· {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-,...

14
{complete Local News Astride All The Activities ( ,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper ,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Our FBmily Of Over 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable Market For All Our Advertiser! WINGS OF LIFE „, II I IAN POLLAK ., i dry say Is an Ideal ,m Df'i'd nn talent or ,. I,I work with a brush , HI have a wonderful i you've taken a brush i io reproduce some- I'.mvass. even without ;.. siirrrss, your hand ;.)!! to try again. .lie staylnR In, have read and there Isn't ,vi> to do. you can i;n t That's the advice ; ..rived from ft friend , ;us hobby seriously. h<> explained, has .' ITP. becausryou can -rvrr you have a few ,nd stop whenever you : ume. In bad weather paint Indoors and in in r you can work out- as well. * v i day, while passing , ,ui ing painters' sup- niiLi hit us. We strolled .MII pricing materials needs for a start. A (•numerated, many :... nnd then figuring •aid the total would J49.50. We quietly ;• promising to return. « : down the street, we ,:u a Five and Dime I!IC "back to school" .'.r noticed painters' .tiicl without batting -.:<• made a purchase. I.IIIT colors, etc. Total r.i paint presented a . We .started on repro- n illume. No go. Then ::; n a desk and then . Ml items looked like : from Mars and you :. n recognize any of j;.c enthusiasm slowly ml leaving everything •- k. we decided to take i; .-^hut-eye. * : > i than we closed our '.irted dreaming about :.i.vs We were one of the •.- ;ind showing begln- :,i experienced artists •wiiis: done. Instead of w somehow worked •:n:<- statue. A beautiful •i standing on a pedes- '• ilked In-quietly and :•: the Ice box. sat in desk munching a We were «t»rtled by loud laugh, "Pop." •:d you suddenly go inquired. ','What Is '.'v painting on the lined to Junior that T.eroly trying to sec <!it c o l o r s , which •t'ti to paint a pic- that is hanging in in The explanation ::i. but he added: i use water colors You gotta get real our hand |fias NOT to paint again. We ' when we want to "in the brush-off "i cold dty. we'll <l »t house painting. •* sorely In need of We may nave better CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1957 PRICE EIOHT CENTS Flu Battle gchoo i Boar( j Aroused Is Mapped in Borough Over $600 Vandalism Bill; Parents Warned IHTUH 1 will In* (iivon To Ksscntiul Workers j Hero, YaiTlieski Suva CIIAI'TKIl 1'KKSKNTATION: Scene at fete of Boy Scout Troop 81 when charter was presented. Shown from left to ricrlit are Assistant Seoutmas.er Carl Zicgler, Scoutmaster William Comha, Wil- Hev. Dr. Andrew llarsnnyi and Postmaster I.rstrr Sabo, liistilutinniil representative. liam Hannni | Legionnaires Set j CliarterGiven\F'\rst Presbyterian For Convention) To Troop 84 Lists Activities At Ceremony CARTERET -Commander Jo-i spph Pletterer of Carteret Post No. 263. The American Legion.: will lead a local group of Legion- : naires lo the 39th Annual Con- vention of The American Legion to be held at Atlantic City. ' The temporary headquarters of the past will be located at the Madison Hotel on Illinois Avenue from Saturday, September 14. to Thursday, September 19. Local Legionnaires me invited to visit. Accompanying Comander Plet- terer will be Walter W, Wadiak, Clifford C. Cutter, Thomas A. Jakeway, James J. Yacullo, and several other members who will remain only for the day of the parade, Monday. Francis T Tomezuk, command- er-elect, is serving on the Uni- formed Contests Committee which! is supervising the elimination and final contests in Junior »n'd senior drum corp pageants., color guard drills. Junior and senior band conceits, drill teams, ritual teams, choral groups, and parade march- ing groups. Mr. Tomezuk has also been named alternate delegate by the department executive committee. Mrs. Harry Gleckner. who has completed a year as National Executive Committeewoman for New Jersey, and President-elect Mrs. Clifford Cutter are to attend the Auxiliary'Convention. Principal speaker at the con- vention will be FBI Chief J. Ed- gar Hoover. The coveted Ameri- can Distinguished Service Medal will be awarded to Bishop Fulton J. Sheen and General Mark Clark. Vice Commander John Kaden will be in charge of thepost ac- i tivities at home during the con- vention Clarence McGillis announced that the post will have a sign painted on its billboard in West Carteret. Joseph CCHJ announced that 1958 dues may be sent to the ad- jutant or finance officer. While tfcey are S3.50 now, they will CARTERET Boy Scout Troop 84, sponsored by the Free Magyar Reformed Church re- ceived its charter at an impres- sive ceremony in Bethlen Hall Tuesday niRht. In accepting the charter, Rev. Dr. Andrtw Harsanyi said it was a great honor for him, lauded scouting for its religious and in- spirational value and told of how scouting provides the basic groundwork for character build- ing of youth. Nathan Hale School Principal Joseph Comba, principal speak- er, told of his interest in .scout work, cited how scouting is help- Ing to prevent Juvenile delin- quency and urged the continued aid of parents. Another feature of the affair was the appointment of Carl Ziegler as assistant scoutmaster. The badge was presented to'him by William Bannon of the Rari- tan Council Boy Scouts of America. William Comba is scoutmaster of Troop 84. Sunday services at the First Presbyterian Church will be held at 8:30 A.M. and 11 A.M. with both services in Eng- lish. For the convenience of pa- rents with small children there Is a nursery during the 11 A.M. service. This Sunday, the sermon topic will be Now Hear This. This is the second sermon in the series of Christian Commitment. The theme for this Sunday's sermon is that a Christian will seek to over- come personal weaknesses, prac- tices, and habits which are un- christian. Mrs. Earl Walter will direct the Senior choir in the hymn The Lord Is My Shepherd. Mrs. Joyce Jones will sing the solo They That Wait Upon the Lord. CARTERET - I'll e Boiid of Health has taken action to set U;J ; machinery to combat what il ex- ! perts to be a major outbreak of Asiatic flu this fall or winter. Health omcrr Michael Yar- cheski revealed todiiv that the board lias purchased protective vaccine for borough employes in essential services. The vaccine arrived this wcik. Amorn those who will receive shots are members of the police department, firemen, volunteer firemen, first aid squad, post office empTfiypsv nntt other essential workers. The primary aim, said Mr. Yar- cheski is to prevent needed serv- ices, such as medicine, fire and police from coming to a standstill if an epidemic should break out. Asiatic flu is regarded as a relatively mild type of influenza by health authorities. Its symp- toms are the same as other types of inbuenzn and the victim win- not distinguish it from any other type. "Iiet's hope that no epidemic hit* Carteret" Mr. Yarcheski said. He hopes to obtain technical assistance from the state in identi- fying and controlling an outbreak in the borough. The flu is described as a re- latively mild but highly contagious disease. Nearly All Shore Crssl ;Public- Property Homes Already Occupied Instruction Hits All laxpayers CARTERET—When all homos in theShore Crest development are occupied. Carteret will have an 'additional population of 1,- 000 persons, It was said today. Developers of the housing nren said this week that most of the homes already are completed HTTCt Occupied.' Some 25 more homes are to be finished up, Last week borough council approved the installation of street lights in that area. Mall already is being delivered. The past 10 years have seen a great influx of new residents. Somr M0 homes have Rone up In the Parkview development and snm-s (if homes in West Car- ten I uhd other parts nf Ciirteret There is every indication iha; Carteivt will pass the 20.000 mark m Tropttln+rrm when -the- 1 1060 ollii'lat census is tuken by the U. S. Census Burruu. The 1953 census listed CartmM's olllciiil population at i:;,o;'l us compmvd witli ll,97(i in liHO. Carteret PTA Units Will Begin Sessions Next Week CARTERET —This borough's Parent Teacher Associations are making plans for resumption of their season's activities next Season's Program Mapped by Lions CARTERET — An ambitious program is being planned for the season. Steve Fedlam president of the Carteret Lions Club told the membership at the first dinner of the meeting held Tuesday night The Washington-Nathan Hale unit of which Mrs. Arthur Stu- par is president Is slated to meet September 18. At that time the Over 300 Enroll In Adult Classes new teachers will be introduced to the parents. Tin 1 Cleveland-Columbus group has set September 17 as the date for its opening meeting. It is expected thai the High School PTA may likely meet September 18 for Its opening session. JA Achievement Advisors Named Church School convenes at 9:3.0 i i n t he CJl 'P sy Cam ?' i A.M. with classes for all ages. The curriculum Is class graded and bible centered. There Is ah Adult Class that will begin this Sunday morning. The nursery class be- gins with those who have reached the age of three. Sunday after- noon at 2:30, the Junior High Fellowship will meet, and at 7 Mr. Fedlam said the executive boar* will meet next Tuesday night at his home. At that time committees will be appointed and the year's program outlined. Aid for the blind will one of the club's projects as in the past. Walter Pavlik gave an account CARTERET — Over three hun- dred persons enrolled in courses at the Carteret School of Adult Education this week. The regis- tration was held on Monday and Tuesday evenings at the Carteret High School. Because of the bad weather on Tuesday, the Board of Trustees decided to continue CARTERET S I x Carteri't industrial executives will serve as Achievement company ad- CARTERET Aroused by an orgy nf vandalism »t the pub- lic school during the summer months, the Board of Education nave stem warnings that parents of youngstcra teanonslblt Iot-Jt will be held fully responsible and will have to pay for the damage. Members of the Board, at their meeting Wednesday night were highly disturbed by the tact that they had to approve bills amount- Ins to $600 to cover glazier bills. The greatest destruction was at the Columbus School, where new windows casting some 4550 had to be Installed. About $50 damage was done at the Washington School. It was the largest glaas destruction bill to be met by the board. It was pointed out that additional glazier bills are flue, namely for a dozen windows at the Cleveland. 8 or 9 In the High School and five In the Nathan Hale School. The first warning was sounded by Thomas Deverln. He was quickly Joined by George Hell. He said It is the duty of parents to impress upon their children that destruction of public property cannot be tolerated. John M. Kollbas said that under a school law parents can be held responsible for the damage. vlsers, when two now JA outfits ^o! Inrtlrcc t'y- nc sald . the children into operation. Advisers at the U. S. Metals Refining Company plant will be Donald Bachinan, Peter Pnnek and Stephen Turk. At Westvaco to accept registration for courses j Products Division, Food Machinery this coming Monday and Tues- day, September 16 and 17. This coming MondRy and Tues- day will mark the opening of class .sessions which will run for the Protestants Plan Church Council CARTERET — Plans are under way to form a Carteret Protestant Council of Churches. ; An initial meeting was held at of the Gospel of Mark chapter by the First Presbyterian Chi'ich on ' chapter followed by a time of fel- Monday niRht at which plans were] lowship andprayer. The associa- ter Fellowship will meet. Monday evening at 7:15 P.M. the building committee will meet to discuss the church site and plans for the new church. All members of the committee are urged to be present. On Wednesday evening the Evangelistic Association will meet! , ^ ~ at 8 P.M. There will be a study] Yacht Club HejlhlS of the national convention of Lions i next ten weeks through November, Clubs in San Francisco. He said 26. Mr. Edwin 8. Quin, Director I scholarships the con- , u , „,,,, .,!,..„„,, u . u .v.»w— ^ , relations and public si Corporation, Frank M. Faff. Ber- nard P. Leber and Raymond J. Shaffrey. Both advisers and achievers will be singled out at the end of the season for awards—cash • and for the youngsters course In hu- apporturie occasion. A movie on soda making and S distribution was shown by a re- presentative of the Hoffman Bev- erage Company who also distrib- uted samples of the company's new product. the Junior Achievement of Union office at the High School regard- ing the Adult School and It is expected that the total enrollment j County Inc. which will have a to- by next Tuesday will be greater j tal of 25 JA outfits outlined for the formation of such a Council. Represented at the initial session were Hungarian Reformed Church, First Baptist Church, Calvary Bap- list Church and the First Presby- terian Church. A committee was named to ob- tain information concerning the tlon comprises those men and women who are willing to make evangelistic calls in the communi- ty. Plans are now being made for the Visitation Evangelism Week. October 20-24 that is being car- ried on by the churches that sup- ported the Billy Graham Crusade. Fall Activities lms WLCK *'" De hv a I increased to $4.00 on November 1. ^ ^ protcslant churcncs t0 join ! Steve Stck reported that the ! Legion's car raffle is how in its setting up procedure anil by-laws. ' meeting at the Polo Grounds on An invitation Is being extended" Reformation Day afternoon. The Crusade Choir and Rev. Bijly the Council. Graham will be on hand to lead this service. final stages and urges! the mem- h bers to cooperate final few weeks. fully in the The next meeting will be held soon at the Calvary Church, with the date to be announced later. j y o||f/( f j(t( , ders pj, m <,.irW« will Hold Annual Sitpin'r Oct. Horougli Sells Hand ; \ i) Issue at 4.2 Percent To Attend Conclave CARTERET — A regular meet- ing of the Carteret Yacht Club was held Wednesday evening in the Borough Hall. Plans were outlined for the fall activities which were officially be- sun yesterday and will continue every Tuesday and Thursday eve- ning until further notice. The purchase of some 600 feel/ of 1 %2. inch copper tubing., which, is needed for the water line the road to the club house approved. Henry and Stanluy Gorecki, members of the club have volun- than that of last year. While some courses are fairly well filled already, additional registrants will be accepted ii the following: Labor Relations, Sew- ing, Shop Math, Steno, "Getting The Most Out Of Your Dollar," Choral Singing and First Aid. The registration fee for all courses is $3.00. Persons who are interested in registering this Monday and Tuesday evenings are requested to do so prior to 7:30 P.M. Regis- trants for classes being held on Monday will proceed immediately to class. Ceramics As was announced In the course brochure of the Carteret School of Adult Education, ndditlonal pourses will be offered If ten or more persons are interested. Be- cause of popular demand, a course teered their services and equip- ] iu ceramics will be offered in ad- ment to install the line. i dition to the regular courses out- Members will meet at the club j lined in the brochure. The ce- The •'•'• "1 Rabbi Lewis Bren- 1 •'' day evening. lulll| Uee will make per- to the people of the CARTERET — Co-Weds of the First Presbyterian Church have I set Saturday. October 19 as the i date lor their fifth annual supper. Thtre will be two servings, the , first at 5 P. M- and th« second at United | 6 o'clock in the church basement. for 1957 I The Co-Weds are iilanninft lo Appeal it Skirted CARTERET At a special meet- ing Tuesday night the Bjorough Council sold $1,864,000 of' bonds to finance the storm and sanitary sewer nnd equipment improvement associates, of New York. It bid was 100.099 for obligations to the children of Korea A Hallowe'en social will be held I se Monday, CMober 9. regular merlin; will bf day, SepUtuber 17. 1858 to 1988, have CARTERET Five officers of the Live Y'er Youth Club will at- tend an officers training confe- rence this week-end at the Pater- MII Y.M.C.A. Camp, Silver Lake, Stockholm. They are; President, Olga Kiel- man: vice president, Lillian ElkO; secretary, Mary Lou Burke; his- torian, ^oyce A. Kent and chap- lain, Joyce Greely. Each of theofficers will attend lectures and discussions pertain- house this Tuesday evening. iContinued on Page Eight) The companies will meet weekly for work at the Merck &. Co. train- ing center in Railway; U. S. Metals and Westvaco at Carteret and the JA business center In Elizabeth. G, Ross Murrell, general su- perintendent of Esso's Bayway Refinery in Linden discussed the program with the future advisers at a recent training the refinery. The two Carteret meeting :;t firms have been sponsoring JA units here for the past several years. PLAN CARD PARTIES CARTERET — The St. Mark's Church will hold two card parties in the near future with the first one scheduled for October 11. sponsored by the Altaii Guild and the second slated for November 8, sponsored by the Daughters of St. Mark's. -.Both parties will be held at the parish house. Services this Sunday at the church will be at 8 and i):30 A.M. with Holy Communion. waste their parents money, be- cause they arc the taxpayers who have to foot the bills. He said a light is being Installed in the rear'of the Washington School to offset vandalism. Mrs. Alys Sheridan said that parents must Impress upon their • children the disadvantage of de- struction. Adam Szymborskl suggested that a letter be sent to Chief George Sheridan urging frequent checks of .school* at night. Award Contracts The board awarded a contract for the paving of the Louts Street area to the Drass Construction Company on Its low bid of $3,479.- 08, The contract for the paving of the boiler at the Washington School was given ^o the New Jer- sey . Boiler Co., East Orange on iUs bid of $850. Joseph Belafsky, 50 Heald Street applied for a position aa teacher of English in the foreign born class. Permission was granted for the High School Band to take part in the parade of the holy name societies In Perth Amboy, Septem- ber 29. The request was made by St. Ellas Holy Name. U. S. Metals Refining Company was granted theuse of the High School auditorium for a Christ- iContinued on Pngc Eighti next i been r'i-oflered by the syndicate at | me to their office. The conference j from 2:85 per cent ] highlights are: cracker barrel cunt- 1 ' 1 " 1 '!••• of the (1 ve of Yom made at both the committee are \ c h e n k 1 n . Mrs. j ( '"n, Mlpa Floryce i Louis Brown, Mn. 111 and Mn. Lewis Tells U.S. Students: Check College Plans Now I - k nn. A». ..or..- lilnh : m1 M are Mn Lpuls : M'-s. aarwn Oruhln "" u ' wis Brenner *»iat- ''"'iiinittee. 'OH "KEAKFA8T _„_, Naine Joseph's Church will " '"iirnunlon breakfast ! lh the MhOol hall fol- " A M. Maw. Walter ls 'Unit-man and John will be CARTERET|-Youngsters be- ginning high school will uiHkc life easier (or themselves if they keep college requirements in mind right from the start. Even youv freshman year is not too early, according to School Superintendent Edwin S, Quin. "The. time to be practical about college is not during the last half oi your senior year in high school" he said. "It should be no lat«i than the first year of high. The decision should be made tlitn ut> to whether college, is ut least a possibility." he milled By the sophomore year, high school students (Should make up their minds about the type of collestr they,would like to at- tend—whether technical, .aca- demic or specialized, he declared. As preparation for college, Mr. Quin, added, high school days can be spent most profit- ably in checking on reading skills and comprehension, and improving these where it Is fuund necessary. "Learn to concentrate" lie advised teen-agers. "Practice covering a good deal of materi- al in » *|io|t " sessions, officer's training, model panel, advisor's meeting, county meeting and speakers on youth activities. The conference Is being held to help the youth leaders in direct- ing thier clubs, Dinner on Thursday For Woman's Club CARTERET — T he Carteret Woman's Club will hold its open- ing dinner, Thursday evening, September IB, at 7 P. M. at the Elizabeth Carteret Hotel, Eliz- abeth. Members will meet at Cutter's Oarage at 6 P. M. [o attend the dinner. Reservation close Satur- day, September 14, and maybe with the CO*chairmen Mrs. Ti nilly or Mi's John L,ukao Sacred Heart PTA Outlines Program CARTERET Several affairs are being planned by Sacred J Heart Parish School PTA. A cake I sale will be held October 6 with' Mrs. John Krissak as chairman. A card party is scheduled for No- vember 4 with Mrs. Andrew Wasco and Mrs. John Dzlak, co- chairmen, and a children's Christ- mas party December 15. Sister Mary Scholastic* new superior. was introduced at the l«ist meeting. J Three new members were wel- comed into the oreanizatlqn. They are Mrs John Mnlch, Mrs.Charles Hiu.vso und Mrs. Leonard Sabo. Several members of the local ;:roup will attend the annual con- wsn of parochial school PTAs October 14 in Trenton, It was an- nounced. Reservations for trafiu- portation may be| made by qon- tuctiuu Mrs. Ethel chamra, presi- dent, 136 Jersey Street. AS Allll.l'S KK<ilSl'KKKl): S< iiir shiuvs .it the lejtstiutuiu lor Adult Srliuul In »luit s uon. Mure. Hum }U0 li;nc i-[inill;il mil MVIT.II I IIIIIM » .ur still "lull NIniwii liulu lilt (u 11r; I t t.iliinj; iifisliatioii. Mis, Muiciice liriia Ailiim Si.vnititniki, .Wei *il y.s S i n liilan, J'lluin si H u n aiul Miss Ihigniiii Rued. .-lUinllHb in it-di jlr Diuitilil tiacliin.UI 41)4 Kicliiuit A Hrttil Plan Jubilee Fete For Father Hundiqk CARTERET — A testimonial lia i«i net In honor of Rev. John lliimjiak. pastor of St. Demetrius' UkiHlnlan Church is being planned for Sunday, October 20. The affair win honor Father Hundiak for Ijis service as pastor «>f the church for a fluarter of a century. Trustees and members of the executive board will meet Monday nit!lit to plan fur the affair in which all the organizations of the will

Transcript of  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-,...

Page 1:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

{complete Local NewsAstride All The Activities

(,f The Town With YourHome-Town Paper

,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22

Top Advertising ResultsOur FBmily Of Over 9,000 Reader*

Is A Valuable Market ForAll Our Advertiser!

WINGSOF

LIFE„, II I IAN POLLAK

., i dry say Is an Ideal,m Df'i'd nn talent or,. I,I work with a brush, HI have a wonderfuli you've taken a brushi io reproduce some-I'.mvass. even without

;.. siirrrss, your hand• ;.)!! to try again.

.lie staylnR In, have •• read and there Isn't

,vi> to do. you cani;nt That's the advice;..rived from ft friend, ;us hobby seriously.

h<> explained, has.' ITP. becausryou can-rvrr you have a few,nd stop whenever you: ume. In bad weatherpaint Indoors and inin r you can work out-• as well.

* •

v i day, while passing, ,ui ing painters' sup-niiLi hit us. We strolled.MII pricing materialsneeds for a start. A(•numerated, m a n y

:... nnd then figuring•aid the total wouldJ49.50. We quietly

;• promising to return.«

: down the street, we,:u a Five and Dime• I!IC "back to school"

.'.r noticed painters'.tiicl without batting

-.:<• made a purchase.I.IIIT colors, etc. Total

r.i paint presented a. We .started on repro-n illume. No go. Then

::; n a desk and then. Ml items looked like: from Mars and you:. n recognize any ofj;.c enthusiasm slowly• ml leaving everything•- k. we decided to takei; .-^hut-eye.

• • *

: > i than we closed our• '.irted dreaming about:.i.vs We were one of the•.- ;ind showing begln-

:,i experienced artists•wiiis: done. Instead ofw somehow worked

•:n:<- statue. A beautiful•i standing on a pedes-

'• ilked In-quietly and:•: the Ice box. satin desk munching aWe were «t»rtled byloud laugh, "Pop."•:d you suddenly goinquired. ','What Is

'.'v painting on the

lined to Junior thatT.eroly trying to sec<!it c o l o r s , which

•t'ti to paint a pic-• that is hanging in

in The explanation::i. but he added:

i use water colors• You gotta get real

our hand |fias NOTto paint again. We

' when we want to"in the brush-off

"i cold dty. we'll<l »t house painting.•* sorely In need ofWe may n a v e better

CARTERET, N. J., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1957 PRICE EIOHT CENTS

Flu Battle g c h o o i B o a r ( j ArousedIs Mappedin Borough Over $600 Vandalism

Bill; Parents WarnedIHTUH1 will In* (iivonTo Ksscntiul Workers jHero, YaiTlieski Suva

CIIAI'TKIl 1'KKSKNTATION: Scene at fete of Boy Scout Troop 81 when charter was presented.Shown from left to ricrlit are Assistant Seoutmas.er Carl Zicgler, Scoutmaster William Comha, Wil-

Hev. Dr. Andrew llarsnnyi and Postmaster I.rstrr Sabo, liistilutinniil representative.liam Hannni

| Legionnaires Set j CliarterGiven\F'\rst PresbyterianFor Convention) To Troop 84 Lists Activities

At CeremonyCARTERET -Commander Jo-ispph Pletterer of Carteret PostNo. 263. The American Legion.:will lead a local group of Legion-:

naires lo the 39th Annual Con-vention of The American Legionto be held at Atlantic City. '

The temporary headquarters ofthe past will be located at theMadison Hotel on Illinois Avenuefrom Saturday, September 14. toThursday, September 19. LocalLegionnaires me invited to visit.

Accompanying Comander Plet-terer will be Walter W, Wadiak,Clifford C. Cutter, Thomas A.Jakeway, James J. Yacullo, andseveral other members who willremain only for the day of theparade, Monday.

Francis T Tomezuk, command-er-elect, is serving on the Uni-formed Contests Committee which!is supervising the elimination andfinal contests in Junior »n'd seniordrum corp pageants., color guarddrills. Junior and senior bandconceits, drill teams, ritual teams,choral groups, and parade march-ing groups.

Mr. Tomezuk has also beennamed alternate delegate by thedepartment executive committee.

Mrs. Harry Gleckner. who hascompleted a year as NationalExecutive Committeewoman forNew Jersey, and President-electMrs. Clifford Cutter are to attendthe Auxiliary'Convention.

Principal speaker at the con-vention will be FBI Chief J. Ed-gar Hoover. The coveted Ameri-can Distinguished Service Medal

• will be awarded to Bishop FultonJ. Sheen and General Mark Clark.

Vice Commander John Kadenwill be in charge of the post ac-

i tivities at home during the con-vention

Clarence McGillis announcedthat the post will have a signpainted on its billboard in WestCarteret.

Joseph CCHJ announced that1958 dues may be sent to the ad-jutant or finance officer. Whiletfcey are S3.50 now, they will

CARTERET — Boy S c o u tTroop 84, sponsored by the FreeMagyar Reformed Church re-ceived its charter at an impres-sive ceremony in Bethlen HallTuesday niRht.

In accepting the charter, Rev.Dr. Andrtw Harsanyi said it wasa great honor for him, laudedscouting for its religious and in-spirational value and told ofhow scouting provides the basicgroundwork for character build-ing of youth.

Nathan Hale School PrincipalJoseph Comba, principal speak-er, told of his interest in .scoutwork, cited how scouting is help-Ing to prevent Juvenile delin-quency and urged the continuedaid of parents.

Another feature of the affairwas the appointment of CarlZiegler as assistant scoutmaster.The badge was presented to'himby William Bannon of the Rari-tan Council Boy Scouts ofAmerica.

William Comba is scoutmasterof Troop 84.

— Sunday servicesat the First Presbyterian Churchwill be held at 8:30 A.M. and 11A.M. with both services in Eng-lish. For the convenience of pa-rents with small children thereIs a nursery during the 11 A.M.service. This Sunday, the sermontopic will be Now Hear This. Thisis the second sermon in the seriesof Christian Commitment. Thetheme for this Sunday's sermon isthat a Christian will seek to over-come personal weaknesses, prac-tices, and habits which are un-christian. Mrs. Earl Walter willdirect the Senior choir in thehymn The Lord Is My Shepherd.Mrs. Joyce Jones will sing thesolo They That Wait Upon theLord.

CARTERET - I'll e Boiid ofHealth has taken action to set U;J ;machinery to combat what il ex- !perts to be a major outbreak ofAsiatic flu this fall or winter.

Health omcrr Michael Yar-cheski revealed todiiv that theboard lias purchased protectivevaccine for borough employes inessential services. The vaccinearrived this wcik.

Amorn those who will receiveshots are members of the policedepartment, firemen, volunteerfiremen, first aid squad, post officeempTfiypsv nntt other essentialworkers.

The primary aim, said Mr. Yar-cheski is to prevent needed serv-ices, such as medicine, fire andpolice from coming to a standstillif an epidemic should break out.

Asiatic flu is regarded as arelatively mild type of influenzaby health authorities. Its symp-toms are the same as other typesof inbuenzn and the victim win-not distinguish it from any othertype.

"Iiet's hope that no epidemichit* Carteret" Mr. Yarcheski said.He hopes to obtain technicalassistance from the state in identi-fying and controlling an outbreakin the borough.

The flu is described as a re-latively mild but highly contagiousdisease.

Nearly All Shore Crssl ;Public- PropertyHomes Already Occupied Instruction Hits

All laxpayersCARTERET—When all homosin the Shore Crest developmentare occupied. Carteret will havean 'additional population of 1,-000 persons, It was said today.

Developers of the housing nrensaid this week that most of thehomes already are completedHTTCt Occupied.' Some 25 morehomes are to be finished up,

Last week borough councilapproved the installation ofstreet lights in that area. Mallalready is being delivered.

The past 10 years have seena great influx of new residents.Somr M0 homes have Rone up Inthe Parkview development andsnm-s (if homes in West Car-ten I uhd other parts nf Ciirteret

There is every indication iha;Carteivt will pass the 20.000mark m Tropttln+rrm when -the-1

1060 ollii'lat census is tuken bythe U. S. Census Burruu. The1953 census listed CartmM'solllciiil population at i:;,o;'l uscompmvd witli ll,97(i in liHO.

Carteret PTA Units WillBegin Sessions Next Week

CARTERET —This borough'sParent Teacher Associations aremaking plans for resumption oftheir season's activities next

Season's ProgramMapped by Lions

CARTERET — An ambitiousprogram is being planned for theseason. Steve Fedlam president ofthe Carteret Lions Club told themembership at the first dinner ofthe meeting held Tuesday night

The Washington-Nathan Haleunit of which Mrs. Arthur Stu-par is president Is slated to meetSeptember 18. At that time the

Over 300 EnrollIn Adult Classes

new teachers will be introducedto the parents.

Tin1 Cleveland-Columbus grouphas set September 17 as the datefor its opening meeting. It isexpected thai the High SchoolPTA may likely meet September18 for Its opening session.

JA AchievementAdvisors Named

Church School convenes at 9:3.0 i i n t h e C J l 'P s y C a m ? 'i A.M. with classes for all ages. Thecurriculum Is class graded andbible centered. There Is ah AdultClass that will begin this Sundaymorning. The nursery class be-gins with those who have reachedthe age of three. Sunday after-noon at 2:30, the Junior HighFellowship will meet, and at 7

Mr. Fedlam said the executiveboar* will meet next Tuesdaynight at his home. At that timecommittees will be appointed andthe year's program outlined. Aidfor the blind will one of the club'sprojects as in the past.

Walter Pavlik gave an account

CARTERET — Over three hun-dred persons enrolled in coursesat the Carteret School of AdultEducation this week. The regis-tration was held on Monday andTuesday evenings at the CarteretHigh School. Because of the badweather on Tuesday, the Boardof Trustees decided to continue

CARTERET S I x Carteri'tindustrial executives will serve as

Achievement company ad-

CARTERET — Aroused by anorgy nf vandalism »t the pub-lic school during the summermonths, the Board of Educationnave stem warnings that parentsof youngstcra teanonslblt I o t - J twill be held fully responsible andwill have to pay for the damage.

Members of the Board, at theirmeeting Wednesday night werehighly disturbed by the tact thatthey had to approve bills amount-Ins to $600 to cover glazier bills.

The greatest destruction was atthe Columbus School, where newwindows casting some 4550 had tobe Installed. About $50 damagewas done at the WashingtonSchool. It was the largest glaasdestruction bill to be met by theboard. It was pointed out thatadditional glazier bills are flue,namely for a dozen windows atthe Cleveland. 8 or 9 In the HighSchool and five In the NathanHale School.

The first warning was soundedby Thomas Deverln. He wasquickly Joined by George Hell. Hesaid It is the duty of parents toimpress upon their children thatdestruction of public propertycannot be tolerated.

John M. Kollbas said thatunder a school law parents can beheld responsible for the damage.

vlsers, when two now JA outfits ^o! I n r t l r c c t 'y - n c s a l d . t h e childreninto operation.

Advisers at the U. S. MetalsRefining Company plant will beDonald Bachinan, Peter Pnnekand Stephen Turk. At Westvaco

to accept registration for courses j Products Division, Food Machinerythis coming Monday and Tues-day, September 16 and 17.

This coming MondRy and Tues-day will mark the opening of class.sessions which will run for the

Protestants PlanChurch Council

CARTERET — Plans are underway to form a Carteret ProtestantCouncil of Churches. ;

An initial meeting was held at of the Gospel of Mark chapter bythe First Presbyterian Chi'ich on ' chapter followed by a time of fel-Monday niRht at which plans were] lowship and prayer. The associa-

ter Fellowship will meet.

Monday evening at 7:15 P.M.the building committee will meetto discuss the church site andplans for the new church. Allmembers of the committee areurged to be present.

On Wednesday evening theEvangelistic Association will meet! , ~at 8 P.M. There will be a study] Yacht Club HejlhlS

of the national convention of Lions i next ten weeks through November,Clubs in San Francisco. He said 26. Mr. Edwin 8. Quin, Director I scholarships

the con- , u , „,,,, .,!,..„„,, u.u.v.»w— ^ ,relations and public si

Corporation, Frank M. Faff. Ber-nard P. Leber and Raymond J.Shaffrey.

Both advisers and achievers willbe singled out at the end of theseason for awards—cash • and

for the youngsterscourse In hu-

apporturie occasion.A movie on soda making and

S distribution was shown by a re-presentative of the Hoffman Bev-erage Company who also distrib-uted samples of the company's newproduct.

the Junior Achievement of Unionoffice at the High School regard-ing the Adult School and It isexpected that the total enrollment j County Inc. which will have a to-by next Tuesday will be greater j tal of 25 JA outfits

outlined for the formation of sucha Council.

Represented at the initial sessionwere Hungarian Reformed Church,First Baptist Church, Calvary Bap-list Church and the First Presby-terian Church.

A committee was named to ob-tain information concerning the

tlon comprises those men andwomen who are willing to makeevangelistic calls in the communi-ty. Plans are now being made forthe Visitation Evangelism Week.October 20-24 that is being car-ried on by the churches that sup-ported the Billy Graham Crusade.

Fall Activities

l m s W L C K * ' " D e hv a

I increased to $4.00 on November 1. ^ p r o t c s l a n t c h u r c n c s t 0 j o i n

! Steve Stck reported that the! Legion's car raffle is how in its

setting up procedure anil by-laws.' meeting at the Polo Grounds onAn invitation Is being extended" Reformation Day afternoon. The

Crusade Choir and Rev. Bijly

the Council. Graham will be on hand to leadthis service.

final stages and urges! the mem-hbers to cooperate

final few weeks.

fully in the

The next meeting will be heldsoon at the Calvary Church, withthe date to be announced later. j y o | | f / ( fj(t(,ders p j , m

<,.irW« will HoldAnnual Sitpin'r Oct.

Horougli Sells Hand ;\ i) Issue at 4.2 Percent

To Attend Conclave

CARTERET — A regular meet-ing of the Carteret Yacht Clubwas held Wednesday evening inthe Borough Hall.

Plans were outlined for the fallactivities which were officially be-sun yesterday and will continueevery Tuesday and Thursday eve-ning until further notice.

The purchase of some 600 feel/of 1 %2. inch copper tubing., which,is needed for the water linethe road to the club houseapproved.

Henry and Stanluy Gorecki,members of the club have volun-

than that of last year.

While some courses are fairlywell filled already, additionalregistrants will be accepted i i thefollowing: Labor Relations, Sew-ing, Shop Math, Steno, "GettingThe Most Out Of Your Dollar,"Choral Singing and First Aid. Theregistration fee for all courses is$3.00. Persons who are interestedin registering this Monday andTuesday evenings are requested todo so prior to 7:30 P .M. Regis-trants for classes being held onMonday will proceed immediatelyto class.

CeramicsAs was announced In the course

brochure of the Carteret Schoolof Adult Education, ndditlonalpourses will be offered If ten ormore persons are interested. Be-cause of popular demand, a course

teered their services and equip- ] iu ceramics will be offered in ad-ment to install the line. i dition to the regular courses out-

Members will meet at the club j lined in the brochure. The ce-

The

•''•'• "1 Rabbi Lewis Bren-1 •'' day evening.lulll|Uee will make per-

• to the people of the

CARTERET — Co-Weds of theFirst Presbyterian Church have

I set Saturday. October 19 as thei date lor their fifth annual supper.

Thtre will be two servings, the, first at 5 P. M- and th« second at

United | 6 o'clock in the church basement.for 1957 I The Co-Weds are iilanninft lo

Appealit Skirted

CARTERET At a special meet-ing Tuesday night the BjoroughCouncil sold $1,864,000 of' bondsto finance the storm and sanitarysewer nnd equipment improvement

associates, of New York.

It bid was 100.099 for obligations

to the children of KoreaA Hallowe'en social will be held I se

Monday, CMober 9.regular merlin; will bfday, SepUtuber 17.

1858 to 1988, have

CARTERET — Five officers ofthe Live Y'er Youth Club will at-tend an officers training confe-rence this week-end at the Pater-MII Y.M.C.A. Camp, Silver Lake,Stockholm.

They are; President, Olga Kiel-man: vice president, Lillian ElkO;secretary, Mary Lou Burke; his-torian, ^oyce A. Kent and chap-lain, Joyce Greely.

Each of the officers will attendlectures and discussions pertain-

house this Tuesday evening. iContinued on Page Eight)

The companies will meet weeklyfor work at the Merck &. Co. train-ing center in Railway; U. S. Metalsand Westvaco at Carteret and theJA business center In Elizabeth.

G, Ross Murrell, general su-perintendent of Esso's BaywayRefinery in Linden discussed theprogram with the future advisersat a recent trainingthe refinery.

The two Carteret

meeting :;t

firms havebeen sponsoring JA units here forthe past several years.

PLAN CARD PARTIESCARTERET — The St. Mark's

Church will hold two card partiesin the near future with the firstone scheduled for October 11.sponsored by the Altaii Guild andthe second slated for November 8,sponsored by the Daughters of St.Mark's. -.Both parties will be heldat the parish house.

Services this Sunday at thechurch will be at 8 and i):30 A.M.with Holy Communion.

waste their parents money, be-cause they arc the taxpayers whohave to foot the bills. He saida light is being Installed in therear'of the Washington School tooffset vandalism.

Mrs. Alys Sheridan said thatparents must Impress upon their •children the disadvantage of de-struction.

Adam Szymborskl suggestedthat a letter be sent to ChiefGeorge Sheridan urging frequentchecks of .school* at night.

Award ContractsThe board awarded a contract

for the paving of the Louts Streetarea to the Drass ConstructionCompany on Its low bid of $3,479.-08, The contract for the pavingof the boiler at the WashingtonSchool was given o the New Jer-sey . Boiler Co., East Orange oniUs bid of $850.

Joseph Belafsky, 50 HealdStreet applied for a position aateacher of English in the foreignborn class.

Permission was granted for theHigh School Band to take partin the parade of the holy namesocieties In Perth Amboy, Septem-ber 29. The request was made bySt. Ellas Holy Name.

U. S. Metals Refining Companywas granted the use of the HighSchool auditorium for a Christ-

iContinued on Pngc Eighti

next i been r'i-oflered by the syndicate at | me to their office. The conference

j from 2:85 per cent ] highlights are: cracker barrel

c u n t -

1 ' 1 " 1 ' ! • • •

of the(1ve of Yom

made at both

the committee are \c h e n k 1 n . Mrs. j

('"n, Mlpa Floryce iLouis Brown, Mn.

111 • and Mn. Lewis

Tells U.S. Students:Check College Plans Now

I - knn.A». ..or..- lilnh

:m1 Mare Mn Lpuls

: M'-s. aarwn Oruhln"" u 'w i s Brenner *»iat-''"'iiinittee.

'OH"KEAKFA8T

_„_, NaineJoseph's Church will

" '"iirnunlon breakfast! l h the MhOol hall fol-

" A• M. Maw. Walterls 'Unit-man and Johnwill be

CARTERET|-Youngsters be-ginning high school will uiHkclife easier (or themselves if theykeep college requirements inmind right from the start.

Even youv freshman year isnot too early, according toSchool Superintendent Edwin S,

Quin."The. time to be practical

about college is not during thelast half oi your senior year inhigh school" he said. "It shouldbe no lat«i than the first year ofhigh. The decision should bemade tlitn ut> to whether college,is ut least a possibility." hemilled

By the sophomore year, highschool students (Should make uptheir minds about the type ofcollestr they,would like to at-tend—whether technical, .aca-demic or specialized, he declared.

As preparation for college,Mr. Quin, added, high schooldays can be spent most profit-ably in checking on readingskills and comprehension, andimproving these where it Isfuund necessary.

"Learn to concentrate" lieadvised teen-agers. "Practicecovering a good deal of materi-al in » *|io|t "

sessions, officer's training, modelpanel, advisor's meeting, countymeeting and speakers on youthactivities.

The conference Is being held tohelp the youth leaders in direct-ing thier clubs,

Dinner on ThursdayFor Woman's Club

CARTERET — T h e Carteret

Woman's Club will hold its open-

ing dinner, Thursday evening,

September IB, at 7 P. M. at the

Elizabeth Carteret Hotel, Eliz-

abeth.Members will meet at Cutter's

Oarage at 6 P. M. [o attend thedinner. Reservation close Satur-day, September 14, and maybe

with the CO*chairmen Mrs.Ti nilly or Mi's John L,ukao

Sacred Heart PTAOutlines ProgramCARTERET — Several affairs

are being planned by Sacred JHeart Parish School PTA. A cake Isale will be held October 6 wi th 'Mrs. John Krissak as chairman.A card party is scheduled for No-vember 4 with Mrs. AndrewWasco and Mrs. John Dzlak, co-chairmen, and a children's Christ-mas party December 15.

Sister Mary Scholastic* newsuperior. was introduced a t thel«ist meeting. J

Three new members were wel-comed into the oreanizatlqn. Theyare Mrs John Mnlch, Mrs.Charles

Hiu.vso und Mrs. Leonard Sabo.Several members of the local

;:roup will attend the annual con-wsn of parochial school PTAsOctober 14 in Trenton, It was an-nounced. Reservations for trafiu-portation may be| made by qon-tuctiuu Mrs. Ethel chamra, presi-dent, 136 Jersey Street.

A S A l l l l . l ' S K K < i l S l ' K K K l ) : S< i i i r sh iuvs .it the l e j t s t i u t u i u lor Adult Sr l iuu l In » lu i t s u o n . Mure. H u m

}U0 l i ; n c i-[inill;il m i l M V I T . I I I IIIIIM » . u r stil l " l u l l NIniwii l i u l u l i l t (u 11 r; I t t. i l i inj; i i f i s l i a t i o i i .

M i s , M u i c i i c e l i r i i a Ail i im S i .vn i t i tn ik i , .Wei *il y.s S i n l i i l a n , J'lluin si H u n aiul M i s s Ihigni i i i R u e d .

.-lUinllHb in it-di j l r Diuitilil t iac l i in .UI 41)4 Kicl i iuit A H r t t i l

Plan Jubilee FeteFor Father Hundiqk

CARTERET — A testimoniallia i«i net In honor of Rev. Johnlliimjiak. pastor of St. Demetrius'UkiHlnlan Church is being plannedfor Sunday, October 20.

The affair win honor FatherHundiak for Ijis service as pastor«>f the church for a fluarter of acentury.

Trustees and members of theexecutive board will meet Mondaynit!lit to plan fur the affair inwhich all the organizations of the

will

Page 2:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

•T ' T W O FRIDAY, SRTTEMnFR 13, 1f»fi7 pf;

f«ltnr finr Mitzvah t Honor Miss Stanfon

I isinl for Tomorrow j At liridal Shower

•r •" '*1IT- '!<!• I' T h e B a r M i t z v a h

' ' i ' • ' " : . i Hic-lnv.-. s o n of M r .

• .: Mi • :', mil' 1 B r e s l o w will be

'. :,, , ! ; i n i i i i irning at 9 :3011 \T , ' i l ie C o i w e g a t i o p of

IV'i•:; :l n'nl (if Israel ,

' •: :'• is fi g r a d u a t e of t h e

:•> i! i ; i i t i i i ' t H e b r e w S c h o o l

I • ,i: ii. llvei a Bar M i t z v a h

: . ' • » :il t in' siTvlci'.

nn.Y-i: IUCVOKKDr\1i ITI 'KT • The Motor Ve-

M, Ii. l"h ;»;u i imin nt T ren ton h a si' : •'*'•', ii;i- itrivi-r'.s license ofI.1'.•>••! I. MwiiiKhun, 19. 65 LouisI n ri lui cine montli . He had theI'II:M HH;. \ i u 1 H t i ii n s charged

L.-.i^st him: Inillif' signal, two•'•I'M;!." mid .slop .siRni violations.

CARTEHET — A brldnl shower*RR tpndui'ed Miss Mary AnnStanton, 75 Wnrrrn Street nt theGeneral Slovak Club,given by rnr Mstets, Miss LucilleStHtiton and Miss Dorothy Stan-•on of Carteret anr! Mrs. BlancheAntonlk of Lackwanna, N. Y.

Approximately lb gwsts ot-;ended fr<im Ciutfiet. Port Rcnd-Ini!, Woodbrldge, Fords. SouthAmboy, South River, Sputswood.Westflcld. Ell/nbeth. Hn/lpt, OcemiBeach, Colonla, Bloumfleld. Oist-tt'lllX'IJi illKl CllifSldC

Miss Stnnton will become thebride of Henry Wnltonowski Jr.of Westfield, Saturdny, October 5.at St. Joseph's R C. Church at 3P. M.

Gas Genie Says...

I'VE GOT A L ^SECRET ABOUT / ^ELIZABETHTOWN

SECRET THAT

YOU LIVE BETTER

WITH THEMAGIC OP GAS!

•«.*. ;iliii:iiiJS.

RADER'SEXTRA-PROTECTION

Sun-ProofH0U8B PAINT

• fwme-Reilttantl * Self-CleaningContains VI totlzad O i l *

RADER'SWallpaper and Painters' Supplies

^ Phone 3 7 8 s t a t e s t r e e t p Perth AmbojVAlley STORE HOURS:

1 "" I'. 'tfiiQ l'20 *• M- t o 8 p- M- Monday through3 S ~ - «-•>»•« Saturday

|p^ftSBURGH PAINTS Yt^M^S^mBKMlonger]

~- B4 -Oeorye M. Slmrkey, son of Mr.

ind Mrs. George Sharkey, 13 Fll-nore Avenue has enrolled In the'reshman CIRRS at Albright College,Rending. Pa. He Is taking a pie-dental course.

A new rectory Is being con-structed for St. Mary's Ukraini-an Catholic Church, Joseph Salw-Iclk Construction Company Is thebuilder and ohn Ollva. of Elizabetharchitect.

Mayor Edward J. Uolun was theprincipal speaker at the quarterlycommunion breakfast of St. EllasHoly Name Society held Sundayin the Parish Hull. Rev, Augustine'Medvlgjr gave the Invocation.Michael Preputnlk was riiaster ofceremonies.

The Lady Slovak Citizens Clubhas arranged to hold a Hallowe'enwrty October 2 and a card partyOctober 14. Mrs. Albert Trustrum.s chali'innn of the card purly,

OBITUARIESMRS. ANNA LARKIN and now of Trenton;.four daugh-

CARTERET — Mrs. Anna ters, Mrs. Robert R. Brown ofLarkin. 37. 5 Orant Avenue, wa* Carteret, Mrs. Louis Rudermanfound dead In her home Tuesday!and Mrs. Louis Litowltz, both ofmorning.

Surviving are her husband,Thomas, her father, George LotUSr. of Czechoslovakia; two broth-ers, George Lotta Jr. and JohnLotta, both Pittsburgh, Pa, anda ulster, Mary Lotta of Czecho-slovakia.

The funeral will be held at 9o'clock tomorrow morning fromthe B I z u b Funeral Home, 54,Wheel"v Avenue. Interment willbe In St. Gertrude's Cemetery.

The Rosary will be recited atthe funeral home at 8 o'clock to-nls-'ht.

Minx Oil Engaged

To Walter Ihdton

CARTERET — Announcementlinn been made of the engagementof Miss Joan 0111. daughter of Mrs.Josephine Gill, 48 Roosevelt Ave-nue and the late Augusto Oil, toWalter T. Dulton, son of Mr. anrlMrs. Walter Dalton. 392 CliffRoad, Sewaren. The announce-ment was made by Miss Oil'smother.

The prospective bride attendedCarteret schools and is employedby the Park Plastic Company, Lin-den. Her fiance aUo attended Car-teret schools and is in the U. S.Navy stationed at the Boston Nav-al Shipyard.

MRS. SARAH BROWNC A R T E R E T — Mrs. Sarah

Drown. 59. of 29 Bergen Streeti died .suddenly Saturday at her| home. A native of Barnvllle, N.C.,she lived In this borough for thelast 20 years and was a memberof the Peoples AME Zlon Church.

Wife of the late John Brown,she Is survived by a daughter,Mrs. Mary Oardner of this bor-ough; two grandchildren, and asister, Mrs. Dalsey Splvey ofBrooklyn.

The funeral was held yesterdayafternoon at Peaple's MethodistChurch.

Miss Timko Engaged

To Michael Muska, Jr.

CARTERET — Mr. a n d Mrs.Jonn Tlmko, Sr. 35 Grant Avenue,Carteret, announced the engage-ment of their daughter, Barbara,to Michael Muska, Jr., son of Mr.and Mrs. Michael Muska, Sr., of295 Lawrle Street, Perth Amboy,at a dinner. party held at theirhome, with over twenty-five guestsattending.

The bride-elect was graduatedfrom Carteret High School and St.Peter's School of Nursing, NewBrunswick. She Is now employedin the operating room of the St.Elizabeth's Hospital, Elizabeth.

Her fiance, who graduated fromMiddlesex County Vocational &Technical School, Woodbridge, isnow serving in the U. 6. Armystationed at Engineer's DivisionSchool, Fort Belvoir, Va.

MRS. EVA GLASS ZIERMrs. Eva Glass Zier. a former

resident of Washington Avenue,Carteret. for 30 years, died FridayIn Trenton following an extendedilrness, She ws? 83. Born In Rus-sia, she had lived in the UnitedStates for the past 50 years andwas active in religious organiza-tions both in Carteret and Tren-ton. She was a former memberof the Brotherhood of Israel InCarteret and a member of Hadas-sah. Surviving are her husband,Harry Zier, formerly of Carteret

NKW BRUNSWICK SECRETARIALACCOUNTING & PREP SCHOOLRegistration (or Intensive FillCourses now open. Act promptly.Classes limited.

110 Albany St., New BrunswickKIlmer-5-3911

RETURNS TO COLLEGECARTERET — Jacqueline Hila,

daughter of Mr.- and Mrs. JohnHila-, 28-Herniftrm Avenue has re-turned to Montclair State Teach-ers College where she is a Senior.Their son, John, will enter Ford-ham Law School on Monday, Sep-tember 16.

RAINY DAY' / / t i n- A N Y DAY

The person who used to dreamabout what he would do with$1,000,000 now has to figure on$2,254,747.71.—Boston Globe.

STUDENTS:

Get ihe RightStudy Light

tiood eyesight is a precious physical

Issd. It must be protected!

* When reading or studying, avoid

{wish glare . . , aVoid shadows. Use.

llie ri»ht size bulb in the right kind

[)!' lamp.

• To help you understand just'what

fcind of lighting is correct, we have

jn interesting little booklet "How to

iiake Your Homework Lighter."

Vour free copy is awaiting you at

* $ny Public Service store, j Stop in.

jor it.

You'll be smart andcomfortable in your

ALL-WEATHER COAT

$4.95 to $49.75

BRIEGS91 Smith St., Perth Amboy

MILTON MIRRORand

GLASS COMPANYW. Dzurilla and $. Poll. Props.

79 E, fl|lilton Avenue

RAHWAYFU-8-1373— FU-I-U31

GLASSfor everyPurpose

Standard «a*Cuttott-Msde

SHOWERENCLOSURES• No Dawa

Trenton, and Mrs. Ruth Trinkow-»ky of New York City; three sons,William of Chicago; Benjamin ofSaddle River and Edward, also ofTrenton; 14 grandchildren and 10great-grandchildren.

Th» funeral services were heldSunday afternoon at Pulson andvon Wise Funeral Home. Trenton.Interment was In the HebrewFraternity Cemetery, Hopelawn.

CWV Auxiliary toAid Dedication

PARKVIEW PATTKKMRS. ROSK ROSENBAUM MRS. DOROTHY llfir

CA-1-43II0CA-1-7341

r• 5 Yew U F»j• Pne btlButci

The Finestin

Copper-Baok|

MIRRORSFor e?erj

1MB

MIRKOKS Madt-to-Ordar

COMBINATION ALUMINUM

DOORS and WINDOWS• Awuiuf tjpe

• Jalviuie

• Ahunlniuu

free KtUuuUi

CARTERET — At the first fallmeeting of the Ladies' Auxiliary,3t. EllM Prat, 797, Catholic WarVeterans held this week, a dedica-tion and reception committee forthe big fete scheduled for October27.

Chosen were Mrs. Irene Kur-tiak. MM. Elisabeth Banko, Mrs.Marge Oaral, Mrs. Marge Mitro,Mrs. Ethel Medwlck, Mrs. BettyFazbcku; program, Ann Shaner,Mary Kuuna, Anna Oavron, Mar-tha BalarU; entertainment, MaryMaskartnec, Mary Ihnat, JuliaSabo, Mary Kobey and MaryQavaletz.

Mr*. Kurtrak, president an-nounced that the State AuxiliaryPresident, Mrs. Geraldine Panni-grosso and_her staff will be pres-ent, as well as the County Presi-dent. Miss Eva Steiner and herstaff.

According to Borough AttorneyJohn M. Kollbafi. general chair-man, there will be only onespeaker at the dinner which willbegin promptly at 6 P.M.

Borough Clerk Patrick Potoc-nig and Charles Makwinski arein charge of the dedication book-let and those desiring to be rep-resented are requested to contactthem at the borough hall not laterthan October I.

GEORGE M. SHARKEY

ENTERS COLLEGE: George M.Sharkey, son of Mr. and Mrs.George Sharkey, 13 FltlmoreAvenue, will enter Albright Col-lege, Reading, Pa., as a fresh-man this fall.

Sharkey, a 1957 graduate ofCarteret High School, was ac-tive In basketball, baseball, andwag a member of the BunsenBurner Club anf the Huntingand Fishing ClJn.

RrmembPr to vpclstcr Septem-ber 2G is the registration deadlinefor thp November 5, election. Tohe eligible to register, you must ben resident of Die I'uunty for fivemonths and all those from out ofthe shite must be residents forone year.CANDLES ON THEIR CAKES

Birthday peeling to Mrs. J,Pnhlei uf 91 Hickory St. who cele-brulcd a blL'lhday on September6.

Hnppv birthday to Wayne Ebwtof 30 Birch Street who was elevenyears old on September !.

Birthday greeting to EdwardO'Belrne of 80 Mulberry Streetwho celebrated his third birthdayon September 7.

Happy birthday to Alyse O'Don-nell of 63 Arthur Avenue whopassed her first milestone onSeptember 11.VISITS PROM THE STORK

Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.J. McGrath of 106 Hagaman St.on the arrival of a girl, Sharon

Daughter born to Mr. and Mrs.Neil Zullo, 88 Edward Street at thePerth Amboy General Hospital.September 10.

Alex Eber Appointed

To GOP Lawyer'* Po$t

NEW BRU8WICK—Awembly-man William E. Ozeard of Somer-set announced the appoinmtenttoday of former Prosecutor AlexEber. Highland Park, a« Middle-sex County chairman of the state-wide Lawyers for Forbes organi-zation.

Mr. Ozzard, who is state Execu-tive Director of the group, saidEber will head an organization ofMiddlesex l a w y e r s who haveagreed to seek the election of theRepublican candidate for Gover-nor. Sen. Malcolm Forbes, A pri-mary function of the group will beto aid Sen Forbes in filling speak-ing engagements.

Mr. Ozzard eald both he andSen. Forbes were "extremelypleased" that Mr, Eber had agreedto accept the position. "With aman of Alex Eber's caliber at thehelm, we can be sure that thisorganization wUl not exist merelyon paper, but will make a realcontribution to victory," he said.

Louise, on Septemhci rElizabeth General Hnspj;,,,Joins a sister and two i)mMl,

Congratulations to Mi ,]|(

J. Rundleof 97 Hickory si,the arrival of their set,,ndchild, Gnrth Ronald Mu||lnMalloy, the former Alice \>is with her husband wi,., \tloned dt the Nuvul Bus,- Ul

Ie8ton, South Cmoliim.

TO MEET SUNDAY

CARTERET — The A1'Roiary Society of Die H,,]Church will hold its li'-ui,,,,ing Sunday, September i,',Ing nt 1:30 P. M. wiUi u;, .tlon of the rosary in i,,, ,followed by a nii-em,;. i

school.

Ui,.

%>•

I M i .

1 Hit

1

M:

'"nil

[In

••''' . l l1 'l it '

A global network of iiid n..,been mobilized against .\:

Influenza that reaches [mmheadquarters of the World n',.,Organization down to Hie >.book of every country du:, .

Son born to Mr. and Mrs. Wil-liam Soniak, 16 Catherine Streetat the Perth Amboy General Hos-pital, September 6.

Form prices rise slightly; costsare steady.'

Son born to Mr. and Mrs Leo-pold Rycko, 107 Longfellow Streetat the Perth Amboy General Hos-pital, September 7.

Son born to Mr. and Mrs. Thom-as Novitski, 117 Hermann Streetat the Perth Amboy General Hos-pital, September 8.

Son born to Mr. and Mrs. Albert.Hansen, 122 Lincoln Avenue atIhe Perth Amboy General Hos-pital, August 29.

Daughter born to Mr. and Mrs. iWesley A. Hundemann, 8 LocustStreet at the Elizabeth GeneralHospital, Elizabeth. Mrs. Hunde-mann is the former Dolores Neder.

August's stock slump was larg-est since May, 1940.

WE CALL F O U N D DELIVER

• MSCHrTIONS

SICK ROOM NffDS

Y11AMINS

JAW svmni

PUBLIXPHARMACY91 Main St., Woodbridge

Phone WO-8-0809Open Eves, till 10, Sunday till 1 P.M.

FKEE PARKING IN REAR

an inscription that has indi-cated prescriptions for cen-turies. It is an abbreviation of•recipe"—the Latin word for•take." Today it symbolizeseven more . . . for behind each.compounded prescription bear-ing the worthy symbol Rx arenew methods of diagnosis,treatments practiced by yourdoctor, new skills and knowl-edge employed by your pharma-cist, new drug discoveries bymen of science . . . all bringinggreater safety, quicker recoverybetter health. The next timeyour doctor prescribes .bring your prescription to yourRegistered Rexall Pharmacist—always an alert guardian ofyour heulth.

VOUR REXALL PHARMACIST

HILLPHARMACY

587 Roosevelt AvenueCarteret — Tel. KI-1-532S

Are you planning to take a

CRljISEtins Fall, Winier or Chrises?

If you're thinking of ji happy, gala druise to the WestIndies or the Mediterranean, or to South America, Europeor even Around the World, then make your reservationnow while Fall, Wtnter and Christmas cruise space is stillavailable. We will help you select the perfect cruise, giveyou full information, and reserve the cabin you want onthe ship of your choice. But don't risk disappointment — *all or stop in at our office NOW for all cruise informationand literature.

Are you planning to take a

WINTER VACATIONin FLORIDA?

If so, book your plane, train and hotel res-ervations now. Early reservations advisable.

MARGARETTEN & CO.I N C O R P O R A T E ! )

TRAVEL DEI»T.

Hobart Street, Perth Amboy HI-2-tibOO

KUTCY'S DELICATESSEN626 Roosevelt Av<\, Curteret - TH. Kl-M%||

SPECIAL FOR

FRIDAY!Home Made

CLAM CHOWDERFISH CAKESFRIED FILETPOTATO SALADCOLE SLAWMACARONI SALAD

ORDER FOR

SUNDAY!Roast R»H(

RoaKt Pork

Roant Qiiokfiis

Ciibbage Rolls

Open Sunday From 9 A. M. to 1 I1. M ,;„,]4 P. M. toil P, M.

Phone KI-1-4900

1895 Christensen's"The Friendly Store"

waistline

• Frees your waistline

• Flattens your tummy

• Sleeks your hips

• Slims your thighs

mum.njform.m%

feels like next-to-nothing on!You hardly know you're wearing a girdle... Fris-Kee bso different! Made of a new lipht fantastic elastic.. thislithe little girdle looks so tiny—yet has an almost unbe-lievable 130°/ up-qnd-down stretch. Whether you're sitting, standing1, walking-it m-o-v-6-j with your everymovement. Mode of a new, 4S-gauge nylon power netthat feels like next-to-nothing on, yet moulds you to thefigure of your fondest dreoms.-Do you/ figure o iavoi huinew fris-Kee today. S, M, L. Either pontle or girdle stylo.

Wt Abo Carry

MAIDENFORM BRAp

STORE HOURS:Open Daily 9 A. M. to 6 P. M.

Closed Wednesday All DayOpen Friday » A. M. to 9 P.

Page 3:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

TT

Elizabeth's is Scpn» Ti TL L' o «r " Calvary Church/m Rose Nemo Bridal Set for Outin*

Rose Marie The nowlvwrds w ,„, „ I VUUH f e,! .•[• M i s s

,,.,- of Mr. and Mrs..,; Edwin Street, be-

.,'. ,ir of Stephen Lasko,V;. and Mrs. Stephen

',;<{!! Blngle Street.in 8t. Elizabeth's

',. .s.itufdny afternoon,i ;r. ceremony was

(. KI'V, Anthony J..,., ,,f the church,

marriage by herinidc wore a gown of,.„ ,,vi i satin. Her fln-, i . iirrniiKed from a.,.,1 iicavls and rlilne-

• II. ciu'rled a cascade.,.: iind lilies of the,, ril wiill an orchid.,.,,,,!• Verba of Wood-.', ,,,ti.(i her cousin as

,,;i,ir. The bridesmaidsj,w|)hinc Mackevlch

•Mutiny; Mlas BarbaraIrene Sebok, Miss

i':;i)li])s, MLss Margaret: MISS Rose Provldentl,iMiinwh. MIM Christinesiritnn waa flower girl

of Perth

ada

• • ' * • • > » ! i n w o r t

nnd SLNI1?Bra Pnlu- Can- C A R T E R ^ T - Tomorrow theNew E n a l n n , fol. u / C a l v a r y Baptist Church will holdweeks and

" ' F R I D A Y . S E P T E M B E R in . 1957

Miss Kaskulinec ExchangesVows With Jurgen Nielsen

TTTTCEE

nd tollowinRwiiihere' at 73 WashingtonFor wing awnv. th/bridn

black

, i ; . . i i

Amboy,served

Tlie ushers werevifh of South Am-

siuippcr of this bor-MaKyarits of Perth

„..•[ Uaduske of Wood-;..l|ih Bodnar of Stelpiitiii Cyrus of Fords.

b l«e shem.li dress withacccssorliw. Hn r o m i ! ( ,

WHS an orchid U

The bride W n s K r a d u H | ( 1 ( , ,

C-rteret HlKh School. CuU fHer husband attended" schools and Is

theand Is e

Ameriran Smeltim-

annual outing to theMountains nf P e n n s y l v a n i a .Transportation will leave the

•church at 9 A.M. for BushkillFalls where a picnic lunch and» tour of the Falls will be held,

r lunch a trip will be made toWild A n i m a l Farm at

nm.iR Company i,, ,>,nh1

and Hi

H nom

i l t Stroudsburg where the afternoonwill be spent." Mrs, Warrlne WebbIs lii chnrne of transportationreservation*. Arrival a t home willbe before 6 P.M.

This Sunday at 11 A.M. theJj^'l Affairsi]

CARTERCT - Members «,f (HeForesters ,,f America Court Cv-

teret No. 48 have announced ^ m t Pastor Joseph Matua will presidethe clubrooms me now iivailuble i a t t h l s service. At 6:30 P.M. thefor use ror parties weddiivs riuh ' o v e n i n g worship service will be

will worship in thesanctuary with the Assistant Pas-tor Homer Tricules bringing themp?.sai?e Unconditional Surrender.

CARTERET- In tbe presence ofa large gathering of friends andrelatives, Miss Mary Raskullnec,daughter of Mrs. Mary Raskull-nec. 42 St. Ann Street, and thelate Michael Raskullnpc becamethe bride or Jurgen Endre Niel-sen, son of Mr. and Mrs. EndreNielsen, 269 Avenel Street, Ave-nel, In the First PresbyterianChurch, Avenel, Saturday after-noon. Rev. Charles McKanzlepeHormed the ceremony

The bride was given In mar-riage by Her brother George andwas attended by the bridegroom'ssister, Mrs. Madallne Moore ofAvenel. as maid of honor; Mrs,Helen Rogowskl of Linden, ma-

mettlnK-s or <nri,ifor

a small fee. Information may beobtained from MrKi 1-7682.

A public curd party will besponsored by the group on Thurs-day, October 24, at the ClubroomsIB Charles Street.A Hallowe'enparty has bwn set for SaturdayOctober 2G.

Socials are held every Fridaynlljht for members and theiruutsts.

tron or honor, and MUe LindaNielsen of Avenel, bridesmaid,

Philip Nielsen of Woodbrldgewas beat man. Roland Behremof Avenel and Nicholas Beyer ofSomerville were the ushers. Bon-nie Ra.ssmu.isen of Laureltrfn.niece of the bridegroom, was theflower girl

The newlyweds are on a wed-ding trip to Atlantic Citv andon their return will live In thisborough.

Miss Nielsen attended Carteretschools and is employed -by theCarteret Novelty and Dress Co.Her husband attended Perth Am-:boy schools and the Middlesex |County Vbcatlonal and TechnicalHigh School.

Niagara Falls HoneymoonFbr Frank Kelemen* Bride

CARTERET - 8t. Joseph'sChurch wan trw scene of a prettyweddinu Saturday afternoon whenMIAS Susan Marie White, daugh-ter of Mr and Mrs. Joseph White.M Louis Street, became the brideof Frank Kelemen. son of MrsAnna Kelemen. 118 Longfellow

men Rev Alovnus Bolnnd. O8M,performed :he -nrmony.

Given in numaKt by herfather, the bride's sown was oltulip and t.iitrt.i ending In achapel train A beaded crown wllattni'hed to ,i French Illusion v*ll.

Iievprly Bazsa was theStreet, and the late Michael Kele-' maid nf honor, and the Missel

Catherine Bamnowskl, Joan Ku-. T I . , • ] • kick* iftid C'lini-lotte Adams served

Ukrainian UnitTo Meet Sunday

'dtfifyINSURANCE

Nobody likes accidents. . . but they're even more un-

pleasant when you don't have

cash to cover expenses dueto injuries. Let Accident

Insurance pay the bills!

WILLIAM A. MULLERr- INSURANCE =I (noke Avenue, Carteret-KImball 1-U048

with Tricules bringing thedevotional message entitled TheHoliness Of Christ, This Is the

Al Ouyon at s e c o n d of a series of evening de-votional messages entitled TheSon Of Ood. There will be sixsuch messages on successive Sun-day Evenings. The public Is In-vited.

Sunday School at 10 A.M. asusual. Miss Barbara Wood is thenew teacher In the beginner de-partment. She was welcomed bythe Sunday School Superintend-ent Kenneth Adams last Tuesdayat the teacher's meeting. At 6P M. the Junior Choir will re-hearse under the direction of Mrs.Helen Matus. Wednesday nightPrayer meeting at 7 with choirrehearsal to follow. Friday nightnext the Calvary Teens will goRoller Skating. Saturday, 21September, the Men's Club willattend the N. J. Baptist Laymen'sFall Rally at Lebanon, N. J. andreturn tor their own meeting at7:30 P.M. at which time the an-nual ham supper will be discussed.

Miss Patricia Collins isBride of W. G. Kadaraitis

Temper Your DrivingIs Plea of Sheridan

CARTERET—The beginningof a new school year should bethe signal tu every motorist totemper his driving to the times.

This Is the plea of PoliceChief Georee Sheridan. He saysthat it is an automatic warningthat' the unpredictable childmuy dart trow somewhere intothe path of your car and thatyou should always be preparedto stop on the proverbial dime,

CARTERET — Miss Patricia A.Collins, daughter of Mr. and Mr6,Thomas J. Collins, 527 HarrisonStreet, Rahway, became the brideof William G. Kadaraitis, son ofof Mr. and Mrs. William Kada-raitts, 56 George Street, this bor-ough in St. Mary's Church, Rah-way Saturday at 5 P M.

The bride was accompanied tothe altar by her father. The cere-mony was performed by Rev.Harold T. Hermanns.

Miss Ida Collins was her sis-ter's maid of honor. Bridesmaidswere Mrs. Thomas Pruda, MissVeronica Collins and Miss Mar-garet .Ann Collins, sisters of thebride; Mrs. Paul Flood of Car-teret, a sister of the bridegroom,and Miss Irene Bilack of PortReading, a niece of the bride.

The bridegroom had as hisbest man, Paul Flood of Carteret,his brother-in-law. Ushers wereGeorge Gother and TheodoreDobrowolski of Newark, HiramPerez of Colonia, Thomas andJohn Collins, brothers of thebridegroom. Glenn Flood, anephew of the bridegroom,-servedas ring bearer.

The wedding music was pro-vided by Peter Grajewskl, churchorganist, with Robert Gllgannonas soloist.

After a reception at the Co-lumbia Club. Mr. and Mrs. Ka-daraitis left for Niagara Falls andCanada. They will reside at 56George Street, Carteret.

The bride was graduated fromSt. Mary's School and Rahwayttlgh School and is employed Inthe planning estimating depart-ment of the Quinn & Boden Co.,300k manufacturers.

The bridegroom attended St.James schools in Newark and isassociated with his father in thecontracting a n d constructionHeld,

BARBARA 1. KISH

REGISTERED NURSE: MIMBarbara J. Kt*h, daughter ofMr. add Mra. Jullut Kbh, 64G«orie Street, wai rraduatedwith hliheit honon from theSt. Elliabeth's School of Nun-Ing, at exercise* held lit St.Mary's Cburch, Elliabeth. Anopen hoiue followed with about100 penons attending, fromNewark, Elliabeth, R»hwaj\Carteret, Port Read|n| andVirginia.

PLAN CARD PARTYCARTERET—The Lady Crafts-

men will hold a public card partytonight at 8 o'clock at the Crafts-men's Club, Elm Street. Mrs.Myron Wolansky is chairman ofthe affair.

CARE IS URGEDCARTERET — With school back

in full swing the Junior SafetyPatrol and the five women policeworking for the safety of the chil-dren "al school crossings are urg-ing all parents and children to co-operate with them to Insure safetyand prevent needless accidents.

Parents transporting their chil-dren ,bnck and forth from schoolare cautioned to be consideratewhen parking their vehicles by theschool, so as not to Interfere withthe crossing of children and toabide by the rules concerningschool buses. Road blocks are putup for u purpose and should notbe disturbed or dlsgarded.

CARTERET — Regular meet-Ing of the Zaporoska Sltch So-ciety, branch 342 of the UkrainianNational AssociationSunday, SepUmber 15th, a t 1P.M., at the church hall of St.Demetrius church.

At 3 P.M. a Joint meeting willbe held with the St. MichaelsB r o t h e r h o o d , another localbranch 174 of-the. same organiza-tion, at which time Stephen Dem-bltsky. of the main office, willaddress the members and guests.

Ukrainian National Associationis a f r a t e r n a l organizationfounded over titty years ago. Itsmain office Is located in JerseyCity. It has over 500 branches inthe United States and In Canada,total membership of s e v e n t ythousand and assets In excess oftwenty million dollars.

The younu people are encour-aged to attend the meeting andhear Mr. Demblr^sky's addrefe Inthe English language.

Eugene Wadialc Is the presidentof the Zaporo&ka Sltch, withNicholas Kira as treasurer, andMrs. Irene Hundlak, as secretary.whil« Joseph Gudz heads the St.Michael's Society, with JosephQlnda as secretary.

as bridesmaidsThe bride*:room's best man waa

James Irvii>« and the ushers wereMartin Menuel. Joseph White,brother of the bride, and AndrewBallnt

For trieir honeymoon to NiagaraFalls, the hnde wore a blue silk

will be held j dress with black accessories.. Thecouple will reside at 7 WheelerAvenue. [ollowiiVii the weddingtrip.

The bride Ls n graduate of Car-teret High Si'hool. class of 1957,and Is employed at the AmericanBitumuls & Asphalt Co., PerthAmboy

The bridegroom attended Car-tpret schools and served fouryears in the Army, stationed InKorra He Is employed at thtAmerican Oil Co. here,

Postal-rate Increases will prob-ably be deferred until next year.

MISSSOMEONE?:

PHONEIt costs little —EASTON(for example)

3-mhwta station rate Irom Htm BiMMfeljftM 6 P A Tai not included.

& H DISCOUNT CENTER\\ ;i>hiii"tou Avenue (Ni«t to Riu Theatre) Carteret, Tel. KI 1-4860

St. Mary's SodulityElects New Officers

CARTERET — The first f a l lmeeting of the Sociality. Immacu-late Conception of the Saint1

Mary's Catholic Church was heldlast Wednesday evenins. Thebusiness Included election of of-ficers. They are: president, CarolCapp; vice-president, Mary Mas-luch; treasurer, Irene Kilyk; sec-retary, Marie Lastar; publicity,Olga Kielman.

Plans for selling Christmas cardsand a cake sale to be held in thefuture were discussed.

Look at the Back of Your Neck—Evervbodv Else Does!

Get Your Next Haircut to the Pleasant Strains fitHI-FI Music, Played Continuously at

ULIANO'S BARBER SHOP1176 Roosevelt Avenue, West Carteret

TODAY THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 21stne Orders Accepted • Free Deliveries • Layaways • Charge Accounts

Mmon Bath Towels3 for

V i;;i., Irr.

lastic Shower SetsSet

CMATTRESSKits

fb i i t i i i ar

' i v Dish Towels

h'WROOFTICKS

for

Irr.2 for

Il( y TJirow PillowsEn.

1i ' ••—

i

Sheet Blankets• Stripes• Ri'K. l.!»8 Ea., Irr. Ea. iCannon Hand Towels

3 fort Solids • Stripes• Reg. 3!)o Ea,, Irr.

T

Cannon Dish Cloths• Kec 19* En.,

Irr.

Joths -j12 for \

Scarfing by the yardt All Colors

• Reg. B9c Yd.

Ladies Nylon Hose2I. 1.39 Pr.

RUTGERS, THE STATE UNIVERSITY68 Noncredit Evening Adult Courses

for Vocational or Cultural Advancement

ACCOUNTING • ART • FINANCK • ENGLISH• INSURANCE MANAGEMENT • MARKETING •MATHEMATICS • PSYCHOLOGY • HEAL ESTATE• RETAILING • SECRETARIAL TEC HNOIXHiYSTREET AND HIGHWAY TRAFFIC PLANNINGTRANSPORTATION

R E G I S T E R N O WFall Term Begins Monday, September 10

UNIVERSITY EXTENSION DIVISION71 Hamilton Street, Nrw Brunswick, N. J.

1:30-4.00 and 6:30-9:00 P. M., Monday Thru FridayCHartw 7-176G, Ext. 2-U. liKH

SpecialIntroductory OfferHurry on i n ! . . .

SATURDAY & SUNDAYSept. 14th & 15th, 1957

F REE4 Beautiful Glasses with Purchase

Valancest Nylon •

• Lurex *2FOI I

f&i LADIES . . . USE O t K J & H

SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICEJUST CALL IMHI 1 ^ 6 0

No

HESELLSEVERY-THING1 1 ; any product, any brand;ftes the dealer who attvertfKii i h Y O PLook for him under• Goal Dealers • Miirora• Hearing Devicea *• Doors • Lumber ^any category you want;; i /

YELLOWPAOES

of you* phone boq»

SPECIAL SERVICE COUPONS!LOULYPOPSfor the KIDDIES!!

's Shell Service1313 Roosevelt Avenue

West CarteretTpny DelVacchio, Proprietor

Phone KImball 1-8534

MECHANICAL SERVICES OF ALL TYPES

Page 4:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

PAGE F-OUR

Jewish W ar VetsTo Support Drive

AVENEI, Plans wore made toeupport thr Multiple SrlemsUDrive by tho Anwl-Colonla Jrw-Ish Wnr Vrtrrnns Post, nl a mcct.-Jng Monday at th" A vend JewishCommunity Center •• S p y mou r Mrrmdstcln, eom-Inandrr. officially nnnnuncrd thatthe group will sictivnly supportthe drive, under the co-rlialrman-Jlilp of Irvine Mnrkowltz and i?h|llip OoldowRky. The drive willbe started ImmcdlRtfly upon re-1CelvlnR word from the state or- iganizatlnn. C a n i s t e r s will he Iplaced in convenient locations.posters will he placed throughout

the township and film briefs will,>e supplier! to lo:-nl tlu'ntres. The

entire post imjnbnship is ex-ficCted to participate in mnkliuthe drive n success. , !j Membership chairman Monroe jboodman announced that the 'poat Is rapidly renchin« the goal <Of 100 members. The post, which1ia» been actively meeting for only|w6 months, has a membership ,-Of 73 now, j* K was announced that Dr. JoelMayer, Avencl, will be. tlie. RuestSpeaker at thr next, meeting tobe held Monday, September 23,9 P. M. All members and pro-

•jpective members are urticd to;Attend,

FRIDAY, NK1TKMBKK Ki, H):.7 CARTKRK/r

D'Zurilla is Kfortrd 4

liy Traffic ClubCARTEItET - - At. fl meetitiR of

ilie Rnritnn Tvnlflc Club heldMonthly evening at the RewrSmith Hotel election of officers washeld for I he ensuinj: yenr ns [ol-lovs: president, James J. Tortor-lee, Lone Trnnsportption; firstvice-president, Charles W. Vos-skuelhlfr, P'-rmncrl Tape Corp.;,'reond vice-president. Gene S. Ro-tonrli, Kramer Brotlicrs Frt. Lines;trensuri'r. Francis A. D'Zurllla,FoM.fr Wheeler Corp.; and boardof Rovrnoi1*, Alfred A. Miller,Schusters Exprnss nnd DomlnickA1. Umuordo. Bukelltc Corp.

nalph Keek, Sncony Paints, con-ducted the "mietlncs find intro-duced. Mr. Ernie Onrdner, mem-ber Of the oiKtml7.irt.ion and for-mer Rutgers Univnstty Footballstar, us Kiiest fj)fakrr who spokeon tin1 subject; "Bmind the Scenesin Football."

Mr. D'Z'i:illii, son of Mrs. D'Zuf-il'lp find the late John S. D'Zurlllais General Traffic Manaaer of theFoster Wheeler Corp., and now re-sides with his wife Anita and threechildren In Mlddietown, N. J.

COI.F AT 9,000 FEETCLOUDCRAFT. N. M —What is

believed to be the highest golfcourse In the United States Islocated near this city. Its greensand fairways arc nt an altitudeof more than 9,000 feet above sealevel.

CLASSIFIED :•RATES - INFORMATION

Deadline for ads: W«Jnr*riay I IA. M. for the wm« w<*k'§publication.

NOTE: No classified ads taken over phone; must be sent In.

Telephone Mercury 4-1111

|1.0tt for 15 words4c e*ch additional word

Parahlr In ad vane*

,'• WORK WANTED •

.WILL CARE for pro-school childin my home in Avenel,, week

days. Call ME-4-4193. 9-12'

!* FEMALE HELP WANTED •

AVON CALLING HOUSEWIVES.Learn how you can be success-

ful In a business of your own.Pleasant, dlptnifled work. Call PL-6-8655 or write P. O. Box 705.Plainfleld. 9-12

GIRL OR WOMAN, full or parttime. Newspaper store in Wood-

bridge. For appointment phone IFulton 8-1685 between 2-4 P. M.|

9-121

STENOGRAPHER for GeneralInsurance Agency, one-sirl of-

flce; experienced preferred. Calljg . 1 2 j ENGLISH SETTER — Male, one

year old. Registered. Fully inoc-

• FOR SALE •

OVER 30 TIMES CHEAPERTHAN DIAMONDS

Famous TITANIA Diamond LikeJEWELS

MORE BRILLIANT THAN ANYDIAMOND!

NOT a Cheap ImitationYOUR FRIENDS WILL NEVER

KNOW THE DIFFERENCEEnjoy the Pleasure of WearingThese Beautiful Gems at a

Small CostIMPERIAL GEM CO.

405 Pearl St. (Next to Post Office)ME-4-3D31

Hours 9 A. M. to 9 P. M.9-5 i 4

TWIN BEDS, kitchen cabinet,high chair. Reasonable. Call LJ-

8-0540. 9-12

Liberty 8-7171.

YOUNG WOMAN, part-time salesclerk, 10:00 A. M. - 1:30 P. M.

Priver's license. Menlo Pharmacy.Roilte #1 , Metuchen. LI-8-8042.

9-12

ulated. Call KI-1-8890. 9-12'

CURL or WOMAN wanted for re-ceptionist in doctor's office;

fliornings only, five-day week.Wilte P. O. Box 10, c, o this news-paper. 9-12

• REAL ESTATE FOR SALE •

CARTERET —Two-family house,eight rooms, double garage, lot

50x100, good condition, stucko.88 Holly Street, Carteret. Inquire111 Pulaskl Avenue. Carteret, orcall KI-1-5107 for details.

9-12, 19*

CARTERET—Cape Cod. three fullDEPENDABLE High School girl j bedrooms, city sewers, all utili-I to baby-sit. References. Call j ties, close to everything! In aMercury 4-5880. 9-12*

• MALE HELP WANTED •

BOY, part-time. Newspaper store\ In Woodbridge. For appoint-ment phone Fulton 8-16S5 be-tween 2-4 P. M. 9-12Y— — —t MALE AND FEMALE •

HELP WANTED

MEN and WOMEN for part-timework, 20-hour week,_.afternoons

Or evenings. Wonderful opportu-nity for housewives to make extramoney for Christmas. Write P. O.Box 1, c/o this newspaper.

lovely section of town. Beautifulplaster walls, dining room, full,dry basement, steam, oil heat, etc.Low, low taxes, $13.00 month,$1,500.00, 30-year FHA mortgage.Brounell & Kramer, Elizabeth 4-9500. 9-12

FOB RENT

GARAGEAvailable Now

36 Hayward Avenue, Carteret .9-12"

MISCELLANEOUS

IF YOUR DRINKING has become

FOR SALE

a problem, Alcoholics Anony-9-12, 19 m o u s C a n nejp y o u C a u Market

3-7528, o.- write P. O. Box 253,Woodbridge. 8/1-8/29

Vi LOT —Mary Street, Carteret.Inquire Wiater, 536 Henry St.,

South Amboy 1-1361.'.. • 9/12-10/4'

jpPIECE mapie Dinette Set. GoodCondition. Reasonable. 138 Scho-

,er Avenue, Woodbridge. Call ME•7371.

CKlb and mattress; playp«n; high chair; bathlnette.

Reasonable. Call FU-8-5037.9-12'

IJ

A - A - ASINGER SPECIALS!

4 DEMONSTRATORS Sales-men's samples, up tij 20% off,

PAINTER AND IJECORATORFree Estimates

Call KImball 1-4825V. J. TEDESCO

0 Pillmore Avenue, Carteret8/1-8/29

PIANO INSTRUCTIONS _ ByProf. Chris Bojis. Beginners and

advanced students, at your home.Call Valley 6-2671.

9/12-10/4'

Set

TRQX

VICES

HAVING TROUBLE with yoursewerage? Klectrlc Sewerooter

removes roou, filth, sand andstoppage from clogged pipes,

this week only. Sold only at j drains and sewers. No digging, noSINGER SEWING CENTER | damages—rapid and efficient. Call

169 Smith Street Perth Amboy i T^nv's Plumbing and Heating,9-12, 19 ME 4-8007. 8/1-8/29

TIME FOR FALL RUG CLEANING— by New Jersey's —

Must Modern Equipped

Kii£ (Cleaning Plant

S. BOYES RUG CLEANING CO.• DYKING • REPAIR • STORAGE

CALL S 0 1 - 1 5 8 2fluiit and Offices at

and N. Stevens Avr., -South Amboy, N. J.

:i; nck-ui> and DKUVEKY SI;HVICE

COME SEE...

YOU'U SAVE i

AT A*P!

i i r I—r 141 i I r r i I \ nj i i i m i i rs i i i 1 1 • i i]°' • i r

COFFEE PRKES 6 c LBJNOW W TO 20t A LB. LESS THAN A YEAR AGO!

Once again, your AaP slashes prices on one of America's new low prices...your choice is still Custom Ground beforefavorites...CuStom Ground A»Ppremium-quality Coffee! your eyes exactly right for your cbffeemaker. You get all

Remember... only the price is cha^dl These are the t h e fine-fresh flavor y0U ^ * * L „ „.sale superb bleeds tha' have made i * P Coffee flavor- Now enjoy THIS REAL COFFEE haf8 'Alive withfamous for almost a hundred yean! And...even at these Flavor11... at these NEW LOW PRICES!

New Opening HoursA&P Super Markets Now Open

Monday thru Friday at 9 A.M.Saturday at 8 A M.

Ni Change In Closing Hours

MILD ANO MHIOW

EIGHT O'CLOCKI-LB. BAG

73YEAR AGO B9>

SK. $2.13

RICH AND

RED CIRCLEI-LB. BAG

VIOOROUS AND WlNtY

BOKARI-LB. BAG

YEAR AGO 2.61 YEAR AGO 2.91

Price Cut! A*P VACUUM-PACKED COFFEE ffi 89Progresso

Tomato PasteDomtttic

3 *•-• 25 e

Frtneh or MiraeU

8 01. Me

Beech-NutBaby Food

Sfnin«d Chopped

9 9 c 6i-«89C

LinitLaundry Starch

JoyLiquid Detergent

Splc t SpanFor walking paintad lurfacs

7 o 9;«nt 0 7 cpkg. • • pk9.WI

Soft-WeveToilet Tissuew h i t " » A,on,agecolored ^ ^ *

SwaneetoHet Tissue1

Red HeartBog FoodB*af, Fish or Liver

3

IvoryPersonal Soap

4 ^ 2 5 °

Ivory SoapF«r <di*ha*t Uundry ar b«th

S madlum 4 0 *

«k« »r

LIvory Soap

SPfCIAUY BUNDtDI YEAR AGO 1.07

"Super-Righf'-Genuine Spring Lamb

LEGS of LAMBRegularStyle

WHOLE OR EITHER HALF

c'Ib.53.'a 59C

Ib.

"Super-Right" Quality Beef

POT ROASTBONELESS CHUCK

(No Fat Added) 55 CIb.

"Super-Right" QualityBoneless

Ib.STEWING BEEFFRANKFURTERS *'.? "A

Brown 8>z.'n Serve P ^55< SWIFT'S SAUSAGE

59< FRESH FILLET - — « « »49<DAIRY BUYS I

FRESH FRUITS AND VEGET4JLES .'

CANTALOUPE vi^ - 21«POTATOES »'""-•--10 35cr V l f t l V I J ONE PRICE ONLY! I V bag J J T

REDUCED /—Sunnybrook Large Size-Nearby Farms

WHITE EGGS, 69cSlbd American

Fresh —ONE PRICE ONLY!

BroccoliFresh Freestone ONE PRICE ONLY!

targe Size California-ONE PRICE ONLY! ^

Imported Italian Provolono ib 99C

Sharp Cheddar Cheese25c Oranges 1 0 • 49c | Gruyere Cheese

Natural Swiss Slices ZbZ'

Seedless-Cal i fornia-ONE PRICE ONLY!

Prunes 3 » 29c Grapes 2 -• 35c fc

TOMATO JUICE •- 2 - 5 3DEXO A&P's Own Pure Vegetable Sksrteilng

With Special 10. OH Label31b.cat 69

A J AX CLEANSER ~ 4 : 3 7Lord Mott's French Style

String Beans 2 31<

BeapplJ-Grapefrutt

el Monte »«" 2 : 53<Hershey. Nestle or Baker's • '

Chocolate •»« 3 S 9 5 cWhite or Cslorad

Scot Towels Z, 2 35cDinty Moore Beef Stew . ; ' 4 3 C

Vienna Sausage ^^ 2 \Z 37C

White Meat Tuna J t £ 7c:39«

Maiire Sardines f - « ^ 2 : : 2 7 C

reisnapma IOc,nlsoHKitchen Charm

100 ft.

roll

With 2 .Off Label

A&P Brand

Bartlett Pears 2 :67cWhite, Yellow, Devil's Fooi, Hmey Spite

Cake Mixes .; 2:;, 49cAnn Page

Angel Food CAMNabisco

Lorna DoonesBurry'suauehosHartley's Marmalade °-^>Junket Rennet Powder 3West Pine Deodorant . .Noxon Metal Polish . .Household Bags

Jane Parker Baked Goods.'

PINEAPPLE PIELuscious templing Ur>|iiral pinr-ai>[>lo in a rru«[ llial's lialinl tn prr-iftliuu, l!rj;ular]y ptinil i t 49c.

Danish Almond RingGiant Jelly Roll

3943«

• •

43c

31c

31C

^ 35C

.21vL ' ;

FROZEN FOODS.'

A&P Brand-Concentrated

Orange Juice 3 - 40cCodfish Fillet cP-.*.-. 2^ ; i«5 e

Breaded Shrimp C.P-.M.'. p°;;59e

Birds Eye Pies c .»o,B..f 2 ;.* 53e

Libby's Mixed Vegetables 2 X » «Libby'sChoppedBroccoli 2 X 3 7 'Strawberries l 2 £ 3 2 I: ««Libby's Cauliflower . . X25e

Milady's Cheese Blintzes 'p;;37e

Red L Fish Dinner """•"

FluffoGold-colarad ihortaning

labal « n

Mazota OilFor cookmf, uladi, baiing

pint 3 2 * iu < r t60°

Kraft'sDeluxe SlicesAmariean, Pimanlo, Swlu

frocaii 6 e i . 4 4 gChaaia p ^ . * *

Borden'sCream Cheese

All vjriolm

501 29Cplailic cup '

Prices effective thru Saturday, Sept. 14th inSuper Market! and Self-Service ttores only.

dltKai, Uuidry or bathColgate's VtlFor laundry and dithai

I*.,. • •«pl,.»*

Blue Dot DuzHut «nd vh'rtt d«t»F9«nt

l«rot M e gi«nt TQe

OxydelDetergenVFor tha lamily waih

Dash DetermentFor autamttic waihin

Super SudsDetergent

larga M « 9 i l n l

Pt9. W g pkg.

A & P SUPER MARKET, 113 Main St., WoodbridgeCoir.fortabty Air Conditioned

gpen . Tuesdays & TJiursdays 'TH 9 P .M. - Friday* T i l 10 P. M,

A & P SELF SERVICE549 New Brunswick Avenue

FORDS. NEW JERSEY

Page 5:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER R \%" PAGE FIVE

I,,'/,MI.S h<

. \oininate Staff AtCiirteret Lod|?e

I will hold the firsti pew officers at a,,,..(( loniRht In Odrt

Mi ivi1; been mudi! I, ..., y.iy will be ob-1

Mi" Fa i r in Tren -

, -.i 1 liiivc a"boo h., i.i ir>tn t h e Car-

• riir.im t» ai.L! nd.•, .)•' ..as :ntK)iin::ed

. I-,si n uh ic l i willn" rif eye •jl'ISSCK to

,, ' " is1 who i".inn )t: 'al ' !ei- t lpfllte, li!(''

i • . t i l e will collectmir:; nnd oases.

• i; ;•] dinner itf honort,-, I, W. L-ib wi.l

• •, r Airman h a i r'•r, son of Mr. an:l

i-i-c, .il Larch Street,v entered training,i:iid Air Force Base,,i,i- • cnycr specialist

• : i-; il 1957 Rl'adUtttO-,I:• •;i Srhool. Airman

tiic Ail' Force July: •)!•:•,m basic tralnlnK: A Hi. Texas.

II, „„.

C.lum-h

. n v r ,

. hi i:cii oi- c imis>' If.NTIST

: ',vi\. SfW:U'cn, N, JI ., M.nlirr riuirrl.Inir -ll of Christ; Bnston, W.iflR

. - • • , •< • I I (I i) A M .:. . ) - ) • 1 311 A M .

•• : i : : « I" MH r i ' l l t ! ^ ' H o ' m

: • J i u i ' l " !'•'; ; u \ i | ! u b '•• •!• C h r n i i Erlirtrc

I!!'\K H O W

BS1UIH SCOCEHKALS

; \ l»:!.r. I". M. Sunday;: , KC. 7:15 P. M. Sun.

^ f j i i ' t y D'ty wi l l 1, . in w i n , i K : ,

l l 9 » At 10 A"."M""u'if-y wiVMoil-| h " n n K i ' . - R i i t i c n fi,,- t i , r : , : I I , , 1 L S ; I

a L l i t h r . i M m ; v ; , , , K . , , ) f u ,

Club. Ail youn, p ,,.,,,; oc'",';,.Cmirrh, roniiniiiiiion n(;'- and uare invited to enme,

W e d n e s d a y , S e n t e m l i e r in , 7 y

• ; • ' " ' ."*• •• ' • ' • ' • 1 H " I ' i m s : M e e t i t i f

ittxn i OR (;UAM) miCAlM'EREi F iv-f men

oy State Police on Uio f".irnpik<lor possession of an iniinmanc pis-tol have be MI hold (w the Grand

, Jury by Ma»isU'al.e Nathaniel A! Jmoby. They are; Oliver Wilson

10; Tester Presley, 23 and

} Presley, 24. «» of B.w.ltly,,;u.'opcr of Manhattan and CharlesCooper of Nesmith, S 0.

TTA TO Ml ITi CAKm-iliT- The Holy Family1 P. T. A. nf the Holy Family entiretywill hold its firu nnri.iiiK of thjseason -Sunday, September 15, ij/i''• M. in Uie selionl hall.

All mothers and fathers are ex-tended mi imitation to inspect theschool before the meeting,

CIUCIJ-: TO MKKTC.MiTERKT White Carnation

Drove No. :i4 Woodmen Circle willmr.t Sunday afternoon at 2 P. M.in Odd Fellows Hall. Election of(ifficers will be hold All membersare a.ikecl tu attend.

DKIVK FOIt MKMBF.ItSCAHIERMT At its meetiiiK

tlii.; wi.k. the Men's Club of til.Denieicu.1-1 Ukrainian OrthodoxCl';i:vh h.'s arranged to start amein!)"r-,l-,ip drive m October andcontinue it ui,t:l December.

IH.UH A I I O N C O M M I T T K ! ' . : II(-ro l n n u l i ' - t s of t r S i . l-.li-.., l o s t ( VVV At ix i l i n ry w h n wil l a s s i s t a t

l!n- di'dir.iillnn of (hr Cnll inl ir Ymith I 'cnlcr Octo f i : - !v i" i i rr«!Tii I f l t to r i»ht a rc : i.en Alc\?••• • / c t : iw l{ v. / t F i s i i M - n r M i - i ' ' i i ; . v , I r - i i e K i i r l i : i U , M i . J i - i v \ ' i , M n r j - M » « k n r i n c r ; r o a r . l i f t ( y F . u e k a s .

M a r y K U Z I T K I , M a r s e ( l a r a i , A n n G a v r o n , M a t y I h n (. ,' m i S 1 ; - I / > I T a n d K t l i H M c i l » v i r l ; . i T o ' h I ' l i n t i ) )

First FnllS

I or Ihidusunh lUuird

• ' . M . I ' K ! ! I . \ - l h .• C . l l t i t T

. , ' i > • • r i-f H . i i l i . ' . • • n i l I I I M r . s t i r

m l l l K " l i ' , • I : i s i i h u i - a i y Vi

!..• it H e illl) Synonoa ie^ iv ik n-jiort on •1Oi11, t Ane in

i.-;", nf l::e ,1|. Alsli Pi\ pi ' w.i,t ; \ Mi:- I,ue;l!c Ulmali

V i-• .IciMi Clmd'wh lu in t i l i i c .1-ii! new members «:li b.- wc'coitiM n .,,, o.d inembcis biiii-uni1, I.

\ :K. i :i, ; - wni bi n ', n n •:;!V .. s ivm Brown annoiir/c•.'! the donor luncheon will tx

.1 l.l , i ' t i i e W . i l d . T f A s i ' i i i , ! : i o t i

i N i ' w \ ' " i k I . ' I ' . V ( . i t M i . i ' t ' h 1

l l i ' i l !

I ",i u x l :••• •. i l ' a r i v e l i n : o f l ! v

. . . r ' l i v II' , J t e h f I d I If n ; . d ; i .

v ' i . - i i i h c r 1 ' . . . i t H ; ! 0 P M it» t !

i:'[ - ' ' . T i :o . 'M(

I l i i : t'1.; • s foi" t h " r v >;;j:.u wev

1, F-V.-.ii-i B ; n " i . V r - . M a .

'.»vn and >.'v; tsidn:':' F/nv-n,

i n MI.;]1!' TOMOHJIO'Vi AI 'TK'U r - r ; ' e S. niTi'.ie For

•.1 VVn.i ni' n {'.•••]r .lur'rtv O m v\ o . !) vi l ' in ei tonviri'inv a t ' ' P M:n Odil Fclio-vs Hall. F,l ;'Mon ottT'eei': will Inke plaei. and thi

bir thday i>f Knthler : i Szvhn will bcelebrated. All members :\re \in<*(to attend.

CARTERET - The PAL. Aux-iliary will hold n rummiur sale on

i veil Avenue, rm-tcrrt. N A•nviiii! with lln- ?m» • b

.1' t'<!) A.«l I. f 1 ,. i,

September 23-28 nt thr corner ofPershing Avenue mid E.ssrx Str f1!

Co-chairmen "I the afl.ili upVilma Yustolc nnd MBTV JJ/vm ! Perry. Olmborskl.

W i i t i d s . r i i ' f>f j . -i) in -

9S7 Nitlonai HIP? irtd•!»' h'v. l.elri ;.nnunUy at

SKRVINC. WITH MARINKS

CAMP PERRY. Ohio Mann-Pfe Bnlnszu Hnrsi. son of Mr anMrs. BnlasM Haisa of Hft Run.

T h e first siwv>n •?[ Ih*l ' th C'OIIEITSS rrcl,i.rii"<1 for thf.

p i ' U i u ' . 1)1 ai1 ". va^t • pnwflf^'h i t earlier had bnen cedid

President

i

I

ABOUTYOUH HOME

IGardening ran be hard work -

so hard that tl.e pleasure l.s iost.When this is the ease, usually oneor all of six bfi-ir, things arewronji. The riesipn of the warden,choice of plants, pest control, windand rain, soil manacemnt, andthe use of equipment.

In th? first place, be realistic.Keep in mind tlv.it many plansthat look excitlnt! on paper requirefar too much upkeep once they areinstalled. Clipping and ndKin? canbe a bis problem. Work over yourHarden so that it, will require ;islittle labor as possible.

Your garden should be builtaround your interest.-, elim.it" nndroil. B:Avare of crowding phnts.Cr.'iivdinK encourages pesis.

Cilor^-e vour j-lnnt-; very care-fn'ly. rh::(j!T I'.arrly ones I hat canLake bulli summer i.nd winterwithout specini care They shouldo? p.'jt-rcsis'ant and liave the r••!•-rt'.-t, h.sibit or fvc'iwth, arrl size to t.h>the desired job.

D< n't strii^ •> v.ith i.'h.nts sus-ceptible to mildew, blarksiJ&t4 orJnoanese beetle.

Space your plaits 'sencroiislyDon't try to ki ep a faM-tirowiiK!giant evei'Kiepn clu'iiped down tobaby size

Have the p r o w uardeniiiKequipment. It is foolish to do a lotof hard work by hand, or to paysomeone else to, that some handy

DANf.K TOMORROWCAli IFHl'T • The annual fall

lamp of the Ukrainian-.\ni'%ricniCitizens club wilt be !vid tomor-row niKht nt 0 o'elcck in St. IVme-••|i.i,"s Ukrainian .Center. Stnn

•tworski and his urcliesi.i will

Foreifjn Minister Nairn of Af-ghanistan has said his countrywou'd receive about $25,000,000 Inmillury assistance from the Sov-el Union.

tool could do with half the effortand time.

CHECK YOUR CHILD'SFOOT GROWTH REGULARLY . ..

Every child p'fih fiTqunit check-ups to makesurf tir.it his fiicvs fit Children's feet growquick y }\\U HTTIN(i SHOES ARK HARMFUL!Wr ai'p dniiv; rvorything possible to bring you.shoes that KIT good values and good for yourcliilrl.(ilPDKN'S, f-'prcializiriR in shoes for children toteens, invites you to bring in your child for regu-liir si/c check-ups. There is NO CHARGE for thisservice We t:i'«e you to take full advantage ofthis o!Ter.

M:il»lc StreetPerth Arabuy JUVKN1LE SHOES

N?Nt toPerth ArnbnyPost- Offlcje

CARD OK THANKS *IRENE SOLTESZ,

We wish to express our deep•rratitude to our relatives,'fiends, and neighbors fortheir kind expressions of yym-oatliy, spiritunl bouquets nndbeiuitiful floral tributes ex-tended in our bereavement inthe death of our beloved wife,.mother, daughter, and sister..Irene Soltcsz.

We especially wish to thankRev. Louis Cortney O.S.M.:Rev. Alyonsis Bohind O.S.M.;Rev. Victor Orabrlan O.S.M.:Hununrian Reformed Federa-tion of America: yard depnrt-ment of U.S.M.R. Co.; em-Dloyces of Cavteret Shirt Com-pany; Raritan Copper Works;friends of Tipple Row. Filbert.West VlrKinin: ofTice supervis-ory and personal, Elei'trolytlcRefln"ries: pull bc:\n-rj: Car-teret police escort and theSynowiecki Funeral Home forsatisfactory .services rendered,

Frank A. Soltesz (husband*and Family

HOLD tJ! THMS Amm i m * k,*p .1**of expenditures. Pay all your bills

by cbcck.Dwn you'll have neat, com-

plete, and accurate records (on your

checkbook Stubs)-plus sure receipts

(your cancelled checks).

WE INVITF, YOU TO START THAT

CHECKING ACCOUNT WITH US NOW!

"Ttw Hunt, tilth ill the ,

IRST BANK AND TRUST COMR\NYPIRTHAMBOY.RJ.

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

l i .

• '••* -

Gas Genie Says...

Iliimiiwiul Spine/ Model Illustrated

YoO find happy proplc in a home that has a

HAMMOND ORGAN-. . . owning ami pla>inp a Hammond Orpin is an f5|wrience you can

share with the whole family

. . . it gives you the: satisfaction (if nilinj; your lei-wrc lime 4 .

with something worthwhile •

. . . you know the joy of Iwteninj; to vour cliiMren create living music

. . . anil thrre'n little room for worry or tension or trouble

in a home thal'tt (illeil with um»i<\

Why a Hammond Organ?IferaiiM it itilTrn from all other, in several i.n|N.rtaiil wayR. (D No

Spinet Miidrl llaniiuorwl ha» « e r iu-«l«l liiiiiiip- (-) ' l |?v« you

tl.ou8a«d8 of different kind* of tone, . . . « (rolled at a touch by

Haininond'B exchmive Harmonic Drawbar*.

The voice* ot many onli^.ral iiulrium-iM* .ur ? m.« to commaqd

with your Ilaiunioud Organ.

r send for free LP Record j ,

• I j Please >end me new W ruling uf /Virr H«v» i ,i li

playing llie Hammond Oiffi

NAME

ADDRESS.

0RGAN S T U D I °M O I M I J OF PLAINFIELD

OF THE cHimrn vuso W. OF MWAHKELD

DiristoN OF THE cHimr

627 PARK AVENUE, PLAINFIELD

V. by : 9,30 A.M.

Phone: 7-:t««0:

Mi

IM ALL PUFFED UP WITH

PR IDE-ABOUT THE BI&

MElA/5 ELIZABETHTOWN &A5

HAS FOR YOU ,NEXT

WEEK...AND ABOUT

THE WAY THE

MAGtG OF GAS

SAVES YOU TIME

AND MONEY I

v I SHOP HEREAND SAVCMOm

Rahway Fashion Fabrics"CORNICE SPECIALS"

HARDWOODCORNICE

witli

DUST CAP

8" DEPTH

Width Trice

3«" ...;... 99c

42" | 1.99

48" ...L.. 2.49

69" 2.99-

. 72 3.49

84" . : 4.49

96" 4.99

108" 5.49

120 5.99

10"

Width

36"

42"

48"

60"

72" .

84"

96"

108"

120"

DEPTH

Price

1.992.492.993.994,4'94.995.996.496.99

SUPPLIES IT'S AMBOY FEED and GARDEN SHOP!

You're © months aheadwhen you use...

V.. .ANDBOVUNG IS

THE BEST COW MANUREDried daily as it comes from thsbarnv Uie anytims . . . easy tohandle . . . free of live v/ecd i^edt...won't burn. The perfect all-Organic, all-purpcnc fertilizer. 5,>0, 25, 50 Ib. bays. FREE Folded

MICHIGAN PEATon lawns-gardens-shrubs

with BACCTd" MICHIGAN PEAT* with >«gvlar piat*

IXCIUSIVE BACCTO* PROCESS MAKES THE DIFFERENCEImpravtd 6flCCro"M(CHICdN PEAT it I he tlVE Peat Ihot got. lo watt

al ones,.. gjvet yofi a 6fmonth h«ad ilart loword bettor gardening.

^ n phinlx Hy liMding bnlanic in; titution.

Rahway Fashion Fabrics1425 Main Street (N«t to w iwunn•«) KAHWAY I

OPEN IKIDAV J

"I'll- 'J P. M. II'HONE

WATCHNext Week's

PaperFor Our

FALLBulb Specials

took for Ida word

BACCTO on• vary bag. A trui

••do* pool. Acctpt

no lubiiliutt.

BACCTO MICHIGAN PEAT*ptocessec! Ot BfiCCTO way.Inn-eases bacterial action hiyour soil, frees locked In ni-trogen and plant food • blndgfinely soils • breaks up claysoils. Screened, ready to use.This Peat puts new life Intoyour soil instantly! Get-6months ahead-get BACCTOtoday. Free booklet.on lawns. i.iul pardons. Stop in1 y;;iirs today.

for-f-j

Plasticrete PATIO BLOCKS 2 9

AMBOY FEED CO., Inc.Established 1919 — George Walsh, Vies."

279 New Brunswuk Ave. (Cor.'oat streeti iVith

H O U R S ' ' '" ' v " * M ll> ' '" M•'l l " l l V l ' I'LOSK Wl-:l> Al' I! SINI»

Page 6:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

PAGE SIXFRIDAY. ;;F,rTEMRER 1?,, 10f,7

CARTRRF.T

Port Reading

Personals

tilnlil;

f ier i .

n» Mtts.JOHN T.

Vlt-IHINNEIX

' j Sixth Street

I'uil Ki-uding

WO K-4U73

21: n

li .le

Turner

;)li Uun-

Cnnnei[Street, has l)iITowtirliip Clerk(fun to ncc pi vfiter i v i ' i s t r a l l t i jat Ills liollie. The lenLsil'ations Willi'x tiikpn any Tune (lurine the eve-ning after G;00 o'clock. New votersmust r o i s t e r before September 26in order tu he el nible to c;i.st n oa i -lot In the November elections.

Fire Company Parades

Itrv W,iller Mnclurn (if SI.1: I? C n i i r r h , Smith Plnln-(ieli.er il the Motidny nWht

•rrni'-ii: i.nd Rev William Harnnnf Our Lady nf Fiitlma Churrl i ,M -\ M(irl^"t rifllverod the closliiKw i n o t i Tursday night.

Vmci'til Martin'), son nf Mr. andMrs. Hiibbv Miirtiim. WoodbrldHCAvenue, will be st;ilinn<d In Naples.Ilaly. fur twi) yours. His address isI'vt. Vincent MiirlllKi 1H54S8U, 3rdCiiiiirrt Philnon, Mil fine Biirracks,( 'S^N-r l lKA. Bux 17 Navy 510,V. V <).. N. Y.

ViVdiiini; "I .lo:ni MurllnoM ' M J"nn MarMno, (l.iuulitcr of

Mi uml Mrs. Si'bhy M:irtlno. 424W(xi(lbr:d"t' Avenue, will becometin' Imdt1 nf Edwiird T. O'Gorman,son uf Mr. and Mi (: John O'Oor-innii, Heiiii Ambuy. Sa turdayi i i n i i i i : i " t i l ;i N t i | ) l l : i l M u s s l i t11 • 4.i oVIurl; in St. Anthony'sChurch.

S'ew Arrivals

Knights EvenPlayoff SeriesWith 7-3 Win

YOUR NEWSOCIAL SECURITY

3, to even

KT - Th" Knlehts ofbi'Tt lb" Cltv l i n e . 7 tn

the series In the flnuleach. e;irly

Htercution Soft-

uns'llci,A cluunhU'i' was born to Mr. andMi's. Robert, Zainpino. 85 UircliStreet, am! :i dmiBliti'r to Mr. a'nd

I Mrs. PiUsl H:irlfiliiil:o, 11 Spruce | jfushnei1, 3bI Street, nt Per' h Ainboy Geseral o'Donnfc'll. c

plnvorTs nt onethis week, in thbiill I . l l ' . 'UP.

Tl>" winners pounded Mot Knlu-si-k f. r five runs In the first t'vninn n"s In roll up a bl? lead. TheCity Line leiini was held In checkbv ,1 IP Zlmmi'iTiiHii who pitchedfoiif lilt bull until the final lnnln»win li the la1 ITS scored two runs.

.In" Basilicl ami Tony Sftrzilloboth «ot two hits for the winners.

The box K o v e -K OF C

AB2bcf

The Port Reading Fire Company , Huspitiil Siiturday, ; KoUbus, Iftook piirt in the 50th iuiiikersitiy ,^,,^,,^ •.,. ^, , IMcyers, l b

of thi' South Hainfiekl F i n[bepBrtmcnt, Kiiturduy.

Forty Hour Adunition

St. Anthony's Church closed itsjForty Hour Devotion ServicesrTuesdny evening with ii procession"by the children.

Rev. Charles Valentine of theChurch of t h r Incarnation, T ren -|ton, delivered the sermon Sunday

9 f low

Luwlor, rfAdams, rfZimmerman, p .

4343322103

rWe Carry A

Complete Selection OfIMPORTED & DOMESTICWINES & LIQUORS

Free DeliveryDIAL KM-!)975

ROCKMAN'STAVERN & LIQUOR StoreRandolph St.. and Fer'hing Ave.

CARTERET, N. J.

\ Bright make-up Is in fnshion forthe fall and whiter months to keep

i piu-e with the bright colors of thenew doll ies . It seems the mousy,

( lacklustre hair colors are not inkeeping with all this brightness.

If you lire so inclined, there areany number of things you can doto make your hair more at tractive.Sonic of tlic more old-fashioned ofus thine tha t frequent shampooingii pood hairbrush and the proper

d i e t are enough. However, if youare interested, you can t in t yourhair, bleach it, .streak it, highlightit or chant 'e the. color altogether.

Hair coloring materials comeunder two hradlnps: those whoseeffect is temporary and those re-ferred to as tints or dyes. T h e per-manent colors are of two types:those tha t coat the hair and those

Totals 25

CITY LINE

Hlrschman, cfO'Reilly. IfLukach, ssLazar, lbRledel. cBilanin, rfDowner. 3bKiilusek. pWeber, 2b

Totals! City LineK of C . ..

442333233

27

R1201100011

000230

001020

00002

002

v!6

2-3x—7

You feel so delightfully clean and refreshed as you step from a.Servisiil't water bulh. Nu harsh , slun-irritating; hard water in-gredients here. Soft water keeps your complexion looking love-lier . . . so effective for laundering, dishwashing, shampooing,every household use. Our regular service pruvidis soft water'round the clock,

Nine Moslem princely statesand two one-time British colonieshave entered nationhood togetheras the Free and United Federationof Malaya.

which penetrate Into the hairshaft.

The temporary rinses have asoftening effect on the hair andleave it soft and shining. Thisseems to be the best for yourmoney. No matter what the styleIs, to be really attractive one rmisremain natural looking. Too oftena dyed head looks just like what iis and no more.

Sun tips are a new Parisiennecraze. Just a few strands of hairin strategic spots about the headme bleached a lighter color.

If you are going to color you| hair yourself, there are a few factyou would do well to know. First,your huir grows about half an inchper month. It was much fasterduring the summer than duringthe winter. The ends of the hairare more porous and pick up colormuch faster than the lengths.

By ALLAN A. BASS,DiUrlct Manager

Q. My husband earned $1585(his year before he became 65 thisJune. Do the wages he earned be-fore reachinx 65 count in the«l?00 he can earn while receivingbenefits? If so, can he get anybenefits this year?

A. A retired worker may re-ceive payments for all month*he is eligible to receive them in

•/• calendar year if he doe* notearn more than 11200 duringthe ent ire yeltr. For each $80 orfrict ion of $80 over the $1200une monthly check may bewithheld, Yearly earning! of$I5CS would mean tha t five ofthr six checks your husbandmight hare received for tbiayear may be withheld. But, re-e a r d l e u of how much he earn*In the whole year, your husbandcould still receive his benefit*for June and the remaining;mon ths of the year if in each ofthose months he neither earnsover $80 in wages nor works inself-employment.

Q, My wife and I are both eli-gible for social security benefitsI run a .small grocery store andusually nfluke about $2400 a yearI've been told we couldn't drawbenefits while I made that much

don ' t understand tha t wheneach of us Is allowed to makemake $1200 and still draw bene-fits.

A. You and your wife canearn up to $1200 a year andstill draw the full year's benefit.But, since you operate the store,the $2,400 would be your earn-ings. These cannot be dividedto come under the $1200 rule.

Rod & Gun ClubWins PlayoffsOver Shop Rite

"AFTVRtn - n ! e Rod ft Gunfivh, Pi-'t hulf rharhps, took bothends of a double header fromBltar's Shop Bite, second halfwinners, 7 to 3. and 5 to 4, toennture the Junior League play-off title this week.

In the first game, Joe Bodnarpitched a magnlflclent five-hitter.The highlight of this game camein the fourth Inning when Joe

iwk out the whole side with thebases loaded.

In the second game Ed Carml-chael went the distance of nineinnlnps. giving up five hits andfanning 12 batters, to score anImnresslve victory.

Ed Hamorski, losing hurler,also ntlowed five hits.

The winners scored the decid-,c run In the ninth frame, break-

In^ a 4-4 tie.The box scores:-

First fameRod & Gun

AB

Leo's Eliminated A&E Marlins Win

Mesquita. 2b .. ..Pettus. cMenchese, ssCorrente. 3bCarmlchael, l bSchaflhauser, IfC. Williams, cf .Stewart, rfBodnar, p

PRE-ELECTION DINNERMETUCHBN—The United Re-

publicans of Middlesex County willsponsor the 12th annual pre-Election dinner October 3 at thePines at 7 P. M. The committeehas arranged a turkey dinner andafter a short program presenting

533424234

R021011200

TotalsSltar's

Bazaral, cfKoch. 3bSabo, rfKondrk, cHamorski, ssBorusavic, 2bGiles, lb ....R. DonovanWardA. Donovan, p

Totals .Rod & GunSltar's .

If

30

Shop RiteAB3332233302

By Brown's TavernFrom Playoffs, 7-2

CARTKBET — Srown'i Taverneliminated Leo's Tavern In theAmerican League softball playoffs,winning 7 to 3. The winners willmeet St. Ellas for the title.

Ray jtincn carved out a ne-Ufive-hitter for the Browns, strikingout nine batten and had notrouble mccept for ont inning, thesixth in which he luued four baseson ball* coupled w|th two hits, asthi Leo'g scor*4 both their rune.

The Browne piled up an earlyfive run lead in the first two Inn-Inns and then merely coasted alongto victory.

The box score: -BROWNE)

AB, aural. 3bI'Kukaslak, 2bLUu«l lbMedwlck, o :Irving, IfKlnch, pMengel. wCutter, cfPiazza, rf

Little LeaguersPlayoff Series

CARTERET — The A & E Cap-tured the Little Leaguers playoff"'•"'""'nn'-'ii 'n bv defeating Kep-Ich Esso, 8 to 3, In the decidinggame.

...inio n ] n v ijy t)1(> dinnersfeatured the game.

. Andres hit a homer with oneI miii on base for the A and Eteam to help win the uame.Hqmick had three hits to lead theattack.

The box score >A * E Murllns

AB

Kokes to MeelCity Line forSoftball Title

25103 210300 000

3x0-3

Second fameRod & Gun

ABMesquita. 2b '.Pettus. c

the County candidates , the mainaddress will be given. The-Speak-er's Committee will announce thename of the fjuest speaker shortly.Kenne th Berry, Spotswood, and j Menchese, ssMrs. Izola Bilder, Perth Amboy. i Corrente, 3bare co-chairmen of the commit- \ Bodnar, lbtee with Louis StarTHli, honorary i Schaffhauserchairman. i C. Williams, cf

Rozzelle, rf .

FBI WARNINGT h e Federal Bureau of Investi-

gation chief, J . Edgar Hoover, hascalled on all citizens to help pro-tect children from sex criminals."A constant vigilailce by everycitizen and every parent is theprice of protection against thissadistic menace."

PorterFinn, rf ...Stewart, rfCarmlchael,

Totals

44"4433310823

31

R111000000002

R121110010

Orilf'rn, 2bHomick, lbT. Peldheim, ssFoxe, pDolyckl, If .McMahoh, 3b ...stnart, cf .Andres, cJ. Peldheim, rfOrlando, rf

Totals

Kasha, ssBenson, rf ..R. Leahy, 2b ....Vlnsko, cfIlk, lbKomdrk, cPerrence, p ....J. Leahy, 3bKukach, If ....

TotalsLeo'sBrown's

28

LEO'S2 0

00110000

4433444431

R013 .1001110

w6n the third and twew,,,In the semi-final of n,,, Nleautle playoffs, br?ntin»Bowl, 4 to 2. under th,.the Park field,

Blackle Sosnowski, n.,t r re t ' s leading soft.pitched a nent fourtwo of the hits comin,. .n in th Inning when is,,.scored both of tht'ir i r

walked five batters mui i,Mtuation well In hand Ml t

Kokc's will meet tlic c •Club for the N;itu,ii.,iplavofTs,

The box score:-Kokr's

"1 c,

Totals 34Kepich Esso

ABSokolowskl, 2b . 3Skiba. ss 3Wolanski, 3b. rf 3Koby, p 2Pukach, 0Rusnak, c - 3Plszar, cf 3Garal, 3b 3Kovacs, If 1Kachur , rf, lb 2

8 11

R H1 10 002000

Merelo. IfKins, 2bDonovan, .isZabel, lbKeats, lbWizna, rfKollbM, 3bMesquita. c3. Sosnowskl

AH

25 2 5000 002 0—2

.. 230 020 x—7

Crashed the Gate?

A Washington minister tells thestory of what happened at thefuneral of a certain woman whoduring her life had constantlyquarreled with everyone, hen-pecked her husband, and hadbeen regarded by all as a genuinebattleax.

But' now that she was dead,people were willing to forgive andforget, and a crowded church lis-tened to the minister as he dronedhis eulogy of the departed.

The sky grew darker and dark-er, and, just 08 the service ended,a storm broke. There was a flashof lightning, followed by a crashof thunder.

All was silent in the church,and then from the front row camethe voice of the widower: "Well,she got there!"

^ 1

TotalsHill Bowl

TotalsA & E MarlinsKepic Esso ....

22 3 5201 410—8011 001—3

Sltar 's Shop Rite

Gas Genie Says

Kates as Low as $3.1)0 per Month

SERVISOFTOF WOODBRIDGE

741 St. George Avenue, WoodhridgePhone MErcury 4-1815

I'M COOKING UP A SURPRISEFOR YOU -JUST WAIT TILNEXT WEEK! BUT 0OHT WAIT

TO START C0OKIN&WITH A MODERN,

AUTOMATIC GASRAN6E.ITSMA6IC!

Bazaral, cfKoch, ss ,.Sabo, rfKondrk, 3bHamorski, p ....Sictt. 2bBorusavic, 2bGiles, cWard, lbA. Donovan, IfR. Donovan, If

Totals

434540443

,1' T

34

12100000000

AGILE BURGLARBALTIMORE, Md. — An agile,

determined burglar scaled twowalls, scrambled onto a second-roof of an adjoining food marketand then jumped 18 feet througha sk'yllght to the floor of a drugstore. Then he removed the safe,containing $2,300 in cash, fromthe building through a rear de-livery door.

M. Sloan, 3bTrosko, c ,E. Resko, It)L. Reslco, rfIhno t . If AF. Staubach, ssickalawlcz. 2b

Bohanek, p

TotalsHill BowlKoke's

AB

23

'INSPECTION' i .MRt- ' iSImmediately upon the ,i: ..,

ment of Congress, men;:..Congress departed for :.,.places for "study missum-spectlons" and "investi . ,,:Representatives will no ,,; :

already gone to Europe, .vthe Middle and Far E.iM sAmerica, P a n a m a and Ak

CHAIN LETTERSFollowing reports that chain-

letter schemes are being revived.Postmaster-General Arthur Sum-merneld has warned senders thatsuch letters are Illegal and thaithey will be investigated by postalInspectors.

Mother's UarUmThe possibility of a landslide so

intimidated the Inhabitants of alittle village that one couple de-cided to send their son, aged 9,to an uncle until the danger hadpassed.

Three days later i they receiveda telegram "Am "returning boy.Please send landslide instead."

M r -UdltMrtM8 d » H M I Accident Inwtam

htni laquMU

SKE F. M. SCHLAGETEBit* Yfonne PlaceEllubcth 3, N. J.

Tel. EL-3-64S2

THE PRUDENTIALtnwruu Ctmpiij d Imtkl

WUODBRIDGC DISTRICTWOOUBR1DGE, N. i.

24

00(1 (ID

102 li'.

The Newly Rtunvutnl

FALCONHALL

106 Fulaski Avc, Curlrni

Is Now Available For

• snow Kits• BANQUKTS• PARTI i:sFor Reservations C':tll

KI1-98811

I like to look.. . ~,

Sitar's Shop Rite 101 010 100—4Rod & Gim Club 202 000 001—5

Farm debts,set records.

assets and equity

FOLKSFAR AWAY?PHONETODAY

icosts little anywhtrtj

Norfolk 70<

If y o u ' d l ike your hul l l l i i s si>U-. I n i i ^ l l i i s picture tu o u r s a l o n

FREDRIC'S FALL SPECIAL! j jCut, Wash, Permanent , Hestyle mid Sel .. rouiplet

T l G Q l I C hairdresser1(50 i:Jm Avenue, Rahway Phone KA-7-9883

Sow Going On at Ritchie's Garden CenterINMAN AVENUE

Phone FU-8-1280

•rino «il» o#up«n far »lflon »pfel«l Antilv«r««ry

Special Free with

SCOHS SPREADER1 bag Scotts SOIL IMPROVER

Ntt. IS Spreader • Regular ¥16.50B a t - Boll Improver 2.9ft

19.45Your Cost

You save .. 2.96

Large BoxFamily Brand G r a w Seed

KeKUbr prioe $5.95Sale* price 4.95

You nave 11.00(WITH CKKTIFK'AW

2 BatsTURF BUILUEE

Regular priceSalt price

You »»ve(WITH

9S.85.... 7.85

$1.00

HURRY! THESE SPECIALS EXPIRESEPTEMBER U, 1957

Ritchie's Garden Centeryi: rw«Lvdi , fiitf n lawn hi tint

10 days, TRUST J

AC1ICOWORKS

flWtltMHTmi \mn I* *

IfMt.fcMlYMll

AOIICO l«rLawni, Trmand ihrwlM

AOIICO»oiT«r»- 1 0 %

NatvralOrganic

n vi <*

Jmal/t* tiiti In

My toile ram to (ke «lnip1<>.

kwlhig, C U M I C *<>'«>S(

why « y <*hoUc i*

OPENFRIDAY

'TIL 9 P.M.

Phone

PU-81955 ACCOUNT

SCHWARTZ SHOES1519 MAIN STREET, RAHWAY, N.

Page 7:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

r F M I > . \ V

Views H.S.Prospects

•<isls Hill Howl UpsetsOver 50 Racers koke's in Second

mod;:; Game of Playoffs, M n ™ t!m:i fiflv (

knlRhts of NASCAR'S

. • is the wr

Kmtt put l l l n l s

i;, writer made his,•'.,„„ the Blue nnd

ivlio Is starting his,n us uric! conch atutn Avenue instltu-

uiio will open theirnijcr 28, nt home byA;iv. have a numbermrriinB to the line,.,men returning to

In the backfleld.Nick

clay

Hi" MO-mll«v,;nt *m

t h " n inn in i i of

Nati i inal J l ic

* ' n l b ( l 'Mii-ll I.) (.1,,. n ) M .a-s well us thd ] , i i r ,,,,,,,,.1Qllalifviii). (,.;

Saturduv helwr, , ,

• ) ,•

Nationalcurrent IJ.IC

Buck Bakpr, 1950slinmplon and theMLU-r in NASCAR. „ . . ,ball Robert... , o l o i . , u l F h ) 1 , l d a

who won th SU1.|MB f , ,a l

Bob Welborn, 195R

v : , ,

convertible

,i. from last year.• •jors. Topping the;,. f,»r the backfleld

T u r n e r and Joe W e n t h - ' ' 1

two hard-i-Ulini! V'rMnh ' f in"'s. will be on hand to IT'- . ' " '

sume their battle for suprermrv

• 1 "SMT.T Thf Hill Bowl n p -"" I'1!!",1!'1 el'nmri'.onshlp• I ' I M I I by winning t i e se r -

in • c( CJC t (V pl;iv>tTs In1 i-'iuiun Siiflbnll l.cii.Ri!:'. in

' ' " 1 :POV (I n 5-4 tfni at. the"••' ' I t! ire innhi'is. but the Hill

IV:. 1 ::<inr truk s'ronR to s?ore•iv ni"« IM th" nr*t two frames• i l l ' 1 \ r l J ) ' l i * j r r l l ••:\mt.

'II1!' Hi!' Bowl pound-d the S'>s-Hflll !;. |-:1V; 1MV ., lot;,) ()f 15 j 1 | ( S ]

while C'lmilie Bohniiek turned in- "• -live- ehht-hl t ter for the

winners." vc Trosko, Jr., bad a

1 • t. l l a t , ;•«• Lt. 11 >.' f o u rperfectU'.lL 0 !

b..X

. i . i i , J o;'„,!,„•. Edward Carml-,|. ibat'lt. [i sophomore,ldlK fullback, a sopho-, i PM^US, halfback, a

;1nd Bill Sltar, senior.

Langhoniespring.

at tin-M.

IIII.I.'HOVVI,AB

:!b

in

St. Elias TakesFirst Game ofPlayoff Series

,m lineman returninRjihide Bill O'Lear, an

:i senior, and Martyboth

Mikell and Bobby Sziget'l,

„ line at the cen te r ' CARTER ET--The SI.Ell™ team•' •S('nlor- won I'1*1 first, name in th- uhivollsline material Include topping Parkview, fi to 2, The win-

v h'irti'..-| rK. Hi-kn. 11)I., Resko. rf•I. Ilinot, ssAekulawicz,riiirwy, efOldakowskiBolmntk. p

2b

Totals

R32.0102011

10

PAL Newand

Sports 'RoundTown• f BtNNT

I ..vM.R (i()LK CHAMPS: Hpnry TledehfrR and unminirk Vrneila, who won the 1957 tltlf. bt\ntnrrsinled with winner's cup by Harold (iraiisam, chairmnn. Also above is Howard Cannan whowas the only playrr In tho leaRiif to hit a hole In one. Left to right. Howard Cannon, Harold

Graimm. Henry Ticdehrrgind Domlnick

Moe Kalusck, winningallowed three hits and

hurler,walked

Merrio. If

Wiznn. rfrinnovan, ss

KOKK'E TAVERNAB R

Benefit Twin-Rill for15 two batters. Losing hurler Joe Little Lpttffliers Sept. 24

Zimmerman had a neat three'H

,\:y. and Eddie Ha- , ner In this series will play Brown's Zabel, lbend poets iTele- Tavern for the American

. ;!ior and Hamorski a -championship.:;ev Fedorcho. guard.! SantalHi pitclied an effective,1 Eddie Kukoskl and ' seven hitter, while his opponent.nlrlon. both linemen,:i;:)is. Recently Rod-

Mimscir slightly but,111!; well.

m m are Roy Ooder-: Bialowarczuk and..iirhauser. The first

and the lat-

.,:n held two practice•.nth North Plalnfleld

L,;,,:ui Park this week.

.LI.-DII the club had a 6-2,;,.: u capture the CentralHump II Championship.

Al Miller, allowed six hits* JerrySolomon got three hits for thelosers.

The fit. Klias team had two bit;rallies to win the name.

PARKVIEWSAB R

T Miller, ss 4 0Medvetx. If 4 ISolomon, 3b 4 0Polouso. cf 4 0Tomori, lb 4 0A. Miller, p 4 0Levity.. 2b 3 0

3 01

Kuils. cfW. KolibasMrsquita. cWudztk. 2bS. Snsnnwski.A. Sosnowski

lib

TotalsHill BowlKoke'.s Tavern

51233433122

31103 240212 002

11110111000

2

011202000

hitter troing Into the final roundThe box score :-

City LineAB R H

O'Rielly, IfLiikfich, ssLazar. lbRiedel, cHirschman,

0—100 - 7

i Makwinski,Bilanin, rfWeber, 2bKalusck, p

Totals

cf3b

MINIMUM

SERVICE

CALL

S3 .50

RANK'SDIO & TELEVISIONSKIV BKUN8WICK AVE

BliS

Kertes. cKltzls. rfMilts, if

Totals

0

; Oulnmb, cMulluns, ss

:Kent, '.'bJM Yavorsky,! Wojcik, rf: ,J Yavorsky. l] Ilundfiman, cj HrycuiUi, IfSantalla. p

! TotalsParkview

• St. Elia.s

1

29ST. ELIAS

4442

H10i0u2

oi0 i

0 j

0

000030

010300

110 'I110

11

71 - 2x—G

City Line ScoresJ with 2 Away inFinal to Win, 3-2

CARTERFT The City Linescored three runs in the last in-nin:.' to come from behind andwm an excitini! 3-2 battle fromthe Knijihts of Columbus to elimi-nate the K of C boys from thepluvoll .series.

The Knights had the gamepractically all wrapped up, with

K of C

Basilici, 2bSarzillo, cfFleming, ssKushner, 3bO'Donnell, cJ. Kolibas, ifLawlor. rfLittle, rfZimmerman, p

TotalsK of CCity Line

333332333

26

AB432132113

111000000

CARTERET — Announcementwas mnde this week that theSportsman All Stars wil play abenefit for the Little LetiscuersTuesday, Sept. 24, under lights atthe Park field, opposing the well-known Cotton Club, stnte cham-pionships. -This game will get un-der way at 6:30 F. M. The sec-ond game of the benefit twin billwill bring together the All Starsand the Calso team, County In-dustrial championships. T h i sgame will start at 8:15.

In event of rain, the benefitdouble header will be played onThursday, Kept. 2fit.h.

H.S. Grid SlateHas Nine Games;To Open Sept. 28

The CarUret Sp. i:«:ni-n A.tso-dfUInn huti announced Lli.it It »'.il•numl ii trophy to She nio-a valu-able football plnyi-r on this year's' • • • • I I ' . i vt»«>r t l ' f t r o n h y w a s

won by EiiKene Carmlrhnrl.rt u> nt !ii double header will tuke

pluci- mi Tuesday Sept. 24th and!'i riif of r;>!n *ill be tifld onThursday Stpt 26th. The pro-ciMbi ul this iitliiir will bf duiuiU-dlo the Little leuKUers for a llltli1

banquet lor the youngsters. T h e ,j double heiidu' will be played on• the1 Pi\rk field and the first name1 « • r w n . y • • • ( " •.,, h e > •

Sportsmen All Stars and the^ O i U O l i ^ l l l b . i l l d K u . i l f l u m i l ' i i , j

j litshts will tx1 Spitrtsmcn All Starsj and the Calso learn, lndustri.ilj chomps.i Heard from good old Rube Jar-I ka, former Ca^terel Press & Cur-tert-t Alumni Press agent, who tinsbeen confined to bed for many ! T. Miller, ssyears, many of us can learn a lot Solumon, 3bfrom Rube, his couratfe has been; Meilvetp, Ifattructinti a lot of attention in: Poluso. cfNewark. Recently. Rube was taken j A. Miller, cfor ii Joy ride by the Newark fire-:, MHIK. lbman und don't be surprised wewill see Rube In Carleret one ofthese days. Rube will be in formany surprises for the channfs he

Park\icw TeamIs EliminatedBy St. EHas

CAHTKIVI' Hi- M. Elia» « o »1 r ;cci.|.,l "i inf of t>e American

• i :\»'i,. p' v c c I'liiiiniinit the'nilrvirw t MM. 8 to :! By wlnulntt ,' f y* ':'!••- <';ii!i"(i fit1 r i«h t to

lilnv HMIAH'S fm iin- UMe a n d

'•e'i u'tiini'tt 'iv ir.,r:ii'ip.itf In theflinl p lavofs

• a t im Wo (oik l.'nrV'd o ni f tyI h i w h . l ' c r whili1 his opponen t s ,"h ' l l ' i rn i*iid Ntelsun. a lbwed foul"

: lilts beUie l l tin Ii»!•> v•'•• • .1 iv iiinl w ill's pnftblNl

th r SI Ellas to s . on el?hl runs ,' l ln mix s c o r e -

ST. M.1ASAU

SI

4

ir

Kon.l. If'Kent, 3l>M Yavor*y, ASWo'cik, pJ Ynvnisky. HiHundennan cfBwlares, 2bSanlulln, if

Totuls

lb

R010001000

21010000

001000

H0200000

1

0

30-23—3

Electrons Win3 Over SheetersIn USMR League

CARTERET—Frank McCarthy.;director of athletics at Cartert t . sl'(>

Hinh School, announced the 1957 j A f u" r l w o w e e k s o t h » r d t l a l n 'grid schedule which Includes nine lnK' Carteret football tenm is be-Kames, five home and four on the 8">»ln« to look better. The tworoad. The rlub will open its season ! s c r l m m n t r l ' s h ( ;U1 ''ecently helped

" ~ " - nit ho some got

NO TAKERSCORTLAND, N. Y — Clothing

Uvo away and leading by 2-0. But .store owner Howard Shaver re-th" roof caved in ias Benny Zus-' cently put a dollar bill in an enve-man put;* it> as the City Line boys lope on display outside his store

CARTERET -Mechanics No. 1teams all came throughthree-game victories in theM. R. Bowlins' League tliisThe Elections won easily

The Elections,and the Casting

' withU. S.week,from

scored three runs on two hits, twowalks and an error.

To suv the least, it was n toush.ball Kiime'fnr Joe Zimmermanand his boys to lo.se.

the Sheeters, hittiiiR three bigscores of 966, 907 and 885. TheMechanics, also rolling in mid-season form, took three withoutmuch efToi t from the Tunk House,while the. Casting Building won athree-yame sweep over the Silver.,

J „ u.,, J , J . , Two Hamc winners included the j a t R n n w a y -dollsn1 bill and examined it, " b u t [ M n i n offi(1|1 Y ,u .d ( , ] u | Mechanics

NO. ::.B..I Heaton hit a 641 set and

Geci|4e Sloan followed with 615.Heaton hit scores of 226, 213 and202. Sluiin rulltd 20!), 213 and193.

The results follows:-

and marked it down to 77 cents.Scores of passmby looked at the=i>.vn and 27 even pick-ed up the;

not a soul would buy it."

September 28 at home with R a h :

way. The newcomer is Manas-quan. a Group 3 powerhouse, athome on October 5. Richard Mig-lecz is line coach and Moe Gasloris backfleld coach. We.s SpewakIs freshmen (?rid coach.

The complete schedule follows:September 28. 2:00 — Railway

at Carteret.October 5, 2:00 — Manasquan

at Carteret.October 12, 2:00 — Clark Re-

gional at Clark.October 19, 2:00 — Sayreville

at Carteret.October 26, 2:00 — Linden at

Linden.November 2, 2:00—South River

at Carteret.November 9. 2:00—Wuodbrldiie

at Woodbrld[;e.November 10, 2:00 — Hamilton

at Trenton.November 28. 2:00 — Perth

Amlwy at Carteret.JUNIOR VARSITY SCHEDULE

the Boys a lot, nit ho somebruises and knocks. A lot of prac-tice Is needed to net the tenmrendy for the opening game with jRailway. . . . Many County Coachesare starting to shed crocodile tears,saying they do not have much thisyear.

Little leaguers, Major divisionfinished their pluyoils nnd A & EMarlins defeated Keplch Easo inthe 3rd and deciding game 8-3 asa triple play by the Martin teamnnd a homer by Andres helped towin the game. A Si E had won thelast 3 out of 4 games from Keplchto become champs.

Tomori. lbKitals. 2bLrvitz, 2bBaron, rfKertes. rfNlelson. pChislom. p

To'nlsSt. EllasParkview

271'AKKVIKW

AB4333222120o

2

0

it

1

R0101000000000

H011101•00

H010i0000

if!

2B204000

010001

0100

31 - 8l—a

Junior playoffs held last

Burner Ramblers,Hill Top IndiansTied for Lead

September 30. 3:30 — Rahway

Sundi.y mid the Rod A Gun wona double header from Sltur's ShopRite 7 to 3 and 5 to 4 extra innings

«->ntvl|l si i nut km. . .St. Eliaseliminates Parkview fi to 2 ando io A LO advance, to the Americanleague finals and will play Brown'sfor. title.

National league doinc.s. HillBowl wins second game of play-oils 10 to 7 surprising the Koke's,

lost only twice thiswho had3:30 — Metiwhen at I season.

K oi C ciime back In the 2nd

\ ElectionsSI .ettei's < o >

9G6779

BEFORE you buy any new car,

take a close look at an Oldsmoblle " 8 8 " . . .

the Rocket that's easily within your reach!

Mechanics Nu. I I 3 I

T a n k House (0

'astin:» 131 .Silver < 0 '

849803

834755

9077C7

921749

800731

885

BOO

858853

766714

Main Office 12 iMechanics No. 3

756 842 9051 1 >

719 889 800

Yard 12» • 819

Smelter 11 > . . . 782

Mechanics No. 2 (2)

Lead Burners 11)

762706

786774

736686

723763

751837

f ^ T ^ R you check the "88" featurefor feature.. - you'll discover more luxury.. .

more comfort and safety. * -more power for vour money! Now's the

•mart time to get out of the ordinary

...Into an Olds! Remember...

there's a Rocket for every pocket!

Women's Pin LoopOpens; 3 TeamsScore Sweeps' CARTERET — T h e Carteret

Women's Industrial Bowling Lea-gue opened with a bang this weekat the Hill Bowl Alleys as threeteams marchfid off with sweep vic-tories'ln the opening matches.

The Hdlf 'N Half team trimmedNational Lead, 3 to f), rolling a bii?2163 set. Westvaifo took threefvoin the WtHis-Etti). hitting a 738score in the last game, and Nat-vur took all three) gftines from theKoos Keglers. | i

Mary Letso hit !a bjg 186 for the'N Half) girls, and alsb rolled a 488set whfch was high for the week.

The (scores :-

OctoberMetuchen.

October 14, 3:30 — Clark Re-gional at Carteret.

October 21, 3:30 — 8ayrevlUeat Sayreville.

October 28. 3:30 Linden atCarteret.

November 4, 3:30 South Riverat South River.

November 11, 3:30 — Wood-bridge at Carteret.

November 18, 3:30 — HighlandPark ut Highland Park.

December 2. 3:30 •-• Perth Am-boy at Perth Amboy.

FRESHMEN SCHEDULESeptember 30. 3:30 — Perth

Amboy at Carteret.October 7, 3:30 — Edison at

arteret.October 12,

Carteret.October 21,, Carteret.October 26, 10:00 — Linden at

'arteret.November 4, 3:30—South River

t Carteret.November

game to win from City Line 7 to iiiiuklng a 3rd game possible anddrama was written in finalgame, For K of C was leading 2 lo0 last Inning and two outs, but twohits and two walks and an errorby I lie short stop on a hard hitball i.'iive City Line the game 3-2.

Mean while nt the nl^ht name,Koke's finally eliminated the Hill

Soon) "THE BIORECORD", tank. PATT. PAGE! Every We.k on CBS-TV.

Half 'N HalfNational Lead

Nstvar No. 2Copper He^ds

Natvar No. tKoos Keglers

Westvaco ......Koos-Etts

735 698 730646 590 669

635 685 668707 656 707

612 553 5647t EU4 64

712 657 13608 563 54<

FOLKSFAR AWAY?

PHONETODAY

sts little anywheroj

Toronto 75*

YOUR AUTHORIUALITV DEALER NOW I

10:00 — Metuchen

3:30 — Sayreville

11, 3:30 — Wood-

to tin; Ilnuls of the National leu-Hue, ineftiiw City Line for thetitle.

Little leaguers will, try »«uintonitjlit to untiingle thf 2nd halfrace us the Carteret Burner Ram-blers plnyed the Hill Top Indiansto a 1-1 tie. The winner will meetth* Duiry Queen Dodgers for theleague championship.

CARTERET The Carteret Bur-ner Ramblers nnd the Hill Top In-dians, who played to a 1-1 tie onTuesday of this week, will replaythe mime toi^iiht in the Little Lea-guers playoff series. Bolh teamsire deadlocked for first place.

Last Saturday murniiiK theCarteret Burner Ramblers de-feated the Babies Panthers 7 to 6in an uncompleted came whichwas tied on Friday and finishedon Saturday. The Carteret BurnerRamblers defeated the DairyQueen Dodgers lo tie the Hill TopIndians fur the second half crown.

The tenm standing In the LittleLeaguers-Minor division follows:-

Kittle l^agucrs-Minor DivisionFINAL STANIIINCS

WonCarterPt Burner

RamblersHill Top Imlk'.iisDairy 'Que'-n Dui'gersHungarian* Reformed'

YankeesMattel's Rni'oeoQp'pnwald'.s RaidersSunrise Dairy DevilsBabies Furniture

Panthers

Lost

112

4455 .

ridge at Woodbridge.

NO STATEHOODThe Senate set aside until next

year action on bills to grant state-hood to Hawaii and Alaska. Thisl&sue has come to the attentionof Congress every year for thepast decade or so, with no finalaction being taken.

1 6

BODYESTIMATES ON W FENDER

COLLISIONWORK AT

ACME GarageAMBOY AVE. and PFEIFFER BLVD., PERTH AMBOY

"/ricfefowork with

Lambreffa say*PETER LIND HAYES

Gas Genie Says

I M RESTING UP TO MAKEELIZABETHTOWNANNOUNCEMENT NEXTWE£K.FOf< «4ORe LEISUREIM YOUR LIFE, U$EMODERN,AUTOA1ATIC6A« APPLIANCE?!

" I take Mary Heatyalong, too. We never hadsomuthfunatsuth lowcost...13Omi. to a g a l "

NOW, drive to work this fMt,convenient, economical wiy)Lambretta leti you cut tWoufhtraffic like a breeze...parks in a•etoud, anywhere. Beats walking.

Fin* Italian construction,,,high quality, but simple andmiffed. Dependable and taf*.Solidly balanced, highly maiMU-verable, ahort braking-. Built lorEuropean travel... to hold up livdefinitely in mountain country.Conn in and aee it today I

Fverybocfy's looking at.

[amlfFeOnly $129.95 Down

18 {Months to Pay!

FISHKINBros. Inc.285 Madison Avenue

Perth AmboyPl.uilf VAlUy B-0048

OI-KN tKlllAV Tilt. 8 P. M,

Page 8:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

PA OF, FinilT

School Board(Cnnflnurd frnm Pnio One)

mas party for employe;; flnrt theirChildren, nerrtiiber 21

Tli" board wcni on record fa-vorltiR Assembly bill 34 whicl•uthnrizos school boards to awarda MnKlr rniilrart for constriiotinrwork rxcprrtini! $2,000.

HfRi- ComplaintsA riniepatinn from the Curtrrri

Mobile Park in West Cnrt^riMclplnW tlmt them WJS discrimi-nation at thr Nathan Hale Scliooagainst children who live in tintrailer park. It was claimed thachildren from Uic Nn'.hrfn HaliSchnnl were bcinn tran.'.frrl'rd t.the Columbus Sniool H.S ".second-rate" stndrnLs,

Stephen Skib:\, hoard |)resid('!)tsaid this was t)ii> first he heardanything about "discrimination"»Kainst children who live in thrtrailer camp. The board presidentsaid board members do not feelthat trailer residents arc second-rate citizens and scored the refe-rence that Colutrmus School wa.'k second-rate school.

A teacher who attended thesession told the board that shewas certain that Joseph Combaprincipal of Nathan Hale did notpick the transfer of students be-cause they were from the traileicamp, but hi cause Nathan Haleschool wa.s overcrowded.

Mrs, Mary Czaya, a teacher alColumbus Srhool defended herschool. She said .she had tsiushlIn the Nathan Hule. Clevelandand Washington School prior to

THTTRnDAY, S E P T E M B E R 12, IOf.7 rr?r. •

•omlna In Columbus School findnE not the slightest dlflcrrnce lrhe ability of thr teachers orstudents.

OeoiRe Hell, board member:id not think that Comba dls-rimlnated RRalnM thr trailer pu-ills "He is a wonderful principal'Mr Heil said. "On rainy dayvhen children miss the bus. helad made three or four trips lrils own car so that the chlldrervould not have to stand out lrhe rain."

The board also held a discusKm on bus transportation.

Adull Classes'Contln'ied from Paue r. ie)

•<m:fs course will he conductedn Tuo.iclny evenlnnS.Mnny rrquratt have also herr

ecelvcd for a course, in Smal'lout Handling and Piloting. I'ufUclent Interest Is extended athe end of reclstratlon on thf'fonday. nnd TueAday eveningshe arrangements will be made triflrr the course.

NAME MEANS LITTLE

BOZEMAN. lylont.-Takcn to n:all for a series of drlvlnR infrac-ions, including drunken drivingnd driving while his license wa.'uspended, the culprit cave hi.1

lame as Lee Pleasant driver, 45le said his wife's name is May-:elle Growing Four Times Driver.

World production of steel in,956 is called a record.

DANCE CENTERStudios Conveniently Located in:

YVOODBRIDGE, COLONIA, PERTH AMBOY,METUCHEN

AIIKPIO Nicelll, instructorJdrnirrl) ot N.V.C. ftallrt Co.. Radio Cllj,

Carousel, Etr.

Announces Registration For:

I • T A P • TEEN-AGE JAZZ• (HA CIIA • CALYPSO

BALLROOMIndivid unl nr Class Tan fill inOur Studio or Your Nome.

ATTENTION, MOTHERS!

Free Stylo Body ConditioningClass to keep you slim ind trim.

Register by Pho|ie — Call HI-2-7079, Mornings

I\on - Partisan Forum is SetBy League of Women Voters

WESTFIELD — Next, Tuesday In Wcslfleld." Mrs Je.srhohn n-ilitht will bf ' the time for voters (plained that the I.ennuc fpoiuw.-

learn nt first hand where New! non-pnrtisan candidatesregularly ns nn nld to voters, thrWoodbrldie candidates rnociln?for the local election helm plan-nnd for October 16.

"What's Your Line" will be th"get-ncquiilntod theme for thrWoocibrid?e UaRue at its flrsiKeneral meeting to b? lirld a;School 11, Ross Avenue, Thursday, September 19. The sessionwill begin promptly nt S:30 P. Mwith n film. "Ynui Vote Is YourKey," on work the League is doihsto promote greater informed cit-izen participation Ht the pollsCurrent projects of the local

prsev's two major gubRrnatorial•nndldatci stand nn the leading is-lies of the campaign."New Jersey's Most Urgent

'roblrms and What I Would Doibout Them'1 will be the provoc-itive topic Of Qovernor Robert B.jteynrr, Democrat, and SenatoriHlcnlm S .Forbes. Republican, at

i non-partisan forum sponsoredv Lie Lop-jim of Womrr Voters ofInv Jersey nn Septrmoer n at!:30 in the Wcstfleld Highirhonl auditorium.

Education, the State water sup-)lv. nnd the State tax structure . . . . . . ..re llkelv to be included In the 1" c l u

(d l" l ! Publication of a U.OKK

about the township, will be tfls-candlclates' opening statments andebtittals State League Vlce-presl-lent Mrs. Donald E. Van Dyke.jvho will act aa moderator, plans0 allow Senator Forbes and Oov-•rnnr Meyner to direct two ques-tions at each other, further stim-ilatuiR the audience to brint> upmints for the candidates' discus-don.

Homred suests will include Mrs,ileyner. Mrs. Forbes and Mrs.:harlcs Keller, New Jersey League

president. Mrs. P, D. Manning,nesidcnt of the Wefitfield League.will welcome the. candidates, andMrs. A. D. Kaplan of RosellS islendinji the Forum committee.

The Forbes-Meyner debate Isme of three the League is sponsor-ing throughout the State, accord-ng to Mrs. Frederick Jesselsohn,president of the WoodbrldgeUaeue. She announced that alloral Leagues In the area are sup-lorting the WestflelO meeting andthat many other organizations Inneighboring communities havei>een invited to attend. Anyoneneeding transportation should callier at Liberty 8-7399. For thosewho plan to drive, the school isocated at Dortaji Road and Rah-way Avenue in Westfield.

1 "We want to encourage every/oter to tnke advantage of this op-portunity to .see and hear Gover-nor Meyner and Senator Forbesspeak face-to-faee, and also toquestion the candidates directly,"Mr.s. JeseUohn said. "Their jointappearances this fall will be llmit-d, and the voters of this area are

fortunate that one ol them will be

j

for the steps it saves

for the protection it brings

for the privacy it offers*An eptra phjme is quite a bargain.

1 CoBtoi only a'few cents a day. And youcan have your choice of a wall ortable model for your kitchen, bedroom

, or any room. To order—simply callyour Telephone Business Office.

everyone appreciatesan extra phone

"The Rat Race," a 1949 play byGarson Kanin, which starredBetty Field, has been bought forthe screen by William Pearlbergnd George Seaton. to be made

into a movie by Paramount.

Olivia Dc Havilland is a reallymart one. Receiving an offertorn Samuel Goldwyn. Jr., to co-itar with Alan Ladd in "Theroud Rebel," she made all sal-

ary and business arrangementsherself over a Ions-distance tele-

SAY"HAPPY

BIRTHDAY"BY PHONE

costs little anywhere,

Newport, R. 1.55<

liijn i a t e l iom Ne\ii not included,

NKW JEKSKY UKLL TK

The next role for Marilyn Mon-roe will be in "Blue Anccl." whichintroduced Marlene Dietrich tothis country. In it, she will sing"Falling in Love Again," and sev-ral other songs Marlene did so

well. Although Marilyn turneddown the life of Jean Harlow andother stories, this one she loves.

"Broken Star," will be AudieMurphy's next, it's another West-ern, in which Audio plays a gun-man who wants to reform and gorespectable.

Lillian Roth, whose autobiog-raphy "I'll Cry Tomorrow" wassuch a success, has really made

comeback to the stage andscreen. She has been playinn sum-mer stock and will also star intwo musical comedies, "By theBeautiful Sea," at Kansas City,and "Lady in the Dark,1

hasset, Massachusetts.at Co-

Ittfi

Railroad ToursFureign or Domestic

Arranged Kree!

Tell us tl.B pliu:es yCJwant to visit. We |i.«nyour Individual I Unw-ary. You \jij only you!transportation costs!Our i>ervice (rea.

LOUIS CSIPO,l«c

»a«i

DEVELOPING^PRINTINC-

• 24-HOUR Serviced• COLOR PRINTS j• MOVIE FILM• ENLARGING• FILM SUPPLIES• FLASH BULBS

I'honeWO-I-0R09PUBLIX

PHARMACY91 Main Street, Woodbrldge

Eves, till 10, Sunday tilt I PL

REE PARKING IN REAR

HEADQUARTERS

GYM SUI

mfffssHup1U3 MAIN STlWtir

Ncit Li> Wuulwuilh'ik

I1IprnnJ.iy

1111JTIui:

The New Records

cussed Every woman interested in jlearning more about how she canhave a riirrct. part in lesislmion iscordially invited to attend.

Cut long (illt in each of 1 pound of Armour Star Frankfurters. Com-bine 1 cup shredded Miss Wisconsin Medium or Sharp Aitrd CheddarCheese C/i pound) with M cup chopped prunnU and enntifrh saladdressing to moisten, and stuff mixture In frankfurters. PlaVe frank-furters in baking pan or on rark and broil 5 to 6 inches from sourceof heat for 7 to 8 minutes, Makes 5 to 6 servings,

phone, savin? herself approxi-mately $10,000 because she was"between aaents at the time,hence had no 10 percenters lo pay'off.

Dr. Hirsch JoinsDoctor's Group

Adolphc Mrnjou. who hasn'tbeen seen on thr- s-vevn for awhile, has joined thr cas^of "The'roud Rebel," which will co-star

Olivia De Havilland nnd AlanLadd.

"One Upon a Horse," the storyof two brothers whose sole aim inlife is to find a husband for theirslater, will star Ingrid Goude.Max and Buddy Baer will havethe roles of the fictional brothers.

Walt Disney has selected twoof Hollywood's character actors.Gene Sheldon and Henry Calvin,to play featured roles in the nowtelevision .scries. "Zorro," whichwill make Its debut on the ABC-network Thursday. October 10.

Duke Wayno has made a dealwith Dick Powell to star in Dirk'slicture. "Somewhere They Die."It's H .,tory Rbout a cowboy butis not a Western.

Needed On the Train"How was it Perkins didn't set

lis degree at college this year?""You don't suppose the faculty

s goins to let a fine football play->r like Perkins graduate, do you?"

ANOTHER ROBIN HOODST. PETER. Minn—A daughter

was recently born to Mr. and Mis.Ralph Hrjod hero. They namedher Robin Hood.

PERTH AMBOY - The Ob-

' stotrirnl nnd Gynofolocical Group

Perth Amhoy. composed of Dr.

Henry A. Brlafsky. Dr. Samuel

Breslow and Dr. Jack E. Shan-

'jold. announce that Dr. Leonard

M. Hlrsi',h ha.s become a member

| of the group and will join their'practice nt Sll New Brunswick! Avenue, Perth Annboy.

Dr. Hirsch is a native of NewYork City and a "raduate of theNew York City school system. Hecompleted his undergraduatework at B o w d o i n College InBrunswick, Me. HLs medical stud-ies were completed at BellevueMedical College of New York Uni-versity. Dr. Hirsch completed ro-tating internship at Queens Gen-eral Hospital in New York City.For the past thre years he hasbeen fiperializiriR in obstetrics andaynecoloRy as resident at theFlower-Fifth Avenue H o s p i t a land Medical College.

| Dr. Hirsch is a member of the; American College of Obstetriciansi ;ind Gynecologists, Junior mem-| ber of the American College, of| Surseons. eligible member for theBoards of Obstetrics and Gyne-folosy and a member of the PhiDelta Ep-silon, national medicalfrntcrnlty. He'ls at present on therlinir.il and teachiriR staffs of theMetropolitan Hospital and the

Epic has come up with severalpiayinR discs, Onn fiood one

is a Dixieland thing by JimmyMaPartland. and such offerings as"BMlin1 the Jack" and "SugarFoot Streak" are featured. Epichas one that might be a big sellerby The Four Coins. The best side,nnd the one that may so. Is "MyOne Sin."

Jay Ray and his orchestra doup a Rood listening 45 for Epicwith "Ann's Theme," backed by aslow rocker called "The Rltz Rockand Roll." Sal Minro does a mooddisc for the teen-agers nnd alsofor Epic called "Dlno." Maybe.Another new Ray disc is "Moon-ii>ht Swim." Clare Nelson vocal-

:zlns!. ,Another cood listening rncord.

long-playing from Epic's. Is Alnnnris at the Hammond organ.Tim sclcrtlnns are old favorites--"Stops Out." with Ralph and

Buddy. "Me and My Shadow,"'What Can I Say After t Say I'mSorry," "Heartaches." etc. Good!

King has a pretty good rock 'n'roll 45 with Wyonie Harris doing"A Tnle of Woe." flip, "There's NoSubstitute for Love."

Capitol brings us Nat Cole withthe music room from "RaintreeCountry." Tills will probably be a

TRAIN WRECKS PLANE

CORONA, Calir. — While prac-icins landings in his light plane.Gene Maxwell lost power, brushedsome trees and made ft near-per-fect forced landins — except forone detail. He landed on theSanta Fe right-of-way, just be-fore a freight train, bound forSanta Ana, Calif., rounded a curve.It hit the plane, demolishing It.

Wes Catri'sSchool of Stage Dancing

RE-OPENSSaturdaySept. 21st

- at the -

CLUB ROOM OFCITY LINE' SOCIAL CLHB

,'i Roosndl Avenue

CARTERETIS LIMITED

hit. On the back is ;, ,,„„,,ilow dancing, "With Yn' ,Mind." Capitol hiis.snn,!'!/favorites on a new tm,, ,,drews Sisters, They ,|(l ,Word" and ' T m GOI,,.the former being son ,)(iazz, If there l.s such n i

Capitol introduce-; a „„,nnd It's good vocal •,,,,.."The Thing I Mi-ht H;,.."and "In My Arms," bv t>roll.

ATCO offers a KDIXI ,,,by the well-known r n i ,.With the Golden HIM,:moving one, flip • My H, ,to Me."

LUCKY BREAKPHILADELPHIA — Mrs. Amen-

tris Hocks. 32, and her daughter.Vvette, 4, were on the sidewalkwatchinR the demolition of anext-door church. A 105-footcrnne boom went out of controland sma.shed into their house,knocking off a ' pa r t of the roofand Rouging a large hole in theirbedroom wall.

RITZCARTERET, N. I K I - | , ' , J

NOW T H R i ; s \

Clark Cable - Yvnnnr Ii,( ,,.

"BAND OF ANGELS"— Plus -

"DEEP AI)VK,Mll;iSaturday Matin?!' I I,

"SUNDAY TIIRV Tl I M , U

SEPTKMBEK 1, it, i;Sunday Matinee M I ],

John Strlnbci k\

"THE WAYWARDBUS"

Joan Collins - .luyne M.IIKMH,)— Plus -

"THE ABM'CTUi;-.'WEO. THKl sTf~

SEPTEMBER IS. l'l, •'.» •

Dorothy Dandrid^i ,

"ISLAND INTHE SUN"

— Pins -The Bowery Hi,..

" O H O S T ( I I A S l i NKiddie Mat in r r S.itu

Flower Fifth Avenue Hospital andMedical School.

Dr. Hirsch has taken up resi-dence at 170 Fifth Street, Fords.

ENTER YOUR CHILD NOWBy Calling Klmball 1-7574

Study ^Pleasure or Career I

FRANRLv B O U L • * i

MUSICS10 MAIH SI MEIUCHtM

- STATE-THEATRE

YVoodbrid&e N. J.Air-CondlUoned for Your Cominrt

WED. THRU SAT.Fred Astaire—Cyd Chafisse in

"SILK STOCKINGS"co-hit

Fred MacMurrayDorothy Malffnc in

"QUANTEZ"

Friday Nile Is lllch School Nile

SUN.-MON.-TUES.i'eter Gushing—Hazel Court in

"The CURSE ofFRANKENSTEIN"

co-hitDean Jaeger, Edward Chapman

In"X. THE UNKNOWN "

WED. THRU SAT.Rita llayworth, Robt. Mltchum

'FIRE DOWN BELOW.co-hit

Bill Wltllams-I.dla Albrlfht in"PAWNEE"

Saturday Matinrr at 2:00 P.

I S f I I N

LI-8-!ID!lO

AIR CONDITION! l>

TODAY TlIKt ' SATI ltl)\i

Tony Curtis in

I STORY'plus

Barbara Stanwyck, .lui'l MK

in

"TROOPER HOOK

GIANT KIDDIE MATIM I

SATURDAY AT l::in I1. M

2 BIO FEATT III N

— Plus —

5—CARTOONS-,-)

SUN.-WED. SEPT. I.Vh

You'll Always RcnicniluT

"AN AFFAIRTO

with

Cary O r a n t — Dchni.ih h-ri|

plus

"20 MILLION Mil lTO EARTH'

ACHILD'S PARADISE!

" " ~ CM UlH t»H »»»«l«blf I! fBEt

I d Itlipt OPim ( •»

FALL CO

FORDS •PLAYHOUSE

H1-2-01UAIR-CONDITIONED

WEDNESDAY. SEPT. 11

HUNGARIAN SHOWFrom 2 P. M. Continuous

TttURS. THRU SAT.

"An Affair tQ Remember"with

Cary (irant and Drborah KerrREVOLT AT FORT I-AIUMIE

withBill Elliott

(Saturday MattnefCARTOONS tor children I

SUN., MON,. TUBS.SErT. 15, 16, 17

"OMAR KHAYYAM"with

Cornel Wilde and Debra Pafet

"YOUNG DON'T CRY"with Sal Minro

T O D A Y | I I K f N l M I ; | l l i

f a r y ( i r a i f l - f r . n i k

"THE PRIDE anTHE PASSION

Technicolor

Krrd MarMiiillomllly 'Mi l

B U N U A V ,

I t k l l l i b u t I ' i i i i n i ' i '"' '•1|1'1"

" X . . . t h e UNKNOWN"I'lus— In Warnr" "i"i

"THE C l l ^ l ' "FRANKI:NSTHV

W i l l h m m V'1" '""•'''

liallci • Tap t Toe • ModemDancingmilroom (Private or Class Instruc-tion)Sculpture • Art • Piano • ViolinAccordion • Clarinet • Guitar

And,Other Instruments

Studios Conveniently Located At670 MAltN STREET, METUCHKN

Director!.:GItETA M. FKANKL, HELEN and AI.KKKD M t D l N H S

—* For Informutiun —

Call Liberty 8-1674

ST. DEMETRIUS COMMUNITY CE681-691

KOOSEVELT AVE.CAKTEltET

EVKKY 1NKilli

^ T H I S FRIDAY, SEPT. 13th

BARON BOBICK & HIS ORCHESTRA- : THIS SATURDAY, SEPT. 14th

Slosh Jiiwoiski & HiH OrrlifHt'111

(Heiit-lit of llkiaiwwn Citizens Cl«»)

Page 9:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

VMTERET PRESShi,, Eviry Friday by Carteret Pros.,

Avenue, Carteret, N. j .Klmball 1-5600

a .^ct o p t i o n or normal, non-commercialchannels, it, i s beginning to look as if the

n 'ted states is going to have pay-as-you-see television, in one form or another, even-tually. If the Federal Communications^mmlssion-whlch is now studying theproblem-docs not approve some sort ofpay-as-you-sce television then it is possiblethat this type of television will bc Inaugu-rated by the use of shielded cables, whichwill cany programs to subscribers and overwhich the Federal Communications Com-mission has no control,

The possibilities for profits and perhapsthe possibilities for lavish and expensiveshows is almost unlimited in pay-as-you-scc television. For example, if a new moviewere to be released and made available to

„„ the highways. We hear so much t h ° ° n t i r c v i e w i n S public—some ten or flf-,ins subject, and we write so much l ° C n y e a r s f r o m n o w ~ ' t might well be that

some ten or twenty million sets would col-lect five or ten million dollars for the one

f'harles E. Gregory

editor and PublUher

rates by mall, Including post-•nr, $3.00: six months, $i.fto; three

', u , n,i cents'; single copies by mall, 10•';;''".\ll payable In Idvancc.

„. (.,i'itiT delivery. 8 cents .per copy.

,, i, id us second class matter June 6, 11>24'.'„'„.,•(.(., N. J., Post Office, under trie Act

, , ' , . , • ] , 1. 1B79.

DAIRYLAM) OF AMERICA

Death on the Roadshard to write an editorial about

i. it almost seems as if the battleUilnmobile accidents and the kill-lnmob ts and the kill-

aiming of Americans is a hope- s h < !w i n f T h a t i s why pay-as-you-sec tele-* VIClntt If nn-nriHAitll.. l i . . . . . rui r* i.

iil m

;;, recent Labor bay weekend, sev--mdird people were killed—despite

/; ihat the National Safety Councili ihat three or four hundred people;),• killed over the holiday..lining was given widespread pub-iinniontators on the radio and on

; n and newspapers and public offl-,;.,(| motorists to drive safely on their: wci'krnd.;n spite of all this effort and the rc-: ,|Tort,s of the highway departments:J Mates, the lives of over four hun-,,ip](> were snuffed out. That was,,:! of the cost. Several thousands

.: incd—some of them losing arms,,. ^ h t , and so on,iMial thing—in writing an editorial,>n>r a solution to a problem. But,

, we will admit we know of no solu-this terrible problem. One can

.. .ibout safe driving, safe highways,living, strict enforcement of licenseMIions, and so on, and the killing:. nevertheless.,:i- a big rich country, but we in the

States cannot afford to lose the•: thirty-five thousands of our citizens

Thatis what we are losing, and that.vi' are losing more of our citizens

.;r. automobile accidents—in one or,ir.s, than we lost in the entire Ko-

• >uly advice we will offer the reader,•>u HI Id save his life and live to a ripe•• :s.to stay off the highways as muchliilp That is the Dest system. If youi to travel, try to pick a week-day,

wMnn is good and driving conditions•' hazardous. But the only sure way\;v ofT the highways.

is apparently on the way. The profitpotential is enormous and the smart boysarc on the trail of these profits.

TV-Hopeless MediocrityThe Television-Radio Branch board of

the Writers' Guild of America, West, hasblasted what it calls "continued domi-nance" by television by chart-minded ad-vertising agencies.

The Board also criticized producers whowere advertising agency-minded and saidthat this domination is choking creative-ness and dooming the industry to patternsof hopeless mediocrity.

We are not experts on the feud betweenthe Board and the advertising agencies or -producers who arc dominated by the ad-vertising agencies. However, we do knowthat something is dooming television tohopeless mediocrity and we sincerely hopesomething can be done about it.

Most of the plays on television these daysarc so mediocre that an intelligent viewermust find relaxation and entertainmentsomewhere else.

The performers talk too loudly—as ifthey were trying to reach the back rowscats—and everything is a crash of shoutsand dramatics. Seldom does one see a dig-nified, quiet, subtle intelligent play—with-out the screaming, screeching and his-tronics.

Television badly needs new ideas, newtalent, new v risers, less noise ,and fewerstereotyped shows on the screens.

67% Approve of Eisenhower Today16% Lower T im Last February

on« out of »v»ry ti»o Democrat*questioned In the survey expressapproval of the President.

Independents express approv-al by a better than two and ahalf to one margin.

And Republicans by a nearlynine to one margin ntve thePresident a definite nod df ap-proval.

Here's today's vote by politicalnITIlinttniu:

(REAI> ACROSS*Rrp.

Approve HI ''<Disapprove II)Nn opinion 3Since he has been in ofHre.

' President Eisenhower's popular-ity hns ranged from a hi«h ofW', last February to a low 83%in December. 1954—a spread ofonly 20pv. lndlcatirm a lack ofwide fluctuation.

This Is one of a series ofEisenhower's popularity meas-urements.

This newspnper presents thereports of the New Jersey Pollexclusively In this area.

I)fm.50'V3515

Inrf.

2112

T ' 1

Under\ the Capitol DomeBy J . Joseph Gribblns

Schools for JohnnyPaced by large-volume school construc-

tion, New Jersey's 565 school districts spentover $96 million in capital funds during the1955-56 school year, or more than doublecapital expenditures made by the 567 mu-nicipalities in the State last year.

For the school districts this representedan increase of $11 Vi "million over the yearprevious while capital spending of the mu-nicipalities rose slightly more than $6million.

As carried in the forthcoming 1957 edi-tion of "Financial Statistics of New JerseyLocal Government," capital spending in-cludes expenditures from current budgets

the television an- as well as from bond issues or other capital

I'ay-As-You-Sro TV• \\ York City television viewers arc

.i sample of pay-as-you-see tele-l.ntle boxes, called Telemeters, have'.i.hed to the TV sets of a selected

• of persons in this area, and those.nress to the Telemeters can cle-

ans in them In order to see non-free

mnouncer onhow much It will cost the viewer

i program which follows immedi-: the viewer wishes to spend thatM- puts-the money in the box and

• unscrambled signal. If, however,

funds.The annual reference work published by

the New Jersey Taxpayers Associationshows that municipalities in MiddlesexCounty made capital expenditures aggre-

not wish to watch the program, • gating $2,996,244 last year while the school

-. • itiier turn of! his set or turn to one1 :• tuilar free channels."-: ..ition of the Telemeter does not

districts in the county spent $3,668,284 in1955-56. The booklet will carry similar datafor each municipality.

Opinions of OthersVIOLENCE

i.'ii possible to eradicateiii the world If we glam-'• > vrryday life," Norrn»n"i Hie Saturday Review'iprnius convocation At

•••'TMtyof Colorado surn-i . i i i

' - about peace and non-•<- home, In school and

1 '"clues. Theh we glam--:•-••inrej In our comics,TV ifsows, and I In the

:|-'l M'BinenU Of our press'<•• i-buck books..

• Western culture, ar-1 UirouBh what Cousins"'•"• "hall education." We•m that some nations in1 actually practice non-

' " we "did, perhaps we1(1 i way to end wars. The

1;lim, but we might try1 America's orlmes of1 " f much hi ther than In••""Is. By deiglamorizlng' lO'rhaps we can reduce'"'"•ulc rate a t honte, if

1 - Littleton (Colo.)

5""'-i.V SOLUTION"H^ulty inherent In the

1 "i ine American Gjpvern-f '" " thlngi to all men

rui.ii

Eisenhower set a tariff quota onU. S. imports of woven woolcloths. It provides thatjif «J':'4

' imports KO above 14 j millionpounds in 1957. the tafiff willautomatically rise to 45 per centfrom the present 25 per cent. The14 million pounds it supposed torepresent 5 per cenf of the aver-age U. S. domestic1 output from1954 to 1956.

The idea was to help the do-mestic Industry protect Itselfagainst the British woolen nulls,without nmklna restrictions sosevere as to set the British madat us or to upset the interests ofJapan and Australia. As it is.everyone including the domesticIndustry, seems to be upset.

The British and the Japaneseboth say they, cannot competewith American mechanization inthe average wool fabric, so they

"''"'v illustratBd'itt the mud-' li;<s developed In the ln-

Pill1lll'i'i wool market.l"""ltl1 «r so ago President

K c a n ' m a K e r s of fine fabricssay the threat Is bigger, than Itseems.

The Japanese say they are aptU. be caught in the effort W eachthe BritMh. And If they shouldnave to curtail their shipmentsof wool fabric* to the UnitedStates then they'll have to. re-dice their purchase of wool from

I s n ' t seem to have «•-_

curred to anyone that, iif therewere no restrictions of any kind,the mills that could produce anddeliver the best fabrics for themoney would get the business —which might not make everyonehappy but would leave no onewith any excuses. — Ft WorthHTexas) Star-Telqrrwn.

PERILOUS ANPUNNECESSARY

It should be manifest by nowthat when the electorate of theState of Arkansas amended itsconstitution enjoining Its offi-cials to enforce segregation orsuffer loss of office anji otherpenalties, and when GovernorFaubus undertook to carry outthat inundate, the road couldonly lead t& where It has: nulli-fication of federal law.

It should be manifest by now,also, that this newspaper mustview this as a mistaken course,for we uphold both the consti-tutional and the moral bases ofthe Supreme Court decision over-riding laws which compel racialsegregation in public schools.

Obvious, likewise, to anyonewho thinks it through, would bethe outcome if thlf confronta-tion between 8tate and Federalgovernments were carried tosome ruthlessly logical conclu-sion. The overwhelming prepond-iContinued on Page Thirteen!

TRENTON — Many electioncontests throughout New Jerseyare beinc overshadowed by thecurrent Statewide gubernatorialrace between incumbent Gover-nor Robert B. Meyner, Democrat,and State Senator Malcolm S.Forbes, Somerset, Republican.

In ten counties, State Senatorswill be elected on November 6 aswell as sixty members of the Gen-eral Assembly in all counties.Senate candidates are seeklnp;four year terms In Atlantic. Ber-Ren, Cumberland, Hudson, Hun-terdon, Mercer, Morris, Ocean,Passaic and Sussex counties. As-sembly candidates are seekingtwo year terms.

Surrogates are Being elected inAtlantic. Camden, Cape May,Gloucester. Hudson, Middlesex,Passaic, Salem and Somersetcounties. In Bersen, Cumberland,Hudson and Pnssaic counties,sheriffs will be elected, andcounty clerks are campaigning inGloucester and Sussex counties.A register of deeds and mortjageswill also be elected in Hudson.Members of Board of Freeholderswill be elected in each county.

With some exceptions inmetropolitan areas, most Incum-bent Assemblymen are seekingreelection. All members of theLegislature receive $5,000 salaryon the opening day of eachyear's Legislature. They are alsoentitled to a railroad pass" goodon carriers operating within theconffhes of New Jersey.

The big fight between Gover-nor Meyner and Senator Forbesis attracting most voter atten-tion because of the issues in-volved. Thus far the Number Onecampaign issue involves Statefiscal policies during the pastfour years. Forbes claims thatMeyner has been a spendthriftGovernor and freely predicts theState will have sales or incometaxes if he is reelected.

Meyner defends the fiscal pol-icy of his administration as aprudent pay-as-you-go policywhich has kept the State of NewJersey operating within Its in-come. While New Jersey's budgetexpenses have increased only sixper cent over last year, expansesin other States are up 10 (o 20per cnet over last year, Mfynerinsists.

beverages wcrr sunt'iuk'ieil, re-voked or expired, according toWilliam Howe Davis, AlcoholicBeverage Control DiiYrtor

On July 1 there were VI.Mlplaces in New Jersey where alco-holic drinks were served. Thetotal amout of fees paid munici-palities for the privilege reached$5,306,517.52. There were 9,357taverns; 1,9(59 package stores;961 clubs; 225 places whorr onlycertain types of alcoholic bever-ages could bc dispensed, and 80seasonal cocktail lounges.

Hudson County continues tohold the honors of having movetaverns than any other county.In the up-State area, 1,539 tav-erns cater to the thirsts of man-kind, and 298 package stores arelocated strategically to sell bybottle and can. Essex County hirs1,355 taverns', but 331 packiuestores aid in satisfying the thirstof residents.

Salem County, which has only51 taverns and 8 package storesholds the record In New Jerseyfor. dryness. Next comes Hunter-don County with 73 taverns and 8package stores and Cumberlandwith 80 taverns and 15 packagestores.

OASIS:—In all parts of New Jer-sey during the past fiscal yearending June 30, only 51 licensesauthorizing the sale of alcoholic

TURKEYS; New jersey turkeygrowers this year will have 222,-000 birds rcr.dy for ThanksgivingDay on November 28.

Although the turkey crop inthe Garden State this year is 17per cent less than the 2H7.0O0 tur-keys raised last year, there will beplenty available because five percent more turkeys arc beingraised throughout the nation.

The New Jersey turkey cropthis year is made up of 90 percent heavy breeds' includingSmall or Midget Bronze and 10per cent light bivccis such asBeltsville and Jersey Buff, whichare the sweater girl variety ofbirds. The number of liuhl,breeds being raised this yt'ar,23,000 is less than half of lastyear's crop while the 190,000heavy- breeds being raised is 6per cent below the 1956 crop.

.Housewives should also knowthat turkey prices during thnfirst half of lfl.)7 averaged l.j \incent below the comparable periodof 1956.

TEEN-ACE DRIVERS: Statefinancial aid to pay thr bills forhigh school lafe driving classesin New Jersey may bc a possi-bility in the hear future.

Many boards of educationthroughout the State have beenrequested to Include auto driv-ing classes in high schools byconcerned patents whose teen-age children are driving for thefirst time. To eliminate much ofthe worry of such parents andto make sure the youngsters aretaught to drive cars properly,many civic organisations haveoffered to provide the dual-con-trol cars necessary to carry outthe program.

However, with tlffht budgetsthe local boards of educationhave difficulty in securing suffi-cient money at the local level topay salaries of the extra teachersneeded to handle the youthfuldrivers.

As a result, the New JerseyState Safety Coordinating Coun-cil has been requested to recom-mend such State financial aid tothe 1958 Legislature which con-venes in January.

Up to the present time 546 per-sons have been killed by cars InNew Jersey this year, comparedwith 481 on the same date in1956. State safety officials areconvinced that something mustbe done all along the line to havelives on tjie highways to preventan all-time record mortality ratethis year..

PRINCETON. New Jersey -President Eisenhower Is stHlpopular with rank and Ale NewJersey vo tm. bm, somewhat less50 thnn he was thrc* monthsnan. find considerably less sothan ho w<w at thf beginning ofthr year.

More than t*o out ot everytlircr voters questltined say theyspprovr of the way PresidentEisenhower Ls hnndllnc his Job.

Nearly ant In (our say theydisapprove

This compares with !"'"<• wlins.ild tills Into in April -im! Rl!''uhn npprovrd nt him last Fel>-niary.

In cnndnetlnn todny's Pnll onthe President's popularity, arnntiiHiiiv,1 feature a! the NewJersey Pnll, n cross-spctinn o[the stdte'.s voters were asked."Do you approvr or disap-prove of thr way KlwnhowrrIK handling his job an Prrsl-drnt?

These were thr statewide re-sult*:

Approve fi7rrDisapprove UNo opinion 10

Five months wio. the findingson the same question were asfollows: Approve 77^1prove 13%: no opinion v , e a o h a t t c | , tftXCS A U b u t o n e 0 ,

And seven months aKO-nKht t | ) ( ? m u o p p l a c e 0,^-^ M o t 0 r s )after his Inaueuratlon for his m n ( J e m o r e U i R n ^ t h e flrgt h a l f

.second terra, the vote was Ap- o f 1 9 5 6 AU b | | t t W Q ( Q M ftnd

prove, 83"; ; disapprove. I l l ; F o r d s Motors* had higher net in-no opinion, 6%. c o m e a t t c i . t a x M l h a n i n t n e n r s t

In other words, over the past six months of prosperous 1955.seven months, the approval vote The top 12 include General Mo-has dropped 16%; the disap- tors, still first; Jersey Standardprovnl vote has Increased 12%, oil. Bell Telephone System, U. S.and the no opinion vote has In- steel, DuPont, Oulf OH. Fordcreased *%. Motors. Texas Oil. California,

The lust time mat lower Standard. Socony Mobil. Generalpopularity figures than the pros- Electric, and Bethlehem Steel,cnt ones were reported was dur- 'the period shortly before and BALLISTIC MISSILESafter the November. 1954, Con- Soviet tests of at least fourKrcssional Elections when the long-range ballistic mLsslles haveDemocrats won control of the spurred the United States ArmyHouse of Representatives. drive to put its shorter range, but

Interestingly, d e s p i t e his test-proved, Jupiter Into produc-drop-ofl In personal popularity, tion.

BUSINESS PROFITS

In the first six months of 1957,12 non - financial corporations

$100,000,000cllsap- f I c a r o d m o r e

Competence Creates Confidence

DROUGHT:—New Jersey farm-ers who have suffered $40,000,000in agricultural losses Decause ofthe prolonged drought, also haveother financial headaches as theresult of chain reaction causedby lack of rain,

(Continued on Page Thirteen)

H l.s not wlim von PAY lor Insur.mrt-' Him <-ansUMlt\s Us v.ilur—it's»-|iiit von GET for wlmt you pay Hint Is Important . Wi> arc n LOCALINDEPENDENT AGENCY uilOH- flllictloii Is to rdprfMtlt YOUR In-t t rcs t to SIT Hi ill vou rcn-lvc i-i|iitl,il)]<; mid ron«-IMltloiis lid JusmiiMitof c la ims Vou will like in:: UKUVICE mill our wuy vl ilaUK bnsliic.,,.

Friendly Service—As Near As Your Phone'1929

STERN&DRAGOStT \

^ A I A I N STREET • WOOOBRIDGE 8 " ^

Your MostImportant Book!

Many have found a Savings

Passbook showing a long series of regular

deposits their most important book. Have you

such a book? If not, for a bettor future, we

invite you to open your Savings Account now.'

I GLAMOR GIRLS

BANKING HOURS:

Monday thru Friday

9 A. M. to 2 P. M.

Friday Evenlnii

4 P. M. to 6 P. M.

Our New Building, Corner Moore Avenue

•nd Berry Street (Opp, Town Hall)

Member: Federt] Rewsrve System and'Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

2'/V> Paid-on Saving Account

WOODBRIDGENATIONAL BANK

«M. ON ntnrn tnufrn, N. *««* «

PAGE NINE -The m&in thing in this off ice be air-minded."

Page 10:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

, .SKPTFMP.KR <Xu

In this film James Stewart has'••• iole of one of two brotliprs••it in the wild and woolly West.'I'v.irt.. a trouble shooter Tor a:i:i'iiiKl being built out. West, un-

flfl l.'iki'.1. In '" i l ly IMC pn\Ui l ] t"

its rlc.Miiifiniiti On prev ious u f c a -

.siolis, i In iKiyrnll l ius hpen s t o l e n

by nuihuvs iintl .so this is a some-what dangerous task.

Complicating the matter forStewart is the fart that Insyounger brother lAutlie Murphyi.who is quaintly known ns theUtlea Kiriri. Is a member of thepnyroll-snaU'himr pans. Ofemirw..Stewart finally inannjies to setthings rlRht and. in between

n u n ' s , m i u i . i ! ' . ! 1 . ' . l<> s ; i n a l ; ' n i r <>>

t ' A u i n ; i s r n 1 n f n i i ' . i l ( | i i n ' . t ' i

Hrief periods of luiuniicp areprovided by Diannc Foster siiulKlfline Stewnit inn relation toJimmy). All of the action takesplare \j\ Terhnlcnlor on a wide

"Mji OF A THOUSAND FACES"Due to the excellent perform-)

liii/e of James Cjianey, in tlie roleof the went silent-film star, LonChfliiey. there is drama ami pcr

;>ilir»litv in th i s f i lm

Tli ir-e oirl PIKIIIHII to r e m e m b e r

Lon Clmne.v and his widely diver-sified screen roles will recall thathe was billed as "the man Of flthousand fares" because of hisremarkable skill In make-up andcharacter rhnngp. And. becau.seof his s t r a w , retiring nature, hewas also known as "the man ofmystery."

The drama Is essentially that ofa loriK-suITerinR man who pours

I his own SufTeilnti into h:.s intim;• With not too much help from the| screen play, Mr. Caguey Rive.s nstirring sense of the actor's devo-tion to his first, wife, Ills infant,son, his aging parents and to his

j profession. He nl.so does a super-lative Job of taklnt? on the make-up that allows him to .simulateChaney as two of his most famous

I 'monsters"-- those in "The Phaii-; torn of the Opera" Biid "The"Hunchback of Notre IXnne." He

i i l s n !! ive,s ; i n i i w e f i o i n e l e p i o d i i e -

tion of Chaney plnyints n keyscene as the twtstpd-leRKed, torso-drnnginR cripple in the earliersllnnt film, "The Miracle Man."

Dorothy Malone has the rote nfhis first wife, while Jane Greer Is jthe ubiquitous vaudeville dancerwho stands by Chaney and be-comes his second wife. Kitnfinckus Is a glib press fluent andRobert .1. Evans portrays Irvint?Thalberu. the famous producer.

TIN IN U N VKAKS(iAHDKNA. Calif The last

visit nf the stork to Mr. and Mrs.David HchmunK, lenving triplets

a (tlrl and two boys - brbuRhtto ten the number of their chll-rireti. They rnnpe in age to tenyenrs, and Include two set.s ofI wins

Freedom of speech <lo"R notmean much to the man who Isafrnid to express himself.

I " l)<iti|,|

l a w y e r i h a i u l n i ' ••

Herds the balm,,.,, J ,of $500, after cloflllC!1,:Why do you frowivsfttlsflpd?

Client _ I w n s h| .who got hit by th,. ,

Faint-heurtcd Aln,their enthuslRsm M,,7bad nrws arrives.

BUSINESS arid SERVICE DIRECTORY• Accordion School • • Funeral Directors • • Moving & Trucking • • Flumbing & Heating • • Piano Instructions •

IILNSCH'SAccordion School

172 Brown Avenue, Iielin

Private Accordion Lessonsii.in-n In Vour Home or Our

Studio)• Complete Accordion Rcpalri• Sales, Kentalt, RicUantei• Pickups and Amplifier! In• Music lluoks lor Acconlloa

for Information Call

ME 4-5666

Readings • t Slip Covers t * Home Imp;

• Auto Washing •

NOW OPEN!I UK ALL NEW, MODERN

WOODBRIDGE

CompleteHand Car Wash

10 Minute Service!

7III RAIIWAV AVENUEIli-twrcn White Church and

Avenel Street

Tel.: MErcury 4-4333Open Daily 8:30-12:30, 1-5 P. M.Siimliiy 8:30 A, M. to 12:10 V. M.

(Closed Every Monday)

- Fridayit 1.5(1

wall 1.75

Sat. and Bun.Kcgular .... 1.75White wall 2.00

• Character Reading

READING and ADVISINGikrYour

Handwriting Analysis

CHARACTER $ TRKADC4GS I

MRS. RUBY RICOl.r,S!l Mah> Street, Rahway

No Appointment Necessary

Delicatessen

TREAT SHOPPE613 Rahway AT*., Woodbrldge

(Opp. White Church)

• SALADS »t their BEST

• SODA FOUNTAIN

t FRESH BAKERY GOODS

Open 7 A. M. to M-.S0 F. M.INCLUDING SUNDAYS

Closed Wednesdays All Day

SYMW1ECKI

Funeral Home

46 Atlantic StreetCarteret, N. J.

Telephone HI 1-S71S

FLYNN & SONFl'NERAL HOMES

SiUhlishPd 51 Teari420 East Avenue

Perth AmboyZt Ford Ave., Forte

VA 6-0358

GOLFWOODBRIDGE

DRIVING RANGE826 Rahway Ave.

Phone ME 4-1400

OrF.N EVERY DAY2 I\ M. TO 5 P. M.

G:3l> P.M. TO U P.M.

Lawn MowersAuthorized

Sales and Service forBRIGGS and STRATTON

and CLINTON GAS ENGINESand PARTS

Avonel Pluirmacy914 RAHWAY AVENUE

MEreury 4-1914

PRESCRIPTIONSWHITMAN'S CANDIES

Cosmetics - Film

Greeting Cards

RAYMOND JACKSONAND SON

Druggists

88 Mafta Street

Woodbridp, N. i.

Telephone MEreury 4-0554

Furiltire

NOW IN OURNEW HOME!

• BIGGER VALUES!• MORE TOP BRANDS• BETTER SERVICE!• LOWER PRICES!

WINTER BROS,WAYSIDE F I I M . SHOP

Woo<l|jr!d*Diner 1*37

St. tieorie Avenue »t C. S.Highway: 1, Avenel(At the Woodbxldie

Ctoverleaf Clrck)• A.M. u> » P.M., lacL tat

WaneMISttury

All Makes Lawn MowersSharpened and Serviced

Free Pickup—Phone KI-1-7163

ALBRECHT'S KEY SHOP124 WASHINGTON AVENUE

CARTERET

• Liquor Stores

Telephone MEreury 4-1889

WoodbridgeLiquor Store

IOS. ANDBASCIK, Prop.

Complete Stock, of Domesticand Imported Wines, Been

and Liquor*

(74 AMBOY AVENUE

WOODBRIDGE, N. J.

Moving and Trucking tComplete Moving Job

3 Rooms $25 5 Rooms |3S4 Rooms $30 6 Rooms $40

i l l Lo»<K InsOred - II Yean Exp.

ECONOMY] MOVERSNATION-WIpE MOVERS

Fulton 8-3914

48-8tatcHoTtnjcSerriosAGENT

Van l ints

HAND MOVINGAND STORAGE

LOCAL AND tOIfGDISTANCE MOVING

3 Rooms $25, 4 Rooms $305 Rooms $35, 6 Booms $40

Afency ForUNITED VAN LINES

33 RIVERVIEW TERRACEWINFIELD PARK, LINDENPhone WAbash 5-2313-2314

Have A Business Or

Service Problem??

Solve It Through

The •DIKEGTOltY

A. W. Hall and SonLoral and L«n( Dlitanc*

MnvlnJ and StorageNATION-WIDK IHIPPBRI of

Bvuwhold anil Offlrr FurnltDnAuthorized AgentHoward Van Li net

Itpantc Room» for Stong*CRATING • PACKING

SHIPPINGUnclaimed Furniture of Wnrj

DensriptlonOfflee and WafehooH

U Atlantic Street, CarteretTel. KI-1-5540

• Music Instruntion #MUSIC MEANS

A LIFETIME OF JOYFor Your Girl and BoyLEARN TO PLAY THE

ACCORDION'THE MODERN,EASY WAY-

NO ACCORDION TO B»TY . . .

PRIVATE LESSONS:Modern and Classicaland Advanced,

Enroll Now for

International— Beginners

ExpertInstruction

In OurPrivate Music Studio

We carry a full line of MusicalInstruments and Accessories

Choose frorn such Famous make ar-cordions as: KXCELSIOK, TITANO,IORIO, ACME, ACt'OKDIANA, KX-Cbl.SlULA and «th«rs.

Perth Amboy's Oldest EstablishedAccordion L>ntcr

!8 Years at (he Same Location

EDDIE'S MUSIC CENTEREd Ikinkinki. I'ro|>.

357 State St., P. A. VA-C-1290

Enroll your childnow for prlvute

classes.• TRIMPE1• GUITAR• ACCORDION• SAXOPHONB

GIBSON t PIANOGUITARS fc TROMBONI

and Amplifiers » DRUMB

STUDENT RENTAL PLANpt Information Call 111-2-6948

RAY'SSAM LAQUADRA, Prop.

MUSIC and REPAIR SHOP417 New Brunswick Avenue, Fordi

WOODBRIDGE

Plumbing & Heating

• Remodeling

• New Installation*

• Gas and Oil Burners

Call ME 4-3046, HI 2-1312

L. FUGUES! - A. UTO

• Plumbing andHeating Salesand Service

• Oil Burners,Sales and Service

• FURNACE CLEANING

KARMAZINPLUMBING & HEATING

• Commercial • Residential• Induitrial

II MAIN ST. (Opp. Town Rail)

MEreury 4-4765

Charle$ FanPlumbing - Heating

Electric Sewer SCTTIM

Telephone:

MErcury 4-0594

«21 LINDEN AVENTJ1

Woodbrldf e, N. J.

Pianos and Organs

Because we have practical?

NO OVERHEAD,We can offer low prlcet on

Pianos and Ortans

USED PIANOSBought and Sold

PIANO INSTRUCTIONPhone LI-8-Z387

Edison Piano Co.1059 Amboy Avenue

(Edison) Fordi, N. J.

Photography t Piano Instructions

COLOR FILMPROCESSING

WEDDINGS

CANDIDAnd

STUDIO

BLACKAnd

WHITEor

3,D COLOR

BEST SELECTION OF

PHOTO SUPPLIES IN TOWN!

G A U M S PHOTO547 Amboy Ave. M^-4-3651

• Plumbing & Hefatlng •

McGrath Bros.on

BurnerSALES andSERVICE

V\free Estimates - Service

Complete InstallationCleaning

— - 1' l lUlK —~

ME 4-2324 or HI 2-2182

PIANOInstructioris

Popular andClassical

TAUGHT INYOUR HOME

— Call —

William J, Ditrolio

FUlton8-5619

Be Popular!

By a Well Known Twekw

Profeuional Musician

CaU for AppobunMnt

ME-40413

L.flrinelta ~/iauiia

Piano Instruction244 Benjamin Avenue

Isclln, N. J:

For Information Cull

Liberty 8-0077

Radio & TV Service •

AL'S RADIO& TELEVISION

Pnnrpt Ezptrt Repair*ECA Tubes and Part*

Batteries

14 PERSHDJG AVENVI

CARTERET, N. J.

A. KUh, Jr., Prop.

Tclephune KM-MIK!)

MRS. SARAHKSTABI.I9HED IN PLAINFrFI.n

Gifted Spiritual Readintand Advising

Help and Advice on AllProblems of Life

Ilntirs 8*0 \. M. to 10:0« P. M.Sunday by Appolntmtnt Only

327 WATCIIUNG AVENUEPLAINFIELD

(Near 4th and Watchtini)Phone PL-5-G850

Religious Articles

SET NEEDREPAIR?

CallME-4-M60

ART'S RADIO& TELEVISION

—SALES and SERVICE—155 AVENEL ST., AVENELAntennas Installed, Tubes test-ed free at our store, Car Radiosserviced promptly.REPAIR ESTIMATES FREE!

BEAUTIFY YOUR YARD

With A Lovely

OUTDOORSHRINE

Our Lady of Grace

32" Size $25.00

24" Size $18.00Guaranteed

Crushed Stone

Free local DeliveryCall 1.1-9-3789

St. Cecelia's LibraryIselln, N. I.

Across from St. Cecelia's Church

Open Evenings 1:3(1 to 9:00

OTHER RELIGIOUSARTICLES

§ Service Stations #

COLONIA TELEVISIONSERVICE

Authorized Zenith DealerSales & Service

1957 Models In StockTV A RADIO REPAIRS

INSTALLATIONSFUlton 1-2011

Car Radios RepairedZt% Discount on All Tubes

when purchased in store

Comer Inman Avenue andKlmberly Road

COLONIA, N. J.

TOWNE GARAGEJ. F. Gardner ft Son

485 AMBOY AVENUEWoodbridge

MEreury 4-3540

We're Specialists In• Bi;AR WHEEL ALIGNMENT

AND BALANCE

• BRAKE SERVICE

t Shoe Repairing •

• Roofing-Sheet Metal •

T.R.STEVENSRoofint and Sheet Metal Work685 ST. GEORGE AVENUE

WOODBRIDGE

Alr-Condltionine - Warm Air HealIndustrial Exhaust System

Motor GuardsFOB FREE ESTIMATE

Call ME-4-52W or 111-2-6966

Roofing and Siding; •

Henry Janten & SonTiiuiini and Sheet Metal Work

Hoofing Metal Ceilings and

Furnace Work

5*8 Alden Street

Woodbridge, N. J.

Telephone MErcury 4-1246

It Fays To Advertise

In The

CLASSIFIEDS

E & LROOFING

CO.Insured

RqpfiBf Installation andRepairs of All Types

• ALUMINUM SIDING• LEADERS • GUTTERSt SLATE REPAIR• HOT ASPHALT ROOFS

For Free Estimates Phone

VA6-B61I or VA 6-0420

HOROSCOPEREADINGS

MflM «* All ProUanu of LifeB M S V I W Daily « A. M. to

10 F. M.No Appointment Necessary

44 SMITH STREETPEBTH AMBOY

All Reading* Privateand Confldeutlal

MARTINSONSTORES

443

LAKE AVE.

COLONIAFU-1-0114

• Shoe Repairing• Bike Repairing /

Lawn Moivers^-^SharpenedRadio & TV Tube*Tested FreeMember of Lake A venae

Businessmen's Association

"Drop In and say hello. We'relocated ipgrit nexi to the ShellStation."

Branch .of Martinson Store at5Z9 Yale Avenue, Hillside, N. J.

Sept. Special!Reg. SK'>

Custom-m.iile In Order

SLIP COVERS$v«7 limn

SERMAYANUPHOI,STI:RV SHOPS

Est. IM:RAHWAY • AVENEL

ME 4-1217KU-8-IM54

rover, r

Printing

Sporting Goods •

Get That REEL FIXEDNOW!SERVICE•TAT1O"I POB

IIITCHELL'•KUME»"

_ "PENN""ALCEDO", "AIREX", "CENTAUEE"

Home of Reel PartsWholesali and Retail

REEL REPAIRS A SPECIALTYALL MAKES

Reel Check**, Cleaned, A A A

Polished, Greased And 7.QQAdjusted, for Only *•

Plus Par ts if Needed

• TROUT WORMS• WILDLIFE PICTTBIB

(framed)t HUNTING, FISHING and

MOTOR BOAT LICENSESISSUEDAsk How Too Can Win

One of Our Trophlea

TACKLEAND BEPAW

SPORTING GOODS258 Monroe Street, Rahwar

Telephone RA-7-3H94

SELL IT THRU THE

WANTADS

te((pUle

FOR QUALITY

PRINTINGDIAL

ME 4-1111-2-3Yes, call today . . . no feefor estimates. We'll rush aman to you to help youplan, showing you money-saving short-cuts.

IMPORTANT!!

WOODBKJDGE PHONENUMBERS HAVE BEEN

CHANGED TO

MErcury 4-ORDER NEW

LETTERHEADS, CARDSETC., NOW!

• Folders• Billheadst Letterheads• Programs• Booklets• Annoimce-

ments• Invitations• House Organs

NO JOB

TOO LARGE

or TOO SMALL

Call TodayFree Estimates

MIDDLESEXPRESS

THK UOODBIUDGE

20 WtKKIN STREET

SUBURBSHMB lipnvttiitt,

288 West Lak,- .\u,

Phone IT-l :;in

ORDERSTORM

WINDOWS ,ANDDOCaS

MOWC a l l f o r F r e e I i i i n i |

a n d D O O R CAV, : • ! ; • (

WroughtIronand

AluminumRailings

mmN O JOB T O O r.n;|

...OKTOOSM\I.I

• " " r->' i \\\

I M M E I H A I i : I N S I M I

NEED MORI K

LET I S

NO DOWN I'M MiU MONTHS in I

Increases theBeauty and ^

Value of Vuur »,Properly'.

SWIMMING A

Built t<( Your

FOR SALE « H "

BRUNEI

SOFTENERSVeiling '' 'Custom

Tub

1'VnciiiK uf - '1 '

Modernfolil l>IHl1

Buofing - ^" l l"

|)o It Yuurwlf i""1 •"

Vl»lt Our SlM'B'""^ j

Op«n Sun,

PHONKI'I ' - l j | | ^

SUBURB*Howe I

288 W. lake Aw

Page 11:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

•KKK.H

" HEALTHHINTS'

L||,.. , ln';uilif(il "me «' tlir ><\ir HIIPHi.lp is , r>stlvl|•nlnrf'i n

V „,„ .,•, favorite It: ta t ' rnrkm ,,-,« hn.p.'.h.-v are ^rf"",ly £ „l r ( l l , «ith smips. Kjlud*. bfyrraers. , 1 , , - ^ , ,„• fr,,il. Y n ,.1 |r „. |,. .irlK'inuK flavor ami ov,-nf,,;, . ispnr5s_ . , , , , , » ^liul hllii)) t<> all >"u r miracle inonls, • ™ ""

(,],• i;.ih! slss boom bah! Football season is here asain! After a•—V.HH1 nl (hri'rlng: at the atadium the crowd is more than ready tn

, pi HI invitation to cat. Invite them over tu your house and make| j nil party by serving renny Frank IVimukes. Take a package

r f.ivorilc pancake mix from the kitchen shelf and shake theTIIS in a shaker or quart glass jar. Just before pouring the••• - ~ " ' • i—*• • i*—-'~ j n i . JIISI i inuie pouring me

i luster fnur or five frankfurter circles <in the griddle for the.if rich pancake. Stack Ihc pancakes and serve with a tangyin1 sauce—and presto, I'cnny Frank Pancakes.

: with to\ir or live men Hnvold Catty who (lev around.! into tne aUno.spheH' tl,i> world \\.\'u rlie late Wiley

q<>]> in exporimentiim r<«t. clii'ri rccpnt.lv at, the ase of.ilntudp flight. i 54

BE WISEAND CHECK YOtJR EYES

(inod vision, like Rood hralth.lsitir'M A p p r e c i a t e d when It Isthmuriwd or Impaired. Some-t'mrs if wp flre lint on Ruard. lossof vision enn come—like twlllnht i

ilmost Imperceptibly, and c»nIrad inexorably to a long, dark iiiinht of blindness. j

That is why The Mp.dle.nl So- jfifty of New Jersey and the New !Jersey Academy of Ophthalmolo- j

| ay and Otohryngoloay, the New jJersey Commission For The Blind,the State Department of Health,and the New Jersey Hospital As-sociation are all coopcratlni? In a.statewide Eye Health ScreenlnsProgram during the week of Sep-tember 15.

This program is open to all in-dividuals over the ase of twenty-

•fii-e. Its purpose Is to detect evi-dence of any eye disease, or of anygeneral disease reflected In the

| eyes, that should have treatmentI or follow-up by a physician,| Clinical stations will operate all

over the state, at least one inevery county. Local papers and

: lndio stations will publicize thetime and place at which examina-tions will be Riven.

This is an opportunity which nothoiiiihtful person should lightlyneelect. Be wise and check youreyes. The Eye Health Screeninc:Program oilers you a readymentis.

Michael S. Newjohn, M. D,

IdenticalA miserly man was approached

by a friend who did his best topersuade him to dress more inaccordance with his-station in life.' I 'm surprised," said the friend, j"that you should allow yourself'to become shabby?" i

"But I'm not shabby," said themiser.

"Oh. but you are," said h i s .friend. "Remember your father. IHe was always neatly dressed. Hisclothes always well tailored and ofthe best material."

"Why!" shouted the other, tri-umphantly, "these clothes I'mwearing were father's."

T

READY MIXCONCRETE

Delivered in (juai i l i l io of

o n e or more cubic yards

"».'"AY^THRU FRIDAY—8 A. M. TO 1 P, M....VniKD'A—8 A. M. TO \Z NOON

Call HUnter 6-4422

IRN-WILff RDiNG CORP,LINDEN, N. J.

POST OFFICE LOSSIn a^kins Congress to approve

postal rate increases to alleviatewhat he described as "the seriousfiscal pliKht" of this department.Postmaster General Summerflelddeclared. "The Department is los-ing morlcy at the r a ^ of morethan two million dollars eachwoikini! day."

Home care is advised for Asian jflu victims

OWESOMEONEA LETTER?

PHONE INSTEAD, costs little anywhere j

BANGOR, ME. 85< ,

3-miniite station rate Iro-n 'lew Brunswickalter 6 P.M. Tax not included.

RE YOU REGISTERED?lave You Changed Your Address

Since You Voted Last?

THURSDAY, SEPT. 26,1957IS THE LAST DA Y TO REGISTER

cannot vote in the: u.st be given before September 26th, Wl o(ii ncral Election, Tuesday. November 5th, lcJo7.

!: Vou have changed yoiJ name .ince you last voted you must• je -«Vuu may register oB give notice of your new address^t the office

"ti register.

fi'i-s place, of confinement by applying ^'•»f an:4>plication, which must be accompanied by''liysician. •

NATURAHZED CITIZKNS MUSI BltlNG THEIR PAPERS

, Be Sure Yon Are Registered^

MIDDIESE)TC(KJNTYBOARD of ELECTIONS

'^ 7«m • 7th Floor - IVHl, AnH.v Na.icu.al Hank BuihUng

Stall

FRIDAY, SKI'TKMIWR 1.1. 19.r.7 TAGF, F.I.FVFN

get the

Save 2 Ways.. . Cash Savings

J C GREEN STAMPSRushed Fresh From Nearby Farms!

FRESH KILLED, PAN-READY, TOP QUALITY

WHOLEHALVED

QUARTERED Ib.33The finest, tenderest, most flavorful frying chickens that money can buy! Dash down to your Acme now for several of these top-quality fryen. 1

LANCASTER BRAND U S. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

Round Roast = D 77<Solid meat. Most economical! You'll agree, here's the finest beef that money can buy!

ACME DAIRY FAVORITES

FAMOUS - LOUELLA

BUTTER65<

LANCASTER BRAND - READY-TO-EATWHOLE or

SOLIDS orQUARTERS

1 Ib.carton

WINNER OF OVER 500 PRIZESThe pure sweet cream from ten quarts of rich fresh milk

goes into every pound of Louella!

N Y. STATE - EXTRA SHARP

Cheese 69<Acme FARM FRESH PRODUCE

Smoked Hams S TT 59 65Save 50c per Ib! SWIFT'S FROZEN ALL-MEAT

Boneless Pork Chops 99<LANCASTER SLICED BACON '«.>>>

FROSTED HSH

Fancy Shrimp 75<None Sold To Dealers. We reserve the right lo limit quantities, S Id. box 3 » w 9

Taste O Sea Large Sea Scallops . . . «> <» p 6 3 cFrench Fried Perch Fillet TASTE o SEA ' soz.PLg. 39<Empress Lobster Tails . io^oiPkFrench Fried Haddock Fillet TASTEo SEA 80, p

Acme GROCERY VALUES

Tokay Grapes2 19

Bananas2 29c

Italian Plums

SERVE A GOOD BREAKFAST!AUNT JEMIMA or PILL5BURY

Pancake Flour '12 oz. bot.25C

IDEAL BRAND

Swe«t Potatoes 4-19. | n $ ( n n t C o f f e e 6 oz. jar

ACME BAKERY SPECIALS!

VIRGINIA LEE-Plain, Sugar or Cinnamon

g. of 12

HOM-DE-LITE

Save up lo 30c over most other brands.

Donuts»°"25< Mayonnaise 16 oz. Jar

Save up lo 10c over most other brands.

VIRGINIA LEE - LARGE SIZE

Apple Pie 49<SUPREME - PLAIN or SEEDED

Rye Bread 2 35FROZEN FOOD SPECIAL!

WAFFLESDOWNYFLAKE 2 25BEEFSTEAKS

.00

25IDEAL BRAND-PREPARED !

Spaghetti TOM«.W 4 45I Save 13c on 4 c^ns over mosl other brands. )

IDEAL BRAND - CONDENSED

Tomato Soup 3 25cSave up lo 10c on 3 cans over mosl oth»r brands.

' i

Toilet Tissue DOESI1" 8 1.00HOUDAY

CUTLERYLANCASTERBUTTERED 3 8 oz.

pkgs.

SAVEI DIFFERENT

Page 12:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

PAGE

EXPLORES Bl VIJIS MOTIVATION-; l)i (icorKi- 11. Smith.professor of pftycholutv al Rutgers \> \ \ ;uk ( ollcee uf Arts andSciences, analyzes runvrrsatiuns ii'curdid in "living niiiin luliorn-tory experiments" in North Jersey as he seeks to ded'rmiin- themotivation In-hind buying- !!<• claims Unit many who drink cuffeedo so in assert adtillhnnd or in;isi iilinily iiml that PRO i i i l ianre-

ment is a big factor in new car sales.

TARGET: YESTERDAY-No beach-located, rocket-ltunch-ing mechanism, this. The futuristic creation that has capturedthe small buy's attention is the prow and bowsprit of. a shipwhich grounded oil Fort Stevens, Park, Ore., in 1906.

YOUR GAKDKNTHIS WEKK

EASY-GROWIN' FLOWER

I found a note on my desk theother 'day. "Are you looking," Itasked, "for flowers that requirelittle care and come up year niteryear?"

Well, the note-writer had mya t t e n t i o n right there becausethat's the kind of a Hardener Iam.

This was Don Lacry's way ofnudging me into reminding youthat September is moving andplanting month for peonies. Ourspecialist in home grounds im-provement likes peonies si lot andhe prefers to see them treatedright.

Give them full sun and' nooddrainage, he suggests. And as

will .soon be distill", .shiide nndrtnnkiiiK up Wiitcr.

TWO INCHES UKEP

Plant the "pyos" or buds of thepeony clumps 2 inches below thesoil surface and spaqe the clumpsabout. 4 feet apart. If you chooseto disregard, the first part of thisadvice you may be writing in aletter a few years from now ask-ing why your peonies are allleaves and no flowers. Two inches,no more.

Wnat kinds to plant' TheAmerican Peony Society has ratedpeony varieties, and lias pivenmore than passing grades to va-rieties called le Cysnie. Therese.Kelwny's Glorious, S o 1 a n g e.Mme, Jules Dessert, Tourangello,Pestiva Maxima, and W a l t e rFaxon. You'll probably find pic-tures of these in catalogs.

; bud shrivel and die before flowersipeur. Prevention goes a lone wayi toward control, so as soon as1 'rost has killed peony plants, cutJie shoots just below ground leveland burn them. This may behandy to know if you now havepeonies.

Then, next spring, spray yourplants every week with zinc ethy-lene bisdithiocarbamate, startingwhen Binwth is 2 or 3 incho: high.

That name was too much evonfor the scientists, so they shorten-ed it to zlneb, and you can call itthat, too. Garden supply storesmay have It under one of its tradenames, such as Dithane or Par-zate. Maybe you'll have to shoparound for this, but it's what theplant disease men recommend.

The Experiment Station hasput out an attractive circular onpeonies that you can get free fromyour county agricultural agent orby dropping a card to Garden Re-porter, College of Agriculture,New Brunswick. N. J. MentionCircular 57(1. "Peonies."

\ WATCH BLIGHTUp to now, peony growing ap-

| pears to be too easy to be true,they Can be left undisturbed for: There's a little catch.

It seems you have to be onguard against, botrvtis bud blight,a corhmon disease that makes

years, choose a spot where they |won't get competition from somenearby tree that's little now, but,

with

the Right Mix

and I In* Right Mea

al the Right Time!

— Call

ix. . . <^'ANeasiirtf . . . "SS

Woodbridge Transit-Mix- a t -

WO 8-4550

Polite Rejoinder

Asked by the i r a t e c o p ,"Where's the fire?" the prettymiss replied. "Why. officer, in yourgreat big beautiful eyes."

BEES CAUSE WRECKCLOVER. S. C. — While driv-

ing a two-ton truck, loaded withoats, a swarm of bees flew In thewindow of the truck cab and someof them got under the shirt ol thedriver, Lee Henry Minnow, 59.While trying to get his shirt Offto dislodge the bees, Minnow lostcontrol of the truck, which crash-ed. Minnow was uninjured, butdamage to the truck was estimat-ed at $500. The bees escaped un-hurt.

ANSWERING THE MAILMrs, E, L. DOVER — I have

some rose bushes I would like tomove. When is the time to do thisand should I mix some peat withthe soil?

Wait until early November, andmix peat moss with the soil at therate of 1 part of peat to 3 of soil.Prune bushes back to about 18inches. You can expect the tipsto winter-kill back another 6inches.

No WorryRobinson Crusoe should have

been happy on that Island. Hedidn't have to worry**tfbout se-lecting a place to spend hisvacation. — Greensboro iGa.'Herald-Tribune.

Ticklers By George9MITH 15 ON VACATION/\YOU'LL TAKE OVER HIS )MILtf EO/TE; HlCERITZY

YOU MU5T NEVER. LETO i THAT VCVV& AFRAID

VERY n.AYFUL?NOWGUMP C©\VN ANP BEFRIENPLY WITH HIM'/

00 PEOPLE HAVEVICIOUS-POOS?

ASKTMI ,MILKMAN**

.- t-M.

Make sureyour MORTGAGEfits your incomeBuilding or buying o home of your owndoesn't hove to be a blow to your budget.Our many mortgage customer* are proof of that

Let our experienced home financing departrntnthelp you arrange a low-cost loon fyou can comfortably repay tike rtitf.

The PERTH AMBOY

Savings Institutionmm AMMT, mm nu

i M M M>UA| MFOM1 MKJMMi I

H8 YEARS OF SERVICE TO SAVFRS

I ?. 1 Of: 7

His Lucky Day.Sonny Daddy, do you re-

member where it. w:i.s that youfirst mrt mamma?

Dnddy — Yes, son, I icrnll thatit was at ft party where there were13 at the table,

LEGAL NOTICES

NOTICETake uotlct that we. A. W Hull A

Son. of M Atlantic Street. Borough orCnrteret, County of Middlesex, state

l.t'MM, NOTH'ES

Ialniu) Boiirnl; running thi'iiri' IIIWesterly along Tiifti Crcnk to the NewJersey Terminal Rnllrond »nd mntlnu-liiK alonn 8iUd rnllrond to th« Inter-section of Pershlng Avenue und HollyStreet, thence (J) Southerly ftlonnPerahing Arenue nnd continuing In astraight line to th» Stuten InlandSound, thence (31 Iiuterly «nd North-erly along the laid Statin Island Soundto the place of BeglnnlnR.

DISTRICT NO. 4: — (Voting place,Cleveland School). BEOINNINO at theIntersection of the Southwest cornerof Larch Street, thence (1) Southerlyalong Pershlng Avenue nnd continuing

of New Jersey, will sell at public auc- ?'""» ""Xs i,n°""tD"'«.£.„tlon m September 14, 1957, at 10 o'clock L" ' „ ' t r ? K " "n,",v t 0

WeJurW

of the bolow named perions [or wl\k.'hwe have a WarehouBPmnn'a Lien forunpntd storage charges.

Mr* Baldwin, Newark, N. J -Margaret Dunn

A. W. HALL 4 SON.

C. P. 9/8, 13 '57Warehouseman

. NOTICEIs hereby Klvtjn ififit (nullified votersof ttie .Borough of Cartcret not al-ready registered In o ld EtorouKh underthe laws ol New Jersey ^oveniln^ per-manent lenlstmtlon m:iy reulsisr withthe BoroiiKh Clerk of the auld Hor-ougn of CSrteret at his office nt anytime b«twe«i xyednesday. AQrll 17, 1B57,and Thursdnv,' Sfptpmher 511, 19.77. orbetween the hours of 7:00 P M. to 9:00P. U September 33, 14, 25 nnd 29, onwhich latter ditte the registration bookiwill be closed until after the forth-coming General Election on Tuesday.NoTember S. 1957. or 4 t MiddlesexCounty Board of elections. CitizenBuilding, 46 Bayard Street. Hew Bruns-wick, N. J., nt any time betweenWednesday. April n, 19J7, and Thurs-day, September J«, 1957, during thefollowing hours: Dally, eicept Satur-day, from 9 A M. to 4 P. M.. or at theoffice of the Middlesex County Boardof Elections. Perth Amboy NiulonulBank BulldlriK, Perth Amboy. N. J.

Notice of change of residence orapplication foe tmnsfpr of registrationahall be made either by written requestforwarded to the Municipal Clerk orthe County Bnnrrt nr Kiwt.loris on formsprovided by siUd Municipal .Clerk or bycalling In person at the Oflkc of theMunicipal Clerk or County Board ofElections at 40 Bayard Street. NewBrunswick, N. J., or nt the office of theMiddlesex County Board of Elections, Ington Avenue and running thence <Perth Amboy Nntlonnl Bank Bulldtni;, Southerly along the Easterly line of

Washington Avenue to the center lineof Cypress Street; running thence (2)Easterly along the center line of Wash-ington Avenue to the center line ofPershln? Avenue: running thence (3)

boundary line of the Borotnjh of Caf-tfret. thenre 13) In a general Northerlydirection along the boundary line ofthe Borough of Cartem to RooseveltAvenue: thence (4) Easterly nlonpRoosevelt Avenue to Arthur Avenuewhert the Southwesterly boundary lineof the Borough of Carteret meets samethence (51 Northwesterly along snl('boundary lint* to Lurch Street; thenffifil Northeasterly along Larch Streetto the pince of Beginning.

niSTIlirT NO. S:' — fVntlnu pl»ceCleveland School.) BEaiNNlNa at theIntersection of the center line of Per-shir? Avenue with the center line olWashington Avenue and runnlnpthence 111 westerly alone said centerline of Washington Avenue to a pointand Intersection with the center line ofCypress Street, running thence ' (Ji*Southerly along the center line of Cy-press Street tq a point and lnwuectlonwith the .center line of Ash Street, run-ning thence |3) Westerly along thecenter line of Ash Street to a pointand Intersection with the division linehetween the Borough of Carteret am!.'Voodbrldge Township; mfinlng thence(41 Easterly along said division line toa point and Intersection with centerline of Larch Street; running thence15) Easterly along center line of LarchStreet to a point and Interaction withthe center line of Pershlng Avenue;running thence (6) Northerly along thecenter line of Pershing Avenue to thtcenter line of Washington Avenue, th*point or plnce of beginning.

DISTRICT NO. 8: — (Voting placeHlRh School). BEGINNING at the in-tersection of the center tine of BurkeStrett with the Easterly line of Wnsh-

Perth Amboy. N J.. up to ami Includ-ing September 26, 1957.

NOTICEIs hereby given that the District Eire- Northerly along center line of Pershlnn

- " - ' " - '-- " - " v l Avenue to the center line, of Mapl.Street and Noe Street; running thenc*14) Westerly along the center line ofMiiple Street and Noe Street to thecenter line of Thornall Street; nmnlnrthenfe (5) Northerly along the centerline of Thornall Street to the centerline of Burke Street: running theuct(8) Westerly along the center line ofBurlte Street » the said EaMerly lineof Washington Avenue to the point OJplace of beginning.

tion Bojvrds in and for the Boroughof Carteret will sit nt places herein-after designated on

TUESDAY. NOVEMBEft 5, 1957between the* hours of 7:00 A. M. nnd8:00 P. M.. Eastern Standard Time, forthe purpose of conducting a

OENEHAL ELECTIONto vote upon candidates for the follow-ing oflices:

OovernorState Committceman nndState Conimltteewomun

from earn party3 ASseoiblvmen1 Surrogate2 Members to the Board of

Chosen Freeholders2 Members of the Borough CouncilThe polling places for the vnrlmis

wards and election districts of theBorough of Carteret nre us follows:

DI6TRICT NO. 1: —(Votrnsi place,Washington School!, BEGINNING! atthe Junction of Noe Creek with StatenIsland Sound; running thence (1) Ina Westerly direction along salt! Noe'sCreek to Pershlng Avenue; thence (2|Northerly, along Pershlrig Avenue toRoosevelt Avenue; thence i3l Westerlyalong Roosevelt Avenue to the Westerly

• - ' " " 141

DISTRICT NO 7: — (Votlnn placeNathan Hale School). BEOINNINO atthe intersection of Noe Street andMaple Street with Pershlng Avenue;running thence (II In a Westerly direc-tion along said Nw Street and MapleStreet to Thoraall Street; runnlnpthence 121 Northerly along said Thorn-all Street to Burke Street; runnlnrthence (3> Westerly along uald BurkeStreet to Washington Avenue; runnln?thence |4) Northerly along said Wash-ington Avenue to Randolph Street;running thence (51 Easterly along soldRandolph Street to Heald Street; run-nlne thence (6) Northerly along saidHenld Street to Roosevelt Avenue; run-ning theme (7) Easterly along saidRoosevelt Avenue to Pershlng Avenue;running thence (8) Southerly alone

line of Charles Street; thenceNortherly aiong Charles Street andcontinuing In a straight line to the said PershlnR Avenue to Noe and MapleRahway River at a point where Deep' Streets to the place or point of b«Creek empties into said River; thence ginning.(51 Southeasterly n'.ong the Rnhway I •River to SUten Island Sound; thenre I DISTRICT NO. 8: — IVotlne olace

Stntcn Island16) Southerly nlon;:Sound to the place of

DISTRICT NO. 2: — (Voting pl.ice.i Columbian 8chooli. Beginning at the! luuctlon Of Stutcn Island Sound anilj Noc's Creek: runnlni; thence i l ) West-erly along Noe's Creek to PershlnyAvenue; thenre <2i Southerly W

Nathan Hale School.) BEGINNING atthe Intersection of Roosevelt Avenueand Hoyward Avenue; running thence111 Northerly along Hnywuril Avenueas extend**1 to a point on the South-erly shore line of the Rahway River;running thence (2) Southeasterly alongthe several courses of said shore lineof Rahway River to a point of Inter-section of the same with the extensionPershlng Avenue to: New' ien-v T*im?. | «f«*a f the same with ^ e extension

nal Railroad; thence (3) Easterly nlong ° C h " r l " street; running theuct: (31the New Jersey Terminal Rallroud and ?ion«f t t-1i.fhJrJ.e.8..?. tre_e. t-_ t t.l*Jl^"^

| across the lanas of I T Williams Com-pany to the mouth of Tufts Creekwhere same empties Into the StutenIsland Sound; and thence (4i North-erly along Staten Island Sound to theplace of Beginning.

DISTRICT NO. 3: - (Voting i>liColumbus School i. BEOINN1NQ ut theJuiH-'Uon of Tufts Crt-fl: iind StuK-"

to Roosevelt Avenue: running thence(4) Westerly alone »»ld Roosevelt Ave-nue to Hayward Avenue, the point orplace of Beginning. '

DISTRICT K<J. »: — (Voting place,Nathan Hule School). BEGINNING at

ace. the. Intersection of the center '.lne of

M'.fiAI. NOTM'F'.K

thenre (II Ensterly along uald line ofBurke Street to the center line ofHeald Street; running thftnee (JlNortherly along said center line ofHeald Street to the center line ofRoosevelt Avenue; running thunce (3|Easterly along Mid center line offMo»«»elt Avenue to the center line ofH»yward Avenue; running thence (4)Northerly along said center line of Hay-ward Avenue a«d extended to theSoutherly line of the Railway River;running thence (5) Westerly andSoutherly the various courses alorigwld Southerly line of the RahwayR1»«T to the Easterly line of the Rlyhtof Way of the Central Railroad of NewJersey; »nd running thenoe (6) South-erly along said Right of Way line tothe Southerly property line of landRot the American Oil Company; runningthence (7) easterly along said line of•ht American OU Company lnndn tothe point of Intersection with theSoutherly line of the Bradley Tract ofUnd; running thence (B) Uasterlyilong said line of Bradley Tract to lneintersection with the Easterly line ofWashington Avenue; running thence9) Southerly along said Easterly lineif Washington Avenue to the centerIne of Burke Street and the polrut of>eglnnlng.

DISTRICT NO. 1 6 L ~ (Voting place.High School). BEuINrTTNG at thenterBectlon of the center line of Oar-eret Avenue with tht center line of

Cypras Street, and running theno* (1)Northerly along sold center llci of Cy-iress Street to a point and Intersectionvlth the Easterly line of WalhlnitonAvenue; running thence (2) Northerlyilong aald Easterly line of Washington4venue>to a point and intersection ofthe Southerly line of the Brady Tractas ext*nd«d Batterly; runnttw ttwne*3) Westerly along said Brady line ind

the. Southerly line of Itndi now or for-merly of the American Oil Companyto a point and Interaction with the"enter line of Flllmore Avenue; runningthence "(4) along the center line «fFlllmors Avenue to a point and Inwr-seetlon with the center line of C»rUr«tAvenue; running thine* (9) Cuitrljralong center line of Curteret Avtnueto the point or place of beginning.

DISTRICT NO. 11:—t Voting plac*Carteret Bus Service Terminal, S u tRahway.) BEGINNING »t the Intersec-tion of the center line of Blair Road

with thf Smiltu-n,the Bnrnin.il n( c'lr,f""' 'then.T i i , Eiuterh •„'",' '

!>«»-«riy Rim,, „,";': '•

Is

the

Casey's Creek; r n , , , "Southerly 9 | o n i f , „ , , ! ' "wly bound n ';k

y 9 |wly boundaC

ry in,, ,„

l " '

!!.

Cnrteret; ,„„„,„,,Southerly niong Siii.l h,the center line o f Vrunning thence IOI w "neuter line or ntmJlthe cent,r llur- of nilllrthence | 7 | Htlu S()l,',

r

center line of hiair , ,'.erly boundary In,,. „,Carteret and ti l e ,,„„;"bsglnnlng. ' "•

DISTRICT NO. 12 iv.-School!—BEOINN1NO ,.'''tlon of the rentpr iin..' .nu« with the <vnu.t ";.Street and runn.nu th,.'

along the cenur •:.",Street, to a point iu,,i ,,th« center line of AM,' - •'thence (Ji Westerlv .,-,''.of A»h Street to a m, , .tlon With the dlvlsiui,' i,Berouirh of C»nctptTownihlp; ruiinln'! tii,,,•fly »lon« u id divts,,,,1easterly rljht of win n,'.Branch division of tinroad of H. J ; r , , , ,m , , ,Kortherly along mid n.-i,to th» wutherly Hnr- ',,\American OU Co.: run,,;,Buterly,, along said i,,,,,,;CHI Co., to a point -,,,,with the center line „[au«: running thtnCcUong the center line (,[nu« to & point ami i,,tith« cint«r line of c l rruining thence (7) EMS-..ter line of Cartern Aw/And Interaction with ••of Cypreu Btrtet, anof betlnntng.

PATRICK

C. P 9/13-J057

Jjoctof eJLeonard Hi is now associated with the

OBSTETRICAL AND GYNECOLOGICALof Perth Amboy

Henry A. Belafsky, MD.

Samuel Breslow, MD.

Jack E. Shangold. M.D.

511 New Brunswick .V,nw

Perth Amboy. New J , . , , I

Valley fi-3(!lin

Gas G&nie Says

Burke Street with the Easterly line ofWellington Avenue and running

MAY I HAVE A DATE

WITH YOU NEXT WEEK?

I HAVE BI& ;EXCmN6

NEWS FOR YOU ABOUT

ELIZABETHTOWN GAS,

YOUR HEADQUARTERS

FOR THE

MAGIC OF 6A$!

MORE PEOPIE DRIVE CHEVR0LET5 THAN ANY OTHER CAP.

New Oiewolel Bel Ail Sport Coupe with spunk to spaial

Great to ham-and onlyClievifs got em JfChevrolet's tfce only leadinglopv-priced car with any oftnese advances—the only eardt any price with all of them!

BODY BY FISHER. You get moreto he proud of in Chevrolet. Noother low-priced car is quite sobeautifully or substantially builtd to the last detail.

SHORTEST STROKE V8. Thishelps explain Chevrolet's smoothana lively V8 ways. Short-stroke(kb'gn also means less pistontfavd, longer engine- life. Here's

suppr-efficient power with plentyof vim and vigor!

STANDARD BALL-RACE STEER.ING. Chevy's Ball-Race sueringgear mechanism is virtually fric-tion-free! That meant easier park-ing, surer control, more relaxeddriving.POSITRACTION REAR AX^E*.When one rear wheel slips in mud,

•' snow or ice, the wheel with thetraction pips for sure going!TRIPLE.TURBINE TURBO.CUDE*. The silkiest automaticdrive anywhere! You move from

standstill to top cruising speed mone gentle" stream of inoiinii.Special "Grade Retarder>«n""saves braking on hills.PA Chevy's got the big "details,"too! See all the exclusives at yourChevrolet dealer's!

GET 4 WINNING DEALNEW CUEVY-TUK

EXTRA

Only Jranchiied Chaavkt deuiert ditpluy iJUtf tmdmaark

See Your Local Authorized Chevrolet Dealer

yii^ffli&is. 'isttfife^JirtaaiMi&iii-:.^^-- -,... . ; . . •„ , ... • ?.i

Page 13:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

PRRflft

.pinions of Others' .,,] from Editorial Page)

,1 federal power, backediltiniaif showdown, by an

• !inliia preponderance of, , ] , , , loyalty to the Union,

1 V^iiuestlonably prevail.,'.,, Aincrlc»n In his rli?hl

'' ,',, uny friend of America'• ,u.^\i is pushed to such ex-

",' ., .mil- Fnnbus, whether his1 ,',.,„ heeii forced b j extrem-

| ( l l l!i his political oppon-,,,. has simply fumbled In

,,', ,'„.,,! to neither flout the. ,., stnte nor the order of

•', ',. ,,i court, has chosen an' , ;v- massive Instrument•'",'. ,,u of State mllltla keep-'" , |ir,icc when there hac". ,, visible serious threat to

, .„.,. i!id turning away H' ', ] uf NPKIO students Iron

,,,,l in which a Federa... ,,,i a local school boarc

1 enroll dran\a-In a grim ant

,,,).>itiiiic>n rests heaylljjm-diiiU-ly upon everyone

.,,1 to move this situation.;-,,• urea of force and Into,nurls which civilized so-(j,v;st'd long ago for thel H'ttlcment of differ-

I lie local school board. NAACP both have acted, iiic tension. The Presi..-. riKlitly affirmed his ob-

mii nl.so his Intention otiisi issue In the courts,

iniirls nlone cannot solve;, in which, as the Presi: [jointed out, lies in theif nidi. But returning thi. i ,y to them gives raiiM-usslon and persuasion,- in work elsewhere too

;, (if Arkansas citizen;.! welcome school Integra

I1 welcome even less acfinitlon and all that i

Consider the large ml-.' ho cast their ballot!i:ii nullification amend

:i i tlie very large majorit•i d for the one which perjpil assignment by loca:or reasons other tha

i1,,mi'. Consider the backlniMann of Little Rod

: i.r to permit him to de. Governor Paubus fo-. unwarranted interfer,:; tin1 internal affairs o

inciliod of the forum.,,uwfr and less obvlou,•lie method of physicalH may not satisfy thos.mt a quick, "clean-cut:i nne way or the other a.-ciiuments lean. But th.- uf the forum by n

implies a cessation <:i. nit And the progrei

:; dop.s achieve, especial!. ii' so overlaid wilii einu-,il intertwined with cus-i.ii- only progress which

,, .iLutained. — Christianit Monitor.

totnl of l,92fi!)0O^ V h ^

F R I D A Y , H E P T F M I U ' R 13, 11,'V

has Mgnrrt a .any municipality, either •• i p

arately or In <-omblnnlinn withother municipalities, to form anauthority to npei-atc a wamr sup-ply and sewerage

1 sy,-

CAPITOL CAPERS: o n , , , , , ,Meyner has boon name 'Dream Man" by five N w Yui.£

glamour girls because „[ h *sense of humor and Intnii™,,*

the Medical Society of New levsey recalls that ••» W i l s l l l , | n , ^never boils". . . . S M s ™ ,Rutgers University have uncov-ered a number of CIISPS „, , k

eye In cattle in New j ( . , . S ( , y

Men I In and(/~>oautiv

Dul you know tl.ut, on an aver-'i,T<-. one pciv-on dies and four HITn-ltii , MI i i ' l v d i s a h l f d I ' ve rv s 'X-f'(jn i!'miit.'.s a.s a result of home

acrid i v 1J

M.niy nf \\\f must nippliiH' acci-dents Kci-iir by rullin • dnwn stair-ways and even steps of not morethan ;i or 4. There should be sub-

s t i i i i t i n i b i> i i t i i s l ( l !< t n fi'.l s t e p s In.1 iillUM'

II is appalliMK to see the women,mounted on lilsh herls. wearingIons: houst" coats that trail on soll-• d iloors. These garments not onlygather up germs and filth but they•iften cause their wearers to tripind full, sometimes with very;erlous consequences.

So many accidents occur In themuse that someone is temporarilytut out of commission every sevenseconds The sm'atrr portion ofthese disunities occur in the kiti'h-en.

Frequently, the d;iilyi paper re-ports nil cxplo-lon ciiii«ed fron*Irthtiim a stove with kerosene

j W h e r e t ! : c p i " o n P a l i ' s I l i i - m i i h -

r e f t l y f i i v n - I n r ; i : i ; " i i r : n j i i n k ••

plai;e Riid the flumes inn I;H > th.-can. The Urtlm often is burned

| alive The liouar cnt'lies fire and! t terrible tragedy results.

Even lltt!e children often me, ictims of the cnrdessiiesh of older

people. It is better to use i«lWa-)apers Hnd a little *ry wood orUndliiw to start n fire. It can belone quickly m tli;s woy. If thereis a very small flame nmon« the

j eonls you m:iy not see It, but it1 .vill cause the kerosiii1.' to bl;i/:-

ir.d an explosion fallows.Cieaii!::B c'.ntrcs wi ii an Ulfbni-

; ntilile liquid lif. 'r ll'-- K:^ stovei :ias been thv OIMIM of manv ^ot tHI-

i ' i l l n l s a n d h u i ; i ; i p . i t M i m e

i : n s j n - i n i ' f a t a l l i . u u i n p o i s o n s

nround th»l kiti'hen is » tvitent andfrcqufiiU CHUM- of danger

Tlip person that mv.lrcts rrad-Ini: labels mi bottles iind contain-rs often poisons a whole family by

itumplng a deadly poison into foodthat Is being prepared for a mealIt IJ no excuse to say. I was In a'mrry 'and thought that I knowwhat I was putting In the food."

Cm ptes.<ly cllmblnt on chairs orstep- liidc'ers often causes friirfu'(suits, [ have known broken bones!ue to fulls (hut Invalided ptopli.'or life.

Floors th;U are too Inghly poli-.li,'d, or a JltlU' -p i t of ml or givn:;'

. 1 l . i ' i e l i t1--"1 f o ^ t • • l i d i - s o r v l t p t

• \ ] ) ' i . I n n i , . i ; s « - , i d e \ - i i ' t a t l n ' j f a l l

Insurance stiitlstlr* report 1,500deaths » VPHI from falls: to saynothtnu of thoie who ure perma-nently ITlppIl'll

It Is i»sy to turn the handles ofpots towards the back of the stove,yet. so many cooks leave ttyrosticking out where they are apt to

; catch In the sleeve or be brushed| against They come down spilling: IOIIIIIK liquid on the unfortunatevictim or victims.

C'ul^ tire u.Misiliy imisi-d frotr

>ai(i;e-.-i!--ss Holding the knife to-

v.nd tin )J i.si.n is une frequent

ipsc of s - i e i e n i t s and dangei •.VI-- :'(' liSenls

TAOF THIRTRHf 1

f.HTS FOR OVHKSF.AR O . I JIt has bpi-n rwommended bf

the Amfiicitn Red CrOM thatChristmas parcels for service m moverseas be mnllpd between No-vember 1 and November U W l l -jure delivery by surface mall. *nMbetween December 1 »nd Decem-ber 10 for air mail Sugf«tc4 »gifts were wearing ippurri mad*from fMily laundered »yntheti«»,sport clothe*, photograph rfcordland subset Ipttons to msg»rlne»,nd hjinetown

The workl has many peopl*I inxious !,i help you along, when! you no 1OIIK<*I rcqiurp itisLitance.

(talc House Dome-iifd from Editorial Page)

unitl irrisution has re-.:. ia-avy udditiomtl costs.,-ii have been forced toiiiuhei price levels mixedml hay in place of home-: .iins and forage. Lossesin: especially new hay

.;a leased costs of harvest-in yields; and loss of(auitul are other factors.

; estimates indicate that••iM-y farmers .will lose at! per-cent of normal total

•'v.-ipts. Total productioni corn is expected to be the

nice records were started jI'nwpects for the haytlit lowest since 1944.

ian- Meyner may renewvii.ution to Preside.nl'.<-i to duclare New Jer-

n.oor disaster area. The:.: turned down an earlier

i:-l \ JIGSAW:—If New Jer-i.'tic futality recortl eon-

••• increase, it will surpass!i 1957, the greatest an-

.1 in 26 years. . . . Ho.rsecontinues to- attract

• at tiie Atlantic City track• •as a 2.9 per cent Increaseiiw and a 1.1 per centII attendance during the

'I days of racing. . . • N«wone of 18 States listed

Hmeau of Public Roads as100 per cent of Its 1956-57> and defense highway

i; covered by contracts ad-: ' and funds obligated. . . •

University and the StateHa nt of ^ea l th haye Joln-•Hcring two courses in pub-ili m New Brunswick this

All courts in New Jer>• returned to normul

r -ours of 10 A. M. to 4 P.1 '"lay through Friday.;""inh of October has been-'"led Parent-Teacher En-

11 Month by Governor: ' i in appreciation of the

i:-;:|iiuit work of the parent-11 Ki-oups The New Jer-•|i'i; Industry Association

" • umers were paid an »v'••' "I more than fifty cents of

(<»llur of net sales lnconU(' by fluid milk dealers fn

Kutgers, Princeton andl[->ll Universities will shareAmei lean Cancer Society';•breaking award of |8 , :

"i grants to 1ST sclen78 institutions in 3School days are here

;i"fl the Keystone Auto-c'iub warns autftmobile

t|ll('k drivers to takeprecftU-Based at 100 cent* P193». the New Jerse*

l|""«r was worth 40 oentt inas compared with 38

Ls "> ^ n e . . . . New Jersty*employment

Iftn

t tw,

t"ni-ti

Bites

Bljl11'

i n .

Mj/4 Money- Saving Safiet A/<vtM...

Maxwell House

INSTANTCOFFEE

SAVE PLENTY ON THESE SPECIALS!Wilson Certified Ready-to-Eat

CHOPPED HAMSliced Yellow or White

AMERICAN CHEESECloverbrook Aged

SHARP CHEDDARShankPortion _ *.

Excelsior frozen Buttered

BEEFSTEAKSPride of the Farm

TOMATOESFull Cut C C cButtHalf D D

Full CutShank Half ib Dolt's or libby'i

PINEAPPLE JUICECenter Cut Del Monte

FRUIT COCKTAILHam Steaks *Monarch Grape or

APPLE JELLY

RED FLAME SWEET CALIFORNIA LUSCIOUS _ ^ ^

TOKAY GRAPES » 1 2FREESTONE - ^

ITALIAN PRUNES . 9GOLDEN | _

SWEET POTATOES . 5

Sunkist, Minutemaid or Birds Ey«

PROMENADE LEMONADEALBUMS ,

6 oi. cam 10c

njc Hhnw TUIICM findr I'tiiiulkir Albunw

3.98 Value

99UOur Special

Price i

SIM!

Hurry'Hl.KHON SQIVH

K^flMt r'H( O l O M TMACAKUONB -

Suiltiltlltr)

uvintux -—

u — boi

It-Og.- cvllu bug 35<

8TH SENSATIONAL WEEK . , .| EXCLUSIVE OFFER . . .

Swedish Genuine Suburban

CUT GLASSWAREHullil it In-*ulUill H»t nt th(H nut-h I u n ell II jj rut K'i |hlilvrtri*- " B *Ijriiuliful M't nf Kttfiinviir* amillt-uvy hiiKH ffliihj* tmntilMM - - -tWt-it cut tu prtM'fv* beauty-* hlj)iiriM»f-rtiHH - - - <• T y a t a 14-h-iu- - - - it jcltu* fur r**ry ated

2,.,r49<!li f4it Ii t.W or

tuuii L>Mr<'hrtk<B'

9TH FANTABULOUS WUK . .EXCLUSIVE OFFER . . .

ECKOKITCHEN UTENSILS,

Otirv uKiilii tli# very fliimt ti ')uur» ut our- murket - * - t'hlillltc |lilulcl iitural haildlM 'iwlli hlnrk mill wlilte bund. Yoa '•mi . M thin bruulllul kltohn« l at UI«IMII« lit our l l- - • •lu-t )i"ir w l l l

Each I'li-ce. 1Oalr j ITJ5

With Karta «.M m•lurv fu*d iiurchftB*.

{NTIRE STORE

AIRCONDITIONED

FOR YOUR COMFORT

•!•*,.>-,/• V

Mutual Super Markets- r Wood bridge fiflS

OPEN EVERY NIGHTJILL 9

FRI. TILL 10

Wisk,,39*,.69c

Lifebuoy Soap SwanTOILET SOAP

5 b.n 25c

SwanFLOATING SOAP

3;:, 28c 2;", 3ic 1 Ib OC^can W9v

SprySHORTENING

3J« 95c

Beech NutSTRAINED BABY FOOD

10 jm 99C

Beech Nat Jr.IAIVFOOD

6 un 89c

Page 14:  · {complete Local News Astride All The Activities (,f The Town With Your Home-Town Paper,,-, XXXVI—NO. 22 Top Advertising Results Ou r FBmily Of Ove 9,000 Reader* Is A Valuable

FRTDAY. r.FPTEMBFR 13, 1057

GUYS FORDS - WOODBRIDGERT. No. 9, y 4 MILE from TURNPIKE-EXIT

100 \ards from Exit 128 — Garden State Parkway

OPEN SUNDAYS 9:30 A. M. to 9 P. M.

HOURS: Z 9=30 A.M.to 10P.M.

CLEM SONLAWN

MOWER21" ROTARY CUT

LAWN MOWERBriggs & Stratton

332'/i II. I".

\ cycle (jas o

recoil starter

New LOW PriceRl-E.

FREE

'S

Worthof

GRASSSEED

at our discount price (actual $10 value)with this coupon and the purchase of anypas engine power motor.

TELEVISION

TABLES R4.05

IMPORTED

HOLLAND BULBSNarcissus 6 for 2 9 °Daffadills 6 for 3 9 cTulips 12 for 5 9 c

Hyacinths and Crocus at Low, Low Prices

Famous, name brand

50 | b s

5-10-5

FERTILIZERLAWN EDGERGRASS WHIPHEDGE SHEAR

SEED and FERTILIZERSPREADER w 0 5

CART **10" x 18" Hopper

I're-season sale, $2,000,-000 stock of fa mowsname brands

TOYS and GAMESat 2 Guys low low prices.

1.80FOOTBALL ORE.VSKETBALLRegulation Size

FOOTBALL HELMET 1 . 9 9BLACKBOARD o i q

Genuine Slate, Easle Type / • ' «

Hotpoint12 Ml. FT.

REFRIGERATOR4!)-lb. cross-top Weezer, aluminumdoor shelves, porcelain finish in-terior, porcelainized steel erisp*ers, butter bin.

34a 9518.95Down

NORGEAutomatic Gas

DRYERDual selective drying, automaticdoor switch, knee action doorlatch, speed drying and air-flowdrying, 5-way venting safetyignition.

.95rius

Service13.95Down

PlusService

CABINET*42" SINKI'mcuUin K>|i, wltlidrawer IP* **•turet.

4.95 Down49-95WATER

SOFTENERSfrom

69*5

"2 <;iJYS" LOW LOW I'KIOKS ON ALL FAMOUS NAME HI-FI PHONO and RADIO•OiUll^ATIONS . . . EMKHSON, ZKNITH, MOTOROLA, WEHCOK, ADMIRAL and HCA.

"ACRILON"

COMFORTER(loud light Acrilon filling, auia/.in^ly buoyant.y«t has fullness and body. Stays fluffy, fresh andsoft after repeated washing. Dainty floral prints.Piltk, blue, yellowy with French crepe covering.

Reg. 9.95VALUE

HW£ DISCOUNTSHi-Bulk Or-lons that arccashmeresoft.

Mock fash-ioned forthat costlylook. >

New fallcolors. 34-40.

Mock fash-ioned, Hi-Bulk Inter-lock for thatcostly look.

Wash, needno blocking:.

Mildew proof.Smart colors.34-40.

All wool flockcoloredkniib.

Several stylesto choosefrom.

Double walkerfront.

Noveltypockets.

Black, brown,Rrey.

Sizes 22-30.

100rr all-wool flannel.

Fully lined.

GIRLS'NYLONPILE LINED

CAR COATS.99

Plastic shell lined.Z big patch pockets.Full nylon pile coat an,dhood.

Blue or grey.Sizes 7-14.

Men's 100% Virgin Wool

SWEATERS

.Mobl popular ski sweaterlliiougli the years. ,

ll.uid.iomc jacyuard knitpatterns decorate cheat.

While with contraBtliistrim.

Sites S-M-L-XL.

BOYS' LINED

SURCOATS

tfiill zipper front.Heavy quilt lined.Fancy chest stripes in two-loneeffects.

Durable water rcpel^tncy.Crease resistant.2 Slash pockets.Sizes 6-16. A1

Men's Miracle Blend

SLACKS

Dackron and acetate.Sharkskins.Flannels.SUen 30-44.You can wear for dress orwork. Hlue, charcoal, treyanil fatyey patterns in group.