Primary Election - DigiFind-It

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O f M IL LB U R N a n d S H O R T HILLS POUNDED 1888 VoL 81, No. 2 Published Every Thursday May 29,; Second Class Postage Paid at Millbum, N. J. FIFTEEN CENTS , Bid onSchoolBus Contract Up 50% The Board of Education ., accepted one bid for the = transportation of students in* the school year --4969-70, - rejected^two : other -hkls atfd'^heW- -"ff" fourth bid for further-eon- ~ ^deration at* its meeting Monday night in the Edu- (sition Centers - - — : — -Fallowing - the recom- mendation of the New Jer- sey Department of Educa- - tion. the School Board this —year "ha d advertised-four- separate contracts for bus trahspoftetioir“tnsteEEi~ of " one overall document; ~ r-: The bid submitted by - the Beim Bus Company, in die amount of $121,440, for- the transportation of_ students tothe Township’s . public schools 7. plus the Short Hills Country Day ...School was not acted op;, by the board at " Monday night’s meetingr pending further discussion with the : state’s Department of Edu- cation. Roy.H. Taylor, assistant superintendent of adminis- —trative services, explained die total amount of the —bid was 50 per cent higher ,Jthan^ tee^$84,Q00—the - Township was presently paying. On Tuesday Mr. Taylor said the school - __.board will confer with, state officials on what ac- . don to take in the matter. Reject Two Monday night the school boafd accepted the " bid of the Martucci Bus Companyr at -the rate of $33.30 per day, to bus \ students to Newark Acad- emy. The board then te- S 'eted the J>ids of the apiewood School Trans—= portation, -at $18 per day, to bus students to Far ‘ Brook School, and the Blue Diamond Line, at $135 per day, to transport students to Kent Place, Oratory I and Oak Knoll schools in Summit. s ;w . The board . rejected those bids because the total in - both cases ex- _ jeeded-the "per pupil final— . of $150 per year'"which die schools may expend . u n d e r - , state.—law, Ac? - '"cording to the Maplewood rjichoel 1 Transportation’s bid, ^ n p u p 2 - fee for a yem-woula be $228 and in - the Blue Diamond Line’s bid, the feewooM-be$49-T- - per year. - Changes in the. state busing law,. enacted by tlte - legislature las4spmg,Timit— the expenditure for trans- portation ~to a private - school by ft local-school - district to $150 per pupil. . When the Board of Educa- tion is unable to contract for transportation within this amount The parent is then responsible for ar- rangtog transportation. ” In Parent’s Hands According to Mr. Tay- lor, a review of the costs indicates the school board can expect no reduction in the current year. Mr. Tay- lor said he is writing to die parents of all children needing transportation to ~ inform them to make the ^necessary arrangement. Reimbursement from . the school board to par- ents of private school stu- - dents is based on the cost oftheavailablepubliceon- veyances. In no case, em- phasized Mr. Taylor, may the cost exceed $150. The school board also approved new teacher ap- M itments . for the -70 school year at Monday night’s meeting. Nils O. Ohlson, who ab- stained from voting on the measure, said he opposed Theboard^aetieh-ofopre-- viously announcing to the public that the average salary for teachers would be $8,500 in light Of the fact that the average salary for the new teachers was $9,700. Mr. Ohlson also __indicated he still objected . IContlnuad on Page 2) _____ _______ Z (8iCKi.Ea PtwwnaBwtiriia) - FAM ILIAR POSE - Photographs o f local students making contributions to' im rfoy causes appear often these days as Township youngsters assume more and more responsibility toward • society. Here Steve Sobol, eighth grade president at M illburn Junior High School, presents a_ check to Alan M iller, state president joltheJVew Jersey Association for Brain injured Children. Monies were raised by a student-faculty basketball game, cake sale, dance, a movie fair arid a s)giant jar for pennies in the school cafeteria........ State Gives OKon Traffic Light Installation of a traffic light al the intersection of Parsonage Hill Road and l Hartshorn Drive has been • approved by the state, The * . ^tem learned on Tugsday. The approval was-given to a plan designed by' the office of Essex County Engineer AFrancis P. Mc- Cormick early this year which provides for recon- struction ofTarsonagoHifi Road to a width of .ap- proximately 36-feet in the wieinlty of^Hartshorn Drive. With the exception . of the installation of some curbing along Hartshorn * Drive and increasing the ; radius of the southwest ~comer of the intersection _ from 25 to 30-feet, there- will be no chtmges takings place on Hartshdm Drive. Both Hartshorn Drive and Parsonage Hill Road are now approximately 25-feet wide. The state last year had _. suggested a number of ah temativeg for improving toe intersection which has been the scene of numer-. ous accidents. These in- cluded the - immediate widening at Parsonage.HiL_ Road to 5Q-_feg| with pro- visions for further widen* ing to 72-feet, the con- struction bf a barrier down- the center of Parsonage Hill Road and the widen- ting of. both Parsonage Hill Road “and Hartshorn Drive to 4.6-feet. All toe state plansTiad - been termed “completely unacceptable and unrealii- ' tic” by Mr. McCormick. No date is given by the state as to when the actual installation of the Hgfo will take place. ;: Grade School Summer Classes Open June 25 At St. Rose BishopDoughertyNamed Pastor BishopJohnJrDougfo erty, president of Seton • HaU Umvewity,; has re-" signed his post at toe South Orange institution . , -and- will-become Pastor of- St, RosftofLim a Church.- - Bishop Dougherty’s res- ignation is effective Jurie - 8. In his- post here he is— succeeding Msgr. John F. Ryan who retired in April after, serving 24 years as pastor of St. Rose. The appointmetft-. of — Bishop - Doiigherty tb the St. Rose pastorate Was .announced by the Most Rev, Thomas . Boland, Archbishop of Newark. - Bishop Dougherty was appointed president of Seton Hall on December 1 ,: 1959. In his statement of resignation to the univer- sity’s board of trustees, he said that his duties as Auxiliary Bishop of New- ark as well as his increasing— responsibilities to -the Na- tional Conference of Cath- olic Bishops “have become too burdensome for one man to continue to bear.” . Exceptional Growth .During his tenure as Seton Hall president, Bish- op Dougherty, who is 62, guided the. university to exceptional growth includ- ing toe construction of more than $13-milfion in new facilities, the initi- ation of new Curricula, the • establishm g n t^Tr f - r - e o t F - ptiter center jnd mi^um, the transition to. coeduca- tion on the South Orange Bishop John J. Dougherty alumnus of SetoiT Hall, "where he received his bachelor o f arts degree in' 1930. He was sent to the —North American College in ■"Rome in the faU of 1930. Theological studies were completed in the Greg- orian University in: the_ Eternal City, from which he received toe Licentiate in Sacred Theeiogy^m . 1934. He was ordained a . priest in Rome on July 2&.' stitute in 1948. From 1937-1947 and the- years subsequent to - 1948, he was professor of Sacred Scriptfire at Im- maculate ConCeption. Seminary, -Darlington. He also, served (1953-59)-as Regent of the Judaeo*_< Christigrp -lnstitute of’ SetomHaflUniversity. Radio and TV—S- The Bishop’s 1 Adsentz talks on the Catholic hour —in 1946 marked thebegin*— ning of a long engagement _in radio and television. He maugurated the Catholic r Hour television program at NBC in 1951, -arid- ap- peared in many CBS tele- vision programs, as well as .on other networks. In 1957,: Bishop Dougherty went abroad—With—the NBC-NCCM team to super- vise tiie filming of the *aw-ard-winning docu- : mentary ‘cRome Etarnal.”! — 4 r n 9 o 2 , Qie same team filmed on the sites of the Ecumenical Councils of _ - toe Church in preparation of the documentary on the Councflrtitled “I Am With Yoiji” - Bishop -Dougherty’s— scholarly work includes: tiie translation of the Book of Deuteronomy4br the Corifiratemity, Edition - _ of the Old Testament; au- thoring “Searching Scriptures’* (1959), a pop- ular introduction to the - ~ For the third successive— year a program of enrich* menteourBes andiBrorove- ment cd&fses wilToe of- fered to diildren of rie- mentary school age. ■ The summer session. to be . offered- at the -Gfen^-z ~:wbbd:SchbbU wTB ’biffiiK-- on Wednesday, June 25, and conclude Thursday, ^ly-ai^Sortrohspbrtation will he proyided. Registra-. - ' tiqn is by mail or in person from May 28 through June— 6. -ft— 7- . Several new enrichment 18 courses have been added this year. A course for - children about to enter kfodergarten in’ Septem- ber,-as well as those com- pleting that grade this June will be offered in perceptual sensory motor training. It is designed to further develop large and small muscle-control; spe- cial orientation, and eye- - hand coordination, A sec- ond course in the develop- ... mea t of study skills wilDbe.. given for students GOm- pleting grades 2 through 6. Creative art, nature study, science, math en- richment, creative drama, advanced tumbling and in- - 8trumentah music for ad- vanced players and begin- ners are examples of other -enrichment courses of- fered^ A lt enrichment courses last'l"-hour and 5-minutes. Improvement courses running 50 minutes—irr- I length for children com-'- zpleting Ttradex three-, through six and will be given in reading and math. • •Coordination improve- ment-y^-be-4waUable:fbr children in grades . two through six. Class size is-limited to a minimum bf ten and a maximum-' of 15 for- all courses, with ..toe excep- tions ot instrumental music and reading im- provement. Fees ate $30 per enrich- •ment course iand $15 per— improvement course and $7 weekly for beginning • and instrumentalists and $10 weekly for advanced -players: Non-resident fees for all courses are slightly ~ higher. —Brochures wit h .. more detailed" course descrip- tions, time schedules and registration forms are available at Gtenwood -School, Taylor Road, Short Hills, or by calling Earl Lanning, 376-3600, High Cost of Living Hits Town Swim Pool Graduate studies in Sacred Scripture brought him back to Rome for two periods, 1934-37 and 1947-48. He matriculated at the Pontifical Biblical Institute from 1934 to WKKKfKKKtKtk -4937 ahd-wMawarde<r a re~— BiBlermtfimraeiCTTBB-^ ' Licentiate in Sacred Scrip- “New Catoolfo Encydo- tiue in 1986. in 193? he _ - pedia and toe ■ dsfr, stoctied in Jerusalem and _ Knowkedge’H and nmBer- ^m pu r aand toe te to x h fe # ^ trsnreled; t b r o ^ tHe4fo^77 - bB^ a ^ €ieB^ app>«tog^^ fiqin pfoa greater em phasis __Land and the Middle-East. the; •..“Hathohc Biblical ^Qukrterlv.” “Womhin.” and music. - , — ate toSaered Scripture at “America” and other jour- Bishop-Dougherty is;an the POntifical Biblical In- mJs:—• - - The cost of swimming - as has yirtually thc cost of -everytbing else —has gone up- * - ■ Family membership, in the municipal swimming pool this year will be $60 $10 more than last year^ and the first boost in rates since toe facility opened six years ago. In announcing the rate increase — partially at- tributable to the drop in ! .membership' during -the -4968 season — the Ilpani of Recreation Commis- sioners cited several inno- vations in the operation of thepool. The 1969 season will pool rind that additional play equipment will be available for youngsters. - Other features for the ,1969 season- -witl -b» -an afternoon swim period when only adults will be permitted within toe pool, and the-, sale of cookies, crackers and similar snack- items. ; Application forms for 1969 membership were hemgmailed this week.' Aft application form is a lso - contained in an advertise- ment for-foe pool in this edition'..of The Item. Kelly, Heilman Primary Election Incumbents Wiffiam-0r" Heilman and John T. Kelly Jr. are regaaded hy most local pohticalZohteiverfns favorites in Tuesday’s pri- -marv election which will determine what two men isptesent the Republican ^ November Towntofo Committee elec- tiori. The two incumbents are being challenged to the G. 0 . P. primary by Ralph G: Edwards. Both Mr. Heilman and Mr.-Kelly received the en- doresements of civic asso- ciations .during- the past week. The Board of Gov- ernors .of the South Moun- tain C iv il Association, which a week ago- an- nounced its backing of Mr. Kelly. todavZsaid-.it was also endorsing Mr. Heil- man: Alfo reported today Was the support of Mr- Heilman ana Mr. Kelly by the Council of the Wyo- mirig Civic Association. Mr. Edwards tost week -was endorsed b y ' the Cfouncil of the Short Hills Assoctotionandthis-week Election Results -At Renr Office ..... The-ftenr--office-wfll' be open Tuesday night, June 3, to \report toe outcome of toe 3-way race being waged by William O. Heilman, John T. Kelly Jr. and Ralph G. Edwards for two Republican Party nominations for seats, on the Township Com- mittee. Residents are in- vited to call The Item, 376-1200; for toe elec- tion results. Partial re- turns are anticipated by 9pjri. received toe support of the Millburn<-Short- Hills _ Young—Republican Club. In its announcement to- day, toe Wyoming organi- —zatiftn emphasfzed, as .did. * the Short Hills Council tost week, that ^ endorsement was confined to the pri- mary election and that it . might back other candi- - datesrte toe genial elec-" tion to November - 7 -,(Jther Township Com- mittee carididate8are Don- ald M. Mintz, who is un- challenged in-tbe-Demo— cratic primary, and Eva S. Auchincloss and Richard . L, Amster. Mrs. Auchin- . closs and Mr. Amster have filed petitions of candi- dacy as independents and thus their names will not . ^appear on Tuesday’s pri- . mary ballots. Tn a statement issued _ _ today, the,. South Moun— tain Board of Governors stod jt-had reviewed the recbid« and statements Of ad ” the candidates and went- on to emphasize Mr. - Heilman’s record as a for- (Continued on Page 4) ODD M AN O UT- Ralph G. Edwards (left), John T. Kelly Jr. (center) and W illiam O. Heilman are the three Republican Candidates vying' for two <S.O.P. nominations for seats on the Township Committee. Polls at Tuesday's prim ary election w ill be open from Torn. to8p.m FewSurprises at GOPDebate waOable for the utet tone; Church ,..,.;i.....23 in addition- there will be Classified ....Zg8,29,30 additional standard-chairs, * Coming Events .23 tables and um^ hpain the Editorials,,....... r.....—B —pool compoundrTte com- ~ Mcytos ,., ........J2&- missioners also report that —- Ohitaiartes~.r.7.T.:.....:...33 —kAhwi -“G m ^ a 4 • ? - OA OR - Pi practice board under construction at (he Inside Tiie Item llports .... .24,25 Lastr week!s_ debate in- volving the three Republi- can candidates for two G.O.P. nominations as; Township Committeemen provided feW surprisesTor the 60; persons who at- - —tended the Republican Club-sponsored meeting. Incumbents William O. Heilman-arid John T. Kelly fe ^based most of their remarks - on the accom- plighmont.R nf the Town- . toip Committee during toe past d^cadeziwhfle chal- lenger Ralph G. Edwards^ reiterated his past calls for J better planning on the part - of the-teunicipality’s gov- erning body. On several oecasicms - during the course of toe hour-long session, Mr. E d - - wards criticized toe Com- mittee for failing to adopt, other than minor zoning changes, any recammenda- tioas -contained- in- the Kendree report-a 1964 document prepared by plartoing consultants-who-, had been retained by toe Township Committee. The candidate,’ howevar, re- fused on. at least two oe> casions to Specify which' - recommendations he would like to see adopted. Mr. Edwards was ques- tioned by'both a former Township Committee can- didate, Mrs. Gloria Con- char, as well as: by an incumbent Committee-' man, William R ftatw, rp- came near the close of the -meeting, "the candidate said_ lack of time pro- hibited a d etiutod-answer, but he would be glad to discuss toe matter to detail following the meeting. In rCTaarks delivered eailier to the meeting, Mr. Edwards stated “the -Kendree report can’t be to ta lly _ ignored .. , we haven’t Taken the first step ... only leadership from toe Township Com- ‘ mittee eah bring about-a ' Scelifiing b?-ti»e buriness center r.-. we must start somewhere in implement- ing an orderly plan which, goes somewhere.” _ “7 garding specifics of toe _Ken<&ee r epOrt.- ^ : •; ..... No .First Stq> To Mti Conchar Mr. — Edwards replied no report taepared J wriSreyBr^ - ie r it o e ly ‘^whfle to Mr. Gerq’s question, ' which Mr. Edwards charged that “a certain amount of stagnation has crept into" - (toe towntoip’sj admini- stration (and) thatjhere is ... . a ' tendency “to look at ” where ive’ve been instead of where we’re going.” - r z^*I don’t believe^m axes being high,” toe Township Committee hopeful con- tinued, “but 4 don’t be- , lieve in postponing actions to. keep themr artifically 2 low.*’ - The closest thing to an actual . .debate dunng toe iheeBug occurred regard- ing statements on toe East Orange water reserve land and toe proposedeite for a new municipal Horary. While Mr. Edvards tdoF ” . the occflsioiL-QfJhfl^jmeefe . tog to repeat his suffiestion . that this municipality ac- quire the East Orange land and described such an ac- .......... best tovtetmehte jre could _ make7”^ l r t Relfy said toe ^ City of East Orange had - absolutely no intention of selling- the property, that Millburn Township in 1964 offered to purchase the. East Orange Gqlf Course and presently holds the right of first refusal in - _the-£yerit toe course is ever__ offered for sale.' . - NewLlbrary ; The subject of ~toe neW " library site arote when toe incumbents were ques- tioned a s t o t o e ^ fiiture_ purposes , of the existing ponce department mid li- brary facilities. *-— -— ... Mr. Kelly, the first re* B ondent, noted that - >wn Hall personnel__ -would.' be occupying tiie — S 'on of the municipal ___ tog now being used < by. the polide department and that no decision had been reached on the future use~ef the library building, ^Tb the renmita of his running-mate, Mr. Heilman added that he “llked” the . kite ofl the proposed 1L- . brary, but “whether or not* we-go through (with the -proposal)-;! just don’t know.” 1. Mr. - Edwards immerii. - ately charged that the “li; _ braty situation” is Being decided “on toe basis of ' expediency-we may gefcit or-we may not get iteit is ; . time we made up our—^ minds if we’re going( to. build 'a Mbrary-it is time - we had a coordinated plan of attack.” ^ As far as the Rep^fean Party, ittelf, was con- - cerned .to e m eetingcloseti- on a harmonious note as -jMctt of tbe thteb tatodfe dates pl^gbd hiF sup^ort for tiie 4wo winners m the JuneB primary.

Transcript of Primary Election - DigiFind-It

O f M I L L B U R N a n d S H O R T H I L L SPOUNDED 1888 VoL 81, No. 2 Published Every Thursday May 29,; Second Class Postage Paid at Millbum, N. J. FIFTEEN CENTS ,

Bid onSchoolBus Contract Up 50%

The Board of Education ., accepted one bid for the

= transportation of students in* th e school yea r

--4969-70 , - rejected^tw o : other -hkls atfd'^heW- -"ff" fourth bid for further-eon-

~ ^deration at* its meeting Monday night in the Edu- (sition C e n te r s - - — :

— - Fallowing - the recom- mendation of the New Jer­sey Department of Educa- - tion. the School Board this

—year "ha d advertised-four- separate contracts for bus trahspoftetioir“tnsteEEi~ of " one overall document; ~ r - :

— The bid submitted by - the Beim Bus Company, in die amount of $121,440, for- the transportation of_ students to th e Township’s . public schools 7. plus the Short Hills Country Day

...School was not acted op;, by the board at " Monday night’s meetingr pending further discussion with the

: state’s Department of Edu­cation.

Roy.H. Taylor, assistant superintendent of adminis-

— trative services, explained die total amount o f the

—bid was 50 per cent higher ,Jthan^ tee^$84,Q 00—the -

Township was presently paying. On Tuesday Mr. Taylor said the school -

__.board will confer with, state officials on what ac-

. don to take in the matter.Reject Two

M onday n ig h t th e school boafd accepted the " bid of the Martucci Bus Companyr at -the rate of $33.30 per day, to bus

\ students to Newark Acad­emy. The board then te-

S'e te d the J>ids of the apiewood School Trans—=

portation, - at $18 per day, to bus students to Far ‘ Brook School, and the Blue Diamond Line, at $135 per day, to transport students to Kent Place, Oratory I and Oak Knoll schools in Summit. s ;w

. The bo ard . rejected those bids because the

total in - both cases ex- _ jeeded-the "per pupil final— . of $150 per year'"which die schools may expend

. u n d e r - , state.—law, Ac? - '"cording to the Maplewood r j ic h o e l 1 Transportation’s

bid, ^ n p u p 2 - fee for a yem-woula be $228 and in - the Blue Diamond Line’s bid, the feewooM-be$49-T-

- per year.- Changes in the. state

busing law,. enacted by tlte- legislature las4spmg,Timit—

the expenditure for trans­portation ~to a private

- school by ft local-school - district to $150 per pupil.

. When the Board of Educa­tion is unable to contract for transportation within this amount The parent is then responsible for ar- rangtog transportation.

” In Parent’s Hands According to Mr. Tay­

lor, a review of the costs indicates the school board can expect no reduction in the current year. Mr. Tay- lor said he is writing to die parents o f all children needing t ransportation to

~ inform them to make the ^necessary arrangement.

Reimbursement from . the school board to par­ents of private school stu- - dents is based on the cost oftheavailablepubliceon- veyances. In no case, em­phasized Mr. Taylor, may the cost exceed $150.

The school board also approved n ew teacher ap-

M i tm e n ts . fo r th e -70 school year at

Monday night’s meeting. Nils O. Ohlson, who ab­stained from voting on the measure, said he opposed T heboard^aetieh-ofopre-- viously announcing to the public that the average salary for teachers would be $8,500 in light Of the fact that the average salary for the new teachers was $9,700. Mr. Ohlson also

__indicated he still objected .

IContlnuad on Page 2)

_____ _______ Z (8iCKi.Ea PtwwnaBwtiriia) -FAM ILIAR POSE - Photographs o f local students making contributions to ' im rfoy causes ■ appear often these days as Township youngsters assume more and more responsib ility toward

• society. Here Steve Sobol, eighth grade president a t M illburn Jun ior High School, presents a_ check to A lan M ille r, state president jo ltheJVew Jersey Association for Brain in jured Children.Monies were raised by a student-faculty basketball game, cake sale, dance, a movie fa ir arid a

s)giant ja r fo r pennies in the school ca feteria ........

State Gives OK on Traffic LightInstallation of a traffic

light al the intersection of Parsonage Hill Road and

l Hartshorn Drive has been • approved by the state, The *

. ^tem learned on Tugsday.The approval was-given

to a plan designed by' the office of Essex County Engineer AFrancis P. Mc­Cormick early this year which provides for recon­struction ofTarsonagoHifi Road to a width of .ap­proximately 36-feet in the w iein lty of^H artshorn Drive. With the exception .of the installation of some curbing along Hartshorn * Drive and increasing the ; radius of the southwest

~ comer o f the intersection _ from 25 to 30-feet, there- will be no chtmges takings place on Hartshdm Drive.

Both Hartshorn Drive and Parsonage Hill Road are now approximately 25-feet wide.

The state last year had _. suggested a number of ah

temativeg for improving

toe intersection which has been the scene of numer-. ous accidents. These in­

c lu d e d th e - immediate widening at Parsonage.HiL_ Road to 5Q-_feg| with pro­visions for further widen* ing to 72-feet, the con­struction bf a barrier down- the center of Parsonage Hill Road and the widen-

■ t ing of. both Parsonage HillRoad “and Hartshorn Drive to 4.6-feet.

All toe state plansTiad - been termed “completely unacceptable and unrealii-

' tic” by Mr. McCormick.No date is given by the

state as to when the actual■ installation of the Hgfo

will take place. ; :

Grade School Summer Classes Open June 25

A t St. Rose

BishopDougherty Named PastorB ishopJohnJrD ougfo

erty, president of Seton • HaU Umvewity,; has re-" signed his post at toe South Orange institution . ,

-and- will-become Pastor of- St, RosftofL im a Church.- -

Bishop Dougherty’s res­ignation is effective Jurie

- 8. In his- post here he is— succeeding Msgr. John F. Ryan who retired in April after, serving 24 years as pastor of St. Rose. The appointmetft-. of — Bishop - Doiigherty tb the St. Rose pastorate Was .announced by the Most Rev, Thomas

. Boland, Archbishop of Newark. -

Bishop Dougherty was appointed president of Seton Hall on December 1 , : 1959. In his statement of resignation to the univer­sity’s board of trustees, he said that his duties as Auxiliary Bishop of New­ark as well as his increasing— responsibilities to -the Na­tional Conference of Cath­olic Bishops “have become too burdensome for one m an to continue to bear.” .

Exceptional Growth . During his tenure as

Seton Hall president, Bish­op Dougherty, who is 62, guided the. university to exceptional growth includ­ing toe construction of more than $13-milfion in new facilities, the initi­ation of new Curricula, the

• establishmgnt Tr f - r - e o tF - ptiter center jn d m i^um , the transition to. coeduca­tion on the South Orange

Bishop John J. Dougherty alumnus o f SetoiT Hall,

"where he received his bachelor o f arts degree in ' 1930. He was sent to the

— North American College in ■"Rome in the faU of 1930. Theological studies were completed in the Greg­orian University in: the_ Eternal City, from which he received toe Licentiate in Sacred Theeiogy^m

. 1934. He was ordained a . priest in Rome on July 2&.'

stitute in 1948.From 1937-1947 and

th e - years subsequent to - 1948, he was professor of Sacred Scriptfire at Im­m acu la te C o n C e p tio n . Seminary, -Darlington. He also, served (1953-59)-as Regent of the Judaeo*_< C h ris tigrp -lnstitute of’ SetomHaflUniversity.

Radio and TV—S-The Bishop’s 1 A dsentz

talks on the Catholic hour —in 1946 marked thebegin*—

ning of a long engagement _ in radio and television. He

maugurated the Catholic r Hour television program at

NBC in 1951, -arid- ap­peared in many CBS tele- vision programs, as well as

.on other networks. In 1957,: Bishop Dougherty went abroad—With—the NBC-NCCM team to super- vise tiie filming of the

* aw -ard-w inning docu- : mentary ‘cRome Etarnal.”! — 4 r n 9 o 2 , Qie same team filmed on the sites of the Ecumenical Councils of _

- toe Church in preparation of the documentary on the Councflrtitled “I Am With Yoiji” -

B ishop -D ougherty’s— scholarly work includes: tiie translation of the Book of Deuteronomy4br the Corifiratemity, Edition - _ of the Old Testament; au­thoring “Searching Scriptures’* (1959), a pop­ular introduction to the

- ~ F or the third successive— year a program of enrich* menteourBes and iBrorove- ment cd&fses wilToe of­fered to diildren o f rie- mentary school age. ■

The summer session. to be . offered- a t the -Gfen^-z

~:wbbd:SchbbU wTB ’biffiiK-- on Wednesday, June 25, and conclude Thursday, ^ly-ai^Sortrohspbrtation will he proyided. Registra-. - ' tiqn is by mail or in person from May 28 through June— 6. ■ -ft— 7 -. Several new enrichment

18 courses have been added this year. A course for

- children about to enter kfodergarten in’ Septem­ber,-as well as those com­pleting that grade this June will be offered in perceptual sensory motor training. It is designed to further develop large and small muscle-control; spe- cial orientation, and eye- - hand coordination, A sec­ond course in the develop-

...mea t of study skills wilDbe..given for students GOm- pleting grades 2 through 6.

C reative art, nature study, science, math en- richment, creative drama, advanced tumbling and in- - 8trumentah music for ad­vanced players and begin­

ners are examples of other -enrichm ent courses of­

fe red ^ A lt enrichment courses last'l"-hour and 5-minutes.

Improvement courses running 50 minutes—irr-

I length for children com-'- zp le tin g Ttradex th ree -,

through six and will be given in reading and math. • •C oordination improve- ment-y^-be-4waUable:fbr children in grades . two through six.

Class size is-limited to a minimum bf ten and a maximum-' of 15 for- all courses, with ..toe excep­tio n s o t instrumental music and reading im­provement.

Fees ate $30 per enrich- •ment course iand $15 per— improvement course and $7 weekly for beginning • and instrumentalists and $10 weekly for advanced

-players: Non-resident fees for all courses are slightly ~ higher.—Brochures with ..moredetailed" course descrip­tions, time schedules and reg istra tion forms are available at Gtenwood

-Scho o l , Taylor Road, Short Hills, or by calling Earl Lanning, 376-3600,

H igh Cost o f Living H its Town Swim Pool

G raduate studies in Sacred Scripture brought him back to Rome for two periods, 1934-37 and 1947-48. He matriculated at the Pontifical Biblical Institute from 1934 to WKKKfKKKtKtk

-4 9 37 ahd-wMawarde<r a re~— BiBlermtfim raeiCTTBB- ^ 'Licentiate in Sacred Scrip- “New Catoolfo Encydo- tiue in 1986. in 193? h e _ - pedia and toe ■ dsfr, stoctied in Jerusalem and _ Knowkedge’H and nmBer-

^ m p u r aand toe t e to x h f e # ^ trsnreled; t b r o ^ tHe4fo^77 - bB^ a ^ €ieB app>«tog^^fiqin pfoa greater em p h asis__Land and the Middle-East. the; •..“Hathohc Biblical

^Qukrterlv.” “Womhin.”

and music. - , — — ate toSaered Scripture at “America” and other jour-Bishop-Dougherty is;an the POntifical Biblical In- m Js:—• -

- The cost o f swimming - as has yirtually th c cost of

-everytbing else — has gone up- * - ■

Family membership, in the municipal swimming pool this year will be $60 — $10 more than last year and the first boost in rates since toe facility opened six years ago.

In announcing the rate increase — partially at­tributable to the d rop in

! .membership' during -the -4968 season — the Ilpani

of Recreation Commis­sioners cited several inno­vations in the operation of thepool.

The 1969 season will

pool rind that additional play equipment will be available for youngsters.- Other features for the ,1969 season- -witl -b» -an afternoon swim period when only adults will be permitted within toe pool, and the-, sale of cookies, crackers and similar snack- items. ;

Application forms for 1969 membership were hemgmailed this week.' Aft application form is a ls o - contained in an advertise­ment for-foe pool in this edition'..of The Item.

Kelly, Heilman

Primary ElectionIncumbents W iffiam-0r"

Heilman and John T. Kelly Jr. are regaaded hy most local pohticalZohteiverfns favorites in Tuesday’s pri- -marv election which will determine what two men isptesent the Republican

^ NovemberTowntofo Committee elec- tiori. The two incumbents are being challenged to the G. 0 . P. primary by Ralph G: Edwards.

Both Mr. Heilman and Mr.-Kelly received the en- doresements of civic asso­ciations .during- the past week. The Board of Gov­ernors .of the South Moun­ta in C iv i l Association, which a week ago- an­nounced its backing of Mr. Kelly. todavZsaid-.it was also endorsing Mr. Heil­man: Alfo reported today Was the support of Mr- Heilman ana Mr. Kelly by the Council of the Wyo- mirig Civic Association.

Mr. Edwards tost week

-w as endorsed b y ' the Cfouncil of the Short Hills Assoctotionandthis-week

Election Results -At Renr Office

..... The-ftenr--office-wfll'be open Tuesday night, June 3, to \report toe outcome of toe 3-way race being waged by William O. Heilman, John T. Kelly Jr. and Ralph G. Edwards for two Republican Party nominations for seats, on the Township Com­mittee. Residents are in­vited to call The Item, 376-1200; for toe elec­tion results. Partial re­turns are anticipated by 9pjri.

received toe support of the M illburn<-Short- H ills

_ Young—Republican Club. In its announcement to­

day, toe Wyoming organi-

—zatiftn emphasfzed, as .did. *the Short Hills Council tost week, that ^ endorsement was confined to the pri­mary election and that it

. might back other candi- - datesrte toe gen ia l elec-" tion to November -

7 -,(Jther Township Com­mittee carididate8are Don­ald M . Mintz, who is un­challenged in-tbe-D em o— cratic primary, and Eva S. Auchincloss and Richard

. L, Amster. Mrs. Auchin- . closs and Mr. Amster have filed petitions of candi­dacy as independents and thus their names will not

. ^appear on Tuesday’s pri- . mary ballots.

Tn a statement issued _ _ today, the,. South Moun—

tain Board of Governors stod j t-h a d reviewed the recbid« and statements Of ad ” th e candidates and went- on to emphasize Mr. - Heilman’s record as a for-

(Continued on Page 4)

ODD M AN O U T - Ralph G. Edwards (le ft), John T. K e lly Jr. (center) and W illiam O. Heilman are the three Republican Candidates vying' for two <S.O.P. nom inations fo r seats on the Township Com mittee. Po lls a t Tuesday's prim ary election w ill be open from Torn . to8p .m

Few Surprises at GOP Debate

waOable for the u te t tone; Church ,..,.;i.....23in addition- there will be Classified ....Zg 8 ,2 9 ,30additional standard-chairs, * Coming Events .23tables and um^ hpain the Editorials,,.......r.....— B

—pool com poundrTte com- ~ Mcytos ,., . . . . . ...J2&-missioners also report that —- Ohitaiartes~.r.7.T.:.....:...33

— k Ahwi -“G m ^ a4 • ? - OA OR -P i practice board under construction a t (he

Inside Tiie Item

l lp o r ts .... .24,25

Lastr week!s_ debate in­volving the three Republi­can candidates for two G.O.P. nominations as; Township Committeemen provided feW surprisesTor the 60; persons who at- -

—tended the Republican Club-sponsored meeting.

Incumbents William O. Heilman-arid John T. Kelly f e based most of their remarks - on the accom- plighmont.R nf the Town- . toip Committee during toe past d^cadeziwhfle chal­lenger Ralph G. Edwards^ reiterated his past calls for J better planning on the part

- o f the-teunicipality’s gov­erning body.

On several oecasicms - during the course of toe hour-long session, Mr. E d - - wards criticized toe Com­mittee for failing to adopt, • other than minor zoning changes, any recammenda- tioas -c o n tained- in- the Kendree report-a 1964 document prepared by plartoing consultants-who-, had been retained by toe Township Committee. The candidate,’ howevar, re­fused on. at least two oe> casions to Specify which'

- re c o m m e n d a tio n s he would like to see adopted.

Mr. Edwards was ques­tioned by 'b o th a former Township Committee can­didate, Mrs. Gloria Con- char, as well as: by an in cu m b en t Committee-' man, William R ftatw, rp-

came near the close of the -meeting, " the candidate said_ lack of time pro- hibited a d etiutod-answer, but he would be glad to discuss toe matter to detail following the meeting.

In rCTaarks delivered eailier to the meeting, Mr. Edwards stated “the

-Kendree report can’t be t o t a l l y _ ignored . . , we haven’t Taken th e first s tep . . . only leadership from toe Township Com- ‘ mittee eah bring about-a ' Scelifiing b?-ti»e buriness center r.-. we must start somewhere in implement­ing an orderly plan which, goes somewhere.” _ “ 7

garding specifics o f toe _Ken<&ee r epOrt.- ^ :•; . . . . . No .First Stq>

To M ti Conchar Mr.— Edwards replied no report

taepared JwriSreyBr^

- ie ritoe ly ‘ whfle to Mr.Gerq’s question, ' which

Mr. Edwards charged that “a certain amount of stagnation has crept into" - (toe towntoip’sj admini- stration (and) thatjhere is ...

. a ' tendency “to look at ” where ive’ve been instead o f where we’re going.” -

r z^*I don’t believe^m axes being high,” toe Township Committee hopeful con­

tinued , “ but 4 don’t be- , lieve in postponing actions to. keep themr artif ically

2 low.*’- The closest thing to an actual . .debate dunng toe iheeBug occurred regard­ing statements on toe East Orange water reserve land and toe proposedeite for a new municipal Horary.

‘ While Mr. Edvards td o F ” . the occflsioiL-QfJhfl jmeefe .

tog to repeat his suffiestion . that this municipality ac­

quire the East Orange landand described such an ac-

..........best tovtetmehte jre could _ make7”^ l r t Relfy said toe ^ City of East Orange had -

absolutely no intention of selling- the property, that M illburn Township in 1964 offered to purchase the. East Orange Gqlf Course and presently holds the right of first refusal in -

_the-£yerit toe course is ever__offered for sale.' . -

NewLlbrary; The subject of ~toe neW " library site arote when toe incumbents were ques­tioned a s t o t o e ^ fiiture_purposes , o f the existing ponce department mid li­brary facilities. *-— -—

... Mr. Kelly, the first re*

Bon d en t, noted that ->wn Hall personnel__

-would.' be occupying tiie —

S 'on of the municipal___ tog now being used <

by. the polide department and that no decision had been reached on the futureuse~ef the library building,

^Tb the renmita of his running-mate, Mr. Heilman added that he “llked” the

. kite o fl the proposed 1L- . brary, but “whether or not* we-go through (with the -proposal)-;! just don’t know.” 1.

Mr. - Edw ards immerii. - ately charged that the “li; _ braty situation” is Being decided “on toe basis of ' expediency-we may gefcit or-we may not get iteit is ;

. time we made up our— minds if we’re going( to. build 'a Mbrary-it is time - we had a coordinated plan of attack.” ^

As far as the R e p ^ fe a n Party, ittelf, was con-

- cerned .to e m eetin g closeti- on a harmonious note as

- jMctt of tbe thteb tatodfe dates pl^gbd hiF sup^ort for tiie 4wo winners m the JuneB primary.

THE ITEM of MillbUm ond Short-Hills. N. J. Thursday. Mov 29, 1969This is the foundation of ttye American democratic process and your vote is too valuable to be wasted.

Additional copies of Tha Itam

Edwards Cites Reasons Tor Being CandidateChurchill Scholarship For Hardin 1he Township Committee would benefit the commu­nity' and improve the oper­ations of tine Committee itself. 1 „ .

“Finally, I urge every qualified voter to exercise his franchise on June 3.

meal solutions to overall problems. I . believe that th e . citizens of die Town­ship should be consulted oh important matters af- fecting them and derisions made only after full con­sideration. If elected, I will be ready and willing to participate hi discussions with any groups or indi­viduals who have bona fide issues in which the Town­ship is involved.

“I neither know nor have any obligation to any

Kditical figures outside illbum Township. - If

nominated and elected my only concerns would be to promote the good of tee Township ana to further' the interests of its citizens.

Xfeel most sincerely that a ' change in th e long-

a dynamic and forceful new viewpoint to the com­mittee, which has not had a new member fo r nine years.

“In statements in The Item hod at public meet­ings during the past several weeks, I have tried to promote discussion of the opportunities and prob­lems our community faces and my philosophy for dealing with them. I feel teat this is essentially a community of one-family' homes and it should stay that way. There should be no encroachment of indus- try on residential areas. Qur long-existing problems of parking for commuters, shoppers and the mer­chants should be dealt with promptly and con­

structively, using already available areas to the maxi­mum extent.

‘‘E ffo rts should be made to get more of the tax money we give to Essex County returned to us in the form of improved maintenance of county roads and 'other county facilities in this Township. Economy mid efficiency in local government should

* be rigidly adhered to and c a p i t a l ex p en d itu res should be planned and carried out on a long-range basis. I am no stranger to budget planning. My busi­ness training has involved strict budgetary discipline and I feel that no less should be expected oflocalgovemmenL ----------

“I am opposed topiece-

Ralph 0. Edwards, can- * didate fo rth e Republican Party nomination to the Township Committee, out­lined his qualifications for office ana his reasons for

H a candidate in his statement issued

prior toTuesday’sprimary election. Mr, Edwards’ statement follows.

“The important ^issues in the primary election on June 3 is to nominate candidates fo r Township Committee with the most ability to serve the citizens o f m e Towndiip. The friends who encouraged me to become a candidate felt that by education, training, personal interest and experience both in business and as a public, officeholder, I could bring

W inston Churchill, are similar to the Rhodes hon­o r ing an o th e r British prime minister, but are awarded just to those ex­celling in the physical sci­ences. About 35 selected colleges and universities ten this country are invited to submit as nominees their top . student in this cate­gory, and from this nu­cleus 12 are named as the Churchill Scholars Har­vard is the one institution allowed two nominees, and this year both candi­dates were successful.

Douglas has been of­fered other fellowships, grants and teaching assist- antships at Yale, Berkeley and at Cambridge, for fur­ther academic work in his field of concentration, quantum chemistry. From among them he has now made final choice of the Churchill. “

lie is a 1965 graduate of the Pingxy School arid will receive his Harvard degree on June 12. Hb varied extracurricular achieve­ments as. an undergradu-

- A Churchill Scholarship for three year? of doctoral study at Cambridge Uni­versity, England, has now been awarded Douglas Hardin, son o f Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hardin o f 6 North Beechcroft Road. The Churchill committee alqp informed the gradu­ating Harvard senior that he was “among the first five in the United States to be selected” for the pro­gram.

The scholarships, estab­lished in memory o f Sir

the Townahip. Back cop approx)ma tel y ' one-yei avallablaat Tha Itam office.

R E A LTO R S

ONE SHORT HILLS AVE., SHORT HILLS

T«i 376-0936Residential

Front Business Cards i to Catalogues MILLBURN-SHORT HILLS

PRESS formerly

TH E ITEM PRESS

PRINTINGto Main St., Millburn

Rhone 376-4800 ~

LISTING Short Hills and VicinitySERVICE

____ D ouglas Hardin

ate;- in music -as concert cellist and cambist,Xutoin^ sports highlighted this past su m m er Tiy his qualmca - tibn ufr an Olympitrcandi- date, have been jepoffed

First Marshall o f the Har­vard Class of 1969;~lftttos capacitydwTs presently in charger of- to e many com­mencement activities. He presided airthe reefent Sen- _ ior "Dinrier at which Wil­liam Sloan- Coffin spoke. Upon graduation, liaison between class and uniter-'

-sity will be his-eontinuing responsibility. v ~ t ’ X-

that lets you live a little?BifflOTTSSCBSORIESTOR' MEN '

(Continued from Page 1)

to the closing of five of th e seven elementary school libraries^ during the summer months.

— Library Policies —Another board member.

Dr. Jerome Horowitz, said the new appointments, in most—cases, were replace- inents for retiring teachers ancT "teachfer^ who" Were leaving the—Township’s system. Dr. Horowitz ex­plained that many b fw ie new teachers’ salaries were equal to or less than the salaries of those teachers they were replacing.

On the topic of school*- libraries, assistant superin-

Tehdent o f schools Dr: Gerald F. O’Mafley said all elementary school libraries

' would be open on the first day of school J i) Septem­ber and Glenwood Sehool- and* Washington School li- brariesw ould remaintopen d u r in g th e sum m er months. Dr. O’Malley said the schools were also con­sidering a method X y

. which, students could bor­row books over tiie vacai- tion period and return ffieiam September.

‘FoppyWeek’In Township

Tomorrow’s Memorial Day observances will-mark the culmination of “ Poppy Week’L jn the Tdwnsmp. Representatives of the Womens Auxiliary o f Guy-: -R. Bosworth Post 140, American Legion, will be

-selling poppies at Taylor Park preceding the parade and along the parade route. The week of May 26 has been officially pro­claimed “Poppy Week” in M illburn Towggftip by Mayor Ralph F. Batch.

.Nowhere wilt see so much beautiful-men s jewelry so magnificently displayed os at Marsh. All the world s leading men's designers ore included io'OuTvQsrse lections.Moke Marsh your first stop for men's gifts. “ C7” '

. There's nothing wrong with ^plainupM'checkififaeeount. .Except that it’s just a plain old checking account.

~Chec-King is different. tMore than differen t...unique#

-Youwrite checks- same way you do npw. Butyou're not bound by------------your balance.

-Vdkrcanwriiecheeks for _ more thanvour balance

-anytime you need to:-WithouL -apuatm^Rtght-uptotheltrnit- of the stand-by. credit .

-you establish with us. . (From £500 to j»S500.) g

Plusarbtg^extra:— f —Yon get pur exclusive Check Guarantee Card.So you can cash vour JT; personal check fup-to $20Q)

Cat NationaiNewark offices * or at stores everywhere.Uve a little. You can. — - , h Witb'Chec-KfhgrATa ny of t>ur amiable offices;

Nowhere else.

f iNfcJEWf IK5 t SiiVEXSMiTHS SINCE 1908 Mittfeurn, New Jersey: 265 Millburn Avenue.

- Newgrk, New Jersey; 189 Market Street. - lec-ikinyfor you!

^ ™ “Nobody but nobodysells Quality like Suburban1

THURSDAY..assorted l a y ® $ I.i

CAKES _ $ 1.-MELT A W A Y RINGS ”

SATURDAY DOBASCH TORTE $1.

only at N A TIO N A Lh a r k s E s s e x

-Qftices conveniently located in fijoyauCFa^ Orange.-Waitowy ;

So, Mountain _Annual Meeting June4

T he South Mountain I will hold its annual meet- Estates Civic Association ing and election of officers

M U H O r U BONDSEXCLUSIVELY

Please send me your free booklet, “Municipal Bonds and

City, State, Z ip_ Telephoned,

Hanauer, Stem & Co.1110 Raymond Boulevard, Newark, New Jersey 07102 New Jersey 023-3233 New York Dlgby 9-2044

for the coming year on June 4 at the Youth Cen­ter in the Millbum Avenue School., The session wjUTie de­

voted to the topic of recre­ation .and a tour oft the building, which is the old Washington School, will be part of the program. The meeting begins at 8:30 p.m. and the public is in­vited. —

Speakers at the session will h e George Estes, chair- map.. o f the recreation commission, and Huber Gemmill, a member of the commission.

A t the session, the or­ganization will vote on the following date offered by the nomination commit­tee. Herman Balcoff, presi­dent; Joseph Rosenberg and Jack Kirsten, vice presidents; Stanley Hilson, secretary, and Norbert Gaelen, treasurer.

Hie Name of the Goipe

FUTTER'S shoes333 MILLBURN AVE. - J4H.LSURK

OPEN THURS. EVES. " S

AUTO LOANS

4 PER YEAR PER $100

34 MONTHS TO PAY

LOWEST RATE IN AREA

Amount Requited —

NoteAmount ™

MontMy -Royiiiiaf ~~

$1,0001.500w oo2.500 3,000 3^00

$1,135.521,704.602,272.682,841.123,409^03.977i4

$31.57 47.35 6113

_ 78.fi 94.70

110.49

Used Can Also Financed Aflow Rates

BANKING HOURS- “ VMonday thru Friday-8:30 A.M. to 3:00 ?M.

Walk-up Window-3:00 P.M. to 5:00 P.M.

Saturday • 10:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.

Millbum-Short HillsDeposits Insured Up To $15,000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Suburbs Role inUrban Crisis TopicofM eetiug

THE ITEM of Millbum ond Short Hills. N. J. Thursdoy. Mov 29 1969 Pope 3

Memorial DayParade Begins at Taylor Park

A prize will be awarded for- the best decorated bi­cycle in the Memorial Day parade which will be held tomorrow following 9:15 a.m. services -at Taylor Park-. As in past years the parade will be combined with Springfield.

The American Legion,, the Fire Department ana the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts will assemble for the services at. the Whitr tingham Terrace entrance

. to 4he-park. The Millbum High School band and Anderson’s Band will fur­nish-the music.

The parade will proceed

from Taylor Park when the Springfield contingent arrives and march to the two Millbum Avenue cem­eteries. The Springfield delegation will go" to the Saink Rose Cemetery and Township paraders will go to Saint Stephen’s where services will be held.

The parade will then proceed through Spring- field and return to Mill- bum by way p f Main Street.—

AB bikes, grouped at the end of the parade, will be judged along the route of march. All bikes must be. in this group to -b e

Members-- bf~ Millburh Township Target Educa­tion hope for a large tum - out for their open meeting " te g probrT e m s ^ laeanMgfqtjtocal amTurban education, John- T5. Gibbons, meeting; chair­man, said to d ay r ~

t5 u s ta v Heningburg,. president- o f the Greater Newark Urban Coalitkav w-iH-—be the featured speaker a t the gathering scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Taylor Park Recreation Center: His topic asks the question: “ Does the an= swer-tirthe-orban crisis h e- in the suburbs?”_ Mr. Heningburgr a resi­dent of Maplewood, has been president of the Greater Newark Urban co­alition since its inception early last year.• Earlier, he had been p ro m in en tly . identified with the NAACP -Legal Defense and Education Fund and the United

[Negro College Fund.. He Js also a graduate of Hampton' Institute and served a k y years v as -am Army officer. -

‘Quality of education,” said Mr. Gibbons, “is a key factor in our current racial .crisis. Education is the cornerstone in our efforts to improve understanding

^amojig thezdiffetent seg-_ ments of our society. We believe that mom effective

Jeducatioo-^dan " -alleviate tensions between- blacks and whites and prepare the disadvantaged in'1 our cities for a constructive .role in society. -

'“We- 'believe- t h at sub- urban communities must

- become active in solving th ese p ro b lem s,” he added.

Mr. Gibbons, a Towm ship-^eadent, is-a-partner;

-oi th e law firm of -G ru m m y ^^ jih b&Bs^Aad. O’Neil. He is a past presi­dent of the New Jersey BarA ssn. and served as a member of Goy. Hughes’ Select Commission of Civil Disorders.

Millburh"Township Tar­get Education seeks to at­tract a broad base of par­ticipation of Township res­idents -interested in broad­ening the educational base of th e community:

There is-no fund-raising involved in the organiza­tion.c~-Its statement of purpose says that the organization will “strive to achieve understanding among our residents that:— :— —, "G iv e n ' present' tax structures, our cities can­not be viable self-support­ing financial entities;.^.. “C ity schoolsr to attain

quality education, there- fere-need more outside s&ianeialassistanee— fed­eral, state, and private;

“There is a close rela­tionship of _the city and the suburbs which makes

4t~in our own best interests i provide such assistance,

- - - - - - -“We should therefore

tell our legislative repre* sedatives that we support

E X P E R T 5-DAY W ATCH REPAIR

Rlus these other services ;~ Silver replated

• 'Beads restrung ~ Rings sized Shoe bronzing * Watch bands Crystals replaced

We are also an authorized Timex8 vijatch repair center. Jeyrejry and Watch Repair, — __1st P leat- T-.

^ S T K T L L 3 3 7 0 T ra n

measures to _ increase the a m o u n to f^ 7 ^ lihce.’’ 7 ° y - - '' ' The organization's state­ment also en courages:- im; elusion in the Millbum

=pOTE-s<S w T ^ im cu E m and : in the Township lf- tirary ' o f “more material relevant to. understanding poverty, prejudice,- and theproblems of our cities. ”__

It -asks^J^Can, ouik-ihik dren be triily; educated "if we isolate them from r con­temporary realities?” .

Ted Lowy May Send YotrUp TheStreet!

" - y ot^everyone who is - in ^ e rnarkfit for jewelry diould go “to Ted Lowy. There is~a warmth and charmto the worieth^comfls^put^

isn Tju st fo r g e ry shopper! So, if after you have visited fe d and have

-useen^the - personalized pride that go^ in tsjT!•wcfi-lwm^aroited^-eroatiert at Ted Lowyk * --?

~ Maybe Ted -Lowy will terid y o au p th e sfreet. - They have some nice work too.

designer jewelry, leather •'

4 SOUTH O R AN G E AVENUE

sBgitoteforjudgingr

following the parade members of Cub Scout Pick 16 will hold aspecial ceremony at Slayton Field

in npfflorif of the late Kenneth R. Pickett. A park bench wffl be do­nated to die Township in the name of Mr. Pickett^ who died—hut year.

©BMWCar and Driver calk this newest BMW “the meet spectacular bargain in the entire spectrum of imported can!” Road and Track calls it one o f the seven best-made cars in the world. YouH call it unbelievable. A cruising speed of 100 mph. Up to 30 miles to a gallon of p i . Fantastic toad-hoklinp. And more. That’s the latest from Germany’s famed Bavarian Motor Works, where racing

.victories are a 50-year tradition. Recent BMW triumphs include winning the last three races in s row at Spl Francorchamps in. Belgium. This annuil 24-hour race is the world’s most Important event for touring cars. For the driving thrill of ydur life, drive this new BMW tdday! ------

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"Match or blend colors in velvet sheared cotton towels and equally vivid shower and window eurtains.-ehoose- Jblue, green and lavender, or pink andurange, each com-. : bination on white.-fly-Fieldcrest -7-Bath towel 24X44", *2.0(LHancl towel 16x26,,, 1.40: Wash cloth laxTS” , ,60. __ Shovver- e iM prinfeToh sheer Fortrel <*- polyester, plain VinyHiner, standard size, 12.00. Window curtain' Witfiffe back, each panel 32x54", pair 12:00. BathShQfr-foMFflobr.

SALE .

2 5 % off regular prices

t t Srchojces: dowrumd feather pillows by Purofied, with ==Tanadown ®' “process, machine washable and dryablef

odorress," dust free; or fluffy rKodel" ® Ijoiyesterr^Dr 1 buoyant fmex |oam,‘ .

Golden Dreams babppillow: European white goose down, gold-color cotton ticking. ‘ For crib or boudoir,

.42x16" finished size. Reg. 6.00 now 4.50

—Golden Dreams: soft white Mark tV Kodei ® polyester - ' fUJjng ,n o n-a 11 er ge nic. Gold polQttoses on whjtecottoff ?

ticking^ 21x I P finished size. Reg. 7.00 now 5.00

— Golden Breadsgoose down, b0% European white goose'feathers. Gold and white stripedrcoflon ticking, 21x27" finished size, e~ Reg. 20.00 now 15.00

■ Gulden Ijlreams foam: molded latex foam, zippered cot- ~~ton <a se^gold-printeit o nation^urti ¥ i i zft 'R ^- row 6.00 . ' - ___ _________1___

luxullouiiy softT gold anekwhifelstriped cotton ticking. = ,21X27".finished size. Reg”. 23,00 now 17.00

Golden Dreams down bolster: plumped with European . -white-^osorfowm^oit^p^

~sizF20x3fr: I^30^now22.50 - - Bed pillows, fourth.floor

B ALIMAN & Ci5;."FiFTH AVENUE AT 34th,STBErr. (212) MU9-7000. AND WHITE PLAINS.JViANHASSeT

SHORT HIU3, RIDGEWOODiPAHAMUS,ST^SAVIDBr1-' g - - ~

Civic Group Has Meeting On Drags

T h e M o u n ta in to p Homeowners Civic Associ­ation held a general meet­ing last week on the topic of narcotics in the Town* ship’s public schools and, on the streets.

Dr. Charles T. King, su­perintendent of schools, a d d D etective Jo h n Gieson,"chief officer of the narcotics and juvenile de-

ship’s police department, w ere the Association’s guest speakers. A question and answer period fol­lowed tire presentations.

I t was generally decidedat the * meeting that the greatest responsibility for the well-being and behav­ior of teenagers rests with parents and jhati a greater effort on the jparrofHhe- parents to - observe and- communicate with their

"^hB Sra-w ouShea m ajor t e to r lft ^ffie cure or pre­vention o f a narcoties problem.

No Trash Collection On Memorial Bay

There will be no murii- cipal garbage collection to­morrow, Memorial Day. R^ffldenti-hamg^regular Friday' pieE-up wiH riave ” only one eouection this

■ week. -...»,1- - - - -

sc e e tin toVillager scooters

ELECTIO N DISTRICT N fAP-Residents may locate their voting d istric t by the use of this map. Po lls fo r Tuesday's prim ary election w ill be open from 7 am . to $ p.m Voting places are: D istrict 1, M iiiburn Avenue School (the "o ld " Washington SchoolI; D is tric t 2. Wyoming School; D istrict 3, Glenwood School; D istric t 4, White Oak R idge Park Recreation House;

D istric t 5, Deerfield School; D istrict 6, Wyoming School; D istrict 7 , South Mountain School; D istric t 8, Ju n ior High School; D istrict 9, Senidr High School; D istric t 10; South Mountain School; D istrict 11. Christ Church Day School; D istrict 12, D eerfie ld School; D istrict 13, HartshotnSchool; D istrict 14, Hartshorn School, and D istrict IS, Ju n io r High’School.

and see how you brighten up the scene. Cool cotton knits in several assorted stripes. Back zipped. Belted. 8-14. "11.00 With them a sleeveless mock turtle cotton knit top. S-M-L. 6.00. The Villager Corner, Tepper’s Third Floor, Plainfiddand Short Hills Mall.

Named HeadHealth Fund Makes Second Mail Appeal

T h e P r im a ry representatives of the New D em ocratic Coalition. While the Coalition has not fielded candidates in

Jd l_ a f- th e 15 Township election districts, a strong showing by its candidates on Tuesday could result in the ouster of Mrs. Marion Schaule^Democratic Party here,

77. A relatively heavy vote for a primary is anti­cipated on Tuesday. Re­publican voters will be se- lecting their partyVguber- natorial candidate from a field of five aspirants while Democratic voters will be making a similar decision from a field of six hope­fuls. In addition, voters of b o th ' p artie s %ilT be’ nam ing candidates for election to the state’s Gen- eral Assembly and to ar

-host of county offices plus selecting members of the state and local Republican and Democratic commit­tees.

Polls will be open from -7 am . -to -R-p an:-----------7

Supune?effect starting June 16 and continuing through Labor Day when the library will

.b e closed each Saturday. During this period the children’s room will no tbe open Monday nights, but

'-the rest o f the library will retiinit&regular schedule.

One of-the privilegeTof th e summer is the possibil- ity of borrowing books for part or all o f the summer. Readers may select books

Tronf=1he= =e h f ite adult departments for va­cation reading and such material is due to be re­lum ed by September 15.; Two-wceK 'books arid" books on required reading lists are excludedirom this privilege arid should be returned in the usual two o r 4*week period. • :

Nathan H. Wentworth o f 1 Shore Edge Lane has been narrii^ president of th e Continental Corpora-' tion, parent of the Con­tinental Insurance. Com­panies. Mr. Wentworth,

: rom erlyv ice chairman o f th e board, was also eleeted a member of the executive- committee.

In ' the insurance com­panies, Mr, Wentworth who serves as vice chair­man," was elected “to- that organization’s executive committee. . _

and the New Jersey Asso­ciation for Retarded Chil* »dren (Essex Unit). —

“While ^w r-are^ pleased- th a t io i l r S i t mailings throughout the Township has brought us about two- thirds the way to our 1969 goal, we ‘ are concerned that citizeri^participation as measured by the^tbtal

M em ber of contributors to the Health Fund appeal is tagging well behind last year's campaign. We are

^fapeful that tilis second piail appeal wul help us dose the gap between our present drive total and our goal for 1969,” Mr. Navinsaid. -----------------------—

Mr. Navin said an in­tensive follow-up drive by itetephbne will accompany the second mailing to the

: Townships, ......"

■_ A second appeal by mail is being made this week to all Township residents who have yet to con­tribute to the 1969 M01- bum-Short Hills Health Fund Drive.

John J. Navin of Wind­ing Way, general campaign chairman, announced that the drive total now stands at $40,510, or 68 per cent of the 1969 goal of

i$80$OO___ _____The amount received

represents gifts from 2,300 contributors. Nealy 7,000 families have been con­tacted by mail in the drive.

Grie Heilth Fund gift helps support the work and programs of five key health agencies. They are The Arthritis Foundation (New Jersey. _ Chapter), Cerebral PsJ^ - of Essex and" West Hudson, Essex County Heart Association, Iric„ Mental Health Associ­ation p f Essex County,

paulsen travel bureau201 -273-1313

parking in rearth e Wyoming Cbuncfi^ c i ted r‘their particular qualifications", including nine years of service, ex-

-perienee and achievement m Township affairs: their

-public statements m adeat the May 22 open meeting of the local Republican Club and * their statements recently published in The Item.

The Young Republican Club’s endorsement of Mr. Edwards stated - ‘his, at­tractiveness, articulateness

mfo-Treshnessw ill make him a W irt formidable- candidate to oppose the Independents ana Demo­crats in the General elec­tion.’-’—

While the Republican prim ary for Township Committee nominations, has captured most of the* local spotlight, Democratic voters also have their de­cisions to make olf the locallevelonTuesday.

The Regular D em ocratic Organization in the Town­ship is being challenged in several districts in the elec­tion for seats on the County Committee by

s e r v ic e _ _’ V '— TO INSURANCE BROKERS

Long Haul Malpractice Automobile Certificate*^

andC1^ 2 8Mti - -

H. R. FREESTON . — AGENCY------_____ _ Rat'd. 193S— _____

Z OUR FINEST j ADVERTISING:

8 customers telling - ■ others about us

Rutgers Professor

Awarded Fellowship—-An- assistant professor o f English a t Rutgers Uni­versity in Newark, Dr.

-Henxy^; ehristian o f 43 5W yoming__Avenue, .hasbeen awarded a fellowship fo r the 1969-70 academic year “by th e Rutgers Re- search Council.’ The fellowship program

was established m 1963 and makes i t possible for recipients to carry op te*~ searchandscholarshippro-

642-3131 1025 Broad St~ l» » friand planning a mova to dr

from Miiiburn Town«hip?Uivefriro_ ■ gift tubecription to The Item. .L i b r a r y d o s e d

T o m o i r o w ____The Miiiburn Public

Library will be closed on Memorial Day, May 30. The library will be open on its regular weekly schedule today and Satur-

B A N KB Y M A I L

new forever-prestTourney slaelc l3 .00

Haggar’s new dress slack___takes the golf course in _ great style . . . with a button-through extension _ waistband and fashionpockets. . r-and-the4R"-----comfort of wrinkle-resistant dacron polyester arid wool

^^colorsjafgold,----------blue, green .-sizes 32*46;-----Men’s Clothing, Tepper’s StreetFloor, Plainfield—- and Short Hills M a l l , ----

think cool and wear.a flowery voile

adresxt&fcelcool -- and feminine in with it's pretty burstingof blossoms. Designed to slenderize. Fully lined. Machine washable. Haveit thblue with pink and chartreuse blossoms, beige with gold and pink. Sizes 12-20, 12&2CH4.14.00 Casual Dresses, Tenor’s Third Fltor,Plainfield and Short Hills Mall.

Bank by mall andayt _5y<% on six- month certificatas with a minimum amount ot 110,000. and in multiples of STOoS. over this amount. On# yaarcfrrtitlcatea pay S% with mlnl- mum amount ot $5,000. and in mul­tiples of $1,000. Both certificates Qivfr you full dividends, paid quarter­ly. Regular savings accounts pay. 4W V ; with no minimum deposit re­quired. Your aavinga ara insured up to S15.000. Write today or c»n 243-1123. ‘ , " ■

S& 5

a?

THE ITEM of Millburn ond Short Hills, N. J. THucsdqy, May *.r, Ifror K.,

No Trash Collection On Memorial Day There will be no munic- Friday pick-up will

ipal garbage <^ltectk>n to- only one collection morrow, Memorial pay. week Residents having a regular

our Nataralizer spectators

are an aQtive group

, dashing alt over town in the greatest style. And alw ayrin that blissful N aturalirer comfort

L. to R. the Belmont in wipe cleaned grained

Corfam with mid heel. In b row n/w hite,

b lue/w hite, black patent and white. The

Cape Cod in grained Corfam with low broad heel

in brow n/w hite, b lue/w hite. The Bentley wiUi

low heel in calf in brow n/w hite, b lue/w hite,STORES CLOSED

NEW "SO N " - Park Bong Choon, an eleven-year-old Korean boy who lives w ith h is mother, two brothers and siste r in the slums o f Pusan, has been financia lly "adopted" by the Massey fam ily o f 30 Jeffenon Avem e through Foster Parents Plan Ine. The Masseys wil l eend $ t€ a month to help pay the foodL clothing , . medtod a n d e d u cationa l expenses -of-Park-Bong£ fam ily. _ .

TOMORROW, red /w hite , g rey Avhite, yellow /w hite. Each 19.99.ShoeSalon,Tepp€rV Str«et,Floor, P lainfieldPfEMORIAL DAY

Korean B oy ‘Adopted* B y M assey F am ily

Park Bong—Choon. an e le verr-y e ar<>id Korean boy, has been financially

radoptechtoy thcfam ily o f Mr. and—Mrs. Robert Massey of 30 Jefferson Avenue through Foster Parents Plan Inc.-----

Bong Choon’s father, crippled during the Korean

contracting' tuberculosis. His m otherpeddles fish, fruit and vegetables to earn about 48 cents a day. Bong Choon, his mother, , two brothers and a sister. Uve in a hut with a small

' room for cooking in th e i stums oTPugan. All mem- bers of the family are in poor physical condition because they lack suf­ficient nourishment. 1

The Foster Parents’ re- sponsibility is financial not legaFW d the child'r grows

lombia, Ecuador arid Peru. A child may be chosen

-aeeerdingr-to-eottgfey,- sex and age, and PLAff'Witl:

“Try hapd to meet the speci­fications. . Foster Parents^ Plan- is a non-sectarian, n o n -p ro fit, nonpropa­ganda,independent organi­zation. f“Adoptions” and cdfttribuBdns a¥e tax~de-“ ductible. For information write to Foster Parents - Plan, Inc., 352 Park Ave­nue South, New York,. N .Y .lO O ia.

NEW YORK" BERGEN COUNTY

FRESH MEADOWS NEW FTOCHELLE

SHORT HILLS STAMFORD

Nancy Greer’s in

the winner’s circle!T h r e e t o u t e d to w in a d m ir in g g la n c e s

for their cool good looks and great

wearability. L. to Rv Short sleeve m ulti

stripe dress of 100%TarneI triacetate g

. with white collar'and belt. 8-18.26.00..Rayon linen basic with jewel neck line. . .

Scarf tied beltr-Blue. Geld. 10-20.41.00 Black and navy polka dot sleeveless

sheath of arnel jersey. Link belt. 10-18. 2 1.00 Dresses. Tepper’s Third Floor,— i

Plainfield and Short Hills MallWE CAN HELP

WHEN ILLNESS HITS YOUR HOME

HOMEMAKERS

poflt 6 THE ITEM bfMiflbUfn and Short Hills. N. J. ' Thursday, 29/7969p s n

T H E & I T E MO f M IL L B U R N a n d S H O R T H I L L S

Editor AdwftiteBf DirectorIwtcrJ. Bennett . . . . . . WOlUra L. Annett

Adverting Minrgtr raid C. Scmffman

F L U S H I N G O U T T H f S Y S T E M

sod/ch*d.a*» ! % ! « < .* » . ___Eliubeth Pettig Gerald C.

w lun PiiMtttaf Co., tot, i oar-

County. J7.00. Entered u Second dm Hatter October «, ti l l ktba boat Office at Itaboni, Meat M rr under Act of Match 3,1179, and aecond dan

I

L

Jeney, 07041. Tefcpfcom (201)376-1200.

A Member .* ■of

Audit Bureau of CbcidatiamrOwdity Weeklies of New Jersey-New Jersey Press Association

The Republican Primary_ . With an eye to future planning and --fresh ideas abdutthei development-of

our community, we call upon the "^ipSBIEaBryotiers o f MiUbam Town*

ship to cast their ballots for Ralph G. - Edwards'and~~WilEam O. Heilman in thePnm aryElectionoh June 3. -

— We endprse the candidacy crihMr. Edwards because a t this particular moment his is the onljf voieewhich calls for new ideas, which gives evi­dence of a willingness to address itself

__to the problems which confront Mill-bum Township in 1969 and which is hot stifled by the missed opportuni­ties o f past years. ">V

MIHbum Township today enjoys a reputation as a community second to, none. But we must ask in all serious-' ness if this is a reputation that we

" presently deserve. Arewe not living in the glorie s o f th e past? We invite our readersto look with open eyes at our municipal" facilities' -our parks, our buildings-tp gaze upon the litter and die weeds which fine the curbs in many locations. Are these th e marksof a community which is second to___none? .

Th,e governing body of this commu­nity bas continually boasted of a low tax rate," but we must wonder ajs Mr Edwards wonders if this’ rate Ms not" 7 been kept artificially low. Have we postponed' too long those things which.an outstanding community can­not afford to postpone? Again, it 4s - time for a fresh look at our commu­nity and Mr. Edwards is the orily candidate in th e Republican Primary willing to take that fresh look.

B u t twuEhQ .P. nominations are to be filled through Tuesday’s balloting -

“ E o rs fe e s econdEeput^ieannomina-^ tiori we recommend William O. WelF"' man to toe par i^ o te re .-:^ :

—. We make -this endorsement with.^ two thoughts in mind:' . '

1 - Mr. Heilman during the past years has-been the lone member of the E-member governing body to differ

. openly with his-fellow Committee- men. We have long heard tales of heated discussions in “the back room,,r where the actualdecisions are made; Mr. Heilman may be guilty of break m gfaith with h^ compatnots cto/the™

. governing body, but in so doing he has kept faith witnthe, voters who elected him to exercise his independent judg­

m e n t .2 - As fire commissioner for the past °

nine years Mr. Heilman has headed the most efficient municipal service of which this community can boast. The

. credit which the fire department has won for itself over the years is re­flected upon its fire commissioner.

Tuesday’s voting is a primary elec­tion. Our comments today are predi- j cated tipon' the fact that the "Jung" 3 c on te s t is confined to the three Re- publican Party candidates. A t ihis par-

1 ticular juncture we believe the victory of Mr. Edwards and Mr. Heilman in

4he^rim ary^ou ldbestrseryethe4uu terests of Millbum Township. Obvi­ously there will be other candidates to consider at the time of the genertilelection in November.

T a y l o r P a r k

— Over the course o f the years^mamy words have been written t o describe Taylor Park, f t has been portrayed as a spot- of--beauty in a not very beautiful commercial area_and it has

4eea d e s cr ib e d as~the ^ o f :our community.

' At the invitation of a resident of the community-a man whom we had never met before-we 'made a- brief, walking tour of the pfurk on Sunday. Part o f what we saw is displayed in,

“the photographs appearing on Page"? of this edition of The Item. -

_ - Butphotographs—cannot tell the entire story. The camera cannot ade­quately portray the youngster. who does not weigjh enough to exert sufficient pressure on toe pedal o f a - water fountain so th a t he can get a drink. Black and white film does not

vividly picture ♦the peeling pain t on -- park benches. Nor does ‘such film, adequately show either the ruts left by vehicles running ghrough grass areas or the glass particles lying-on the

----- Itw asoniy^few yearsagothat this -.com m unity invested a sizeable aqaount o f : money in renovating the entrances to Taylor Park. We believed at the time of the expenditure-we still believe-that it represented money

Sn t in toe best interests -of the wnahip But-unless greater efforts

are begun immediately in the areas of - both ordinary maintenance and major

renovations, our -previous expendi- tures will have brought us nothing but _ handsome entrances-te-a place which we would reafly not like to visit. “

In GoodCompanyA week ago we endorsed the candi­

dacy of Congressman William Cahill in the Republican gubernatorial primary

“ election. O ur endorsement -rtf; this, candidate-was-acotopletely independ­ent action. WeEacUspoke to none^of=-== the political “ pros” representing any

-faction of the Republican Party; the endorsement primarily^ was made on

-the -basis-of to e statements delivered------ by each of:the five G.O.P. candidates

and as the result o f a study o f th e __recorehaach has made m pub lic life. "

During toe past week other :«ni- -dorseroents-have been given. We are propel to note that wfe are standing in

" the eompany- of men sach-as William J ....?• Tompkins, Clifford P. Case, Frank •

Bate and Leslie Blau as well as George "M rW altoaus^=an<hAndrew~AxtoBr"

both of whom announced their sup­port o f Congressmah Cahill many

-4tk -no accident that the men w h o - have made the Republican Party in New Jersey a progressive and respon- sible political organization are virtu- ally unanimous ,in toelr backing of Congressman Cabill. —

- -O ur message today is the same as it - was a week ago: For the good of the Republican Party, but more important for the good of the State of New Jersey, we are endorsing thecand i­dacy o f WiBiam Cahffi to t o r Jun<r3~“ GJO.P. primary election.

Looking Backward_ JRalph .Bellamy with his famous

book “Looking Backward” has ap- v patently wooed and won the Town­ship Committee. With toe. whole _ United Stotes blooming with the artis- - tic and engineering triumphs of such

" architects as Erin: Saarinen, Waiter “ Gropius, Mies vander Rohe and Philip

Johnson, with the Seagram Building,___Lever House, Lincoln Center and the

terminal buildings o f JFK airport in constant view, why mdst Millburh roll

_ back the pastto the outmoded designs * of Colonial . Williamsburg fo r a police ; structure?.

— M arcel Bree ^ ftol P ^ b^nBeek- • ‘ hard , have recently built a handsome

- functional building for the Depart- : ■ menfc-ofH opsing and Urban Develop-v ment^toTVashington ; Ulrich Franzen

jp, a distinguished homeriecdnoiSwTjuikL ^ ing, Hugh Hardy haii just finished the

Cincinnati Playhouse; Lawrence Hal- prin and Associates and Emory Roto and Sons are currently designing hand­some structures.

_ As long ago as 195l Temple B*nai Israe lb ro ugfrta beautiful and much- admired building designed by Tercival Goodman to Millbum. Last year an­other religiousedifice, Tem pleB’nai Jeshuran.gave scope to the creativity of Pietoo Belluschi, dean of the school

/ of architecture of MIT.. gWhy does not the Township Com-

mittee now making plans fpr a police —department, with a library and per­

haps a Town Hall in the offing, engage an outstanding architectural firm for

: om ^coiBinuniqfl Why aet tfe f a r^ * - “ derivative design? -

Ibve il& ir with colonialism? After all, Washington

■ didn’t sleep here! « ^ ”

JletteM , to th e ZdUtoA,Police Headquarters

Editor, The Item:___ “f t horror!” That, was.• the reaction of this Miami

(Ohio> University archi- , tectural student to the* f proposed Millbum Police

Department Headquarters. This4si969;Tio1rtoe 18th Century. Millburij Center leaves-much to be desired

’ now, both aesthetically and architecturally. An add itional thissort would be no improvement. When men are orbiting the moon, why must Millbum be reminded of .1700 Vir-

V ginia?----- What better way is there“ to improve tois town “ aesthetically than for toe-

town to build a pleasant, modem - structure for it-

More- ahd more today, — architectuie-is-becoming a

social sciencer Questions such as “how will a build­ing Jiffect toe people who com# ,inltoontMt ?^ith “it T

’ I t e '- ra m ito n lystructures taken individu-. aHy, groups of stouctures,

. and how wilHhese factors —influence-toe-building” fare- . . contihvtoaffirbeirfgarsked1

by architects and planners today. A design' problem must be token "te=cbhtexto With its total environment.I quesliiofr-whetheF-“fee“ presented-solution has an­swered toese questions as they pertain to Millbum:

I believe the Township ' Committee greatly limited

the possible solutions by makinga definite choiceof an architect at such an

—early^stage in—the desigrr —process.-“An increasingly

significant method of- " design in public buildings

is the architectural compe­tition. The best solution is

Eicked by. a jury from lose submitted by archi­

tects. 1 hope it is not too late for Millbum to edn- sider this procedure. —

„ An exciting and appeal- ing new Police Department Headquarters would be a great. step in toe commth-- nity planning of Millbum.I hope the peofrle'oT this town will “express ‘ their

__feelings -on tois issue sothat’ something can be done. ^ _

” James R. Weill _ 12 East Hartshorn Drive

................Library Eite — — Editor, The Item:

_ I -am much distressed upon learning of the pro- posal of our Library Board

' "rdaiing" io “ toe- proposed site for a newrHbriry for th e Towntoip. Putting aside the issue of whether a library is in fact needed, a subject of whfehJLhave

'lnsufiicient knowledge to base an intei%ent con­clusion, I believe that toe site proposed is a poor one..

T he L ib rary Board seems to believe that the Township is willing to sac­rifice three very mce resi­dences valued at a total of $93,100 for the building of a library. Under the present tox rate of 2.96 mills per hundred dollafo of assessed valuation^ that

. 1 is a loSs of tax revenue of nearly $3^000 per year. This is not to mention the legalexpenses.of condem- nation and ’the almost steady increase in toe tax ~

.„:mte. Furiher, it m«uis toe- dislocation . o f . at _ least

If there were no other availabto rites for building a library, I would feel that

tois might be a necessary price to pay. However,, a- mere glance at toe .map of

4he proposed site on p^ge ” one of the May 22 edition of The Rem indicates the Township of Millbum has leased to., the Board o f . Education * land directly behind those houses. Ac- cording to an article in

.....The Item, that land is tobe used in the future as possible playground area fo r th e Junior High School, but there is other land nearby which might be used for such a play­ground. • ■ •

I believe that thisjand should be used fof~the library if one is-huilt rath­er than going through the expensive and unnecessary

- \process of condemning pri­vate property. I believe that this—is hut another example of poor planning by the present power ;

- strUcture-of the Township-Frank L. A rm our ...........7 Femdalj^ Road

Library Site .. Editor, The Item ------- —

- Tt is probably true that— those *who are most con­cerned see the problem most sharply. We on Glen

7 Avenue stand to gain mostfrom having..an- adequate

. and beautiful library “to ; our block. Yet it seens to me th a t toe proposed

_ amendment to toe “ mas­ter plan”" re: location of library fronting only on - Glen Avenue between Lackawanna. Place and Brookside isa good idea in

' a very questionable^ set- -7 ting.

— The best reason for the - Glen Avenue s ite - is - its

cheapness; the “master- planners” wonder where else you could get such land yielding rateables for

._ approxim ately $ 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 .A second obvious reason, yet not a good one, is that

. the library would b e i r the congested center of town. However, it is the close- ness to the center wh toh is rather inconvenient for all who have to drive to get to the center of town.

------A careful Took a t the

Soposed location yields e following facts: Glen

Avenue is bounded by the South Orange Reservation.It is a state designated ap-

s proach to theTN^ J. Turn­pike. It is toe main alter­nate route- around Mill- bum Avenue and Essex

__ Street. It. k toe main ar- .. fery to ffie Lackawanna

Railroad Station and to the Lackawanna Railroad parking lots. It k to e main

- route taken by shoppers from Livingston, West Gr­ange, South Orange and Short Hills to the Lord

7 ancT T ay lo r’s shopping area. It is a main exit route to the summer resorts in ' the northern New Jersey lake area used by all who come up Springfield Ave­nue, Vaux Hall Road or from Maplewood. I t is one of the main entrance ways-- tp th e S outh Orange Reservation. I t is used by ~

-horses, bicycleg pod cars.. In short, it is a very

.important tounk line over­used at the present'time; a bottleneck now and, with thft prnppged library «dt- ing and entrancing its t ra f ­fic iqto this. very critical

— area,-* ‘p otential traffic-^ horron

Glen Avenue is a one

rection. Can Glen Avenue be widened? It is bounded

by the reservation on one ~ side and .private homes-en to e other. Thq only alter- -

be to purchase land from : the Glen Avenue landown­

ers for about a fifth of a. mile. However, there is a bridge over a stream which

foes behind the Paper Mill layhouse; it too would

have to be widened. Con- struc ting a .road, pur­chasing property for" at least a fifth of a mile, and increasing toe width of a bridge all cost a great deaL. of money; when we are done,-there would also be

_ toe need for sidewalks and sewerage drainage Ito be considered. .

The “master planners’” ’ $10 0 ,0 0 0 bargain just seems to me to be too expensive. Are there not- other locations in. town which,' from a •geographic and economic point of view, are :^tnom... ideidly suited" to be the site Tor a Library? ?

The meeting of the-- Planning^ Board is June~4; All people who are inter- estod in using ou r tax

—money wisely- are-invited^ to come to toe meeting

- aad- express themselves. We may well need more library space. Let us see that we^force the “master— olannQ8^4»"gve u8 toe - space, if we ao need “it, " and not just financial bur- — dens and . “commutation

“ Yond Cassius has a mean and hungry lo o k ."At some ’of the elementary schools they’re called

strawberry festivals; at others they’re spring festivals. We all know what the bard said about naines.

At any rate my wife called me on the phone one afternoon and suggested I join her and the kjd$ after office hours at one of toe schools which was holding a festival. Her message, to the best of my recollection, went like tois, “After all, it’s an opportunity to have a quick and inexpensive dinner out.” I had never been to an elementary school festival before. I agreed to come to the-schoolgrounds. ------ ..

Now I must admit my choices in food are rather simple; one could even de&ribe them as “common” and I would not be the least bit offended. .1 like hot dogs, I like pizza. I even like meatball sandwiches, but I detest a soggy roll, - r -

As I walked onto the school grounds I saw children and adults eating pizza; I saw them eatmg hot dogs l even saw my 3-year-old toying to devour a meatball sandwich by ; pressing it into toe center of his polo shirt.

I walked to the truck which had the word “Pizza” painted on its side. “Sorry, buddy, we’re-all sold out,” was the message directed at nie.

I walked to toe tables manned by the members of the/ parent-teachers assocktion.

“I’ll have a hot dog,” said I. — ■ i“Sorry, buddy, we’re all sold out,” said she.“iyhave^a meatball saodwieh,” ! rebutted.-------------

lT¥oilM be softy, buddy",^ wetoher parifog wnrrfsDo not-misundefS^id ;me--*he monthall was delicious...

considering it was’X m e a to ^ . But th e ro lM detest soggy7rolls. " —■ ..., . : ^

Jlinner com pIeted.l je jo in ^ my familv- uMi was auicklv k formed tliat myNow I believe every hild should have a pet; my household already includes a turtle plus a constantly shedding beast toat passes for a -dog: Some months ago I had, in fact, purchased a goldfish, tmt after 48-hours he was summonied to that great fishpond in the sky.

It is now six houis sinceAhefestival came to its end. The children have long been asleep; the virife is attending some meeting somewhere which ultimately will result in peace on earth. - LsiQvith, toy typewriter and 'Hsten to my stomach “ protest. But-4 am not alone. There are two quite chubb y » goldfish swimming in a boWl a few short feet from my desk.~ WHat/toaUT te llth e chlMiren?^—--

' . .. : •• - c . j . b .

David Cancell 236 Glen Avenue

B totorrTheltem T^"- Two weeks ago the Item

Carried articles and letters telling of the incumbent committeemen’s- prowess in speeding the taxpayers’ money on projects, among them toe road-^material- stors^e^yardpurcRasecTfbF” $93,OQQ.razki^ncU exca­v ated fo r -a d ^ R Io h a P ^ moneys, now disguised as an auto wrecker’s yard. Now they want to -buy— more commercial real es- tate to raze for_a_l7-car parking lot; to build a new police .headquarters; and

- to spend $93,000 more to .” buy what;“Brae retable is

. left on the-Glen and Lack­awanna Place area to build

-a ntor liteary. - — -----"" TOe alternative candi­

date to the present incum- bentar wants to acquire a $4,000,000 acreage worth $1 3 3 ,0 0 0 annually ;in taxes to toe Township touse asapark._____________:

The board of assessors assesses property owners in toe South Mountain r section for road a id curb repair, but does n o t assess property owners for work done in the Highland or Hobart Avenue.areas.. 7

A letter to the editor o f /" • The Item explained toat

- the county. Republican machine wanted to -g e t^

_foothold here.I enjoy reading The

Item but4jad brouble put- ting all these things to ­gether until estimating m y tax bill based upon the new assessments.

Edwin J. Scanhell 55 Church Street

New Community Foundation . yThe Itepi: "t t t -

At its last-regular meet- ‘ing, toe Short Hills C pun-__

voted to endorse anicT support- toe - fdiihcQming

drive....qi.,,toe. - -

Information will soon be circulated to residents of

the Millhum-Short Hills area to a letter by the local sponsors of the Foitoda- tion. We encourage all re­cipients to study this letter and to respond generously.

This w ell-conceived project, developed by the black people of N ewark to provide cooperatively owned low cost dwellings for their residents, will

: help Newark and all Its neighbors. It deserves-the ~ financial support Of allsuburbia. : ~ ...— . -■

, Harold Reintjes, __ H . Chaiman

Local Affairs Committee The Short HiUs

- Assocktion

N O PR OG R AM . Editor, The Itejbt

— To— anyone who at- . tended th e open meeting

" last Thursday evening to hear the views of the three RepubEean -eandidatesrit—

: became Jeadiijr-apparent- that Ralph G. Edwards, however decent and wel- lintentioned,—has abso­lutely ho program what­soever to offer toe Town-

' ship. He appears to lack a knowledge ofTthe histoiT^ and background of the. community, and is wito- outan appreciation fop the many accomplishtoehts of current and past leader­ship. T regret to say he was less than generous in^eora^ plimenting MrrHeilman o n • his leadership of the Fire Department, which we all. Know has been outstand­ing.- Vague and inconsequen­tial allusions to the waning enthusiasm of tfie'Tneum- bents ,to k ie a e q u isitionof

TJie E ait Orange Water Company property th a t^ incidentally, is not for

- sale, to situating the new library on Hartshorn Drive on Jand actually ow nedby the. Board of Education",

. have clearly, indicated to me that Mr. Edwards k plainly n o t ready to as­sume a position on the Township Committee. He would fo llow certain recommendations - of the

■ Kendree Report toat toe Planning Board has long/ stoefr rejeeted. 4n fact, Mr. Edwards was hard put to find specific fault with anyihm ginthetow n.Here- m&ins the hand-picked candidate of toe Republi­can Cpuntyieommittee. ,

~ In my judgment, there * are two candidates^ Wil­liam O. Heilman and John

lE Kelly Jrr, who stand . dfearly. ,above their new.

Republican rival. Beth men are a t once innovative and practical and have consistently shown a thor­ough 'grasp of municipal affairs; Endorsement of

• Mr. Heilman and Mr. Kelly in the Republican primary will give recognition k> - their exceptional service to _ our community.

Milton Luxemburg 21 Rahway Road

GOP Endorsement , Editnr T ie ltem -

The continued errone­ous. reference to Essex

fiuende Jtoihe current cam- •paign for MiEbunETowm

. ihib Committee^eompels^ me to clarify exactly who endorsed Ralph Edwards.

:: No one from outside Millburh Township played any role whatever in eitoer encouraging or endorsing this csmdidacy. Mr.- Ed-

• wards, aloi% with John T. ' Kelly Jr. was endorsed by r the Millbum Township Re­publican .Committee. T h k .. group cemtists. of 30 Mill- bum residents who are elected annually by their . fe llo w RepubEcans. A

- male and female represent- — ative-^ase elected, m each

1 Election District to the Township; it is their duty to serve as leaders of, the__

- RepubEcan voter to that district and to represent those RepubEcan voters in - the policy making of the

• RepubEcan Party.77 Last year the same fpraup endorsed the candf. dacies of Ralph F. Batch and Mr. WiUiam B. Gero and nary a bleat was heard from any quarter. - One must conclude that it „ is not the action of the Millbum Township Re­pubEcan Committee that

-has Gaused-concern to cer;teta entrenched forces i n __the Townshiprbgtdtire-em- noyance is caused by the . identity of toe beneficiary of that action. /The atti­tude of the"Millbum Es­tablishment toward the R epub lican Committee seems to be that the Re­pubEcan Committee ~ k ~ completely freeTto do any- ,thtog4t-wishes, as long as the Committee does as the local Establishment com­mands it.

Through name-calling the “non-potiticians” who run MiUbum are seeking to in tim id ate the proper function o f toe legaUy constituted machinery of

_their party.Qwen J. McCluskey-

Campaign Manager for .- Ralph Edwards—

The NDC -Rditori; Tholtem:— Qn Msargh Z^-the New- - " ark Sunday News reported that a six page pamphlet called ‘‘Yohr Manual was being distributed to stu-— ‘dents in the Philadelphiaaw a it, te lls h ow a c a m p u s___rioter -can- disable and

-maim pohee, police horses, photographers and even in-

-nocent onlookers during ° —school -disorders; 4 f tecom-

pie to with crudely drawn illustrations o f ' how to make bombs. ’ - - •- . Sam Brown of the Na­tional Democratic CoaE- , t ib n has akeady de­nounced Father Hesburg, president of . Notre Dame univertity,' for his firm stand against student riots and has also 4 criticized President; Nixon for prais­ing Father Hesburg on h k PO nonsense poEcy. Says &un Brown now, ‘5 f it’s, a —" choice between Nixon and the students^. 171 be with _ _ them, of course.”

College campus violence and destruction k sweep­ing across the nation under toe guise o f “student pro- .

. t e s t . ” ~AE,eady i f -has -spilled • OV<» into high

schools and in one isolated case reached down to the second grade iwel - noil violent of courts^ No one can' possibly believe tha,t

tog by thefr~owre“vc!litiwi^Cont. on ptg* S

THE ITEM of Milltkirn ond Short Hills, N. L Thuriddy, Moy 29, 1969 Poge 7

fo r unwanted articles.

MUNICIPAL SWIMMING POOLWhite Oak Ridge Park

The m aterial to repa ir thfcbench costs less than two dollars.paulsen travel bureau

201-273-1313

• ~ T R IE PLANTING IN FALL TO PROVIDEFOR

FUTURfBEAUTY AND SHADEV -AFTERNOON ADULT SWIM PERIOD

• RECLINING LOUNGE CHAIRS• MORE PLAY AREA EQUIPMENT FOR YOUNGSTERS

• MORF TABLES AND CHAIRFHANDBALL COURT

• ADDITIONAL UMBRELLAS-Gustav HenlngburgPresidentTUB GREATER NEWARK URBAN COAUTION, INC;

TENNIS PRACTICE BOARD

PO O L HOURS:AN INVITATION TO HEAR

A MOST INFQRM ATIVE TALKMonday th o u gh Friday -^Swimming Instruction, 9 :00 -1 2:00 Noo^Swimmjng, 1:00 P;M. • 8:00 P.M.

“" Saturdays — Swimming 12:00 Noon -8:00 PTM.V Sundays andHbirdays--Sw im ming4;00P.Mt -8:Q0P.M. _

Free Swirhm'Hig Period (Children) - Monday - Friday, 12:00 -12:50 P.M., Exdusive.of Holidays

Swimming Instruction will be available to all children o t M illburn TQwnship whethet.gr nat -tbey are members of l be_pQQl- No charge. Registrati on must be made in Taylor Park ju r if f# rii; i0 th a n d '1 1 tft^ ^ tb N 6 b n r ~

Opening date June 21:

Within A Few Days You Will Receive YOur ADblitation Rv MaiUForMembership In The M1969 Or Clip Coupon And Mail With Check To: - ’ — .......------------

, ' ' jv TOWNSHIP OF MIU-BURN------'• ■■■■■■---- — '■■V peeRgATi^ ^ M M id s ro N ^ 5 ;^ -~

T \ ' *' TAYLOR FABUS.ore*: •

FEES: FAMILY MEMBERSHIP - • • • -860.00 Q

Included in Family are man and wife and unmarried

dependent children under 22 years of age living with

parents. A person bom on or before June 11 ‘ 1947

shall be considered 22 years of age this season.TAYLOR PARK RECREATION HOUSE W I ^ D A Y ^

830.00 nSponsoredb^

Available to any permanent resident of the Township

o f MiHburn.

i ifag. §. .,

S jg § W r5 5

'w KH r- *

~ Ti^JakeY^n1(7n^r the Recreation House., -

? rA nuv MAkilcV . ............................ ..................... . . . ■ __ _ ...

"T a rvrvD ccc _ \ t ............. -............ ----------:: mBFHCaaE

f ■ - _ v _______ ; __________ TWffiFX- ''BSSENAME :.....:............* tiLijdANL) a riivji WWIC»~-....v - -

j _ _ - \ — m t H M i ~W ZT c;--- V - # ' ... — .W T ^rr^r -r icI CHILDREN'S NAfcfe V M l - > ' CHILDREN'S N A M E S .. Afe»t

- — - . 1 . - . . , v...— . .£***—> • '

Ih H — H . i — HUpS-Sril *■# - r. r ' i. . __-.-su_____ ' ..a* t e l

T 7 ' ' ‘ :. s v : ' , , - . - ■■ - SIGNATURE ‘ -•••-..f .... ..»... ...... _r_

■ s.-": ;r~ ~ r . .. "

IIBtfliroTCffrfTMIlY^ tllMO HIHIMBiMUNCE WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE ~

m REGULAR ACCOUNTS- CHECKING ACCOUNTS|E StfEBH'OSITMXES id

CALL:676-5700

AK.;AT HENRY S t, ORANGE

ONESTAPMOACHES

PAIOFOR BY OWEN McCLUSKEY Campaign Mgr.

Pooe 8 THE ITEM of Millburn ond Short Hills. N. J. - Thursdoy. Mov 29, 19&9

Letters To The Editor

Cont. from p*g* 8yet this particular case managed to reach the Su­preme Court where- the ruling was in their favor since it was a “peaceful, non-d ittrup tive expres­sion. ” In another instance, where the Supreme'Court

refused to review a case brought by students who were suspended for “vio­lent and destructive inter­ference with the rights o f o thers/’ Al* Milano, di­rector of the Legal Rights Program of toe National Student Association pre-

WHY WYMAN?Maplewood—but we know how t the competition ANYWHERE IN N.J.

HUGE SAVINGS ON ALL

'69 FORDS ss.10W MILCAGl• NEW CAR GUARANTY?

SUBURBAN TRADED USED CARSJ '67 OLDSMOBILE 88 4-Dr. ■ V-8 Auto., Power Steering,Ifurquoiie. -----1 '67 SUNBEAM Alpine Road- J (ter 4-speed transmission, I sparkling white.1 '66 FALCON 4-br. ,I 6cy!., automatic, radio. Red.-

•t Hilli traded.| '65 CADILLAC Convertible _ ~ >e Oe VUJe. FXili power, | e|f-conaltloned. Yellow with

'66 FORD Gelaxie 500 M r. H T ,V 8 , automatic, j power steering. Blue. with I Black vinyl roof.'65 FORD Country Sedan 'V-8, automatic, power steering, etc. Turquoise.'65 CHEVY Carry-All Van 1

6-cyl., standard. Dependable. '64 FORD Galaxie '500' 2-Dr. H. T., V-8, automatic, J power steering, braket. cte.Ten, Very clean.

■NEW:■USED:

MANY, MANY MORE!LOW COST LEASING IS HERE!

BY DAY, WEEK OR MONTH!ALL MODELS AVAILABLE NOW!

1713 Springfield Ave., Maplewood 1740 ^m g^ ld Ave., Maplewood w

diets this ruling will mere­ly increase campus vio­lence.

At toe first convention bf the New Democratic Coalition of Hew Jersey, a

a to repeal toe new ins it a enrae for

any outsider to enter a s to o d to disrupt classes was approved. Apparently toe NuC will endorse and s u p p o rt anything and everything students at­tempt, regardless of the tow, including use of agi­tators.

In February a chapter of this New Democratic Coalition Was formed herein town.

“The coalition plans to take ipi active role in the Township Democratic or­ganization and e x a c ts to run a full slate o f candi­dates in toe upcoming pri­mary elections.” This was reported in The Item of February, 13, 1969, On March 13, The Item stated that toe Coalition was not expecting to field a candi-

-date- for jth e^ Township Comm ittee T5ut would challenge Mrs. Schauler’s

larTlemocratic organ!-' Twfler were it to -be out7-ation Tor seats on the

Egs ^ ^ oantrTYemnomtog: a h ^ ^ a t^ i^ s f r - ^ e l i t i e dCommittee.- _ , ,g ^ O bviously Township government' and its proD-

ierarr a r e n o t their main concern or objective. The real t arget is the -local ^Democratic organization. T h e strategy behind this move is that if the.NDC can succeed in getting can-

then bq in a position to infiltrate the Essex County D em ocrat, if Committee an d create chaos and havoc. ... -'-r——7

Knowing the disastrous results a split party causes, th e Republicans have united, and healed their differences in anticipation of victory in Nowmber.

I urge all Democrats to turn out this primary and vote for regular party can­didates. —

Remember - United we stand, divided we fall;

Kathryn O’Hare (Mrs. Martin)

r -&4 Cedar Street ——

PartysControversy "Editor, The Item:

It has come to my at?~ tention as chairman o f the Democratic Party of toe T own sh ip ofMiUbum that there is controversy over toe coming election for. D em ocratic committee­

m an add com m ittee- woman in the Third Dis­trict flection in MiUbum.

The comments made in the local newspaper which I have read seem to miss toe important fact that we have ‘‘closed” primaries in this state.

Any eligible party mem­ber and voter can become a candidate for this post by obtaining only ten sig­natures and thus have his or her name placed oh the ballot, Mr. Gerardo and Miss Jane Stanley haw ob­tained toe necessary signa­tures and have asked for the endorsement of toe Regular Democratic Or­ganization. .

As Democratic chair­man I have given the en­dorsement to toe Candi­dacy of Mr. Gerardo and Miss,Stanley for this dis­trict,

Mrs. Marion A. Schauler 76 Church Street

Editor, The Item:- - For years, our members of the Township Commit­tee have felt that the com- iMttee_would function far

girift n f a n y in flu en ce o f

•arties^-iSS . domination by 'any o f state or county arms of such parties It has been fel£ and I feel Wisely so,toOT== Cf -=CWMH rteSnr*fOE;local office should stand up and be counted because they, themselves, want to betelected to the Town-

elected* it w o u ir ship Committee rather' IT than because they are the

"!ise Iec t^^” candlcrSte by any-palitiral group..-

. Such outsidermfluence can only result in friction and ..internal confusion. Our two incumbent Town­ship Committeemen have, w ith good judgment,' chcoen to ignore the “di­vide and conquer’’ tacties being forced upon the Township in this primary election. They are running on the record' of the T ow n ship Committee be-

cause they haw con­tributed that record soadmirably.

The writi_____ writer is convincedthat we should .vote for1 Kelly and Heilman as e team ami look to them to defend toeir records'to the electorate for the next three years. They are men of character, o f ability and are devoted to serving our community. I strongly urge their re-election in toe forthcoming primary.

Fred E. Borchert Jr. I Hobart Avenue

RECEIVES PROM O TIO N ' - Edwdrd G. Moninger a f Bt_

M.H. Detrick Company o f Chi­cago and elected to d ie board. o f directors. M r. Moninger /ias-_

=been^Mdt 0 e com pan y -33

LAWN MOWERSSALES AND SERVICE

K ilft u d Scieeor Grinding

MIL LB URN GRINDING SHOP 658 Morris Tpk., Short Hills

&RoxeHS-5Q54

I’ve got news for you’’^ThS Allstate group can provlds for justTbout all your Insurance needs. That

- mead* I can help cut red tape and high costs out of. Ufa, Health, Homeowners, Businessand-Auto-bisur- ■nce. Why not give me *call?"

MIKE ROSENBERG " a g e n t *

Phone: 3 79" 1065Allstate

m ond Short Hill*. N. J. Thur»dov,Mqy29, 1969 Poge ?

SH Post OfficeUnion College Will Honor Finn Hfxdm’s Contributions

wilting time at any itot* Intpwtlon station locatid In Emx County

T h r e e w w w honored whlfcrWWtiSoliciting Bids dents have bcfcn named to the honors list at the Mor­ristown Prep School for the fifth marking period.

In the fifth form* Peter Gannett of 26 Pine Ter­race and William Lqec£ of 7 East Hartshorn Drive

■ney Raab of 114 Hemlock 'Road received honors in the sixth form.

RUGS CLEANED ■08< A SO. FT,FLOORS WAXED :NEW METHOD

maintenance SERVICE C« 3.2598

—The Short Hills Post Office is soliciting bids for a servicing and mainten­ance contract of govern­ment owned vehicles for the 1970 fiscal year, July 1,1969 to June 30,1970.

Bids- will also be solicited for the awarding of a contract for one ve­hicle to be used On a six day basis. The vehicle will be "used for delivery of mail on a mounted route covering- approximately

joined the NCE faculty in 1930 and rose to the presi­dency hr 1949.

The third president in the history of-the 84-year- old, college, Dr. Van Houten has guided NCE through its greatest period of growth. When he be­came president, NCE was a small college encompassing four buildings on less than two acres. Today i t is a mejor urban institution

, containing 12 buildings on approximately 20 acres in the heart o f downtown

Dr. Van Houten has not limited his activities to the physical growth of the col- tege, but has been instru­mental in expanding the degree and non-degree pro­grams and curriculum with particular emphasis on

Dr. Robert W. Van Houten, 34 Addison Drive,

8 dent of Newark Col- of Engineering, will be

honored at the 36th an­nual commencement exer­cises of Union College on Thursday, June 6, at 6:30 p.m. on the East Lawn of the campus. *

Dr. Van Houten will receive a citation for his outstanding contributions to the field of higher edu­cation, in particular for his achievements in the devel­opment of Newark College -of Engineering, and his interest and support o f two-year colleges, espe­cially Union College.

Dr. Van Houten has been president of NCE for the past 20 years and has been affiliated with the college since 1926 when,

-he enteredasa student. He

VICE PRESIDENT-SALKMANAGEMENT CONSULTING SERVICES

Major international management consulting firm is seeking a Vice President to develop new business and manage client contacts in this area.

This position offers the opportunity for independence in selling professional management consulting services to top level executives. No relocation, limited travel, and exceptional earnings potential. ' -

Hi* ideal applicant should hive a degree (Engineering preferred) and a suecessful background of selling services or intangibles to top executives of business and industry. In addition he shouldpossess experience in operations management (exceptive level) of industry.

Candidates should be mature and require a minimum of $40,000 peryear. He must reside in and be conversant with the local business community.

In addition to the satisfaction derivecl from "helping a firm increase profitability, the, monetary rewards art great as there are no limits on his eamings.^^

Your resume will be treated in strictest confidence. Ou/employees know of this advertise-_me»L_______— ----- * - " -- - . ------

BOX NO. 340, THE ITEM

12-15 mites a day and about 4% horns a day.

Bids for both contracts will close 2 p.m. on June

T.R. Whitneyjewafus*'

will offer 16. Contracts may be ob­tained from Joseph Rizek, superintendent of mails, or F rank Kuzara, vehicle m aintenance assistant at the Short Hills Post Office. Information may be se­cured by calling 379-5822 between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.

FREEEAR PIERCING

Dr. Robert W. Van Houten President of NCE

Today it ranks fifth na­tionally in baehetor-of-sd*- jmcer degreer granted and- among the top 20 for advanced degrees. ‘

HOTaTserved th re S W -m unityirr several areas of public service. He~ served

-ffi^yPM T s M -g m a p b e r o fthe b o w d ~ e f directors of the Newark chapter o f the American Red Cross and has been active—in.—the- Robert Treajf Coa£tnc9"of tee. Boy Scouts of Amer­ica. He is currently a mem- beVof tne Junior Achieve­ment- o f the Essex-West Hudson area.

with the purchase

of all earrings -

priced from 7.95

ESTABLISHED 1930— ^ g - ^ g ;

i\ Landscape Contractors| - RESIDENTIAL, INDUSTRIAL

S' U P P 5 P - COMMERCIALW ==-'— -—= •= —

GROWERS OF BETTER TRIES, SHRUBS] EVERGREEN!

RT. 24, MENDHAM S O W

T .R .WhitneyJtwaaa * wTioiy,

tT[%NlrfWGAY~& THURSDAY EVENINGS TIL 9OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAY EVENIN g - 4 ) ^

SROOTSiROerfS

An all leather thong sandal with antique brass knocker motifs 'Hahd-rubbed;mahog-

JloishT : S,M,L.XL $15.50 .

L e t ’ s e n t e r -■ . r * « w e o f r e a s o n

E tienne A'igner Sandals fo r H er

I Nautical sandal of canvas I land leather spertsa jaunty! pnehor. Sure-gfipflex- 1

Hathaway[boating, S,M,L,XL$11.50

- Desert-GlassksT-Slaeks^KniF S k ir ts--TheTooteetd of sportive fashion begins .with Hathaway's thoroughly comfortable Desert Classic golfing slacks of~n lightweight pelyester/cotton. White, bluefsandx>r tarw - $15. Tod them off with mock-turtlenecks of cool cotton lisle in solids or stripes. . in as many colorsas you havebudgetfor _ $1_0.. ___ --------- - — _ -

_ _~4QLSM iNO£iELDAVENUE,SUM MIT I l - J l

OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAY EV€NINGS;'TlL 9OPEN MONDAY & THURSDAY EVENINGS 'TIL 9

JROOTSm o o r si's clothing

° "'system so that only tbe deservinj and needy

o a t t - T J w w W —

H * O F F E R S E X P E R I E N C E A M P K N O W - H O W

- H A seasoned Senator and member of bo«i houses qT— thetegistatureforthepasteightyears . . n (v

□ Served an eight legislative committees, chairmen •

I n An'expertonmuniciimlandwtanproblemsA specialist in state end local fiscal nffeirs

B H E T H I N K S , . . w A C T I ± j j S j n 9 ^

SENATOR HARRY t. t l f c f l lw R EP U B L IC A N C A N D ID A T E FO R

j R M A R Y D A Y y J U N E J g U

S tr iped Jeans by .sta-hmb8i

■—STS risrRSpSafcV jeadrdt polyester/cotton in white with" — hiiie nr jynwn stripesWaist sizes: 27-36 $9.; (with bell

bottoms $U0.) Other Levi Sta-Prest trousers from $ 6. ::eomBe(f t»tton "GrubfUhirt With mock-turtieoeck irfla

variety of solid shades. 8-2Q $3.6Q -University: StMX $5.50; $6.50 . .

SPR INGFtEtfr AVENUE, SIJMMi.f— ~

*'W eekender T rousers” 1_„ i. . . our unlimited collection of, these slacks includes the great­est variety of stripes, plbids, dhecks, windowpanes, district <het^s,fibrakahdhigh slia'8e solidsimaglhahle.. ~. in the lightestweight blends fofplty to the very finest trapirer worsteds. $15._~t§_ $30. ‘ ~

W & M - 4 orsp m N G T lii^ A y ^ , _’._ jPaid for by Q m |jNS SEARS OPESSEX,

”22“YotoTerr^TWonteteir, N»W to n v r " - T j ? 5 ? “

One ot the candidates represents an ultra-conservative philosophy and hat l ittle chance of defeating a-Oemocrat in the generaleleetion. Another is knpwn as a Democrat's Republican. a liberal whose political views are clearly inconsistent with the basic principles ottne Republican-party. rJ~\

Frank X . McDeriTOtt rapiesents^eFfnainstream^-active-aTwi- responsible Republicans and has been a consistent winner. He has carried-the Republican banner tothe discerning voters who havegfvenllim ls^raadlJEBe'oTsupport.' _ _ ___

Frank X. McDermott is the only Republican who can Bear ' Robert R-Meyner inNovember. - — -

Government handouts and giveaway programs are only concessions to poverty. Handouts have made a mess of our welfare programs, have created a "professional poor", and have taken away a sense ofaccomplishmentreelfrespectandinitiative.’ __ _ Only a job can impart dignity and pride in oneselfrPeeplehave to get off Big welfare rolls and onto the payrolls. After cleaning up our whole welfare system, with themoney we save by reducing our welfare expenditures-we should provide incentives for industry, impiemented by sound legislation to rtwke them W k ^ r ■ - - ■■=

Commuters And Motorists Are Ike fergetten MajorityNew Jersey has over 1,000,000 commuters and many millions more motorists who use - our railroads and TflghwaysriThey are the forgotten majority. Oar railroad commuters are subject to inadequate equipment, substandard Service and a disjointed network of rail lines whlch are totally unaqjgfrtable in this day and aga. The

- motorist pays gasoline taxes.tcnis, and motorvefticle taxes ohlyto see the money vanish - leaving an outdated, congested, and dangerous road system. Ttiis is rapidly stifling our economy snd

wasting untold hours of our valuable time. ' ~ vAs Governor, I will make New Jersey motorists and commuters

' j iw t d i citizens byglying these problemsthe highqst priority. As a first step, I will establish separate departments of Rail Transportation and HI#» ^ .t r i»i>»prtation.Wtti>l tha conwiuter and motorist will be properly represented.

Today, we ail fear- Ilia resultS of crime - whether it be the riots, campus disturbances, the infiltration of organized crime or the violence in our streets and pub lic places. We must eliminate crime and restore respect tor law and constituted authority.' r='“ ^"Tr "

I believe that by and large there are enough laws on the books to do this. What we need is a Governor who will.enforce our laws with vigor , - and equally important, we need~judge$ who will make the punishment fit the crime., I pledge to you that I will enforce our

lawsastfiey should beand! will appoint judges whb will fake a hard line on crime — judges who will pfotectyour rights and not legislate' to alter our laws __-

New Taxes Are Not NeededNew Jersey does not need an income tax or an increaseinthe sales te*,10 oes need a TSavemor who has the courage ta control the budget and who believes irt the prudent use of bond financing forcapital needs. — r4— ------ r —— -ft needs a Governor who will work with the Legislature to create a budget within exiting tax dollars. We need a man who will return to the taxpayer $1.00 in service for $1.00 in revenue. We must also demand our fair share from the federal government. New Jersey stands last in the nation in the ratio of dollars contributed and dollars returned. We've got to put New Jersey, on. the move toward first place. -

W t Can’t Let Our Universities Became Training Grounds For Revolutionaries

School Butioflis wrong, During my entire political career, I have been a strong advocate of home rule arid I believe wholeheartedly in- tha neighborhood school system, „

We hear much about the urban crisis,but in my mind it-is also a suburban critis.-Taking children out of our citiesand shipping them to our suburbs irnot ttxraiwwer^Tha answer lies in sending master teachers,administrator! andTine equipmentInto-taa^ltiej^ disadvantaged youngsters of the sama'opportunity our children in ■the suburbs enjoy.

0-1963 Elected to General Assembly 0 1964 Union County Delegation Leader□ 1965 Assistant Majority Leader□ 1966 Minority Leader□ 1967 Elected to Senate 01968 Senate Majority Leader □1969 President, State Senate

Frank McDermott was born in New York fn 1924. The-son of a policemen, Jhe grew up in the warmth of a home that placed high* emphasis on community -service and hard work. After working his way through Columbia College, he want on to earn his degree from Columbia Law Sehpol,*and*then two more advanced degrees from New York University. During World War II, he served injhe Army Ajr Corps for three years. •

Frank McDermott’s public record- is solid and inspiring. His steady rise in just S years froitva freshman State Awemblyman from Union County In 1963 to the 1969T'fe*Rlency of the Stats Senate, the highest position in the New Jersey legislature, is a testament to Tisrroaifd: - ...,:

N. J, REPUBLICAN PRIMARY, JUNE 3 ,1 9 6 9

JT Vote ter” _ ' ' JFRANKX.McDERMOTT For

Pope to THE ITEM of Millburn end Short Hills. N. J.-. Thursday. May

Remodeled Bank Office Opens Monday

A virtually new Mill- -bum • Short Hills branch office of First National State Bank ofN ew Jersey will be opened Monday, June 2, with the com­pletion of a full re­

modeling project on the two-itory building.

The office, located at the western connection of M illburn Avenue and Essex 'S treet, has under­gone p substantial enlarge-

Ifthisisall that^atingout” means to you, you’re missing■ i-herer s CjPiofo new world:_____ _• waiting feirVeiihet-a nearby.

restaurant. Meals you wouldiVt dare dream of having at- horned Where wtflryottHFtnch

much oftl^ g ood food aruuffiL town is prepared by flameless electric cooking in restaurants and diners clisplay- =iftg the famous Reddy-Kftowatt symbol. It's a good symbol to look for when you're looking for good food.

gggfY Eniov the pleasures ~ of eating out.Enjoy them often.

ment of its main customer area on the first floor, the addition of two. new lounge* customer areas, a redesign and doubling-in- size of the vanlt and safe deposit areas arid the im­provement of several other rooms.

Ini addition, a second main entrance tr i th e of­fice has been developed to provide access from the parking lot . behind the building. With the com­pletion of the project, the parking lot will accommo­date about 100 cars.

The project has been in progress since last summer and in March most of the operations of the office were moved to temporary quarters behind^ the main building to allow interior work to proceed. The tem­porary office was formed by two trailers, placed side by side and combined ih a sizeable floor and teller station area. The trailers .Will be removed from the .site over the weekend,—— • Among the improve­ments- and new facilities which the bank’s - cus- tomers will find in the building-arei— ■

_ A lounge and wood- ISHJKing- fireplace in the enlarged mam customer

j i g s ‘A second ground floor

lounge, located in the safe deposirarea; gg g

A new co n fe re n ce room, also in * the safe deposit .area, $s well as eight new private rooms for safe deposit box users.

A new reception office and lounge .for the trust department on the second

An elevator, to provide "sefvjce for visitors^to the trust department offices.

Extensive outside land- scaping to magnify the exterior appeal of the building. ; *' New lighting of the building’s exterior.

New lighting in the parking lo t and repaving of

■the lot.

jCoalilion Forms Local County Task Forces

CPA Post - Norman Cog liati o f 356 Hartshorn Drive was, this week, elected vice presiden t o f

'd ie New Jersey State Society o f CPAs. M r. Cog liati is a_ jnem ber o f the American Ac-, 'counting Association, the Na­tional Association o f Account ants, the Tax institu te o f New York University and the A rne tt ican Institu te o f CPAs. He is a member o f the accounting firm

■ ofPuder & Puder.

. W A T E R I N G Y O U R LAWN COSTS'

L E S S r a A N . 1:: APOPSICLE.

T h ea v e ra g ftla w n c osta about 10c*to water.-■ On ly 10c! The n cxf tim e yO trteartK e icecream - 1 m an’s bell ringing in your neighborhood, run out

and- trea f your lawn. N o t tb a P op sid e :. . . to a good, thorough sprinkling.

COMMONWEALTH WATER COMPANYAM, AMSy CAN-WATER WORKS JVSTEM COMPANY

In its last meeting be­fore the June 3 Demo­cratic primary, the execu­tive committee of,the New Democratic Coalition an­nounced the formation of two task forces to start, work immediately after the election.

The first group will operate wholly within the Township by establishing year-round examination ox local policies, issues end

priorities as well as seeking out the best qualified Democratic responses to them.

The other body was charged with the responsi­bility of coordinating local activities with county, state and national Demo­cratic functions by effec­tively imposing on them the wishes o f Township residents on matters of policy and candidate selec­

tion. Both taskforces feel ■that with this structure the New Democrat -Coalition and ultimately the local Democratic Party can at­tract into it and rack into it those persons who have been alienated after view­ing the local and county leadership.

At its meeting, the com­mittee applauded recent events in Millburn: the entry into the Township political process of Demo­cratic and Fusion candi­dates for municipal office and the community efforts in the creation of the Target Education project.

.,,, CorrectionThe figuresreflecting

the percentage increase in tiie tax levy here, which were contained in the -fi­nancial statement prepared by Township Committee­man Everett W. Vilett and published in the May 22 edition of The Item, con­ta in ed a typographical

MVHTOB SIRVICI CO.

W M t M 'U & S T S r

error. The cornet figures fo r the! tax levy are: municipal purposes, up 64 p e r ce n t since 1900;

purposes, up 3 per cent since 1900; and county purposoNj Up lOh percent since I960.

Philip J. Cartwright, Inc

W HAT A G REA T DEAL- I LL TAKE m G L A D T O B E O F S E R V IC E "IN BUYING r THAT NEW CAR/" MR.BANKS... TAKE UPTO 36■ V F O R F A S T F IN A N C IN G *

M O U T R E D T A P E A T . . . M O N T C L A IR N A T I O N A L /

ill; WRITE UR) V

O R D E R W M

M O N T H S T O R E P A Y A T O U RL o w b a n k r a t e s ' e n j o yO H B O V I S N 'T I T A \

B E A U T Y / y 7/ - —S >t)UR N E W C A R /

DO H M O N T Y I T L L B E J U S T T H E T H I N G M Y C A R P O O L A N D S H O P P I N G A N D 9 L/ING S U B U R B A N

S E X C O U N T YA N D I F N O U E V E RNEED A USED CARW E H A V E G O O D T E R M S

AS E

Ml DAD WHAT COOL WHEELS,r W - T O N I O H T PF O R T H E M T O O / USECAN

G U E S S B E T T E RER G E T S O M E

G A S

MONTCLAIR NATIONALB A N K A N D T R U ST C O M PAN Y

THF0N£ REPUBLIGAN WHO CAN WIN IN NOVEMBER:

M N K X JIA cDERMOTT

THE ITEM of Millburn ond Short Hills, N. J. Thuttdoy, May 29, 1969 Pooc J 1

VP Position To Pieger

Dunn Named Trustee Of State Pension Fund

and Construction Trades Council, AFL-CIO, and is an impartial arbitrator for the UnitedStates Concil­iation and Mediation Serv-

Underwood Prom oted Tb Executive VP

©ftfie March o f Dimes for the MUlburn-Short Hills area and is a trustee of the Heart Research Institute of St. Michaels Ifcapftal Center, Newark, and the hospital’s representative!

Wolf Chosen As Secretary

Edward Ov Wolf ffl of 15 Canterbury Lime has been appointed secretary- life and disability in the eastern regional office of Fireman’s Fund American Life Insurance, Company at Newark. Mr. Wojf is chief life and disability un­derwriter for the region.

Mr. Wolf has been in the insurance business tsince 1961 and has held under­writing and supervisory positions. He joined Fire­man’s FUnd American Life as chief underwriter at Newark in 1967. He is a graduate of Indiana Uni­versity.

hom e office and was named a second vice presi­dent. lie was elected vice president jjn 1961 and plated in charge of the

Wilson M . Underwood of SB Mohawk Road was prompted to executive

Mr: Dunn, whose term recently expired as counsel to the Essex County Board of Education, is senior partner ip the law firm of Dunn and Pykon with of­fices in Newark and Dover. He holds several positions in banking, labor organiza­tions as well as law.

'‘Preiodent and chairman of tiie board of the Secur­ity National Bank of New* ara Mr. Dunn is counsel to the New Jersey Building

He bps been chairmanJoseph P. Dunn of 286 Hartshorn Drive has been confirmed by th e New Jer­sey legislature for a 4-year term on the board o f trust­ees of the Police and Fire­men’s Pennon Fund Com­mission.

M r.D u n n w a e n o m i- nated for the post by /Governor R ic h ard J. Hughes. The commission is one of six pension systems administrated by th e state treasury department.

vice .pfesident o f New York Life Insurance Com­pany test week.

Mr. Underwood joined New York Life in ,1951 as supervisor o f the public

A R R O WP a y sutilities division o f the in­

vestment department. In H i g h e s t R a t e s o n 6 - M o n t h S a v i n g s C e r t i f i c a t e s

1954, he was appointed assistantvice president and. later that year was as­signed to San Francisco to open an office fo r com­pany investments west o f the Rockies.,.ln 1958; Mr.

.wood returned

Eric PiegerThe election of Eric A.

Pieger of 73 Whitney Road as administrative vice pres­ident of First National Health Agency, Inc., New­ark, was announced this

Under- to the

F a n ta s t ic B a r g a in s

pearl ifvrrrLUSCIOUS LING ERIE-PEIGNOIRS-TRAVEL SETS

MADLY CHIC CULOTTES - HOSTESS ROBES- - w n rsR T ow rB E A prn fW BEAc^

__1— -— -...SHIFTS TEBHIEf. fjfflSl f t ' S si___ r SAM ttPS, CLOSEOUTS * SLIGHT 1RREG.

All interest paid quarterly. L E G A L FO R INVESTM ENTS'

Save By Mail. . . We Pay Postage Both Ways SAVINGS INSURED TO $15,000

Mr. Pieger had been ^m anaanror'the'com pany since February, 1967. Pre­viously lie was associated with a major insurance

-company—employed —4b- office systems. Since Janu­ary, 1968, he has served as

^ n ^ t a nt ^ o fe e ln te r g ^ t inental. Life Insurance Company.tn v e sfm en r A partment.

He was elected senior vice president -o f: t*he invest­ment department in 1»U4.

t ;M rr • Underwood is a graduate of Union College and was awarded a mas­ter’s degree in business administration from New York University .

B efore joining New York Life, Mr. Underwood was' associated with Cofi- solidated Edison of New York and Brown Brothers Harriman & Compan d

ifo a h n a rd tment Division- of Sperry Rand and the Butova Re­search and DevelopmentLaboratories. He received his bachelor of .science de- gree from the City Collegeof New York and “has taken post graduate work in electrical engineering at City College and in pro­duction management at Columbia University Grad­uate School of Business.

the fun place wF I R E T H O R N S P E C I A L

Plant with th« Orange fruit in tlit Plant now to Intura bunch** of Or Barrie* In September and October, -

Earl MellenElected _

Blue Shield TrusteeEarl R. Mellen, board

chairman of . the Hospital Service Plan ofNewJefgfey : (Blue Cross) was elected to ' the board of trustees Of the Medical-Surgical .Plan o f New Jersey ,(81% .Shield )at4t& annual meeP ing this week. Mr. Mellen lives at 393 Wyoming Ave-

-nue. -Re-elected to the board

oftrusteesw ag Dr.Joseph A- Gpx 6 f 3 4 lfobart Gan

Morris Turnpike,Rt. 24, Short Hills, jlfcfc • 376-1990

Open D a ily 9 till 9; Sunday till 6

paulsen travel bureau 201 - 273-1313 .....

- - parking in reariO D a g * in T o k y o , R o m e o r R i ou ymireh winner, yoaTlreCeive tworaund trip tick­ets to a dream city via Pan American® Jet Clipper .. . hotel accommodations for 10 glorious day^ ■.. and $300 in cash. And Pan Anvmakes the going great, if you do not wish to make the trip, redeem it for cash! fA v M S c ?

RIOlstprize TOKYO 2nd prize 4 ROME 3rd prize

Solid state AM/FM radio. S.44 Solid state AM/FM radio. 5.99 Solid statp AM/FM radio. 10.99 Solid State AM/FM radio. 22.88 What’s your fancy? Gogs,

lions, fofidu pans, mugs on atree, pitehers^eats, bear huiks, humidors oTlgur- ines? See diem alii

Dsing time on April 30,1969. Prize ’ October 15,1969. Enter as often itails and your entry blanks at your nothing to buy!

recognition to John T. Kelly , Jr. and William O. Heilman for dfctmc=- tion in the service of the Township. 7"; . •

Fruit baskets, waste baskets, flower,, bread,' wine, bun and le tter baskets. Many shapes.

Their wisdom, patience and application has substantially contrib uted to the solution o f the various problems which have confronted the mufticipality over th e past several years.

I com m end them to all o f the residents o f the Township and askr that y o u join me in supporting them in the Primary Election on June 3rd and in the General E lection in November.

You will find their names o il Line G

Sincerely

Ralph F. Batch

' M a y o r dtm S A T I S F A C T I O N G U A R A N T E E D - R E P L A C E M E N T O R M O N E Y R E F U N D E D

Thundav. May 29, 1969Pnpo ^ ~~ THE ITEM pf Mlllbufn ond Short HtH». N, _J,“ N e g o tia tio n ! are

underway td provide ad­ditional parking for the Glen wood area.

“New ratable* in the form of office buildings for Eastman-Kodak will be completed and will Join other recently completed new buildings on East Wil­low Street.

“ Plans are currently being considered for solid waste disposal.

“ Plans are currently being considered fear the secondary treatment of sewige.

"Plans fur the rehabili­tation and beautification of the Short Hills Station area are in preparation.> “Continuing study of our Millburn Master Plan by an excellent Planning Board guarantees long- range, permanent benefits to the community.”

Heilman apd Kelly Present Projects

and deserve to have eacn move carefully thought out, so as not to diminish the benefits they camS , Wouldn’t it be th e

t o f folly to fin d these Item deferred p ro j­ects inadequate because the incumbents decided t o make a last minute jnuh t o preserve their polp K al ssdEety?'*

Banking Institute

Appoints W ulff

Walter C. Wulff of 2 6 6 Dale Drive, a vice presi­dent of the Fidelity Union Trust Company, was a p ­pointed chairman of th e guaranty fund committee Of the Essex County Chap­ter of tire American Insti­tute of Banking at t h e Institute’s 45th Annual Banquet this month.

Com m ittee’s HAVING ABARBEQUE? Why Not Try

OurNew England Clambakes

Independent candidates for election to the Town­ship Committee, Eva S. Auchincloss an d Richard fci, Amster, today ques­t io n ed whether recent municipal actions pertain­ing to the police headquar­ters, the library, Rahway River, walls and parking reflected the incumbent Committee’s desire for the' welfare of the community or a desire to preserve the present makeup of the Committee.—

The complete, statement follows.

“The present Township Committee, in an apparent effort to make up for lost time, has with® the last

few weeks announced a series o f major projects for our community. Thu bus­tling activity, in such marked' contrast to years of dull inaction, invites reflection on whether their motive is the welfare of our Township or a desire to preserve the present makeup of the Committee.

“In announcing our can­didacy, we called attention to the library, the poflee station, and the parking

Eroblem which the incum- ents had failed to plan

for, delayed interminably and which we contended was a substantial basis for their rejection in Novera-

“Since our announce­ment little rapre than a month ago, an architect’s conception of the new police station has been published in Theltem ; the site for thenew library has been designated; and a 17 car parkuig lot coating $68,000, tucked away be­hind a store on Millburn Avenue, has been an­nounced.

Project* currently un­derway and those which lje in the future were listed to<jay by incum bent Tovmship Committeemen John T 1. Kelly Jr. and William 0 . Heilman. The list o f projects represents the final statement by the two men prior to Tues­day’a primary election. The projects, as cited by Mr. Kelly and Mr. Heil­man, follows.

“Completion o f a new police headquarters on Essex Street.

“ Renovation o f the mace vacated in Town' Hall' to provide much

needed space for other Township Dodies.

“ The library board is p re sen tly selecting an architect to draw pre­liminary plans for the con­struction of a library. ...

“The Par-3 golf course in White Oak Ridge Park is progressing well and will be available tat play in the spring of 1070.

“The walls along the Rahway River through Millburn Center Will be reconstructed in order to minimize flood damage.

“Negotations are under­way to provide additional parking for Millburn Cen-

• LOBSTERS • STEAM ERS:

• C LA M BR O TH

m ost recent Township Committee meeting, the present group reluctantly acknowledged th a t . then scheme is only the first step in a larger plan for parking in this area, calling for facuitiesin Taylor Park which might be used for commercial parking. We think toe time has come | for our officials to tevfel with toe .taxpayers, said apprise, us of their plane for relieving the^Smting problem in Millburn; in­stead o f parceling them out by dribs and drabs,

i . “I t- is-significant that the oT iFlw w m atjim ^w t have about~our proposed police station and library^ is an architect’s rendering and a proposed site xe-..

annraric* ment has been made re­garding -their -contente, furnishings, construction timetable* and, most obvi­ously, their costs, all of which are essential to the making o f any sound judgroents rpgyrrtm g thoi*posals.---- :-------

___“Eachof theseundertak-ings, to say nothing o fto e construction of walking paths and improvements to the banks o f the Rah­way River, also announced

Jast week, assures us of the incumbents desire to make up for lost time and win:: an election. The people of MiHbum 6n the' other hand have waited endlessly for these improvements

CATERED ON REQUEST

,24 South Orange Ave. 762-8109 South Orange*

Also

All.Kinds of

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395 Millburn A re., MillburnO P E N S U N D A Y S

I t ’s really ra Savings A c c o u n t .77

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HE KNOWS HOW TO FIGHT CRIMEBill Cahill is a former FBI Agent. He’s served As Canflen County

Prosecutor andDeputy AttornerGeneral of New Jersey. As a six-term member of Congresslfe’s sponsored^ and foughtfor toughjmti-crime laws. ' .!£

Bill Cahill doesn’t just talk about fighting crime. He fights it,And he has recently pledged an all-out attack on organized crime.

He will wipe out the mobsters who with the-help of corrupt pub­lic officials, are now milking $500 million a year from our urban poor.Interest at 5r/e paid front

day of deposit. ~

3* Only j> 1.000 st;iftsyour account adtl to it in $ 100 multiples. -

• 90-day withdrawal privilege.

• At your option, an interest check mailed every three months.'

♦ Quarterly compounding yields — : X()9T7 anmrally. ' '~t~-

Bill Cahill doesn’t just raj he’s against a state income tax. He’s been actively fightingto avoid one.

He has introduced legislation which would turn back to State and local governments more of the tax revenues collected bythe Federal Government.

• A V ailabletoindividuais. notf-prorit- 'Ofgifflteiifioit.s. OdUciarics. businesses --and corporations. _

First National State Bank of New Jersey ^ K i o a r S t r e e t ^ ^Newa rk^New Jei-sey 67102 .

: 0 YSr ' a Five-Star Passbook. Account. Please send me a signature-card; — -----

Please semHnemore information regardfng the PivcrStar Passbook Recount.

Na m e ^ That’s one reason why taxpayers like Bill Cahill. One reason why he’s won eight straight elections. One more reason why you should vote for BilLCahiU in the ItepuMicanPriroaryJunefetL

ADDRESS,C I T Y t STATE.

ESTABLISHED 1812

— B A N K rQ g ^ E W JE R S E Y;______!_?. Total Jle!^n'exAJveY-$&60jei tton ^

%th

New Jersey Historic Trust Q Names Advisory Committee

The board of trustees of • for Historic Preservation, foe NSW Jersey Historic hah wide authority to Trust, established in 1967 acquire, hold and preserve by state legislation, has significant historical prop- named a Special Trust Ad-, erties. I t may receive visory Committee to give monies through grants,

Sidance and counsel te r funds, gifts and bequests e board. to insure the preservationLocal residents Who of the irreplaceable histori-

have been named to the cal heritage o f the State of committee are- Fred Her- New Jersey. ngri Jr. of 172 Western According to Harold C. Drive, Wilham H. Lang.of Huffman,chairman of the 10 Delbarton Drive and board of trustees:Milford A. Vieser o f 8 "Although a number of Shore Edge Lane. sites and structures are

The Trust, patterned maintained that document after the National Trust New Jersey history and

i ■ / . .........i| »' her dominant roll and ap-Visitournewoffies sociation with every chap-

a* tnv n f C^afac lava.

complishments by the His-. -toric Trust. If we rare to successfully resolve - foe problemsfoat face theHis- toric Truit and all other historical bodies vriio cur­rently are endeavoring to preserve and perpetuate Our heritage the business com m unity must con­tribute of its expertise and business and professional people must more and more associate themselves w ith th e preservation Movement. The profes­sional stature of each of foe Advisory Committee members augurs well for success in this,area. /

state sind private interests, Historic preasrvation not only enhances contempor- aty society, the efforts of

those involved are dedi­cated for foe common good and bequeath ah in­valuable legacy ;for pos-

SOL ZESSIN is a

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done. To preserve our his­tory and tp transmit foe story of our heritage un­impaired for the benefit o f future -generations it is necessary to preserve de­sirable tangible evidence of this heritage. To depend solely upon foe written word to this end would rettrict-eevereiy 'a multi- dimensional subject and drastically decrease the op= portunity to instill in-pos­terity the rich values th a t provide knowledge' and -patriotism and provide'a chi ^ f o r t h e future ^ ^

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THE ITEM of MiHburn and Short Hills, N. i. ' Thursday, Moy 29, 1969 Popp 13

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H a n k N a z a r . Inc.! Carpenter

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Dial Shampoo. 10c-oft label

-7-oz plastic— N N H f l bottle - U S P - —

GleemToothpaste H l | c8c off label J f K J X 3 25 oz tube N H N p

Pom 14 THE itEM of Millburn and Short Hltls.N..U- Tburefoy, Moy 29,1969a t O h io U n iverz ity , Athens, Ohio. «' y

LINDA E. KIRCH, daughter of Mr. and Mis. Roy H. Kirch .of 26 Con- iston Road, and NANCY A. LEAMOND, daughter o f Mr. and Mrs. Edmund W. LeaMond of 14 No*- wood Terrace, have been admitted to die Gold Key Organization of Smith CoI- lege, Northampton, Mass. Both are 1968 graduates of Millburn High School and will serve as guides for prospective applicants at Smith College.

— Nancy has also bear elected president of the

class of 1972 at Smith C ot

^ • * *PETE LYTKOWSKI, a

1965 graduate of Millburn H igL School, has been, awarded a varsity letter in lacfosse a t Norwich Uni­versity, Northfield, Vt. A senior business administra­tion major at the military college, Pete is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Sigmund LytkoWsM of 17 Rosedale Avenue.

* * *.EDGAR J. GILROY,

son o f Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Gilroy of 217 White Oak Ridge Road, received the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference award as the senior athlete who demon­strated outstanding ath­letic and academic ability. Edgar, a senior at Muhlen­berg College, Allentown, Pa., was co-captain of the soccer and lacrosse teams.'

Hartshorn, Drive and a sophomore at Vassar Col­lege, was a panelist on the David 8usskindshow Sun­day night on national tele­vision. The pahfelists dis­cussed the issues creating problems in understanding between the^ generations.

SUSAN LEE VENDE- VILLE, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Natthew J. Vendeville of 14 Edge- w o o d T e r r a c e , and PENELOPE JEAN SHAW, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Shaw 428 Write Oak Ridge Road, have been named- to the dean’s list for the winter quarter

p Q l U g e

[CornerTHE MAJORITY OF

M A TER IAL USED IN THIS COLUMN COMES DIRECTLY FROM THE VARIOUS UNIVERSITIES AND COL­LEGES, THE ITEM, HOW­EVER, IS GLAD TO PUB­LISH NOTES REGARDING STUDENTS SUBMITTED BY PARENTS OR STUDENTS THEMSELVES.,

SARAH RIDGWAY, daughter of Mr,-and Mrs. William C. Ridgway of 250

GOVERNORAmong students named

to the fall form dean’s list a t Rutgers College, Now Brunswick was RUSSELL M. GERTMENIAN of 40 Cambridge Drive. - E L I Z A B E T H LEE FOOTHORAP, daughter .of Mrs. James F. Footho- rap* of 49 Whitney Road, is

DIVIDENDSPAIDQUARTERLY!

I [Uj -Highest ftate H ill Ntw Jersey

■ i i i u m m g F

mm w ■ riT T m riT r

J. RUSSELL COZIER, son o f Mrs. Margaret C ozie r ,of 11 Defwick

Tzmr, was awarded a var- ■ T jh y 'le ti^Brown University, ProvE” dence, R. I . szH" - *** - —-— =- S 71 E LTL ETT A N N BREEpiN€hrr80pfaom orr biology major at Montclair State College, was initiated" into the science honor so-

B , Sigma Eta Sigma.ey is the daughter of

-Mr.-and Mrs. Robert L. -Breeding o f“ 30--€oloniar Way. * * * - • --

I E D W A R D - A L L E N SWABB, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Swabb o f 02 Addison ’ Drive’, Ms heen named to -the dean ’s I s t - ^ Vanderbill UmVer^” sity, Nashville, Term.

'* * *[ STANLEY S. RAY-” MQND, aon of Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Raymond of 69 Spenser Drive, has been chosen for inclusion in the 1969 edition of Outstand­ing-College Athletes of America.

Sandy, a senior at Ly­coming College, Williapis- pc^ , Pa., was named for m s'conlnBations to the swimming team daring his’ four years a t the^ollege as Well as for-his leadership ab ility—-and service to Lycoming., He served as co-captain of the- swimming squad last winter and for several

th B ^ ^ 'L iw r e t in a r coi-

th e Syracuse University Semester in Colombia pro­gram. t, Joining other students

in . the group, she will fly TcTBoUeta eariv in August: " t i^ spaadTour mo n th s , at t h e > University °of the -Andes in the Colombian capital Now a sophomore atiSweetBriar. Elizabethis^ a graduate of Mlfflburn High School-Sheplanrto major in international-af^ fairs.5V4% 6 month certlflcates-

minimum amount $10,000. limited offering. Dividends

^credited from date of deposit; Eachi member’ s^certificafoais

Federal Savin gs, and Loan lifc. surance Corporation, a govern-, ment agency.

BERKELEY i SAVINGS

^ AND LOAN ASSOCIATION88 LYONS AVENUE, NEWARK 07112 • 9 2 6 -4 5 0 0

434 CHANCELLOR AVENUE, NEWARK 07112 • 9 2 3 6 2 4 ^

A PPO IN T ED .M AN AG ER - Raym ond C. Gautier was re- candy appp in l ln^ oaaecM f- Control Data Institute o f Essex S jT ik i T fiiscom pany, -a new­com er to the com m unity, w ill o ffe r courses in contem porary

"com puter ahcTeTectronic equip­ment techniques.—

CongressmanCongressman SANDMAN ON _ TA XE S

Republican Congressman Sand­man is the . only GubernatonaT candidate consistently opposed to a State Income Tax. Sandman favors a tax on public author­ities to reduce the homeowners real estate tax burden.

Birriholz Forms— Research Firm— A Company designed ex- clusively for real - estate research and feasibility studies h as . been formed by Jack Bimholz and Company of Newark. •— According to Mr. Birn- holz, who lives tit—629-

SANDMAN ONCOLLEGE RIOTS

Sandman favors college students having the right to dissent and d e m o n s tra te but o p p o se s student._squ.a_cU who take the— law into th e ir ow n ” hands. Sandman agrees with President Nixon that college administra­tors should display backbone in dealing with, college uprisings and rebellion.. __________

want...ata price - -you can afford!

Congressman SANDMAN ON

-STREET CRIMERepublican Congressmdri_$and- man believes the alarming in­crease in rapes, house burglar­ies, muggings and auto thefts, requ irer elhergehcy W ehlfbh. Greater State aid should be made availab le to provide more policemerrat htoherwage leifols to patrol-neighborhood streets.

- Congressman - SANDMAN ON SOCIAL SECURITY PENSIONSSocial Security benefits are be*- law federally established poverty levels. "This is a national dis- grace./rwRestore human dignity .: to our elders," says Republican Congressman Sandman, He foy-. ors ajminimom 15% increase in _Z socid I security; pMsiontir^=i _

Need lome help jn writing news reports of the activities -of your organization? Stop in_al The item office and we'll be glad to furnish you with a fact theet on the proper ‘method^of preparing a new* atory.-

m m m m13595:

ZIDEELVERED —

INCLUDING T H E S E ACCESSORIES

• ^ F R O N T 'S : REA R S E S T BELTS

• OUTSIDE REAR-VIEW M IRRO R

• W IN D SH IELD WASHERS

• HEA TER & D EFROSTERS

e HEAVY DUTY BATTERY :

I AUTOM ATIC PA RK IN G BRA KE

• R E L E A S E -

VOTE SANDMAN YES INCOME TAX M

VOTE REPUBMCAM

• A U T.QM ATICTR ANSMTSSIO^

5 PO W ER STEERING

% PO W ER DISC BRA K ES;

• PU SH BUTTON R A D IO ,

• W H ITE W A L L 4T R E S- —

• DELUX W H E E L COVERS

• ELECTRIC CLOCK

THIS WEEK ONCONTINENTALS . COUGARS AND MONTEGOS ' INSTA LLATI ON AVAILABLE

FLETCHER UNCOCN-MERCIIRY 86 FRANKLIN PLACE SUMMIT

TftE ITEM of Mlllbum and Short Hllb. N, l Thutidoy, Moy 29, 1969 Pope 15

mini-priced, of course

WAYNE: Route 23andRateerRoad — -— _SO. PLAINFIELD: Park Avenue and Oaktree Road CLIFTON: 14 Main Avenue at Route 3 - -

g MILLBURN: 800 Morris Tpke.. Route 24 West, Short Hills

SdopeShop

Schools Revise Policy For Health Exams

The first major revision since 1963 in the health policy of t h e . Township schools, stipulating that stu d en ts’ receive their medical and deptal exami­nations from their family doctors and dentists, was approved by~the Board of Education at its meeting Monday night.

--.-According, to Roy- H. Taylor, assistant superin- tendent for administrative services, the revision, was developed to meet the

SteeringColumn

f rva ieraCTe gentleman iii- Green field, Indiana is stUT openrtfflgHd-ear he built^in- 1910. A bachelor, lie has never permitted a female-to

may account for the car’s longevity^ And perhaps his?J^ ^

There were an average 35 pounds' of “plastics ~in the~ 1965 cars. This yem tt*53ip~ to about 80 pounds-per car/ and that’s just the beginning of iheplastks revolution.,

&d-but^tfue:AV^en-the” first motor car was seen'in L fi Havre, Prance, back in 1913, two peasants dropped dead of fright. - —

Tip-for the man at the jymp: Some new model foreign cars are filled di- rectlv into the tank, with­out any tubing. Automatic shut-off device won’t work. Hand-fill or spill! . V -

Latest gadget: au electric jack that plugs into cigarette lighter. Costs $40. Thejfirst one will probably be bought by a guy whose car has blowout proof, self-sealing, double walled tires! _____

Youll-find all toe gadg­ets you want on our cars at Fletcher Lincoln-Mercury, 86 Franklin Place, Summit. 277-0940.

changing needs of toe schools and to establish' more thoroutfi examina­tions. Mr. Taylor said toee x a m in a t io n s b y to e family physician ordentist would also provide a closer follow-up of deficiencies.

School reports of dental examinations will be due each January. School re­ports of phy sical examina­tions for kindergarten en­trants will be due in Sep­tember (as at present);for

B in grades 2 ,4 ,7 and November o f each

year; and for participants in competitive sports, prior to me first practice sessions (as at present)." The school doctors, added-Mn.Taylor, will still be available foremlrgeacjr service, for -administering 'toe Tine tests Tuberculin testing) rad for screening those pupiITunable to be examined by- a private-L physician. ~ ~~~ „ \ I

"policy are "available at-the- Education Center and let­ters and necessary forms-will; be distributed tp thepupils during the _iir§t week of school m Sepfeni-1 ber. . . .

— - — ORDER TO LIMIT__DAted: APRIL 26, 1969

ESTATE OF EDTTH-TEDA) R,• KUEHt, deceases: J

Punuant to the ordar of JAMES E ABRAMS, Surrogate of the County of Essex, this day made on ♦ha application nftha iinHmrtlgn/ulExecutor of aajd deceased, notice is hereby given to the creditors of said deceased to exhibit to the sub­scriber, under oath or affirmation, their.claims and demands- Mftifltt. the estate of said deceased within six months from this date, or they wHf%e forever barred from prose­cuting or recovering the Same against thesubtcrlber.

. “ SAM S. MINNECIHABRY 3. STEVENS, JR.,

S11 Miliburn Avanua —, -----—Millburn (S.H.), N.J. */May 1,8,16, 22,29, *69 -

---- - ORDER TO LIMIT----------Dated: APRIL 26,1969

ESTATE OF-PETER CIANCI also known as-PIETRO CIANCI, da- ceased. .. .Pursuant o'the order of JAMES

E. ABRAMS, Surrogate of the CountY'WEssex, thls day made oh the application otthe-undersigned. Executors of raliTdeceated, notice it hereby given to the creditors of said deceased to exhibit to the sub­scribers, under oath or affirmation. - their' elaimt and demands against

IMEMBEt THE DtTt - TUESMY, M 3nllo w FM IB ON UNE e

Republicans for Miflburn

K E L L Y I H L M A t t

HELP US T 0 KEB» = ESSEX COUNTY POLITICS OUT OF MILIBURN LOCAL GOVERNMENT

KEMSNSOffiOURRECOROACCOMPLISHMENTS

1. Lowest tax rate in Essex County. _ •

2. Only 16.5 cents out of every tax dollar collected pays for all municipal services, an excellent Police Dept., an outstanding Fire Dept., conscientious R oads and.

— solid Waste Collection Departments, Sewers and outstanding recreational

States, built3. One of the finest communities in the United States, built only by excellentplanning. ............. _ l __

4. The establishment of many Businesses in Miliburn during our tenure, one im-_*£_PQftont motivating factor being an honest and efficient Miliburn local-govern­

ment. ' —

VERSUS______ f u t u r e Pla in fheSKY” J_____ _ ----- — ^

We wilL not expend 4 to 8 million dollars of Miliburn T axpayers* mrmwy f/vatfftfr: fish in effect another Essex County Park.

WE STAND WITH PRIDI ON OUR RECORD :: __ ARB SEER YOUR SUPPORT ^

P«ld For By John T. Xtly. Jr. a Wm.fr I

T S T

ELECTION NOTICE t Notice I* hereby given thet i

Primery Election will be held 01 Tuetdey, June 3rd, 1969. 7 A.M. ti 8 P.M.

State CommitteeRegister of Deed* end Mortgage* County SuperviaorTowndiip Committee (2) County Committee TOWNSHIP OF MILLBURN Flrat Dlttrlct Lackawanna PI.

Ter. tgb Ridgewood Rd.Northerly to Millburn Ava. to Line opposite Midland Rid. to Look. R. R. to Lackawanna PI. POLLING PLACE Millburn Ava. School. 17 Taylor St

Second Oittrtet - Maplewood Urn from. Ridgewood Rd, to W. Branch Rahway River, to South Orange Aye. to Brooktida Or. to Gian Ava. to Lino of Cape Ct. to Ltndan St. to Myrtle Ava to Bailey Rd. to Maplewood Lina. POLLING PLACE: Wyoming School Naw Gym, Ent Pin# St.

Third Dlatrict - Lina from Woodland Rd. at Moftlt Tpke to

R. R.to Forest Dr. NortheastTaylor Rd. North to Lack. R. R. to Morris Tpke. to Llna of Woodland Rd. POLLING PLACC: OlenwootTSchoolr.326 Taylor Bd, a. — .....

Fourth District - Livingston' Line at Passaic B Ivor to Parsonage nW Btf. to WIHta ou t Bldgs Hd: to Hartshorn Dr. Imaginary Llne Weat of Hartahorn Dr. to Morria Toke. to Pasaalc Biver to TTVTfigStbn Line

-AOLL IMG PLACE:, Bacreation use. 341-Wltlta-eatL-BIdga Bd:

— Fifth Olstrlct - Parsonage Hill Bd. at Townahip-pf Livingston Line to Hartdiorn-Dr. to imaginary Line .NlXCleastarty bf N. Baachcroft Rd. to Great-Hills fid. tp Greet Hills Tar. to imaginary Lin* West of: Silver Spring Rd. to Township of Llvlnntton Line to Parsonaoa HHI Rd. POLLING PLACE~ OeWflela School, “Silver Spring Rd.-GraatHills Terr. ; ------- -'i

Sixth District- LackawannaPI. ar~L»ckrRrR.'to^QtjsrtrAVB:-tff

six months from this date, or they will be forever barred from proaa-- cuting of racoverTng the Same aastnat the tuiacr laersr•^ rp——

JOSEPH E. CIANCI........ a n g e l a m : e m o r r is evTOEtONFFREI MAN . Attorney 64 Main Street __Millburn, N.J.May 1, 8, IS, 22,29-. '68 y

. Fee $24.00

. Linden S t to Myrtle___ Bailey Bel. to RidgewoodEtd. to Maplewood Line to Union Una W Veux Hey Rd. to MIHbtfrn Ave. to Wyoming Ave. to Leek. R. R. to Lackawanna M, POLLING PLACE: Wyoming School New Own, Ent PinaSt

Seventh District'- Main S t from Unibn Line to Ridgewood Rd. to. WhHtmghorn Tar. to Mountain View Rd. to the Union Line to Springfield Ave. to 8pringflaid Line to Mein S t POLLING PLACE: South Mountain School, 865 Ridgewood Rd.

Eighth District - Forest Or. North at Hobart Ave. to Hyland Ave. to Montview Ave. to Oelwlck La. to Hillsida Ave. to Hobart Ave to Old Short Hills Rd. to Leek. R. R. to Forest Or. North. POLLING PLACE: Junior High School. 11 Old Short HM* Rd.

Ninth District - Morris Ave. at' Millburn Ave. along UMburit Ave. to Courity Line to imaginary Line

St. 1Line

d Rd.Meadowbrook Rd.

from-Ave. POLLING PLACE:

High School, 4S2 Millburn Ave.—Tenth District - Veux Hall Rd.

at Rahway River to Mouhtaiiwisw Rd. to Whittingham ter. to Mlllbum Ave- to Lackawanna PI. to Lack. R. R. to Wyoming Ave. to Millburn Ave. to Veux Hah Rd. P O LL IN G P LA C E : SouthMountain School. BBS Ridgewood Rd. — •__ Eleventh District. . HighlandAu« Irnm M«Wv|«» Ave. .tO HartsbornrOrr-tnlmeoinarv: :LiniL

IMIUBURW OIL CO.

^ I N C E 4 S 6 r

3 7 6 -0 0 0 8

Wees of North. Baachcroft Rd. to Great Hills Rd. » <?id Short HIHe Rd. to Jefferson AM. to Montview Ave. to Highland Avp. POLLING

' PLACE: Chrift Church Day School Room Nbi 1, East Lane.

Twelfth. Olstrlct - Greet Hide Tar. to (moBlnery Line to West of E llio tt PI. to Towndiip of Livingston Lino to West Orange Line to Cherry La. to Towndiip of Maplewood Line to South Orange Ave. to Broolulde Or. to Imaginary Line West of Campbells Pond to Old Short Hitts Rd. to Greet HIM* Rd. to Greet HWs Ter. POLLING PLACE: Deecfleld School. Silver Spring Rd., Greet Hills Terr. |

Thirteenth Olstrlct • Leek. R. R. j at Morris Tpke to Taylor Rd. North, to Western Or. to Moraine PI. toi Mlnnlslnk Or/to Hartshorn Or. to White Oak Ridge Rd. to Imaginary-Line below Addison Or. to Lino North of Audubon C t to Morris Tpke. to Lock. R. R. POLLING PLACE: HartshornSchool, 3SS Hartshorn Or,

Fourteenth District-Hartshorn Dr. at Whits Oak Ridge Ril, JO Mlnnlslnk Rd. to Moraine PI. to Western Or. to Highland Ave. to Hartshorn Or. toPsrsonage Hill Rd. to Whitt Oak Ridge Rd. to Hart-: thorn Or. POLLING PLACE: Hart- ahorn School, 398 Hartshorn Dr.

Flfttenth District • Lackawanna PI, St Laok/ R. R. to Glen Avai. to Brookbde/Or. to Campbells Pond

Montview Ave to Oelwlck Le to HINIId* Ave to Hobart Av*. to Old Short Hilts fid, to Leek. R. R. to Leckewama PI. POLLING PLACE: Junior, HJ0i School. 11 Old ShortHWeJ3&X COUNTY BOARD

OF ELECTIONS. <Attest:ELMER J. HERRMANN.Clerk..May 22/29, 1969 $71.28

Woke up a little richer each day!

J E A R N T H E H I O H I S T R A T E IN T H E S T A T E P A I D O N R E G U L A R S A V I N G S A C C O U N T S

INVESTORSS A V I N G S

AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ^ -----^

_ _ _ _ Main Office: 64 Main Street, MilbumEast Orange, HilWde, Shbrt HilU^Union .

Member Federal Savingt Si Loan Insurance Corporation-

WELLS28 THIRD S T R E E T

S u & u A J k w t$ ) e a f a i !

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W i SALUTE

AMERICA'SHEROES

■ A GUARANTEEDONE OWNER CARS

O L D E S T C A D I t t A e U E A L E R IN E S S E X C O U N T Y

'68 CADILLACSEDlN-OE-VIUE: ill Slick Imk kith «iml l» lull po«tf tfcciMMCi this EflGTORY- JIIFtOIIBITIOimip----------------

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'67 CADILLACSEDui-DE-JliuE: Cleimmt Dili «ilh i black vinyl lop: lull. 'imi'H includmt F4C- TOIV klR CONOITIOmSO!

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'66 CADILLACSEOAN-OE-VILLE: Sled Gtt. hwh nlh kink *in|l loa and Hick ml lull. Kid inti. FACTORY SIR COKOIYIOMINC!

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'65 CADILLACCOKVESYItlE Cage. Slat liaiik ailk • Wicklor full, pmici Will EICYOSY AIRC0KDITIQNMG!

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'67 CADILLACEDtN-DE VILLE:Hick finish with I black my tut trill nniwl inclrimc f ACTORY IIR-CORDITIONISK' .

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'63 CADILLACiEMN-DE-lflUE: i del link ktirli Ml

* 1 4 9 5GILBERT H WELLS PRES

n'e/td- u w M M f OidsmobllB Eo.28 THIRD STREET . SOUTH ORANGE

SO 3.4400 SO 3.4413

ftoflt-16 T H E ITEM of Millburn'ond Short Hills. N.

4 Homes, 1 Car Robbed■ Four homes and one car

were broken into and ' robbed in th e Township

last week, according to polios reports.

Last Thursday the resi­dence of Byaid Pawson of 33 Byron Road was en­tered through a cellar Win­dow and completely ran; sacked. Police report a sil­verware service, valued at $1,680 was stolen from the residence.

Two residences, those fOf James Sanderson of 29 Lake Road and Mrs. Marie O’Brien of 20 Addison

1 Drive,- were robbed on Sunday, May 25. At the Sanderson house entry was made through a basement window and $133 and

some jewelry was missing. A watch, silverware and a mink stole were taken from : the O’Brien resi­dence. „

The next day Sam Sheitelman of 12 Highview Road reported to police a break and entry at his home during the previous night. Entry was gained through a rear window but it was unable to determine if anything was missing.

A car belonging to Mrs. J t . Edmands or Rye, N. Y, which was parked at the Short Hills Mall bn Tues­day afternoon was broken into and robbed. Mrs. Ed­mands told police a pock- etbook and several pack­ages were stolen.

(SICKLES Photo-Reporting)-- "FU N -ftP — -tjsa Coppola holds up theprize^while^her friend, Arm Mctionough o fW West ~

Road, holds the po t fille d w ith names o f the ItsH tyt^ ildren who won prizes a t a "Fun-In" last Saturday. LisaTW ith the help o f her fam ily and friendsr organized the fa ir fn r the benefit o fjr^ ~ £arm_eUte convent in F len iing ion a rid raised $400 w hich js being donated fd ttie cloistered nuns.

old girl's way of helping a group of clofstered nuns in Flemington. Held In front, back and side yards of her home; at 2 Birch- wood Drive, Lisa’s fair was a fbn-Med^Safairday after- Troon fo r some 250 people

A Fair Is Lisa’s Way - To Help Her Frielids

M ontclair National

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Theaunw asft^sh in ing to welcome Lisa’s fair last Saturday but the fain only- threatened and that’sw hat Lisa, had said, “It can’t rain.u— ----- — :—

Lisa Coppola’s fair, with

A l u m n i M b d a l

F o r F o le yThe Villanova Univer­

sity General Alumni Asso­ciation this year selected Joseph T. Foley class of 1930, to receive the Alum­ni Medal, • .awarded, for

“ outstanding service to the University through^ the Alumni Association.” Mr. Foley, who^resides at 12 Quaker Road, was chosen for this honor because of long years of loyalty and devotion to alumni activ­ities on'Jboth the local and' the national level. . '• ..

The medal was present­ed by the Very Reverend Robert J. Welsh, O.S.A.,. president of Villanova, at the association^eannual re­union dinner on May 24. on the university campus^

games, prizes, food and novelties, was a 13-year-

and resulted in a $400 donation to the Carmelite nuns she had metseveral

yean ago.About three yean ago

Lisa and her father visited theFIem irigton convent and talked with a few pf the nuns. i,isa never seemed to forget them and two yean ago decided to sell cookies and cakes and organize # few games to help the convent. That was Lisa’s first fair. Last year m a n y

i of her friends and neigh, hors pitched in and Lisa was able to send a $100. check to the friends she seldom sees but never for­gets.

This year Lisa went all out, started work just be­fore Christmas and ran her fair for the third time .last weekend. Enlisting the talents of her brothers and siste rs and about 30 friends, Lisa assembled a collection of stuffed ani­mals, aprons, pot holders, p id books to. sell at the fair. Lisa and her friends also baked1 food, organized games and rounded up prizes for the “Fun-In” as the fairWas called. " ^ .

Lisa then contacted two IwM supermarkets and a" bread" company and re­newed- donations- of- 386 hot dogs,..roUs and cans of

thkSfyfai^Qers;-Jeveral of1 her neighbors contributed records, toys and the odds and ends necessary for the

. A b o u t 2 5 0 people turned out for Lisa’s fair on Saturday. Some were friends of tne family from

- neighboring communities. Many were friends from the Township and famiife* from the Glen wood area who heard about the fair or had been to the “Fun- In” in previous years., Lisa judges this year’s; fair a complete success and - plans to hold another one m two years. Each year die has doubted her effort with the, appropriate re­sults so Lisa feels her fourth venture will take a little m ore planning and preparation. *

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3 H.P. Jaqobsen 321 engine

Model No. 42118 *16996

B L A N K E N 'S H A R D W A R Ei M 0 SHHMBHftO AVENUt/MAPtfWOOD

fraa Paritina Adjacent to Store ~

CHICKENSALWAYSFRESH:..NEVER

FROZEN

RibSteaks “ Spareribs - Smoked Hamssmoked hams££*■■ *49® rock cornish hens6 *49® corned beef rounds *89® turkey wings i 26*

WATERMELWHOLE

CUT UP MEIONS PRICED SUGHfLY HIGHEE

FRESH each GOLDEN ear

CUCUMBERS TOMATOES ORANGES

Fruit Drinks »“PINEAPPLE-GRAPEFRUIT

BeHteuteDriiikSAVE 10c ON THIS HOLIDAY FAVORITE ^

Realemon LemonJiiice~-39tALUMINUM FOIL • 4< OFF LABEL

Reijnahls Wrap 4-110

STORE SLICED

SAM 1 Your Good Deal Min) SAYS:“EVERY OTHER STORE FIGURES THEY’LL I O U 3 Y THIS WEEKEND.!SO, WHY LOWER PRICES?

WE FIGURE WE LL BE BUSIER THAN ANY OF THEM, BECAUSE OUR WEEKEND PR ICES ARE LOWER THAN ANYBODY’S.”

* Real crazy prices on charcoal to get the barbecue swHOtFafflo a sizzling start. Two othli bargains for your barbecue. On chick­en. On Franks. ;

The kids will want ice cream and soda? Note our buy on half - ga llons of ice cream. And conned soda. The some price othert get for o ‘dozen cons we'te charging for a'CASEI (24 cant to a case. Okay?) '- The point is we're offering prices that will persuade everyone to come into Stoff/Good Deol. And adding extra chackers to give you faster service. _ ---- .— ------- ■ - *'

If this Is one of .the biggest shaping weekends of the year-is* that any time to let up?"______________*

Boiled HamKITCHEN FRESH

Potato Salad-AMERICAN KOSHfR-----

All Beef Franksturkey ro lle r £89® haddock s ,69®munsett *89® queen crab legs,J9®large bologna s S F shrimp SO*lo 40 COUNT .W J

ALL FLAVORS HOLLAND DUTCH

15* ICECREAMs r

B t©H A L F

[G A LLO N

STAFF FROZEN 125c peas or beans.IT m

i a L _ _ jhapplepie

22® american muffins;'^ 15®

bartlett pearsBtato c 5

inch $IIPSoc

’ *10®39®43®59®

m P lejitiee Heinz babyhellmann mayonnaise0 ® alpo dogfood 4'~rs1Mfruit cocktails ______staff sugar 5 £49® white bread ' ^ 29c staff gallon bleach ■Sr29* frank & burger rolls*”- ” 35' maxwell house co»* If 69®' potato chips ooutMn 79'

staff prune juice 3 tr$4 E pride o’ coioinbig»n« 3 ^. -1^

10

-HGGEFOSIT-FtoRETURNGARTON-

c Gallon FreshMilky, fruit saiado.u»^59c f r a n k s - - - - e65c |5 crown drinks»^29{ franks S J9 °

■ m argarines 6& $1N franks .75° e C o o W r i n k s ^ & u n f f i t h a m U ! g -.

cream cheese^.29c bacon *. orange juicesr fi^Tneats 3^89c^ p a r k a y A ^39c salami S '^79c

sour cream ..38° salami X 49c

Orange JuiceMINUTE MAID FROZEN

Lemonade - r ,,BIRDS EYE REGULAR OR CRINKLE CU'

French FriesFAMILY SIZE PACKAGE

Roman PizzasCHOCOLATE, POUND OR GOLDEN

— 1 Twuw - • Vl. vuvciflATlW •• WW1 i •'vvvw wbvuw aiwtif Iw XSBIOfllo Lee lid Ac a ofoicE welt y i i BaM.n.|| pm«i| *911 nbnlv I nnnnff 7coriieu-Cob b<?efburgefs»499c w«owl»!1 i , . 7 yy9fanteiuice, J ^ - M

. ' DOUBLE TUBULAR ARMS • 8 W

;l720WSTREH r M O f l in r w r MILLBURN

Said The Treasurer Of

DON’T FORGET THE 4,000 FREE ORANGE POPSICLB r ; interrupted the Refreshments Man.

The Treasurer counted the money in his jaenny bank, added prospective receipts (if it does not rain), subtracted all the costs - he does not know the new math so he used Circa 1930 Public School Math • and suddenly there,

I t ’s O N E D O LLA R A G A IN in 1969” he shoutedBUT M ILLBURN SHORT HILLS FO URTH OF JU LY COM M ITTEE HAS HELD T H E LINE SINCE 1963 A T $1. DONATION PER ADMISSION TAG AND NO CORNERS H A V E BEEN C U T , AND COSTS H A V E SPIRALLED.

TAGS BASED ON A MINIMUM DONATION OF $L

WILL BE DISTRIBUTED BY MAIL PRIOR TO THE 4th. AGAIN in 1969 TH E SAM E F U L L D A Y O F CELEBRATION IS BEING

PLANNED.

—"from th° ft a.m. m tfil the fireworks GRAND FINALE at ^= = ----------10 o ^ . f a f tfae satne $1. donati6n~ , r __ ■ r~ ~ g g61.50 WILL BE THE '

MINIMUM DONATION AT THET = -------GATES ON THE DAY“ f f O y J T H E c I S H M A T I O N : ^

Please answer your letter froin the Committee soon with a dona­tion, It'i a baraain at S i, it voiractjaefore the Fourthl ••

JulpR h Committee T.O. Bbx 4ShortHilis, N. j. 07078

T H E I T E MO f M IL L lil 'RN an d SIIO B T IfTCLS •

Thursdoy, Mby 29, 1 9 6 9 ' 1 i ; Pofle 17

Team T u b in g G ym Studies M ore M eaning

Reports on two cur­riculum innovations, the- Unified Science Course and the team teaching of English at the senior high school, were presented at the meeting of the Board of Education on Monday night.

The Unified Science Course, explained bjr the chairman of the science d e p a r tm e n t, Leonard Blessing, was prompted when several teachers sug­gested combining physics and chemistry to eliminate

. shortcomings. _in th e sep- arate studies of the two - sciences. By taking away m u c lro f The over-lapping

-o f material, thw“teacnere : felt the sciences could be

handled more extensively

Thwft years ago crystalized into a three- year course of study, titled Science I; TIpH lyw hfch combined “the study of chem istry, physics and biology. -Three teachers taught the course, each emphasizing a certain area ofc science.

Better Understanding A.' “"We found the 'students

were getting a better un- - Uerstandifig oi l i e nee,” z ^ B : ! ® g r =m e ^ g " l F W =

gome 40 residents at’ the m eeting Monday night. “For example,, a student will - b e tte r understand photosynthesis, a standard biology concept, if- h r knows something about light, energy and thrfrans^ fer of-molecular or atomic partieles.”

While the reaction, to unified science courses "by colleges and professional m e iT T I^ r^ ^ W d ® le jli5 r r Blessing pointed out . die big problem faping teach­ers was convincing the stu­dents’parents.

"We have to convince the parents that what was good enough for them is

not good enough for their c h i ld re n ,” me science teacher stated.

Mr. Blessing continued by saying 12 schools in New Jersey were using uni­fied science courses this year and predicted many1 more would establish them in the fall.

“We have had teachers from all over the state come to Millbum to ob­serve the course and all were enthusiastic,” con­cluded Mr. Blessing.

Thematic ApproachTeam teaching was also

the-appmach used .by Jo ­seph Wrzos and-€-lifford ■ Gordon, English -teachers at the senior high school, to make their cburmTm English literature more meaningful to the -stu­dents.-...^ ---------------------1- * A fter combmmg"' two senior English classes, Mr. Wrzos and Mr. Gordon fol­lo w ed th e "traditional chronology—o f literature with special emphasis on themes suggested by them and by the students.

"The interests of die students..dictated.ihfi di­rec tions we followed,” commented Mr. Gordon.

22"(Jiass Roupings~werh v a r ie d , th e teach ers wo'rked separately and to-

§ ether with the students, iscussion topics and sup­

plementary readings were suggested to expose the' students to as many view­points as possible.

“We feel the students, in working with the two

-teachers, can experience different viewpoints and disagreements and then have a basis to form their own opinions,” Mr. Gor­don saidt------- —

Failures Important While the tests and grad­

ing for the course were conventional,- the students were . given the opportu­

nity to make their reports in various ways. Some stu -' d en ts ex p ressed their thoughts about certain lit­erary works in paintings and others “used musical compositions to explain their poetry readings.

"Some of these reports were very successful and some were failures,” added Mr.'’Gordon, “but we also take pride in the failures. The students were learning what they coiild do ana gobbled up everything we gave them.”

Verne Aubel Appointed VP

Sobin Chemicals Inc.r Boston, Mass. Has an­nounced the appointment of. Verne W. Aubel of Pensacola, F la.. (formerly of Maple Terrace) as vice president-marketing.

Mr. Aubel ~ previously had .been general- sales

jn an a g er. agric u ltu ra l chemicals division of Es- TambiaT Chemical Corpora­tion, and vice-president*-- marketing of nittoken divi­sion of Allied Chemical

l The Aubels wih-inQve: f ro m rT e iS ico Ia tb W elle s^

Presidential Citation For Retiring Colonel

A Presidential citation, theXegion of Merit, was awarded to Lieutenant Colonel Peter L. Home Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Leigh­ton Home of- 28 Baltuarol Way, on hie retirement April 29 from the U.S. Army after 27 years of service.

Col. Home received the citation for his “excep­tionally meritorious serv­ice “while serving as di­rector of the Army’s Metrology and Calibration Center for the Missile Com­mand at Redstone Afsenal iri Alabama. .

“During this period,” the citation read, “Col. H orne perform ed his duties in an outstanding manner, demonstrating the highest degree of initiative, organizational ability and resourcefulness.” , —

__-CoL -Home’s _ perform*fthce was'Tfesponsibte for

j - the revitalization trf^the: Army calibration^system and successful relocation1 of~ the Metrology— and ^shbration Center at thfe. Redstone’Arsenal.

ley, Mass, in June - “The dStm gui^ed char-

acter of his performance,” the citation continued, “served as an incentive, to othop. and earned for him the respect and admiration of all military and civilian personnel participating in a program of national im­portance.”

CoLHorhe is a graduate of Millbum High School and Georgia Institute of Technology.

Alumnae News

PAN HELLENIC The Short Hills-Summit

Area Panhellenic will hold its annual Presidents’ Cof- •fee on Monday. June 9, at 9:30 a.m. at the home of Mrs. Howard VanWym

d o r te l l Westview Ro

Co-hostesses will bp Mrs. A.B. Conciatori of Chat- ham, president, Mrs. Don­ald Chapman o f Madison, vice president, Mrs. Frank Chestpn of Summit, secre­tary-treasurer, Mrs. Werner Goepfert of 7 Crescent Place, recommendations, and Mrs. C. Philip Bartlett of Chatham, publicity.

All NPC sorority alum­nae chapter presidents are

invited' and may call Mrs. V a n W y n g a rd e n at4

Plans will -be discussed for the fourth annual Punch Partji -

Additional copia* of

tho Towndilp. Back copla* for approxImataly ona-yaar ara- availabla at The Item Off**. - '

EYMOUR

IlNSLER

ICHERMERHORNSHORT HILLS *

116 SHORT HILLS AVENUE

3 7 9 - 3 4 3 4R E A L T O R S

T h e t e n n i s s e t l o v e s t o p lay*

a n d s w i m a t

S u n V a lle y

S w i m a n d T e n n is

C lu b .■"because-there are 9 championship. tennis courts----------:

Sun Vaftey Swim and’ Tennis Club _ Florhaffl-Jaffe1- 763-3940——

William Kluger, Mgr.

| N O B O D Y undersells KramerPorvtiac 1

i and N O BODY can give you the quality, (

■ convenient' servicelhat Kramer

i customers receive.

M T N E W L O W P R IC E S NMEDUIEMIVlRYioii ensri siock

dual have the best dealtil you

PONTIAC

I T H IN K W T I L D O IT A G A IN

Pope J 8 THE ITEM of Millburn and Short Hills, N. J. Thursday. Mov 29.1969

]jy c i£ if i O T E S (S / N E W S / O F T H E W EE K

Readers are Invited to Contribute Personal Items, Accounts of Social Functions,. Reports of Meetings or Clubs.— — .

On Sunday, sunny skies and beautiful surroundings brought more than 100New Eyes«for the Needy,

rblutoe. volunteers away from th e ir gardens and golf courses to attend the an­nual New Eyes cocktail party, held this year a t the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed­ward J. McGinley of Old Hollow Road.

The affair is always the highlight of toe season as i k f o l lo w s “th e annualSpring Jewelry Sale, held this year on therprecedingtoy. -______

— The^jewelry committee' chairmen reportthafc the response from-the towns^

Sjple and friends" made s year’s sale net the larg-

"“^ p f io e B d s ever. All pr<>~ ceeas go to supply new

-•‘ ^ H F ^ F y t e - ^ B e d y ^ p e o - pie aU over the country- who are unable to pay for-

Mothers Hold Election

Miss Ackerman, Ensign EnglerMr. and Mrs. Albert

W arren Ackerman o f W ayne, Pa. have an*

Triangle Publications. ,She is the granddaughter o f Mrs. George Louis Mc­Cloud of East Orange and the late Mr. McCloud and of Mrs. Stewart Randolph Terrill o f Sea Girt and Albert D’Orsay Ackerman of Merced, Cafif.

Ens. Engler graduated from Millburn High School and Bucknell University where he was a member o f Kappa Sigma fraternity.

;He 4s~presently stationed aboard th e USS Seminole

Miss Susan Hail Ackerman

Mrs. RossS. Peterson of Maplewood was elected

_ chairman of th e Mother’s ^ Cummittee of the Junior

Essex.Troop at the group’s annual ' luncheon held on Tuesday at ^Rod’s, West

, Orange.Among other officers

named was Mrs. George

houncedthe^engagement of their ctiughter,„Susan_ Hall, to Ensign George Gil­bert Engler, USNR, son of Mr. and .Mrs. Howard GU- bert Engler of Montview Avenue and Hague, N.Y.

The bride-elect, a gradu­ate of Radrier High School and VeihOfiToUrt Junior College, Newport, R.I., is with, the art department of

,ocA Couple Are Engaged

(fyfd

Just Disi-37^5858jj! The Hutchinson Company

Realtors & lnsu ranee Member of the Multiple Listing Service

SH O R T H1LL§id SEntioiNear the Short Hills Railroad S? to Esso

W . V J W W W / e , . V s , « V s W ,

Radeen’sA lO E C O R A IO R S --------------

(LKA-1Q4) at San DiegtJaH f':Ens, . grandson of Mrs. Charted H enry Engler^'of South Orange' an ti t h e ia t e .M ^ - E n |t^ afid ofl3i~e late Met and Mrs. George Richard Coleman of Short Hills.-----

been elected -to mem­bership in Sigma Lambda Sigma,-Senior Honor Soci­ety at Keuka College. H er father is an electrical con-

- -tractor in the Cape Cod

Mrs. William Austin Tansey IIU Mrs. Carl William Heide

Archer-Tansey-Wedding Hdd Here an Saturday ~

Miss Gallagher Bride^ G ftieu tT iffW .ffid e

Mr: and Mrs. Ralph_D. Morgan Jr. of Baltusrol Way, have announced the engagem ent o f th e ir

aughter, Jane Fitzgerald, ra Job i ■to John Joseph Bolan. son

of William F. B o la n of Deer Path. He is also the son-pf the late Mk Helen, Klein Bolan.-The couple are -gradu^

ates • of - Millburn High- School. Miss Morgan a t ­tended Wilson College and was graduated from K ath­arine Gibbs Secretarial School.

Mr. Bolan attended Vil- lanova University and is a candidate for graduation in June from St. Peter’s .College,Jersey City..

An August 16 wedding is planned. '

Women Host Candidates

The Essex County Dem­ocratic Women’s League will hold its May meeting this evening. Mav 29. a t tiie Coronet, Springfield Avenue," Irvington,” at 8 p.m. Refreshments~wilibe served followitff the busi­ness portion o f the meet-ing. ------- :_ AH Democratic candi­dates have been invited to speak to the League's membership and guests.

Miss June Strelecki, d i­rector of Motor Vehicles, will, be installed as the 1969-70 president of the league, whose - member­ship totals-1,000 members from ^l~ 2 1 'to w n s in the county. —

Former Governor Rob-

County Democratic Chair­man Harry Lemer will act as installing officers; - -

fmbeotc Rowe . .. .§tu6iOpSSUii»57 union p| summit 277-3717

M iss -M aida W right Archer;, daughter of Mr. and :Mrs. Wilson Butter Archer of Westfield, was married on Saturday to WiUiam Austm ftoisey III, son of Dr. and Mrs. W. Austin Tansey of Highland Avenue. The ceremony was performed in Saint Rose of Lima Churefr by the Reverend Henry F. Nicholaus, assisted by the Ra&£xend -R ichard L, Smith of the Presbyterian Church o f Westfield. A-re- ception was held at the Monday Afternoon Club of Plainfield.

The bride wore a-gown of ivory silk, peau de soie with a yoke of Brussels lace. Her headpiece was a mantilla of heirloom Brus­sels princess lace and she carried a bouquet of phal- .aenopsis and stephanotis.’ ’ Honor attendant was

bride’s sister, Mrs. M an R. Haworth of.Res- ton, VarJjndesmatds were Mrs. Walter A r Hunt-ofr Berkeley, Calif., sister of the b rideg room ; Miss Penelope Birdsall and Miss Barbara DeTrolio, both of Westfield; and Miss Mary­ann Dattola of New York City. A

J. Donald Tansey served as_ best.m anior-h&-orettfe er. 'The ushers were Mr. Hunt and John-Nr Burkg^ David C. Charlesworth, S. David Lang and Allan C. Steere, all of N ew . Y ork City. • .

Mrs. T an sey . a graduate- 4)1 Vermont ..College and Columbia University De-_ partment~~of Nursing; ; is presently employed at the Columbia University Medi- cal Center. Her father is compensation analyst to- employe relations for the Standard Oil Company of. NewJersey;

Mr. Tansey graduated from the Pingry School and Yale University and is a fourth year medical stu­dent at Columbia Univer­sity CoHege of Physicians and Surgeons. His fattier is

fa cardiologist at the Short Hills Medical Center; ““

A t e a wedding trip the

The First Methodist Church of Westfield was ttie setting on Saturday for

‘ marriage of Miss Elizabeth Galla-

Home Garden, Club

Elects New Officers-At. the annual meeting

of -the- Short Hills Homeert B. Meyner Mid Essex Garden Club, Mrs. George

Staehle was elected . dent, Mrs. Harold Kidwell, recording secretary and Mrs; George Scheller, cor­responding secretary.

Continuing in office are Mrs. Norval Myers, first Vice president; Mrs. Harry D. Miller, second vice pres­ident ana Mrs; William D. Huyler, treasurer.

Tennis A nyoneYe*! Call to reserve your tim e; Three of the finest all-weather

'courts in a Country Club su r­rounding. Sem i-Private Club; Tennis and Golf Membership; $15. annually . Tennis Fees; SO ^ perYroui'; p e i—p e rso i r r C a ll '3 7 7 -7 1 0 0 ,; : - I # *

2M ItiPGEOAU ave,. FLOHmM ivu B c ^ .^ r i e f c - A DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL MODUUR CONCEPTS. INC.

Mrs. Donald Thaddeus Okner

Donald T. Okner Wed ToTlorham Park trirl

Miss Madeleine Jeanne Kiei m n - dauditeroT-M r. arid Mrs. William. J. Kier- nan of Florham Park, was married on Saturday to Donald Thaddeus^Qkner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Luke Okner of SUver Spring Road. The ceremony,, per­formed in S t.'. Rose of Lima Church by the Rev­erend Albert Wickens, was 'followed by a. reception a t Rod’s, West Orange.

- Mrs. Salvatore V. Senab f W s ^ u n g ^ v i ^ ^ r a s - ter*s honorattendantr Miss Eallie~ABne Seng, n riee q f the bjride, was flower girl and K enneth . Sena , the bride's nephew, was ring bearer. 7" —- Thomas L. Okner-served

as best man for his broth­er. Ushering were Glenn Okner, tuiother brother of the bridegroom, and Wil­liam J. Kieman, brother of the bride. ’

Mrs. Okner; a graduate o f Endicott Junior Col­lege, Beverly, Mass, and Fairleigh Dickinson . Uni­versity, Madison, is- associ- ated with Martindale-Hub-

S u ite f t . .Her husband attended

R utgers , University -and graduated from. Fairleigh DicldriSQriTrri m1 9 6 8. He is presently at­ten d in g fit. Joh n ’fi Univer-

^atyr-Sdsooiof Law in New

- The couple will llv»4n- Sununit.—^----- 4-------------

gherj-dau^iter-of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Gallagher of Mountainside, to Lieu­tenant Carl William Heide, U.S.A. He is the son ofMr* and Mrs."Henry A. Heide of Great O ^ Drive; ■

The ceremony, per­formed by the .Reverend

" James Whitaker, was "fol-" lowed by a reception-at. the Hotel Suburban-. Sum­mit.

Given in • marriage by her father, the bride vvore a gown- of appliqued Chantilly lace over illu­sion. Her three-tiered veil of illusion was heETby a headpiece of.silk organza rosettes with pink Tatin ribbon. She earned a bouquet of white ofbhids with ivy.

Mrs. Lawrence Watson of Montclair ’wag th m n ly attendant, for the bride- She wore a pink gown ana carried a bouquet of pink

-elegance—carnations and gametresses with ivy.— - 7 Mr. Watsonr served as best man and the ushers were Captain Frederick. A. Heide, brother, of the bridegroom,. ~and“ Robert H. Gallagher, brother ofthe bride.. ...- Mrs. Heide is a graduate; of Drew University, Mad- Isoftr- -Her^usbanArisrrair; alumnus of Millburn High^ School and Lycoming Col­lege, WiUiamsport, Pa.

The couple will live at1 Fort Benriing, Ga., w herr Lt. Heide is .a tactical

‘ officer. - - '

end planning a move to purn TOwnihip? Give hi icriollon to Theltem.

Couple Wan June WeddingMr. and Mrt. Carlo A n­

gelo Poto of .Sandwich, Cape Cod, Mass., have an­nounced the engagement of their' daugiter, Janeth Lee, to Frederick Charles W agoner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Tate W a ­goner of Slope Drive. .

The wedding wiU "take place on Satiuday after­noon, June 14, in me Epis­copal Chapel on the Keuka CoHege' Campus, Keuka Park, N. Y.

Miss Pola is the grand- dau^iter of. Mr. and Mrs. Gustavus Pols and of Mrs.William Hamilton Staats and the late Mr. Staats^ all o f Sandwich. She was graduated as valedictorian o f her class from the Sand­wich High School, and is a junior a t Keuka College where die is an education major. She has dene r e ­search in k er chosen fieldm SeattlerWash. Miss Pola

9 Q | I ..........j '

i of "Andrew Bell_________

idsonWaggoner and the late Mrs. Wa ggoner of Maryville, Tenn. and-of the late Mr. a n d M ffi4Jharies--Josepb Gee of Tanriewpod House, (torr^ t i a ^ M ^ T l iF at- tended the Haverford (Pa.) School and was graduated from -T he Pingry School. He is-a jum or a t Cornell University where _he_ti_en-

TBnST'in the agricultural school, majoring.ii) animal science. Mr. Waggoner is a member o f Beta Theta Pi sodal fraternity. H isJather is - vibe president-sales fo r the Home Life Insurance CompanyofiievvYork^ —

Miss janeth Lee Pola

ADAMSSTUDIO

C o m p l e t E^ r i i l f w F ;

D e c o ra t in g S e rv ic e

fu rn itu re lam ps “r

c a r p e t s ^ ' ___

^ rugsdraperies

- upholstery '

” T "

wallpapers .

— For a Personal Appointment . . .

Call 37 9-526 7ShorHWti* 252..

WNATAisNOTo MEXICAN ~ DANCE

. but iTs much m ore fun!PINATA 3 papier mache figure filled

with goodies ■ - the game> — ^ , __of a million laughs foi^ all 7

• . ages 1 - haag-it and hit it - ■ use -it as a centerpiece or ■

_____ for a chijd’s room. .

”1

on ;I M P O R T E f r G f f f S Q F - O I S f l N C T P N ,

Tues.-Sat., 10-6;Thurs., 10-9 .

27? Main St. . _ __ Millburn

O F S U M M IT

Skirted: tunic, floral print, bhie o r c o fa l .^ z .

-52-46Br 34-*0e, ________JS2B.

Blouse & short,; gold - and pink

3240B. 34-40C......... 2 $2.1,

Drape sheath, f nylon 14' dadron, blue & wWte;Sz. 3440BCD, '

---------- $32r

)OF SUMMIT

TENNIS DRESSES-

v m J SALE OVER IS STYLES DIRECT FROM HAWAII!

FOR YOURSUMMER ENJOYMENT

Gay and exotic prints'. . ; the tea dress has -orange, green, and turquoise sunflowers on white ribbed cotton, '$20 ... the hostess dress is a scroll print in black and while with bufltdn tea, $ 2 6 . ., . the shift has a cutout waist, lined top and skirt in shocking {rink and white. S26. AH waste tumbledry only- Sizes 10-18. Come see our exciting coBection on the street level.

Right in tinib for the beginning of the great outdoor : season ,T~nJ g » rt ' collection of tennis dresses . . . all in dacron-and-cotton for ease in laundering. . . all white with or without color trims. . . pleats or slits. .. teoaddoths or piques, Have your choiceat values up to $28. I *?

Laura Picetti, PFCGQe|j^rtTHE ITEM of Miflburn nrvi Short HiJls N. h- Thursday, May 29, 1969 Pafl»

Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Picetti of North Caldwell announce the engagement of their daughter, Laura Jean, to Pfc. Douglas Ed­ward Goepfert, son of Mr. and Mrs. WemerF. Goep­fert of Crescent Place.

Miss Picetti, who was graduated from West Essex High School, attended Muskingum College, New Concord, Ohio, and is a candidate for graduation,? from Drew University this June. ‘ ' *

Her fianqe was gradu­ated from Blair Academy and Baldwin-Wallace Col­lege, Berea, Ohio. He is

■ serving with the Enited States Army in

Vietnam. .

Traditional Overlook Follies t + T & B e c o m t r ' M u s i c a r T h r a t r e

Mrs. Joei Davtd Taurog -

ToJJdsHSavid Tautog

itiaHerofftiminion riolTars for the hospital, involved hundreds or people on be­half of Overlook and is well established as_anim-

:= = M ir a ” JoAnn Weinberg, daughter of Mr: and Mrs. Mark H. -Weinberg of •White Oak Ridge Road,. was married onSunday to Joel David Taurog,-son o f Dr. arid Mrs. AlvinTaurog

ding and reception were held a t Congregation B’nai Israe l ™with D r. Max Gruenewald officiat ing at theceremony.

Given in marriage by her mother and father, the bride wore a gow n-oF white organza and lace. Herheadpiece was a circlet of lace with a sh o rt veil. She carried baby white orchids on a prayer-book that had been used by her m o th er and m aternal

Omenn-Poster Betrothal Told

Dr. and Mrs. Edward Omenn of Athens Road have announced the en­gagement of their daugh-

- -ter^ June-NataKeTto Jamea , J. Foster. He jathe son of ^Mr^ .and-=.Mrs. James R. Foster, of Grand Rapids, Micfrr

Miss Omehn, whose — father is a. dentist, gradu­

a ted -las t Mbndav„-from Bryn Mawr College. She. plans, to attend law school

• ~~m th e falL She is a grand-, niece of. I .L . Peretz. the

" writer.Mr , -Foster,.-a- second-

year student at the Har­vard Law . SchooL—is a

5 "'graduate’ of "the TMassa-, c h u se tts In s titu te of T echnoiogyrlfirfather is" manager, of the National

, Waterlift Corporation.

No Trash Collection On Memorial Day

There will be no m anic- age collection to—

__ I , Memorial Day. Residents having a regular Friday pick-up. will have

L only one -collection., this, week. _____ _ _

___ js a friend planning a move to orfrom Mlllburn Townanlp? Give him a gift aubaertption to thaltam.. ~

"pandmotTeF^atTBeu’wed--dinas;- .........* . ■—MisaElizabethDykema of Sagamore Road was maid of honor. She wore a gown' of aqua faille and fee and 'bairied an old iashioned- nosegay. - - :—

Arthur Taurog of K’far Chabad, Israel; served as best man for his brother. The ushers were WiUiam W#ihberg o f - 0 range, brother of the bride, Ed­ward Hands of Everett, Mass.; the bndfeV cousin and StevenBarry te o f Los I Angeles; Calif- a cousin of the bridegroom.

Mrs, Taurog, a graduate of Millbum High SchooL-is- a French major at Rice University Houston. Tex. She is president of_Tfteta_ chapter of Pi • Delta Phi, French honor soeietyrsec- retary-treasurer of Rice Hiljel and chairman of the

-Jones Theater com mitteer 'Her father,-a mechanical

engineer, is section chief of the Quality Assurance Division at . the Picatinny Arsenal and president o t Congregation B’nai Israel.

t a u r o g is also a "§tUdehtatRicerWhere"Ee is a bio-chemistry ‘major. He is president o f ! Rice HilleT and a member of Phi Delta Alpha, national German honor society. His father is a professor and research bio-chemist at the Univer- sity of Texas Southwest­ern Medical School. . _- -After-a-wedding trio to

-Uetorado,- the- couple wilL live in Houston.

Singles Alumni GItib Plans Dance Sunday

The New Jersey Singles’ Alumni Club will hold an open house dance Sunday June 1 at 8:45 p.m. at Charley-O’s Restaurant, 59j) M orris A venue. Spingfield. -

Single adults, ages 24 to 4 0 , m ajr’attend, Men are required to wear- jackets. There is no admission charge. Membershipmfor- mation may be secured from th£> dub at Box 11, Rutherford.— 3 7 " ’""

FOR YOUR RECEPTION, PARTY OR OANGUET...

y i #

p2 LRENT!

I* Dishes • Glasses Things to Bent for Every Event I Banquet Tables • Silverware • .

• Tables - all-types • Card Tables f

•EilverService j»Coffee Makers — L • Chairs • Table Linen

We Deliver

284 SPRINGFIELD AVI. BERKELEY HEIGHTS, NEW J ERSEY:

REGISTER FOR GRANO DOOR M lZI

one of new je r tey ’t finest collections of swimwear let our expert f i t te n help YOU*

body by Roxanneopen Thursday until 9

closed Friday, Memorial Day

Miss Laura Jean Picetti

portent community activ- B^r-ThB-Oyeritg)kMusical Theatre will wear a wholelty. The Overlook Musical Theatre will wear a wfyole new face, but-^wiH-retam many featum '^vhTcff tiave made it a popular annual .event, including the- pro­gram. Patrons will receive invitations as usual in

-October and the. gay round, of dinner and post-theatre

Lpartie s -will -again- h e - planned . -— The, box ^office wlil- Speri afTKe Mmroit and EfeabeSrTrust eo . in No­vember, bufa'w iderm eth­o d of ticket distribution fa also SeingfiikSSter

The two ytSung di­rectors are new to *the Follies TheatEB,bUt not I E tire area. They/are known- for many local shows, in­cluding Summit’s Metro­politan- Musical Theatre. Mr.. Farrell is musical di- rector of the New York University Drama .Society , has been active with the N .Y .U . E x p e r im e n ta l Theatre and is organist and

-choir—director io r Our Lady of Peace Church in- NewProvidetice.-MrJ ^ ew— hart has also worked with the tivo N.Y.IJ. groups and is cuhrentiy enrolled at the N. Y.U." School of the Arts, studying film directing^He has been active In chil-‘ -dren’s theatre, acting d p greeting with the Penny Wane Players and the Merrymakers, a profoa sional troupe.

The Overtook Musical -Theatre has emerged as the n ew r major fundrairing- event or the Women’s A ux iliary of Overlook Hospital, as the traditlonar -Follifet, gomes uf agean d a t 2X, graduates from vaude- vilfe to musical-comedy.

"To celebrate its major­ity " the ’ hew-^Overiook Musical Theatre’s first pro-" duction will be “How to Succeed in Business with? o u l-fy e n Trying1’, under the direction of Chase Newhart and Kevin Fan reU. The re-vamped com- mittee is headed by Mr. R alph Witrfief‘ genefal chairman, and Mrs. Arthur C. Culbertson Jr., auxiliary second vic£Fresident. The

musical- theatre ^concept- was developed by a special a u s t t f a r y com m ittee chaired by Mrs. Culbertson and will enable the auxil­iary to offer more varied productions.

The 1969 show will be presented December 5 and 6 in the Sumnvit r High School -auditorium’ and preliminary planning is al­ready underway. The tal­ent hunt haa started and auditions are scheduled for- jnid-October. Notices de- scribing the new format. have been sent to auxiliary members, former cast and committee members and little theatre groupein the Overlook area. Wide-based com m unity suppo rt being sought -for‘the- new : theatre.- *hislbry. :the auxiliary’s, chief fund­raiser has netted almost a

I

Miss Carol Joan Bloom

Bloom-Leviii Betrothal Told

. Mr and Mrs. Jerome B loom of^S outbO range haw announced the en- ■

W ; ' Carol- Joan, to Jack Paul Levin, son of Mr. and M B."Sam uel Levin of

M mmtalnv ^ K B o a d ^ sg^gA ' faH "wedding is

planned?" " z ' ‘!SCJ*T^si ..• Miss Bloom was gradu­ated from Columbia High

-School- and the School of ’Pine and Applied Arts of Boston University.

M rJjev in^analum nus of Millbum High School andRutgers University , is

- .presently studying law:-at the University of Pennsyv-

. No Trash Collection There will be.no munic­

ipal garbage collection to­morrow...Memorial Pay.

Residents having a regular: . Friday pick-up .will have only one collection this week; ;

MHIburn bnd Short Hills. N, J.

Mrs. Philip Stewart Ward

- Elaine Anderson. Wed ToPhilip Stewart .Ward

— Miss Blaine Evelyn An- derson, daughter -of—Mrs. Alfred S. Anderson of Summit and the Jate Mr. Anderson, was married tih Saturday to Philip Stewart Ward. He is the son of Edgar A. Ward Jr. of Shor t Hilte Village and oLMre.. Elmer H. Kueho:oiWayne_ The Reverend Richard E. Nystrom officiated at die ceremony in the Central Presbyterian Church, Sum- mit. A* reception Was held -at the Anderson home.

Given in marriage, by her brother, N oelC . An- derson, the bride wore a gown of ivorv peau de soie and Alencott lace. Mateh- ing lace flowers held her tiered veil of illusion and she carried a cascade bou­q u e t o f phalaenopsis, stephanotis and ferns. ■ _

MIK NOeT&nderson was m afrondf hdnor for her sistiFM-i^v. Bridesmaids were Miss Carolyn Bon- •ney, Miss Susan -Gustav- sony Mrs. Robert B.. Martin -amTMiss"~Wendy~fc Proc­tor, ^

ROSE MILLER—Rffmertv 6f Downtown NewarR

.... ..p rgum t* .

fashionsFor Discriminating

Women - ^

DRESSES, SUITS COCKTAIL — DRESSES

P A N T S U I T S ,_ PANTS OUTFITS

ENSEMBLES ‘— Jr., Msses,V2, Sizes

Expert Alterations Included

M fs U U ttH tN A V t , SHORT HILLS -Between The Chanticler And Sake (Oppoeite SIde)

Rose MHIer., 467-0390-1 " Parking" in’Rear

Wjphael C. Foley served as best-m an and ushers were Mr. ft$artinr- Bruce Berry, John 'Connell and Frank Trofea.' The couple are. gradu­

a te s of Summit " High School. Mrs. Ward gradu­ated from Southern Semi'-" nary, Buena Vista,-Va. and the Katharine Gibbs Secre­tarial School, New York City-. She is employed by jthg FostarWheeler Carp,, Livingston. .

Her husbandy a.graduate o f . Fairleigh Dickinson University*, Madison, is with the Union County Trust Company:;■ After a^weddingTrip to! Bermuda, the’ couple will live in Parsippany. ’t ■ . # .

Chorale ElansSpring Sings _

T h e Sumnut Chorale Will hold-itSLannual Spring Sings on the first three. T u e s d a y s in June, at the Summit YMCA at 8 p.m. conductor Ralph Hunter and the members of the chorale have invited the singing community to par- ticipate in these sings.

Mr. Hunterjvill conduct a sight reading of the Mo-- zart Requiem on June 3. He is currently an associ­ate professor and choral director of Hunter College, the City University of New York and Choral director of the ManEattariville "Col­lege Choirs, N.Y. On June 10 guest conductor How­ard Vogel, choir master and organist o f ' Calvary- Episcopal Church in Sum- mit, will lead a reading of the Brahms Requiem. F. Austin Walter, professor of mutic aL Rutgers Univer- sity and conductor of the Rutgers Glee Club, will be th e guest conductor on June 17. His musical selec­tion will be the Verdi- Re*, quiem. - -----

Barisoti-Marks Nuptials Held at The Short HillsMBs Lois Elaine Bari-

son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Martin P. Barigon of Elberon, was married on Saturday to Richard David Marks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Abe L. Marks o f Westview Road. The wedding and re­ception were held at The Short Hills with Rabbi G e ra ld Lee Zelizer of Temple Israel Union, of­ficiating at the ceremony.

The bride wore a gown o f w hite organza with peau d ’ange lace and seed -pearl trimming!'. Her floor length veil of English net was held by a seed pearl Camelot cap and she car­ried a cascade bouquet of white roses and stephan­otis.

M iss Paula Miller ofO ak hnrst was maid nf maev:-----honor. Miss Joanne ~ De Rosa o f NeptuneJCfty^amT Miss Barbara Marks, sister

of the bridegroom, were bridesmaids. '

Serving as best man was Mark Goff o f NewtSn,' Mass. Ushers were Gregory Richard Barison, brother of the bride and Alan Mints o f Newton Ceptre, Mass.

Mrs. Marks, who gradu­ated from Asbury Park High School and attended the Medical College o f Vir­ginia at Richmond, is pres­ently a senior at Mon­mouth College, West Long Branch*.'

Her husband graduated from Newton South, Hi#i School, Newton Centre,

'Mass, and attended Fair­leigh Dickinson University, Madison. He is .currently enrolled in the Rutgers University School of Pnar-

After a wfetfefihg trip to Europe, the couple will live in Parlin.

NOW OPEN IN SH OR T H ifefeS -

AT 760 MORRIS TURNPIKE (near "the Archfi

DR 6-9060OPEN EVENINGS TO 9; Saturdays & Sundays to 5

,-B A C K A G E JR IB &•MIAMI BEACH •PUERTO RICO i •MEXICO • NASSAIX•BERMUDA ~ •JAMAICA • HAW AH • EUROPE

- • CALIFORNIA u lAT V W f l ------•BARBADOS •FREEPORT • ARUBA

CRUISESO U R S PE C IA L T YTREE INFORMATION AND

1 ~ IMMEDIATE RESERVATIONSSailing Schedules A Deck Plans

HONEYMOON SPfCUUA^

Mrs. Richard David Marks

StRoseTlass Presents PlayThe eighth grade of S t.

Rose o f Lima Sohool pre­sented a piay, “Afr in tile Family” last Friday night

“m the-schoohauditorium. The performance was dedi­cated to the-principal, Sis­ter Kathleen Reid; CNDr “with sincere gratitude for the w arm th love and lead­ership which she has sho w n . during her four year term as principal of the school. ”

— Appearing- iri’^the cast Were Robin Clayton, Ken­neth VanDeventer, John K ilcom m ons, Christina Birdsall, Marguerite Lucey,

"James McDonough, Rob­ert Finan, Attila Lenkey, John Kearney, Rochelle MatHeu! Eileen McCor­mack, Joanne Murray and Fred erick Miller . - ,

The play, a comedy, was directed by Sister -FraneesTlogersrUND^and

Club Schedules AuctionThe Summit Commu­

nity Stam p Club will hold an auc tio n as a feature o f- its ftext meeting, Wedne s -

g riw , Bi3Q pm.in 'tiie cafeteria o f Chubb & Sop, Kennedy Parkway. =:rfine4nmdted-lots ofaHr descriptions-will-be auc­t i o n e d . - -7 ^ ^ = ^ ^==^

Mrs. Mary Capito. Other members of the class ietvedon various commit­tees. ___ - ...

t e r z S k o

3fay me remind you?

Mom is tHe lime ” te-stereyour 'Jura and chili coals in our protective -- on-t/ie»premises QoM Storage Vaults. ;;

Don't delay/QattffI5m13t5todaij 2 3 3 for our bonded messenger.

Miss Kathleen Lindgren was maid ‘p f honor for her sister.. Bridesmaids were Miss A rlyne Lindjnren, cousin of the;bride; wist Jud ith Seery and Mrs*: ■ David Price. They were gowned in shades of pitfk and7 carried colonial bou­quets.

Richard Jung served as best man. Fred Lee, Rob ert Chadwick and Ronald Favao were ushers.

Mrs. Stoeckle, a gradu­ate of Livingston High School and Berkeley Sec­retarial J3d«>dlr is erh*

Eloyed by the Westing- ouse Electric Corporation

in Newark.Her husband graduated

from Fork Union Military Academy and attended •Leicester (Mass.) Junior College. He is with the New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. His father is the re- eentiy retired police chief o f MulburnTownship,

* * A

- > M ii F iin k J.:Stoeckre Jr. - (

Miss LtndgrenMarried •-Tax FrariferStoeckleJr.

Miss Jane Leah Dunetz

Jane Dunetz Is Bride-elect

The engagement of Miss Jane Leah Dunetz to Rich­ard Elliott Haine has been

After a wedding trip to announced 1py her parents, Bermuda, the couple will; Mr. and Mrs. Nathan J . reside in Madison. ^ Uunetz of Walnut Aven^e ^ :

Milton Haine oF West Or- J ange and the late Mrs. Rae

-Haute.Miss Dunetz, a graduate

of Millbum High School ja tten d e d ^n io n Cc^le g e ^ QanforcL- and- witt^enter- Newark State College in J J te fa ll. -

Her fiance is an alumnus •of Mountain High Sehool, West Orange and a mem­ber of the <?lass of 1970 at Rutgers Unversity, New Brunswick.

The coupfe plan to be _ married in June of next year,

At a double ring cere­mony performed in St, Philomena’s Church, Liv- ingstonvon Saturday,-^Miss Patricia Ann* Lindgren, be­came the bride of Frank J: Stoeckle Jr. The bride is .thn dauriiter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lindgren of Livingston. Mr. Stoeckle’s parents are Mr. and” Mrs. Frank J. Stoeckle Sr. of- Hobart Avenue. The Rev­erent Edward F. Kavm of- ficiated at the ceremony

which was -followed by a reception at The Cobble­stones, West Caldwell.

Mr. Lindgren gave his dau^iter in mamage. She wore a gown of silk or­ganza and peau d ’ange lace w ithachapellength tra in . •Her three-tiered fingertip veil w a s: held by a crown of pearls and she carried a colonial bouqiiet of mini­ature carnations, swqet- b eart roses arid baby^s breath. '

Chr-IHServicc Dlrm ef-Slated ’" The annual dinner meet-'

Ing -n f Thr-ril ServiPA wiU i be held Wednasdky, J une -P & Tw,>Cedar Grove. ----- ——--J^In addition to the elec­tion of new officers and; the recognition of home­makers ff id o th e rC h r-tll personnel, the dinner will feature an address by Ber­nard M. Shiffman, deputy a d m in is tra to r o f the

-Human Resources Adminis- fration b f New YorkCity: He will speak on the .changing- attitudes toward welfare. /

Tickets for the dinner, to which the public is in­vited, may be obtained by sending name, address and a check fo r '$5 to~Chr-lll Service, 6(X South Fuller­to n Avenue^Montclaiiv 07042. - - ' _

Chr-M is the' largest . agency in New Jersey in th e hom em aker-h y me hes^th aid field.'

mm

PHONE 379 38U7

EAST ORANGE

If you have Indoor plumbing___and outdoor children,___---- maybe you need

a larger water heater.

gives you all the hot water you need... when you n eedtT .; at the turn of a tap. So caltyour local plumbing contractor. He's the maTrwhcrean’tell yotr if your present-water heaters large and dependable enough foryour family's reefuirements:

Remember; families grow larger; water heaters don't.- " x

' Make eure ybu-iiaire ^the right size BAS Water Heater!

0 P U B L IC S E R V IC E E L E C T R I C A M D G A S C O M P A N Y

ORT Installs New OfficersAt a mnniing at Thi»

Arch on Tuesday, the Short Hills Chapter of Women's American ORT (Organization for Rehabili­tation through Training) installed new officers for the coming year.

Inducted. as president was Mrs. Derish Wolff of 61 Winthrop Road. Others installed by Mrs. Marvin Mittleman of New Provi­dence, community rela­tions chairman, were Mrs, Abram Patlove of Livirig- don, Mrs. Saul Lupin of 19 Winthrop Road, Mrs. Frank Kadison of Living­ston and Mrs. Ted Aus- lander of 65 Troy Drive, vice presidents, Mrs. Jack Pomerantz of 15 Winthrbp Road, financial secretary, Mrs. Samuel Cohen of 10 Pilgrim Road, treasurer, and Mrs. Louis Spitzer of 16 Kean Road, recording secretary.

Mrs. Leonard Bimbaum of New Proyjdence. vice president oi thtr 't fe f t tr Central Jersey Region, de­livered th e invocation.—

BRIDAL CROWNS And Veils

Mothers of-the-Bride and

Bridesm aid Hats Ready Made, or M ade To Order

With Your Fabric or Ours MARTHA TODD 313 Millburn Ave.. Millburn

376-5246

Mrs. Derish Wolff O RT President

Club Departments

Set Planning SessionC hairm en o fT h ed e ]

m ents of the geraniums and recipes for 7 tne herb8 will be availabler

Proceed&will be usedto help Glenwood children

jo in the Outdoor Educa­tion Program in the Mill-

with their members during this -week to formulate program-Rm^lans-for-ttie coming club year. These . ..wiii ~ho p re s^ ted and dis-__ burn schools.cussed at the board meet­ing on Wednesday, June4.

Tftemeeting wilHjegin J t;9 :4 5 arm., and follow­ing llinch, .the planning" ses­sion w a r re su m fca tS :30 p.m. Board members -are asked to bring a sandwich foritm cheon^

A central switchboard serves all -Township public schools. The school telephone..number is

U W t t S T M M f t N C A H F l f l J SERVICE -

pFLEA MARKET ANTIQUE SALE

ART SHOW ™FRIDAY

MAY 30LIVINGSTON H. S. FOOTBALL FIELD

South Livingston Avenue, Livingston, New Jersey

INOOORS IN CASE OF RAIN ' DAWN TO DUSK

DONATION $1.00 BRING THIS AD AND SAVE .25

DRY COLD FUR STORAGEON THE PREMISES

REPAIRINGRESTYLING

CLEANINGRELINING

FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY• $50 Min. Cloth Coat $2• $100 Min. Furs $3• Mink, Chinchilla, Russian

Broadtail Leopard $250 Min. $6

D ia l 2 7 7 - 2 9 5 3N ew Coats, Jackets & Stoles

in Stock

COLUMBIA FURS71 UNION PLACE • SUMMIT

"Ffestiyal Time For Glenwood

G lenw ood S c h o o l’s Strawberry FestivaLwiU be held Wednesday, June 4, from 5 to 8 p.m. The rain date will be' Thursday, June 5. Colorful posters have been made by Glen­wood children • and are now on display in many stores.

This year many.newgames have been added for all ages. Greater incentive will be given in. the games' by the varied assortment o f prices at the “win table.’’ Judes such as the whip and swing will be waiting for the adventure­some children. On sale will be hats, pennants and white elephants along with an abundance of food for dinner arid snacks.

There will be a sale of exotic herbs and scented

iraniums and recipes for

Nursery School Sets Fall I t im

The Nursery School o f Qo n g te g -a t io n = J l n a i Jeshurun is accepting ap­plications for the' 1969-70

.Sj&osl . year. -The pre­school classes will be di­vided in In Lwn gmupg. three-four year olds and four-five year olds. Both groups "will meet five" mornints a week and a four-five year old group will also meet jfterrioons.

The Nursery Sehool is approved and certified by the New Jersey Depart­ment of Education. Each class will be under the guidance of a certified teacher and fully trained assistant.

Information and regis- tfation applications may be obtained Tfioih Mrs. Herbert Steier. Congrega­tion B’nai Jeshurun, 1025 South -O range Avenuey- Short Hills; 379-1556-.--

Livingston AFS Sponsors Flea Market Friday

.The Livingston Chapter, American Field Service, wHl'sponsor a flea market. antique and art sale at the Livingston High School - football fieldyXivmgston, May 30 from dawn to dusk. In - case-^>f-ramr 4 t - will be held in the high school. ___ /

Junior Volunteers Honored At St Barnabas Ceremonies

TO KEN O F ESTEEM - Members o f the Ladies A u x iliary o f St. Rose o f Lim a Church presented —a-g ift o f W aterford crysta l to Monsignor John F. Ryan, retired pastor o f the church, a t a party .

Jn h it h onor he ld las tm ekrS ffoym j lx iv e ^ home th ee ffa ir—was held, Monsignor Ryan and M rs. James Mahon, outgoing president o f the auxiliary. ' ■

St. Rose Ladies AuxiliaryjL»m*Scheduled at YWCA

“Time to Travel”, is the theme, for a young adult dance, to be held on Satur- j day evening, June T4;~ from 8 p.m. to midnight at •the Summit YWCA. Single

Honors Monsignor Ryati

fcaat ©rang?(Elrantrs & Syrrs

533 MILLBURN AVENUE SHORT HILLS OPP SAKS

28TH P IN G R Y SU M M E R SESSIO NCOEDUCATIONAL

JUNE 25 r AUGUST 6, 1969

READING INSTITUTE— . Grades 2-12

DAY CAMP Ages 5-14 DalFy 10:30 to 3:45

----TwoSwiim DiiiySportsGimesCrafts „Shop Art-Modeb Cookouts-Tournaments

Advance Credit Courses Grades 9-12 " \

Biology, Chemistry .. . .Physics, Mod. Europan History _

SPECIAL COURSES

Gredei&-12 '

Greet Boohs, Composition Computer Propramminj Typing, Study Techniques hinting. Sketching Red Cross Life Saving Urban Sociology Driver Training

20th Century U. S. History — ■ -Teimisttihic: Beginners ind Intirmedietes _

„ „ . THS PINGRY SCHOOL ~~ZTo North Avenue, Hillside, N.-J«Telephone: (204) 355-6990^ . _ TRANSPORTATION am p ;;

W here O rig in a lity is a T rad itio n Diamonds And Precious .StorSfes

----- Fine W StefterBy Lucien Piccard ’•

The home and gardens of Mrs. Henry Reinhold of 31 Grosvenor Road, were the setting on Wednesday, May 21, .for. a tea spon­sored by the Ladies Auxil­iary of S(L Rose- of Lima Church. *

Festival june 5 AFSHrSchool

T he-- “ Stop , Bpangled Strawberry Festival” of the Short Hills School will be held on the school g rounds . oij Thursday, June 5, from 4 to 8 p.m- Dinner consistmg of ho t dogs, hamburgers, baked beans, cole slaw and potato chips will be' served outdoors- Dinner tickets will not be sold that_£vfc ning, but- they may be purchased ahead of time fronr the "ticket chairman, Mrs. James Smith of 18 Gap View Road. Dinner tieketsr wfffl-fre ^ l^ which: wdll include- a strawberry dessertr Dessert tickets may be purchased separ­ately for 25 cents. *3

Games,-• fun, rides and prizes will, be available, featuring new attractions such as a paint-m, a sponge-toss and an ob­stacle course. -

-The -public is invited to .attend. Proceeds of the festival will go toward the purehas&y o f a perceptr- mafic machine with films covering remedial reading and academ ic subject fields (perceptual training,: speedreading, phonics and la n g u a g e a r ts ) . The machine can he used by aE of the grades.'

Mrs. T , A von Glahn juid Mrs. John Bowen are" co-chairmen of the event. Assisting them WiiT be: tre a su re , Mrs. Robert Smith; prizes,.Mrs. P eter B uehning; decorations^ M rs. Edward jialston; food, Mrs. Hallett Gates an d p u b fe rity, -Mrs." Rea Hinson and Mrs. Lawrence McLean..“L Assistingw iththeTood, games, "and rides will be Mrs. Robert Hutton, Mrs. Sanford Robbins, Mrs.

^^torWoodV Tps. .WJUiun' R obertson ,- Mrs. John Maris,Mrs:Vineent Aproz- zese, Mrs, Richard Breck, M rs. George Cameron, Mrs. Eugene Bogucki,.Mc­Daniel V an . Dora, Mrs. Pau lR o m an . Mrs. FredKTells, Mrs. John Prach and a f e f eMrs. Alexander Hoff, H7 ***** 7SS* Rain date for (he festi­val is Friday, June 6, from 4 to 8 pan. — ,

I t .was “Orchids to Mon- signor. Ryan” and over a hundred women "turned o u t to pay tribute to their pastor who has retired after morel than 24 years of service to St. Rose of Lima Parish., The auxiliary presented Monsignor Ryan with a giff o f Waterford crystal as a token of their affection.

Receiving with tiie host- ^ ss ..a^jast-presidifent of the- auxiliary, were Mrs. James M ahon, outgoing presi­dent, and Mrs. James P. Duffy, incoming president. O ther committee members w h o assistedwefeM rsrrEd- ward Stearns and Mrs. Wil- Siam Plam fb^fif : Past theauxiliary'altendm gine af- f a ir _ were MrsT-rdHoward E eltiU —M rs. Homer—J- Wright, Mrs. Joseph=Oar- d o n e , M rs. A lexander H a ird y , Mrs, W alter Schmidlin, Mrs. Howard J. F in le y , M rs. Eugene Becker, Mrs. Henry Goetz, Mrs. William Mullms, Mrs. Anthony Coppola. Mrs. V m cen t S c a 1 e ra,~Mrs. J ac o b A v -B o lle ,—Mrs Charles Raisch, Mrs. Ber­nard Haley, Mrs. Michael Pinto'* ana Mrs. Joseph Dunn. —

The annual awards cere­mony for Candy Stripers and Boys’Volunteer Ccnrps at Saint Barnabas Medical Center, took place yester­day in the center audito- jdum. ■■

Ten Junior Volunteers received pins for more than 250 hours of service each. Twenty-five received emblems with the seal of the medical center for 150 to 250 hours each. ,

Mrs. Robert E. Lee of 2 Great Oak Drive, newly- elected president of the Guild, was master of cere­monies and th e principal speaker was John Phillips of Florham Park. Mrs. Lee introduced Anthony Seals of Livingston; president of the board of trustees; Miss Anna E. Marks of Living- ston. director of Nursing Service and - • Education; Mrs. Charles H . Rybolt of WestOrange. formerpreti- dent - o f Oie ^guM1, Mrs. Howsad-E;- Brigg of -15 W estRpyi,foritHirvolun- t eer chairman -of the guUd;

-Mrs. Albert Davis and MT8- R obot W .--Farmer both of Livingston and hoth. for­mer volunteer co-chairm'en- offbe guild.

Presentation of awards Was made by Mrs. Pearl P i n t o o f " : ^ ^Place, the center’s volun­teer supervisor.

Among the Junior Vol- unteers. receiving pins .was Karen1 Smith Of 28"Berke- tey Road. Local residents who received emblems were Thane Benson of 548 White Oak Ridge Road, Patti Catallo o f 35 Ravvley Place, Marcia.Fischer of .16 Westyiew' Road, Beth Lieb of • 85 Keats RobuI and Marjorie Ohaus. of—39- Browning Road. "

Highlight o f the pro­gram was entertainment hy the Rasberry Jam II and Sandy and Sue, Folk singers. Sandy and Sue are Sandy Leyitch o f West Or­ange and Sue Blackwell of 17 Greenwood- Drive,m sophomore a t Millburn High School. They started appearing together in 1968 and have entertained with their guitars . and folk ballads at coffeehouses

BirthsMr. and Mrs. Myron

Rosenberg of 893 Ridge- w o o d llo ad a n n o u n crth e birth of a daughter, Devra. Lauren, on May 16-at St. Barnabas Medieal Center.

-— * •* * ,A daughter, who has

b ee n named Stephanie Gayle, was bora to Mr. rnid Mrs. Herbert Tanitz of Livingston o n May 15 aC St. Barnabas Medical Cen­ter. Mrs. • Tarutz. is the dau^iter of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Franzblati of 50 Mountainview^,oad.

Custm

rw« also sptciolitu in wiinitliing BruakFront, pjonet, otc. FREE ESTIMATES • NO OBLIGATION

BUILT-INS OF ALL ’OESCBIPTIONS

CUSTOM MAPS TO ORDER

A N EXCLUSIVE SERVICE

% f n M l f f R a M A

young men and -women* young manifids' and home­ward-bound college stu­dents are invited to attend the gala-event.

Live m usic by the combo “Four and More,” entertainment by featured soloists, and refreshments will Assure" a swinging eve- ning for all. Those attend- ipg s may eome"-with -or without a date. Tickets (nay be purchased at the

J .J . Hennessey, a i^ lt program director, a t Aba.. YWCA, 273-4242,

he call for further information. ______ . -

N e w R e s i d e n t s

IM rLand Mrs. John E.Wesbecker, son and dau^i- tersr 23 Oakdale Avenue. formerly-of-ElmfeFNrifr ~ Mr. a nd Mrs. David B.

Gordon, 45 GreenwoodJDrrce, from. Orange, cavalry camp? «xp»n

- F ro m T o le d o , OhlO, M r. riding program with jumping, drills,and Mrs. Loren G CarlsoaL»-»‘,Ad ^ . <u“ dand sons, 25 Woodland academic summer session:f lO ff ir _ — ^Rwldant bovi. Grades S-U. Ao-

Mr a n d M rs William counei lor make-up. RamM r. an a m ra. m u m m R. , ding. Math and Lang. >kiu>. su- Rahmig, son and daughter, parwr Facnur. RaeraattoB. - : 1 4 Pine Terrace Easfe, froR i wftiTg o s call tor catalogs Bricktown. ' nyma adm issions dirt.

Formerly of" Orange, «« campm dhvi,Mr. -and Mrs. John Man- cemwoH-on-Hudaoii. n. t. nsaoning and sons, 15, Meeker - H— (*L4) sss-stid— -----"Place, .

FOR PARENTS W HO W AN T THE W5T, ,

FOR THEIR SONS . .CdnildSr HEW YOr£~ MILITARY ACADEMY In lha scenic Hudson Highlands away from urban pres- anraa. Bttra: Oradw S-I2. Excalleni program In aiudlas. sports, physical education. Cavalry. Band. Rlilery. Swimming, Band ft Merit Scholar-

FOR A SUMMER WITH A PURPOSE__ Beys ag«s 9-H. ......

ALL AMEBICA CAMP: ali sport*, professional coaching, iOP faculties. * 1 -*-idy available. 4 and 8

i. Every boy a player.

and for church groups, chibs and other organiza­tions. The Rasberry Jam n , is headed by Robert R. Findlay- of Mendham, a teacher at West Morris Re­gional High School and is com posed of students from that school.

DEERFIELD At the final meeting o f

the Deerfield School PTA executive board, the of­ficers for the coming year were announced. They are Mrs. Edwin Rothfeld, pres­

ident; Mrs. Edwin MiBer, first vice president; Mrs. P au l Whoehon, second tribe president; Mrs. Arthur Kepi, corresponding seers- - tary; Mrs. Carl Bommaiui J r . , recording secretary and Luke Percario, treas­urer'. ,‘ f ' ; - ;

FASH ION CONSCIOUS

V 0 M A N, d hara to laam and tap

profetiional makaup. Small bu m of your own po«Hila fi part dma bad*.

Call Collact: (212) 682-4432 • Write: / Includa phone numb

Expert Spring GroomingWJS HAVE CAR SEATS FOR DOGS

— .......

D0GGYT0WNbrooming with a Gentle Touch”___

762-3158 ~108 West South Orange Avenue, South Orange

- 8 » m. to 6 p.ib. - (Boeedwtonday* ~~

ayffaand Sfheatoe

___ttUm nuJ, _.. . '273-M 0O

MT. VERNON ALTERATIONS"W ith Justifiab le Pride"

FRANCES and GLADYS—- j .__, , (formerly wlthTlna-a)... . _------- -------- -

_____ announce the opening o j th e ir^ ^

dress making and alteration business

- WE LOOK FORWARD WITH PLEASURE TO SEEING ALL OUR OLD FRIENDS.

W H Y N O T D R O P IN F O R A CH IPO F rn P F F .F .?

249 m t . V e r n o n a v e ....___ :________ (Off Park Avanuel

674-55 54 —HOUffS: 10 A M. to 8 P.M.

ORANGE, N .J.

n years ago this man’s heart would have stopped cold.There was no “Pactepiaker’va inventioiTpf tfte transistor ™decade ago. But there is now. helped make the Pacemaker And thissmali electncal device possible. In facVthctiansistor keeps this man’s heart beating— opeiredupthe entire field regularly. - - :-^^BfcphertrtabQratories* - lexp ior^ iTeqmpment; ..

miniature TVs,smalljCompuier^- and, of course, the ever-present Transistor radiOr-^

At theTe^plTOiie compare-—we do more thafi JustiielB .__people talk. New JsfseyBslfln

Members o f W oman’s Club *7■ •' I * —ft fi

Contribute Dollars and HoursContributions to 4 l or­

ganizations, national, in­ternational and local,,dolls d r e s s e d f o r " u n d er­p r iv i l e g e d ch ild re n ; oookids baked for veterans hospitals; gifts wrapped, at Grey stone; cancer ..dress­ings made by the mile - these are some of the activities of members o f the Woman’s Club o f Mill- bum.

The number of hours, volunteered to welfare are uncounted but the women manage to run households and some hold full or part-time jobs.

Among the organiza­tions receiving contribu­tions from the club are Millbum Recreation De­partment Y outh Center Fund; Channel 13; Ameri-.

—ean Legion Post 140;flp.jghhnrhnr)d House;

1 G rey s to n e Park; "Bqyj — Scouts of America, Orange

Momitajn- Council;.-Girls °ScoutCoancil of Greater Essex County; Red Cross;

_ New Eyes fo r tfie-Needy^.

IN A ___1_.DILEMMA , ■

ABOUT YOUR "

Wall - i pA r r a n g e m e n t r?.

Inc.; Arthritis N. J. Chap- ’alsv of Es­

sex County and west Hud-ter; Cerebral Pali

son; Essex County Heart Association; Mental Health A sso c ia tio n o f Essex, County; N. J. Association for Retarded Children Es­sex C ounty Unit;

A lso , New Jersey’s Boystown; Project HOPE; Radio of Free Asia; Save the Children Federation; Eye-Bank for Sight Res­toration, Inc.; Millbum and Short Hills Volunteer First'A id Squad; Florence Crittenton Home; New Jersey Society for C rip­pled Children;, Also, National Founda­tion March of Dimes; Na­tional Conference of Chris­tians and Jews; Bonnie Brae Farm for Boys; Kess­ler In s ti tu te ^ ARE;Veter- a n s Seryiees^V eteranSi

^FundyVinetand Research; jR adioFreeE urope;JD e£t orah Hospital; American

jCancea Society; Millbum L y o h ^ C teb;-.Leukeinia s o c ie ty 7 ? I nc.: 'United

"States Commission - fo r

Ihc.; Essex County. Com- jn itte e for Planned P arent hood; the Salvation Army; National Multiple Sclerosis

, Society and Meals For Millions Fovmdation. ' 1

~ p^nlrlp,! tux p»ym«nt« «ra due on the first day of February, May. August and November end tfte tax collector's office at TQVML..HSU. remains open from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Oty those dates, .Ta*f* nor aldwithin* 7Qhy grace perlod s t Jba due date are subject to a penalty of 8 par cent.

TRAVEL ITEMSOur recent travels have updated tfie Florida news. -- Miami Beach and Ft. Lauderdale continue to be the_ greatest bargain for off-season travel and-many new paclu-gs* are available, such as one including a cruise to Grand B ' ama. .......... . - — ■

Mrs. Mer.t :"' inspect., * o: KEY BISCAYNE HOTEL & VILLAS , shows it to be one of the ideal resorts

_ fo, famtlies. Ththotel has the informality and charm of the Caribbean Islands, but American efficiency

, and cleanliness. Visiting the HOLLYWOOD BEACH - HOTEL impresses one with thadistinguished elegance of the hotel. It is closed every summer and constantly renovated so that the hotel and golf course are in excellent condition. r

Something jdifferentl'A-Stopover m -JCELAND— - _Mr. Dannemann recently spent, a . weekend there.

Travel Headquarters, Inc.-----535TW UtBGRW A V E :. S H O R T t H U E rN . J:

OpposlteSaksFifthAvet

CALL 379-4343

LET'S GO TO CAMP

OUTFITTERS FOR BOYS’ l GIRLS’W EEQUAH IC - PINE FO R E S T - T IM B ER TOPS - OW EGO • A R C A D Y - N A V A R A C - ECH O L A R K

K EN M O N T - KENW OOD - R O N D A C K .■ AND 20O O TH ER CAM PS

• Knapsacks .• Polos .• Shorts• Pajamas• Name Tapes

• Woolen .. I • Pillow Cases | bags. Blankets___ • Laundry Bags • Duffle Bags-• Trunks • Ponchos • Mess Kits• Toilet Kits - • Dungarees— !• Towels• Sheets Jj. Sleeping. ] • Wash Cloths

COMPLETE j Special appointments may be madeCLOTHING SELECTION for evening pufchase-ofHafggr

All Camps, Emblems, etc. camp orders, between 6:0ff P.M. wmEE WAME TAPE P*ease call injdvanee• REASONABLE PRICES , f -%■- DR 9-5135

Infants' - Toddlers* - Girls' Wear 4-14 Teens' 6»14 r- J«mf®rs'.S l5 — Boyswear 4-20

R e in e t t e ’sO F SPRINGFIELD— ' —

246 MORRIS AYE. 379-5135Dally ?i’30-6:00;' Thur*. A Frfc 9:30-9:00---------

I g H 29. 1969

IN STALLATIO N CEREM O NIES ■ Evelyn Trevenen, (w ith gavel), wgs insta lled as president o f the Business and Professional Women's C lub o f M illbum a t the dinner meeting- o f the group held la st w aakatS touffer's.O tharttakm §offjee were (from le ft) Ddtdthy Tighe, treasurer; Corrin e Harris,

Coming EventsThe Item -will be glad to publish events-of any

• organizations. Telephone DRexel 6-12Q0.

FRIDAY, 30

— 9 :15-a.m. Start of Memorial Day observance; Taylor Park.

SATURDAY, 31

■7 T 0 a ;m 7 Ju m o fA ib ^

. JUNE MONDAY, 2 .

.— 8:30 p.m. Township Committee meeting,"To wn; - Hall.

TUESDAY, 3

7 a.m.-8 p.m. Election Day. 77 ' ' _“ 8 p.m. TARGET - Education meeting, Taylor

P&rk Reoreatibn Housl. 1 9 £ w A “graiogrigjhng Oontiflental fatta^ lub meeting. T ^ ,

=— , WEDNESDAY, 4 ^

Republican Club. -party, home of Mrs. Homer Rose.

7:3b p.m. Continental Chapter No. - 142 GES

8:30 p.m. Planning Board meeting, Town HaR.

THURSDAY ,5 ^ '

4 - 8 p.m. Strawberry Festival, Short-Hills „

4 Trustees A re Elected

1 . A Township resident, Nestor J. MacDonald of 9 BarberryLane, waseleetecL vice president of the board of timstees pf-the-Kessler Institute a t its 20th annual meetingtiiis month.

Also elected were: How­ard S. Levin Of 18 Moraine Place, a trustee to the class of 1970; William O Pillow of 165 Long Hill Drive, a trustee o f-Jh e : class of 1971; and Janies R :Er Ozias of 8 Wells’ Lane, a

' of the class oftrustee -

" 1The Jeweler's Shop proudly inyitesyoutohelp celebrate ^thrre-opening of our refurbished jewelry shop.

FREE DRAWINGS FOR 2 OMEGA WATCHES

ONE MAN’S - VALUES T§ $225O NE LADIES

__ NOTHINGTO BUY

Anyone {8 yarn or older may participate. Drawing -will be

- held at Jawetat^Shop on Sat., J June 21, 1969, at 5 p,m. You need nor be present to win,,Stopjn and flit out an entry blank tpday. _________I

Come see our exquisite collection o f diamonds. Omega watches, clocks, bracelets and a variety o f gift .items, ai“ mini price tags. We offer a professional re-designing sehrice, pearl restringirig and watch repairing , 'savings __ .

Your Professional Jeweler3N M tttlttt AVE. 3IA-IM ■ l i l l l l

second vice president; Marie M arquet, firs t v icepresidentrM rs. Trevenen; Eleanor M cG laughlin, corresponding secretary and

MUdm cL M cLean, im m ediate- pas t presid en t-o £ the state federatirn w ho was the in sta llin g officer.. Absen t When the p icture was taken was A lice Kem , recording secretary.

- - “ FRIDAY, 6 ,

10: 30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. Friday Friends meeting, Taylor Park Recreation House. _

S ^U R D A Y ,7 ; •'

— 9 a m: Junior . Essex Troop- final review of - troops, Pleasant Valley Way, West Orange.- 10 a.m. Junior Arboretum Club meeting.

TUESDAY, 10

* 12:30 p.m. Wyoming Church Women’s Guild monthly luncheon meeting, —=— —— ;-.

7 :3 0 , p.m. Continental Lodge 190 F&AM- meeting^.__

------8:30 p.m, Bdatcl-of- Adjustment meeting, TownHan. ~ : ■■■ , j - ; . 7 Z 7 . . ••

FRIDAY, 13 . _ -=ys.10:30 a.m. - 2:30 p .m .J ’riday Friends meeting,

Taylor Park Recreation House. ,Wl(„~ ,0,«„UUJ on»

” 11~10 a.m. Junior Arboretum ftub ’m e e ti i^ ---^

~ - MONpAY,16 ■

8:30 p.m. Township Committee meeting, Towp HaU.- ■

Z . L . • TUESDAY, 17 7 \ g

8;3Q- p^m. Auxiliary Guv Boswoirlh Post 140= meeting. Post Home, ------

Local LVW T o Distribute Vote Sheets

The Millbum League of Women Voters will distri­bute non-partisan voter in­formation sheets contain­ing background informa* tinn on afl of the guberna- torial candidates and their answers to questions putto them.by the_League_of."WomenVoters ofN ew Jer­sey.

— The sheets will be hand— ed out a t the Memorial Day Parade and during the mom ing HCudi hours at bpth train stations on June- 2. During the afternoon of June 2, the day before tiie primary election, League w o m en—will also walk th r o u gh Millbum Ceiit6t_ gassing out this election information. ~

PR ETTY PR IN T FO R NOW AN D LA TER - Cotton dress by Brenner Couturew as one o fth e fashions shown yesterday a t Topper's, The M a ll, in ji & ow - sponsored-by. the S t John 's Church-Guild o f Dover and ' the Woman's^ C lub o f Roseland^ Follow ing the fashion show , the groups lunched a t S tau ffe r^ and attended the-tnatmee perform ance o f "George M " a t the Paper M ill Playhouse.

Senior High School Menu

Hot P la te.. . .40

Friday - No School

Monday - June 2 Or. Mushrrom Soup Sliced Ham on RollPotato Chips Pineapple Tidbits Roll *Milk

Tuesday - June 3 French Onion Soup Breaded Veal Cutlet Steamed Rice .PeasRoll& Butter Milk

Wednesday - June 4 Cr. Tomato Soup Beef Stew on

Broad Egg Noodles Cracked Wheat Bread

& Butter Milk ^

Thursday-^ Ju n u h r ~ PepperJtotSoup R o ^ B e e f - Mashed Potatoes

1 & Gravy W. K.Cqrri

-GrackedWheatB read -

Milk

jun io r High School Menu

: Hot or cold plate in­cluding miUc-.40 Cents

F fM y ,M ay 3 9 =

School closed

Monday, June 2 -

Cream of celery soup Hamburger on bun with onion rings Potato chips ±Fruit

Tuesday, June 3

Tomato soup Fruit juice :Ham ‘T-—Candied sweet potatoes Com niblets --v - :Hard ro ll- butter | ..... ......Wednesday, Juna 4

ChickensoupSpaghet ti with meat sauceand cheeseTossedsaiadItaliair bread - b u tte r-

Thursday, June 5

Veg6table^oup Chickensaladsandwich— Macaroni salad.Choice of vegetable or fruit

Benefit Jazz Concert

To AtdBiafra Fund"

Max Kaminsky and the -Chicago Jazz Saxtet will -be featured at the benefit jazzjconcert being present- ed ; by the students _ of summit high school on Wednesday- June 4. at 8 p.m; Tickets are n o w -on: sale at Siegel’s Btationery Shop, Roy’a-HobbjL Shop and Brooks in Summit. The proceeds will benefit the Aid to BiafraFund.

WHITE SALE!Slock up NOW!

while prices are low

FAM0U57MAKE PERMANENT PRESS SHEETS—Stevens white percale -LB0 beouti-blend sheets.

- Twin - — - Size 7 2 x 1 0 4 Regularly 4.49 SALE-3^9-Full 81 x 104 5 .4 ? - 4.79

Twin fitted 4.69 3.99fu ll-fitted- -— . - 5 . 6 9 . 4 .9 9Cases 4 2 x 3 6 . 1.59 1 .39.0^Fieldcrest Solid Color Percole, Yellow, blue, green, or pinkCoses 42 x 36 Regularly 1.89- SALE 1.69Twin 72 x 104 ; 5.29 4.79Double 81x1 0 4 6.29 5.79Twin fitted 5.49* 4.99

.Full fitted " 6.49 5.99. Lody PepperelI Mirplux: French Rose Sheets _

Permanent Press. Maize, blue, or pink. - ,’ Coses: -42 x te ^ R eg u lo rty 1.99 SALE 1.69

SALE OF PILLOWSIDown Pillows,With zipper Covers. Luxury pillows,

— IQO^FHmftOTtecFdown, ngturolly: .resilient. j__— " Reg. Size - 21 x 27 Regulorly 12.99 SALE 9.99

•- sizg^eut ZT x"3i77f: j:- — 18.99:...... 14.99'King-"Size Cut-21 x 39 . 21.9? 17.99. Serene Sleeping Pillows. Machine-washable ond'dryabte.■ f luffs bock to shone eosilv after, o .wonderful night's sleep.* Reo’ Size Cut TflTx 27" Regulorly 6.99 SALE M t -

Queen Size Cut 21 x 31 " 8.99 7.99King Size > - Cut 24 x 5 7 ” : Vl.W - ■ 19.99 ' ]

. Fortrel 7 polyestef fiberfill is the only continuous ftloment fiberflll, unique to the Serene fomjly. f

- 190%, Docron-PWow, in yoW eHbice-W firrn7~iwedlurn or n soft density.^egular'Size 21x 27 Regularly 4.99 SALE 3.99

r^ o infoom-Slsepins-Pjllo.ws,;Dreomy soltl.Pure, non-oller- , genic latex foSrrT rubber. Dust resistant and-odor-free. Zippered white cover. 21' x 27 inch cut Size. .. . 7 _

— . .. Regulorly 8:99 SALE 5.99 •

s a l e o f v i n y l i z e d f ib r e r u g s

For indoor or outdoor. Reversible, heavy quoHty. _ >Green, brown, gold.

— - Regulorly 39.95 SALE 24.958 x 10 . — ^ 9 7 . 9 5 - 22,95

27 95 193Btzl

SUMMIT PHONE 273-5600 EASJ ORANGE 672-1315 — Beth Store*-Open Thursday 'Til 9j00 ---------

^W hy do the lam yourself? FOB THE S A M E COST or LESS

Still on excellent selectioryoll ore boiled! o r planted in containers! " Iand burlappetf

POTTEDROSES

SPRING LAW N SHAPE-UPChoose your favorite-varieties- now while they're lr>- bloom!

JustJike plontinp instant flowers! — Choose now—r the selection was never better!

Chinch Bug Control Weed Control Crohgrass ConfraT ~ Fungus Control

Fertiliiation __£ 33-8-8 plus 2% O.

Sod-Webworm

Wed . TVttlfS*. -Fj 1„ 9 (except

rltEE P o w er A eration

"Aeration of the lawn improves soil structure by improving penetration

of ah’& water to roots."FOR SERVICE

| j g A L L R M - 3 2 1 6 _

U 5 Spciogt k lt l A ve . ie r h t leT H e ig h ts , N.1. 0 7 2 * 2

Charles SchaussF u n era l services for

Charles Schauss of 104 Farley Road were held on

‘Tuesday at Smith and Smith Suburban, Spring- field. Mr. Schauss, who was 77 years old, died on May 23 at Overlook Hos­pital.

A native of Newark, he had lived here for the last 36 years. He retired in 1955 as assistant manager of the dividend depart­ment of the Prudential Insurance Co. after having been employed by the company^ Tor 46 years. He was an Army veteran o f World War I.

;— Mr . Schauss was a mem­ber of die Senior Citizens of the Prudential, the Short Hills (Association and Springfield Emanuel Methodist Church.

H e leaves his wife, Mrs. Isabella Jedele Schauss.

_ Uoirimuniry__ Coagrcj

On the fhst Sunday^in'

of Communion at 11 -o^clocfejinffiiasanctoet^T theuCommunity Congpegfc.

-■ tional Church of Short- H ih s .T h e l t e v e ren d ^Cen-

-fU u -dy---W fldriek r assisted— by the Reverend Stephen

M. Anderson, will ede-- brate the Eucharist.

New members wilL.be presented to the congrega-

~~ firm at this gervice. • J-The Junior Choir wifi)

Hold a supper party in Fel­lowship Hall on Thursday, June 5, immediately fob-

; - lo w in g their regular 4 o’clock, choir rehearsal.

------ Municipal tax paymaht* are due-en-^he-tim day of February. May, Auoust and November and thatax collector's office at Town Hall remains open from 7 to 8:3Q-pJa.- on those dates. Taxes not- paM within a 7-day price period of the due data are. auSS iti a penalty ol 8 par cant.

d o m in g l&enrfrM Jn Jfwrl® (WjurrijMW , IrnW C D P R A T inN Z AAT 7ir>NI AFRICAN —Presbyterian

The Reverend John W. Thoinson will preach a t bisth worship services an Sunday, June . 1. He will

rw>ak on the topic: “Great, ramblers.”

There will be no meet­ings of the Junior High and Senior High Fellow­ships that evening. -

The Church and Society Committee of Session, under the chairmanship of George R. Gray, will meet on Monday evening, June 2, at 7 :30 p.m. in the parlor.

On Tuesday, June 3, the executive board of the Women’s Guild will meet at 9:30 a.m. in the parlor and the Cancer Dressing Group, under the chair­manship of Mrs. Paul WoR- stadt, meets at 10 arm,4n Fellowship Hall.- The Worship and.Music

X o m lu itte r^ o f Session, zander the ehairmanshipsoT Josep h -D . Andrews wili ho id i ts m e e t in g o n Tues- day eyenmg^St S p.m. in R o o m ft. - - ’ '

CONGREGATION 'NAI ISRAEL

ISO Millburn Avc.Or. Max CrucncwcM, Rabbi Dr. Charier Fraundlich, Rabbi Rav. Joshua O. Staala, Cantor

Services:7:15 a.m. and 8:15 p.m. Fri­

day.7:15 a.m. and 8 p.m. Monday

through Thursday.9 a.m. and at sundown Satur-

day.8 a jn . and 7 pjn. Sunday.

CONGREGATION B'NAf JESHURUN OF ESSEX COUNTY

1025 South Oranga Avanua Short Hflla, Naur Jaraay

Phona: 379-1555 Rabbi Ely B. Piiehik

Rabbi Barry H. Graena Cantor Norman Summtri

Sabbath eve worship: Friday :15 p j» .Sabbath morning worship:

Saturday 10:30 a.m.Nursery School: Monday -

F r i d a y mornings. Religious | ' ’ grades 7-9 Saturday,

lunday, 9:30 a.mL „

COM M UNITY CONGREGATIONAL

Parsonage i

WHITE O A K RIDGE CO M M U N ITY CH APEL

291 Parsonage Hill Read379-0590----------

. Rav. Leroy R.Linsoln,Pastor Emaritua

Cardnar S. McBride, Pastor Robert Harrinx, Youth Dirartc Sunday — 9:45 a.m. Bible

School; 11:00 am . Morning W orshipjT p K Evening Serv-

Wednesdayl Mldryeek aerv lcer7:45 p.nr. ----— -

ST. ROSE OF LIMA52 .Short Hills Avenue

.Monsignor John F. Ryan, pastor Masses — Sunday 6:45, 7:45,

8:45, 10, 11:15: High Mass. 12:30. Eridays, 5:45, 7:30, 8, 9. U ; (First Friday 8 p.m. Mass.) Weekdays, 6:45, 7:30, 8, 9 a.m.

Confessions - Saturday 4-5:30 p.m. and Saturday- evenings 7:3£-9;00-p.RU Cpmpline Serv­ice, Sermon and Benediction Monday'cvenlngszat^8il5 p.m. followed oy confessions.

HAYES6-M0NTH SAVINGS CERTIFICATES

LIMITEIT OFFER

HIGHESTDIVIDENDS

MinimumBalance$10,000 j H | Multiples $1,000.

SM*4 -

""IttYESsAvmcsi~ ■ t uhw «ntS72enarst, mwiric 2,-iti:

;115,000 -

c a m p b r ia r ^ r h in ebeck , n . y .

A co-ed camp fo r a g e$5 thnr1684 rniles from N. Y . wlth-all sports and _ cultural activities. Mature professional staff,

- Modern faciiitiestindoor gym, private lake, - linens supplied. -Medical staff. Special diet for overweight children.

BKtlSU awU1350 4 osaks

C.I.T. 2 year program15- 16 $450. ,16- 17 $400

Rev. Charles E. Boyar, Minister 9:45 a.m.—Church School; 11

a.m.—Morning Worship, sermon

ion each first Sunday.

C H A T H A M CH URCH OF CHRIST

362 Fairmount Avanua

Rav. Kenyon J. Wildriek, Th.M.— Mlnlatnr- ■

~ Rev. Stephen M. Andanon,

Dr. Ralph E. Davto,"

a.m. Junlor. Junlor High. Middle High Departments;

rnlbr HifhASemlnar.— — t t z c n r tow er Junior,- Pri­

mary,.- -Kindergarten,- Nursery and Pre-nursery Departments. Church. Worship sendee. Mr. Wildriek.

ST. STEPHEN'S \ .EPISCOPAL CH URCH .- -Main Straat, Mlllburn — - Rector Rav’B Joseph D. Herring Sunday: 8 a j u , Hoiy^com-

municn.9:15 a.m. Morning Prayer and

.Church School. (3rd Sunday Holy COmmunTonT.

11 ajn- Morning Prayer and Sermon. (1st, Sunday, Holy Communion).

FIRST BAPTISTRev. William C. Lincoln, Pastor

Spring Street,. Mlllburn Wednesday, 7 :30 p.m.JPrayer

meeting. ____1_J7 “Sunday, 9:45 a. tn., 1

TEMPLE-SINAt208 Summit Avanua

Summit Reform Jewish

Rabbi Morrison D. Bial Cantor Bernard Barr

Friday 8 p.m. Sabbath Eve. : Service." Matiric Kartch.

i Witdrstr Avunue, Summit Jacob Trapp, S.T.D. Minister 10 a.m. Services. Family Sun-

Nursery care for ~2. 3 year

Sisterhood of B’nai lsraellMk M asstoB e Presented "At Christ CBurch on SundayPlansIhstallationLuncheori

54 Church Stmet, fitlHburn, N. J. j The Sisterhood o f Con- tion Rhai Israel will

___ its insudlataon lunch­eon oil Monday, June 2. at

:Larry P. Shoe

635-7814 Sunday . Bible Classes, 10:00

a.m. Worship 11:00 ajn. Eve- ning Devotional — W in t e r Months, 6:00 p.m.; Summer Months, 7:00 p.m.

Wednesday — BibJe Study, 7:30 pun.

MORROW MEMORIALM E TH O D tS T C H U R C H -----

600 Ridgewood Rd. Maplewood, N. A *

Dr. Willism F. I. Redds, Minister Rev. Willism K. Bums,

Minister of Mueic 9:15 a.m. Church Worship.

•unde by Ivy Chapej-Choir; 9:15 a.m. Church SChOOir l t -arm. Church Worship. Music by Chapel -C hairs 4 tun. Junior Youth Fellowship; 8 p.m. United

i Young Aitoits (every u t t e r w eek ), .. .

FIRST CH U R CH OF.CHRIST, SCIENTIST

■ 292 Sorlnsftold Avon Summit, N. J.

Sunday Service. "HW School, n a.m. Lessoh-sermom •^iicient and Modern Necro­mancy, a liis - Mesmerism andHypbti8ffi'“Deft5Urt'Cfed.”....Pupilsaccepted- to age 20. Nursery care provided for infants and small children.

Wednesday, 8:15 p.m., Testi­mony meeting...... - •. .

Reading Room; 340 Spring- field u venue. rSnmmit. Open dany fiomexcept Sundays and holidays and after the Wednesday meet­ing.

SPRINGFIELD EM AN UEL UNITEDMETHODIST CH URCHAcademy Green and Mein Street

Springfield, New-Jertey The Rev. James Dewart, Patter

9:30 a.m. Church School for all ages. German Language Service: 9 * 0 -and 11- a m - Di­v ine-W orship— Sermon. Re Raymond D eH afnut.

TH E CH URCH OF < JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER D AY SAINTS

140 White Oak Ridge Read - Short Hills, New Jersey-

Presiding Officers Bishop: Neal E. Mann

'■ #1 Harrison Court Summit, New Jorsoy

1st Counselor: A. Perry Soderbe 270 Timber Drive

Berkeley Heights, New Jersey - 464-4032

2nd Counselor: Arthur W. Ericson 5 Canoe Brook RosdTT , ,

__ Short Hills, New Jefsey '379-3127 '

Sunday Priesthood Meeting o-nn a m. Sundav School -10:30 a.m. Sacrament Meeting - 5:30 p.m. * MrA ^^W edneiaty - 7:30 p.m. Primary - Thursday 4;00 p,m. -

Safety Council Warns NJ’s HolidayDrivers

Mrs. Sumner 22 Oswego Lane will be installed as president. Iri stalling officer for the afternoon will be Mrs. Lawrence Chargin' of 158 Mohawk Road. The vice presidents to be installed are Mrs. Edward Fischer of 39 Harvey Drive; Mrs. Ger­ald Holland of Maple- wood; and Mrs. Richard S k in d e r o f 14 Haran Circle.

Mrs. Morris Eisenberg of■ Oval Road will be in­

stalled as financial secre­tary and the recording sec­retary will be Mrs; Benja- inin—Eichler o f ~25 Gval Road L Mrs. Lawrence Miller of 49 Woodfield Drive will be installed as corresponding secretary and Mre, iBdwardi;Alter-eL 150 ; Myrtle Avaiue^wfiFtake o f f ic e a s treaRiifer.

Co-chairtnffi for the in- sTallation luncheon are Mrs,IrvingSchwartz ai3S South. Mountain Road and; Mire.' Jack Nathanson of 11 “Mountainview Road.

The highlight of ® e luncheon-will be provided by Bernard F. Tully o f Main Street, who is noted

■^-lOHN'SLUTHERANCH URCH

587 SpringfMd Avr. Summit

The; Rev. Riehird L. Petermin...v: Pastor___ '*■’Sunday--

CHRISTCHURCHHighland Avehuo, Short Hillr

Rector— Rev. Herbert H. Cooper, D.D.

Assistant to tho Rector:Rev. George W. R. MacCrey

Rev. Richard B. Andersen Smi3ay:78 a.nu. Holy Gom-

munion. 9:15 and 11 a.m. .Church School. Morning prayer arid sermon.

Mrs. SumnerKalafa^**, S isteihoocLfm ident

fo r h is "o flp ia l flor J : decor. Mr. Timy not ordyr

provide the cent«7 :e for t te luncheon b u t

___d e monstrate his artcreating unusual artificial flower arrangements and suggest tritere m i^it be ef^ je eiavely. displayed. Mrs- Leon FinlLDL 22 Rahway Road is in charge of pro­gram - arrangements - an d MrerrDoi-l&yman of 49 Walnut' Avenue- is respon- sible for prizes" which wilT be awarded.- •

W YOM ING-PRESBYTERIAN^;. —-4 » Wyoming A venue, Millburn

MinisteraWilliam R. Russell

o John W. Thornton John W. Parks, D.D.

9:30 and 11 a.m. Sunday Worship service. Child care will bfr^ r o vided fQr pre-school children. Mr. Thomson.

9:39 and 11:00 ajn: Church School through Junior Depart-m ents...... ...... ’ ..........

7 * 0 p m.-^Senior High F e l­lowship.___

7:00 pjn. — First and T h ird Sundays - Junior High Fellow -ship. . ________ ■ . ^

3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday Oiurch School.

‘Rejoice,” music for the worship of God in the

^wentaetfar century, will be

E nted a t the service of j C om m union at

Christ Church on Sunday, June 1; a t 9:15 a.m.-The entire parish of the church and all interested persons are invited to attend. /

Dr. Herbert H. Cooper, rector of the church and the Reverend Richard B. Andersen will participate, assisted by the Christ Church Crucifers.

The Folk Mass was first presented in the church on -May 11 and the enthusi­astic response to that pres­entation has prompted the repetition o f the service.

In the Mass the words

HOLY CROSS tUTHERAN^CHURCH:—— (Thu Church of thi Radio——

"Lutheran Hour” end - TVfr J‘Tht» 1»theLHe»4—

639 Mountain A«e„ - in B a i i u a f ...:

Th« ReverenduT J. Sfumpf, Perter ~ Telephonn: DR 9-4525--- =sSumtey, - 8;30 ■ a.m. Worship. 9:30 aam Sunday Bdhod and JUMa- f 10 :45 a.m.-Com-munion Service. \

^ IV4N G STQ N llN iT€D - METHODIST CH URCH

Wert Hebert Gee Rd. a at Walnut St.

Livinxeten. N. J.Rev. Rbbert A; Burbank, 'Minirter

1(f a.m‘. Family Moniing WorsTiip, "Nursery and Kinder- gaittn- '--J ' '

10:30 a.m. Church School (grades 1-6).

11 am. C h u r c h School (grades 7-12) Adults’ Coffee, hour.

of - the service of Holy Communion in the prayer book are the same but the setting is entirely differ­ent The music of the FolkMaw “ Rejoice,” was writ-een by Herbert G. Draesel Jr., Geoffrey Butcher, H. Bruce Lederhouse and Harry T. Burleigh. Father Draesel is rector of the House of Prayer Episcopal Church in Newark.

The idea for the Folk Mass came from a Senipr

High Yoking People’s meet­ing in the fall Of 1968 at which Father Draesel was the speaker. The talents of the young people were explored and five instru­mentalists were found. They are Marc Smith, David Everard, Cinidy Sun­shine. Gretta Cochran and Geoffrey Dugan. In addi­tion to these musicians, a choir of about 20 young people and some volun­teers from the church’s Senior Choir will take part in the Mass.

Copies of the music will • be available to all who attend the /service.

Why plant a hedge...

when you really want a tree?Some investors today are looking for a hedge against inflation, some have exchanged their dollars for gold, "which hasn't changed in

- value Jn-Amerltt-Jn-3(LyeaB. Still otters arohedgHginflatkmby Investing inMARCO

l ISLAND, FLORIDA, which appreciates in value everyyear. lf ou are looking for aoinvest- menT 'as good as gold," we have dona yoiL one better.,. MARCO ISLAND. - -

MAIL COUPON I J o n d d C m t e ^ TODAYl Representing Florida's Mackle Bros.

238 Morris Am., Springfield, ft.Phone: 376-8273' — ---------

-6M n 9 fo 9 weekdays,10t66 Sa ifs, Sun.

l am Interested in n Literature Q HomesIte :~ □ Inspection trip to Florida .

(Ottering mi b-v;

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BARROW’S- TRAUilfcSAEESS SENTAL, IMS.H78frSPRINGtHELBAVEvN6W PROVIDENCE

464-2913____ -1ZL

Planning a tirip to tiie beach or lake during the three day Memorial holi­day weekend? According to the New Jersey State Safety Council, "more than 2-million- vehicles will travel 380-milliotrmiles on New Jersey’s road this weekend.

The State Safety Coun­cil, in its traffic safety advisory, cautions thaL holiday travel is different from the usual everyday, driving to the office and to p p in g center in that a gr e a t—deal of holidaym b ^ r in gH s = d e n e u t k ig h = speeds in heavily loaded

-care on—roads that are frequently jawimpH t° ca­pacity.___t________■" - ■

“How far can I safely travel in a single day?* The Safety Council advises there is no single answer to this often asked question

but depending on variable factors and the mechanical condition of tirie car, efeht or nine hours of.travel, should be the' limit. This would mean on interstate roads- or turnpikes a fast m oving vehicle could travel approximately 450_ miles per day and pro- p o r tio n a te ly l^s^ de­pending upon traffic, c o j^ " ions on state highway

s w m W f h f N M f « >

^ fV f s rw te C t B U i l f t H € N 6 T to 'j *— a R a v m ^

B x h H I n S R A H C C

0? A V t M f JR

a

f t & M L C 9 « r r A i B b t r « M

34 KtcuueOb* T. HZ ovw

Research indicates that driving too many hours in one day invariably dulls reflexes, induces “ highway hypnosis and produces danger. TheCouncil recog­nizes there 4iave been- re­ports of" phenomenal dis­tances covered in one day but they say the risks are not worift the few minutes of bragging back "at the office.....The - Council recom-mends that motmrists pre­plan the trip, set out from home early in the morning to avoid peak travel periods, look for a motel esuly m the afternoon,^

"take time to relax, prepare the car for the next day’s travel, and retire fo rt agoodnight’s s le e p .----- - -

The object or a holiday trip should be fun and the smart driver will eqjoy his trip by following the rules of the road, . using seat b e lts , observing speed limits, blending his yenicle wiriiThenllOw of traffic. being courteous, adjusting

4 o local weather and road conditions and Deing alert to the movement n f o t her vehicles. .

EVANGEL BAPTIST CHURCH

242 Shunpika Rd.. Springfield

9:46 a.m. Sunday School11 Wnf*lp

-9.-48 prt». Priayur Maating

Tom ato, Eggplant & "Pepper Plants

8 0 0 Varieties o f Perennials

HARDY MUMSHere's your chance . . . Many, mqny

varieties on di'sploy! Now's the right

time to choose and plant. ■

Kodak FILM FOR LIFEw en u n u H B m sL .

You set a FRESH ROLL of KODAK FILM jaiitfc. every roJI yuu bring . .in to wr plant foj processing . . . RoH After Roll After Roll, ■

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SAME LOW PRICE POLICY ON KOPACHROME SLIDES AND MOVlE_S:We Give Kodak Film Only T Bring in yourJilm = ' 1 . ^ __AMPLE FREE PARKING

ACADEMY FREE FILM CO. 20 EAST WILLOW ST„ MILLBURN, N. J.

THE ITEM of MiHbtim ond Short Hills, N.~J'rT-THuf»cJdy,- Mqy 29, 1969CMNHjl

Roth Ends Drought^ g i mm

Colonial League Registration

With No-Hit PitchingScott Roth reccgded his

first win of the seasoir^ast“ Thursday, bat ~ the long

wait was worth -itcffist:Millbum High School jun-

no-hit; no-nth- game against, the Madison Dodgers in a game played-- at Madison/ Roth’s victory featured-sbeatrike -outs-as-- he faced 28 men in the seven inning contest. ;

'Roth aided his own cause in the third with a

"two out single and eventu­ally scored.

Millburn scored two in­surance runs in the sixth .on consecutive sifigleg -by Jim Pittenger, Greg Bor- chert, Rick Arons and Bob Parish. The runs were un­necessary as Scott retired the last ten men to face him.-----

Walks in the first two innings, four / o f them, threatened to spoil the effor t by Roth but in both innings the junior-hurter- pamp through with clutch

strike outs.Prosperity-for theMfflter

nine was short-lived." On Monday o f this week 4he locals were white-washedby~~~the~~Summit Hilltop-

>rs. DuMg -% ”pers. Durfflg a wild second inirirfg~""the -host—team -M B runs with stsfftef BblrTriolo the only Summit lad who failed to score. Fourteen men came far is a E t^ d iK i i^ th r ^ ip p r causing Coach Pearson to go with three pitchers.

Today the Blues put th e ir 3-10 record u jr against Cedar Grove in the fimal game of the season.

DeSean LoSapio— M an tope TarrentinoConway . Cook : ■.D'Andrea

Schwartz Slarte' _ Kimball__

fa if f ie r s P f a v e d

In State ChampionshipTwo wins in dual com-

_ petition and a stinging set­back in the State - finals

. marked the golf action for fraf MUlbum High School linksters ' over the past week. 'West Orange and gumffiit wgre~att the-sRstr end of 12-6 and 1 lVii-fi% scores in matches played at “ Canoe Brook, but the Millers were on the short end of the scoring at Fors- gate on Monday.

The loss in the State _. meet was described as one::

of those days when all o f tiie bad shots in the bag popped up.

Alex Doyle paced the ""“Blues Tuesday afternoon

with a brilliant 33 to put ~ the home team back on

the right track. Alex, a 1 junior at MHS, had four

birdies match and only one bogie during the nine hole as he picked up three points for the locals.

f W k r i a r k also-picked^ up three team points for

Coach Mauriello’s squad. Ken Hirsh chipped in with 2%. Roger Maivinney had two and cajtfSmi^HBlttl** enfeld p ick ^ up- one wifcn

.a 38. His opponent, Jack-Underwood.pulled in with.a37.

The scores against West Orange last week were higher than usual but the Blues managed to take the match 12-6. Hirsh had the best round, of the day with a 3.8 but was able to pick up only 1- team point. Alex Doyle and Paul .Gal­lagher took three each from their opponent.„ Y e s te rd a y .B lu e .and

.-White -itoekutheir record to- Montclair with Cedar Grove and Verona on the docket for next week.. r

Orioles Take Division Lead- In tiie American ■ Division . of the Little League the. Orioles, win- ners o l the firstTi2if, Have taken^a one and half game lead over the Buzzards. The Orioles-defeated the Buzzards 3-0, the Eagles 8-4 and the Bluejays 13^2 and 10-9. The winning pitchers were Tony Soper and Lee Springmeyer. The Buzzards also defeated the Bluejays 2-1 and the Eagles 16-6.

_ In the National League the Robins are undefeated in the season’s second half

P.S. EXPRESS BUSES TOMONMOUTH PARK RACETRACKEVERY SAT. THROUGH S I K THEN EVERY ItAClNG OWLBtfSES1fAVEMf yttt 6fetT£R 12NOON. . r-.. , .(SATURDAYS &1UIY4AT ti-jlBAM.) ^$125 ROUN0 TRIP ’ ' . PUBLIC SERVICE TRANSPORT

H U M

STARTS SATURDAYt t i r t r A U G U S T ^

SPECIALBUSES -GardonStatePky OCEAN PORT. N.Jj), , ■ ■ __■ , , ^ H 5 tmllwirw-wrirtW ftey.'ttit 1W

P O S T 2 P M • Daily D ouble 1:50 PM

JSorchert AWIWParlth.... -McGeorge .J9>IW 1 1-Roth ,3_l. lTWHtairft •— 4 ' v i 0 * 2 o 3MadHon 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

3 0 - 3= 3 0 0

Tall man- ~ McCullough

Registration for the Millbum Township chib in th e C o lo n ia l Baseball League will be held at the Taylor Park Recreation House this Saturday,- May -3Tr"fregtfm ffir ’ " T tr a r n ir Bovs from 16 through. 19

of age are eligible fopyea•tew

he league, which- is

Sonsoted by the Mtttbum nior Baseball Club and

the Millbum" Recreation - © e p a r t in e r t t , i n c l u t t i r teams- representing Chat­ham, Chatham Township, Hanover andParsippany-- The first Millburn game is scheduled"for'Juw9"ab(l' play will continue through the early part of August.

BillMcCormack’sColiimhja Still A Jiitx r For Miller Netmen

Items in Sports

“A Spark of Hope”Over the course of the last few

weeks some hopeful developments have presented, themselves to the world of Millbum athletics. Some townsfolk have begun to show more than a silent concern toward "the present state of affairs. Repairs have been penciled in for the summer months at the athletic field, and three., of the home town squads have demonstrated their supremacy in the Suburban Conference. Taking note of these happenings we thought it appropriate to pass the glad tidings' aiong.to you.

. A t a recent meeting held in the Education Center Richard Amsterpointed out to the parent-teacher

“tepreteMtives/ihe need for action onof the community’s physical

- education and athletic program. Sighting an insufficcnt" number of pereohnel on an elementary level and

/" th e" -gross indadetjuacies of ' the physical plant used for mterrscholastic and intra-muraLtmograms'atrthe settioi high scfiddT“level, he""charged ~hts listeners With' a mal"re'spbnsibility in ' “ insuring th a t our boys-and-girls-have- •available to them the opportunity to develop their-bodies through abound physic# ‘education program “and to achieve the-- disciplines and skills, attendant to athletic competitions”

A second milestone came in the form of a memorandum which noted plans for the replacement and repair of the bleachers at the athletic field prior to the commencement of next fall’s sports calendar. It should come as no surprise to any regular reader of this column that we were deeply moved by this announcement.

The track, tennis and golf teams that represented the Blue and White this season all came out on top of the Conference standings. A word of congratulations to Coaches Beck, Faroer, Pandick, Ram and Mauriellb for their fine performances in bringing home, the gold this spring. In producing three championship squads to go along with the cross country and~.

_jEresflfiig "titles, the Milters were _ gumanfeed^ th a i -five—of - the^m ne

- available first place banners w ik h aag on the locfl gymnarium waft- -—

This has been a hectic year for- 1 sportiinM illbunv. The story of the

_ 1968-69 inter-scholastic season hasratf' ^ b u t teaq^cTiy conclusion, but is we - -

look back # id essay the total-picture " w6 can see some areas of improvemerit - - a B i i^ t - a m u l t i t u d i o f c^

- cry o o ttg r change. It is hoped that-in beginning-to' creep this - year, nex t year, and the years to follow will find Millbum standing as th&> model of

—athletic-achievemeTfir"

Pittenger .SllberBechert -

Parith ' -McGeorgeKeeley

after downing the Cardi­nals in the first of the three crucial games. Pete Hardin was the winning pitcher. The Cardinals were the first half division leaders.

Cardinal* Hawke Sparrow* •

Hurls No-HitterS e n io r ' righ t-hander

Larry Aubel (formerly of Maple Terrace) was the pitcher when Pensacola (Fig.) High School, Big Five Conference winners* defeated Jaekson-v-Hle (Fla.) Parker 3-0- in the Regional I-A A playoff

Make a D a t e '^ ^ S T

Open Nitely 7:30 to H pjn.*" Matinees: Sots., Suns, and

Holidays 2 to 5 p.m. Admission: Mat. 50c, Eves. $1.00 ttIVINGSTON ROLLER RINK

81$ So. Livingston Ave.

THE CHAM PIONS - Noel Wollman (le ft) and Dave Hohnstinetoss the discus nn theium ^W ajiae-tm xJm islhia-thateueatat^the Suburban Conference meet in Cedar Grove last Saturday.

I

Dave also took first place in the shot as M ille rs topped Cedar Grove and Sum m it to give Q/iHS its fifth consecutive

- w n fS i ijM m p Im W p rnm fa ctm e rrh am T a ile d to win the Suburbancrown only once in the last~15years.

Trackmen Suburban Champs For Fifth Consecutive Year

f ’o r the fifth- year-m■'-ar­row and for the !4 th timein the last 15 years the M iU buro - High School track team has won the S u b u rb an C onference championship. Coach Paul Beck’s boys easily - de­feated Chatham last week in the final dual meet of th e season and “then chalked up the champion­ship on Saturday by finish­ing first in the conference meet held at Cedar-Grove.

Bill Beck, Dave Hohn- stine and NgeT" Woll ma nL took first' place ribhons at. Cedar Grove. Bill finished ahead of tiie field in the mile run~witir a time of 1:28/9 while Hohnstine and “Wollman won the shot anti discus events. DaveF j u t the shot 50’6” and Noel came in with' a 141*6” effort in the dis­cus/ ‘

The Millers took five 8econd . si9ts .during, theovercast day. Joe Rugo ■ ■ ■ M A jjl " m ' Jtneturned, tiie trick in- 220, A1 Roberts was run- ner up in the pole vault, Don Horn was number

F M S I ILLUMINATED

NIGHTTIME PAR 3G O L F C O U R S E

K NOW OPEN! *!s0

two in the long Dave Hohnstine and Gary

jum p,a.... and Gi .

Green were second in the discus and javelin throws,

Hohnstine picked up three more team point&in the javelin with a third and the Blues had.three others in th ird ' positions. John Meier „was third in the high jump, Al Nittolo was third m the two mile run, and Jud Wagonseller matched their efforts in th e 7 pole vault. -----

J o h n O’Conner, Jay McGinley , Steve -Pearsona n d f lh r is T.anHig aHHpfjpoints to the Miller cause by taking fourth in their events. Six Millers picked U p valuable points by plac-:ing f i f th .------— - ——--The Panthers o f Cedar, Grove High School pu t the pressure on the locals throughout the dav but “HaT to settle for -second, place with 59 points. The Blue and White registered

63%. Third place-werrtnKr Summit with 45% points.

Midway through week “"tite ~;hdm ^w h ers traveled to Chatham for the final dual event of the

^season. The Eskies met the same fate as the other conference foes, dropping the deeisfcHT to Millburrr 81-45. “. Hohnstine and AL Rob­erts scored double vic­tories against the Boro team. Dave took first in tee-shot end-discus and

-Alanwas4hewinnerinthe^ J qw hurdles , and in th e : polevaultevent. - ;

Gary Green took the javelin throw with a 188’9” performance. Don Horn outjum ped— Jim Leonard of Chatiiam in

-the l ong jutafL aad John- Meier was-top man in the_

A1 Nittolo and Bill Beck

SetoikHall lb Award LettersEight students will be

ho n o re d tonight when Seton Hall Preparatory School holds its annual all-sports banquet a t the Military - Park Hotel in Newark. .

Scheduled to receive athtetie letters are John Riva o f 40 Highland Ave n u e for varsity cross-

.-country and track; James Mahon of 2 Randall Drive foT ovkrslty wrestling;

....' " ' * t .W«sh-Joseph Byrne o f 11 \ington Avenue for varsity trolf; Ralph Hytend of 15 Tioga Pass for junior var­sity. footbrilif RidMgd: Reynoids-•

ior varsity baseball; Scott

Bames of 25.. Addisoq Drive forj, freshman foot-- baU and freshman basket­ball; and -Brad Barnes of 25 Addison Drive fresh- m anerosa-pountEyi 3

the wire in the two mite; Beck was first in the mile.

-Beck -added to his indi­vidual accomplishments on Tuesday of this , week., by winning “tiie John Cblims- Memorial Half Mile at the Passaic County Track meet. The speciaLinvita- t ional half mile f eatured the finest high school half miters in this p a rt of the. stateT BiH Look the -blue ribbon and - the ■ trophy with a strong 1:58.2 ef­fort. —

Saturday the coaching staff will have the Millers -iftrtiie state district Com­petition Witb group cham: pionships set for June 7th.

y*7CTT«tham High Hurdles

16.B, Nordholm (C), t ^ . Nathan«ori (Mi.

• 10.6, Unare* (C), Kltne TCL;■n (M) _

52.4, Schiro (C), Am*«er (CLO’Conner T6L .......

4:34.6, Beck lM), Pfaff^TCr,' EilvOMl-— - . , ‘ry. - \

• Low Hurdle*-31 6. Roberts (Mr. Wagon*eir8f:(W1r KUne. (C)

_______ Two Mile^^.5a.6^1jBQiCL4Ml„2ege*-lM),. Semple (C).

23.2, I (C). Shhro (C),

Scharo (C),

H(C).■ .....High Jump---------- ------

6'TO i- Meier (ML Schiro TCI, Howerth (Ml ~ ~

Shot Put. 49'3K“ .Hohnitina (M), Pearson TM); Fi*cher (C). '

T88'9; ’, Green (ML FJtcharJC),

Discus •T42’B”, LfShhsfirti (Ml, Lantll*

;m ), Cataplho (M)

GEORGE .BACSO'S

North Jersey Tennis Academyo f KIMBERUY SCHOOL, Montclair

Complgtg Tennis Program .. BOYS and GIRLS 10-18

ADULT CLINICS

744-913?

The tennis action was he&vy last week. Coach Arnold Ram’s seven-man squad had four matches during the week and won all but one.

Against Suburban con­ference competition the Blues -continue" unde­feated, hut Columbia Highseems to have the number

homeof tee tfometowners. On Tuesday the Cougars set back the Millers 3-2. It was only the second loss of tee season for Millburn, but what hurts is that tee first loss was also to Columbia.

Bob Schewior, playing the first singles, and both d o u b le s team s cam e through for Columbia. Schewior defeated Jeff Kalafa 6-0,. 6-2; Eick and Smolen defeated Craig Rose and Larry McMains 6-4, 6-3. The syr-nnd rion- bles mateh between Todd Hess and Pete Kendall of

Millbum and Nathan and •‘Grber of Columbia was a thriller. The Millburn duo won the opening set 6-2 but then lost the second set 12-10. The rubber set was no contest as the Columbia team won 6-1.

Madison, New Provi­dence and Summit were no t as successful as Colum­bia. The Dodgers and Pio­neers were shut out by the local netmen while Sum­mit fell 3-2.

Kalafa and Dick Mur­ray, the number one and two singles entries, lost their matches against the

.Hilltoppers, but Eric Kap­lan easily won his contek and the Milter doubles teams came through with wins. Again the second doubles match provided the greatest excitementw ith 't fo g s RnH ITfflemanJuhaUjL_winning- in three sets.

Tncft Golfer 4o PerformAt Canoe Brook June 24r

PauL--Hffe}- the tarick golfer,- will present a full hour of golfing amazement at CanOe BrsOk Countiy Club on Tuesd ayrJune 24 -at-T -p/m; Froceeds from the event wHl go to the W om en’s Auxiliary of Overlook Hospital, Sum­mit. — - ________

Tickets may be ob­tained from ..the chairmen of Twig groups. A ticket in ihe form, of a donation to the hospital is $2.

According to Hahn, all golf shots are hit with the same basic swing, no mat­ter what club is used. To back up his-statement, he w ill demonstrate clubs

with rubber shafts made of garden-hose, swivel jointed cluta, and clubs with six- foo t shafts • ..........

He-will hit the ball 230 to 250 yards straight down the fairway whether the tee is a. yard high, or he’s balanced on one foot, has one foot on a chair or is hitting three balls oneafteranotherm they swing

id #h fle aflMforeKim.^ABd/^ J j lB M of this is going o n r itahn keeps a continual Tine of. humorous dialogue.

In-addition to the trick shots and humor, Hahn also gives a serious golf clinic.

KENTUCKVBOtlRBON Bottled in flood/' fe ? l

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SHOPPING CENTER OPEN 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M.

MON. TO SA T .----~"24gi SPRINGFIELD AVE , UNION, N. J. L

FINE VVINE AND SPIRITS SHOP

"Next to Pathmork______ 379-5830

Did you help make J.W.Dant

the largest selling popular-priced

bond in America?Thanks, Mr. Bourbon Loyk . ,

100 MOOf • © J. * 0«T OISTILUOS 00.. tOOISVILU. KHTOCW j

FOR FREE DELIVERY

11QUOR MART:188 E§SEX ST., M ILLBURN

THE ITEM of Millburn god Short Hills, N. J, ^Thursday, Moy 29, 1969 Foot 25

Miller Cage Teams Frosh Track Team wood of • 145 Weotam Drive were awarded letters for varsity lacrosse while Oliver Mading of 18 South B eechcro ft Road and Ralph Warren of 25 Coni- ston Road were given let* ters for junior varsity play. ■

In tennis, h varsity letter was 'awarded to uhristo-

Eher Klem of 30 Western irive and junior varsity

letters were awarded to Thomas Mangan. o f 24 Jef­ferson Avenue and John Sprague of 33 Birch Lane.

Pingry School Awards Letters for Spring Sportsave New Coaches

he appointment of State, Mr. Neigel played basketball coaches at varsity basketball for four senior high school, yearn and was a member o f

it C, Kitching for the Hie team that weht to die

Finishes UndefeatedBy defeating a com­

bined team from the two junior high schools in Cranford, 72-45, foe Mill- bum freshman track team finished its second consec-

Several Township stu­dents have received letters for spring athletics a t the Pingry School > *

Geoffrey Dugan of 5 H illside Avenue, John Mindnich of 12 Wyndham Road and David W. Ford of 115 Forest Drtfe re­ceived letters for varsity baseball while James Bet-

teridge of 282 Hartshorn Drive was awarded a letter for freshman baseball.

Is track, James Hodge of 26 Barberry Lane, re­ceived a letter for a varsity competition and Ian Alex­ander for junior varsity -competition.John Ford of 115 Forest Drive and Richard Not*.

Keith Steege arid Steve Fenster as each recorded two first places. The sea­son ended with Steege as the team leader with 67 points and Fenster a short distance behind with 59.

uthre>: undefmited season.While capturing seven first*

l places to Cranford’s six, the depth of the Miller squad once again proved Ike turning point as they

NEW CEN TER? --S ix-foot, seven-inch Brent C. K itch ing w ill ssaflelofev-OB the hardwood flo o r fo r the-M iller^ nextrearba t.

as d ie new varsity basketball-coach, the form or star fo r Duke JJM ve rsity w ill try taim prom thecagers’ lacklm ter shm iing o f H ^ tm itpr, HtJCItChihg comae to -the senior hwh school after-

TrTSur years a t Interboro Hl& School in Gtenoldenr Pa., whore he fashioned a com petitive team ._____ __ .

Keith A. Neigel^Il^S^EctbaliScaehregional playoffr to fo e ’ NCA A ^4sllege division championship. ~

— Frfer-to his undergrade ate studies, Mr. Neigel at- tended Jonathan Dayton R eg ional High school Where he also plaved bas- ketbali.

The new coaches are replacements for Frank. Close who resigned from _ hfe basketball duties earner this yeaf and Robert F.

Catches Save No-Hit GameThe FreshmanBaseball | iu-a ^ Suaimit (11-0)

Teaur played- its finest v a d e d T a y lo rP a rk ‘games of the season this Bergwall once ng^in t past week to bring its f o foe-mound.-In an ez record to 8 and 5. On fog and beautifully pla Monday BarryTJergwall game, the Frosh emet pitched a no-hitter against victorious 4-3 in ex trail Madison. He was helped ings. It was another i by- two spectacular catches pitching - performance by Jack Auriema and a Bergwall. He. _alsa_c diving circus csU%h by Rick tributod three hits-al Jacobs. Bergwall struck out with two- each by D ten batters - and Bobby Donnelly and Eddie A Marzak contributed twp laney. hits for foe Millers.: ., The Frosh will end tl

season,Thursday at \O n Thursday, unde- ona. •*

Pearson, whose resignation as junior varsity coach was announced at foe school board’s meeting on Mon- day night. »studies. While at Montclair

BUGSKills 250 v o r le fle s o f insects Protects 2 to 3-w ooks W ill not w osk o ff Economical "All-Weather 3S " Tires

• C lean s id ew a lld e sig rr.ra d ia l darts on shoulder

• Triple-tem pered nylon cord construction• Buy now a t these low prices8 oi BOITU S1.98

------ m a k e s l6 gallons

K u BOTTLE $198— m akes 36 gallons— —

LARGER SIZES $ One Low Price Plus $2.20 to $2.36 Fed.

Ex. Tax (depending on size} and old tire

7.75x15 7.75x14 8.25x14

• Easy to ose-oo m ixing• 8-8-8- fe rt iliio r formula foods flow ers• Systemic insocticido kills insects• insect protection lo r six w e o b „• W ill not w osk o ff

5 IBS^only 8 2.98 T& 301BS 1 4,98 Meet Kevin Reddington, Your Miltbum McDonough Mgr. ...'Ask for me by.naiffe during our Super Sale and Firrotate alt your tires on your car, with-t*He purchase of one tire.

t* Mix or Match

3 7 6 - 3 3 0 0SH O RT HILLS ePieisoh’s i r ?^M0HT€l3378 BLOOMf lElQ AV£

Phono: 744-9300ALL STORES OPEN 8 A.M. TO 6 P.M.

SATUROAySrB A S fe^T O ^PA fc^

Page 26 THE ITEM of Millbum ond Short Hills, N. J. Thursday,/**

MILLBURN MILLBURN

May 29, June 2, 3, 4, Lion in Winter, 8:30. May 30, 31, Lion in W inter, 2 :00 , 8:30.

• Jufte 1, Lion jn Winter, 2:00,7:30.

SUMMITSTRAND

May* 29, June 2, 3, J S h o rts . 2 :3 0 , 7:00,

9:05; If It’s Tuesday, This Must Be R etu rn , 2:55, 7:25, 9:35. May 30, 31, June 1, Shorts, 2:00, 4;25, 6:50, 9:05; If It’s Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium, 2:40, 5:00 ,7 :25 ,9 :50 .

0MAPLEWOOD

MAPLEWOOD May 29, June 2, 3, Fea- turette, 7:00, 9lQ5; If I t ’s Tuesday, This Must

= B e J ^ i m ; 7:3079_ May 30, June 1, Fea__----

S T W f f l t ’s T u e s I ^ ~ -This Must Be Belgium

2:30, $ :4 6 r ^ 55rf?9er ~ f i t 's TueSE^;

This M ast Be Belgium 1:00, 3:0CR10:10; Feafcurette, 2:40,

_5:30, 7:40, 9:50.

MORRISTbWN

May 29 thru June 4, War & PSace (Part I) “

3 $ ORANGE PALACE CINEMA''"" ""

May 29, June 2, 3, •^gr<rien—it ts s e s r ^ 3 Q ;

8 10 0 TtT:00; ghCTts, 2:10, 7:46, 9:37. May 30, 31, June 1, Stolen Kisses, 2 :0 0 , 4:00, 6 :00, 8 :00, 10 :00; S h o rts ; 3 :3 0 , 5:30,

— 7 :3 0 ,9:30,--------

--------WEST ORANGEESSEX GREEN CINEMA .

May 29, June 2, 3, Kill­ing of Sister- George,

___ 2:00, 7:00, 9:30, May30, 31, June 1, Killing

* 'o T Sister George,“2r90r 4:40 ,7 :15 ,9 :45 .

EAST ORANGE HOLLYWOOD

May 29, June 2, 3, The - Killing 6f Sister George,

2 : 0 0 , 7 :0 0 , j9 :3 5 ; Shorts, 1:40, 9:15. May 30, 31, The Killing of Sister George, 12:15, 2 : 4 5 , 5 :2 0 , 8^05, 1 0 4J e : a q j r t s ^ tS fij

DIRECUT (JN THE OCEAN*SPRING LAKE. N. i. g

PltVATE BEACH • GLORIOUS SURF PRIVATE P06t • GOLF • &UP0RTS'

CHEERFUL ROOM SETTINGS r:---- WONDERFUL FOOD ^

SUPERVISED CHILDREN’S ACTIVITIESA T T R A C T iV E R A T E S” Write for Brochure

Fred 0. Cosgrove, Mgr. 201449-8800 FREE PARKING = -

HOLIDAY MATINEEWINNER OF THREE ACADEMY AWARDS

- INCLUDINOeESTACTRESS

GEORGE M — Danny Meehan stars as George M. Cohan in the m usical, GEORGE M i, which opened a t the Paper M ill Play­house Tuesday for a 5-week run. Mr. Meehan was nom i­nated for the Tony Aw ard fo r his portrayal o f Eddie Ryan

isite Barbra Streisand in Funny G irl, and has ju s t com­pleted his fir s t major mot ion picturel Don’t Drink the Water.

5:05, 7:45, lQ:25. June_ -l-4, The KiUing o f Sister

G eorge, .1:36!,- 4 :15> 7 :0 0 . D:40; Shorts,

O R M O N T ___— __May 29, Juneg r O r ^ 2 : 1 4 , 7 :44, 9 : 59 L S h afts ; T-:80r

- -9 :45 .-May3Qr 31, June1, 3:35,5 :4 0 , 7 :5 3 / 10:06; Short, 3:25, 5:30, 7:43,-

- 9:56.

L IRVINGTON A RTTHEATER__May 29, J une 2, 3, Lola

Montes^-DrSfif Nothing ■hut th e /-Best. 7:00,_

...1 0:45. May 3°, June-1,| 6:00, 9r45r

Nothing "But the Best,' 4:10, 8^10. May 31,

L ola M ontes, 7:00, I 10:45; Nothing but the

Best, 9:10.

MINLOTaS C - 7CINEMA

May 29, I f It’s Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium, 12:40 , 2:05 , 4:00, 6:00, 8:00,10:00. May 30, 31, June 1, 2, 3, If

....I t’s Tuesday, This Must- Be Belgium, 2:00, 4:00^- 6 ^ 0 r 8 :0 0 ,1 0 :0 0 .— -

Library

m

To Look into

Dining

r e s t a u r a n tOF THE WEEK

The fo llow ing it a p a rtia l lis tin g o f suburban restaurants w ith in driving distance from the M illbu rn Short H ills A n a that are suggested for din ing o u t G enerallyreservations an recommendedk 1

J. Schiffm an

ROBERTO’S (West Or* ange): a charming Italian Rpgtfmrant and cocktail lounge^wHere, flianks to the skilled direction of chef Tony Chiali, the pleasures of Northern Ital- •— cuisine, are recreated.

esfiffjsJsifssR

There is much old and new which make good summer reading at the Millbum Public ubrary.

■ “Except for Me and T hee” is a warm, out-going novel by Jesnmyn West, concerning Quaker family life of the middle 1800s.This story includes both the bitter and the sweet. A continuation of “ Friendly Persuasion,” it furthers the adventures of the Birdwell family. The problems o f the 1860s ring a very familiar bell aa they may well he likened to today ’s knotty problems of race, youthnil rebellion and in­tolerance. B ut where there

~53rijsjafiF There is a te o - hope. The Quaker mood is ah underlying stream ^mthe book. ^ ------ _

- “The V ery Tree”~~hy [»;Josephine Young CafiS-kA: fef light, charming story o f n* collegelife andstrife in a small town coUege for mea- m J^ew Y o rk -S fca te— I t deals with the efforts to raise th e q u a l i t ie s o f th e school, die characters 'o f th e professors arid others involved in this period of “ g ro w in g pains.” Mrs.C ase , the daughter o f

-Owen D. Young, is th e -wife- of toe-former presi­d e n t^ of Golgate College and presently is trustee o f p j Skidmore College, so she w- brings rich experience to £ vi-usbo iwowomt the tee.

"R aven Seek T h y i

Full course meals, lunchi eons, platters, salads, sand* wiches, and orders to take out. RE 1 - 1413. I t’s; across from the South Mountain .,arena. - M b. NOTthfield Ave., juzt 7* minute’s ride from Mill-* bum center.

94A4AIN:ST CHATHAS/Tfei to- RESERVATIONS „

635-2323 *«

Brother” h y G a v in M a x well makes splendid read- ing for this season as it

^concerns nature - in the highlands o f Scotland. I t is written with sly humor with a real touch o f magic in word arid spirit. This book- continues h is earlier wofrirr “Ring - o f Bright W ater.” ■■ -."7 ^ ■*•■■■

Junior Symphony Concert Includes 3 T ow i StudentsJ?he> New Jersey Junior

Symphony Orchestra wUl present % concert in the auditorium oftheWesLQr- arige H igh Sehool on Thursday, June 5, at 8 p.mrJfhe.orchestra wiii b e under - th e—direction ~~bf Frank • Scocozza, concert*- master^ofthe parent- New Jersey Symphony.

: The program will in* elude “The “Overture to Egmont ” by ■ Beethoven, Concerto fo r cello and or­chestra . by Lalo, Sym- phony N o .. 5 (The New World) ^D v o ra k,) and S o irees Musicales by Britten. .. Soloists in the cello con- certo will b e Willard Col­

lins III of Rutherford, a former member of the- N e w J e r s e y J u n i o r Symphony, i. The* Junior Symphony .is composed of studentsJn thp lfith through 12th grade. Young people from the Township who will, perform withThe orchestra mclude: Peter Dykema of 2 0 1 - Sagamore R o ad , Jeffrey Parsonnet of 409 W yoming Avenue and Kobm berger of .32 Holly Drive, -m The orchestra is one ol the five youth training or­ganizations maintained by th e New Jersey Sym- phbriy.

THE ARCH (Short. H ills): Celebrating tenj years a t the Morris Turn­pike address the / l eh FU*. ■tanmint is THE, SUmptU- ous-dining spot in this* area. You Can have lunch-. eon, cocktails, dinner or supper (Dinner mush; by Sal Gibe) in an atmosphere -worthy of some of the nest dining spots iri the east 60’s in N. Y. C. There are facilities for private ‘.parties, too. Reservations, especially weekends, DR * '.3535. Open evey day.

CHARLEY 0 ’S (Sp field): Iri a rut? Try tlTe newest, jrestaurant. in-thir* area, featuring Uiat goou okitime flavor witb prices to match. They’serve itot and, Gold saBidvriehes for Turieh,.- and • the dinner menu lists Broiled lobster,

LM^Bzr-Bgioin - Steak -a t $4.26; Prime RibSr-44.75. ox Char Ie y’ f %>ei»i PlPk- Steak, at $2.75 (these™— Come See^Us! —

LOBSTER SHANTY**

SHANTY PUBENTERTAINMENT—

^ F i n e s t Seafood, Drink & Fun O f POINT PLEASANrBEACH.N.j: ■ tm l-..;-....— t>i . 899-6700

field, at toe end ol him Ave. )opp. the Tills Caterers).. . Phon«

376-3840.

S&te and 2k*tce' FRIDAY, MAY 30th 8:30 P.M. to 1:30 A.M.

a AT ^ a

COGKTAft BAR A NO BESTADBANT ^ , 624 MORRIS AVENUE, SPRINGFIELD > DR 9-B6811

A rt School Is Planned At Foundation

Mrs. Robert C. May o f Whippany, executive di- 'Xeetor of The Masterwork Music and Art Founds- tion^has announced that nlans are now in process fo r1 the n^femg-ofrrThe Masterwork SctoqI of Art for a special sntNjyeek. summer session. The 'a^t school, which will be oper1* ated at th e Masterwork headquarters at 300 M^nd- hfun Road, Morristown,

N0WTHH0 TUESDAY

“HILARIOUS! View ofwacky Americans abroad is irresistible and winning?’

—XEX KEJ)

Direct From The Music Hall!

p n g

irimuBawr

e A Walter Sia4« Thcalrt •

P D M IMUlw I y

BRU .. | :wor 1 X 7 A H m rrsgW im X r

aPEACE.

will bC housed in us own special building which has been set aside for this purpose.

Mrs. May issued a call for volunteer help and contributions of - supplies and- equipment to enable Masterwork to begin its a rf

Amongthe many^____-jeded are easels,Icing tables, high and low sioolS). .chairs, storage cabi- a j e t s ^ ^ r a w i n g - h o a r d s ^ drafting tables andm ent, b lic k l. .___air conditioned, phpM eu t1 ters, projectors and screws and all types of tools. \

Help also will be needed duriflg the month Of June ter paint and clean the quarters to be used for art instructio n I t in aepfectecT th a t % a rt school will be; ready to .open during the first week o f Ju)y, ‘

Anyone having mater rials ’or time to contribute to the project, or who wishes further informat ion about the school, is invitod to call The Masterwork office Any time between 9 a.m. and 4 > m . Mondays throurii Fridays. The num­ber is 538-1860.

r+BOWCRAFTp im m

Fun For AH Ages

Tickets M»yS*-Purehn#e Separat«ly_F»r Each Part ,

St. MoritzON THE PLAZA

M k

Alpine CKktall Lounge famous for its food

Luncheon 12-3 • Open Dairy . except Thurt. Dinners'- 9

Open all Hoi Wave -

M Moderate price* dSaWUiilAi

TAAWCVF#»9974 lake Mohawk, Sparta, NJ

THE WILLIAM PITT, Jbatoam): a charming oionial restaurant re­

created after th e . oririnal structure built in 1760, the WBUam P itt is open diaily except Monday for lundi and dinner; eves, ’til 9:00. Lundi is from $1.75 special executive men’s unches have been well

received; and {firmer starts at a modest $2B5. Week­days from 3-6 p.m. (ex­cept Monday) relax and enjoy double-sized cock- taus. Now enjoy cocktails on Sunday,tool

TE E R Y D E V IPSE Y ^, (Springfield): A landmarknn th e nom er o f MorrisAve,, on the=t5pringfielo- ShOTt HiH8~Bomerhne is Terry Dempsey’s, known fo r th e ir scintillating steaks- and chops. Now, Mr. Deinpsey announces wito-rik«mre^to o f . h is - -n e w lounge, ap p ro p ria te ly ca lled th e T ipperary Room, and his new .en­larged D in in g Room, Lunch is served from 11:30 to 2:30; dinner f r o m i f . i B r l o 11 p,m. Sunday from l to 10 p.m. DR 9-5681.*** ■

M-A-ftfO’S (MfilbumTr Vivid plush red decor! strikes the eye as one enters famoqsMsgio’iR e s1 taurant, long a tradition in Millburn, just s_3* minutes walk from the ^equally’ famous' Paper SiH rHay-

jjiouse.’ ‘ Open for luncheons, mpjctaiils, dinner' or after,-toeatre snaeks,— -------------

Sunday dinner is served ■continuously ~ from 12 noon to 10 p. m. A - la (

-W w PW»y- Exit ■ 138-----Galloping Hill Rd. 15 Po.rm) MU 7-0707. Closed Sun. and

f Since 1930 a Favorite for Gourmet•

RecomniendedbyCOE-.

For Dining...

Morris Turnpike, Short Hills, N. J. DRexel 9-3535

Dinner Mtfsit By Sal Gioe

QP£N EVERY-DAY -

. Cocktails'

Featuring: §

TOM COUGHLINIrish Folk Singer

................... poto-. Caesar salad, and gariic

.teead),'/-_ Special ladies’ cham­

pagne hour 3 to 4 pm ., seven days, a week. CHAR­LEY Q’S has catering facil­ities for up to 75 people. ^BARLEY Q’S is located at 595 Morris Ave., Springs

>f Mm-lortone

carte m 1 a. m. Reserva-[ tions: D R 6 -1724. Open1 7dw eaw «ek- ■ j 14’mw' —

The ST. MOKT2: Un; der toe directibn of toe Grueter family, top St. Moritz, on the Plaza at L a t e Mdhawk,. Sparta, N. J. has been t^e favorite

S and dining rendez- hundreds of resi­

dents and vacation families in toe Lake Mohawk area. For a delightfully different culinary experience in a, Swiss-hype atmtwjjhere,

TRETO LA ’J : Since 1930, this Union, N .J . dinner spot has a ooriti- nental cuisine; A la cmrte menu: entrees, including p o ta to and yegetablel $1.50 - $4.75 - also cMl” dren’s menu.

Located at five points, Union, N .J , parkway exit 138. Reservations; MU 7 -070J ‘-■ G RUNING'S (Short 7Hil^^famou8 for their ice cream and c a r ^ for geir-" e ra tio n s , Gruning?s is eqiiaUy-.famOus for t heir.: Tiiiidieon8. -dinners; and after-theater sRack^r-^as, well as -takeouts. Special1 atteritipri given to .chil- dren. Gisan^H a^ni, -11 .

Wed.; open T h u ^ .L ru &; Rat., 16 a. m, to midnight. | At 780-Moms lumplkel-' 3766 183/-Ask ahoutThefe specials,

; F L O R H A M ' PA R K 1 INN: This excellent diningi spot, at 119 So. Orange Ave., Florham Park offers cocktails and a Conti­nental Menu. For instance, Wed. eve., Chateau Briand a la Bouquetiere for 2, $11.95. ’ if - seven course feast that wifi leave toe .most "discriminating gour­met speechless.. . end F ri., .eve., their famous Lobster FestivalTa six course New Eng. dinner . for $5,95.. Their facilities include: the Grand BaH Room, for weddings and banquets; -the Gold Room, for small intimate parties the Red- PUhod Room, - for formal

-dining; and the- Cypress Room, for casual dining. R eservations suggested •especially Wed., F n :« Sat.

eves. 827 - 4416. Owners, t h e -.Gentile" F a m i l y ; Charles, Richard and Joan,

OLD HALL INN (Ber- nardsville): The Old Mill frm has given diners, espe- cially those /with hearty appetities, another reason for ealing out during the week.

Innkeeper Raymond M. Cantwell’s mid-week offer- ings continue to be as popular as ever. Monday evening, Bountiful Beef and Champagne (all the luscious roast beef and bubbling Champagne you can eat and drink) ; Tues­day evening, Sirloin and S p ir its (sparkling Bur­gundy and individually se-

Ju ly 4th Plans ToldTheM illbum-Short Hills

Fourth of July Committee fndrjs -tarinchuig 'its* armrizfr request this week" in a letter to all Township resi- dents asking fo r funds to defray the cost o f the -alL day celebration presented h e r e : : on Independence Day.

Again. this year, and in. spite of mounting costefor all jiervices, the requested donation-for tags byjnail has been held a t $1 a tag. Each tag purchased at the gate on the Fourth w ilt require a —donation—rif- $1.50. This minimum do ­nation has been main­tained sinee l0 6 3 . . • .

An all day and eveningogram wfil be offered. A

circus wili be held in th e morning with eight-acts, most oi thenr animal acts, w ith performing bears, chimps, ponies and dogs and possibly an elephant act- if the elephant-actors 4Ufrive on- the East Coast in

i. A highwire thriller will close the morning pro­gram and. will be repeated

before the fireworks in the jevening......* At Ts^top'Park in the afternoon will be an_ as­sortment of rides and, new this yeai^- a tpiniature farm- with . farm animals which; will occupy a comer of Taylor Park. A giant swing is being rented for the occasion1 and free double orange- - popsieles- w illJie distributed.

PJans. for a prefixeworka program have-not yet been completed, but music will be part of entertainment. AezM -jroekets - -wifi -paF dominate at the fireworks but traditional as well as new p o u n d , pieces have been purchased also.. Contributions payable

to ‘‘July 4th Committee” may be mailed to P.TX Box 4, Short Hills. . —

Donald H. Krautter of New Providence is the president o f the commit^ foe. He is the son-inrlaw of tiie late Mijton O. Lange, a former ; committee presi­dent.

Gimp T o Teach Children

Their Abilities, lim itations

:3 & E jja S T _ S T ± _ —W Phone 783-7114.

June 22 will fie' a red1 letter day in to e lives of hundreds-of-New Jersey’s handicapped children - it marks the opening of the annual summer sessions at Camp Merry Heart, near Hackettstown. I t is the only - ■ special residential camp in New Jersey open

;to-crippled children and y6imgi;;adulfofrbm ? Any­where in theAtoto,-1- -— —

According to Jeffrey P. Ruddy of 90 Kean Road, Essex County Easter;Seal- ch a irm an ,- toe camp’s primaryjiurpose is to pro- vide experiences in out-ofi door Uvfeg - to otherwise' jsofated crippled children.

FAMOUS FORI lD E L R E A M AN D C A N D Y o,

\ l E l j in l^ lM f lU S J O l i t j —Luiuheons-Dinners & After TheotrR Snacks

SOUTH ORANGE""

rOPEN 8UN^ MON., JUES., WED., 11 P M .j

JH U R9 , FRI & SA T , 10 A M MIDNIGHT

SYD’S IMILLBURN MALI'

| VAUXHAU MX 1 ■■ MILLBURN AVI., UNION P ^ ‘ADELIC!WSSFt^■ Burgers -

Steak Sandwiches!*■ Ghicfen JfctS* B«Ket^5 " TfotBwfleXBeef I Knishes

Homemade french- Fries

KINGLET

■ H O T D O G S

lected and custom b r o il e d , sizzling sirloin ste a k s ) - - Wednesdays evening, Con­tinental Buffet (a topical menu from a different country is featured each week) has become a great favorite o f the more ad-} venturous gourmets in the area; Thuncty evening, Sweetheart’s Night (every lady is presented with a corsage). * Friday and Sat­urday arte still extremely p o p u la r,w ith weekend revelry as congenial and fun-seeking folk .gather be- fore a blazing fire for an evening o f warmth and c o m p a n s io n s h ip . JE 8-1413 o r 7 | f "

Hen ry Lam o ffe rs

UCHEERESTAURANT

h 226 West FrortlSt 757 2007/1

m

WATCH FOR THE ...... I ' VANY DAY NOW!

BPPfS ESSEN RESTAURANT Of LIVINGSTON: 105 E. M T. PLEASANT AVENUE

o fto h e rtn l

• American Cuisine

Open 11:30a.m.-2a.m Daily Including

Sundays

CALL £ 731-1413

575 NORTHFIELD AVE., WEST ORANGE, N. J. Opposite South Mountain Arena

LUNCHEONS - DINNERS - COCKTAILS. Finest Prime Beefs, Fresh Maine

. •■ Lobster & Other Favorites

PRIVATE FACILITIES FOR LUNCHEONS. PINNERS. -MEETINGS, WEDDINGS, RECEPTIONS, ETC;

G lu i/d e jf Q 'd ,. RESTAURANT&COCKTAIL LOUNGE

595 SP RINGFIELD376-3840 cetering facilities for up to 75 persons

EVERY PAY, inciUdin^SwriaVi FfiOM 4 to 6R.M. '

711 M o n is m . SMUT M U ’ > 3W-S1II

. Serving Lunch and Dinner Daily A Sunday Specializing in Hot and Cold Luncheon Sandwiches \

Late Snacks To 1 A.M. - Site. Til Midnight .

DINNER MENU“ MOILEOLOBSTER $4.95, PRIMERIBS $3.76,

SfRtOiN"STiAK$4.25,GHARLEY-S SPECTAL PLANK STEAK $2.75. INCL. BAKED POTATO,

, CAESAR SALAD & GARLIC BREAD.

THE ITEM of Millburndrtd TTwindoy, Moy 29, 1969 Poaa 27NOTICE OF .INTENTION

Take, notice that THE STOV ERN CORPORATION trading at STOUFFER'S hat applied to «h» Township Committee of the Town- ship of Millburn for . a Plenary Retail Consumption license for premises situated at 1206-12,12fll*- er Road, Millburn.

OFFICERSAllan K, Bittner. 1801 E. 12th

StM No. 818. Cleveland, Ohio. Presi-

Steven M. Santner, 6039 Edge- brook Btvd., Parma Hta., Ohio 44130.' Vice President 8i Treasurer.

DIRECTORSAllan K. Bittner. 1801 E. 12th

8t., No. 818, Cleveland, Ohio, Donald R, McLean, 17 LVman

Circle, Shaker HtS., Ohio 44122.B. F. Copp, 24668 Hazeimere

' Rd„ Cleveland, Ohio 44122.Mrs. Margaret L. Mllphell, 91+1

Highland Dr„ Srecksvllle, QhtO.Steven M. Santner, 6039 Edge-

brook Btvd.', 'Parma Hts., Ohio 44130.

Robert W. H1)1, 2609 Milford Road, University W ., Ohio,

Walter Mahlmann, 17409 Fern­way Road, Shaker Hts., Ohio.

STOCKHOLDERS There are no stockholders hpld-

ingrr n 10% o__ if the applicant corporation.

Objections, if any/ Shou Id be nada immediately In writing to Mr. ohn W. Pritchard, Township Clerk if the Township of Millburn.

The Stovern CorporetidbPresident

----------------137S’EucUd~Avs..Cleveland Qhlfr 4<mfr

Say 29-.- June S...... $21 SO

“ , LEGAL NOTIE.__n y s a t iU iM iT •------ Bawd: MAY 21,1969

-ESTgfE j ffT EVA F. PRENTICEt

-----Pursuant tpTHadfder ol-JAMESE. ABRAMS, Surrogate .of thq-

- "County of .Essex, this day made on the application of the undersigned, Executors of sald deceased, norfcir is hereby -given to the creditors of

- -said-deceeseb- te exhibit to th«subscribers. Under oath or affirmation, ' their daima and demands against the estate of said dacaated within six months from this date, or'they wiH be forever barred frdrjv prosecuting dfl 'recovering the same against the subscribers, ........................ ...

JAMES H. SANDERSON -DONALD R. SANDERSON

~ SAK?ERSOW~& CUlXENT Attorneyt .rf72Halsted Street

East Orange, N.J.____ •Wey29, June 6r12,19, 28, '69

m I * Roe S24.00

, NOTICE OP INTENTION'Take notice that Edward J.

Flynn- and Mary Agnes Connor, trading as Flynn's Tavern, have

- applied to -the Township Com­mittee of the Township. Qf Millburn

_for a- Plenary- RetalL Consumption- license for premises situated at245 Mailt Street, Millburn. New Jersey.

FLYNN'S TAVERN----Edward J. Flynn, 246 Main

Street,MUtbumrJV^-;=T- .. Mary Agnes Connor, 380 Wyo­

ming Avenue, Millburn, N. J. ‘_ Objections, if any, should bo

—made immed lately iff wrHtregTB-Mr?- John-lftt Pritchard,. Township Clerk of the Township of Millburn.

(Signed) Edward J. Flynn- - —---------- -----245 Main Street

Millburn, N, J. 07041 Mary Agnes Connor

_ __ 380 Wyoming Avenuo-Millburn, N. J. 07041

May 29, June 6*89 $11.00

~ LEGAL NOTICE Notice is hereby given that

seeled proposals-y»iltbe,receivadby_ the Board of Education of 'the Township of Millburn, NewJersey, at iu t f Hlca J l +3f M i^ n -Av d nua, Mjllburw; N'.‘J.^hf(r2:00 P. M. (Eastern Daylight Saving Time) on

_Xuosdav, i June ft, 1969. for the following:

Specifications it__ i -obtainediBusiness pffiee of the ffdard

of Pdunetlon, 434 Mi Hbum-Ave­nue, Millburn,N.J. Ji

The right is reserved to accept or reject any or all bids and to waive Ihformanties. All bids- must be in sealed envelopes accompanied by a certified check drawn to the order of the Millburn Board - of gduentlon. in the amount .of. b% "

MODERNIZE YOUR— BATHROOK

At Our Low Estimate Prices

— DUNCAN A. DOUGLAS CO.

303 MILLBURN AVE.

SHEET METAL WORK J PLUMBING • HEATING

m s n

• WheelChairs• Commodes t• Oxygen Equipment •.HOspitaf Beds

FRUCHTMAN’ SSURGICAL CENTER ”

- V 2/3-7171 ' 50 Maple St. Summit-

LEGAL NOTICEESTATE-OP WINtPRfO ROANE,

NOTICE OF SETTLEMENT Nodca IS hereby given that the

accounts of the subscriber, administrator .o f tha aetata of WINIFRED RUANE, dacaasad, will be , audited and stated by the S.urrogata «nd reported for settlement to the Essex County Court, - Probate Division, on Tuaedey, tha 22nd day of July naxt

' JOHN J. CLEARY Dated: May 14, 1989 LOUIS F. BOTJER, Attornay .1150 Springfield Ava.May22,"28, June 4, 11, 18, '69

Faa$22.00

NOTICE OF INTENTION , Take notice, that The Racquets Club of Short'Hills trading ae Tha Racquets Club of Short Hllie has applied' to the Township Commit­tee of the Towhahip of Millburn for a Plenary Retail Consumption Li­cense for premises situated at 162 Hobart Avenue, Short Hills.

Names and addresses of. all of- ficers.are:

Richard L. Lawrence, President, 106 Wellington Avenue, Short Hllie,

.....N J,M. Louis Miller, V-President,

363 Orenda Circle, .Westfield, N.J.Mrs. John P. Harrington, Sac.,

370 Rolling Rock Road/Mountain- sida, N.JL,__u

Henry C. Montgomery, Treas­urer, 1 Blrchwood Drive, Short:...-_4Vlre,- Micheel F . Wmb -Aeigr- -SecTr TT—Elmwood -Place, Short-II..I

M. Curry Hutebtason, Atet. Treat., 59 Wellington Avenue, -swrrr Hllie, m .

—rrrH ss iT t. . .___ :. Evans, 1099 Sunny-

view Road, Mountainside. N.J.— A lan P. Plemlnfl, 14 Dellwood Avenue, Mountainside, N'. J,

Louis Gdithan. njO Brswntng-Road, Short HWe r N — -------

- Mrs. John P. Harrington, 370. Rolling Rock Road., Mountainside,. 'N. J','. " -

M. Curry Hutchlneon, 59 Wel­lington Avenue. Short Hilts, N j .

’ George Kelly, 39 - Nottingham Road, Short HUN; p m ; - '.lames y K In.I.r OK Merry.wood Lana, Shgrt Hills, N.J.i;_Richard L. Layyrence, 106 Warllngton Avenue. Short Hills. N J .__

Duane R. Lues. 22 FerncllffTerrace, Short Hills. N.J.__=

Will la m R. Mergerm, 201 Ho- bart Avenue, Short Hllie, NJ.

M. Louis Miller, 353 Orenda Circle, Westfield, NJ.

John Milton, Jr., 25 Stewart R oed.ShorfWttlv N.J. v

Thomas F. Mitchell, 11 Fern- dale Road, Short Hills, N j .- —HenTy CrMomobnwryrl jBIreli-. wood Drive, Short Hills, NJ. .

Mrs. Michael F, Pinto, 17 Elm­wood Place, Short Hills, N J r

Edward V. Siedler, 24 Elmwood Place, Short Hills, NJ, - “

John R. Wagenseiler, 146 imvson-BHve. Short Hills, N J.

_ O bjections, 1+ ehy, should bemade immediately in writing to Mr. ■"So- Pritchard, Township Clerk of

bJewnshiparf Millburn.-------__ (Si G N E D) . R IC H A R D L. LAW -:HENCE,

PRESID EN T RACQUETSCLUB ---:-----------May 29, June-5, '69 Fee$34.76

Avdu, Philadelphia, Pa., Vloa Fret.Party A. Smith, 3612 Rlyer Hat'

Or., Jacksonville, Pla„ Vice Pres.Noble F. Whittaker, 11S Mono-

mere Av*., Yonkers, N.Y., r Fret.

Harry C. Gittaspla, Knox Hill :d., Morrlttown, N J „ Treasurer.' Fred E. Campbell, 34S E. 82nd

»., New York, New York, Sacra- try.

DIRECTORSMelvin ML Alldredge, 72 Fond*

m Rti., W., Brohxvilla, N. Y .Anthony A. BliaS, Centra Island

«M., Centra Wane!, OystW Say. N.Y; '. R. Manning Brown, Jr., SfhWast*

cott Rd., Princeton, NJ.Fred E. Campbell, 346 E. 62nd

St.. NSW York, N.Y.Roy C. Collins, 71 Durand Rd., ‘ ‘ + N J.Corbus, 80 E. 79th $1-,

New Ysrt,N.V.Donald Kirk David, OatprvIHa,

Mesa.Harry C. GlllaapW, Knox Hill

Rd., Morristown, N J.William J. Kane, 320 Algonquin

Rd., Franklin Lake#, NJ.Jamas B. Kroh, 1001 City Lina

Ava., Phhadalphla, P#. *

Hd., Briarcllff Manor.Gwilym A. Price, Club Rd., Car*

negle, Pa.John M. Schiff, Ostar Bay, Navy

-York;-- r:; . . .Percy A. Srhlth, 3812 River HaH

Drive, Jackaonville; Fla.Nqbla F. Whittaker, 118 Moreo-

mart Ava., Yw*af#, N.Y. 'J. Albert Zefbler, 1300 N.

Lakaahors Dr., Chicago, IHInois. .Stockholders holding mort than

tan partant of tha stock - JOHN A. HARTFORD! FOUNDATION, INC., 420 ItEXINOTON AVENUE -- 22NO FLOOR, NEW YORK 17,

....... ......... .........-o Mr.__... W. Pritchard, Township Clarkof tha TowSohlp of Millburii. -(Signed) THE GREAT ATLANTIC

* PACIFIC TEA CO. P.O.BOX 214

NEWARK, NJ.Q7101 May 29, June S,'69 Fee S3?.40

A H A N D Y R E F E R E N C E T O R E L I A B L E L O C A L F I R M S

}• sur# to m ontion th e Item w hen y o u co ll

D o n 't F o rg e t to M e n tio n th e B u s in e s s D irec tory W h e n Y o u C all

7M 6SUSSSF,CARRIERSUBURBAN

REFRIGERATION COMPANY INC.

AuthorizedForOoolingandHeating

Naine-fai= ~r;;Airt^mditomhg^ : - 1

Commercist..„m ^,:a , . iRdugHFiet :—

277*20»)‘41RiveTKd.. Summit

S^ RCA-ADM IRAL GENERAL BLECTRtCWe Service All Makes

DR 9-4200 —327 Millburn Ave. Millburn

7 AUTO DEALERS

RAMBLER54 LES SERVICE

Stickel Auto Salts Corp.73-79 Millburn Ave.

- SttMMtT t r C U R YS tfR ftYN O U TII,

IMPERIAL? i___L-?iCtfRYSLER

J/AL J a n t I___Z __ . $Mlm & ServtcM _ — -

utlwrtCTdOmwfor----^HILLMAN • SUNBEAM.

.iSSlMCA-.Auto Rental Dtv.T»aak. Or Month

Call 273*4343517 Springfield Ava. Summit

0

NOTICE OF INTENTION- — Taka notice that the Great At-

intic and Pacific, Tea Company,tha Township Township of

.Miupurn for a Plenary Retail Ola- tribution License for the premises situated at 42 Chatham Road, (Short Hills) Millburn,-NJ;

------OFFICERS---- -MelvinW,Alldredge,-72Pond-

f laid Rd.,W .. Bronxville, f+Y-.,

Rd..dent,— ‘—

Edward A, LePage, 149 Orchard Hch.'BrlarcfTff Manor, fS7Y.; ExecrVrPras.___• — .... ,

Willigm CorbuerBQ-E.+Bth Str, New Y orkT NTY.- Exec. V. Fret. -

James S. Kroh, 1001 City1 Line Ava., Philadelphia, Pa., Vice. Pres.

Percy A. Smith, 3612 Rlyer HaH Dr., Jacksonville, Fla., Vlca-Pras.— £

Noble F. Whittaker, 115 Morse- mere Ave., Yonkers,: N.Y., Vice Pres.___..... J. Albert Zeigler, 1300 N. Lake- shore J3r,, Chicago, 111., Vice Pres.

Harry CT Glllerole. Knox.. HUL Hd/rMoriistowhy fcfc<h,- Treasurer. i- 'i -m d 'ETCampbell, 346^f;3»mi St., New York, New York,'Secre- tary. ;

DIRECTORSMalvln _W^AIIdradge£Zg_Pond-

flaid Rd., W.'Sro nx v I He, N.Y.Anthony A. Bliss, Centre Island

Rdv, Centre Island/ Oyster Sky, N.VT

f - . R. Manning Brown, Jr.,-50 West- cott Rd„ Princeton, N J.

Fred E. Campbell, 345 E, 52nd St;, New York, N.Y._ Roy C. Collins, 71 Durand Rd.,Maplewood, NJ._“__-rrST--- William Corbus, 50 E. 79th St.,New York, N.Y.

Donald' Kirk OavicC Ostervllle, Mass.

HariY C. G lllesple, -Xnox+Tlll Rd., Morristown, NJ.— WWIam J. Kane. 320 AlgonquItT .Rd Franklin Lakes, NJ.'-■ Jamas 0. K ltili. 1001 C ity Line Ave., Philadelphia, Pa,— Edward A. LePage, 149 Orchard Rd., Briarcllff Manor, N.Y. -

Gwilym A .~ Price, Club—Rd.,- Carnegie, Pa.’ V -■ \

John M. SChiff^-Oyster Bay,New._y.prk.________•-

Percy A. Smith', 8612 River Hall Ive, Jacksonville, F|a.Noble F. Whittaker, 115 Morse- re Ave:, Yonkers. N.Y. - — tJ. Albert Zilhfiir, 1300 N. Lake-.

shore Dr., Chicago. Illinois. ~ _ ^stocknoldars holding more than paroehf of th+ftadk - JUHffAr--

H.ARTF O R 0. F O UN DAT) ON, INC., 42Q LEXINGTON AVENUE- 22NO FLOOR, NEW YOfl'K+Fr: N.Y,

Oblactions, if any, should be made immediately In writing to Mr. John -W. Pritchard, Township Clarkif the Township of'Millburn. ...(Signed) THE GREAT ATLANTIC

r—— ^-SrPACfFlCT^COr_________ ,__P.O. BOX 214

- NEWARK. NJ/OTTOf- May 29, June S, '69 Fee $36.96

'NOTICE OF INTENTtON . Take notice that tha Great At­

lantic and Pacific Tea Company, Inc., tiar applied to1 the'Township Committee of the Township of 'Millburn' for • Planery Retail-Dls- trlbutlon License for the premises situated at 720-748 Morris fum-' pjka, (Short Hills), Millburn, New Jersey.

“OFFICERSMelvin W. Alldredge, 72 Pond-

field Rd., W„ Bronxville, N.Y., Chairman. •

Wllllar3R8® rknklih i-aicat, n .j T,

'. Pres.William Cnrbue, BO M. 79th St.,

New York, N.Y., Exec. V. Pras. James S. Kroh, 1001 City Line

AUTO DEALERS jAUTO REPAIRS

Dial ES 5*6400 1239 Springfield Ave., -

___ Irvington_____

Factory Authorized

VOLKSWAGENEst.±)54

SALES SERVICE _ PARTS

AIRCOOLED AUTOMOTIVE CORP.

Dial 763-4567 Selected Used Cats

Overseas Deliveries Arranged > - 2195 MBIbirn-Avg;

(Comer Valley St.) ,

WYMAN FORD. New- Used Car & Truck

Sales & Leasing

PARTS - SERVICE & BODY REPAIRS

17T3 Springfield Aire: ' Maplewood, 761-6000

BAKERIES

„ J ^SHORT HILLS (AKiaY•PIES *CAKES '"Direct to You ■ ■fr om Our P it

I e-WS DOINGS----- . -o BIRTHDAYS ^ — g....f SPECIAL OCCASIONS

“752ii«wm^pit:;si»sfni^litext to A&P)Ample Parking

......Cloaad Sundaya .

KITCHEN CABINETS

RISIDENCf CONSTRUCTION CO.

IN(f.Custom Built v

K IT C H E N C A W N iT SComplete

Home rmprovements—LibrariM— Kiichena-— — ~—

Dens t Bathrooms - Everything Under One Contract

Dial 376-2100 IQE.WaiowSt. Millburn

CARPENTER

P EtER ZAG EL t o . r W .

ROLLSROYCE & BENTLEY MOTORCARS

i

301E. 57th Street, New York

AUTO LEASING

Get listaM Service With INSTANT

RENT-A-CARLOW - LOW.a.RATES!!

Hevrtr.W'Ml}.Monthly • C aiiim Tio to V ^ . * D »lbm rt Pickup Service

763-3011 642-6600763-4900 ---------- 403-MOO

AUTO REPAIRS

DU'KAY. ' IMPORTED CARS INC FRANCHISED HIW CAR DIAURREPAIRING & SERVICE ON • FIAT a VOLVO . TOYOTA aJAMAR

- alRIUl H .HEALEY e MG

FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS -I 3 7 6 - 6 9 6 0 I

-Tune-TJ|»General RepainC ts s o ,

Lubrication Batteries

Tires M unAccessories -----

“ PLAID STAMPS GIVEN ON Allsales a, SERVICE

3|2 MILLBUkN AV • MIIUIUKH 379-37471 7g2-9433~i m r $ T itR iftr ts s r

IS VALLEY ST. SOUTH ORANGE 381 Millburn Ave.. Millburn

Mople Buiclc,I n c .

Auto Leaahw9-i7'W.South OrangaAva.

South Orange •—~r*

Minburn Mobil Service-W 41 & Rum Ogurek

J tt• t Mobil Products

Minor Repairi-Brakw.lBnition Tune-Ups

- Tiret, Batteries, Accessories

For Pick Up & DeUveiy.

Dial 376-9827........

hCoraer Main & Ersx, Millburn

LINCOLN CONTINENTAL

MERCURY - COMET

SPEItCO MOTOR CO.

INC.Authorized -

C A D ILLA C O LD SM O BILE

- Sales&Set^ce "Complata Auto Body Shop'

USED CARSt-1 -273-1700.

491 Morris Avo. Summit/

Short Hilts TexacoJACK RYAN JOHN COOK

Texaco ProductsGeneral A u to fiepa irs...—

“We Fix Anything But Broken Heorti”

Pick Up & Delivery Servicen 379-5885 376-9897

50 Chatham Rd.. Short Hills

T E D 'S

S 0We Give__SHAKES - TUNC UPSPtaid --- ---- ICNITION-Tines

voap sniYic r ^

PICKUP » BtUteRT

I 3 7S -9772

w >:

JOHN W. HUNT CRRPENTER ^ NUIL0ER

7 LIVINGSTON, N. J. 992-7760

•'''^X tm tA P ork -^eem t-MBSs.'= ' JO Ws. experiencex .,:— /

Additions Alterations Repairs

KITCHENS_ References '

CATERERS

fU lPRALIM RiCTO RS

Y O U N G ’SFUNERAL SERVICE

149 Main St.- Drex«l 6-774A

FURRIERS

SCHULTZ BROTHERS FURS— —Fot-Aft <

____ Your F u r Needs........._ Cold Storage Repairing

Restyling Revitalizing 376-1285

346 Millburn Ava^MiHborn

GARDENING

VMHTERARCE SPRING CLEAR UP

New Lawns,Old Lawns Repaired

Coll 887-6287

HEATING

Duncan A- D o u g la s ------ C o . -

Fit. 1893Plum bim-Jleaiint Coiiitactars^,,

Sheet Metal Work '■ Jobbing — Oil Burners ■ Water Heaters

-----DR6-0344.303 Millburn Ave.

MILLBURN LIQUOR SHOP

Eft. 1933FREE PROMPTDELIVERYDRexei 6-1886-6-4886 36 MtmSt. Millburn

— VIUAGE _ WINE & LIOOOR

-BE5I+-ALE1 tiEVEHAQEB-. WINES .LIDUOHS----- --

—=—FREE DELIVERY..,- JIM DONNELLY ~

ANDJQEtfELBeRQ " —~

LUGGAGE

L U G G A G E & LE A T H E R GOODS CE N TER

Luggage Gifts ~ Handbags ■ Trunks

Expert Ripair Sarvica273-6674

333Sprihgfiald Ava.,8ummit -■

MASONRY

JOSEPH IPISCOPOMason Contractor

... Complete Line of Masonry .Repair of new Steps, Sidewalks

Patios.-Retainer Walls----

464-1752MEATS-KOSHER

, ROY’S MARKETUJOOKlN € -& € A ^ ftfN (& -

FREE-DEUVERY

•WEDDINGS•GRADUATIONS•OCCASIONS

Hor d’oeuvres - Canapes

- Dial 3764322 41MlinSfr«et^ilbtlTr

DELICATESSENS

Millburn DelicatessenDelicatessen • Cold Cuts

Salads _ .Open Daily to 8 p.m.

OpardWt-d.:__ 32&MUbuMLAY6.‘ _

DRexei 9-5800

FLOOR COVERINGS

S e L I C H TFLOO R COVERINGS

Broadloom Carpeting Linoleum Tiles

— .— Carpet Cleaning Open Mon.3L.Thun,'Eves.

537 Millburn Ave. DR 6-6297

SUBURBAN CARPETSSpecialists h i * ____F loo r Coverings - -

...__.DiflL37R.3806______308 MHIbumAva./MiHbqm

IM SFLORISTS

H A R T H.1 THE FLORIST/ INC.

Cali ORrnal 6-1530 For Fret Delivery

39$ Mttbtun Ave. MUIbutn

MILLBURN FLOMST"Every thinginFiowefs"Cut Flowers • Corsages

Funeral Sprays Floral Designs

38MamSt. DRexei 9-2011 If no answer JE 9-2666

P M VSTEPH ENSdVIl L L E FECOr

_.J^S!l<i)f/»'eries F U C L O IL ____

S*Wa& Service CRettview 7-0030

-31 BimaMPL.

JEWELERS

(Thr3letu£kr-a #Lpn)x

OF MILLBURN 350 MiltbumAve. (Next to Movies)

. YoerFfiffiHHMiiHHheiH ~

RatiinM Resbnr B ia t p . & Poultry Market

Seymour Rothstein1....... - Saul Poznanskl----------L — FREE DAILY DELIVERY-----

Cali 379-6643| ?19 Mountain Ave., Springfield

DONALD W.KERKH AN....... - WATCHMAKER \.._______JEWELER

Watch & Jewelry ” SALES & SER VICE

DR6-033I -,.34 ^SSEX ST- MILLBURN"

“ lA S U R ’ S JEWELRY“ DIAMONDS : Gifts/ -

---------- SILVE RS MI THS rS^.//.:,JDCD J6%ELRY~MOOERNI2ED

517 Millburn Ave.- ShunMills 370 T32T '

1040 Springfield Ave.373-5500.

MOVING-STORAGE

T f R U , ! J A t i ^ B T w'F Y w jrto ca l' * under T irtyhound Van Lipt's Agent— - ;1414 Springfield Ave.,

IRVINGTON - .ESsex 3-1958

JULIUS OKSENHORNDesigners & Creators

Of Fine Jewelry Diamonds - Precious Stones

Fine Watches dy Lucian Piccard — — 379-1595300 Millburn Aw „ Millburn

LAUNDROMAT

MILLBURN LAUNDROMAT160 Main St., Millburn

376-7375

Drop a ll laundry M o re 1lOO: p.m. Washed, dried & folded. Same day-service

Spgcial attention given to blankats,

Serving area fo f past 10 years

LAWN MOWERS' M IL L6U R N . .

GRINDING SHOPLawn Mowers

■----------Hand PowerSold • Serviced • Repaired

Saws FiledKnife & Scissor Grinding

. T 376-5054 460MorH$Tpfc~ Short Hills

LIQUORS

DAVE’ S LIQUOR MART

Largest Salaction of Wines, Liquors, Bears

For Fraa, Prompt Delivery inMUmurn-Shdrt Hills

, PR 6-4202 ___188 ESSEX ST. MILLBURN

GREATEASTERN LIQUORS2435 SPRINGFIELD AVE

§ W . ± :WTOXOMAf SASTSKW___

, 8H0FFIHG CENTER

BEER ALE BEVERAGES— WINES LIQU ORS-------•WE HAVE ICE CUBES*

OIL BURNERS

Sales & Servicea n w i » f t i B t t r c r

PAINTERS

« W

FULLY INSUR E D ___

D. MarckettaMILLBURN, N; J.

Photw 376-1451 after 5 p.m.

PARTY RENTALS

J O H N D A V I D PARTY RINTAl— r e h t a l s d f .....-FiNESf EQUlPMErif

FOR ALL TYPES OF _] --------- PARTIES

I 743-443) I106 Valley <t., Soutk Oronge

PRINTING

M ILLBU R N > S H O R T HILLS '*1

PRESS___ 20 Main St, Millburn

fFVWdMwdfth732 Morris Turnpikt

Short HMs ,*

PLASTERING

PLASTERING SHEET ROCK SPACKUNG

& PAINTING Ceiling i Wells expertly

patched or new

„ Phil lpiscops_- 273-1961

PLUMBERS

CMHican A. Douglas

!---- -- Est. 1893 rPlumbing Hefting

— SheetMetat Work -------DRexei 6-0344

Jobbing303 Millburn Ava.

ROBERT U VALLEYPLUMBING & HEATING

JOBBING SPECTALIST aA R R A C .R n X P n X A T fi

SEWER CLEANING - WATER HEATERS- d

GAS FURNACES 18 ROSEDALE AVE,

MILLBURN

762-5041

1114 M YR TLE A V E ., MILLBURNJobbingaSpecia ity -T

OWEN J.-376-0277

M P E D IC IN IPlumbing & Heating "

Water Heaters Installed

260 Main St.DR 6-0884

PRODUCE

S & sFRUIT CENTER iN C -

"Tfrima Maats

a Vegetables • Frozen Feeds

FREE DELIVERY SERVICE

Dial 379-217740 Chatham Rd." Short Hills

RAILINGS

T M n r T i w T h F S TEst. 1921

Louis Wolfgang, Prop.- We Specialize In

..W ROUGHT IRON Stairs & Ponsh Rails

376^20 — . .22 Taylor Str MiHbum

REALTORS

RoM M Hut GoduuUbf

Som ppaH f REALTORS

__ Rf.P_C.ARPE T SERVICE SINCE 1906 -----

34 ESSEX STREET, MILLBURN Ppp. Millburn Station

SECURITYSUBURBAN SAFETY___

& SECURITY CO.• Alt Typos Security Systems e Antique & Contemporary

Phones' te Answerin

15 Shirlawn Dr., Short H

STATIONERS MILLBURN STATIONER^

Greeting Cards - Books - Photo Copies

- ^376-0391— -45 MainTt: MiHbum- -

TAXICABS

MILLBURN-SPRINGFIELD

CADCO.

------SKhkY HA6I05-----24 HOUR SERVICE

TO AND FROM STEAMSHIP LINES

AIR & RAILROAD TERMINALS376-1000-

TELEVISION' LEADING

TELEVISION SERVICE--;SINCE 1940

Best equipped TV seivice shop m Newark,

- Any make TV repaired within 24 hours

Color TVEstablished 1928

DAIDONEALL ELECTRIC___

862 South Orange Ave. Newark

E S » x 3-8160 —

l i r "Travel Is Our Business " ' 1

MILLBURN1 1 1 ty u s o d Jh c .

Let Us Arrange j_ .._ ,Y a u fTravel -

Anywhere In The World : jb y l a n o -s e a -a ir . ^

' Courteous Service ‘-No Service Charge

3764770357 Millburn Ave., Millburn

P A U L S E NT R A V E L BU R EA U

CR 3-13137 Beechwood Rd„ Summit

x CUSTOM MADESLIPCOVERS ' UPHOLSTERY -

• REFINISHING • ANTIQUES __ RESTOREO

•REGLUING • DECOR AT IVE

......ROOMING

Colonial' Roofing” Co.

RESIDENTIAL . COMMERCIAL

AU types o f Roofing 124 Locust 6t., Roselle l OR 6-2023

SUBttftBAMBCPAIR. 1

MAINTENANCE CO.

, 3794116 /3794115

—in te rio r Designers

376-0684VACUUM CLEANERS

F jjjtj tE fr’S SEWING pf^FACtlDM CtNTBR

H O O V E R -----3-Vacuum Cleaners--------

. Known Sewing MachinesSales 4 Service

273-0210334 Springfield Ave. Summit

W ^ E « e xWater Condit’g Co.

992-1554Water Softeners Rented

3.00 Monthly Sai^Qelivary . . 50 E. Mt. Pleasant Ave.

WOMEN'S WEARING ■ APPAREL

Real Estate Listings Offered by The Board of Realtors

Summit, New Providence and Berkeley Heights

THE ITEM of -Mlllbum and Short Hitts, N. J. thuwctoy. May 29. 1969

T R E E S ! T R E E S ! T R E E S !AH brick plaster waHs, 4 HUGH bdrrns, 2 baths, Heatolator fireplace; BEAUTIFUL level lot (bird watcher's privacy) dreamy kitchen. Mid 50's. MARGARET R, SHEPARD, REALTOR CR.3-S950. Eves. 464-5607. ‘ _

'W tm tr ia l i z t

your Dream

REDUCEDperfect fo r the young family. 3 bedrooms, den. screened porch, kitchen with eating area Perfect condition. Menrmoui neighborhood -schools, playground, shopping and station aH very close. Call us If you’re looklna In the lower $30*fc You’ll be glad you dldl

« BUTLER AGENCY7 De Forest Avenue, Summit

125 Y E A R S YO UN G

- «<rinrt«H yard and*"hidden patio. Carpeted 2 roojiL nrayhousT off Z car garage: Mechanically per fact ? 5-bedroomsrfamlly-TOom. $78,500. See It now.- - - __

- - “We will take your home In trade1' - _ - - -rr.~

- - ^ H O O W E S

A L L BRICK

Realtors Est. 1896

MEMBER INTER

-------- Yes It’s True! Only $26,000.-and in Summit 1 _

" Two Family Duplex House. Each side; has Basement; front end- “ W®"p6'feHrilvTrtg'7jrorn:"‘Omm, room, kltchen with eatlng area.- Threebedrooms and bath on second floor Stairway to.large attta

Few mJnutes to town. Ideal for family who wish to w aLgD B g side and rent the other side. For appointment to see, call:

S P E N C E R M. MABEN.INC.■ ■ • .■ . _ Realtors-39BeechwoodRoaa~ Summlt,N.Jin790L-.— . 273-1900- —— — Pvanmgs gall Mr.Owren 464-2694

G R A C IOUS LIVINGWell-built, brick, expandable ranch. One of Summlt’s most desirable locations. Excellent surrounding prestige homes. Fully air-conditioned with loads of extras. 3.Twin-Sized Bedrooms, 2%

BR ICK R A N C Hn Ranch On Summit’s North

f ide. JalOusled porch, new roof,-flagstone walk. 2 car garage with eiectrkr doors. Must be seen to. he appreciated. Could be yours for $51,000. -------- ~ |

T H E RICHLAND C O M P A N Y^ ------- ----------- - (Realtors Eft-1929^-------— 7rt1

315 Sprlngf laid "Aye., Summit i r a r /U1

Ou Habig 273-2252Evenings & Sunday Call Inez Petty 464-6826

LOOK WHAT WE FOUND! ffiU8. S S s S t s S Sgracious living, Including a fireplace, panelled den, jalouslrt-porch,_

me. room, large 2-car garage. We Invite your inspection. Call us. Priced In the 5o’srImmediate p-*

FLOOD ASK1NNELL■ ~ Realtors = .

43 DeForest Ave. Summit 2//-<‘ Eves: 273-1812, 277-6560

N E E D ROOM T O R ETIRE?Then we have just the p|ace for you in W^deany

located ranch home in Summit's exclusive North Sloe. There,are 3 bedrooms, 2% baths, a Im panelled den, electric garage doors, plus a three year old furnace with electric air filters. V

There are many lovely shrubs and graceful[ trees which will afford much privacy. Th s centrally air conditioned home is ready for immediate occupancy.

CALL US FOR AN APPOINTMENT.

T h e S t a f f o r d A g e n c ySCHOOL teacher to case for home and two children ages 14

' l l , to live In or out for -- r . months.Mountainside, to Box 159, Summit Summit. H W.

: S i n g s* 273-1000

& Sundays — Mrs. Schofield — 322-9412

C L E A f ’NG girl Tor two days a week, for beauty Salon di PerruatMere. The MalT^Siart W il li 37641114. ^

THE GILLAND AGENCYI - - —79 Unfeh u~f s ummit, N.J .

EvesL^Serry J eiter 273-0388 or Lilt lan BbnniSter 273-1829

ATTRACT! VEVALUE4-Bedroom Colonial on nice lOOxlSO; lot In lovely BwkOley Heights; short walk to WatchungReservatlon- -Has 1st floor family •room, full dining room, basement, .laundry, 2-car garage, breezeway. Outstanding value at $37,500.

A n d e r s o n A g e n c yRealtor 444 Springfield Ave., Summit . J

--------- 273-8400 . T ’ _----- ' Eves: Gene Stiles, 232-0942

W A L T ER A rM cN A M A R AREALTOR IN SUMMIT SINCE 1915 — PI F I KtTINra-PFMTn i W a PPRf llc NGE FINANCING-MORTGAGES

ALL BRICKIN TH E FIFTIES

Seldom can we offer this quality construction at this price. This 17 year dld^ttstom. buHthomO features * targebedrooms; 2 lu ll baths,:a kitchen large enough for the whole family. Full basement with powder room and laundry and a 2 car detached garage. Other dxtras Include oil. hot water heat and wall-to-wall carpeting. Situated on a; beautifully planted -lot affording maximum privacy. Close to schools,and transportation. Priced at $55,006. .......... '37-MAELE5TBEET . T - SUMMITr OR AS NEAR AS YOUR PHONE CR3-3880

Eves. ASun. callHelenStlbltz 464-5459 * Betty Rlngler 277-3705Cofe Schneider 277-1398 Mary Thorne Miller, 464-3179

RANCHERA cream puff center halQanch — 4 bedrooms, 2Vz baths, recreation room, Jalouslec)

Dunnder AgencyR aaltbrs : '12 Kent Place Blvd^Summ^,;TRANS-AMERICAN REFERRAL

Eves: 273-8286

Franklin SchoolEasy walk to station or school In this 2-story Colonial with tbree bedrooms. Extras inctudea screened porch, first floor lavatory, basement rec. room with bar and fireplace, and a lovely tot. See through

FA IS O N inc

A Realtor ® Saves You Money.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE:F tV E

Bedroom s, I0W taxes, convenient walk to town, colonial; and comfortable IN,

— k+t: heated pc- *-“ 'CSfNSBRm—tb school

shopping. Nicely landscaped. —status neighborhood. $42,500. ^-RlcnaTtfArMminu Agency

382 Springfield Avenue, Summit, NJ.

273-86001 ANYTIME :

i condition 1st floor rami...— Phone Anthony Caporaso, 273-7723.

>ife BATHS. 2-car garage, 7 years young; contemporary- in te r io r with dramatic f i r e brace and n ew carpeting. Eat-In kitchen with new Kltchenalde and Disposar. Large famlty- room leads to patio and fenced-ln yarof^Hiwheifc- transf erred;— P rincipals only. t52.000. Can for appointment, 273-7940.

CHATHAM B O R O U G H "FOUR—bedroom ; center __Colonial. Living ’ room with fireplace, dining room, den, * M i | it*ln Wtchr----------

—Excellent635-5881.T 3 S

$350.00 taxes,-$16,500.00 Cali 383-1990 or. w ritertaw ls “&• Harinp-Raaitors,- Newton, N.J.,

^ 0S6 i-.^ ___ - - —REAL ESTATE WANTED \

BERKELEY HEIGHTS

je lot ano aeaa-ena street, 3fe years old. large eat-in kitchen, laundry room, panelled family room, formal dining room. 4Jatde,,d re s s in g -room ; o f f master bedroom, wall-to-wall carpeting

, 2 . car garage, -price M— o i Principals only464OT73.

F R E E A C R E Sied rooms; — study. 2 - Tull

uaiii.oonris, modern kitchen WRIT dinette, large living room with wood baffling fireplace, screened porch,-- 2-car— garage. For Information wrlte or call Alan Rubin, 623 Harris Drive, Rahway, 381-2310. _

Traditional H ornes___ with 3 modern concept___ that In a nutshell is what old Wheatsheaf Farms ls all about, Tlocations unusual to say the least. overlooklng Fabled WashIMtOh \/aii«y on tha.oid-Sunderland Estate. Plots are 1/3 acreassortment of^wo -stoby and iv r story Colonials available, prices startat $59,900, ------------1 ■ '

T O CHOOSE^FROM: — ——Jack DISIo— SldPerr - - — Cyjhaler George Gilbert -MWbRf'SIlversteln A1 Warhoftlj

Our Architectural Control Committee protects your Investment Plans by Some of New Jersey's Most Promlnent Archtfects.

OLD W H EA TS H EA F F A R M S“By the Developers of Cromwell Hills’

Sales Office Open Daily 1-5 !all Tract Phone— 267-2359

T IR F Q __of__run-of--tha-m III■property? Lovely 4 bedroom -home. 3 room cottage, beautiful acre. cholce location, 464-1958:

Directions: Route 24 to MOrrlstbwh^heanorthern rout# 202, % mile o-Sussex Ave. on left, straight-ahead approx, one mile to OldWheatsheaf Farms entrance on le f t— la-------- - ,n A“— . a. ------- > * — jtjShja-"Old Wheatsheaf Farms entrance on left.-

CUSTOM-built Colonial home on beautifully landscaped 119x200 lot with trees, 2 bedrooms and tlle bath, -dining room, eat-ln kitchen,! large INIng room with log-burning fireplace, large panelled family room, all on flrst floor. Large expansion attic,-fun basemant; IVt car garage,principa ls on ly ..priced at$37,000. Can be seen at 33 p e b b le Place. Telephone 4642448.

NEWPROV1DENCE ~

Murray Hill setting with . bedrooms, 21/: baths, 20* family room with fireplace adiolnlng- gradous patlo and large kitchen, — ajhiiiinimnu, imininauii_______ _ stately trees, walk tostation and schools, principals ohijy r i s k ing _iBBgO<L-SB.

" COLONIAL CAPE CQO

finished porch, with istaaaaaUMi attached

.repl___B H E kitchen-full basement,

attached garage. Low appointment oniy^-i af0k7p,ffl: 277-2658.

SHORT HtLLS7-year old COLONIAL, air conditioned, 4 bedrooms, 3 baths.

Seeretarywork locally in a

Typing, shorthand and a pleasant telephone voice are required. Be at work within 15-20 minutes from your area.For further information ar

NationalGypsum Co.• Millington

647-0500An Equal Opportunity Employe:1

T V P 1 S T — W A N T E D IM M E D IA T E LY . PHONE

r 277-2020.

C..L E A N I N G w o m e n

references. $14 prus carfare,

and 'loofiL- .FaTO|I^j^ _ ^ ^ | aj g j^ h a ia..

7 CHURCH Secretirv; stemXIarlc: 24 hours a week, four days. CaH

- 638-5889 or635^9688.

N U R S E S "R .N . O R L .P .N .

7 A.Mt-3 P.M.------------ 3-11 f.M .J1:P.M»—7 A.M. K

Excellent fringe benefits,_ „-new salary sens, part or

Tull— ffine . Must have . t ra n sp o rta t io n . Ca ll

----weekdays 8-3. .....G LE N S ID E

N U R SIN G H O M E—N Bw PWOVI BENCE

7 - 277^68180

m &fafcm

MORRIS TOWNSHIP MORRIS TOWNSHIP

1969H IG H S C H O O L

G R A D U A T E

Secretary $100/w k.

T O S T A R TTrain as secretary to operating executives- In professional firm near home with pleasant surroundings. _ Personnel/pub- llshlng organization. Apply In person to M r. John Simms.

Boland A BoyceRE PAID AGE I ST., M ADI Si

377-5700

COME IN!

A-1 TEMPORARIES

REGISTER ONLY ONCE NO F K TOP RATES

CASH BONUSES

SW ITCHBOARD Operators, Monday through Friday, 4 to 9: Saturday and Sunday: 8 to 4 and 4 to 11. Will train. 277-3668.

S E C R E T A R Yxperlence;

__ Chatham .R U C T I O N E E R ,

ca»t<

COUNTER GIRLF u ll t lme:~pl8aghr " Workt e conditions, hourly salanr, liberal employaa benefits.

M O R E Y L A R U E Laundry & P r y

Cleaners402 Springfield Ave.

Berkeley Heights (at A8IP Shopping Center)

General Insurance Agency seeking alert young lady. Excellent opportunity for girl with Iriltlatlve and desire to assume responsibility. Must

^SPENCER mT m ABEN^ - ..........INC,

39 Beech wood Rd. : Summit— .... ' 273-1900---- M

SALESWOMAN -_____For larM, active Real Estate office, affiliated with American institute of Marketing Systems. Many buyers ana sellers.

S EC RETA RY , school office. State, experience and references. Supt. of Schools, 233 Lafayette Ave. Chatham, N.J. 07928

CommercialRaters

(Experienced) ,i for a change of M id of commuting?

_______ opportunity tolo in the com mercial

-Department of , Allstate Insurance com panies attractive suburban office.E x c e l l e n t _SALARY.We offer; OUTSTANDING S U R R O U N O I h a s , CO M PLETE BENEFIT P A C K A G E , S E A R S DISCOUNT AND PROFIT SHARING. 7For more tnformetlon call:

Miss Bentson, 464-2366 or apply In person -

8:15AM-4:30PM.) is & Saturday Inter ’

y appointment).

A L L S T A T E IN S U R A N C E C O M P A N Y

PART TIME beautician, either shampoo or -«*“Call 4646550,

TeachersSeeourtetfpf “

C O N S C IO U 5 W O M A N

BEAUTICIAN, experienced full

jQ U IS T A N D I N GO P P O R T U N IT Y

■Ambitious woman to be lmlned piswtton - as - featured

E le c t r o lo g is t In leading department More beauty salon, Chosen applicant „wllL receive 3-weeks training In New York m e lectro lysis (permanent hair removal) all expenses paid. Salary, bonus, fringe benefits. Call Mrs.. Elaine HeymarC 756-3100. Ext. 258. - -

•— 9 1,1 , U fl tfalr-condltioned office a f ...........Center, noeds a ccurate typists who can work S fu ll days a week. Salary o m il 376-7277 to a rrant for interview. .- ..

BANKING T R U S T DEPT.OFFICE CLERK — General diversified duties, light typing.CLERICAL KEYPUNCH "Diversified clerical duties Including7 alpha numeric 029 keypunch machine. These intefertlng positions In congenial surroundings are Immediately available for capable conscientious IndlvlduaTs In The; National State Bank In Summit, N.J. Posltlons requlre accuracy with flgures. abillty and Initiative -to follow-duties-with hMfffinumgwil - -Interview telephone Mr. Stackler Z

JU N E H. S . G R A D S -___ - Begin a career as an

— Insurance Clerical Trainee- -- with ■ _____,---------

A L L S T A T E , “ T H E G O O D H A N D S P E O P L E ”

We also have IM M E D IA T E O PEN IN G S -FOR:

" IN SU R A N C E C L E R I C A L T R A IN E E S — e - N o experience necessary. We will train

recent high school graduates in our ______

S E C R E T A R Y -' G irl with good skills needed f o r ---------

_ ,° u r y ile s Department. 7

Halt Miss Bentsen 4642366____ or app^ 3aJ»$Qa8tlS—Evening bSaturdayInterviews by appointmentA L L S T A T E IN S U R A N C E C O M P A N IE S

Mountain Ave. Murray HHIEqual Opportunity Employer

THE BOYLE CO.RealEstateSince 1905

RESIDENTIAL building lot. Wiltpay up - t o $ 1 8 ,000. . -~“757-7496.

CLERKA e ro sp a ce co m p o n en t Manufacturer tat- opening forMPWMclerk,. diversified ar-*r—modern office - with—i

>rklng conditions. F«- employee benefits.

al Opportunity Employer

BEAU T IC I A N -Part time: Thursday,. Friday, Saturday. Paris Beauty Salon, a-' South 'Sprlngfltld; . Ave,. Springfield, (near Springfield center). 3740555. Z_

7 : 7' FA S H IO N CO N SC IO U S W O M A N

needed l)ere to learn and tex.. professional makeup. Small

' test of your own possible. o~ ■ M or part time basis. Ca Collect: (212) 682-4632 or Wrltl Include phone number

Y IV I A N E W O O D A R D

DM w mR ECEPTIO N IST

‘MbrtlVJiWWehbdirffi experience nece

bain. L ‘ •Cell Mr.

Ylrm.

R A N C HLovely custom bull! Center-Hair. 3 - b e d r d o m h om e - In BROOKSIDE. Large living-room,' flrep lacer dlnlng room,— denr kitchen, breakfast room, 2-car garage, landscaped acre 4ot. Immediate possession) Priced In 40’s fqr quick sale. Getter hurry I

376-2300

P R O D U C T IO N O P E R A T O R S ___

Small parts assembly work -l-n— m ed oMH - e ljoe e -

laboratory. No experience necessary. We will train qualified people. Day and

- evenlnfljttilfts available,

M IC R O S T A T E E L E C T R O N I C S

__ Operator of Raytheon1S2 Floral Ave.Murray Hill, n .j .

insurance opportunitiesF U L L T IM E - ............................................. P A RT T IM E

Nationally known Multiple Line Insurance Company has several openings for: . _ . _ - - \...... -— . ...

•CLAIM C LE R K S• F i l e c l e r k s• GENERAL C LE R K S ^• KEYPUNCH O PER ATO R • T YPISTS

----- T. helpful, but not essentlat for some of our openings. Fullypaid company benefits. Pleasant working conditions. Saury open.

C A L L M R . JO H N C O M E A U , 2 7 3 4 7 0 0

U N IG AR P,IN SU R AN C E G R O U PChatham, N J. 97928

SecretaryMust have excellent typing skills. Busy law office. Cali for appointment, 277-2200,.

( P A R T T I M E - -, . Evening Hours

We have a limited number of openings 4or good typists — 6 to 10 p.m., Monday through Friday.Pleass spply to our Personnel Department; ho appointment b necessary; 9 to 4t45. ‘r - . I

K E M P E RI N S l I R b W C F

’as DaForett Aye. Summit, 8LX Qualified Applicants

A D D R E S S O G R A P H O P E R A T O R - Experienced at cutting and imprinting.!

F I N A N C E C L E R K --------Experjeocectw ith fidu re s

E V E N IN G W O R K — — _____'" ■"H fgfiiai^ rgracrneeded to perform

clerical work -1 2 Midnight to 8A MAllstate offers: Top starting salary, complet ‘ neflt package, outstanduigturrouedlngs

Sears dlscount and profit sharing.___

CLASS O F ’69IN T E R E S T E D IN P E R M A N E N T

O F F I C E P O R T I O N S

Kemper Insurance offers:

Excellent salaries with merit increase program

Liberal benefit planConvenience to transportation including

the Erie-Lackawanna Pleasahtworkingcondltionslnamodern*

ely shopping area.

W o n 't y o u - c o m e into our Personnel Department? VVe may have just the spot you're look ing for. >

Kemper InsuranceSummit, New Jersey ^

C L E R K-TY PIST

-5=—day* • w a k i— tonga nlat TCaT°Unf o>S' appoVntmlrtrtr

HELP.WANTED MALE

TIM EKEEPER

general office and time card flgu ra work.* ShouM. .oe

O V E R L O O K H O S P I T A LCR3-8100

193 Moirb Ave. Summit.

M E C H A N IC S _Two m*n wanted; ell benefits, paid holidays, sick days and vacations. Weekly guarantee.

S P E R C O M O T Q R E491 Morris Ave. Summit

, 273*1700

A D M IT T IN G C L E R K

Weekends and holidays, 3:30 PM to 11:30 PM. Pleasing- man per. Excellent typist. Apply Personnel Department.

O V E R L O O K H O S P IT A LCR3-8100

193 Morris Ave. Summit

B O O KK EEP ER ^Top salaries, many fringe i - n e f I t s , E x p e r ie n c e

------ m wrnecessary: Pleasant workingconditions. Contact Mr. Tanz, 277-1234.

R O O T S , INC.An Equal Opportunity Employer

- ^ t E A E L E S m T P - ■< -One of theJargest, most attractive real estate offices in Short Hills area, has ah opening for..an alert, attractive, Tntelllgeni: saleswoman- Experience preferred but not essential: Pleasant congerilal~offlce w ffff tremeridous established earotng=potenttat.-=- ;

376-2300

growing company. Must . have complete knowledge or Injection molding operations. ,

SALARY OPEN " -BENEFITS

40-HOUR WEEK NEW MACHINERY NEW PLANT

DAY AND NIGHT SHIFTS See Mr. Wtlson at ORANGE-PRODUCTS, INC.Passaic Ave.------- - - Chatham—------ -— - ^635-6666 ' r i g g

M O VE U P'with

Orangb Products

__ a company on the movsIU

‘Wa neid^ybu to make our Plastic Precision Ball Company the leader in its field^Good pay, liberal benefits and clean working conditions in a new plant, are what we offer in return for dynamic, conscientious performance. , . ------ ’

We have openings on days (8;00 to 4;3Q) and nights (4;SDTfo f:00) for: - -

INJ. M O L D . M A C H . O P E R . 'T *ING. M O L D . M A C H . S .U . M E N (nights) C E N T E R L E S S G R lN p . M A C H , 5 .0 . M E N E X T R U S IO N M A C H . O P E R .

__ T 0 D L R O O M M A C H IN IS T (d a v s )________W A R E H O U S E M E N (days)CUSTODIAN (da”ys}“

.i \ a p p ly o i ------- -— • —

O R A N G E P R O D U C T S INC.

Passaic Ave., Chatham,. N J . 6 35-6666— see M r. W ilson

W A T C H M A N : - - —For f lll-lb -pn weekends-effd— hoUdays. Orie S-hguf hKtrber week. Modern'rHgseareli ■ ■ Laboratory. Must have, own -transportation. ___S

Phone for appointment^■^-^Air-Reduc-tioR-------- Research 7

LaboratoriesMurray HII) 464-2400AirEqual Opportunity Employer

SALESMEhL-woutd-you like .to earn $20,000 per year or more ahd do it working out of a modern, of ficewItfilnaTew mlnutei of

, yr fW ................... --------*We have 32 associates In our Branch Office who have been with u* for 4 years or more. 1968 average earnings for these 32 was $20,000 plus. 1969 looks better still. ____You’ll start with a substantial salary which Is paid. over a three-year tralning period, plus commissions. There Is an excellent fringe-benefit Drogram. lncludlrw company paid pehsloruNo need to travel, no need to relocate.. Otir office Is In a convenient

■JSniiiMllJttiil ltCiilgiLMiBHB-nliBilw ftf pB 'siir^11 u — l"~^ a^ ^ gPIf you are not completely satisfied with your present situation,WMiDurn l J.^MJMIIUUmIV P 1-IUllh B°X 336 0r

- An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F

RETAILDEPARTMENT MANAGERS

DEPARTMENT MANAGER TRAINEES

STORE MANAGER TRAINEES

Are yon t ied down to a dead end Job? If you are ambitious, Interested In a position In^management and : want to grow with a .company that will be opening many stores in the next few years — come In and discuss

J t wtth us thls week. We have opportunltles for both ex perlenced people— and thn<» Intarastmt In a

_management training program.

Interviews-- being --held 't+cts= weekT^Please

— M r-A c ca rd i ------MEDI M A R T ------- —800 M orn sT u rn p ik e - Short H ills, New Jersey

v Telephone: 376-4705

■DI MARTD R U G S T O R E S

— An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

, DON’T WORRY Ab o u t e x p e r i e n c e !

h to you ; and commlar*'

to $100i month', wh ile you -

Future; Fringe benefits ,u q u a l i f y C a ll

mm i r iuN Y M. Ga ETA, 41 River Rd. Summit. 277-3440

JANITORIAL HELPPart time, .10 p.m. — 2 a.m.

CHATHAM High School boyafter je n o o l t iB L ..411. stty,Saturdays, Chatham Dwartment Store, 230 MaM St., Chatham, 635-4630.

PAY PHONE

COIN B O X

CO LLECTO R

N o experience needed Good starting salary

O pportunity for ad? - ly a rrcgm en t 7 7

Must have N .J. driver's -license

Liberal benefits, in- cludinq college , tuition aid plan

m o Equal 'cijkSOftuntaMikSlMV^Lr7- For more Information call. 371-995S-Monday thru Friday 9 AM to 5 PM. (Except May 3$)

TEACHERS, COLLEGESALARY — CAR EXPENSE r-

BONUSYear round work In circulation departm ent of newspapersupervising small group1 of teenage newspaper carriers In: Springfield and summit area. Hours needed:mornings 5:30 AM to 8:30 AM- and Jf- *ate afternoons. Call—

J A ^ K -e £ - A L L—TRADES^^-- - Maintenance oLchwctw Full time,

(part-time—$2.50 per hr.). References, -good salary, fringe benefits,. pension, life insurance, hospitalization, nSJoT medical, disability Insurapca, holidays, vacations. Short Hills arM. car necessary. Telephone DR9-2531 after 6 p.m.w e i-L.~ j.ltoom gd, PL9,n|pi»dependable, IIcensed DRTYER, 5-days a week — Mon. thru FrL ?r_ to New York C ity.. Irregular hours. Will drive owner’s car. Full-tim’e job whlle in New York. F lexible hours. High school education. References. $150 per week. 379-7842. " .

PORTERMidnight—6 a.m. Restaurant

-located In Madison requires nJght cleanup man, 36 hours weekly, $80rper week to start! P h o n e 4 6 9 -1 9 5 8 fo r

D A Y e w t o d l e n . S a laTy comparable with prevailing wages. Frln o e beneflt s . 4 0 h o utweek.

For . Parks. No Ipytetment required. Apply Union County- Park Commission. Acme St., ETnaBeth.’ MaHWay ta' Friday;9 a.nrf. to 4 p.m. w*T-r '

HELP WANTED M l,F

SecretaryThTnklhgof returrilnato w5H<"bta ’ jKfaiin ir

-prarfenaT 'Compbny^ffas ' secretarial openings lust for — i in Springfield area: Salaryyou IrS n V

FULL time general worker.

YOUNG MAN GROW U Fl

: With fast moving plastic Industry. We have en opening - In our Extrusttn Department; Wlb train, ah alert -person.. Learn a valuable-frada with real potential: Start at $1.95 per hour w ith -Tegular Increases. Call 635-666S, . " .

' O R A N G E - ' 7 P R O D U C T S . INC..Passaic Ava. ; ; Chatham, N.J.

1.1 H , - ExR*rlenc»<r i or broker. EstablishedJ B s^wSeo.0*" ,0f

PORTERPermanent position. 5-V? i a week. 7 (0-3:30. New p!-. Good working conditions.

t ip P M tS Passa ic ; 635-6666

Maple-Street, s 203^77-1080~

, CAMP COUNSELORST E A CH.ERS. ^ U L E G E S T U D E N T & i ,Q R O U P

'EI& . NATU RE. AR C —

‘ -Fo r in terview '~ 1066-or -647-1664.1

"b S T Y C rCALLTijS-:

Sand brief resume; Address.. Box 157 Summit Hamid, Summit, N J .

COOK O ifA l TRESSPart' or full time. Good pay. 273-9788. , _____ .

; LOOKING FOR A —^BETTER JOB?C.E. Personnel Servlet., - Street, Summit, N J . Suite

We’re Expanding

.....___p yo u r 'may have a place for you:Excaliant pay-Full companypaid banaf Its.Comp In and talk about your future.

B U R L I N G ' v v .

Continu t l <?n next p i t

f THE ITEM of Millburn ondShort WHIs. N. J. Thursdoy. Mgy 29.1969 Poor 29

jm m n T T T J P f T

FE M A LE--

Secretary .AccountsPayable C lerkA L E S SERVICE DEPT,

iood typist and skilled steno. >(versified duties; axparlane* lecessary. 8:30 s A.M.-4:30

Clerk Typist C lerk-Typ istCUSTOMER SERVICE DEPT* MERCHANDISING DEPT* Good typist, diversified duties. Good typist* Experience

aanEk.tass.Mr

F ile Clerks * C le rk-T yp istU g h t S^yplng DrEeq*?M^N1t ®e0c°esseJy.P lw ill Yrato^to?

Secretary Jr. Keypunch

PAINTING - two' collage students desire summer painting JoOs, 2 years experience.

Executive secretarial pool. Good typist and skilled steno. Diversified duties. Experience necessary. Will train In preparation for promotional opportunity. S: 30.4:30PM.

OperatorI.B.M.Experience necessary. 8* AM - 4:30 PM. _

S e c retary SecretaryM ^ R^ ANDIStNGDEPT.MEaCHANDtSmO-BEPT*

=rkKessaiT. rSt^lt A M — 4:30

T ra ffic C lerk Warehouse OpeningsM eji_needed to f u lf i l l requirements due to opening of new building.

ta-JJlgbet-yL-SSSOPM

Return & H oldM old ing Goods Clerk Service Mart

CRESTUNER 15’ fibreglass 35 tip Evlnrude. trailer; equipped. $750* Call 277-3772. — —

PRODUCTION CONTROL DEPT. - -High -School gradual« n»ifltaln

re c o rd s and followup *■ procedure

Mechanical aptitude. Supptys materials and starts up machines.to Insure production Is * of-—proper -quality^ and quantity. Perform minor maintenance on machinery. -Assist--in .-mold changes. 10:30 P.M.* 7 A.M. S=-----------------

MALE/FEMALE —

Accounting C lerkHigh School graduate;

---- to work with figurenecessary. 8*. 30 AM —

Phone 464-4100-Ext. 433for interview appt.___ . __

r — - — Excellent working conditions,' air-conditioned offices,

— liberal fripqe benefits. —

C.R.BARD ,INC.LEADER >N PR OD U CTS. FO R PATIENT CARE

Hospital and Surgical Specialties

C LEA R A N C E SALE NOW! "justify clothing - & h ousewares at lerry-go-Round Resale Shop, 4Wt ackawanna Place, Millbjurn.

jpen daily 10-4, closed Monday. SUMMER CLOSING: June 21st.

, „f) } \ ftnrinfl.Sl . ■ M u r r a y ,W Naw-.iariay* T W y ■Londonderry Way, Summit. .

(3 MILES FROM SUMMJT. N.J. -VfMILE FROM BELL LABS) —ANEQUAt- OPPO RTUNIT YEM PLOYER ffVYFL-----

FULL OR PART TIME

Top pay — paid holidays — pleasant working condltiom-in"

Call.or Apply to; -_____ __"". .v-to*.-

Karl Neuweiler Inc. _18 Com m erce St. ^ — - Springfield

376-0018

AfTRACriVE.MOGRESSIVEFOODCHAIII IN SHORT HIUS HAS OPENINGS FOR

• CLERKS/CASHIERS •Part Time (A.M.)CASHIERS •GROCERY CLERKS *•full Time MEAT CUTTERS

___ Excellent fringe benefits .and good salary offered^ .Opportunities to advance from within.. Vou will enjoy working in Short Hills most attractive store-amt meeting — other people. .

Please apply Store Manager, STOP & SHOP. tfti ~ Pn iitft P4 .. . —

~ __Short Hills, New Jersey

STOP & SHOP , ,„c(An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F)

... TELLER-TYPISTLIBERAL FRINGE BENEFITS

SUMMIT FEDERAL. s a v i n g s a £o a n a s s n :

veteUna^y hospital. Call S7M522COLLEGE student .. ... .... ....car wanted to drive youngster to

— & from local schoet-ffom June 9-25 i t 2 p.m., return 4:30.p,m. week d ays. References. - South Mountain-Mill burn era*. $25 I gat.379-6054. v —DOMESTIC WORKERS wanted

. to work In warns as household workers for wfndbiw washing,{iiaSlPhiSW -”8:

—R E A L ESTATE SALES OFFtl__■■ Seles experience preferred, n o t . essential, car TS-esaentlal. iff*; challongln^^ It's fun, M ’s

MAGICIAN — Fun, laugh, magi for your, birthday parties. Call. i Gary Gifford 376-3415. __ J J

CARPEN TER trimmer -wants w orkday day or contract.

....... . .. young'chlid'in'my’i s a ^ i f e i a,~*BABY SITTING by day, weekagMjbaittmdjilr*'' ----nan wl_.

376*7768

'WOODWORKING,

WORKING MOTHER’S ATTENTIONI j r

LICENSED DAY CAftC'. FOR CHILDREN

464*3311

MATURE women wHI alt .. .... with people who ana recuperating, by day or h ou r, “ ins^ortatlortj experienced,

MATURE WOMAN - companion Ittant housekeeper to elder y 'son. Expariancad jOTOfti.

ReavS’11' hwwworkT” 273 2139 or379-3511.HIGH SCHOOL graduate seeking baby Sitting job at NJ. shore for July and August, $35-5561 after!

DO you want CLEANING DONE EVENINGS? Phone after 7:30 p.m.686-5393.M EN A N D WOMEN fori household cleaning services, window washing, floor wpxlng, catering and household cleaning. -77-2908.

R M vacation. Experienced .jby sitter, references supplied. Call after ♦ p.m-r-’MIss KIm Lawrence. 538-8896.

going < baby si

■CHAIRS andtockers repalred and restored----- seatrcaned, rushed,

CHATHAM- GALLERTEST VVatchung Ave», Chat harp. 635-7709. WE_BUY _Af4©-SEtL. -fHtmrtweandf Inepalntlngs.’ W E C tfr 'r C ^ L A R " ™ ^ | iw Lou Kelly; Prop. - a collector for 27 yam now selling & buying. l lB - M a ln S tM West Orange. 736-1144. Open dally except Sun.

condition, 10 gears, $50. Can

12-ft. wood, boat; .excellent IcftnflHfen; m t k a i a l i i iM l iM Catr464*9492rPhoenix. Catarmaran, 18’x8’, 235

ft. sail. Great for facing ana family fun-Compiete

trailer. 273-0410^:

M AH OG AN Y china cabinet. coffee table, mahogany, $100. Phdne 277-0019 after 12 noon. -WOODARD Ottoman, Spring ch*)r,:VVlltlan7Sburg Electrified Sconce, Pair chairs, WindsorChair; Mlsc. Items. 273-2$35.MATT R ESS—Queen size, foa mrubber----- super firm, $40.379-6645. .GE REFRIGERATOR, dinette sat, dining room table a rJ chairs. 502-3068.

.ALU M1NUM storm .-.-Windows* screens, doors, .electric motors, hand tools, benches, supplies, dishwasher, refrigerator deep freeze, wall oven, cocktail'table,

t t re s s e s , box springs,

THURSDAY, Friday, May 25, 30, 9:30 AM to 3 PM; 6 Londonderry

i, (off Essex Rd.): Summit.

GARDEN-wooden foldlno chairs; draperies, dow n -comf orters; lamps:-manv rftBcollaneousltemsr Simmons sofa-bed; 7 ^ electric an^rTs^rnotdrmourtted-cm

perfect condition. May , . . . from.10a.rn. — 4 p.m.-,

84 Welllngton Ave., Short Hills.THURG '& ffV^ FldVy^ att^ 10-4, 21^-Rldge Dr., Belkeley-

Miscellaneous items.furniture, I

u uu i, ioin.ps, appliance-miscellaneous Items; Mhen’s. women's clothing. 959 Springfield Ave.. New Providence. Can 277ilQfl3.,J.2.-,5_all week._____SOMETHIN G - f or everyone! Bargalnes galore. Thursday and FrldayrT0*4r32rchaucer Drive, Berkeley Heights.

HARDY PERENNIAL PLANTS, ground covers, Wlldflowers; ferns, small— fruits;—flowering shrubs, evergreens, shade trees and specializing In field grown gr-"— chrysanthemums. Fred He . . Nursery. -Woodland Road, Green Village. Phone'"nights 439-2491.

PACHYSANDRA, $4.50 per i,uuj -40 per 1,000. MYRTLE, $.20 laht — -w(H-planL extrfe-BfRB

. I0USES, $1. Harold Travts.13 No. Baums Ct.. Llvlngstpn. 992-0714. ____

of load, 377-4544SCREENED TOP SOIW

277-2836. . .

Screened Top SoilRich & Loamy *

464-0488

AAA TOP SOIL, golf course quality, so rich It doesn’t have to u" tcHaned. ~»3*73 p»r cu.yd..

WATER- GOBLETS. 1 doz., beautiful German crystal, perfect condition, $100. DR9-122S.

IS' gray-green cotton RUI I mahogany sideboard, ratt; h furniture, maple table, J)

stools, An tique Pa. uuicn m * « t cheat. Greasing table.

.MUST sell ImmMlatelyl Prustleii refrigerate?, 1-yr. old, cost $267aHI for $100; beiutffid Daystrom dinette set, 1-yr. old, tw $ l6 5sel|r for STS^ia ilan

! $136-110 for $40; tradnioMl chair, 2-yrs. old, $35i $25; sofa-bed, |5b; kltChl • cnelrsv $20. 7 f ~s s s -761-5639 after 11

.t n w p p y O RG A N ,—w w

Elkwood A m , New Providence.

SEWING NOTIONSIUTTONS-TRIMS-RIBBON . Completely stocked for

the Home SewerPINKING SHEARS SHARPENED FURRER*S SEWING CENTER' ~ » iS l» 4 4334 Springfield Ave*. Summit

M. Ahlfeld, 232-684tfOSPLTAL ,beds, whaal chairs,, walkers, sunlamp* - for sale o* rent* Free delivery. Fruchtman'

party and make n ■Pleasure than an ordaiavely paper p_______center-pieces, shower umbrellas

for rant, etc. R.S.V.P., —S h o p p in g C e n te r, Providence. 273-2747.

CA M PIN G E Q U IP M E N TRental*, Tents, Sleeping Bags,

DRAPES — antique satin, white, lined, with rod, 825; French door . “ *iir white

I . Jlr blue___ ______ ... .. $7. Leathertrunk $9; transistor FM 85; sled $6.; 007 electric race tracks with 2 cars $7. 635-0664.

Eriday - Safurday - Stlnday 25% discount on—all—merchandise at AR.CHI E 'S R ESA LE—-SHOP; Meyersville Rd. Meyersvllle. Open 10 to 6. 647-1149

S A G EFU R N ITU R E E X C H A N G E

C lo s e d "for ’M em oria l W eek*end „ F r iday-^andSaturday- - - - ........50 DeForest Ave. Summit

TRIUMPH TR-4 T963V 1WSTT tops, R&H, wire and dlac wheel*.-: Fan price. Call 635-77li after

Wlgr human ~ halr^— strawberry blond, long, practlcauy new; orlg. 5160; selling for $50. 273-3373.

I,SfrortHt1ls,betwe.en *

Garrard—cnaiMprr^FIckertnff cartnog^ A.&R. speakers; $100.

SINGER sewing machine, pine■---- ; stack, pine home office desk^ ^ trC h a lr , stratolounger, b inocu lars, books, lamps, -fireplace equtpmerrtr etectrlc-fans and other Items. 464-4166.

child's Show $ Tell. (

crib, chlfforobe. bassinette — scales; fireplace andirons, tools and brass fender-, two largetrunks. 373-4995.

condition. $150. 277-6722.

STRAW BERRIESA S P A R A G U S

Wightman Farms

FR ID 6N P a ir in g — Machine, electric. One-year old, excellent condition, $165. 761-5800 ^

PORCH furniture, relax in comfort, 5 pieces heavy Rattan, reasonable. Call Friday, Saturday, Sunday 464-2629. .

Aet,— sofa bed," —refrigerator, mTsceTiancbnjs items. - Ca ll 464-3895 after 5:30 p. weekdays*

E V E R E T T —C on so le -piano* walnut; excellent condition; owned bj¥ musicians, $450. 273-9181* 9*12 A. ------------UPRIGHT piano, perfect— for playroom or practice, $65 or best offer. 635-6945. :CROWN electric guitar $ <

ALIEN EJURG - ELIZABETH.N.J.

Dally 111 9 , SaT*tll 6 n m M M 0 N D 0 8 0 A. N H E A O Q 0 A R T E R S W AREHOUSE CLEARANCE Mason & Hamlin — Knabe — SoKffler — Everett — Kawai — Janssen — Plano Rental — $I2month. ______

.351-20001 “ALTENBURG

PIANO HOUSEE. Jersey. Street,.

llizabeth, N.J.

1=7 S T A N B A-RD-—thoroughbredPoodle Puppies, black. Methdr ~um|Lean born and bred. Call

BOUV1ER das Flandres puppies. Excellent with children^ At® Champion stock. 2 months. '35-5561. -______ , •O LD ENGLISH SHEEPDOG

Ig Fringe-Sbneftt.-Dam also Fazzwlg line. Pupple* carefully bred for tmautyrJBffilhRjtte aftd fine temperament. Supurg with chndren. e a y Ip trBIB. excellent

part Schnaunrii several mixed breed dogs for adult famine* only. -Young part Springer Spaniel, all .shots. Affectionate, playful Junior cats and kittens, all colors, v.Pleas* save .small, furniture, bric-a-brac, china,, toy*, householdItems, for our garage sal* to be hMd Saturday, June lM , 10 to 4; 124 Ashland Rd., consar Colony Court, Summit. F o r adoption, spa y in g and g a r n i dale Information please call 273-2663, 635-5998, 276-2994, 376-1948,

KITTENS-** irratatiPle l Flee t gotxf home. AD3-2438. ._____

HOMES, 464-9*93.POODLE puppies, two adorable miniatures, whKe female and

S S CORVAtR 1966, d.aBbrjedena, ] a r m s M jg F y htj) R a ii, >B5o. JJJ-J43» ,

after 6. "

f o w s a U

1960 CORVETTE. 350 CJ. - A L L OUT- 376*7768 after 5 p.m.1066. BONNEVILLE, 12,000 miles, PS. PB, alr-conditloned, dark green, extra wheels and snow tires, $3500 or best Offer. Call 464-1694 after 6:30 p*m.

NAVY ENLISTEE ordered - Pacific must sell lata 1968 Pontiac Tempest Custom Sports Coupe; R*H , ww , PS; automatic transmission. Deluxe Interior. Less than 5000 miles. LMA36Q0/ asking $2500. Call aftsr 6:3d weekdays or before . 5 p.m. Saturday. 635-2451.GTO I960, green and white, convertible, 4 speed, PS, excellent condition, mu« sell 464-1576.1965 Vo l k s w a g e n * excellent condition, R&H, low mileage. 273-8358after 6 p.m.

FRED STENGEL Carpentry repairs, alterations, cabinets, bars, formica' tops, recreation rooms additions. 1246 Magnesia Place, Union,- N..' MUrdyck 8-6632.

a*r* *pwu, nursi sniTier. ifoffer under»1850.- 464-5381,1964 Thu rd irb lrd , excellent

like new; orlg.____ -business after- purchasing same.

’64 P LYMOUTH Sports ,Fury hard-top,7etr conditioning, PS & TO,-bucket seats, AM-FM radio;

LOOKING for a good guaranteed Suburban-Traded Car — such as a 1966 Olds -F85 Station Wagon with air conditioning - $17501 Call Ed oarampie. S03-4400. WELLS Cadlllac-Oldsmoblle, 28 Third St,, South Orange.

Excellent condition. 379-7842.

DOORS, paneling, basements, etc. Reasonab le. .N ic k Caputo 464-5087. _ _ _ _A L L C a rp e n t ry r s M fn J ' rt^raation *roo?nsdan^cailnats. F. 0. Connell, Builder. 273-2647.GOOD carpenter wants work.editions.73-4094.

WOOD FINISHER — Antlairepair, reflnishlng furniture; bulitins. panelling. '992-7039. Thurs., Frl., Sat. after 7 p.ianytime other days.

II 464-6246. .

^ A R P t n t n r , a iieranons; basements, attics, racraation rooms^additions.- Free estimates.

O N .E -ST .O P R E P AI R - _&J IM P R O V E M E N T " Includas - A Iterations, Paneling, Closets, Tile. Palntlnn and Thecoratlnnr m c o p" o .I h o m IIMPROVEMENT & REPAIR*, :273-135T^— ^

. c o m p l e t e service measuring 3Rg*£ffnertf wmmrfg?-- old carprt a lte ra tion work restratcWng. ehlftlnfcano repairing. 762-451 fl.

t:~n^ R P E T " INSTALLATION

REPAIRING AND - GLEANINGFREEE5TIMATES“-At_L WORK

GUARANTEEDCAPITAL CARPET

P SERVICE 484-0353

TAKE IT O FF ! !

Houae,' B?X SERVICE CO*. _ F ra n k lin Place, Summit. 277-3815 « A ntiques a specialty.LAWNS cleaned and cut, cellars, attics and garage cleaning. Lloht hauling and rubbish removal. Reasonable rates. Cell 273-4340.

LAOtES- alteration ahd rapalr work, In my home. 379-7762 after6 p.m. ----

FRONTIER Electric Company; . C lark St., Summit.. Prompt service. No job too small,

equippe,561-9290.

..air- conamonea, led. Owner ill-must

1968 PONTIAC CATALINA - won’t fit my garage. 2-door,

>t"op, power steering & power

1965 SIMCA 1000. 4 doorseuau, less than 20,000 miles, $450. Cali 273-^30 befote-6~or ~464-2661

1963 O LO SM O BILE F-85 c o n v e r t ib le , a u to m a t ic transmission, PS, PB, blue -with white top, excellent conditionInside and out, 8676__Call

-464-5831 days, 464-6430 evenings.

iiaiiMiinMin. ra, r c , -SA-.cnrunning cODOttlon,464-38Q8.

HONDA--' SOi$ li5 V best ' offer.

W ANTED TO*BUYOLD fashioned- furniture*- <

WE:-PAY CASH tor yobr used furniture, arttiaues. silver, bosks, bric-a-brac, paintings, works of,Gk0RGE'S AUCTION ROOMS

83 SUMMIT AVENUE — TST. CRestview 7-0996 ... We wlll buy-yotir attlc^ontentsANTIQUES, old coins, old gi and lumber. • .

Antiques Restored ffl. J. Marianl MES-7978.

antiques, paintings, silver, china andTewelry. Telephone 277-1344,ORIENTAL * rags, cut glass, - old

s, paintings, jewelry, antiques, ie furnishlngs. etc. lmmediate r. Calt Mrs. Gifford, 731-6733

iPASSBOOK No. 1-7S718. Please return to Summit & Elizabeth Inratea.T Summtt.~- _ --

PAS5BOO k No.I-61566. Please return .tb Sdftvmit & Elizabeth

Co., Summit.PASSBOOK No. 1-61312. Please return—to- Summit -&•• Elizabeth Trusteo.T Summit. --------GERM AN SHEPERD, black.

,-Jake-555 - ta tto e d - o rw *— 1 'WlWMlPI I ' "W"

POPULAR and classical \ Instruction In y o U rh .. , , . , Elamantary — advanced. Harry Mhler. SO 2-07*7. ____ _R E A D I NG— A N D - M A TH .IMPROVEMENT WORKSHIP. 233-0039TUTORING ~ Master Tutors for all subjects, all grade - gaN Tutoring Associates, 218

EDUCATIONm arnatninal MONTESSORI

Teacher Training Program and Earty ChlldhoocP Educatlon-for

illdren 2Vi to 5. Transportation . T il la b le . fo r c h lld r a h y Registration for hralnato j M children now open for toll 1969. East Orange — Phone 872-7363.A R T &.CHDOJL SUM M ER SESSION: 6^vks art InstructionV^ Fah llitran . taopfc^jgfcMfcGaharal art, portrait-figure, water color oriental; special events. Studio Art School, Maplewood Theater Bldg., Maplewood. 763-4719 6r Mr. stra ley

T u T O itM Gr- e b l lw SShtor, language— major, wht tutor Spanish. Reasonable rates.

's u Waiht F r e n c h s c h o o l A ll levels - all ages - a i l methods.sn n fixsr* "-'

MAPLEWOOD ELECTRIC outlets, circuit breaker systan... Reasonable. State License 580. AI Kubichek. OR 9-3444, SO 1-4454.Landscaplng-Gardanlnp

TREE SERVICE ,Pruning, removals, spraying, feeding, etc. FRA N K S TREE SERV fe i; 273*2228. —

I AISinSCAPE

- G A R b E N iN G -

JOE’S LANDSCAPING - AND GARDENING

.s e r v ic e -..:647-3616 ______

.. - .........ig*power- rake, top -dressi na. bund" apd_ repair fawns, out In -sod- clearing area, shrub planting and monthly cafSrj Free . estimates: 376-2165.

TR EE SERVICETrimming and tree remov specialists. Shade-tree spraying.T :___ledVahOyke

_ . Tree Seryice277-6999-----

C R E S T V IE W T R E E . S E R V I C E

Protect your trees from leaf destroying— inch worm and leaf roller.

S U BU R BANG A R D E N E R S

LANDSCAPINGAND

M A SO N W O R K

Complete line of masonry work, repaired or new, steps, sidewalks, patios, retalnerwalls. Free advice and designing. 464-1752.,PLASTERING & slieiet

0. A. CHI ERA,R INC. waterproofing. 277-044S.

BALTUSROL 'CONSTRUCTION CO.----Mason-Contractor ■ and Builder ! >. -

Stone, brick sidewalks* A ll types concrete work and construptlon. N ic h o la s ’ Rudlsi, Summit. CR3-4262....ALL types mas n work, brick work and carpentry. Fra# ettUMta*. Call John Amaru, 277-0537.__________________

P.A.D. PAVINGBLACK-TOP driveways, Belgian block curb*. Patloa and sidewalks. A ll work guaranteed.

Call for free estimates. 379-7660 376-7948

M A SO N W O R K C O N C R E T E W ALKS; FLA6-5IQ N E PATIOS, BRICK STEPS, .W ATER P R O O F BASEMENTS?

379-7660 376-7948

_________*S|it S8m RotuwA at277-3736 after 6 p.m. for ettlmete before you do anything

Antiques repaired, restorad and reflniihed; Furniture raflnlshed and antiqued. Chair Caning- and rushing by A. Graullch. Free estl- mates. 464-4022.CLEAN & remove trash, appli­ances, prune trees, hauling; odd joSTatc. 647-2236. o r 647-4434 ,

gentleman; kitchen privileges; parking facilities, 273-9825.Su m m it -'Large room; centrally located; parking; gentleman only. 277-2621or 273.5925.

STORMS down, screens up; w indow washing. R ichard1 Ramefla, 273-3631.LIGHT hauling and dallvary; attics and cellars cleaned; rubbish and brush removed. Household

Wl N DOWS WASHED, GUTTERS C L E A N E D , O D D JO B S 277-2966.

yter round nomas iron retired lady preferred. Parking ipac*. References. Address Box 152, Summit Herald, Summit, N J .

repaired, cellars , B H I . B a t :: painted; oer

repairs. F. DeAngelus, WYi 2-4826.LIGHT and heavy hauling, yards,a iK ), uaiiar cleaning,gardening. 2774)906. *

cleaning, tree work,

ODD JO B SRubbish removal, cellar, at Dump truck. Millburh-Short i- only. 242-2014. «

COPIES- Electrostatic

INSTANT SERVICE

— A R T T y S ^ W m. 1 19 Summit Ave., ~

; Sonrimtf,.fy;3.

SUMMIT —~l~aT"2^ gr aaraaa centrally located. 2Z7-2621 or 273-5925.g a g a s s y a s ~

-U T^ h tR S . & LE A D E R S . Experienced carpenter. Excellent references. LOUIS CAPRIO, 688-2608.LAWN MOWERS — Sales & Service — sharpened & repaired. Free pick-up & delivery. 379-5222. •• ;

GIL PAINTINGS RESTORED FINE ARTS

BOUGHT-SOLD^Galt’s Gallery572 m a in ST.,C h a t h a m

635-9696

S W I M M I N G P O O L MAINTENANCE. Art pool needs. Cull 757-7947 after 6 p.m.S O U T H O R A N G E MAINTENANCE — SCREENS REPAIRED, gutters & leaders cleaned & repaired;—sash chain replaced: glass _ repairs; roof repairs. 763-9385.SUBURBAN-Fence CO. Chain -

887-2408 and 273-9215.LIGHT trucking'and deliveries cellars and attics cleanedHtubbisb removed. 273-2149.

Bairns Fareim * ~

School and Memorial ___ .rooms, „3 bedrooms, 4th bedroom or-dan; iMr baths; c im ting and draperies; fencedstraws?1,1

LUXURYO FFIC E SPA CE - IDEAL

SUMM IT 1500 square feet.

273-8600 any time!RICHARD A.

MICONE AGENCY

STRAND Theatre Building, Summit. Second floor. Call Mr.

Martini manager, 273-3900

■TWO .-faMmJshad- apartmewts" available, June 5 to Labor Day. Two-Ulblocksl^ocean: Utilitiesapplied. Kitchen privileges. $750 and 8500. 775-9754 or 774-7612.•CAPE COD -< Brewster FuHy equipped, cozy" 2-bedroom cottage on sacluded Jake-front; — ^ v f r beach, boats, lutae-----ned porch, modeirh- kitchen,freezar, -washar. Available -June 15-July 1: July 6-Aug. 3. $150 peF week. Phone 746*5199.

rv- dok wip m en , uii irees,lot, beautiful view of

porches.233*7366.NANTUCKET-oceanfront^ rustic

ttage, 4 bedrooms, panoramic wr Available June 23-July 30, — ulred. J t

ApsHmshtUntornlih iM:

aparcmeni; yuuu ireasonable. 968-1569.

PAINTING — INSIDE 'AN Dlq I t s i d e , n i c kQIANAKOUROS, 375-2594.-----R O O F IM G . G U T T E R S , L E A 'O E R S l 'P A INTlrN-G,r e m o w e l W g : A t r r F pATI ONS. Interior and exterior. F ree estimates. R & E ConUactin9L543j-2217I V A L I T .•aperhangjng, block ceilirigs.

> HAVENfor haFure lovers, )ust across the way . . . a marvelous 3-bedroom

-heme -with -the feeling -of-spa- -ciousnessthroughoutTf-A short1 walk to the SAort Hills station. Priced in 40 ’s. May - we -show you today?

ROMAN. REALTY ’ ’ ztw^MinBtiwnRvgTiw^

'Realtors 376-4545

THE TIME IS RIGHTto buy this young and most at­tractive 3 bedroom. 2 bath home in. desirable Country Club arisa, Lqvaly living room, ton dining room, modem: kitchen, large screened and glass porch. Un­usual grounds with many trees and shrubs, lust reduced, so act quickly and don't miss this''fine buy. See to-day with Florence Macrae,D U N N A H ARTFO RD , Inc. 762-7744 Realtors

Evas. 379-2766

DON'T HESITATEPriee greatly reduced. Owner can give quick possession. Fi-eplaec • .in living ro«m and family room. Large dining area in kitchen. Four bedrooms,. two baths. Car* paling and drapes included in price. Call today,

AllsoppRealtors 376-2266

COME HOMEand RELAX. in this lovely qual­ity-built . home! - Enjoy O N E FLOOR living at its best! 3 bed­rooms. 2 baths, lavatory^, large family room, porch, 1st floor laundry;—Prieed~righf. In 60’s. Call MRS. BARKER

^ 3 CH£RMERH0 RN~— — 379-3433 —

-Retftots ~ Evas 376.6121

DRASTICALLY reduced price on 6 -bedr0onr-hpme-.-Ultra modem — kitchen, n e w ly redecorated throughout. Near railroad, stores, ete.,-.oti-_shady street. $28,900^ Principals . .

HELP WANTED FEMALEMATURE WOMAN for part or full time office work in smell Mapiewddd~concerh. Must be ac­curate typisl. 'W rite Box 341, Millburn Item, MjUburn.

ASSISTANT BOOKKEEPERFamiliar -with-NCR posting ma­chine. Part-time, 9-1 p.m., 5- days.-_Cood: vffirktng condifTot»."

STENO-TYPIST—diversified.of­fice duties. UNETTE, 26 Okner Parkway, Livingston, 992-3800.SECRETARY-RECEPTIONIST for 2-girl internist-cardiologist office Maplewood. Experienced, ma­ture, organized,-executive type, -willing-- to.-leirri. Typing, noshorthand. No smoking. 762- 2500 leave message,.

MEDICAL-- ASSISTANT, Mill— bum Internist's office. Techni­cian, secretary or assistant. Ex­perience preferred. Good hours and salary^ Write Box..338,.Mill-— burn Item, Millburn. .POWER MACHINE OPERATOR — full or^part-tirrie. - We will ‘ teach you". Currid Awning Co., 666 Morris Tnpk, Short Hills, 376-2723,

”_He lp w a n t e d Ma l e -driver to recover missing news­papers, Springfield-Short Hills, Sundays 9 - H- a.m. $3' per. hr., •' j BHf l i f t *|B W P Iff., Vltff t ffp* * 376-4000, 376-7475.

JoiTI^PETERSON — "PalntTno and Oecoratton. interior arid exterior. Reasonable rates. 32ft. z997. ■ ■TtREO OF INTERIOR WORK?

"PA'PfRTH ANG ITrer~—-Qua) ity

INTERIO R—EXTE Rt O R . Free estimates. .All work guaranteed.

, years experience.'- 549-1452, 1-1621.. L L A G E P A IN T IN G & DECORATING - Professional p ape rh and in g . E stim a tes chaierfully given. Insured. FREEMINOR REPAIRS — gu-----cleaned.373-5259. ------;—

EXPERT piano tunlng^rapalrlng. Baby Grand for sale. Stainways -bought and so ld . Expe- * appraising. Dowe, CR3-5061j

^ptotlo fSinfiygr 'ipalrlng, ca ll L . Horvath. rfc3529*__

LOOKING for a coflrae? Want t

have- as ___ _________ _vocational plans, cair fo r appointment with Edward F . Johnson,. Collage 'Advisement

vices, Madison. 377-5953 or ’-7043.

servlcas ^ f^ ^ jp e ^ S le ’ eollree |tuda im . Rga sonahla rat as.

painting & waterproofing, Over 25-yrs. exparlancr. CaH 677-2911 .

Roberts Detective . . . Agency

Confidential mvestnatlon .of

TAX ACCOUNTINGS AND RETURNS

CORPORATIONS PARTNERSHIPS

. INDIVIDUALS FEDER A L -- A LL STATES-------- TAXATIONS

-------k e m p s Fa x *AND ACCOUNTING — 464-0454 ANYTIME

a 194L ExcahaotB P B H H H T Tegittaradnurse, 377-1732i or Gltderr Terrede-Jfiur^y Hotne, (same

N e a r " , c e n te r.

HELP WANTED— FEMALE—

...SECRETARY, CLERK TYPIST

How You Operate

Come show us your skills. -We'd-like To see how you conduct...yourself inThe-positions we current- -

-ly have open:- -

SECRETARY •In our Sod a i Seivices Deportment. This is o vety interesting, "very worthwhile, very well-paying posi-. tibn. Good skills o must. \

CLERK TYPISTAn opbortanlty to-coifitribute some­thing worthwhile to the most-mod­ern medicahfacillty in this part of the country? .Good typing skills ond o knowledge of office. procedures important.

^tn addition to receivinp a fine soT-' ory and working in extremely pleas­ant surroundings, you'll get a mar­velous package of employee benefits "

~and arf the prestige of working for^ on. important employer. For an in-

...terview pleose coll:' " - • -

Personnel DeptT .....992-5580 : p

SAINT BARNABAS MEDICAL CENTER

— Old Short HtHs Hoad— ’--------Livingston, N. J.

' An" Equal Opportunity Employer

RESTAURANT.

ASSISTANT MANAGERto assist in the supervision and administration ol entire food ' • ope>afi6h. 5ome experience preferred in food preparaflon

■.....o r related fields. , -.

PERAAANENT . • ' FU LLTIM ENO HOLIDAYS OR SUNDAYS _ . ......

LIBERAL STORE BENEFITS— i. -:____Apply in Person

BLOOMINGDALE'SSHOUT-HILLS

HELP WANTED— MALE fr FEMALE ."

DEPARTMENT MANAGER ~~ , ~

F iN E T w iL R YJPgsitjon. open fo> Selling Department Manager in-the^fine-----

Z and Costume Jewelry Department of a leading retail opera- — ttonf~"Must have apme -knowfedge of find gams’ )o*b*itt#r - - , jewelry. -RwnpiiBibft total aagaatioe -------------- ------ —

MILLBURN ITEM, MILLBURN, f € &

Jo o r^ Q ------ THi^TEM ^ MWfaarrrond ShorA-feUHs, NrJ.— THarsdW M QV^ ^ S y

YOUNG MAN, 18' or ougr, work awning shop. Experience' ipij’

■necessary. CURB ID AWNING CO., 666 Morris Triple, Shorttfffls. 376-2723, ___________

IMFLQYMINT WANTIO

WOMAN — competent nursing qualifications. Light housework. Elderly or chronically III. 379- 7 i35 . ..REGISTERED NURSE — infant or invalid cere, by hour or by dey.992.7699, 992-5557.________

“ WOMAN wishes'two devs house- work a week. Celt 678*8416

■ **t*f oft*. ; ;APPRENTICE to Cabinetmaker—

• 16-yr. old high school boy with school woodshop training. Anx­ie ty to learn I. 763.4524. - ,

FOR SALE

ANNUAL DECORATION DAYSALE AND TRADE-IN

Ofce Day Only —Friday. May 30 . ,11 a.m, - 5 p.m..

; ANTIQUE EVELYN1386 Springfield Ave., Irvington Drastic reductions on furniture, glass, china, paintings, bronzes &decorator, items. ....... ’ -

: W ill, buy or trade- ___BRINC THEM ALONG

—DfNINCROOM, 10-piker tradiv tional mahogany, must be seen— sacrifieer '-Regency sofa, green; desk; chairs; kitchen etc. Must sell— moving! 3D 2*6838, Mon.6 Tues.-----— 1 ■: —

- Strong, white” WICKER SET “ -^chairs; love sear and table, with

green rugr$T25. 379-3271,

Black Wrought ' Iron Gtass-top dining table end server, incliid- ing 4 «matching chairs, 379- 3242. ■

ROVING MUST SELL: Mahog­any comer 'cabinet (gins door o n top i ; maple double bed, box spring & mattress (Bite new)-; child’s oak desk; daybed; Vic­torian swivel piano stool, needle­point seat; green formica-top kitchen table & 4 green vinyl- covered chairs; black lacquered cabinet; white pieta! utility kitchen , cabinet, formica top; walnut chest o f drawers; metal clothes cabinets; portable type­writer. Ceil Thursday & Sunday — 379-2373.

Store and basamant loaded with antiques and used furniture. Why not decorate with antiques? A N ­TIQUES, ETC., 2120 Springfield Aye., Union. I -4 p{m. daily.

Beautiful ROSENTHAL dinner se t, 8 settings, extra pieces, $100, Fisher mahogany break- front ; other bric-a-brac. 731- 8156.

SEARS Craftsmen 22* rotary mower, self-propelled, 3.5 h,p. motor, 1967 model, - used I ■m onth,^S?5^37 9-9232,:-;

BMYrdSfiA^ J p tA N O igooch condition, Walnut kitchen-set. $ 3 5. 763-757Q. ---------

Two GifiSON-AIR "CONDITION? ERS, 8600 8TU. tike new; iry s tatting complete _air condition* ine. 0 ^ 9 - 5 ^ ^ = = ^ ^ Used CanLQOKINC for a good guaranteed Suburban-Traded Car— such as a 1966 Cedilla Sedan de Vtthr. fully loaded including air condi-

-Uoning— $3,25D! —Gatt--Ed0e-r Temple, SO 3-4400. WELLS CaditlacOI3Sm 6bBe,28 T h E t St.. South Orange. '

HAVE YOU BEEN SATISFIEDW ith your HEATING SERVICE

GOOD QUESTION-If Not. . .

Call and T ry

WOOLLEY FUEKO.Eslablithed 1924 ________

12 BURNETT AVENUE MAPLEWOOD

SO 2-7400A N D RELAX

You will bepfeosed

f a P f , ,, ■ f , n■ GOLD’ RING— pearl end 2 tiny diamonds, with guard. Meple- woqrf, Saks Fifth Ave., Short Hills area. Sentimental value. Reward, SO 7-2460.

LAWN MOWERS —* Sales & Service.— sharpened & repaired. Free pick-Lp & delivery. 379- 5222. , ' ■

MISCELLANEOUS

LIGHT TRUCKING > OLD APPLIANCES &

FURNITURE REMOVED CELLARS & ATTICS CLEANED

376-7948

STUDENT CAR INSPECTION SERVICE — $3-15, 379-4363, 7-10 P.M.

SUMMER RENTAL

WILDWOOD CREST; New mod­em apartment, electric kitchen, sleeps, 6 — . month/seeson; ALSO new, modem dormitory room, private entrance, bath, TV, sleeps 4 (prefer working college girls), BOTH 1-block from beech. 762- 8926. .

-£_M PTICg OF INTENTION..—-TAKSNOTICE thet .JUGTOWN— MOUNTAIN 3MOKEHOUSE INC.~

-tfadlno~aI~ JUGTOWN-MCKfNT AIN SMOKEHOUSE tNCvhalTagptfetf-td --thr^TowniWp,’6ommltte«-ofth«Tnwnthlp ofM Alburn for a Plenary Retail Distribution license No. D-7

-fpr prafnlies situitSBTit T206IT21 2 ~ John jLuKenrteav ParRT"

OFFfCERS AND BOARD OF DU- 86eTQHr*FfEr=~—Hfeam-B,- Ely Jr., R.O. Not 2.

Ftemington, N.J. President. _JlidttH H. Ely, R.O. No. 2,

Flemlngtoi). N.J. Secretary........—Lionel A. Jackson Jr.. 64 Tati-" m«dg* Ana., Chatham,. N.J., V/i&e

The names and residence of ill -officers and elljd.irestprjL and ell stockholders holding 10 or-more pereontum of any stock of said corporation arees-folldWs:.- —-—-

Hiram B.'.Ely, Jr., R.D. No. 2, Flemington, N.J. .

Objections, If any, should be made Immediately- in writlnatfl-Mr. . Johrrw. f'rltehard.Township Clerkof tha Township of Millburn._....

JUGTOWN MOUNTAIN SMQK E HO US E INC.

"1206-121 JJohn-F. Kennedy-----Parkway, Millburn Township,

‘ Short Htlle, N.J, * lay 29, June s, '69 . Fee:$16.72

, . NOTICE QF INTENTION Take notice that SHORT HILLS

CLUB trading at gHORT HILLS CLUB, bet applied to the Director of Alcoholic-Beverage Control 1100 Raymond Boulevard, Newark, New Jersey, for-a plenar y r eta il CONSUMPTION license for premises situated at 9-37 LAKE SHORE DRIVE, SHORT HILLS,

Mr. |OFFICERS

President, IB Norwood Ave., Kant Court, Summit, New Jersey 07901.

Mr. John L. Kemmerer, Jr., Vice-President, 10 Stewart Reed, Short Hilly; New Jersey 07078.

Mr, ^Robert Campbell, Jr., Treasurer, 7S South Terr., Short Hills, New Jersey 07078.

Mr. Jdhn B. Stoddert, Jr., ' Road,’ Short

_____ M. Walbrldgs,Assistant Treasurer, 94 Knoilw Road, Short Hills, New Jersey 07078.

BOARD OF GOVERNORSHamilton C. Albaugh, Jr„ 144

Foraet Dr„ Short Hills, N.J.Alexander C. Brown, Jr., 261

Hgtehorn Or.. Short Hills, N.J.John D. Brundage, 50 Stewart

Rd., Short Hills, N.J.Robert Campbell, Jr., 78 South

Terr., Short Hills, NJ.' William 0. deCemp, 11 Barberry

Lane, Short Hills,N-f.Clifford E. Evigler, 288 Hobart

Ave., Short Hills, N.J.W. Thornes P iq u et, 283

Hartihorn Or., Short HIM* N.J.Peter A. Hager, 2 Lake Bp.,

Short Hills, N.J.21 Twin Oak

5tewartRd„Shorf HttlsrN. J;.... Donald A. Macrae, 35 AdamsAve.. Short Hilly, N.J, ; .....- RSBineld— Ft Peerson. 15

. J o h n S rPvrrhtVL.- [ Jr., 14 Jefferson Ave., Short HUM, N.J?"7- 1

John B. stoddart, Jr., 45 North.Bd^ShortllimrUiJj"-*———f~Cove-Wr-9ulltvan,’ 33 .CohlstonRd.. Short Hills, N.J: ' . -----"— ohm M. Walbridge, 94

Knoll wood Rd.JShort HtHs/’N.Jv—*---- Edue- -4-Lc—Warren,— Jr.. 25Conieton Rd., Short Hills, N.J.

Objections, if cnv. should be de immediately, m_ writing to

THE DIRECTOR OF ALCOHOLIC----- ERAGE CONTROL, 1100Raymond Boulevard, Newark, New Jersey.

SHORT HtttSCLUB, Me(Signed! B v :__-

« RGSiRTCAMPBECfcJR.-.........Treesurer ____....

May22; 29; '69 Fee $33.88

, LEGAL NOTICE I - ORDER TO LIMIT- 7

Dated: MAY 2,1969 ESTATE OF CLARA LUELLA

DAY JEFFERY, deceased. Pursuanttothe order of JAMES

E, ABRAMS. Surrogate of the , County of Essex, this dav made i the application of Executors of said Is hereby given to the credltonrof wld deceased to exhibit to the

-subsc r ibere,— under o»th -or srfffrrnation;— their claims . 'and demands against ’the estate- of said deceased within -six month’s from this date, or they will be-forever barred from prosecuting or. recovering the same against the-

Taka notice that Ri , Gentile "" trading a s . Lackawanna Tavern has applied to the Towmhlp Committee of the Township vof M illbu rn for a Renewal of Plenary Retail Consumption license No. C-6‘ for premises situated, at 44 Essex St., Millburn Township, New Jersey. '

Objections, if any, should be made immediately In writing to Mr. John W. Pritchard, Township Clerk of the Townchlp of Millburn.

signed) Roberta V. Gentile.22, 29,'69 - MMay 22, Fee 87.04

NOTICE OF INTENTIONTA KE N O TICE TH AT

PACKARO-BAMBERGER & CO»,IN C , trading aa PACKARD'S WINE AND LIQUOR STORE, has a p p lie d to the Townchlp Committee of the Township of Millburn for a Plenery Retail Distribution License for premises situata&at 261 Millburn Avenue,’ Mlllbuflf N.J.

OFFICERSFrank W. Packard, 95 Temple

Ave., Hackensack, N.J., President.Andrew J. Collier, 47 Echo

Ridge Rd., Upper Saddle River, N .J.i First Vice-President and

Peter F. Packard, 280 Prospect Ave., Hackensack, N.J., Second Vice-President and Secretary.

John W. Packard. 266 Next Day HIM Court, Englewood, N.J., Third .Vice-President and Aset. Trees.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS v Prank. W. Peckertf, 95 Temple Ave., Hackensack, NJ.—

p80 Pro,p*et---- John W. Packard. 256f»»xrDav-iHIH Court. Endlawood. N.J..’’ ^ p aTD CKHOLOgRB ’ ..

' Frank W.-Paekard, 95 Temple' -AvPujiaEkansack, N.J. , _

I ’ ..ruirntSy V Bcrn P f f f r ^ srTTt^ixi-,.j4ad8ehsack, N.J. -

' W. Packard, Trustee for i

Hackensack, NJ,. LFrank Wr-Fackaid, liuslBu rui"

Pater F. Packard, 95 Temple Ave., "Hackensack, N,4t

''Objections, if any, should be ■ made immediately In writing to John W. Prtlchard , Township CTerk ’ of.the Township of Mlllburn. N J r

-----PACK A R D-B AMBERGER-’8id o ;, In c .------

630 Mck, N.J.» 5 ’69 . Fee $22.44

SUMMIT AND ELIZABETH TRUST COMPANY"

— COL EMATTBURKE BOURNE & NQLL, Attorneys 382 Springfield Avenue v Summit, N.J. -May 8. 15,22, 29, June,5,

Fe^ $24.00

NOTICE OF INTENTION _ ...., TAKE NOTICE _lh»l .SHORT HfLLS CATERERS. INC., a, corporation of the State of New Jersey, has applied to the Township

-of Millburn" for- Plenary Retail Consumption License No. C-7 for premises located at 610 Morris Turnpike, Millburn, New Jersey.

The names and residences of alt officers and directors are asfollows:'....... '

Ben Bienstock, president and director, 450 West End Ave., New

Joseph SchWarHTVice-president." ictor:. 63-61 Yallowitona

Blvd„ Forest Hllle, N.Y,

secretary-treaso 611 Morris. Tpk", Springfield,

The name* end residences oi stockholders holdinj t0% $>r rf of the stock are as foflotvsT ’

----- A net ole Trachtenberg, iMorris Tpk., Springfield, N.J.

- Objections, if any, should "made immediatelyTn- wlting JOITfrW, Pritchard, Township cierk "

’ of the Township of ‘‘‘'liBihiwekiPiid SHORT HILLS CATERERS,

-TNC. -

. NOTICE OF INTENTION — Tska netted that Anthony ,Pepe

trading as Pape's Market has applied fo theTownship Cemmittee of tha Township of Millburn for a Limited WetMl.

Millburn, N... Objections, if any, should-be

made immediately in writing to Ijfr. John W. Ptltcfwd; Township Clerk of tha Township of Millburn.

ANTHONY PEPE May 22,29,-69 , f e e $9.16

NOTICE OF INTENTION taluk n m t that Guy ft.

Bosworth Post No. 140, American Legion, Department of New Jersey, Inc. has applied to the Township Committee of the Township of Millburn for a Club ltcense for premises situated at 200-204 Main Street, Mltlbura New Jersey.

The names end residences of the officers end.the bffiest they fillrasftatlvety arses follows;---- -■

Commander William T. TsaNa 9 Shqrt HMe Ctr.; Millburn.

1st Vic* Andy Hvisdo, 19 Backer Tar., irvlngtoh. . ’

2nd Vic* Norman Meyo, 21 Meeker PI., Millburn.

3rd. Vice, Joseph Connellev/ Henry S t. Maplewood.

Adjutant, Homer J. Wright, 11 Canterbury Lan* Short Hilt* .

Finance, O ff,, Robert E. Marshall Jr., 17 Haddonfleld Rd.,Short H I » * - ; -------------------1

Service ON., Milton Freimen, 809 Wyominfl Ave., Mlllbura

Sgt. et Arms, - Thomas Eakley, Millburn Ave., Mlllbura

Chaplain, Henry J . Fsense, 13 Meeker PI., MIHbura

Bsord of Governors ‘ Ib an e se , 931

Wyoming Ave., Millburn.>letry Heftmen, 31 Berkley Rd„

MlllburaRaces Ceralla, 13 Fern Ave.,

Chatham.-Edvyprd Gerwick, 22 Ocean’St.,

Millburn.Owen Cooper, 8 Oakdale Ave.,

Millburn. .. _______________Henry Faenze, T3 Meeker PI.,

Millburn.

natteJramociisti in writing to Mr. irW. Pritchard: Township-Clerk

or the Township of Millbura - __GUYLJB^jOSW ORTH F O S r

NO. 140, —A ME RJ C AN - L f

"DEPARTMENT . _ ‘OF NEW JERSEY, INC.

----- (Signed)........................

ESTATE of S. WARREN8 LEE. deceased;

......Pursuant to the order of JAMESE^ ABRAMS" "Surrogate of the County of Eesex, this day made on the. application of the undersigned. Executor of tarcTdeceased, notice it hereby giver) to,the creditors of said deceased to exhibit to_ the subsc riber, under oath or

:thls data. or thay, will b«Lforever Jrarrad from - prosecuting - o r recovering the same against the'

, subscriber.SUMMIT AND ELIZABETH

TRUST COMPANY BOURNE & NOLL, Attorneys 382 Springfield Avenue Summit, N.J.May S, 15, 22, 29, June 5 ------r - Fee $24.00

NOTICE O INTENTION T ak e netlee that EAST

o r a n g e -m i l l e u r n GOLFCLUB Res Applied to th Committee of the TtMillburn for a Club ____pramlaes iltuatad at 440 Parsonage Hill Road, Mlllbura, New Jersey. ’

EAST ORANGE 1 MILLBURN GOLF CLUB

OFFICERS AND TRUSTEES

the Tqtvnshlp Township of b license for

65 Glanwood Avenue, East Orange.B yard M, Pawaon, Vice

President, 33 Byron Road, Short Hllle.

Shirley Braun, Treasurer, 132 North Arlington Ave., East Orange.

’ B. O. Burgl, Secretary, 226 North Arlington Ave., East Orange.

MEMBERS OF BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Charles Paulson, 80 Canoe Brook Road, Short Hllle.

Donald S . Fuerth, 377 S. Harrison St., East Orange.

James J. Parrish, 38 Telford St., East Orange.

Theodore L. Widmayer, 96 Whitney Road, Short Hllla.

Objections, if any, should be made Immedlataly ln wrltlngto.Mr. John Wi Pritchard, Township Clark of theTownship of Mlllbura.

(SignM) BENEDICT Q. BURGI,, Secretary

May 22, 29, '69 Pea $16.28

LEGAL NOTICE NATIONAL MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS

SOCIETY UPPER , NEW JERSE Y CHAPTER

Multiple ijifletfrtit Snrlety, ! 'rp.«r_ -MlT.’-J-. Chapter' Year endlrtff December 31, 1968. r Belance at of January 1.1968

Income-Jars «;2 gr0 r

DISB U RS EM E NTS85,147.96

Supporting Sai Natidnal Retei Program

Total

1969May 22,29, ’6

LEGAL NOTICE____SALE OF STOCK OF

~—SONAP ASSOCIATES, INC, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN

that pursuant to aij order of the - Board of' DiriKtdrt, and in pursu­ance qf the statute in such case

.made and-provided;- th e under-- signed, as treasurer of Bonsp Asso­ciates, Inc., will sell at public auc- tion on tha 2nd day of Junj), at ten ofclggk in the forenoon, et the of; fices of the Company, 60 Rowland Avenue. Caldwell, New Jersey, fifty (501 shares of the capital stock of said Company, standing in -the name of Michael Piaz20l», dr so many of said shares as will pay

.870,00000—being, the-amount^ol unpaid assessments on said fifty

which essasement tha purchaser mUtt forthwith pay oh each share In addition to the amount of his

BONAF ASSOCIATES, INC. By JOSEPH BONANNO,

. Treasurer Dated: May 12,1969 Simandl, Leff, Itzikman

& KraemerAttorneys '20 Evergreen PlaceEast Oranga. New Jersey 07018May 15, 22, 29/69 Fee$29.04

. ORDER TO LIMITCited: APRIL 34, IBM

E ST A tC OF PATRICK FAR-' RELLY.decaaaed. ,Pursuant to the order** JAMES

E. ABRAMS, Surrogate of the County of Essex, this ddy made on the pppUcetlon of the undersigned, Administratrix of eald deceased, no­tice Is -hereby given to Bis creditor* of sold deceased to exhibit to the subscriber, under oath or affirma­tion , -thglr claim* end dements, against th* estate of seld deceeaed Within six month* from this data,, o r thay will be forever barred from! prosecuting or recovering tha same against th* subscriber. -

/ • MARIE PHILLIPSBERNARD A. REILLY, Attorney 11 CommaresSbieot Newark, N.J. - '"t. ,May 1,8,15,22, 29,'69

Fee $24.00 «

IF IT’SREMODELINGRESIDENTIAL /IN D U STRIAL^ INSTITUTIONAL

S S B

25 Y E A R S E X P E R I E N C E

STATE HIGHWAY 10 o WHIPPANY, N. J. “ TO 7*1122 thru 1125 or SO 3*2000

| FROM PLANNING TO HAPPY COMPLETION

ADDITIONS • BASEMENTS • BATHROOMS JMENS # DORMERS • KITCHENS GARAGES o PATIOS • PORCHES

AND BUILDIN0 SPECIALTIES.L E/iOERS ANE>GUTTERS s \MINOOWS<9 I wninC|:;

• 1166 by Hilt A Reed Carp.

eld, M,j! j.a p p u a n c e

P E M O O y T STHIS YEAR YOU HAVE A CHOICE

THE NEW DEMOCRATIC COALITIONIC O N S C E K t OF H E DEMOCRATIC P i m |

1 5 " CAN REPRESENT YOU

ELECT YOUR NEIGHBORS AS COUNTYCOHMITTfflim r

V O T S1 5 C & 1 6 C

AT THE JUNE 3rd PRIMARY

1 Feld for by New Damoeratlc Coalition, Harry Turner, Chairman

CHAIN WIDE FLOOR SAMPLE

iw

cornu s i e kiiTHI FAMOUS BRANDS

t w c r t t A S H t r

ibj, te prior sole! Ns Oeoleral One O fT kindl

10 CU. Ft. CROSS-TOP FREEZE^| K Co. Ft? FTgsFPr&ffT-Sep. Freezer $289 $2381 12 Cu. FT. Hotpoinl, Auto defrost Spec" $1991 17 Cu. Ft. Kelvinatof, Frost Free- -$289 $258 .I i l Cu. Ft. Side by Side Kelvinator $489 $3981 IS Cu. Ft. Bottom freezer, Deluxe $315 $2 8| 22 Cu. Ft. Duplex, Frost Free . - $479 $4281 . 15-€u7-FLrffeezef,"59& lb. capacity—:"~$pwe""~ $215

Comp- ; 5ALE1 eeTtopouse OuatCytte. ^o.' Spec. $168| Hotpoinf2Sdeed, 161b., allpotcelain /' $P«c. $198I | Whirlpool 2 speed 4 cycle mag filter. $248. $21.4;1 j Hamilton Gas diyer, deluxe • - -Spec. $188

|“ WItirlpobTgasilryer, 2 speed" - Spec. r $ « r

Comp. - SALEGal wiCTj deluxe gas— $198 _Admiral 30” elec, bis oven * "$188. $148

- Hotpoint 20” elec. Spec. $128 .Tappan 36” deluxe - $fT8

Comp.S39T

GENERAL ELECTR)C;PortabliStefeo

Complete |*t set styling

REFRIGERATOR

, _ $ 9 8

P&NTAttEDISHWASHER

* U 9

Upright ft* -FAMOUS MAKE

FREEZER

* 1 4 8

FROST FREEREFRIGERATOR

* 2 3 8

HOTPOINTW A S H E R

* 1 4 9all porcelain LW802,

FRIGIDAIREd r y e r

* 1 1 9Moctel PAN

__ 2 spe e<L2-_cyc l_e .WHIRtrPOOL

w A s m e r

* 1 5 8 .~ Autoinarnr-3

T loinctv CALORICG A S

R A N G E

20 cu* ft*. . SlDE-by-SIDE---- -

REFRIGERATOR

* P 8

PORTA BLEr c a t o :

* 8 8^ AM/FM Radltr ~ ~ ~

CONSOLE

STEREO

* 1 9 8„ , 6 apeakera -

--- --—30~inch —-rAUTOMATIC

ELEC. RANGE. *Peluxe l

30 inch_ t&ELF-CLEANING_

ELEC, u m

* 1 9 8

PORTABLE

1 9 ” TV

* 1 3 0

iU Y NOW !NO CASH DOWN i m i o f i w

ALL STORES OPEN ALL DAY MEMORIAL DAY:;;

AIR CONDITIONERS

T TGIBSON V------mCHRYSLER HOTPOINT WEST INCHOUSEFEODERS------ADMIRAL

ALL STORES OPEN ALtrDAYMEMORIAL DJY *

SCHICK Facial Vi SAUNA

m

8 DISHWASHERS 4 Compl. I SALE' 'Admiral undercouhter $198 u eWestinghouse eyele . $298 $260Famous Make Portable $148 r

A U STORES O PEN A l l D A Y M E M O R IA L D A Y

Comp. S A LT7. Fa«fous4$^rtable"~.-^^^ ;%ee^ JJU L—MotorolaTS CMSole deluxe S $pec. $178

- 4i€^^^0f«5l9eeirtefflpe»— $pee.Zenith 18” portable . ^ Spec. $130 2295 sqHflrdeluxe consoler

_ _.... twin spkrs. $538 $498 rRCA 295 sq. in.newest model W Spec— ~$89t295 sq. in. consolMend wired $569 $488

* Westinghouse 295 sqi-rnriowboy ~ >■--------------

$650 ;r $44« - . ’

GENERAL ELECTRIC ^HAIR SETTER

mPORTABLE FAN

STARTS TODAY . . ENDS SAT. S_P.U. TH IM ’S A BRICK CHURCH STORE NEAR YOU.

MORRISTURNPtKE ^ SHTUfI HILLSj a j

OPEN WEEKDAYS 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M.-SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.* PLENTY OF FREE PARKING