larry" Pitt has come to b* knowns "Mr. Rutgers" in terms ofnowledge, interest and parlicipa-ion in University programs. Young)on, even if he had so chosen,oubtless would have found bisutgeri ties difficult to snap.The saga of the Pitts at Rutgers

Asks For Mass TurnoutThe mayor said the only way out

the dilemma,would be a massrnout at the Dec. i meeting torash the issue out, then the town:

hlp^could approve or view opposi-Sn-BftKc hearing:on the change

lie Public Servjce buses, it per-lltted to make the route change,rotild have to make a left turn offoute S to Throckmorton, Mr. Keat-•g. called this practice a trafficaiard, until "we get traffic light

ipproval for that location from theState Highway Department."

Mayor Phillips noted that theState ' Highway : Department ap-parently had Ignored two prior let*ler» sent on this subject and direct-e d ' a third be sent. The formalippllcatlon of Public Service Co-irdlnated Transportation Co.,~ l»hat the buses proceed "leaving 916

service at 516 (temporary Route 18,Matawan-Old Bridge Rd.) and Go)ibRd., and then via Gaub Rd. andThrockmorton Lane to the presentroute and Route 9, returning by thesame route."

has its start in a classroom atIPofsdam formal School in upstateNew York, where, in 1884, a. pro-fessor succeeded in "selling" Rut-gers and a liberal education to anabout-to-be-graduated student.

The student was Sherman GrantPitt, Don's great-grand(athe,r. Thofirst Pitt _at Rutgers, who camearmed with a teaching degree, pro-ceeded to make a record unmatch-ed by succeeding Pitts or, for thatmatter, by more than a handful ofRutgers men. He was, to cite someof campus accomplishments, PhiBeta Kappa, class valedictorian,three-year letterman in football,editor of Targum and a prize-win-Ing debater.

Helped Acquire CannonSherman Pitt married Ella Law-

rence, daughter of a prominentNew Brunswick citizen who hadbeen instrumental in acquiring theClass of '77 cannon which stillstands today on Queens Campus.

John Lawrence Pitt (also known'Larry") and Malcolm

sons of Sherman Pitt, . aregraduates of Rutgers. "Larry" Pitt(the first), class of 1917, and Mal-colm, class of 1919. both followedJieir father from Rutgers to DrewSeminary and into distinguishedlervlce In the Methodist ministry.'You might say," Larry Hi t (the

second) observed with a broad:rin, "that we're a family of teach-irs and preachers."

the University, and grandson Don LawrenceRutgers freshman: "TheTHtsare"b*lleved to" be" biefirst family to send' four, successive generations toRutgers.-

"Larry" (the first), a resident offirrrton-and-afornier-dfrector.-of;religious education for the New jer-sey Conference of the MethodistChurch, married a teacher, as didLarry. And Don and his sister,Susan, 12, already -have indicatedan interest in teaching. This dedi-cation to teaching i s only, one of aremarkable number of mutual in-terests which have characterizedthe Pitts at Rutgers from 1884 tothe present

In Honor SocietyFreshman Don Pil.li a baseball

letterman and a member of theNational Honor Society in highschool, plans to continue the fam-ily's contributions to Rutgers atH-letlcs in lacrosse (his father wa,sAll-Metropolitan in the sport) andswimming. He's following up theglee and mandolindub activities ofhis grandfather by playing in theROTC band. In trying out for apost with WRSU, the undergraduateradio station, he's combining thewriting and debating talents ofRutgers'earlier Pitts. ,

Don Pitt will be faced with agood many decisions before he is

Pitt,both

graduate^- from Rutgers, not theleast of \vhich will be the choiceof a social fraternity. ShermanGrant Pitt, John Lawrence Pitt andLawrence Walters Pitt, not to men-tion Uncle Malcolm, all chose Del-ta Upsllon. ' — '

Other Changes RequestedOther changes requested were

jn the. State Highway IB servicewhich would "leave the presentroute at State Highway 18 and OldBridge-Engllshtown Rd. (527) andthence via State Highway 18 topresent route at Route 9,".. On the Matawan-Old Bridge (516)

:e, buses would proceed "leav-tag: tbc present route at State High-way 18 and Matawan-Old BridgeRd. to present route at U. S. Route

Mr, Jacbnettl pledged t h e r ewould be renewed discussion of thepetition by "the civic association inview of the differences of opinionthat had'been shown to exist, buthe was dubious that the majorityattitude ,wou\d be altered, .-

The governing body received no-tification of cessation of a run fromSouth Amboy to Sayref. Woods Southand Madison Park by the MarathonBus Co. Committeeman Harry-Mes-senger laid that he was "grateful"this would occur as, In his opinion,the .buses ran too, fast throughMadison.P«rk, constituted a safetyhazard and no great hardship wouldbe caused by the termination of theroute.

Proposed Labor-Management Institute

. Plans (or proposed building of the Rutgers Insti-tute of Management and Labor Relations shows $550,-MO labor unit, scheduled to go up first at fight center.Organized labor raised tho money for Its unit and a

management drlvo will be started'shortly to provldofunds for constrncllon of Its unit, shown left center.Other buildings in the complex are an administrationpublic-research unit (left) and a dormitory (right).

Labor has moved to within theshadow of. Its goal and now management has tho ball. That's thosituation 'at 'the' State' "University

' as plans are being readied to pro-vide tho pioneering Rutgers In-stitute of Management nnd Labor

.Relations a new $2,000,000 home.Construction on the labor unit

of the proposed four-unit buildingcomplex Is expected to get under-way early next year at the junc-ture of Ryder's Lane and ClintonAVe, near Route 1, In New Bruns-wick.

Organized labor has come within150,000 of its (350,000 goal, close1

enough to start construction of thelabor unit once approval has been

, granted fr)r the architect's sketch-

ings covering 66,000 square feet.The other sections aro tho admin-Istratlon-publlc-research unit nnd adormitory to houso 100 students.

Tho Institute, established In 1947by tho New Jersey Slnto Legisla-ture,.was tho first to recognize therole of the gonernl public In labpr-managernent relations.. It has im-plemented the public Interest InIts programs ever since, particu-larly In Us Intensive attempts toprovide Industrial relations train-Ing" to high school teachers,' attor-neys and other professional groupswhich engage In labor-manage-ment relations.

It Is hoped that a combinationof foundation gifts and state- ap-propriations will finance tho con-struction' of the adfnlnlstratlon-, M preparedby Edwards and Green

,oJtC«md«a«,.:njeJcIci£O/f Is sched-uled »m>rlly for a fund drive in

'.raise another J5OO.M0 for the man•ogement unit ..•J i . US*?, CMnected JBuUdlnjs^Jjtudjtprtvm, a library, conference

'TfieMfloagement and t a b o r Jte-J "'

nuhllc-rfseaich unit and the dorm-itory <

The labor unit, containing 15,448, square feet, will Include a 450-seat

{suite, ^ndbiar and classrooms and

^«.i?.1354W^J*I, Staff OfXicet, ft" Tbe MU*t9fium was donated In

'<

memory of. William Green, firslpresident of the American Federatlon of Labor; the library In honoiof James B, Carey, president olthe International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers,AFL-CIO; the-conference suite Inhonor of David J . McDonald, pres-ident of the United Steelworkersof America, AFL-CIO, and tho of-fices In honor of Lewis M. Herr-mann, editor of the New JerseyLabor Herald, who, as a statelegislator, introduced the enablinglegislation for the Institute In .1947.

Tho management' unit, contain-ing 15,500 square feet, will lncluucsupplementary library facilities,an Informal conference room, classand iomlnar rooms, an audiovis-ual center and staff offices.

The comp'ex of units will havea built-in attraction beyond itsunique public service functionStanding in an area earmarked"courtyard" on the,_,prchitcct'»drawings Is (he sturdy oak whichInspired Joyce.Kilmer's famouspotm, -"Trees."

Madison High's(continued from page one)

Handicrafts/Ceramics, Commercialrt. Sculpture, Art History.Homemaking, Foods and Nutrl-

:ion, Textiles arid Clothing, HomeManagement.

Music, Band, Chorus, Music Ap-preciation, Harmony; Theory. (

Physical Education, four years of'hyslcal Education and four years

if Health plus Driver Training.Three Type* Of Courses

Three "patterns" of study are of-fered: College, business and gen-eral. AH have the four years ofKnglish, physical education a n d.health and two years of U. S. His-tory. ' . ' • ' •

Otherwise the college course In-cludes: , Ninth grade. Algebra I,World History, Earth Science, For-eign ^Language, Elective' Minor;10th grade,' Plane Geometry, Mod-ern. History, Biology, Foreign Lan-guage,; Elective Minor; ltth grade,Algebra II, Chemistry, ForeignLanguage, Elective Minor; 12thgrade. Mathematical Analysis,Physics, Foreign Language, Elec-tive Minor.

The business course consists of:Winth grade, General MathematicsI, Earth Science, Introduction toBusiness, Elective Minor; 10thgrade, General Mathematics II, Bi-ology, Stenography I or Bookkeep-ing i; Typing I; 11th grade, Ste-nography II or Bookkeeping II,Business Law and Salesmanship(one-half year each), Typing 11;12th grade. Office Practice .orClerical Practice, Elective Major,Elective Minor. .-The general course of study is;

Ninth.grade, World History, Alge-bra I or General Mathematics I,Earth Science, Elective Minor; 10th-gr a d e. Algebra II or GeneralMathematics II, Biology, ElectiveMajor and Elective Minor; 11thgrade, Foieign Language, ElectiveMajor and Elective Minor, 12thgrade, Foreign Language, AppliedScience, Elective Minor.

Alter To Suit Individual Needs .Dr. Sample and Mr. Smlda em-

phasized the three "patterns" arenot necessarily mandatory and canbe altered to suit individual re-quirements on recommendation ofadvisors. The administrators callIt "a single curriculum type ol pro-gram" and are confident those whopursue It will bo "prepared forhigher education or future voca-tlnnal training." A bulletin contain-ing descriptions of all courses willbo furnished the student and his orher parents before time of enroll-ment.

In other business Tuesday night,tho board accepted quotation byVanLlcw Motors, Jamesburg, onthe purchase of two Ford stationwagons and trade-in on tho Volks-wagen nnd station wagon for $3785.Two taxis at $4.75 per day aretlrediinti l the new Fords aro de-livered. . ; • . . ' - • ;

Bids will bo sought next monthon about $150,0$) worth of shopequipment for tho'new high school.

Dr. Sample rejected criticism ofsomo school crossing guards as un-called for. It was alleged some'ofthem go into the fast .lane of trafficand Incur safety hazards bringingfast-moving vehicles to an nhruplhnlt letting small groups of chitdrerr pass over.

Dr. Sample found their performance was much, to be. preferred tothat in another district where thechildren themselves seem to decidewhen traffic should be stopped am!amble .out into the roadway withthe Crossing guard waving h i swarning1 slgir When they1 are half-way across:' There also was.criti-cism of some bus.drivers for start-ing out too fast lfter a stop,

Yule Seals OutIn Monmoutli

More than 60,000 persons In Mon-mouth County have in their poses-sion this week sheets of ChristmasSeals which for the past half-cen-tury have added gaiety to holidaymail and at'the tame time savedthousands of American lives.

Featuring children singing, t h e19C0 Christmas Seals were mailedout In Monmouth County In. an ef-fort to raise $44,000 to continue theprogram of tuberculosis controlwhich has helped bring.about adrat tic change In the health picturein Monmouth County during thepast fifty years.

Mrs, Edward M. Crane, Middle-town Township, general chairmanof the drive, pointed out that eveathough dramatic steps . forwardhave been made in MonmouthCounty's fight to wipe out TB, therestill is a lot of work to be done.During t h e past year, she said,close to 1000 persons came underthe direct service program of thetuberculosis control set-up in thecounty. T h e s e included patientswith active tuberculosis, those whofcave-been ^exposed to the diseaseand-jnust-bsreSrefuUy watched io_make sure they have not contract-ed TB, and those who have had ac-'itive TB and now are arrestedcases, requiring continued medicalsupervision. — > — 7 — -

"Christmas Seals have played animportant part In American's fightto conquer tuberculosis," M r s .Crane said,."and we are hopefulthat t h e people of. MonmouthCounty wljl realize the need to con-tinue this program and will sup-port the 54th annual Christmas Sealcampaign." Stevan Dohanos, notedartist who himself has be<m thevictim of tuberculosis, Is serving asnational chairman of the drive.

In this area Mrs. Crane is beingassisted by Miss Laura Harding,BayonetTarm, Holmdel; Mrs. Hen-ry E . Ackerson f u Maple PL.'Key-port; Mrs. C.-.E. Springhorn, Sun-set Ave., Malawan, and-Mrs. D. M.Marshall, Crawford's Corner Rd.,Holmdel. -

Rolls-Toward GSPCharles J. Bracken, Wilson Ave.,

Morganville, had a close escapefrom a serious accident Tuesdaynight. Acting Chief J. Edgar Wil-kinson, Matawan Township Policereports,1 when the Bracken car went.off th« road on ~ Lower - Main St.vsmashed through : a guard railfence and rolled down an embank'-'ment toward the traffic on . the

arden Stare-Parkway. A drunk-en driving charge was entered alt-er the man waslexamlned by Dr.J. P. Cooper, MatawanV the officerreports. V—

Sales Volume Topt\$25,000,000 At SWS

Sales volume at iSayre WoodsSouth has topped the $25,000,000mark. It is reported by Saul Can-tor Associates, Inc., builders.ofthe 2000-homo pljnrmd.cqmmunlt'belnk completed on Route >. Marsod'Townshlp"." ' ' "!'.'<;'' •• -

Thirty-year i no down: payment-G..I. mortgages s t i l lare availableat Sayre Woods South, which offersfast commuter bus service to Man-hattan and Newark. _

To Reopen Span(continued from page one)

rpan. The bridge i s being-strength-ened and will be given a new deck:

News of the- resumption of lighttraffic across the bridge, providinga direct-route to- the Cliffwood.Cliffwood Beach area by way ofOld-Amboy Rd. and West FrontSt. was greeted enthusiasticallyby Keyport businessmen. -

Lay-Tulip(continued from page one)

south of Koute 39 near Laurel Ave,also tended to show "clear sailing"was ahead" for the enabling" ofdi-aance. : V •

The Lily-Tulip firm has had thetownship in suspense since lateSeptember on the count of taking30 borings at the land to determineif It would support a 1,000,000square feet plant. Company officersalso had pointed to a 38-foot dropin terrain as unfavorable for aplace on which to build a plant,but the township undertook an ex-pensive drainage problem on Ma-horas Brook going through theirland to encourage favorable de-cision from Lily-Tulip. '•

: FinarAcflooTjVexf Month''_._'

mlttee for additional public . . . . .Ing and final action next month.Then Lily-Tulip can go to work pa(he plant, expected to be in opera-tion and employing 1000 by 1952.

A railroad siding Is to be run intothe plant from the main line of theNew York & Long Branch R. R.with 20-odi, cars of wood pulp esti-mated being moved in e v e r y d a ylo meet manufacturing needs. - - -

The company manufactures COOdifferent types of cups and^ontain-ers, from the pleated water cup,which was Lily-Tulip's first prod-uct, to half-gallon tubs.' Plants are located In CollegePoint, N. -V.; Augusta, Ga.; River-tide, Calif.;- Toronto, Canada;Brooklyn; Hawthorne; Old Town,Me.; Galva, 111., and , Springfield,Mo. A large research center. InCommack, L. I., was completed this>ear. Lily-Tulip has affiliates in" land, Australia, and New Z«a-

Zone Ordinance(continued from page one)

lot, includes a tract north ol theParkway, west of Route 39, ex-cluding the River Gardens area.The R-75 zone, with 75-foot front-age requirements, is in.the Allan-,tic Ave., Malawan Lake area, whilethe R-30 zone, with a 50-foot frontminimum, comprises a major por-tion of Cliffwood Beach. " .5

The highway business zones, re-quiring a minimum lpt size of 15,-000 square feet and permitting onlyone business establishment for each200 square feet of floor space, arelocated along Routes 34 and 35. '-. The Industrial zone is located justsouth of the Parkway, near LineRd. and south of the Central Rail-road of New Jersey-right-of-way.

Another tone li located west ofthe railroad extending southwardfrom Cliffwood Ave. .10Uie_Park-way. IndustrHH-rininiffliims are 15,-000 square feet and the buildingmay not occupy more than 40 percent of the land area.

The ordinance also prescribes theminimum habitable floor nrea per-mitted for various types of,dwell-ings. A Blngle level ranch homecalls for 1200 square feet; splitlevel, 1400; one-and-one-half storybuildings, MOO and two-story dwell-ings, 1600 square feet. '

. j ^ t T ^ r g s f fment, the project Is not expectedlo be "out of the woods" until theplanning board returns the zoning

d t t l t h t h i c p r njiear-i The Tted i

itty player:

4- Wftv

KHSOTS(continued from page one)

Ing" new places, and teams to seeinstead of the oldtime humdrum ofthe same teams in the same oldplaces, The first two games, withBrick and Leonia, put the color andtiirge Into the season's programthat lasted all through the year.

Keyport was not quite so success-ful. The Keys played one game lessthan usual, due to having an opendate Oct. 8. The open date proveda baneful experience as the teambounced back from a first-gamedefeat by Manasquan to pull anupset victory against Toms River.Oct. 1. But Just as the Keyport

had reached a fine com-,_ , . , . . . 'p i t ch , the epen date.icame,along and In the two.iweeks, flf Jn-.activity they lost their playing"edge"." The Red and While neverdid recover the drive they devel-oped in the Toms River game untilthey came up against RumsonNov. 12 when they showed plentyof "heave" In battling the favoredPurple Bulldogs.to > standstllL

^ Hllhlljht Of Season

The Rumson game provided thehighlight of Matawan's season » l soas the Purple Bulldogs came intoIt. with -an- unbeaten record of' 17straight games.. Matawan edgedthem out by two points to sharewith Ocean Central the distinctionof being' the only teams to defeatRumson since 1958.

The Thanksgiving Day g a m efinds little at stake between Mata-wan and Keyport Insofar as eitherShore Conference or Central Jer-sey, Group II, honors are concern-ed. Each has a leg on the KeyportLions Club trophy now in competi-tion between them, so the winnerwill go ahead on that But Mata-wan stands at 4-4 on the seasonand can get on the winning sidefor tho year If they defeat the Redand White. Keyport simply has towin to keep the year from being adismal one, having a 2-1-4 recordgoing Into tho game.

In the play of the game, the Is-sue of how It will go should besettled early. Keyport has beenvulnerable on defense againstsweep plays and rollouts all sea-son, until an Improvement was.shown in the last two games withWall Township and Rumson. Nowthere Is no schoolboy runner In

KNOW YOUR NAVY

,5

MASK* SEAMAH-COUHAGIOUS .

WAS ISAAC HUU CAMAW Of •MMED tOHSTIMIOH M THE. :W/U Of 1819. m « AND HIStWS OOTMANUEVfKHI THt •ENEAflMr KtOGtNG AWAY UtOM

AftW WOKS LA1UHUU M CONSTITUTION « W C f D ime m e w s SH» TO A HOAWJO

Jut Of HIUU. HVWS t O S S B - 'eAsuiSSs; 'mwmw'f

«UH> AND WQUNWD. - :

Central Jersey more talented onthe "sweep play than Matawan'sCharlie Wathmgton, even thoughhis speed of foot i s such that heoutruns his blockers and has to goit largely alone. He is primarilya runner to the outside, althoughbe varies the script by doing a shotto thef inside now" and t b e n o n idraw play... Wathington is not aline plunger or buck'er of muchsorts; s n ( ] the Huskies assign thisrole to his younger brother, Billy,

Line Play Advantage,;Aside from their vulnerability at

(he flanks, Keyport should havethe advantage in line play. TheMatawan forward wall largely wasswept . clear .by graduation lastJune,—The one valuable player,Dennis Kreuger, with all-state po-tential, was injured in the BishopEustace game and Is finished forthejseason, The way that Matawanstood up against the vaunted forcesof Brick andXeonia in their firsttwo games attests to Kreuger'sworth. Without him, the Huskiesforward wall never has been thesame.

t h e Keyport line Is tightly knitin the center,' almost' too tightlyknit hi that the.cppqsltlQaiwirivento the outside, by the hard goingthey encounter up the middle. Pow-erful "John : Str iker and "WayneBowne have -given the-JRed andWhite «. rock-ribbed • defense upfront that even offensive-mindedMetuchen could not penetrate thisyear.

"ajfdT Wnite"has~anotherdistinct advantage in the Matawangame. That is the punting and pin-point passing of Danny Hourahan,a sophomore. He weighs a scant140 pounds, so Hourahan has to beused in the specialty role, but hiskicking i s long, straight and true.

Passing Edge Reduced

Keyport's passing edge has beenreduced lately by the developmentof a new player on the Matawanensemble, Richie Fierros, as a passreceiver. Fierros' value to CoachRizzo's team is that he gives ojtion on the passing, and takes the"marked man" role away from tallBUI Bowie as always being thelikely receiver. Bowie also Is anaccomplished punter and shouldkeep the Keyport punting .advan-tage within bounds. "

Coach Stan (Tuffy) Baker, Key-port, has no open field nor break-away runner to begin to comparewith the durable Wathington. RussZilinski and Charlie Ochinegro cango to the inside to advantage andthis year the Maroon and Steel willhave.no towering Mitch Hamiltonblocking their -way. The weatheraccordingly could play * . consider-able role in the same , a wet fieldfavoring Keyport In all the 21 en-gagements of the series, it neverhas been postponed by rain. If rainshould catch up with the teamsthis year, a downpour that is, thegame would be put off to Nov. 26,

Matawan has been hampered ingames against teams like Rumsonand Neptune who "know',' them byrigged defenses designed to stopWathington and Ignoring the Mata-wan offensive potential otherwise.Against Wall Township, Nov. 12,the' Matawan offensive patterntook on a' sudden bill of variety,with, double and triple pass-optionp l a y s i V i ' h Bobby Jackson com-ing But o f tho /ditbatk"arid-the're-verse and-eturfley Wathington toss-ing crossback passes against ov-ershifttd defenders.

Need D r y FieldThis makes it more vital than

ever for Matawan that the field-bedry Thanksgiving, with so muchhanding off the pigskin In prospect.Keyport's. offensive Is tlght-knlt,not s'6 addicted to'draw or (tapplays, breaking quick from the" I " on straight aheads and lateralbucks. A new player who hascome along on rollout plays is LesBrown and he may solve the needto keep Matawan defense ''honest,"that is confronted with enough of athreat to the outside that the Mar-roon and Steel cannot "bunch"linebackers against Keyport Cross-bucks and driving handoffs.

Whatever edge there Is in thegame goes to Matawan due to thefact that Keyport has no tremen-dous offensive-thrust players to useagainst the Maroon and Steel com-parable with Brick's Sammy Rielloor Leonia's Jeff Turecki and JerryBarudln. Having withstood the at-

I tacking power of such players,| Matawan has no alarm at anything 'with which Keyport can confrontthem. But against Leonia andBrick, Matawan had Kreuger.

.Without him, their line collapsedagainst Neptune and they wererouted. A young PennsmiKen; teammade the Maroon and Steel inex-perience along the forward wal l 'stand out in unhappy perspectiveas the South Jerseyans repeatedlytrapped the Huskie forwards withsurprising ease. The Matawan:team that played Brick and Leonia,could roll against Keyport, but.not.the Maroon and Steel eleven o f thepast four weeks. ;

As for Keyport, the more fright-ening aspect for them is tho wayMetuchen's Bobby O'CorifteirniftedTabout their ends on rollouts. Wath-ington is ertfy-bit.-ai good a run-ner on sweeps as the Bulldogflash. For Keyport it is to be saidthat whereas they never rolled upany scores to compare with Mala-,wan's, they also never sustainedthe routing defeats that befell theMaroon, end Steel. But then again,the Red and White's most formid-able foes were Manasquan andMetuchen, they never had to standup against Brick, Leonia or-Nep-tune. "-•" ". ; -. •: '•>.•>'

Interesting ..Contrast,^ .i,::^-,i_Innummary, the game .presentsthe interesting contrast o f ' w i d e -open play with strikes to^ thejeilF?side, long downfield passes' andvaried formations with the l int un*~balanced-all-over- the-place-agalnst-a. tight-knit setup from a balanced"T" with the ball controlled andk e p t i n s i d e . . - • • ' • - : . ' • • . ? ' : .

Student tickets may be purchas-ed at the two high schools. Theadult tickets are on sale at Ryan'sin Matawan, Frank's Barber Shop •injaiffwood, and at three places,in Keyport, Costa's, Smokey's Bar-ber Shop and Larry's Barber Shop.Purchasing tickets in advance Bstrongly recommended to avoidgetting caught.in a crush at thegate. _r—-——-•. •'_ • i,...

The series results' shows 15 wins;for Matawan, four for Keyport, andtwo ties. Matawan will be seekingto keep the Red and White fromwinning two games in » r o w . , , i

t h e record of the series:1939—Matawan 3 — Keyport1940—Matawan 0 — Keyport1941—Matawjn 6 — Keyport :1942—Keyport 6 — Matawan1943—Matawan 6 — Keyport1944—Malawan 24 — Keyport1945—Matawan 27 — Keyport1948-Matawau 19 — Keyport -1947—Matawan 25 — Keyport .1948^-Matawali 27 — Keyporf ~1949—Keyport,' 7 — Matawan1950-Matawa'a 18 — Keyport1951—Matawan 18 — Keyport1952—Matawan 14 — Keyport1953-Malawan 25 - Keyport1954—Matawan 6 — Keyport1955-JVIatawah 13 — Keyport1956-Keyport 14 — Matawan1957—Matawan 6 — Keyport *1958^-Matawan 6 — Keyport1959-Keyport 13 - Matawan

MATAWAN0 ' Brick Twp. '

M Leonia25 Bishop Eustace

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THE COUNTRYKITCHEN .

' Tennent RoadMorganville .

(RltM Utmi SMe Jnsl OftHighway 7»)

TAKE OUT ORDERS ONLYP i n a and Hot Sausage

Sandwiches

Open Weekend! Only

LOWELL U 4 W

THE BASIS FORTHANKSGIVING

If the Pilgrims, besetby hardship anddeadly peril, couldestablish Thanksgiv-ing, how much morethis day should meanto us in modernAmerlcal Our bless-ings are too numef-ous'lo count.

This bank will not b* open on Thanksgiving.November 24th.

THE MATAWAN BANKVIAJAWAS, NEW JERSEY

24, THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J.

West KeansburgGirl Is Bride

Miss J o « n Margaret Dickey,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. AndrewDickey. 45 Holly Ave., West Keans-burg, became the: bride of JohnArthur Schulz, srarcf Mr. and Mrs.Charles H, Schulr,- MonmouthBeach, at St Ann's Church. Keans-burg, oil-Saturday, Nov. 19, 1960.The Rev. Anthony J. Luisinl offi-ciated.,, ,:V:T : • ' . : - , • .-.•."Mi. Dickey gave his daughterIn marriage. She wore a gown ofwhite silk organza with the bodiceof Chantilly lace and matchinglace inserts at the waistiand hem-line. Her fingertip-length veil ofFrench Illusion fell from a crown

jjf s e e d pearls. She carried aprayer book adorned with a whiteorchid. '

Mrs. Robert Hackett, Keyport,sister, of the bride, was matron ofhonor. She-wore a gown of olivepeau de sole with a matching petalheadpiece and a klsslng-length veil.She carried a cascade bouquet ofyellow and rust mums."Honor Attendants Also Wear' Olive

Miss Martha Schulz, MonmouthBeach, sister of the bridegroom;Mrs." Charles E. Schulz; MoHm'ouinBeach, and Miss Claire Faas, WestKeansburg, were honor attendants.Miss Katheline Reamer, W e s tKeansburg, was junior bridesmaid.They wore gowns of olive peau deBoie~wi[fi matehlBg~"petaf~h6:pieces. They carried cascade'bou-quets of yellow mums.

Charles E . Schulz, MonmouthBeach, was best man. AndrewDickey, West Keansburg, brotherof^the bride; George Lane, Rum-apn; • Richard Bohnert, L o n gBranch, and Robert Hackett, Key-port; were ushers.

A receptkm-mis held at the WestKeansburg Fire House, after which•the couple left f o r a motor trip toFlorida.

-•--The bride attended Red BankCatholic High School.- She is em-ployed by L. Bamberger & Co.,Eatontown.

The bridegroom was graduatedfrom- Long Branch High. School.He Is employed as a carpenter inhis father's corstructlon business

The couple will reside' at 177Kiddle Ave., Long Branch.

Pago NtrlO-

FormalWear

To HireW. 5. WALLACE

CLOTHINGMen anMtoys' Furnishings

_ Smes „W. Freot S t Keyport

Deaths Reported During Week

Ernest H. PlathErnest R. Plath. 1407 H Sfc, Be!-'

mar, died Friday, Nov. 18,1960, atthe home of his daughter. Mrs.Emma C. Knight, 425 Euclid Ave.,Brielle, after a short illness.

Mr. Plath, born, in Germany,came to this country when he wasseven-years-old. He had lived inBelmar for the past 15 years andwas a former resident of Nutleyand Newark. He retired 20 yearsago as a foreman of the ElectricMeter Division, Westinghouse Elec-tric Corp., Newark, where he hadbeen employed .(pr_30 years.

He-.was a member of the mu-sicians union in Newark and wasa former member of the ColumbiaBand, Newark. He also played withthe John Philip Sousa Band andArthur Pryor's Band.

Also surviving are another daughtar, Mrs. Edna -M. Donalo, Brielle;three sons, Albert A., Union Beach;W. Robert, Manosquan, and Fran-cis J.; 11 grandchildren' and ninegreat-grandchildren.. Funeral services were held at thtRobert C. Neary Funeral Home,Manasquon; Monday morning a t l la.m. Interment was vin.GreenwoodCemetery, Brielle.

Joseph R. RebordapTn?rT?b6fi3S6T38r~

Seventh St. Union Beach, diedThursday, Nov. 17, 1960, at hishome. Mr. Rebordao was bora inPortugal.,' Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Em-ma (LcBedz) Rebordao; two broth-ers, Lionel and Dominick, Portugal,and two sisters, Mrs. Ascencao dc-Costa, Portugal, and Mrs. .MariaOlivcria, Taunton, Mass.

Private funeral services wereheld at the Bedle Funeral Home,Keyport, on Saturday.

George J. Kunkel "George J. Kunkel, 81, of 100 Man-

ning PI., Keansburg, died Satur-day. Nov. 19, I960, at his homeafter a brief illness. He was a re-tired marble setter. He was born,in New York. Mr. Kunkel Jived on)Staten Island before moving toKeansburg 12 years ago.

He was a member of SpanishAmerican War Veterans, Deckel-Camp, Staten Island. He was acommunicant of St. Ann's Church,Keansburg.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. An-na (Schnaarsk) Kunkel; a son, Al-fred, Staten Island; seven grand-children, and three great-grand-children

Funeral services were held in St.Ann's Church Monday at 9 a.m.with the Rev. Stanley Levandoski,pastor, officiating. Interment, un-der the direction of the John J.Ryan Home for Funerals, Keans-burg, was in the family plot.

Charles M. BloodgoodCharles M. Bloodgood, 71, of 827

Bordentown Ave., South Amboy,died Saturday, Nov. 19, 1960, atSo~ulh Amboy Hospital, after a longillness. He was born in Browntownand lived in South, Amboy for thepast 40 years . ".' - - ' ••'•'•

He was employed as a custodianat the Young Njen's Christian Al-sociation. He was'»/»mniun|canf

of Christ Church, South-Amboy. -Surviving are hlr wife, Marie; a

son, Charles Jr., South Amboy; asister.. Mrs, Mary Wells, UnionBeach. -

Funeral services were held Tues-day at 1:30 p.m. at Kain Mortu-aries, Inc., Perth Amboy, with theRev. Ronald Albury, rector ofChrist Church, officiating. Inter-ment was in Christ Church Ceme-tery. -

Mrs. William BorkMrs. Marie Bork, 56, of MO Pros-

pect Ave., Cliffwood Beach, diedSaturday, Nov. 19, 1060, at herhome. Mrs. Bork was born in NewJersey, daughter of the late Josephand Margaret (Leary) Klienhenz.

She was a communicant of St,Joseph's Church, Keyport, and a

u member of the Ladies Auxiliary,Guadalcanal Post, 4745, Veterans ofForeign Wars, Cliffwood. She wasthe wire of the late William Bork.

Surviving are six sons, Williama n d John, Cliffwood Beach;Charles, Jersey City; James, New-»rfc; Robert and JosephrGliffwoad;three daughters, Mrs. - Anna Ziesrkowski, Newark; Mrsi Marie Hag-ney and Miss Delores Bork, Cliff-wood; a brother. J«hn Klienhenz,Forked River, and eight grandchil-dren;

Funeral services were held Tues-day at 8:30 a.m. from the DayFdneral Home, Keyport. At 9 a.m.a high mass of requiem was cele-brated by the Rev. Cornelius J.Kane, pastor, at St. Joseph'sChurch. Burial was in St. Joseph'sCemetery. •-„

Robert H. DallyRobert H. Dally, 87, John St.,

Keansburg, died Saturday, Nov. 19,I960, at home.- Mr. Dally was born in UnionCity and was the son of the lateMr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Dally. He•had lived in Keansburg 20 years.Ha'.'was retired.I He was a member of Union CityLodge and Garfield Council ofElki. .

Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Jo-sephine D. (Wlit) Dally; a son,Robert Dally, Weehawken; •daughter, Mrs. Valeska Cantelmo,South Hackensack, and a lister,Mrs. Grace Tarls, Keansburg.

The funeral service was heldWednesday at 2 p.m. In the LeberFuneral-Home, Keansburg. Burialwas In Flower Hill Cemetery,North Bergen.

Joanne Gannon 'Joanne Gannon, eight-day-old

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ThomasGannon, 7 Elm Ave., Hailet, diedFriday, Nov. 16,1960; in RiverviewHospital. <

Surviving besides her parentsare a brother, Thomas Gannon. Jr.,at home; her paternal grandpsr.ents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gan-non, and'her maternal grandpar-ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cap-lette. -•- - . . .«-. . .•.-...

A blessing was conducted Mon-day at the Ryan Funeral-Home,KeWsburgj"Birflsl .'was <•!« ^Ml»Oijvft Cemetery,- Mlddletown.

J£~-Mm-., - - . _

fr

y onONE AND ALL!

j; 1 t\yr

"

Thanh giving time and we join all of you In grate-fulness for all we share as a nation and, a people.Thanks, too, from all of us here at McDonald's,lhat we live and work in this community where sovery, very many of you have honored us with yourfriendship and patronage. As we salute you, wepromise to keep faith — in product and service.You can always be sure of the tastiest food intownaTextra thrifty prices here at McDonald's!

Me Donald'sHIGHWAY 35

"Juit Nor* •f.BwrPMMrt

Middletowh

P. S. We Will be ClosedAll t>»j~ OjMT.ii* FriA* 11 A. M. «•

Miss Byrne WedIn Keansburg

Miss Susan Patricia.. .Byrne,daughter of Michael Byrne, £07 Pal-mer Ave., West Keansburg, and tholate Mrs. Susan Byrne, became thebride of Ralph H. Marquet, son ofArthur H. Marquet, Red Bank, andthe late Mrs. Eleanor Mirquet,Saturday, NOY. 12, 1960. The Rev.Stanley Levandoski officiated atthe ceremony in St. Ann's Church,Keansburg.

The bride was given in marriageby her fathen She wore a candle-light gown of bombazine silk witha cowl neckline and bodice appli-qued^in re-embroidered Alenconlace and sequins. Her cahdellghtsilk illusion veil fell from a pearttiara. • . '

Mrs. Catherine Buchanan, FairHaven, was matron of honor for hersister. Honor attendants wero MissEileen Byrne, sister of the bride,and Mrs. Robert Westerdahl, Deal.Miss Nancy Byrne, sister of thebride, and Miss Cathy Buchanan,Fair Haven, niece of the bride,were flowep-giris.

Wear Matisse Velvet^^Allwflre EQwns ofmatlsse velvetw i t h satin "cummerbunds a n dWtehlh^headpieras^Tfiey tarriedarm bouquets of white roses withthe exception of the flower girls,who/ carried princess baskets filled

roses. . • ( ..David Keelan, Keansburg, was

best man. Ushers were BarryYoung, Bethlehem, Pa., and GeorgeMiller, Philadelphia.

A reception was held at BuckSmith's, East Keansburg.

The couple will live in Philadel-phia after a motor trip to Canada.

The bride Was graduated fromRed Bank Catholic High School,She formerly was employed by theBell Finance Co., Ked Bank.

Mr. Marquet. a graduate of Mld-dletown Township High School andPhiladelphia College of Pharmacyand Science, Is employed by LongLane Court. Pharmacy, Philadel-phia. . -. •

Funeral ServicesCharlie Hail

Funeral services were held Fri-day afternoon a t : p.m. in the JohnJ. Ryan Home f o r Funerals,Keansburg, for Charles Hall, 66, of103 Forest Ave., Keansburg, whodied suddenly Tuesday, Nov. 15,1960, at his home. Burial was InFair View Cemetery, Middletown.He wai the huiband of the lateGrace (Haider) Hall.

Bora In NeW York, Mr. Hall wasa retired employee of John Mor-rell Co., Hollls, L. I. He had re-sided in Keansburg 12 years.

Surviving are a brother, RobertMall, and a sister, Mn. MargaretLawrence, both of Keansburg. '

URoy R. Purdy Sr.Funeral services were held Sat-

urday morning at 10 a.m. at theJohn W. Mehlenbeck FuneralHome, Hazlet, for LeRoy R. Purdyir., 87, of 19 Poplar Ave.; WealKeamburg, who died Tuesday,Nbv.: 15,'I960, -at Ule/,hdm» o l '««IN»;aMrV."Viflla'm' Bracken,'308Lawrence Dr., Paramui, where hewas Visiting. The Rev. Nbrman'R.fyley, pastor of St. John's Meth-odistChurch, Hazlet, officiated andInterment wai in Shoreland Mem-orial Cemetery, Hazlet. Specialservices were conducted by Daugh-ters of America Friday evening at7:30 p.m. and by the Masons, atI p.m.

Mr. Purdy was born In Osslnlng,N.Y. He had been employed atShark River Hills Marina, Neptune.Mr. Purdy was a member of Cae-sarea Lodge F&AM, Keyport, andStar of Bayslde Council, Daughtersof America, Keansburg.; Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Jo-sephine M. Purdy; three sons, Le-* - y R. Jr., Keamburg; Roger A.. . J John F., both of West Keans-burg; a brother, Russell, NewYork; a stepbrother, Alton Flnck,Philadelphia; a lister, Mrs. AlleenDaglstino, Biyonne; his mother,Mrs. Bessie (Baker) Flnck. Phila-delphia; and three grandchildren.

Bertram F.-MorrisFuneral services were held Sat-

urday afternoon at 1:30 p.m. at theBedle Funeral Home, Keyport, forBertram Frederick Morris, 54, of431 South Main St., Keyport, whodied Wednesday, Nov. 16, 1960, JnMonmouth Medical Center. TheRev. Norman R. Rlley, pastor ofSt. John's Methodist Church, Haz-let, officiated. Burial was In Holm-oel Cemetery,. Mr. Morris was born In Trenton

and had lived In Keyport 20 yean.Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Eleanor (Rudlger) Morris, andIwo torn, Bertram II.. and RichardH., at home. .

Paul W. FitbtlkornFuneral services were held Sat-

urday at the John J. Ryan Homefor Funerals, Keamburg, for PaulW. Fiebelkorn, G6, of 13 ScaviewAve., Keansburg, who died Wed-nesday, Nov. 16, 1960, at hishome. The Rev, John P. Euler,pastor of Hayihoro CommunityChurch, East Keansburg, officiat-ed. Interment wai In Fair ViewCemetery, Middletown,

Mr. FietKikorn wa* born In Ger-many. Hs war a veteran of WorldWar I and was a member of theDisabled American War .Veterans,Bayshore Council.

Surviving are three niewt anda nephew. ,

Parents Welcome New Arrivals

'• ""- Crook""Mr. and Mrs. David Crook, Balti-

more, Md., are parents of a son,Michael Evan, born Thursday. Nov.10, 1960, in Johns Hopkins Hospi-tal. Mrs. Crook is the former MissSandra Slovenz, daughter of Mr.and Mrs. Stephen Slovenz, Keyport.She is on leave from her positionas a teacher in Baltimore Schools.Mr. Slovenz is proprietor ol theDixie Lee Bakery, Keansburg, anda well known local bowler.

LeonardMr. and Mrs. Michael Leonard,

90S Summcrtidd Ave,, LaurenceHarbor, are the parents of a daughtcr, born in Perth Amboy Hospltal.

KleinA daughter was bora.In Perth

Amboy Hospital to Mr. and Mrs.John Klein, 33 Bcechwqod terr.,Mntawan. -

Ahero •- Mr. and Mrs, Michael Ahem, 29Shetland Rd., Old Bridge, are theparents of a daughter, born InPerth Amboy" Hospital." ' ; '

A daughter was born In PerthAmboy Hospital to Mr. and Mrs.Bonald Schuck, Box 242, Hlgglns

d.r-Mata.waiti -~=-r-Washington

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Washington^6 Hall PI., Keyport, are the par-ents of a son, born in Perth AmboyHospital. :

BuonoA daughter was born In. Mon-

moiith Medical Center on Wednes-day, Nov. 16. 1960, to Mr. and Mrs.Alexander Buono, 4 Mallard St.;Hailet.

ColotMr. and Mra. Robert Colot, 10

New Brunswick Ave.. Matawan, arethe parents of a daughter, bornWednesday, Nov. 16, I960, In Mon-mouth Medical Center.

BetitmerA daughter was born In River-

view Hoipltal on Thursday, Nov,17, I960, to Mr. and Mrs. BrentBeisemer, 10 Galewood Dr., Hai-let.

Luerf t nMr. and Mrs. Fred Lonergen, 20

Miller Ave., Hailet, are the parentsof a son, born Wednesday, Nov. 16,1960, in Riverview Hospital. ••""•

LouthneyA daughter was born in River

view Hospital on Wednesday, Nov.It, 1960, to Mr. and Mrs. ThomaiLoughney, 4 Rosemary Dr., Hailet.

Parker •Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Parker,

398 Shore Concourse, Cliffwood, arethe parents of a son, born In SouthAmboy Hospital, on Monday, Nov.

WercsawA daughter waa born In South

Amboy Hospital to Mr. and Mrs.Joseph-Wertsaw, 13 Prospect PL.Matawan, on Wedneiday, Nov 16,i960.- •. ,,, •,,;;. . .,,,,„. , ,,,„''.''HI'W ' . Martynovych ';, '.•••

Mr.• • and Mrs; > Nicholas-' Marlyno-vych. 36 Second St., Old Bridge,are the parents of a son, born InSt. Peter's Hoipltal.

Zallnsky-A daughter was born In St. Pet-

er's Hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Ches-ter Zallnsky, S Monroe PI., OldBridge, on Monday, Nov. 14, 1960.

SlmoneMr. and Mrs, John Slmone, 49

Fourth St., Old Bridge, are the pa-rent! of a daughter, born Thurs-day, .Nov. 10, ISM, In MiddlesexGeneral Hospital.

SchrleverA daughter waa born lo Mr. and

Mrs.' Eric Scliriever, 29 OlrardAve.; Old Bridge, on Friday, Nov.II, I960, In Middlesex General Hos-pital.

HalshtMr. and Mrs. Robert Halght. 26

Meadow Rd,, Old Bridge, are theparents of a daughter, born Tues-day, Nov. 15, 1960, In MiddlesexGeneral Hospital.

! G«nMeA son was born In' South Amboy

Hospital on Tuesday, Nov, 6, 1DC0,lo Mr. and Mrs, Lawrence Gentile,Hazlet.

JoaniMSp. 4 Fred Johnson and Mrs,

Johnson, 3 Allen S t , Hazlet, arethe parents of a daughler, bornWednesday, Nov. 16, 1960, In Pat-tenon Army Hospital, Fort Mon-mouth. • • ' " . •

Se«MA daughter was born In River-

view Hospital on Thursday, Nov.16, I960, to Mr. and Mrs. ThomaiScott, Second St,, Matawan.

wkkleyMr. and Mrs. Walter Wfckley, 3

Princeton PI,, Hazlet, are the pa-renti of • daughter, born In PerthAmboy Hospital,

HendrlckionA daughter was born In Perth

Amboy Hospital lo Mr, and Mrs.Daniel Hendrickson, 20 BayshoreAve., Laurcnco Harbor,

CuihmanMr. and Mrs. Jac A. Cushman,

Taylor,Rd., Motawan, aro the par-ents of a second child, « son, bornSunday, Nov. 20, I960, In FllklnHospital. Their other child Is also

Son.

SthsuxJr MOTORSif,.;ou.fji»no

YOUR AUTHORIZED

BUICK--nrf OPELDEALER

"Better Buy" USED CARSSALES and SERVICE

COIfox 4-4000•M l i t KM* f/iPt SOTVICI WtO*j* tf.f vn tittti ton Out

HIGHWAY 35 »» BEDLI RD. KEYf'OKf

TarkMr. and Mrs. Ernest tark, Eng-

llshtown, are tho parents of adaughter, born Tuesday, Nov. 15,I960, In Riverview. Hospital. Mrs.Tark is the former Miss Ann Furry,Keyport. . . •

D'AgostlnoMr. and Mrs. Thomai D'Agostino,

Holmdel Rd., llolmilcl, are theparents of a son, bom" Saturday,Nov. 19, 1960, in Riverview Hospit-al, .. -

SchulliA ton was born Saturday, Nov.

19, 1960, In Riverview'Hospital toMr. and Mrs. John Schulti, 34Applcton Ave., Hailet.

BarryMr. and Mrs. William Barry, 502

Prospect Ave., Laurence Harbor,are the parents of a daughter, bornSunday, Nov. 20, 1900, in River-v l e w H •'• •

Terwllllger .A son WOJ born In Riverview

Hospital on Sunday, Noy, 50L I960,(6>1r. and Mrs. Richard TcTWilll-

i 63-lllh St

I.- BakerMr. • a*d Mrs. Thomas Baker,

Main St.; Marlboro, are the parentsof a daughter,-bonr Sundnyr Nov,:'20, I960, In Riverview Hospital.

~~ Bordulls ••"*A daughter was born In Mon-

mouth Medical Center on Monday,Nov. 21,1960, to Mr. and Mrs. JohnBordulls, 1210 Union Ave., UnionBeach.

GlaslerMr. and Mrs. Leo Glasler, 609

Sidney Ave., Union Beach, are Ilioparents of a daughter, born Sun-day. Nov, 20, I860, in Monmouth*Medical Center.

FitsA- ion wai .born In Monmouth

Medical Center on Saturday, Nov.19, 1960, to Mr. and Mn. JohnFill, 4 Atoll PI., Hailet.

Gali<m_ v -Mr. and Mrs. Herman Gntion,

Keyport Av«., Cliffwood, are theparents of a son, born Sunday,Nov. 20, 1960, In Monmoulh Medic-al Center.

StolesMr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Stokei.

Houston, Tex., are the parents ofa third child, (heir first aon, bornon Wedneiday, Nov, 9, 1960, InHouston. Tim baby weighed ninepounds, nine ounces, and haa beennamed Daniel Arthur, Mrs. Stokesla the former Mlsi Marian Harrli,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. DanielHarris, Keyport.

< Bruce . .Mr, and Mrs. Norman Bruce, 9

Jackson St., Matnwan, are the pa-rents of their first child, « daugh-ter, born Thursday, Nov. 17, I960,in Ssdth Amboy Hoipltal, The babyhas been named Barbara Ann, Mn.Bruce li the former Mill MaryQulnlsn, South Ambpy, ,

HawthornsA son ws« born In Monmoulh

Medical Center pn Saturday, Nov.19, I960, to Mr. and Mrs. W. D.Hawthorne, 24 Dartmouth Dr., Hat-let.

EngagementOtto-Ludwlg

Mr. and Mrs. William Ludwlg Jr.,104 Broadway, Ktyport, announce

MISS SHIRLEY LUDWIO

tho engagement of their dauijhter,Shirley Louise, to Gerald BernardOtto, son of Mr. and Mrs, BernardOtto, 136 Prospect Ave., Wood-bridge, ^ -

'Mwtflthvlg wnsnradiratcd froiifKeyport Hlrir Schntfj-TJloss of 1858,-oni li employed us a secftslnry bytho General Ceramics CoriK1, Keas-bey.

Mr. Otto attended Barrlngcr HliihSchool-"oiid'vvos-graduated fromCentral llltjli School, Newark, Hoserved four years In the U. S. Navyand wni honorably discharged InMarch 1950. Ho attended RutgersUniversity, Mr. Otto Is employedas «n electronic technician by tlioGeneral Ceramics Corp.

A February wedding la planned,

Mr. Strong wai born in Cavan,Ireland. He had lived m Keansburgfor the past seven years. Ho wasa former resident of Brooklyn andwas n retired Iron and steel work-er, formerly employed by tinJones and LaughHn._ Steel Co,,Brooklyn.- - - ~ r -

He 'was a communicant of St.Ann's Church, Keansburg Hiswife was the late Mra, Mary (Don.ahue) Strong.

Surviving aro two tons, FrancisM , Brooklyn, and Joseph P., All-wood, Clifton; a daughter, Mrs.Mnrtln .Lohsen, Keansburg; abiother, Michael, Ireland, and fourgiandchlldren.

Funeral icrvlces were held froia_the John J, Rytin Home for Fu-iierali, Keansburg, Tuesday, At 8n m. a high moss of requiem wasoffered In St. Ann's Church. Burialwas in St. John's Cemetery, Mid-dle VUIBEC, N,Y.

Julius S. DanielsJulius S. Daniels, 48. Brown Rd.,

Morganvllle, died Sunday, Nov. 20,IM0, at his home after a brief ill-ness, Ho wai born In Harrison andhud lived lit Morgnnvlllo for 18years. .

Mr. Daniels was a formor dis-trict manager of tho Walter Heads

ObituariesVincent Stymanikl

Vincent Szymansltl, 64, died Sat-urday, Nov. 19, 1900, at hi* home,167 Pork Ave., Kennaburg, after abrief Illness. Born in Poland, hehad lived In Keanaburg 13 years,

Mr. Stymanakl 'was cmploytdby the General Motors Corpora'lion, Linden. He wai a memberof Local 60S, United Auto WorkersUnion, Linden, and St, Catherine'sChurch, East Koantburg.

Surviving art hli wife, Mrs, Trs-•le(Polltowakl) Srymanikl; Ihre*daughtcri, Mn. Helen Bauiamann.and Mrs. Dorothy Maraico, both ofWpodbrUlge,. M4..MH. IrehoWII-lialme, Keanaburg; » son, WalterStymanakl, Jeney City, and eightgrandchildren.

A high requiem man wan offeredWednesday at 10 a.m. In St. Cath-erine's Church by the Rov, Thail-dens 3. Wolclchowakl, Burial waiIn Ml. Olivet Cemetery, Middle-town, under direction of the RyanFuneral llomt, Keaniuiirg,

Patrick StrongPatrick Strong, B5. o f 29 Fourth

St., Keamhurg, dlrd Friday, Nov.II, 1D6D/. at the Mornn NursingHome, Rirltan Townililp.

ThreatrCTrPeMhAmlmyrHe^TWaar:manager of-tlio-Stanley -Tn<i»t«rr-~-Jersey City, nnd n member of Jcr-.acy City Khvanla Club and thePerth Amboy Lodge of Elks.

Ho is survived by his wlfu, Helen: 'dntiRhWrMnr fcfonardNelron1

Morganvllle; a son, Julius Ir,, serv-ing in thu U. S, Air Forco InFlorida; his'father, Vincent Daniel- -nyk, IVrth Amboy; two listen,Mr«, Theresa Vlrrhlsh, Perth Am-lioy, ami Mm. Nora Dnnlelc»ylc,Vlnelund; , two brothrra, Vincent,.Perth Amboy, and Kdward, K<ll«on,

I'tincrnl scrvlci's were held yel-tcrday moiiilnft at 8:30 n.m, fromKalu Morlunrlfs, Inc., Perth Am? .boy, and at 10: IS n.m. a hluh manof requiem was celebrated In St. •Stephen's Church. Interment wai InSt. Gertrude's Crmettsry. ,

AWl StcnqulslAxel Slcnqulit, 773 Roublna St.,

Perth Ambpy, died Sunday, Nov. •20, I960, after a long-llln«si,-|tt wai 'a retired employio ol Iho LehlghValloy Railroad. . '

He was a lifelong resident ot IMPerth Amlioy and a member ol 1 .Grace Lutheran Church, Perth.Amhoy,

Hit Is aurvivtd by hli wife, Mrs.C n i n i (Alexander) Strnqulit;Ihrcc d«ugliter«;Mrs. lfances Koy-1-en, Newton, Pa.i Wri. I'lorenot.•••-'-Sicrdy, Mi'luchon. anil Mrs, Doto«,thy ZardHVda, Nixon; two ioni,Alex, Wf»t ICeatwburj, and Carl,.-',Perth Amboy: a brother, Car,Perth Amboy,. and II grandclu>dr*n.

Funeral services wert held y»i-terdny at 2 p,m, at the Flynn ft.._Son Funeral Home, Turin/Amboy,with tha Rnv. Herbert ll«cht offlot-i •ntlnii. Interment waa In FranklinMtmorlal Park. '

Real F,atato l.lsllng Carda folmla at thli. offlcag>

PAPPAS StudiosCANDID WEDDINGS A SPECIALTY

H MAIN ST. TEL.CO449N KEVPORT.

IU.BIAT..

Friday «•>•« SaturdayNovember 2 5 «•<( 2 6

from 12 Noon 16'5 P.M. /So kiddies, bolter ' /

tell Mother or Dad to bring

you In* Santa will give

free gift to all children'$$

who are accompanied tv

by their parent*.

In Keyport'It

—"Page Ten fHEMATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Thursday, November 24, 1960

Youncofski InRing Comeback

•Johnny Youncofski, Keyport wel-terweight, will hit the comebacktrail in boxing this week after atwo-year layoff. The Keyport boxerwas slated to step in the ring las!night for the first time since lati1958. He engaged in a four-roumpreliminary bout on a card to bestaged in the Camden Armory.

If all went well at Camjjen,Frank Boyle, Cllffwood, his train

~er, has him slated to box anotheifour-rounder on the card to be pre-sented in Putcrson Noy. 30. TommyW.elstead. Matawan welterweight,was slated to six rounds on thesame card, the first time the Mata*won 148-pounder has attempted thisdistance. The pairing for the fightwill be announced tomorrow. Wcl-stead" has been out of action sincehe dropped a dose decision in afour-rounder at Highland Park lasts u m m e r ; - - - • • • ' • — • • - • : • -

Youncofski's' most successfuyear in boxing was in 1957 whenhe scored impressive wins at St.Nicks,*j9W f LtWiouls .inJ?5SLpn technical knock-outs, one at the hands of':FelixMnciiado, a Cuban welterweight ofpre^astr© days, and Joe Tipplet,

•>-a Pliilly fighter. In neither of theseboutrwasthe-Keyporter seriously-hurt nor the margin against him

<a marked one.African Trip Definite

Joe (Rocky} Tomasello, Matawan light heavyweight, also eyeinga comeback after a two-year lay-off, seems definite now to go toSouth Africa in January to squareoff against Mike Heit, British Em-pire light heavyweight champ. Theoriginal date for the bout in Jo-hannesburg was this week, but it

- -had to be set back when the dis-orders which have been putting theCongo In such *iturmoll were hav-ing repercussions a.mong the na-tives in the veldtland,

Boxing Is such a popular ItemIn the South African domain thatth8 authorities were /ear/ul that

. theholdlng of a major bout down•ftherc at this time would be the

source of added excitement. Thesituation is reported much' improv-ed in the, Rand now as a periodof increasing prosperity in the

"gold mining industry is renderingboth the veldtlandcr and the na-

_ti.YA increasingly aloof to outsidepropagandists.

Ed Wclstead, younger brother olTommy, scored a notable successin the recent PAL amateur boutsat Linden. He look on the GoldenGloves chomp, Richie Gonzales,Elizabeth, arid gave that highly-

Matawan High School 1960 Varsity Football Squad

ik on a very difficult schedule,_yctj:sn_emerge. The squad consists ot;Front row. Charles

The Maroon and Steel eleven that-tookwith a 5-4 record If they defeat Keyport. . . _ .Garafano, Vincent Wlldman, Robfcrt Jackson, Henry Vrecland, David Gregory, CharlesWathlngton, Michael Cathcrwood, John Hinds, Ronald Slckels, William Bowie; middlerow, John Yates, Richard Vena, Kenneth Morris, John Davis, Richard Flerros, RobertDavfc WilliamrwalhtrigtorirJohn" BungerrHownrd Warden, Garden-Sutherland;-topJOW,James'Stanberry, Richard Byrd, Edward Gallo, Peter jGeorgc, John Williams, William

WririeU,George "Worrell[,^7ames IBelnaT'TInioiHyTBoTu'rerf^jblin Slctcels; rear row,-JohnGardner, manager; George ueiii, assistant coach; Darry Rizzo, head HOBch; BraceMacCujcheon, assistant coach; Allan Barr.

Squad members Dennis Krcuger, Michael Zelwak, John McKnlght, George Seibert,• - - James Christiansen and Walter Missel were absent when this pictureRoland Peterso

was taken.

Keyport High School I960 Varsity Football Squad

touted young man a battering allaround the ring. Welstead and Soc-

*co Jensen, Keyport, a 140-poundbattler, previously had gained de-cisions In three-rounders in theKnights of Columbus bouts at St.Anth6ny's, Elizabeth.

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Basketball BacAjSfc Joseph's

St. Joseph's School, Keyport, isto be back in the North JerseyShore Parochial Grammar SchoolBasketball League this-season. Thishas been brought about by the Rev.William Bausch, who has been ableto set up an area of the formerparish. school gym as a practicearea for the boys. Two Hazlet men.Sid Christiansen and Charley Castner, have taken on the task of drilling the team.

Play starts Saturday. For play-ing the league games this year, theKeansburg School court and St.Ma<y's7New Mbrimoulh "School,court will be used Saturday morn-ings. Coach Christiansen has asquad of 35 boys working out of,the St, Joseph's team, but the Key-port school acknowledgedly Is ata disadvantage this first season ofthe sports ~ return as none of theboys to represent the school inKeyport have been able to acquirebasketball experience in the. yearsthe sport has been blotted out atthe school and accordingly muststart from "scratch." The otherteams will have holdover playersfrom their 1959-60 season.

WithSS35p;4;-hJeagu;this-y£aiL will be:_JMorthern_ Pjy^sign, St. Ann's, Keansburg; St.Catherine's, East Keansburg; QurL d f P t l H l H i h l d

The Red Raiders squad Includes the members ot the Red and White layvee team thutcomplied the first undefeated, untied, unscorcd Upon, record ever put together by a arid-Iron aggregation In these parts. Squad members arc: Front row, James Noe, WilliamHogan, Robert Fclgenwinter, Russell Zllinski, John Stryker, Lawrence thenowclh, WayneBowne, Joseph Cacarlllo, Charles Sakln, JamesLawson, Charles Ochlnegro. Robert Rose:middle row, Frank Klley, Edward Caruso, Ernest Callveto, Charles Craig, Edward

Carncs, Richard Wilson, James Sllvestrl, Peter Rothenberg, Ned Crossley, Lester Brown,Mclvin Robinson, William Trcmblcy, Alan Frledrich; top row, Charles Bishop, manager;Daniel Hourahan, Samuel Robinson, Edward Scullion, John (Woody) Sullivan, Ralph Foss,Peter Brown, Henry DiPalo, William Frledrich, Stanley Slusarz, James Alexander, JayDetnarest, junior varsity coach; Stanley Baker, varsity coach.,'

KEYPORT HIGH SCHOOL1960 Varsity Football Squad

Jersey--- • - - - . —Number • . . -,.

Hed WMtfiNuvie . ' Position' Height Weight72' 73 X Stryker Tackle^ 6' 07 190 "28 2 8 J . N o e Back: 5 ' 1 0 " 1 5 5

15 C. Ochlnegro Back 5 ' 8 " ' 150S. Sluarz . Back ' 5 ' 6" 150W, Bowne Center 6" 0" 250L. Chenowcth Guard 5' 8" 100R, Zillnski Back 5' 9" 170J. Lawson . End 6' 2" 165M.Robinson End-Back 5 ' 8 " 155W. Trembley End 5'10" 165R. Rose Tackle. 6' 0" 185E. Caruso Back 5' 8" 160H. Dolan Tacklo 6' 0" 260C. Sakln Tackle 6 ' 0 " 185W. HDgan Back 6" 0" 170J. Cacarillo Back " 5'10" 165L. Brown - -Back 5'll" 1 9 0 ,S. Gaser End 5'10" • 155R. Foss • Tackle 5'11'.' 190

XR. Wilson Guard 5'10" 190P. Rothenberg Center 0' 0" -185D. Hourlhan Back 5'10" 145R. Bratlfolls Back 5' 7" 150J. Sllvestrl Guard 5' 9" 160A. Frledrich Back 5' 9" 100R. Felgenwlnter Back 5' 6" 155E. Caliveto Guard 5' 9" 160 .S. Robinson Back 5' 8" 155R. Craig Tackle 5'10" 200W. Sullivan End 51 9" 145J. Sculllbn , ^ - E n d 6' 0" 150P. Brown Tackle 6' 'i" 205N. Crossley Back 5 ' 7 " 150E. Carnes End ' 5'10" 160J.Alexander -End 5'9" 150W. Frledrich Back 5'10" 150F. Klley Back 6 '0" 155J. Dolan Guard 5' 8" ' 170

34 3458 5823 2384 6428 2633 3357 576014C24155131032501839426154 4949 4953 5317 1732' 3239 5829 2952 4054 32

601462415513103250182417§1

Head Coach:'Stanley Baker.Assistant Coaches; Jay Demarest, Thaddeus Krensavage.

1 -• Ye»r ':

i Senior"' Senior

JuniorSophomore

JuniorSeniorSenior

. JuniorJuniorJunior

.JuniorJuniorSenior

. SeniorSeniorSeniorJuniorSenior

SophomoreSophomoreSophomoreSophomoreSophomoreSophomore

SeniorSeniorJunior

FreshmanSophomoreSophomoreSophomoreSophomoreSophomore

JuniorJunior

SophomoreJunior

Sophomore

Hawks Out OnWeight Ruling

Withdrawal, temporarily, at least,of the Hazlet Hawks from theschedule resulted In only one gamebeing played In the boys footballleague Sunday, the Matawan Fal-cons overpowering tho KeyportBlackbirds 32-0. Billy Geiger ranfor three touchdowns, Blnkle Mor-larlty and Billy Strong for oneeach.

The Matawan Eagles played theBlackbirds second team a practicegame as the second half of theprogram. . . . . . .

The league's difficulties"'"werecompounded this week when theHawks withdrew from competitionwhen a weight limit c' 135 poundswas set on the boys to compete.This cost tho Hazlet team threeplayers, thr Falcons ono and theBlackbirds two. George Blschoff,Mdlawan, league'organizer statedthat it was necessary lest them bobad injuries from mixing boys ofIh6 diverse weights.

Agrees To Reorganize TeamWhen Coach Tom Mason, tho

Hawks, did agree td reorganize histeam, ho found his players quitting'n protest against tho loss of theliree boys, so the Hawks could not

field a team Sunday. Next Sundaya doublchcadcj again Is slated withthem as participants and It Is hopcd to straighten out the dlfflcul-les nt a conference before then.

Blschoff reveals that the boysfootball project Is snowballing allover. Union Beach' Was slated tomvo representatives at the con-erenco on rules. Atlantic High-

lands and Leonardo waMfcd Infor-mation. Coa.cn Joe Vctrttno. Nep-twn^.fligh School, was In contact

through a representative from thattownship about a boys' setup. Thecoach of the Fair Haven team, al-ready In national "Pop Warner,wanted tho local clubs to go na-tional. '

Going natlonal'would mean re-stricting weight limits to 115pounds, Blschoff states, It Is In-tended to have two divisions nextyear, an up to 10 years divisionand a 11-13 years division. Coachesfor tho younger boys will be need-ed from fathers and others whohave played college and high schoolfootball, also funds for equippingall the boys. '

Rocca-Srarr TeamIn Asbury Wrestling

Wrestling's team match combin-ation of Antonio Rocca and RlcklStarr- ara meeting rugged opposi-tion tomorrow night at thb AsburyPark Convention Hall when theytake on the combine of the squth-ern Rebels 1 and J. This bout isscheduled for two-out-of-three-fallsto win. Red Grupc, German giant,meets Bruno Sammartlno to quali-fy for a championship'bout withR o c c a . •. • -.-•

Another team match Is^chbdulodfeaturing tho Chinese sensation,Lee Chung, and Or. Jerry Grahamagainst Miquel Perez and LutherLlndsey In a two-out-of-three-fallt i l t . . . •.-• • • - , . - • , . • .

In the opening bouts Karl Kraii-er, another European Importation,

makes his debut In Asbury Park-'against AI Smith; the, Spoiler', andIn tho first event of the evening,Pat KellyThe bouts9 p.m.

opposes Tony Marino,will start promptly at

d til

Real Estate .Listing , Cards forsala'at, this office.

T, Single WingInKHSVs.MHS"Football formations dlways--aV o

something of a mystery to those1 hotactively playing the game. In' theKeyport-Matawan game Thanksgiv-ing Day, the two major basic for-mations, the "T" used by Keyport,ana the single wing, used by Mata-wan, will be pitted against one an-other.

To explain all the complexitiesand the possibilities of these forma-tions would be an Impossible newstask, but for the benefit of the fanat the Turkey Day gome, this ele-mentary explanation of that withwhich ho is to be confronted conbe made: T-Formatlon—The quar-terback crouches behind the center.He's. the "stem" ..of: Jhe T. Theother backs: stand abreast. Theyform the crossbar of the T.

The quarterback is the key to theT-formation. He takes- tho snap,and sets the play in motion..'Hecan hand the ball off to one of thebacks coming up for a straight orslanting thrust against the opptHl-tioi. line. Or he can flip to a circlingrunner on a,"rollout" to the wingswith blockers massed ahead. Andthe quarterback may "keep" thehall.himself, on the pass-optionplay, spinning behind the massedblockers bn a rollout or pass on therun with tho rollout simulated.-

Depends On Quarterback!

The effectiveness of the T de-pends largely on the quarterback'sdexterity In timing his handoffs andfakes In split-second ".movementamong the backs. The T aims tostrike before the defense can getset and it Is up to the quarterbackto keep the defense guessing''andunable to shift their weight of num-bers to where they think the playIs coming. Critics of the T bel iefthat It imposes too much on oneplayer, the quarterback, that If hehas an "off day," fhe whole teamhas one.

The Spllt-T Is a variation of thebalanced-T because the linemen arespaced (split) wider than In thostandard or balanced-T, where theystand almost shoulder-to-shoiilder.The spllt-T emphasizes lateralmovement by (he quarterback. Intho standard-T he does his wheel-Ing and handing off near to his spotbehind the center, but in tho split-T.he Is "on the wheel," handing offto the right or left of tho center ofthe play as he moves to a real orfaked rollout.

Single Wing—This formation Isso-called because one halfback Isposted outsldo (on the wing) of anend. The other backs llrio up in tan-dem behind tho center. The otherhalfback (tailback) is deepest, Tothe wlngbnck side, closer up, is thefullback. The quarterback, just be-hind Ihe line, Is slightly outside thefullback. .•:.

•Balanced Line Not Required : -Unlike thoT, the single wing does

not require a balanced line for bestresults. Tho weight of strength" jnthe line can be posted on the sameside as the wingback (strongitlde)or the backs may realign so1 theWlngback Is away from tho'side ofthoJine with, the. majority oflfns-men In It for, a .'-'weak' side'1 play;Ordinarily four linemen are postedon the "strong";side of the center

weak'.'while two go to the other orside. Sometimes the center a n i t h squarterback move way over to the«nd of the line and even are sep«r»-ted.by. a- gap from tho. main .body „.„,,„ , „ . Bof players. Less frequently a bil- mann, plays.

MATAWAN HIGH SCHOOL1960 Varsity Football Squad

, eg; QLady of Perpetual Help, Highlands;Holy Cross, Rumson;" St. Mary's,NevrMonrnouthr —"

Once Power In LeagueSt. Joseph's once was a power

in the league having won thechampionship in' 1954-55 and 1955-56. In 1957-58 the Keyport teamwas second to St. Mary's and thiswas the last season the St.-Joseph'scourt could be used for basketball.The school continued to place ateam in league competition In the1957-58 year, but the difficulties ofoperating without a place to playor practice when the school gymhad to be withdrawn to parishneeds, led to a decision to drop thesport.

The St. Joseph's team, in itsheydey, had Doc Creamer, nowcoach of basketball at the faniednew Notre Dame High, Trenton, asits coach and later it was schooledin play by Don Czok, coach of RedBank Catholic. A number of re-nowned players for both Red BankCatholic and St." Mary's, South Am-boy, moved up from the. Keyportschool's teams.

Monmouth C»un'y Junior HolyName Basketball League will re-sume activity Dec. 11, accordingto Wally Neff, Union-Beach, leaguedirector. St. Joseph's will be unableto return yet this year where itsteams were once a perennial pow-er. St. Ann's, Keansburg; St. Cath-erine's, East Keansburg; Nativity,Fair Haven; St. Agnes, AtlanticH i g h l a n d s , will make up thisleague's northern division in thecoming season, according to Neff.The teams will play Wednesdaynights and Sunday afternoons atKeansburg School gym.

Number20

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303

•27194

22•15282

17

•34•18•20•31 '24

*128

3269

29233835133

373940

> , NameAlan BarrJohn'Bunger - :

Michael Catherw66d :

J o h n . D a v l s •••::••'•••Robert DavisCharles GarafanoDavid GregoryJohn HindsWilliam IsaksenRobert JacksonDennis KruegerJohn McKnlghtKenneth MorrisRonald SicklesGarden SutherlandRichard Vena .Henry VreelandHoward-Warden .-••Charles .WathlngtonWilliam WathlngtonVincent WjldmanJohn Yates ' . ' . • -Roland Peterson-William BowieMichael ZelwakTimothy BoflnerJim MelnaGeorge MorrellGeorge SiebertWilliam FarrellJohn WilliamsJohn SickelsOc Byrd •

Ed Gallo .Jim StanberryPeter GeorgeRichard Fieros

Position^GuardGuard

End,-.'-:BadGuardBackTackleBackBackGuardBackGuardCenterTackleBack •BackGuardBack'Back'Eiid •;-,-•:•Tackle-B a c K ••'••-End ;BackJEiid : 'CenterBackEndE n d -TackleGuardEndBackGuardBackBack

Height5' 7"5| 7"

'5''6'-'''5' 9"5'10"6'0"5' 7"5'10"5' 9"5' 9"5' 7"5'10"5' 9"5' 6"51 6"5' 8"5' 8"5" 7"

: 5'10'T--~5'10" '- • " 6 1 2 "

6' 2"5'9"6' 1"5' 9"5'10"6' 1"6'0"5' 9" "5' 7"5M0"5'6"5" 6"5' 6"5'10"

Well145ICO

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-145145150160

"180190165145170140100165160

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••'.• Y e a r - . .SophomoreSophomore

Senior.SophomoreSophomore

' SophomoreSeniorSenior

SophomoreSeniorJuniorJuniorJuniorJuniorJuniorJuniorJuniorSeniorJuniorJunior

.-JuniorSophomore

- SeniorJuniorSenior

SophomoreFreshmanFreshmanFreshmanFreshmanFreshman

SophomoreFreshmanFreshman

JuniorFreshman

Junior

ROLLER SKATING9 GROU

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.'.Every Nighl i.Except Monday

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•Probable Starting Llne-Up.Coach: Barry Rizzo . • . ' • • • ' 'Assistant Coaches: George Deitz, Bruce MacCutcheon, Bill Newman.

anced fine and a "box" formationIs used In the single wing.'

Single wing plays start with asnap back to the tailback or full-back. The tailback is the key. Fromhis deep position, ho can run, passor kick.

The use of massed power aheadof the i ball-carrier. features thesingle, wing. Once In a while, on"trap" or "draw" plays, the tall-back or fullback will run "naked,"that Is, without blockers, to t h e"weak" side, hoping tp catch, thedefense overshlfted to the "strong",side, : , / • * ~. . ., ,

Two-On-One Blocking

T h e unbalanced line and thebackfield wedge of the single wingmake possible two-bn-one blockingat the po(n,t of contact. Also thetailback does not have to turnabout before passing in the singlewing as does a T quarterback. Thewlngback Is an extra receiver inaddition to the two ends to get mendownfield fast on pass plays. :

A team frequently will line up Ina T and then shift to single wingto upset the defense. But a teamso shifting must halt for one. fullsecond be/ore the snap or else drawa man-in-motlon penalty.

Defensive formations Involve theuse of five-six-seven and even eight-man line*. The defense has.to de-cide whether to "crash"- in .on thopresumed ball-carrier or to haveits ends and secondaries "drift"with the play tp make sure the ball-carrier cannot go outside, thd de-fensive, alignment. Tho defense hasan unlimited right of shifting.,

':>. JWs/ey to CoaciiWHIafd Risley, one-time manager

of the semi-pro Matawan Tigers,announced Sunday that he wouldreturn to bmeball next .year aicoach In the "where his

Fisher Keglers TakeThree Game Sweep

Fisher's Cities Service againswept three games in the Women'sBowling League and' continue tolead the league with a sensational29 wins and one loss record.

Tiny Glenn's holds a slight leadon second place with a 16'/4-14record followed by Raritan Esso,15-15; Woodland Park, 15-15; Pio-neer Food Stores,. 14-16; MatawanFord. 13J4-1654; Tiara Beauty Sal-on, 13-17; Hopefuls, 13-17; KeyportPharmocy, 12-18; and LaurelynHotel, Ml. '

The only other three-game win-ner was Hopefuls over LaurelynHotel. Two game winners were:Woodland Park over Tiara BeautySalon; Matawan Ford over KeyportPharmacy, and Raritan -Esso overPioneer Food Stores. Flo Ostinbowled high game of 167.

Football Schedule

THANKSGIVING DAY

TimeMltawan at Keyport U A.M."3rlck Township

Ocean Central

19SSScore

7-13Brick Township at

\ Ocean Central ' 11 A.M. 31-0Carltret at Perth .

I Amboy, W a t e r s1 Stadium - * P.M. 340; Edison Township at

Woodbridge' 10 A.M. 7-25; Freehold at Neptune It A.M. 141• Lakeu-ood at Toma: Hiver . Jl A.M. 14-7. Long 'Branch* at Red .; Bank u noon <0-o' Manasquan at Point .' I

Pleasant • J P.M. 14-0iMtluchen vs. Hiiti-i land Park at Me-

m o r I • t Stadium. . .. New Brunswick io :» A.M. 19-39, Mlddteloun <t

Asbury Park 10:30 A.M. (-7Red Bank Catholic

: at Rumion 11:» A.M. 68, Souui jRlvsr va. .' . New Brunlwick ati Ru((<n Stadium ] P.M. U 4

EATONTOWN

Rt. 35 at Circle — Liberty 2-4200

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defense for the Columbia:!;reshmfii"against the cub learns of Yale,Princeton and Pennsylvania t h i sfalL jHe._al3O_pIay:d ..much. oL Ow....period when the Lion cubs were on .the offensive. The Light Blue year-lings gave a good account of them-selves with a 21-man squad despitebeing outmanncd hy all rivals by,a big margin,. -

Joyce is an enroHee in the fiye-y e a r undergraduate engineeringcourse at Columbia and is in theNaval Reserve Officers TrainingCorps.

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Today thru SaturdayYul BrynnerEH Wallach

Steve McQueen :

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"THE NIGHT FIGHTERS"

Sunday - Monday - TuesdaySpencer Tracy

Frederic MarchGene Kelly

"INHERIT THE WIND"Clark Gable

Eleanor Parkerr- "THE KING AND

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MatineeThanksgiving Day

Starting 1:45Sat. Continuous

SUN. - MON. - TUES.

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'—Also —A SCIENCE-FRICTION R/OT.'I

NEXT WEEK"I Aim Al The Stan"

. ' —AIM— •"Stop, lawk, >a>i Lau»>"

Thursday, November 24, I960 THE MATAWAN JOURN/U, N. J. Poge Ewvwii

Keyport Jayvees Unscored UponFor.-Season; Crash Matawan JV3&0

Small Game Kill Of Brookside Gun And Bow Association

Keyport High S c h o o l JayveesClosed out their season Friday un-defeated, untied and unscored uponin seven games when they took themeasure ot the Matawan jayvees38-0. They scored a total of 195points in the seven games, or anaverage of 28 points a game whilekeeping their goal line inviolate.This Is top all-time performance fora football team since the game wasStarted at Uuflocal schools.

The Red and White triumph wasa masterpiece of solid line play.Nothing showed this more than thefact that Matawan's best accom-plishment of the afternoon was inthe'running back of kicks. Timeand again the Maroon and Steelseconds would get a kickoff out tomidfield to put themselves in fineattacking position only to be ableto do nothing with the opportunitiesso presented once they came face-

Jto-face with Keyport's forward wall.The Huskies line continuously wasbeing ^'submarined" by their.jj-

Fumbllng -at the-start, on t h eopening kickoff and again on thefirst series of downs, got the Mata-wan seconds off on the wrong foot,even thnngh they remvared- eachtime. They punted to the KHS 32and Dan Hourahan ran It back tothe 34.

TO In Three PlaysIn three plays, the Keyport jay.-

vees had a touchdown with awe-inspiring celerity. Fast-breakingplays from the "T" sent ButchteRobinson off right tackle for an in-itial first down at the Maroon andSteel 44, then Stan Slusarz chasingdown the left side of the field tothe Huskies 4, and finally LesBrown streaking powerfullytnrougha wide open hole' in the Maroonand Steel line for the first touch-down. But the point was stopped,so it was only 6-0. ••—» ."But the Keys were .not stoppedfor long. On the first scrimmageplay after the- second kickoff, thejunior Huskies went over to pass-ing. George Morrell's toss was pick-ed off by Slusarz in midiield andchased back to the Matawan 14 be-hind sweeping downficld blocking.The Matawan line did stack upSlusarz on a direct handoff, butthen Brown came around on a spinand threaded his way to the goalline for a second -Keyport score.Brown then plunged the point andit was 13-0.

First chance for Matawan sup-porters to cheer about anythingcame after the third kickoff. JohnYates, a tackle until this game,\?as revealed in the reconvertedrole of 185-pound plunging fullback.He battered his way into thp Key-port forward wall for a first downin midfield. The Maroon'and Steelappeared 'to have a drive goingwhen Morrell passed to Bill, Far-rell for a'^iew first down at theKeyport 34.But this bid to get backin the ball gaifte fizzled when theKeys clamped itfown-oif « reverse

lay and'then piled Yates up at thea&otscrkqmage. , \ bad, pass, jlrprri

.tnter^on an1-attempt-U* forwardpass resulted in Morrell's losing theball and Keyport taking over attheir own 4 4 . . ' '

Repeat FormulaIt took the RtdBorders five plays

-to do it this time. They repeatedthe formula of Butch Robinson tothe right, then Slusarz to the leftthat had set up the first touchdownand it worked just as well as itdid the first time. Slusarz streaked35 yards Ito'the MHS:: 13. Brownfumbled on; the; spin play but' re-covered;Onthe 8.'Butch Robinsonthen-speared to the 4 and Brown

"cameouir ol another spinner-toscore. Slusarz dove' loir the point;

Now In the second quarter, Mata-wan tried, forward passing.to noavail. On'an attempt to punt, Jhekick partially was blocked and, theKeyport seconds came Into posses-,•Ion at the junior Huskies 32.

, Itjwas four plays to a touchdownfor the Keys this tlmei Slusarz andBuich Robinson, reversed theirroles, the latter getting the firstdown to the left at the Matawan 13.

. Then Slusarz darted to the rightagain to the MHS S and ButchRobinsoff dove into the end zone forthe fourth Keypbrl lijiichdown.

KHS L e d l M At HallThe Maroon and Steel finally got

rolling after the kickoff, Morrelland Yates getting the baU down tothe Keyport 24 when time ran outon them for the half with Keyportleading 26-0.

Even though having no hope ofwinning now, the. junior Huskiescame out of the second half firedwith the determination that theKeyport jayvees unscored upon rec-ord must be smashed. A Slusarzfumble on the first scrimmage playof the second half set up the Mata-wan opportunity at the KHS 44.Yates and Richie Vena got i t i e ballto the 36 where it was fourth downwith two yards to .go, but Venafumbled and the chance was gone.Keyport then mounted a 62-yardmarch to their fifth touchdown Ineight plays, a fourth down Houra-han-to-Ed Scullion being the keyplay.rlJnwir twjsted his way to the'1 on a rollout, but It was Slusarzwho plunged it Over.

:Tri t h e final quarter, • Keyportmarched from midfield in sevenplayi scoring on a Hourahan-to-

Bohby Rose pass after Matawanseemingly had them slopped at theMHS 25. The junior Huskies, try-ing ever to spoil that perfect KHSrecord, rushed the ball to the Key-port 27 with 'Ven» sparking thedrive, but the Red and White sec-onds neld for downs and then weremoving toward another scorerapidly when the final whistle cutthem off. ...rr1.. :

The sizeable crowd who watch-ed the contest dispersed wonder-ing if the flash KHS juniors wouldtake over the offensive role againstthe Matawan varsity Thanksgivingand also what use Matawan wouldmake of Yates in the linecrasherrole on the big team.. After the game. Assistant CoachJay Demarest, who guided t h eKHS jayvees to their spotless rec-ord, gave the attendance of theyoung players at a preseason con-ditioning and drilling camp in thePoconos as one of the main rea-sonsfor their outstanding success.He-added ^ttrattheTHrerHBHesorthe Red and White at a canip wasassured for next year by the un-precedented showing of the' jay-vees.

Yards Lost RushingForward Passe*

Attempted 3 «Forward Passes

Completed -. - - 2 3Yards Gained Passing 00 34Forward Passes*

Intercepted .0 1Number of Punts 0 3Av. Distance of Punts, . „

Yards , — 22Runbacks of Kicks,

Yards J7 124Number of Fumbles 2 4- *>•»Times Ball Loat,

Fumbles 1 1Number of Penalties 1 • 2Yards Lost Penalties 5 30

The llneups:> . • :Kfyport J.V. (31)

Ends — Sullivan, Scullion, RMC, IV.Trembley, Carnej. ^

Tackles — P. Brown. Cralf, Foss.Guards — Wilson, SUveslrl, J. Do-

Ian.Center — Rothenberf.Backs — Slusarz, Hourahan, L.

Broun, Klley, CrossJey. W. Frtdcrlcb.s. RDblnson, M. Robinson, Allen, R,Williams.

MaUwan J.V. (0)Ends — Selbert. Farrell, Eyrd.Tackles — Sutherland. J. Williams,

Bonner.Guards — Warden, Stsnberry, J.

Slckels. Morris. - • -Center — Melna.Backs — Yates, Galto, Morrell.eorge, Christiansen, skinner, Vena.

score by quarters: .jKeyport J.V.. 13 13 S e / i eMatawan J. V. 0 0 0/-QA 0

Touchdowns — L. Brown w ; M.Robinson, Slusarz, Rose.• PAT — L. Brown. Slusarx.

Hook, Slice InRougkBadIn'61

They're malting it tougher forthe duffer. The United States GolfAssodatiqn has issued projected re-vised rules ,lprr1961 which williraajts-.n m»r»i,"ex«:thBiMr*1iheplayer to ^iay on the course 'toavoid stroke penalties. It Is goingo be-Uiiich to "hoph1/ pr..','»lice?

iS ughi"«<^f- ' ' *

SICKROOMRENTALS

FREEDELIVERY

Foxwood KeepsLead InLeague

Foxwood and Harmony Park con-tinued their all-Winning ways inthe Raritan .Athletic AssociationBasketball League as first placeFoxwood defeated t h e RaritanTeachers 42-31 and Harmony Parknipped Norgste Manor,37-35.

Foxwood had to overcome anoutstanding Individual fMrlormiincoby the Teachers' Tony Benetsky toWin Its third straight same,. Bcnet-iky led all scorers .with II pointsbur-could-not match the winners'well balanced attack. Joe Kuhlpaced Foxwtod with 12 markersfollowed by Richie Hoehn with IIpoints.

Harmony Park's battle with Nor-ito Manor was nip and tuck all

the way with never more ihan livepoints separating the teams. SnulBunln. ol Harmony proved Ihedlfference,..Timo: after.time.,he hit

Bey.J.V.

Ffrct Downs 13Yards Gained Rushing 227

Mat-awanJ.V.

-A

n t o ^ j i i S t j o u g h i « < - ^ f • ' « ' ,The changes are part of another

"trial period" being conducted bythe United States Golf Association.One tlso had been held this year.

The principal changes ahead callfor greater punishment for goingout of bounds or losing a ball. Dur-ing 1960, only loss of distance wascharged for those errors. Nextyear, the penally irr both Instanceswill he*troke and distance.; ; : ;

' '.Eradicate.OneInequality •;!j ) « t ' , Inequality, however, ' has

been eradicated for 1961. After theI960 regulation* became law, manyofficials noted a weakness In thelost-ball rule. It was possible thatless than a diligent search mightresult in a failure to find the ball,

As a "lost" ball, the result wasa loss of distance only. However,the golfer who waded through roughand finally located the ball In anunplayable spot was less fortunate.He would, despite options of pro-cedure, end by taking a penaltystroke.

The result, It was claimed, waslhat many preferred to call a ball"lost" rather than to look for it«Dd-perhaps find it in a bad spot.

Three Options NowHereafter, the golfer -will have

three options Instead of two for anunplayable ball. : '

He will be permitted to drop an-other ball within two.club lengthsof where the original ball was, un-der penalty of one stroke. He alsocan proceed as he had In J960. TWsallows him to play from as nearas possible to his original place, aft-er adding • one-stroke penalty. Fi-nally, he can drop out from behindthe unplayable toot, under a pen-alty of one stroke. Keeping t h epoint between himself and the hole.

The new option, it was explained,means a player can also move theball out laterally from a fence ifthe ball is lodged against it.

The O.S.G.A. also states thatclubs can modify the out-of-boundsregulation somewhat. If the newrule is "unduly severe," it is sug-gested that golfers "under penaltyof one stroke, drop another ballwithin two club length* of wherethe ball last crossed the boundary

The regulation for •provisionalball remains the same. The ballmust remain in play If the originalhas been lost or his gone out ofbounds. . .

The US.G.A. noted that t h echanges have met with the approv-al of the Professional Golfers As-sociation tournament committee.

II you need printing of any kind,we are here to-serva you. Ourquick service and reasonable price*win fleas* you. , , '

RICHMOND

Anthony Rosato, .(left),, president, and Joseph j a sK-year-old Beagle, lools anxious to start thoManclnJ, field captain of the Brookjldo Gun and. Bow »bole business over again. The club _ha» leasedAs»ocI«tfoiir«iffi»™i4-1polroTer-»-dIsnlay;etphea*fproperly la llunlerdon «nd Middlesex Counties,ant and-rabbit taken by the It-member club. Sandy, I - - . '

LOOKINGIT OVER

ARMY-NAVY game Saturdaywill h»Ve three former athletesfrom this area In the line of marchof the cadets and midshipmen ontothe turf of Municipal Stadium,Philadelphia, prior to taking theirplaces to watch the game. Theyare Ray LoPresto. Keyport. Army,and Alton Davis and Bruce Gunkle,Matawan, Navy. LoPresto and Da-vis formerly were football playersand opposed one another on Key-port arid Matawan teams InThanksgiving Day games, Qothplayed some football at the acad-emies, LoPresto as a member ofan Army plebe team and Davis asa member of his company team,playing football on the same basishat "house" teams play It at

Yale and Harvard. Neither esteem-ed his potential for varsity football,coming from small high schoolslike Keyport and Matawan, suf-ficiently to secure a place Jn com-petition with big IntcrsbholasticStars from all over the country en-rolling at Ihe service academies.Davis does play company soccer,in addition to football. LoPrestoand Gunkle do have varsity pros-pects in baseball, LoPresto as anoutfielder and Gunkle as a pitcher.Both were playing baseball tillsfall. Gunkle is now a candidatefor Ben Carnivale's Navy basket-ball, team, but^yea'thOttghtGunklewas one of the more outstandinginterscholastlc cage stars develop-ed, in Central Jeriiey while At Rnt-•ger*"Prep, he fs'JhavfnB >a hardtime) seeking a place orr the Navyvarsity. Like Keyport's Bobby Ken-nedy at West Virginia, there aretoo many 6 ft. 5 In. and up tallfellows against whom ono has tocompete for a place. If Gunkte doesmake the Navy cage team, themiddie five will be playing in thisarea against Princeton and Colum-bia. But more likely we shall beteeing him in action next springwith the Navy baseball team. In-cidentally, the Army-Navy footballgame never'looked closer than itdoes Saturday, but we give a shadeto Army on their showing of thepast few weeks. .

• '• •'RED BANK CATHOLIC HIGH

will be bidding for their secondall-winning season when they goagainst Rumson at II: 30 a.m,Thanksgiving. The Caseys do nothave the players from aroundhere now that they once did be-cause enrollment difficultieshave restricted the' number ofSt. Joseph's graduates to be tok-en in at the Red Bank school tosix. Last year Len Brown. Mata-wan was on the all-winning Cas-ey squad but he did not try outthis year because he was unableto make the training camp. Hisyounger brother, Robert, was oneof 74 aspirants for the Caseyyearling eleven and he was* oneof those kept when the squad wascut to the workable siie of 24.Ernie Mason, Hazlet, was anoth-er one. of the first-year candi-dates who was retained for thesquad. There are a number ofKeansburg boys still on the Cas-ey squad, although not In thenumber that made them' thebackbone of RBCHS football Intimes past. That Rumson Is ea-ger to upset the Caseys Is to putft quite mildly. If the PurpleBulldogs can accomplish thatfeat, they will have done morethan winning a Shore Conferencechampionship «nd they will beable to dispute Brick Townshipfor Central Jersey, Group II, •honors. m ., #

UPSALA lost to the Seahawks ofWagner College on Grymes HillfieldTstaten Island, Saturday 19-H,giving the victors their first unde-feated untied, season of 33 yearsof playing football. The Vikingspushed their favored rivals »nwndon the ground but succumbed toan air attack In a closely foughtand well-played game. The Sea-hawks put U» pressure on Upsala *first year players, notably BobRanfcl, just out of Matawan High,ui their passing-offense formations.They^aSded' his zone with twodrtwoff receivers and a crossoverend on the pas* for the winningtouchdown In the last *"rter. Thecrossover end got behind RaoWand took the pan for a 33-yardscorinepky. Without taowta* theprtdse defensjve «Mi8J"i«' ">puses into Ibe zone th»t R « B U wasSurged with by bis coich, no onecjui £ y U It * « bis respooribiltofor some other itesaU player-r forthe crossover endbefeg tof"*1*"oat a defensive checker. Obvkwaly,Ihe s e n i o r quarterback of Ute

aer ttm «toie»ed W» / * * •put the pressure on.tt*

meTairi *c*bs »(*» « • * « , > • ;Viklagi haul to ttmmd defensivelyia. Ibe accurate calculation that thenew players of the Seatowki «*•

(ccotiatved in sixth column)

Jannarones OnGlassboro Fives

Tom and Jim Jsnnarone, sons ofR. Thomas Jonnarone, superinten-dent of schools of Rerltan Town-ship, will swing into action forGlassboraJSOte College in a nowbasketball season when the five ofthe South Jersey Institution take onRutgers in the state university'sgym In New. Brunswick i vyeekfrom tonight, Dec. I.

Tommy now Is a senior memberOf the-starting five ,at the Glass-bon) school. Jimmy was a mem-ber of the Keyport High five of1958-59 and played on the jayvcesquad last year. He has progressedto the point of being likely to breakinto action in the preliminarygame against the Rutgers Jayvees.The contest get underway at G:<5p.m. v : : r-.-r::. '"'•.'". " ': v '"• ~ ~

Ronnie Truex, son of ArnleTrucx, famed Mlddletown Town-ship High school coach, also willbe in the Glassboro lineup. The ci-der Truex was a noted footballand basketball player for Rutgers,

Bid For All-Amorlcan

On the Rutgers sido, DOUR Pat-ton, Red Bank, grandson of F. Pal-mer Armstrong, Keyport banker,will be the ace. Patton bids wellto become an alt-American in bas-ketball in this, his senior year. Oneof the teams that Rutgers is slat-ed to encounter it Navy, at Annap-olis, Feb. 1, where Bruce Gunkle,Matawan, is making a bid .(or a'place on the varsity cage squad.

The Jannarones. will rnako, onadded as>peataii£« in; »hl»-Bre«. onDec. 3 when thewGlassboro fivestake on Monmouth College at A>-bury Park Convention Hall. Thehomo games of Monmouth' start at7:30 p.m. They take on their alum-ni la the opener Saturday. Afterthat, they face Newark State Nov.30 and then Glassboro.

Other games for the Monmouth

eager* at Convention Hall will be:Dec. 7, Helton college; Dec. 9,Bloomficld College; Dec. 14, SetonHall, Patcrson; Dec. 17, PatersonState; Dec, 21, Brooklyn Poly; Jan.'14, Kings College; Jan. 28, Mont-clalr State; Feb. 1, Jersey CityState; Feb. 29, Oneontu, N.Y,,State and Mar. 2, Newark, RUtgeri,

Incidentally, Glusboro will mainadded appearances in North Jerseywhen they engage such other col-leges on the state teachers collegecircuit as Newark, Montclolr, Jer-sey City and Poterjon.

Tom D'Agostino WinsThanksgiving Handicap

Tom D'AgotUho, ace kegler ofDick's Auto Electric, won the fifthannual Thanksgiving Handicap itJim Crover's Koyport RecreationAlleys over the weekend. He scoredDames pf 224 and 201, aided by 30pins, for a total of 445. Lou Do-menlco rolled up 444 to give Toma scare near the end,

Dim Whltehurst with 437 tookthird money and was high on Satur-day. T, V,' Lcavy with -435 placedfourth and Bob Helfrich, of M&IIGulf, placed fifth with 429. Olhorprizes went to Art Colamarl, RockyTomasellp. Eddlo Thome, Roy Zur-ky. Fred Slcc and Sonny Domcnico.The high score of Ihe event wasLeavy's 240.

The next event will be the sec-ond annual Baysliorc Eliminationsin which Joe "Pep" Tomasello, lastyear's chnihplon, will compete. Thisevent: ia limited so those wishing toparticipate..*!* -asked tq atM.HPj «tnnpo, The date for the cventls.tottt«>t."i,l,>.;i' •-: I V.I ,>•'; ••-•!•,/>

In the teen-age lucky strike tour-ney, Roberta Kipp, 12, took the leadwith-421. In the. 13-to-IS age groupChuck Campbell It high and in theie-to-18, Gerry Gam Is topn. Eachcontestant receives seven strikes Intheir two-game event which endsDec, 4.

ready Idi maks l t s 'move. Btininended the night with 33 points fol-lowed by Norgate's Frank Wellswith 13. It was the third straightd f t f i l i * t l tt gseason'a league champion.

Police Edge Woodland ParkThe Barjtnn Police edged Wood-

land Park 30-33 In a rough andtumble game. The police trailedby four points at half-time, butsome hot shooting by Hank Spring-steen enabled them to take controlof the game in the second half.Red Dtuchler of Woodland tookscoring honors with 14 polnli whileSpringsteen h a d 13. Woodlandplayed the game without its starscorer, Bill Fash,

In the other action Upper Raritanstaged-the first rout of the letitueseason by rolling over Hidden lillls48-19. Playing minus Its most con-sistent scorer, Charlie Schenk. whowas out with an Injury, HiddenIlllti never w«> In the ball same.Upper Raritan, with 1)111 Nlcolnyleading the way, was ahead at thehalf 2M. Nlcolay ended up withmore points than the entire HiddenHills team, 20. Mike llnnralian 6!Upper Raritan tallied II points andDon Pctrlllo led Hidden Hills withjoven.

Foxwood has n record of threewins and no defeats followed byHarmony Pork-, 2-0;~T<»ritnn Police,2-1; Upper Raritan, 1-1; WoodltndPark, 1-2; Rarlton Teachers, J-2;Hidden Hills, 1-2; and Norgate, 0-3.

Looking It Over(continued from third column)

ills would commit tho errors of In-experience sooner or later. HutKunkl has a flno first year recordof play with Upsala behind him,Including his performance In thoSusquehanna game In which lhatPennsylvania college, wllli the bestdefensive record ol any collega Inthe country, sustained their onlyloss oj two «e«wini,.. EOlnRj:d«wn8-7 lo Upsala, T/io Viking* ,y/trt(he only team to hold (hem to onetouchdown. We (understand lhatPurvis Peeler, Matawan's fine runnlng back who took Shore Conference scoring honors In 1058, Is Intercstcd In Upsala. At a colltRelike Upiola or Wagner, the condi-tions for playing the no mo aremuch belter than they are at Mich-

igan State, when Peeler spent Msfreshmen year, for there Is nopressure ot tlio "big time," Nor Isono'lost In a mast of numbers, asat Rutgers, or subject to the dlllb-erate marking down In studies be-cause he Is a football player, asanother Matawan alumnus, StcvoJoyce, must be wary ot In the IvyLeague Jungle of Columbia,

RUTGERS completed a highlysuccessful first season under thocoaching of Dr. John Bntcmon,who lias family connections Inthis area. Because Rutgers hassuch a wealth of manpower andfine physical layout for football,there is a tendency to say thatanybody could make a go ofcoaching the Scarlet. Far fromit. Nothing could be more exact-

Hng than tho task of a Rutgershead coach In keeping his teamat R suitable competitive edge.The Priiici'ton-RBme complex andtho not'belng-lvy complex andthe continuance of rivalries withcolleges Rutgers, has far out-grown In size, such as Lafayette,Xehlgh, and. Columbia, pud.thoRutgers foachrlntiitjisyfihtilogUcot need to lift deadweight! witheach succeeding game after tlioopener with Princeton. Rutgersgoes Into the Princeton InauguralxhargEd_ up^-this i^tame-over,-there are eight more games forRutgers to play with rivals withmostly poor-records, little foot-ball "color," and little to givetho Scarlet squad any "lift." Tinroach accordingly has a grimtask each week to put the "urgo"into the Rutgers squid. In con-trast, Coach Dick Colcnun,Princeton, can lose all the open-Jng games ho wots lo to Rut-gers or anybody else, for heknows hla players aim for thebig November wlntlup teals withYale, Harvard and Dartmouthand they will bring themselves

along psychclogtciUy from weekto week to reach their real fight-ing pitch In November, With nopyechologlcal bugbear, Cofemancon devote himself to the, me-chanical needs of,Ivy football.So. by this contrast m New Jer-sey's two leading football-pityingcolleges, tt can be seen that theRutgtrs coach has by far themore exacting task, it against •seemingly lets formidable sched-_ule. Small wonder the Scarletdrops "turprlso" decisions Ilka<he H-12 joss to Vlllanova. -

ar- * - -»— -———

NOTRE DAME Is about the onlyplace where tho conch faces) •more Impossible psychological talkthan lit Rutgers. With the Irishgoing Iqto their worst losing sea-con, seven strnlfiht losses already,a word ot understanding Is duoCoach Joe Kuha.rlch and his play-ers, They have oh their necks* the"Rockne tradition, the "Amerlren's team" tradition, and the "sub-way alumni" Insistence that NotreD a m e be perennial nationalchampions, With all due respect to :

KnuteJtoekne, It Is: to beremenw—hi!£edvthal.wlitmh«-w« taaehlng-„Notre Dams, there were not many'high «chooli playing football andIt waa relatively csiy for Ihe goodscouting orcamiatlon lie had adhlenibled to gAthor lor Nolro Dame-Ihe better football latent of thocmintry. Today the high schoolsare turning out topflight footballplayers by tho niuItMhonsands: andNotre Dame's rivals Ret plover; ofJust aajfiutt talent tnd number asdo the FlfihtlnR Irish, Accordingly,It Is not to tin expected that NotreDams players and Notre Damocoachen ot today can roll at Willover mi rivals as they did InRockne's day when they not only .had the Four Horsemen but tho"horses" In general, the pick ofall.(ho bolter football prospocts lotho country. ,

Open BowlingTHANKSGIVING

DAYALL DAY AND EVENING

FROM 1:30

1 Free Bowling Instruction I

! BOWLING-RECREATION CENTER

M AUTOMATIC LANES - COCKTAIL L0UN0B

10 6-3860

Thanksgiving Day is «n especiallyAmerican holiday. It expresses our belief in a

free and abundant way of life—and our hopes

for peace and decency throughout the world.

The Pilgrims' courage and .trust in God made the

first Thanksgiving possible. We need their faith

and courage and will to work if our children

are to be thankful for the world we leave them.

JCP&LJcncy Central Powir A Light

Page Twelve THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Thursday, November 24, 1960

$20,000 Bail InDeadly Threat

, : -Malawan Police Saturday arrest-ed" a Malawan Township man whowas placed under 520,000 bond andheld for action ol the MonmotithCounty Grard Jury on' charges of"advocating or threatening to takelife."

Police Chief John E. Melna saidEugene J. Demish, 30, of 97 WestConcourse, Clilfwqod Beach, al-

g y i e p oeJnstein, Monmpiijh jColinty Bit

Association president, who wasconsulted by Demlsh's wife._h&cause of marital difficulties.

One of Demish's neighbors warn-ed -police that Demish left homeSaturday rnornlng making threatsagainst the lawyer, saying hewould "blow his brains out." Dcm-

. ish was arrested after he and his••• wife, Adrlenne, had parked their

car outside the lawyer's office at146 Main St. The arrest was madeby Patrolman Carmen Messina.- ; Found Loaded Pistol

Police" said they found a loaded""'.H'Caliber JIIAroI- UHder llreTfBIir

seat of the car and an unloaded12-gauge shotgun on the rear seat.Matawan Magistrate James H.Martin ordered Demish held foricdoiTby thegrand Jufy- r

Mr. Weinslein, who was out oftown when the incident occurred,said he was consulted twice byMrsr-Demlsh but never had mether husband.

Chief Melna said Demish, an em-ployee of Weslon Instrument Divi-sion of Daystrom, Inc., had no pre-vious police record. • • .

• Children's Society- Lists Contributions

Residents of the bayshore areacontributed 155 as their share of$1318.04 sent by MorimoUlh Countyresidents In support of the work

•„ of the Children's Home Society ofNew Jersey; the state's oldest,

-pr ivate ly financed, nonseclarla'ri,"nonracial. .child-care and adoption

..'agency . . . , : , . . : : :. .. ' - •"According to a fiscal-year re-

port received here today from J.Stanley Teunon of Trenton, presi-dent of the Society, these figureswere Included in the total of con-

•""tribuUonAjecelved from 547 com-munities of the state, which hesaid, amounted to J47.232.44.

Included Is $5 from Union Beach,$17:50 from Keyport; }15 from Ho*-let; $2 from Cllffwood and $15.50from Matawan is was reported.

Leukemia, according to t h eAmerican Cancer.Society, is a formof cancer In which there Is abnor-mal growth and development ofwhite blood cells.

T.M.IUi.U.S.>AOff,-

"Yes, lady, this use to be a one-horse-town—until I sold him with a Want Ad!"

Seek Teachers ForAir Force Schools

The U. JS. Air Force Is seekingteachers to stall Its overseas de-pendents schools-for the 1961-62school year. The schools are locatedin Europe, North Africa, Azores,Bermuda, Iceland, Japan, New-foundland and Philippines. Theirpurpose is to provide public schooleducational opportunities in gradesone through 12 to children of ourmilitary and civilians stationedabroad.

The tour of duty Is for one yearbeginning August 1961. Salaries be...gin at {4433 per school year withadditional compensation to indi-viduals possessing higher academicdegrees. In some areas 10 to 20per cent is added to the base pay.Transportation is furnished to conn-try of assignment and return at nocost to the employee. •

Housing or a housing allowancealso is. provided. If those Interestedare at least 23-year-of-acc, havetwo years current teaching experi-ence and possess a valid teachingcertificate, they may Invest abili-ties and contribute toward educa-tion of American children abroad,

There is no set rate of cancer•rowth. Reports of the American

Cancer Society Indicate some typesgrow more in a few weeks thanothers do in several years,

LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICETAX SALE — 1B0O

. w i l t * . «o,a,<™, » HWiWfo u a. ^•gainst ttesame on lho rirsl day o( July, 1080.' exclusive, however?'*? "the"?.1 '?'. '**" taT f!" >'""' lml> •> computed in tho following list togetherwith Interest pn said arnounl from the /Irsl clay ol July, 1000 to the dale o(h?ie' ,t co" A " 1 " - t i r h l ! s u l «« lber will sell in tee lo- tho person -whobids tho amount duo subject to redemption at the lowest rate ot Interest,but in no e r a exceeding (a) per centum per annum. Tim payment

,,for tho .sale, shallI be mode before the conclusion of the sole Orlho propertywill » re-sold. Cash or certified.clieck only will be accepted In payment,• , n i ^ n y . P * r i e l « ' " j " 1 P'OP"!?!'or which lhere shall bo no othur purchaserWill be struck oil and sold to the Township or Matawan, N. J., [or .redemptionat eight per centum per annum and the municipality shrill have Ihe someremedies and right as other purchasers, Including the right to bar or fore-close the right of redemption,the "It*^ *t"le f"th H m a d ". a n i 1 contlucled In accordance with the provisions otl a xJ?jiS l*t*M . ' if !"n e5 l 1 ?n t l . o l h l !r municipal 'charges on r e ^ p r V w l y T o n dFh«? ™"?r£" V" S°8!XWo.1 " V " 0 ' to (he creation and enforcement of liensLh „ H ? . ' ? ™ p £ i r S T " ! ? i M °'.!"° ""Ised Statutes)," and nets supplement-ary thereto arid amendatory ..thereof. . .

At ai. amoui;{,!*!$ UK,e b°',°"! t h l ! ? a l " &' under»lgmd will receive payment of the

|2 n t n y Pr°i ) e r ly w "h Iho Interest and cost up > the time of

» mifhl!i "P }*%*' !5 »ubJ<!cl <» »»'• described In accordance" wlta the tax!!)5 SS*' i" . . ' '."? " l m " ol the owner as shown on Ihe.lost U x duplicateuT.r n ***',?;* Jf " ! ' } " * " ' . *.n<! o l t i e r municipal chsrgei which were « Hen

MATAWAN TOWNSHIP, N. JNAME - , BLOCK

TOWNSHIP ASSESSMENT MAPSlovur. Walter and Laura • »Hourahan, Elliabeth and Jirry 4Verbeck, Adam, Est. -

PAULINE K. nr.HC 1 1 ^ ot T . t t s .

i SecurlUei Corp.and Qi

.ider.-E:^ » ' 'Short. James.Williams.. GeorgeH.

BulEko, Josephine and• Altxmdcr.E: M, ana J.

Short James. Est.G I

Jeorg*.fohnson, M. A.'

VanPell, W. D. and Mabel'Edwards Industrlsl Center, Tnc.Edwards. Doke snd Ann ItGoodmin, Jsmm and Thetma *Watson, Alexander .Wslters, Evelyn' • 'Becker, TBecker, Lee

..Mlele, ', Joseph and Antoinette

"" Delhagen, Alice" m ..

: VV.

Delhagen, AliceSkinner, William H.Sickles, George WLy ASickles, GeorgeLyons, Anna M .Sickles, Gearga W.Sickles, George W,Splnks, Matilda C. snd CldneyFalkoner. Cecil J.Eplnks, CldneySplnks, Cldney C,Splnks, Matilda c. and Cldney 0.Splnks, Cldney C.Splnks, Cldney C.Splnks, Cldney

WOODJNELDS11

'M131919SI31SI '21219121

17A'. 1M

HO11at....noi»

24

MIS

. . U .

27« . 101 Inc.170. 1BO Inc.103. • Ms Inc.200 . 203 Ino.

tiD910 • 311

417 • 420 Ino.000 • DM Inc.020'. <J2< Inc.

028 . 627623 • 830 Inc.

W P

642 .647 •

Devlin, Patrick, Eat.

Gibson. Horace and DonnleHill. Alma D.

Cartan, neni '

LAKEV1EW PARK

MATAWAN PARK •'". '17 2

OASTON OEI1EN7 & WOOLEY"

CMFFWOOD HEIGHTS "

WS ino611 Inc.647 Inc.

8-KIIM

?S

ii

3 . 4 .

9 • 47 Inc.40 . IS

«J • S> Inc.76 . Ill Inc.40 - J] Inc. .IS • II ino.

M - 2 D11 • 111 4 . 1 9

S7 • 40 lira.U - 14

Hodge. Donald and Laura. Sardella.'Umberto

Cross, Ltllle and OscarMacon, Lime MaeBuntin,. Anarlh* DargusWilliams. Joseph and MattleGary. Jackie and ElizabethBuntln, rannlnWynn, Lee and BeatriceWynn, L«eBoles, Joseph and SusieJohnson, RichardBlount,1 James and EmmaWashington. Otis and MellsmMurray, Junior and LouiseHardgrave, Serfna 'GolelT. H. K. and DolyiliTrent,'James and Annie .Wright, Oenle

• Kyles, Leo ar* OhrllUtuEllerbe, Tecumieln <D - .. ™-,i m '• KEVPORT IIEWHTSSkoch, Ells T. . D S . t . 1 . ICllllwood Beach Really Co. D laWalker, Mary 5 43 • 41 .Herring, Busier and Iran* . D M . B7PrefefTck, Marl* - R 51 « 02Alexwider, K. M. and Jolmaon, M, A. O . 48 . 47Alexander, E W and Johnson. M, A O - SI . 51Alexander, E M. and Johnaon, M. A. O 59 . 60Cooper. George and; JYsmcef H 42Morse, If BO . I] Inc.

, CLIJTWOOD BEACH PARKFriedman,'Robert Baron and Altred B II • USanders Isham T 24 - So Inc.Lynch. Henry II l ( | . is Inc.Smith, Benedict and Evelyn K s

CLIFFWOOD BEACHLynch, Mary and Alex II 329 . « 0

- -Cardelfs, Vincent and Ann 17 129 • 127Bellonl. George and Carolyn In 571 -174

• Kum, Herbert It. . M 120 • 611Oreenmeler, G e o r o and Mary a 770 • 771Mulhollsnd, S 20 .1074Comer, Atlillo ind A. 34 T '1« i • IJ72Comer. AIIIIjo - 34 J179. lisaCorner, Altiiio snd Alice 34 12,11 • IMSMonti. Chsrles anil Orcella a 1917MorrLs, Charm and Orcelln 39 , 1320Burns. John a ' M 1JJI - p 5 l

.• W»ner, Carl • ' 41 ;_ 1MI

AMOUNT

103.41227.3038.01

107.37. . . . 357.08

• 394.40O.00

18.2018.34

U13.D1182,0770.01

• 1S.35037.(3

297,51

O0.0330.3313DH

141.008.34

10.6915.98

30.33

BOM

103.0020! 97

252.M

43.0310.3931.0320.H

410.0'27J.5,240.19335.7120.0919.7B1.424.6H

WO:9.4*1

B4.TtOM

124.0013T

20.68116,50

9.724.6820.(1810,3910 Tl39 83

492 013 1 141.31

103.48

1AJI4

. Roasting The TurkeyToday's h i g h quality birds

make It easy for even (he Inex-perienced to have excellent re-sults. If the turkey purchased car-ries specific Instructions for hand-ling and cooking (on the wrapperor Insert sheet), follow those rec-omendatlons. True roasting laslow cooking by dry heat on arack In an open pan. And nowater, no cover nor searing is revquIredcVarlitlons of this methodalso give satisfactory results.Whatever the method, alwayscomplete roasting In one con-tinuous cooking period.. Follow these simple steps foropen-pan, low-heat roasting: '- Have b i r d completely dean.

Rinse with cold -water. Pat dry.

Preheat oven to 123 degrees F(slow).

Rub cavity of bird lightly withsalt. Do not salt, If stuffed.

FID wishbone area (neck) withstuffing, if used,

Fallen neck skin to back withskewer.

Stuff cavity tightly. If stuffing Isused.

Push drumsticks under band ofskin at tall: or tie them to tail.

Place turkey on rack la roast-ing pan." Brush skin with • fat.Place In oven.

If desired, baste or brush oc-casionally with pan drippings—es-pecially any dry areas. Bastequickly In order not to lose ovenheat. When turkey Is two-thirds'done, cut cord or band ot skinat drumsticks.

Continue roasting until done.Turkey 1« done when meat atthickest part ot drumstick feelsvery salt when pressed with pro-tected fingers. ' ,. , .

Industry LaudedFor State Work

Industries in eleven New Jerseycounties wero commended'recentlyby Salvntore A. Bontempo, Com-missioner of the Department otConservation and Economic Devel-ipment, for their work In clearingip water pollution. Sixty-nine -in-lustries in Atlantic, Bergen, Hud-ion, Hunterdon, Marcer, Middlesex',.lonmouth, Morris, Somerset, Un-

rCoUiitles Wefe: c i F;d. These groups have succeededn eliminating water pollution eith-er by treatment plants or by dis-posing of wastes In locations awayIrom water.

Commissioner Bontempo, whilerecognizing that industry Is not theonly cause qf stream pollution, saidthe companies were "outstandingexamples of public-spirited .indus-try." He pointed out that "theyshowed great wisdom and foresightin considering not only their ownwelfare, but the entire state's.aswell." -.' - • ; . . . ; • • "

For the past two years ThomasL. Spencer, assistant district con-servation officer, in the departmenthas been working with New Jer-sey Industries to reduce pollutionof out streams. Mr, Spencer, whohas traveled 70,000 miles In thecourse of this program was praisedfor Iho time and eftort ho has ex-pended.

Lists Other FirmsMr. Spencer's progress report al-

so listed numerous companieswhich ate either In tho process olcontrolling' pollution of are study-ing means to eliminate It. This byno means completes the program,The purity of New Jersey's watersupply Is an Important concern anda task that is never finished.

Commissioner Bontempo express-e d the hope that the Industrieswhich . had controlled pollutionwould "keep up their.fine work"and that all Industries "would bencouraged by the progress made

by others In ths field and be In-spired to follow their example."

Health Standards ToBe Discussion Topic

Problems of municipalities Inmeeting minimum standards for Io-cs! health departments set by thoState Health Department will comein for consideration by the HealthDivision of Ihe Monmouth CountyWelfare Council at a luncheon meet-ing Wednesday at 12:30 p .m.at theGeorgian House, Route 35, WestDeal.

Dr. Stanley Mayers jr., centraldistrict:health officer In the. NewJersey Health .Department, will bethe speaker. Members of the di-vision, which Includes representa-tives from the. health agencies ofMonmouth. County and Interestedindividuals, will be Joined At themeeting by municipal health' de-partment representatives who haveieen invited to attend the meeting.

Donations ListedBy Jockey Club

Officials of the Monmouth PartJockey Club played host to execulives of 34 Monmouth County chartable agencies. At a special meet-ing held in the administration build-ing, checks totalling $86,000, repre-senting the proceeds raised at theUth Annual Turf Charity Ball onCarnival snd a donation of $25,000made by the race track, were pre-sented to representatives of the fol-lowing organizations:

American Cancer Society, Mon-mouth-County Chapter: AmericanRed Cross, M o n m d u t h CountyBrancti.JVfotor Corps; Arthur Bris-bane Chilifcrreatment Center, Cath-olic Welfare Bureau, Children'sPsychiatric Center, Family a n dChildren's Service, Inc.; Fitkin Me-morial Hospital, Fitkin MemorialHospital Dental Clinic, Fitkin Me-morial IMspltal Nursing School•Fund.

Aim, Home fop-Chrrjnlf-Sidc,Long Branch Public Health Nurs-ing Association, Inc., Marlboro Hos-pital Auxiliary, Monmouth CountyAssociation of First Aid Squads,Monmouth County - Heart~Assocl«-tion, Monmouth County MaternalHealth Center, Monmouth CountyMental Health Association.

Other OrganizationsAlso Monmouth County Organiza-

tion for Social Service, MonmouthCounty Welfare Board, Briar" Hilland Children's Shelter, MonmouthMedical Center, Monmouth MedicalCenter DentalOut-Patient Service,Monmouth Medical Center PollakMemorial Fund, Monraouth MedicalCenter School of Nursing, -Moh-mouth Workshop, Muscular Dystro-phy Association of America.

Also National Foundation,"tional Multiple Sclerosis Society,New Jersey Association for Retard-ed Children, Public Health NursingAssociation of Rumson-Falr Haven-Sea Bright, Riverview Hospital, Theialvation Army, Tuberculosis Pre-raitorlutn f o r Children. United

Cerebral Palsy, and Welfare"Cotuvcil of Monmouth County,

Louis H, Burfelnd, president ofihe Monmouth Park Charity Fund,Inc., Mrs. Philip H. Iselln, Chair-man.of the.Monmouth Park-TurfCharity Ball and Carnival Com-mittee, a n d Amory L. Haskell;president of the Monmouth Parklocke/Club, mado the presenta-Ions to the itiany local-charitableigencies. '

In the H-year history of the Mon-mouth Park Charity Fund, Inc.,$878,192 has v been distributed to/arious charities within t h e:ounty. This year's donation of S86,-100 is the largest amount distri-cted in any year since the in-eptio'n of the organization in 1947.

New growths are of two k i n d s -benign, and malignant. The Ameri-:an Cancer Society states that abenign growth does' nbt"spreild 'toptherparis of the body 03 dde's')articilignant;'' growth/ hiA ::'ihalignahtMalignant g iS ig iShtgrowth (cancer), if unchecked, willspread and cause death.

LEGAL NOTICENOTICE '

,N ORDINANCE LIMITING ANDRESTniCTING TO SPECIFIEDDISTRICTS OR ZONES AND REG-ULATING THEREIN BUILDINGAND STRUCTURES ACCORDINGTO THE CONSTRUCTION ANDTHE NATURE AND EXTENT OPTHE USE OF LAND! PROVIDINGFOB THE ADMINISTRATION ANDENFORCEMENT OF THE PRO-VISIONS OF THE ORDINANCE:ESTABLISHING A BOARD OF AD-JUSTMENT AND FIXING PENAL-TIES FOR VIOLATIONS IN THETOWNSHIP OF MATAWAN.NOTICE Is hereby given that an

ordinance above entitled was passeda regular meeting ol the Township

jmmlUeo-oMne~Townihlp ot Msla-ran. County of Monmouth and Slate' New Jersey, held on November

-. 1&80. , :utcd; November 21. I960.

ROSE K. WENZEL,Township Clerk

24 91.80 • • .

MONMOUTH COUNTYSURROGATE'S COURT

rOTICE TO CREDITORS TO PRE-SENT CLAIMS AGAINST ESTATE

ESTATE OF WILLIAM O. FITZPAT-RICK, deceased

Pursuant to the order of EDWARD. BrtOEGE, Surrogate ot the Coun-

y ol Monmouth, this day mode, on10 application ot the undersigned,

Jorolhto H.jFltzpatrlck. Solo Execu-trix of the estate ol the asld William

1. Flttpatrick. deceased, notice Ishereby given to the creditors of said

eceased to present to the said SoleExecutrix their claims under oatliwithin six months Irom this dale.

Dated> October 27th, 1900Dorothea H. Fltirnlrlck311 Main St., "Matawan. N. J.

.Indabury, McCormlck & Estabrook,333 NorUi Broad St., ' -Elizabeth, N. J., .

Attorncya«t ne.aa

9-UBSHERIFFS SALE

SUPERIOR COURTOF NEW JEHSEY

CHANCERY DIVISIONMONMOUTH COUNTY5°fket No. F-2910-SI)

J. I. Klslak Mortgage Corporation,New Jersey Corpontlon, Plaintiff

vi: Albert E. Walmer and Sally L.Valmer, his wile, el UK, «t als., De-

fendants. '.By virtue ot a writ ot execution In

Iho abovo slated action to mo di-rected, I shall exposo for sale at pub*

c vjndue. at the Court House Inhe ;Bornugh ot Freehold, County offlonmouth. New Jersey, on Monday.'

Ihe 20th day ot November 10SO a f »o'clock. P.M. Prevailing iimc.

ALL that certain lot, tract or parcel»' l»nd, situate, lying and being Inhe Township of Malawan, In the.ouniy ot Monmoulh, Jn'th* State At

New JferseyiBEdlNNINO at a point In tho

Southeasterly side o! 'Shore Con-course, distant 0S.57 leet Southwest.'erly along the sumo from Its Inter-i 5 e ' S l k , w l u ! . •*« southwesterly sideot Cllffwood Drive. If both tideswere extended to so intersect andrunning Ihenct (1) Along the South.

, !"& I ™ o l S n o r * I Concourio'"Uth OT degrees, 30 minutes, West.

"mlnules Eaeit'J>l» (li lh M d e r n s " ''°JJh JS degree's. 30 mlnutei^Etit,7.81 feet: thence « ) North 1 degree

m A n u t " . W«sl, 40.78 feet: thence

MONMOUTH CO. CATHOLIC

Nov. 18

Team : W LCWV , 22 nSt. Joscpli's 21 12St. Agnes No. 2 21 12SI Agnes No. 1 20 13St. Mary's No 2 20 13Holy Family No. 3 18 ISSt. James 18 ISHoly Family No 2 16 17St. Ann's No. 1 10 17St. Catherines No. 2 • 16 17St. Benedict's No 2 16 17Holy Family No. I 19 18SL Mary's No. 1 15 18Bayshore K o f C No. 2 15 18St. Ann's No. 3 IS 18St. Ann's No. 2 15, !8

St. Benedict's No. 1 14 ISSt. Catherine's No. 1 M 19Bayshore Catholic Men 12 21Bayshore K of C No. 1 . 11 B

KEYPORT BUSINESSMENNov. II

TeamKeyport Wine & LiquorMiddletown Lanes

Pro ShopKeyport CleanersPennerti ftooftag •Circle ChevroletMiddletown LanesBrigadoon VillageUnion DrugsScoras ConstructionVariese Construction

W24

2418181514149

- 5

MATAWAN-KEYPORTMERCHANTS LEAGUE

Team " wAce Brake 18Twin Gables " . 18Atlantic.Tile 18Campbells Junction

Texaco Gas 17

Tourines TavernPalmer ESJOAll Bros

Woodworking Co.Burlew's Restaura/itAngelos Liquor Store ~Matawan Ford -Jags Sporting GoodsOld Mill Dairy

1717

17191610106

FRIDAY NfTE LATE MEM'S823 LEAGUE

Nov. 18 ,Team ' W L

Laurelyn Hotel-., 23 7300 Bar 20 '10Jo-Joes Cocktail Lounge ITA U'AJohnson-Gibbs. -14 -16--SevenClub liVJ 15J4W. Keansburg Fire Co. 12 18Keyport Elks 8 16Gutter Balls 8 19

THE IVY-LEAGUENov. 17

Team W- LWerner's Hawks & Larks 23 7McGuire"« Oaks 18 12Hazlet Pharmacy IS 14

Tick Tock CleanersShore Flying "A"Automatic DrinksMagnolia Inn300 BarDixie Lee BakeryHidden Brook Grinding

15 14IS 15IS IS

if4 If*M

BE EXTRA ALERT,on RAINY

DAYS

FOR SALE

GHRISTMAS:GIFTS"Let usr help you with your Christ-mas shopping. Give a Christmaspresent to last throughout the year». a, member of. your family, afriend, a boy or girl in the servicea subscription to Tho KeyportWeekly or The Matawan Journal.Just dial COlfax 4-3030 we do therest.

' '•win

'PRESBYTERfANS Pioneer «Matawan." Just published, may

bs purchased In Matawan at TheFriendly Shop, Main St., In Keyportat Bayshore Stationers, 36 W. FrontSt., The Keyport Weekly, 52 W.Front St., and in Freehold at theMonmouth County Historical As-sociation Library, 70 Court St. Priceper book, J3.98, • • w j t f

USED refrigerators, %&M and up.Good condition. Pete'i Inc., CO1

U 4-2700 or KEaoiburg 6-1100.

RUGS," never used, 9x12, $30; 9x15,$35, other s i zes , - O. E . Vacuum,

20; also some wool hooked andbraided rugs. Private. Call COlfax4-0244. WJ24

FK E E ESTIMATES ON :

ALUMINUMWINDOWS - DOORS

SIDINGNO DOWN PAYMENT

KARL FRANTZ — CO 4-3405' wjtf

WAGON WHEELS, sleds. 2 sealedbuggy; upright piano, typewriter,

:ash register,, ship's clock, nnd-rons, fire screens, copper pots,rystal chandelier. Antique gunsmd sWords. WWr'Kave yoti lo i$U>r trade. Beachway Trading Post,103 Highway 36, West Keansburg.

- ' wjtf

ETROITER mobile home, 10 X 50,3 bedrooms; 2 years old, good

ondition. extras. Asking J450O.:ail COlfax 4-0795.- , - .wjl

HREE cushion style living roomsuite, occasional t a b l e s andimps, reasonable. Call LOwell1443.- . wJ24

PECIAL top size Holland Bulbs,.79 per dozen. Balled and burlap

vergreons at 10% off. Three bagsIme, $1.00, spruce trees In bushelsrom $2.95 and up. Closed Thanks-jiving Day at 1 p.m. •Raritan.andscaping,—Highway-35r South,mboy. Call PArkway 1-0208. .WJ24

EDROOM SUITE, 6 pieces', goodcondition. Call LOwell 6~4715

fter 6 p.m. J24

ENDIX WASHER $25, vacuumcleaner $7, electric mantle clock

5, kitchen table and 3 chairs $6.•loor lamp $3, boudoir chair $2,Ivlng room mirror $5, % b e diprlng $3, gray baseball suit, shirtsize 40, pants 36 - $3; revolvingTV table $3, pipe bender $4; alsopunch set, bowl and 10 cups $5.iicycles girls and boys $15 and up,:all LOwell 64)593. . |24

& Q train set and equipment,reasonable. Call LOwell 6-4106.

IOXER, fawn, female, AKC regis-tered, 6 months old $50. Call

IQIfax 4-2651. w|24

FOR RENTtPARTMENT, 4 rooms, hot water,heat and electric supplied, Cor-

ier house, 70 • 2nd St., Keyport.^11 COKax 4-3C23. wjtf

.PARTMENT, 4 rooms.96 Broadway, Keyport

Inquirewjtt

STORE. Inquire 96 Broadway,Keyport.; -• ' wjtt

The aforesaid described premises™ * l l1_!5n«w» a« 126i Shore Con.<>"**', CMtwood Beach, New Jersey.TOGETHER with all fl .tur. . now

ir hereafter attached lo or used Inronnecllon ivllh the premises herein'"bribed and the following household•pplaneea wh eh ars fUturas and>art of the really:

Iloper gas range. Fifteen i l l ) Alu-minum combination storms andoteeni, One m Aluminum comblna-

tlonrdoor, One II) li'," W.P. comblna-i V" •PPW'mate amount ot Iheudgment \o be satisfied by aald salet the sum ot tll.000 00 tojclher »1lh<o costs of this sale,

tloh door.

Jr2..Sij !'•uaeOCIeln. Kovaca * AndKsoa,

PARTMENT, 3 beautiful roomsand b a t h , recently decorated.

Second floor of two family house,private entrance, plenty storagespace. Heat and hot water sop-plied. $85 per month. Inquire 71Main St., Mafawan. w)24

PLEASANT, large furnished room,located In Kevport, near bus line,

railroad station and schools. WriteBox A In care of this newspaper,and kindly include business refer-ente, .. r ,' wjtf

KEYPORT apartment, 2, 3 or 4rooms, furnished or unfurnished,

adults; beautiful bath and shower.Private entrance. Walking'distanceto all transportation. Residential.Call after 0 p.m., COlfax 4-3049.

WJ24

APARTMENT, furnished, 3 largerooms and bath, hot water and

heat supplied. Adulu only. CallCOllax 4-0014 between 6 and 7 p.m.

rtj24

THREE ROOM bungalow'tor singleperson. Call LOwell 6-3975 alter

6 p.m. , w)tf

HOUSE, 3 rooms, gas heat, hotand cold water, driveway. 731

Eighth St.. Union Such. C a l lCOlfax 4-4617. w)24ONE studio apartment, completely

furnished, private bath.*t 66 Majn$(?.* Keyport; a lso ,3 room apart-'ment unfurnished located 41 MainS t . Keyport. F. W.BIttderAgeacyi

" M»fn St., ~5t4-JJI6.

Keyport .COlfaxwjM

HOUSES FOR SALENEW_HOMES built to your require-"ments, 100% mortgage, no downpayment Lota ayallabla In Matawan • Keyporf area. Call LOwell64244, wjtf

BEFORE you Buy or sign a Con-tract for a house call us and com-

pare our General Contract price toothers. 'Wo will build you a cus-tom hquse, not a prefabricatedhouse, on your lot or ours, to yourspecifications with no money down,100% financing. Call COlfax 4-3034-1676 or-1137. ;_>-V-.<"-p wjtf

BEFORE you buy see this houseunder construction, Mornlngside

Ave., Union Beach. .Near school.Small down payment, good financ-ing. Call COlfax 4-3034 or COlfax4-167C , . ' • • • , w J U

KEYPORT 6. room house, all Jroprovements, enclosed front, back

and open porches, out buildings,all new floor covering, tub sink,gas range, new hot water boiler,street gas, electric heat, new styletable snack bar in the wall servingtwo rooms, kitchen cabinets, allscreens $8000.- Call owner SouthOrange 3-0926. wj24'

MR. AND MRS. Hom«buyer, be-fore you buy or build you should

see our models in Freehold onDutch Lane, Lake Drive and Route9 by appointment. Economy homes.HOpkins 2-20O6. J24

ONLY $10,500 buys 3 bedroomranch.,with kitchen, Iivipg room

and corner lot. Sterling McCann,Real Estate, 253 Broad St., Key-port. COlfax 4-1376. J24

HAZLET, extra .large lor with 3bedroom home with oversized 2

car garage. Immediate possession,$10,000. Sterling McCann, Real Es-tate, 253 ©roacTst,, Keypott.COl-'ax 4-1378. • J24KEVPORT, 2 family on corner lot,i only $10,050. Sterling McCann,Real Estate, 253 Broad St., Key-port. COlfax 4-1376. 124

WANTED

LOTS WANTED

Anywhere buyers waiting. KeyAgency. LOwell 6-0244.

' •• - ' --• w j t t

WANTED TO RENTAPARTMENT, 3 rooms and bath

and garage by school teacher.Call COllax 44219 evenings. w)24SINGLE gentleman wants furnished

ohe_toJhL«e:.raom.apartment-for-Immediate occupancy in the Mat-awan area. Call LOwell $-3400.

.'.. J24

SERVICES^" L O W "COST HEATING

Complete systems Installed as lowas $495. Duct work, furnaces andsheet metal work. 31 years ex-perience.

CALL LOGANCOLFAX 4-2916

wjtf

. CURTAINSHow about those curtains, betterget them laundered before t h eholidays, don't wait too-long.' Alltypes of curtains washed. Ironedalso stretched.

PARKWAY 1-3595

wjtfPARKER Boarding Home fpr aged

men and women; Z4 hour super-vision; Individual diets. Licensedby State of New Jeresey. Reason-able rates. 1<,J miles south olMatawan light. Highway 34; oppo-site Whi'e Gate Inn. Call LOwell6-0611. |tt

WILL CARE for children of work-ing mothers in. my home. Call

LOwell; 6-3832. . j24

FINISH basements a n d ceilings.Convert your wasted basement to

a spacious breath taking play roomfor pennies a day; also cover yourold ceiling with insulated 'panelblocks. Estimates given. Call L.Marciano, WHitney 6-4571. -}I5

Situation WantedWILL wash and Iron all types ol

curtains; also stretch curtains Inm j own home. .Prompt service.Call BArkmay 14595;" ' w)HWILL care for children of working

mothers in my h o m e. CallLOwell 6-3540. • • wj24CHEF, 38 years experience, under-

stands percentage and good food.Julian, 347 Main St., Belleville,N. J. Call after 4 p.m., PLymouth9-0738. wi24"

Real Estate For SaleHILLTOP plot size 100 x 100 over-

looking Raritan Bay, near shop-ping center, schools and commutertransportation. Carl Hardy Bldg,,Contractor; R. D. 1, Box 190, Mat-awan. Call PArkway 1-5170 afterB p.m. • w]24*

HIGHWAY property, 100x275, moreland available, 6 room house,

concrete garage, 22x22; other largebuildings. Suitable for lumber yard,car lot or factory, Call LOwell6-2159. wJ24

AUTOS FOR SALE1957-FORD-Ranch-Wagon,-good-"condition, standard transmission,

6" cylinder. Private. $795. CallCOlfax 4-3405. wj24»1959 RENAULT Dauphine, excel-

lent condition, 1 owner, reason-able. Call PArkway 1-6093 even-ings. - s , wj24*

1953 PONTIAC hydromatic, radioand healer $175. Call COlfax 4-

3972. Wjj4

NEW

MERCURY-COMETTRADE INS

1957 Dodge, 14 door, V-8.automatic, R & H, reducedt o • - • • - • .. $ 5 W

1956 Ford Fairlane, 2 door,V-8, automatic, R & H,Gleaming Black . 7J5

1955 Chevrolet, 2 door."210", R & H 485

1956 Mercury hard top, 3door, standard transmis-sion, R & H 695

WALL - IRWINMOTOR CO. INC.10 LAFAYETTE PLACE,

FREEHOLDHOPKINS 2-1818 •

OPEN EVENINGSMONDAY THRU

FRIDAYUNTIL 9:30 P.M.

J24

INSTRUCTIONPRIVATE instructions, piano, voice

(! and theory, conservatory of,mu-sic graduate. Taking limited num-ber of pupils. Call LOwell 0-1440.

' wi24

HELP WANTEDREGISTERED NURSE. 11 p.m. to

7 a.m. shift, five days. Call COl-fax i^?JL

WOMAN to verify service appoint-ments by telephone from your

own home 1 to 2 hours per day.Write Box G In care of this news-p a p e r ^ ^ wj24

LIGHT, FAST hand assembly. Ap-ply Ballard'i, First St., Keyport.

' '• . wjtfLAB TECHNICIAN to work in re-

search laboratory, steady day-time employment. Writa Box FIn care of this newspaper. wj24

BUSINESS SERVICESTop Soil

TOP SOILTRUCKiNO, trenching gad bun-dozing, mason sand, gravel, drive-way gravel, bluestona, cindert andtop toll. •

MICHIGAN PAY LOADER

DIETRICH BROS.; ING:28 SPRING LAWN AVE.

MATAWANLOwell 6-3993 • 21W

: > wJU

TRUCKING, AND'.;.., -i

.rEXCAVATING

SHOVEL DOZER SERVICE< Top1 Soil, $15 Ps i Load

Fill Dirt, 17 Per LoadLoad Ij Approximately S Cubic

. Y«rdi

ECKEL BROTHERS.'. LOWELL 8-1845 ' "OLD TENNENT RD.

MORGANVILLE, N. J.«JU

TOP SOILFILL DIRT

- -FUEL OIL ft KEROSENE< ' i

ffiANSBURG ICE * FUEL CO.,INC.V- - -

HWY M W. KEANSBURG. KEANSBURG M258

wjtl

If you need printing of any kind,

we, are.-here to ferva you. Our

(quick service and reasonable prices

please you,

Slip CoversRICHARD'S DECORATING .

Slip covert and praperiet made toorder. Your fabric or ourf atlow- prlcej. Payment.^ arranged.534 B e e n St.. Hailet COlfax 4-1544. wtf

PINCUSHIONSLIPCOVERS f DRAPERtES

Upholstery, custom made, choose1960 fabrics at home. Free estlmates. Call. Dorothy Smith, LO-well 6-1290. wj 12/1/60

CONVERTIBLE T«DPS"For all model cars. Larry's Upholstery Shop, 33 Little St., Matawan.Call LOwell 6-3018. ffjtf

ACCOUNTANT- Bookkeeper, com-plete service, small businesses,

part time. Including reports and In-come tax. Raymond L. Johnson, 503Union Ave., Union Beach. CallCOItay4-6<l54. wjtf

AntiquesOPPORTUNITY SHOP

ANTIQUESWe buy and sell Antique Furniture,Bric-a-brac, China, G l u t , Dolit,Jewelry, U. 8. and Foreign itampsTh- Matthewt, 115 Broadway, Keyport. COKax 4-14M wftt

Top Soil

TOP SOILBig Lotds 114.00Top Soil, best 15.00Road Gravel big loads . . . . 15.00Fill Dirt 1MGood Fill Dirt .' » MSand, Gravel, Blue Stone; drive-ways gravelled, bulldozing, grad-ing. Jots cleared. Excavate f o iSeptic*, Oil Tanks, e t c

BACKHOE SERVICELiterals. Footing.. Ditching. Pond,

' Swimming Pools, etc.Free Estimates

ECKEL'S TRUCKINO

MaintenancePAlTfflNG, carpentry, g l a z I o g .

lock repairs, sump pumps, roof-Ing. Small Job specialists.••-- GENERAL SERVICES CO!

LOwell 6-3107

WjttMOVING, odd Jobs, trees and

shrubbery removed, attics, cel-lars and yards cleaned Call LOw-ell 6-3322-after 6 p.m. wjtf

LIGHT HAULING

LOWELL. 6-2634wjtf

ContractorsCARPENTER and building contrac-

tor, J. O. MeUger, Florence Ave.,Keyport New homes, garages, aUalteration! and repairs. Call COl-fut 4-4159. wjtf

THOMAS KEARNEYPLUMBING A HEATING

J85 Maple Placa 'Keyport- _...._..

Free Estimates CO 4-9788wjtf

ALTERATIONS, painting, interiorand exterior, handy man. No

Job too large or too small. CallCOlfax 4-4058. wjlT

Television

DON'S TV SERVICEFor fast efficient radio and tele-vision service call LOwell S-U44.

TV SERVICELOWELL 6-1600

TEN EYCK JtONSUN INCL ,-..,.MATAWAN

PERSONAI SERVICE 10 YRS.

UpholsteryRICHARD'S DECORATING

Chair bottoms. R; sofa bottom,tit; opertljr repaired ..at roar

534 Beers St. HiileL COf.

Thursday, November 24, 1960 THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J.

Hear Delegate To.Girls'State

Miss Judith HoIdoiiGirls' Statedelegate for 1960 from LaurenceHarbor American Legion Auxiliary,Unit 332, was the guest speaker at

. the meeting held Monday eveningin the post home en SummerfieidAve., Laurence Harbor. . ,

Miss Holden was introduced by' Miss Mary Reiher, president. She

explained her activities during the—Jseek—aU Douglass—College and

thanked the organization for mak-ing her trip possible.

Two 50-star flags were purchasedfor Brownie Troops 30 and 31 ofthe Laurence Harbor CommunityChurch and for Brownie Troops 15and 16. of the St. Lawrence'sChurch, Formal presentation will

_ be.made by Mrs-Joseph Mollis,Americanism chairman, ID the nearfuture. • ' • .

Dec. 12 Yule PartyThe Unit Christmas party is

scheduled for Dec. 12 in the posthome and the Past. Presidents'Parley • GhristrnasL' party . wilL^beheld Dec. 14 at Buck Smith's Res-

> tiUMBt; Easf~KeaBs6nr|." Mrs.Jack Olsen, Parley chairman, ex-tended an invitation to Miss MaryReiher, present president, to at-

...i tebd .thelparley_p«rryrr_ _;.._;-. Sfxty^eight members, including

49 seniors and 19 juniors, havepaid their dues for the comingyear, according toVreport by Mrs.John Vachltis, who still Is collect-ing them.

* Commander .Jack Olsen asked. the auxiliary for assistance at senr-.ing at. their dinners.- A donation was. voted for theMiddlesex County Polio Drive andplans were discussed for the ba-zaar which will be held in the posthome Saturday, Dec. 3, from 10a.m. to 8 p.m. Mrs. John Parij isgeneral chairman.

Seek Masked PairIn Holdup, Robbery

Two armed and stocking-maskedmen Monday morning held up androbbed the attendant at Hub Cap

"Joe's Service Station, Route 35,Cliffwood,, of $60 in cash. The at-

tendant, John Enters, 57, of 35«'Matawan Rd.; Laurence Harbor,had his wrists bound, with, a dog'chain but otherwise was unharmed., He told Matawan Township in-vestigating officer James C. Hoyt,the pair forced him into a rearroom, bound him and took the

. money. He said they fled south onRoute 35 in a late modeUfour^ootblack car. He said he believed oneof the bandits w*s addressed bythe other as "Skip."

The car they used was found tobe one stolen in Union City. It wasabandoned in Matawan BoroughTuesday with a stocking in similarto those believed u s e d by thebandits. r •

,. Police issued an alarm for thetwo. men, believed armed with two.22 caliber revolvers.who were described as white, about

' six feet tall, between 20 and. 21''years old'and1 of nledtanv; build-

Afterthe robbery. Mr. Ehlera went' out on the highway to stop a de-' livery truck to notify police o l jhe

incident, ,'"" • ; ' , . .

If you need printing or any kind,we are here to serve you. Our

. quick service and reasonable priceswill please you.

Buildings With Class

Architects' rendering ol the classroom building Ito be erected at Rutgers University, New BrunswlcVon College Ave , adjacent to Ford HaD shows raist"office bridge" (center) connecting two-story clairoom unit fright) with lecture hall unit.. Tf

Ick building will house 26 classrooms and two lee-halls each seating MO students. The connecting

bridge, also two stories, will contain some 36 offices.DIehl and Stein, Princeton, are the architects.

Erigllshtown Rd,, building, $2000 to

Adeline A. Fislier, Box 447 B,land, $850 to $550.

The new 60-room home of Rutgers' GraduateSchool «f Education, shown here in a' rendering bythe bonding's architects, Diehl and Stein, Princeton,will be erected near site ol present education build-ing on Seminary PI., New Brunswick. Three stories

"will rise abovo grade In front of building (>e« draw-ing), while a fourth floor will h t visible oh level olparking lot in rear. The building will,have red bricklacing lo conform with other structures on campus.

land, $4000 to $3200."Albert A. and Kate Jackson,

Ry*o personal, SEW.to $400.Florence C. Roche, Star Route,

building, BOO to {600.Richard MartciKpBox 464, Mata-

wan, land. $200 to $100, building,$1200 to $1000, personal $300 to $200.: Reductions Ordered

Victor Trad Vandcnburg' Rd.,building, $4300 to $3500. personal.$2300 to $1750. '• . •"Edelweiss Forms Inc., Slallbn

Rd.. land, $2500 to $2000, building.$1500 to $100; property at WyncrcstRd., land, $5000 to $-1000.

William Schultt, Route 79, build-ing, $1600 to SK00,

Juntas L i V i o n , Morganville,land, $500 to $250, building, $1500to $1050.

Broadkey Corp.; Lloyd Rd., per-onol, $200, cancelled.Clarence Ware and Louisa Flick-

elm Estates, building, $2000 lo1200, personal, $200, cancelled.Kate Peyser, Route 79, buliding,

;3Q00 to $2000, personal, $300, can-tflled.----"-™"""""-*--- •'-' -":T- -David EuBcbrotsonrDcaeon-HIHrind, $250 to $200, buliding, $1000

a $500. Other • property, land, $250i $200. \ ---. . - ' .AnRelo Rossi, Star Houti-, land,

1500-to-$400.— -•••-'•Damon and Mallclyn-Tyrrell, 21

Woodbrook Dr., land. $5W toj2!>0,milding, $3000 to $2000.

Lavoie Laboratories, Inc., Mnta-ran-Freehold Rd., personal, $75,-

D00 to $42,000.-, 'Hugh T. and Frances M. Llght-

oody, High St., Wlckatunk, land,$250 \a $200, buildinc, $2000 to $1800," :rsbnal, $250 to Slot.

Other AppcaliJames R. and Eileen Cuba,

Aaln St., building, S200O to $1800,wrsonal. $300 to $200.

Joseph A. Bauer, EnfillsMown,x-rsonal, $G0O to $200.

Arthur. F. Forman, 'Wlckatunk,-Arthr F. ,building,' $2000 to $1600.

C h l ' d Christine

There Is a prophetic line in anold Rutgers song which describesrather accurately the massive ex-pansion program now underway onthe State University campus in NewBrunswick. T h e line appears in"AhnaMater" and goes lite this:'•Ever changing, yet eternally thesame."

Architects' renderings bn two olthe newbuildings on the men's col-leges campus point up the familiarred brick exteriors and green sur-roundings. But they tiso show con-cessions to our times. These, andall other structures proposed forthe various university campuses inthis city and in Newark and Cam-den, have been designed in func-tional style to meet the demandsof an anticipated doubling o! under-graduate enrollment with minimumeconomy.

The general classroom buildingand the proposed home of the Grad-uate School or Education, both de-signed, by; Diehl and Stein. Prince-ton, are among five major struc-tures recently given1 final designapproval. '

Paid For By Bond IssueTogether the five buildings will

cost $10,800,000, which Is lo be metlargely from bond issue funds. Itwas the passage .of the CollegeBond Issue referendum on ElectionDay a year ago, which made pos-sible the State University's current

$47,000,000 statewide expansion pro-gram, •.

The bond Issue authorized the ex-penditure of $06,800,000 for collegebuilding construction, 529,650,000 atthe State University. Riilgers hasbeen able to plan Jor 24 new build-ings at a cost almost double thebpnd issue revenue by Ihe use ofgifts,-federal loans, recent state ap-Jpropriatlons and its own resources.

One building, the $1,010,000 Doug-lass College dining hall, financedby a combination of College BondIssue funds and federal loans al-ready Is well underway, as areseveral other m a ) or structureswhich do not draw from bond issuofunds. -, '

Those five buildings whose de-

signs have been approved are tho11,900,000 classroom building, the$1,250,000 education building, a $4,'800,000 dormitory development for1000 men students, a .$3,000,000 din-Inf hall nnd graduate student dor-mitory, and a $750,000 addition lotho gymnasium, all of which willbo located ct the men's colleges.Ten other building projects, Includ-ing several multiple units, now areon the drawing board,

The total buildinfi program callsfor the expenditure of J9,9OO,0OO atNewark Colleges and $2,950,000 atthe South Jersey division of the uni-versity al Cnmden. More than $M»-500,000 will be spent to expand thefacilities on the various campusesin thit city.

g, $Charles' -and Christine

Tennont Rd, land, $400building, $2000'to $1800.

Judson Clark, Marlboro Rd.,and, $400 to $200, building, $2000:o $1600.

Florence Spr»Kuo nnd HurryCluni-1, Ilucks Lone, personal, $2300io $1900.

George T. Sastlioff, Marlboro,ami, $8100 to JM00.

Joseph Esciiuk, Ryan Rd., land,$800 to $400,. .: .

Lubkcrt HolmdclP-TA Speaker

Following Open, House,atia\l!theIlolindel Toiviiihip .Seftdoli Nov. 15,!there was a business meeting olthe Holmdel Parent-Teacher As-sociation at 9:15 p.m. al the Ele-mentary School. Harry Lubkcrt,president of the Board of Educa-tion, was guest speaker. Mr. Lub-kcrt spoke on the importance olproviifins school facilities for thefuture enrollment In the school sys-

SANTA IS EARLY TfflS YEAR

At • ;

Hazlet. T h e

MA $25 SAVINGS

BOND FREEWith Every

Used Car$309.00 Or More

From Now UntilChristmas

THESE FINE USEDCARS NOW IN STOCK

695.00495.00595.00695.00795.00

1595.00

, 1956 Chev. 9 Pasis. WagonRH, Auto., Power Steer and Brakes . . . . $

1955 Fords, Chevs., Plyms. from1955 Mercurys, Buicks, Otdsmobiles from1956 Chevs., Plyms., Mercurys . . . . . . . . . . . . from1957 Plyms. . . . : • • . . from1959 Fords, Chevs. .-.... from

TRANSPORT SPECIALS1950 51-52 Chevs., Fotds, DeSotos . . . from $49.00

THB WEEK'S SPECIAL1960 Plymouth Belvedere Exec. Car, 8 Cyl. . . . . . . . . . $1895

- H * « Onb Ceupe, Heater, White Walls

ALWAYS 10O GOOD USED CARS TO CHOOSE f ROM

SAYREVILLE MOTORS1 • • • Your Authorized Plymouth Volicmt Dealer

ROUTE 9 AND ERNSTON ROAD(OppesUc Sayrr Woods Shopping Center)'

Service Tel, PA 1-0600 Ope. From »-m *-.» Sales Tel. PA 1-3600tiS :

cm. He sold that the board Is•ecommondlng tho purchase ot lando meet future building needs. The'•TA voted to ''endorse the school

ward in.its octlon to purchase thiUeprlbit'a' iitpstlpiiipetty. for Jh.eVure* 'erection' of an elementarychool."Membership chnlrman announced

hat there «re 188 paid-up mcin-paid-fon. Iiers In the" organization. Christmas

;Uls will be donated by the mem-jers to be distributed to the needy:hildrcn in Ihe township.

F i r s t Br»<'e mothers wereOstesBCs at the meeting.The next meeting of Ihe P-TA

vill be on Tuesday, Dec. 13, at 8,m. at the Elementary School in

will boprogramChristmas Music" under the (IIcction of Jack Ptatt.. The ntx'

xiard meellnc will be Thursday,nLthe-Eleraentary School.

Trailer Weekly(continued: from page ono)

it licenses. He cannot see with Ihecstrlctlon of SO how n trailer perk

operator can make his business oneconomical operation.* ~

Cqmmlttci'mnn Millard B. Umvbcrscn has voiced opposition lo Iheametidment as out of place In (h<zoning ordinoncc. lie questions lh<right of the townihlp to levy arallcr fee. on a weekly basis underi zoning ordinance, but it Is de-fended asfiivins the ionin|? officei:hc right to supcrvisi! Iho threemonths collecting, ns there is ncmeans of eltccllvcly Electing (hiccs due the township.The proponents of the 50-trmle

imitation hold that with tho II p>week charge in addition, the nilmber of trailers to hring children Into the township to Mi to the numbers bearinji on the already overCrowded school system apprprlattly Is limited. They.intend (battle for their restriction, polnlln,out the East Windsor and Moon-achle ordinances, bearing theweekly fee charge, have been upheld In Ihe state court.-,.

Plosky,to ROD

Authorize Tie-In(continued from pa(jo one)

Council rejected a lower bid sub*milted by Security Furniture, PerthAmboy, because t h e oiler wasmade contrary to specifications andV>t on • proper form. There was3nc other unsuccessful bidder.

The resignation ol ]..RaymondKelchel, secretary of the lonlnRboard of adjustment, was acceptedby council. Mr. Ketchef, now re-tired, reported he plans to spendmost ot Ills time out of the) Hatef., Franklin ^mlnlck,,former bor-mgl) clerk, was named,(o tilt oui

ilto remainder of Mr. KetehcC':erm.

Alfred Diel a n d Robert Ficclvore affirmed as members of ihcWashington Engine Co. and counciauthorized n contract nfgiillulcilwith the A ft R Shop, Route 34, forhe installation of an air horn, parr

Ihc fire alarm systeirr.JuniorTho Matawun Woman'

Club was granled permission tohold tag days Dcc.Tand 3 for tilupper extremity ctmpulce fund anicouncil authorized the advertLw^ment for bids on a renewal of" tinmunicipal garbage contract, returnable. Dec. 13.

Score Delay Of(conlinutd from pnge one)

the grade crossings, tlie scenes oifatal accidents involving passercars and trains.

Following Ihe action of Ihe town.ship, the PUC wan promised b;Iho Central Railroad of NPW. Jcrsey and the Now York nnd LouBranch Railroad that the tnfoldevice* would be Installed by Oc(olier of this year at Ihe latent,

The rHIroadii prnmlscd lo Instilnulomuilc i;jt(.'s nl tliu CllllivootAve. cropsInK, now protected b)nushing red liBhta, anJ olfurcd t<InMall fiashliiK lights at Iho Gcrard Aw/, crossing, preicntly utiarded only hy reflector type slijnfl,

A petition, diiined Ijy 5(1 rcsiilt-nlsasked that VanClonl l.ono bu itand'a Ihrough street to he coniwcleiwith County Rd. and Sulc-m PI, Tin

Neiv Classroom Building At Fairleigh Dickinson

This Is an architect's drawing ol the newest odill-Ion, lo Iho Tcancck campus ot Falrlelgh DickinsonJnlverslty. The threo-story building, now ready for

• • " llllonlicise, features a complete Air-conditioning aystcin, ui

Tho first air-conditioned class- The top llnor wll'

Inrgc demonstration room, and four InlioratorlM,The drawing jhowj tlm touth fiUlti el tliu bulldlnflwith Its bli'cl and glnst ruroln wall mnslrucllon,

oom building at Falrloliih Dlcklii-;on University will be parliBlly-l•eady.-for_use-oo_ Ui ei-Teancqk-:ampus this moritli;'l'ho three-storytructure also features un umphl-heater style demonstration roomo accommodate 138 persons. Tho

>y the beRnnng pg•atct.. A Inrge nsscmbly rooni onlie secoml floor will have a KOUIHI-roof nurlltlon which cm he fuldctl

lack to..crc.ntL> two clnssranms.

Include twoclassrooms tn accoinmodnto umu<ually large- classes,- nnd - spoclalluhoratoi-y-j,>(|ul|)nu'iiHii oms-oftlieruunis to accommutlu'ie grouixs IIIenfiliu'orltig druwhi|.t mul dcserlp-live grometry.

I'ully Alr.Condlllonedoom:. will.be .cquipped-wlth -stu.-_| Eully alriondllloiiud lor-lhccoiiKionary scats with folding aims sohat notes may he taken.

Tho building will IIOUH> IB class--ooms, and four biology laborator-cs, which will be ready far useiy the beginning of lho spring st'iiv

y a M w i f n(oil at ttudemt enrolled In suinmccsession, thc-bulldlnii Is nlsn tqulp-nrd'Wlth a sprinkling sysU'rn.Toiftiro protection.

The modern structure In simi-lar In design to Williams Halt, an-

th l bildi hg ,

other classroom building on thooampuK, Tho Mniiton |lnildlnii,which luis lieeii used lor scienceluborulorics unit iccluris, will be

raiwl m man as tho blnlngy tab-oraioiks In the new buliillng arcavailable.' " :—"''•—OrpiiiMlrwss-hrnkcti-lait'Noy, 20.and work on ilu> lmlWIng began 1a week Inter; Simli'nls openi'd,rfad, und recorded bids for COB-slriii'tlon of Ihe luillillnn last N()V,-4—al—«---»l-ii-tle-tri—convocation -Kopresentativts of rnnslvvittloneonipanle^ wort! quc^lloncd by the•Ktmlents on phases of cost esllmn-lion, niiilerlul piocirement, andbulliUng coiiNlrunlon.

'l'iie imtltlinji waii rnnslructt'il byIhe Mahlcit Construcilon t.'ii, oT I'ul,riMm, and (Ivuluni'd by Ihe (Inn oll;clllH'lmcr nnd Wuiincr of NewYork.

q was taken under ndvjse-iromlsed to Biirvey Ihe nllo andistlmalc Ihe costs Involved.

Tho committee granted a taxiicfnse to Fisher Hall, Cliffwoml,ind set Dec. 10 at 10 n.m, as set-ling day, All outstanding bills torho year should be presented lorlaymc-nt by Unit dale.

Property Taxes(continued from page ono)

[otal business propei'ly taxes were1117,320; total farm levies, %%Wwhllo rfaldcntiol property taxesi«ounlBit for. B.tutnl ct }«»0,U7l,.

Mulnwan Township reversed Ihorend shown by nil olheF huysliorciita communities, reflecting a de-crease lo local properly taxes for:hc 1!I5!I.1!H1O fluent year. Totallevies In tho township dccrfuscil$14,025 bringing Ihe new total levyto $570,800. Farm land and resi-dential tuxes ilt'creaReil, nlthwghbusiness properly allowed a minor':K)O5t.

Incrvaso In KeyporlIn Keyporl, local properly tuxes

showed nn IncrcnBo of $0'I,3JO bring.Ing its now total levy to $732,5.19Kith lotnl luislnt'RS levioii (Inuredat $2211,331 nnd tolul residentialtaxes at 1499,259, Kcnnsburg witha new totnl lovy of $103,539, showed

Kllin $703} Increase 'over lamyear. • - •

Mni'llwro Township flhi)Wt'd thesecond highest Incrcuiia in totalproperly lax levies In tin? li»y«horiiarea, n boost of $110,391!, lirlnglngho town.ihlp'B mini levy lo $590,

fpi)l,, Increaites wero shown Inarm, luislnc-ss nnd rt'sMeititnl tnx

levies. _ .Mutownn showed n $50,mi> ovvr<

all Increase over ID5!>, with newtotals or $581,981 overull comprisedor Jll'I.KM for hiiHliiPKs, $12211 farfarm properly and $429,088 fur rent-dtmlial, nccordlnn to tho clumber'*figures.

Hulmri'l TowiiFililp imported atotal property tax. levy of J47IW,an Inereojtr of-$G8,02l over 11fiiiftKrcimptilcd In IflJD. Till! levies ln<eluded liunlncss, $17,173;- f n r tn,$159,031 and residential, WKW.l In Union [lench wrre rc-norled at H77.321. an lncrea»» of$.13,771 over Hie 11)99 tolal levy.

Public Library(•continued from pun** one)

pletlon of a land survey, now under'way. • —

Mil* Cnuehlnij 1'unliThe hoard filled l.wu rnnchinjl

posts, John l.unkovlch wns nrnni.d un liuskethull and Imcoach fur Mnlnwiiii CiruSchool lit an iinnunl iinlnry of t.MIfnrvoy LiiToureltc vvan appolnk'diifinislnnl lil|;li Hciiml Iruil, roncliat a milnry of $175.

Two new leathern were hired,Mr«. Dorothy A. Hellly Kry|iorl,

nent |>v Ihi' rommilleo whichM200, «iid Miss Reno A. (inrlely,Slallngton, I'D., SJCOI), linth lo le:ieh" rst gradu classes in CltflwootlIchnnl. School Superlniendcnt Hvis-mil A. G. Sleller re|»rleil thaihero art1 utlll two vacancleH in Ihe-iluh schuol lemhliiR Mull, Indus-rial arts nnd history. Thrcn tendi-ng resi|;mtllonn were, rcct-lvcd,i om Dolpi-M I'aiilln, l.eonn llynllmil Dorothy Ki'rri; .....

Hids w<!vv'ftwnnk!il I«r l l w d e c -l i t ii I

ichoolwood, was low' with $2113. Otherbids wero G & It tilu'irle, Main-

nn, $nno; '/.Ic-ulfr Mrrm., I'llH.ivood, 111), and Churh*H Vi\iwi,'Inlnflold, $4411. • - , . • • •Tho bid cif I'I'WT Kobiin, Union

lighting of Ihe rein1 of theVfiw l-lcclrlcal Co., d i l l -

IlL'acli, wiin hn'pptnl nl $3 pur dnyfur trnn-;pnriliin a child from Clllf-VVWKI UI n n|icclnl t\w$ In Kenns-

11, .luhn Umvil. CIKiwood, bill-ilhiK $4.50 will in-1. iho cimiruct ifIlio Mii'ccshful hldilt'i' lulls tn nr-iani',0 JIM,Mill IIIMIIIHH'O. WiillcrIk'iinl:;, Mai'uiiiivillc, nsked $28 perilny for Iwu NUIII IUIIM, ram fromMiituwnii lo Limit Urnnrh, but ihol.onii Uriuidi i)iu|uuiil . Inlci' wttTilrflmH'd. •"'

Mli'luu'l (iiiii'in-, Miilnwnn, wn«Klvi'ii thii iimlrm't lit $.t per clayfur tin' |i'itm:pt>rliillim nf 21 iwpllnfrom tin) Lliml Rd, nrcu .In Muti\.JVHII school. ThMf! rWWron nrg In!i'xvr"u of "flic" riumbtir Hint iiiin beni-oiinniiHlnlnil tm". tho Vrun."

' DuringCOLOR MONTH, U.S.A.

Inatitfunitini} Gryatext Armyof Color Shown in Hittory...

Appeal Results(continued from-page one)

Marjorle Hammerslrom," RDIMatawan, buildlnc,-JI5<XI to $1000personal, $200, cancelled.

Joseph and F r a n c e s GroisoEnglithlown, bulldini!. $1800, can-celled, personal, $200, cancelled.

I'ettr and Jennie Daldone, RastFrancis Ave., building. $7000 to11850.

More On ListVincent and Jeanne- .Slirc-ck, BD1.

Ixilldinj:, $2(00 to $!9C0.JotH-pli «nd F r a n c e s Grono,

West Fraacis Ave., land. $200, cirtcelled.

Joseph and Lucy Sch'.anl. EastFrancis Ave., buliding, $1800 to

»Joba C and Joan tinnier, Ea*<

Francis Ave.. bulUSas. $2Ktt UiJJMfc •

Edmund and Dtrclh/ Wooflow-ia, Route 520, IftiiWing. COM toIISW.

L. Cuadertcn and ComunctGundcruw, Route M0. building,C0OO to tlMO. •

Irving G, and Manha Prrry,Route $20 and E « t Fr«ncJi Mt..bblldfns. tmo lo $1500.

Gdrafcl A, jr., and Eli»belhB2um_n. fliti Fijnc'd A l e , buildU)B. J2OO0MJFW.

louSk and FVKDCM Ormso,Ej.glij5ttnwn, Umi. HI 000 to f«KO,building, «»Q0 to $IM0.

-Robert.- - $n4 HuiretH - Ptye,

M E ? . . .I carry a lotof WEIGHTAlways talkthe boys into

buying \WALKERMufflersfor their cart

YOU CAN'T DOBETTER THAN

THE WEST

" Tha life You Save May B« Your Own

1ATTYS AUTO PARTSLower Main St., Matawan

LOwell 6-1088

ti« PriceYES...Even Lower Priced

than Many Black-&-Whlto TV!

i these Shows In COLOR!Chinntl* 2 , 4 1 0 In Color Ritularly I

MllIC Illilll l,!i>O liolllt Of tllllir |l|O|;llllll< IMC tfllfll-nkJ llil * year, Ynu'll w( I lie link I'aur.Miuw. iiilurfllnn mi Chtnnel 9> "Million Dollar Mink-", dieDanny K»ye Mi»w . . , I'ctiy Comi>, Olniih Mimr.|'««l A»!»ii», *h|il<y Tciiipk, I!iW« Iwil , NIK:

. Opclo, Iliinawu i n j many ullicm In f.Mnn Color.

limited Hmt Only I Spoclal OHtrl

RCA VICTOR COLOR TVInstalled &Semced

ImWdn Hook Up n4 IQtti «CA S.i.U.rtUi On.-y.lM Wcon ' r en Alt f»ili. \l\lUi\n

FREE. Kb. I

PETE'S INC.OITN MONDAY AND I HIDAV NnF.IJ

44 W. FRONT ST., KEYPORT

267 MAIN ST., KEANSBURGArren Irom *ifn

KE6-U00DM Our Mtitr Buk PfM

No M*M)f D»w»

THE MATAWAN JOURNAL, N. J. Thursday, November 24,1960

Tallest Toy Soldier in the World!Our Sentinel b over 35 feet f a l l His or-ders are to delight all ch i l d ren . . . spreadgood cheer and to welcome children ofa l l ages to Monmouth Shopping Center'sHoliday Wonderland.

SANTA'S POST OFFICE FOR CHILDREN.Bring the children to see this ChristmasUndStar Feature at MSC. They will be thrilledto watch the,busy, busy dwarf, reindeer and

-mice helping Santa answer his Christina*mail. All MSC stores offer FREE Santa'sStationery. The children can write their•'letter to Santa," and deposit it In a Santadam Post Office mailbox, All letters mailedh*re at MSC^nnsTPosTOffice will be an-•wereiHjySanla, personally.

DECK THE MALLS WITH JOLL

m

trl lLDRHI.. .MEEril lE%HOLIDAY PRINCESSThe Holiday Princes* reign* over a kingdomof animated and lovable animal* in SantttiFairyland. Elephant*, giraffes, teal* and, oftso many other* frisking and-playing to (As)delight of all! The Holiday Ptlncen ha $free, surprise gift for each boy or 'girl tvlutHands before her. Admission is Fret to M5(J,Santo'* Fairyland. Bring, the children (dmeet our tconderful Princess, and they vmlove JOK forever and a day! . '

. . .AHD THE ANGELS DID SAYThousands oj /eel o\ brilliantly twinkling garland,* , , *flowing, sparkling Christmas trees in a gem-like telling, ' 'greet you with heartwarming cheer , , . Tht spirit ofChristmas'Si here at MSC! • , ,:

The Joy of the world expressed In tht volcet of chlldlWChildren'* tlioral groupi from many eommuntty Ha00%mil add to the magical itmoiphere ul MSC. Comt, ht*t.the sound of joy , . , tlie singing on tiu.mgUt,

MEET YOUR HOLIDAY HOSTESSESThe Silet Personnel in all the MSC Slarei will be weir-Ing a Christmas Tree Corsage during the Holiday Sea-son. It it a symbol of friendly and personal tenrlotduring your. Christmas shopping in any of the Mott-tnoilth Shopping Center Slorci! Over 2,000 Holidayflostciiet are ready to serve you.

SHOP EVERY NIGHT 1 f t 9:3DShop Monday through Saturday 'til Christ-Htm. Bring the family to MSC and have funtvhlle you thop. Evening shopping it fun!

PARCEL POST WRAPPING SERVICETlu* convenient lervlce ft operated by theArmy Corpi of Aibury Park and Red Bant.sget will bt wrapped for mailing, at a' nry |price. All proofed; of this Krvlct go to tht Salratfts).Array Corpi.

OVEfi 32 STORES IN MSCIiroryonj of tlieu qutllt^-ilorts I* brlmfull «llh ^Tory beit of gift (rlving^dr«i. Shop til ifafMSC ltONi|. . . Visit all of lliemi broivw and feast your «TMl O w !dren ihop|lcrs gTien special (mention m i comldtntlMbl

EATONTOWN CIRCLt - ROUTE 35

HOLIDAY TREATS FOR CHILDREN!tjrei cartoon movicl for children in the NSC CMoAuditorium Tuesday and Saturday tiights from 7 p. m.to9p,m< A festive selection 0/ cartoons uitl be shun,ftu admission, nothing1 to buy! ' •-.., L . "

EATING IS A PLEASURE A T M SCIfnakjast, inacls, lunch mi dinner an enjoyed «i

> tambsrgtfh Henrj't Delicatessen, S. S. Kresge's, Mont-gomery herd's and the neicest for jourjhopptng pleat-tre—llenr/i C<tjttttia-nm bt located'adjacent to (Ml

•"• Otuft, (Patch for vpn'tng.) . .

T \he warm glow of g i i i • c h c ^ ^ ^ ' e L V ^ - M 1 ? ^ * . i ^ "cxspfteniiBnt •••antkipatwnofCkristmatte^

On Friday, November 25th at exactly 7 fM, the Center becomes ACHRISTMAS WONDERLAND for children and the young in hearti.tthe glittenng domain of Santa and the Holiday Princess, whereevery day and evening is filled with the beautiful sights and soundsof Christmastime, Come share the joy in this merry wonderlandof thrilling surpvisesl i v ,,,-.,'

EVERYTHING FROMAT MSC

This year, Christmas shop nearest your horns, • • H h i Mon-mouth Shopping Centsrl No mpra hours of driving, of rid-ing long distance by bus or train, this year wak» Chrlit-mas shopping a family treat; bring your children, ma, pa,!n-!aw>, everybody! Pleasure for all and ail in pleasure at

FREE Toyland colortna irie«hfor children may b* obtalntdin t W Toy Deparfmanh ofBambflrgw'*; S. S. Kr»^»'sSnd Montjomery Wad't .

FREE • EASY PARKINGPark nearest to SISC stores ...tht thsVlkktdistance hetwen your iisrked oar tttt t wstores! Unlimited i>arkingV-*<uur tlme*-dt^nor night! Parking for over 5,000 tarsi

3 BUS UHES TO THE CEHTHUShop aith ease. Boro Busses ami pm b fAtbury Park and Long'Branch itrtcttf tU» "

Cental ,