Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r...

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PACK 84 DINNER John L. Oemckc, Ion Avenue, ton of H U PoMi-fce Franklin 2nd Grade Gi»e* Assembly Program Th« sccund grade of Franklin program Ml Tuesday. under dir- ection of their teacher Mr*. Gus- tav (Pauline) Srhlichting. A group of nine tyrls. led bv Gloria M«wn. conducted the opening excretes*. _ , ... (»*. arvanrf of the mcsidenttal 4 n*ucoration and the birthday of Bent .min Franklin, m whoae honor tilts ■efcaol wmi named, was 111ntetf by Barhar.i Dorsch, Kenneth Miller and Robert How- Troop 17 Brownies Have Fly-Up Party Troop 17. Riowntat, Lincoln school on last Tuesday, held Fly-Up ceremonias.- with Mini Elizabeth Lindsay in charge Nancy Albino Patricia Sinopoli and Patricia (Joworek wont lo ' received by Mr*. Joseph Stawicki, W-.ider who piescntcd Girl Atout pirn to them Busan .Odell went tn Troop A and was welcomed bv Girl Scout Scardino Mother* pi event were Mr* Ralph Albino. Jr , Mrs Dominick Sinopoli. Jr., Mr J M Goworek and Mr* Gordon Udell. Mr* Rocco BotwHli is leader of the Brownie^ with Mm Via *ent Caaay and Mrs Anthony J. Marot\i hi «ssi«tantv - Awards were n.ibars Bilach played a piano solo and Patricia Reilly save a tw rlmg routine. A filmstrip, "A Dinr at the Zoo”, w »s projected CmiWirntiry wa* b Christine Falco. Carol Rysocki, |>iward Her,del.i and Charles with an Army Reserve or Nation al Gulird l/nit After the initial eight weeks, he will receive a two weak Isstn and then enter eight weeks of advanred individual training; be saraUsd in one of the specialist Army post fo* training. Mr*. Joseph La Corte. Mr Mrs. Philip Domanico an. and Mr* Anthony lmbe Lyndhurst. and Mr. -nd PiauU, ol K nray, LAUUNO! CALLAGHAN LmwrrrUi- Callaghan im Fern Avenue, son of Mr. and Mr*. John The d a « gave original dramati- sations of winter sonf« snd poems* Thera wai a demonstration of rythm band instruments. Minnte-ed Just in th* event ..f more ^ow — nd -don', be. Highway Commwoner Pernor's adv,cv on how to .rapple with it in an automobile U important Make sure the tank U M l. > « have U « ch*im „„ a«l haw a shovel and b*» of » " d Stay in the proper lane G,ve ■»,. „k,ws th. right of way Avoid parking on ma„, highways and thorough, fares. Maybe the most important element is that bag of sond. lares Maj be the most m>pnrUnt element is that ta t of sand c*n save. by^Jmiral Public Library, Valley Brook Ave . . .yndl*r,t. N. J 1 0 anti SOUTH HKRCKN REVIK* \ ol. 41 No. — 2‘» LYNDHURST. -fi. J., JANUARY 26. 1961 H*con4 1 'iiiw pnM af paid kl ftatharfnrd. N. J. TILtPHONI OINIVA • S700 S7U Curcio In Denial He Quit As Head Of Scout Fund School Trustee Peter F. Curcio —------------------------------------------ today renounced as "untrue a|n l,A aa a Scurcilous a report he had re CO UItty BOOTCl Adds Billions To Assessments Signed as chairman of the fund Campaign for the Lyndhurst Boy Scout Council because of reports a scout organization last week had not invited him to a meeting ; concerning the Board of Educa tion election. Curcio is a candidate for r«. I election The mother's group ol one of the scout troops hehf i f meeting last week, inviting mem ber* of a ticke* composed of Mas* Charles Christ. Morris Settem * brino. William Wackwitz -jm«4; Robert Schuman Sozzio, another member of the board who is active in scout work, also attended Curcio and other candidates for the board, including George Graf fam Jr., long active in scouting, were not invited. **The report that i resigned as $45,224.«57 chairman of *he fund drive for I Fast Rutherford, the scouts is absolutely Untrue 2.12* percent for a total of $11. and is being spread by unprinci *22 .*>00 was increased to $40.W»s pled persons who are endeavoring 722 to bring politics in the scout pro I*ast week Mayor Harold Pa gram," send Curcio reti signified that more growth in the future of the^ hilltop Bergen County assesses tax- able properly at less than 25 nerccnt of true value, according rvc,rtv Board of Taxation. Although total assessments stand only at $1,157.08*96* — tot*I value of realty actually is elnee to IS billion The exact fieure set by the board is $057.- Mrs. John B. M l, 706 ln establishing the as- sessments on which the muairi paHties must, pay their county taxes the county board ordered ;m extra $3.300.0*4.7K added As a result Carlstadt. which assessed at 17 n of true value was increased from $17,181,100 to Natural Gas For % Lyndhurst Users Begins In August Rev. Jewell Dies At Shore, !Popular Here Lyodhurst suffered a tragic loss last Friday when Rev Robert B I VNUHl KST AT VASSAR. Since Jacquehn tvennd-, the countiy's new Ora lady, went to Vaasar It b only natural Vsssar girls v|,uuid favor a Jackie’s bouffant hair-do and the hnlkv sweater* *hc likes to wea^ Last week a Life magastne photographer went t« the Vasoar campus looking lor some Jackie loo*i-s!ik»s. In the abo.c grmiji of tour he found one Lyndhurst girl, Stephan? Warick. **nd from the left, an honor graduate of Lyndhurs: High Sch« n and a huh ft ml^ndiip student at Vavsar. She is the dauchter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Warick of 27S Watson Avrnnc. Other* in the ph«»t4»graph .ire Susan Joe lie, Kllen Jennings, Jane lluPont. read ing Irft to right. - . ... * “As I undpistand it tl - i «-cting]t^ in the future is held In a private home and tT«6fftQglCr Italian Unit Is Organized For Culture l ! Rutherford assessing at 22 T____________ _________________ _ alters. White 1 fool that all e»n I pw rtnt yaa iat nmmi tnm S" < e,il*n»a Jci e\ Is ;i irowtnj: • • didates lor the Board of Kduralmn 7SI ii«n to SI I0.77S.C93 w ill TUI C panding state. The new I960 ren- •hould be invited when a non l.-,ndhurst. using an 1*3* ra ..... Uus shows that in the last ID years political organization meetme tion was hiked from %1A.SS1.12, this was an unusual gathering to $101,040.9** I wrgeft west Hi»>on vnapwr ol Teachers Outline More Salary Facts Kiwanis Club Members of that organization were unanimous in ______ . i »nd slmi 11hail I"—1 r — ‘MT*‘ KU ___ The tear he i shortage i* nation- 'their flow to otiier States Aide. Two factors caused this Smre 1830. teacher salaries in Lyndhurst and Rutherford are to be pmong the first New Jersey municipalities converted to ’ na- tural gas use. ' In letters to users in thane communities Public Service Elec- tric & Gas Company said thSt its agents will begin next month and inspection of gas facilities in the Mica. By August the conversion Jewell. 35, rector of St Thomas (will be under way. Episcopal Church. Lyndhurst. | The PH men will delerminn died whil** attending a minister 1if appliances need changes to ial conference in Asbury Pari. .H-cept natural gas. If they do Although Mr Jewell has been ! I*S will hear th? expense, in Lyndhurst only three month The gas-will come from Trans- he had already made his pres >ontinental Pjp* Works which has ence felt m the church parish j extended its line into this area which worships in the beautiful I from Texas The cost of the na- new building at Stuyvmant and ■ tural gas will be approximately Forest Avenu«s | what was pajd for mixed gas. Selected to offer theprayer at : Ps has been mixing natural and the annual athletic awards dinner -utificial gas for some time. of the high school alumni. Mi Other areas to be converted are Jewel) scored heavily with seve Verona, and Montclair. North ral hundred present at the af ffaledon. Hawthorne. Glen Rock, fair Mr Jewell's good humor Ridgewood. Prospect Park. Patcr- ’md his intimate knowledge of son. Haledon. Fast Patcmon and j sports captivated man-, of those Fair Liun in Passaic and Bergen who met him at the affair and Springfield in Unw»n. Upon his coming to Lyndhurst The following letter isbeing Mr Jewell became active in the ; dispatched hv J EdwardMcGo- because it was in a private hmrn- North Arlington, assessing a» ,h* Cen'er ol lt.ilian Culture, an •nd the ho« and hostess had I9!>2 percent of true value w a, •*'“ n “ ‘‘t ‘OB T" perfect rifht to mvite Whom the, w m iH from SISJ7SJ7S TUM UnwerMt -. was held Sund-y - - J al «H* kntHa of Pi*t« rVt*njintef> »fs pnpofatww jDtjca.sqd. .^boftajje Low salaries during and New Jersey have not gone up as 2 per cent We have grbwn fastei t right after" World W arTTaent f:ffit a t thr -nriim*-. »Uru pleased “But I am shocked snd out- raged at the report that out of pique I resigned a position which I hold most dear I was chair man of the campaign drive last year—and 1 am chairman agaui this year I worked hard last year and. if anything. I intend to work harder this year. “Reports to the contrary, I am the active chairman of the Lynd- hurst scout fund campaign I am engaged m seeTng that we go over the top for this all important cause and ! am sure that Lynd- hurst will I also urge our fai-' minded residents to overlook this incident and to put all their re- sources behind the drive for these funds from which we draw such magnificent dividends." Celsbrstss Birthday I New Officers For Democrats The Democratic Club of Lynd- hurst under th. . ^dership of its President, Ralph Pnfito. on Mon day, January 23rd, ;<t its AMVETS Headquarters. Station Square, nominated the foitowmg state of unopposed officers Louis Tlssierc, President; An thony SeardirH James'DaV.iist T?* 1'f; *V t. tary; Mrs. Victor Shabuma. Co* aaspaadiflg Secretary. A contention exuts between John McAuliffe and Sylvio Parra lor Vice Presidency. The election will be held on Monday. February 27th, combined with a social hour Would you buy a sack of i for a Penny? . at the home ol Peter Domanico. 311 Livingston Ave., Lyndhurst. Another meeting was scheduled for Feb 3 at I pm. at Lyndhurst High School.. Rev Dr Vincent Moneiirt executive director of the ■late-wide organization, urged all s1 in ftirMsa ewt- turc to attend the r . t.ng Feb. 3. I' Fath« r Mo-.dla said the main purpose of the organization is to present to the comm%mrtv -at large an appreciation of Italy*! and become more prosperous than many teachers into industry and , workers whose salaries ' most states. In 19S0 the average diseouritfed cUhers from entering risen much faster than living cost New Jer&y family had over $50(M the profession. At the sam«* time. Teachers dropped fai behind to spend. This year it will hav. new teachers were coming from other groups in tht IMft's and well over $7000. New Jersey in a age groups born in the low-birtli- liave been slowly catching up in good place to live, work and I rate year* of the 1030's, while the 1050‘s raise families That means we |*molhnent» were going up repid Lyndhurst must compete all want Good Schools What con !ly in the late 40’* and $0’s. Salary- wise w«th our neighborm*: stitutes a ginn^ sehnolj First of j New Jersey now has nearly communities LyndhurM has fal* lai ut-hiod m »alar»*«~ fou< wan of the Rutherford office: ‘To Our Gas Customers: __________"We arc ftlanninn to send? na« . In the short" lime we knew tural gas in your area, instead of him he had already given all of the mixed gas you are now using. • is a life/' said one member fThis will assuie yn* of an ade : An jsw lal - u n w y . with thclqaatnm pply of gas fur all ynug tough Eighth Air Force, "Mr Jew |iiee<fl«; SfMJ tr v ttt he^p II was active in veteran affairs tie was a member and former chaplain of Frank M. Sell Post. Amerk'an lagion. of West Mil- ford. In 1060 Mr Jewell suffered a tragic loss in.an automobile the problem of wveting the ever increasing demands of the grow- ing area in which you live. ‘‘Tbe conv^-sion to natural gas 'ill be done in ‘wo step*. Tbe first .or “predrilling* step d\(l Ufke place sometinw during Jan- good>chMol ha^ nuuldied ux- a b u u l 1 U*acbM« u» Teed •tcnctVers, who. nt >nef4 ywpdrr 'rt l»"i< n rd very least, meet our state* mini muni standards for teaching certi ficates. Classes shofild be small pffmtnnntites. ments for standard state certifi Rutherford. East Rutherford. Has- caU's. There' are some good ;brouck Heights. North Arlington teachers with substandard certifi- j -at the present lime have sain enough so that a ^teacher can c»U*s. but generally, those w ho! ries ranging from $300 to $1050 really teach—not fust keep order fully meet state standards will wire than Lyndhurst t cultural heritage. He outlined Teachers can do their "best work do lietter than those who do not What ran Lyndhurst do’ Help ra w n n in Italian language, liter- I with not more (ban 2-S pupils ature. art and history which are After that, there is no time fo. offered at Seton Hall to CIC individual instruction For each members and their friends and child we want the kind of educa encouraged members to take ad tion that will fit him for the cident Mr. Jewell's first wife, juary or February. 1001 U*e Rmmer Ethel Garrett, and i time. spccu»U> »*elr ilnTighlef Ceeo* W*nr« • •- ^ Wtw w>».We tally injured in a Christmas Eve accident. He was hadly hurt He si^nt a year in the hospital re- covering. Mr Jewell's second wife is the former Helen Heidersbach of Oradell She and Mr Jewell’s son by his first marriage. Mi- hael. II. have been living at 454 (Coniinu^ri on Page $) vantage of these courses. Officers of the Chapter tentatively elected. They | Peter Domanico, president. Elea- nor Villanova. vice-president. Jeannette Schuffenhauer. record- curriculum to fit his INT ■siorctary; Angela Pi«i. eor- whether he is average, bright or secretary; iPasquale Jeven slow. Schools, then to most best’ tob he is capable of handling. School should help make him a responsible citizen; serve as a foundation for further education. This means a carefully planned A HAPPY » . Mr*. Jeeephine Franglpane. one «f Lyndhunt’s matriarchs. Sunday night eele brated her 09th birthday All of children imagined, Mr*. ef Lyndhnrst's She was brother, who Is a men Ratta. treasurer: and Mildred Panfiio. membership chairman Others present were: Mr*.’ Rose Foilara Liberti. Mrs Carmel Shadcl. Mrs Marietta Domanico. Peter Curcio. Anthony Buscemi and Anthony Di Taccom. nrmm g££ed 4 Frank Ron of us, means a modern school building, safe and sanitary where Future Teachers Attend Meeting The Fulure Teachers of America aiKt*the Bachelor “Future Teachf4v Me* " t m mM -- ■» -T ll»IIMia ■- V Much of the teacher Mhortage ^support the nrsnl hud yet is a matter of supply and de- though it Is still lower thanout mand. Not enough schools pity surrounding communities it is a salaries to attract an adequate step in the right direction supply of goo<^ qualified teachers The riscnt White House Confer ence on Education suggested that teacher salaries might have lo be doubled. In a period of shortage, com , mujities bid against each other Three graduates of I .>(nlhiir*! Iligli School anti one of for I'ood teachers.t and states Sj MarvV High School of Kutlierforil were u»*ijfnc<l to thriMii^ their minimum salary} . . / . law .ind state average salaries training regiinenU at Fort l)ix last week. TheM* are. new c*"P"te With ^Ch to » _______________ ; __________________ At that SUUjd servure- S ^ t if»»We n MHK f M gas-burning equipment, and will make preliminary adjustments on certain appll—rss so as to spaad up the work on conversion day. “The >i*cond or “actual conver- sion" step will take place some- time during August. 1961. At that time, natural gas will be turned into the mains, and it will then (Continued ,,n Pa-, , LYNDHURST YOUTHS TAKING THEIR TRAINING AT FORT DIX, THREE FROM LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL ^ PTA FORUM ON FEB. 2 The f.yndhurst PTA Council will hold a public Forum SOXt uTmt.r«rAv™rTniert.ined ^""'rtM rW ^ynm tirrsT TTtnlf'-mrn^tar t ^vrmrdt I4vin*«tnn Avenue, entertained ^ ... . ... ..vi,„.k .k. T ~ . u Ion Tuesday evenin, at rards. for 1 ^ ° ! ' T the benefit of the Tire Auxiliary Thursd,,)f “'trrnw,n al lh'- sch'« l Her guests were Mmes Edward ^ R»|Ph pol,u> and ^ ' ‘‘P Aloct a. Mr and Mrs. Samuel Parker. Barbieri, John Bilmski. Anita hath st Paterson State 123 Jay avenue, had a silver wed Kubatz Florence De Luca. George ! College, who are now, practice ding anniversary last week Mrs Gabnel. John Samoski. David Ar- ,f iich ,n* *n Lyndhurst High Peter Aiello and Mrs. Anthony thur. Joseph Guastella. Raymond S<*h«»l, were guest speakers. They Lavsll arranged a party of 25 for Roderick, Frank Marrone. Louis ,0‘d of choice of Curriculum neses r - - - • r”‘ * 1 ““ “ ’ ■ . *■ - them, in celebration of the event Adde*> and Grace Perretti. sary to enter college und the 'quir(*d scholastic standing to en ter They also answered question At a previous meeting of tbe Roeschke. principal of the Roose- velt School. told of the advanta ges and opportunities in a teach ing career. Officers of tbe Future Teachers are Vivian Rizzo, president. Pa- I tricia Carueci. vlee^prsaMent; Mary Ellen Cassidy.'^secretary. ;.nd Virgini CarahHhAtreasurei Meetings »are held Vvery two : weeks on Thursday afternoon, Mrs Alice lb* kson ks advisor. eight o'clock at the Town llall to hear candidates for the of fcdupnUod. Mr Joseph Schultz, of Ridge- field Park, former president of th* l.ergen County PTA Council, and i.ow a member of the State PTA Board, will be moderator. Mi Warren Bogle will he chairman. Mi* John Me Creo, timekeeper., and Mrs Burton |)avi has charge of publicity. Other members of the commit- t« »• o' arrangements are Mrs. Ar- thur Taylor. Mrs Walt«r Ronson, Mrs Joseph Stawicki and Mrs. James Allan. JOHN BRYAN III Kilt HI KKI I MAN JOHN hlM K V Cub |»ack H4, which me. tf Washington school, held a m tai ing on Thursday evening wit' .. * ^ - .... ,, Cubmaster William Jacobsen an Herbert D freeman. MS Union | t uhmwrtw K<,nn. th R. ......................... Mrs Ma, v »"*- ;»K. Tn charge. Plans were mada fsr t M fl ‘' I d nue, mmi of Mr and Mrs Patrick February ttth at the Royal H Bryan. jwsiian Palms The Wetieloa d< Atm^iloyed hy Flintkol« Company. East Ruther- fold, is the former St Ma. v s boy. Callaghan was employed at thur Gi.mmetta, Ri>t»ert Sh Manson Ceramioa Belleville;;rrank- «aMain«k. Ku. F t Denacke st Bendig Corp.. Band .iw st|^H iflM | and Freeman went mtiOhc Army Nicholas Cinaido. l>ennts right from high school a During thetr training^ they will Ma had Otknw»ki and Daf I M*tam kg general PIsMHHHH^H military subject* as well as char- ■- j acter gutd mre programs under' Mr and Mrs Peter lmbes the post chaplain Mountain Way, were murr* Under the RFA program, they lyears last Wedne tay Gue. wilt Nerve on active duly for six their hom<. m >ieiu ation o fH_ months of training and then be event wcie their childiert N,| transi. nietown duty and Mi I'ctei J ] m-t.. m WMMMkaj • ark a i tm % h*ai?

Transcript of Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r...

Page 1: Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r Mo-.dla said the main purpose of the organization is to present to the comm%mrtv

PACK 84 DINNER

John L. O em ckc, Ion A venue, ton of H U PoMi-fceFranklin 2nd G rade

Gi»e* Assembly ProgramTh« sccund grade of F rank lin

program Ml Tuesday. under d ir ­ection of the ir teacher Mr*. G us- tav (P au line) Srhlich ting . A group of n ine tyrls. led bv G loria M « w n . conducted the opening excretes*. _ , ...

(»*. a r v a n r f of the m csidenttal 4n*ucoration and the b irthday of Bent .min F ranklin , m whoae honor tilts ■efcaol wmi nam ed, w as 111 • ntetf by Barhar.i Dorsch, K enneth M iller and Robert How-

Troop 17 Brownies H ave Fly-Up Party

T roop 17. R iow ntat,L incoln school on last Tuesday, h e ld F ly-U p ceremonias.- w ith M ini E lizabeth Lindsay in charge N ancy Albino Patricia Sinopoli an d P atric ia (Joworek wont lo

■ ■ ■'received by Mr*. Joseph S taw icki, W-.ider who p iescntcd G irl A tout p irn to them

Busan .O dell w ent tn T roop A a n d w as welcom ed bv G irl Scout S card ino

M other* pi event w ere Mr* R alph Albino. Jr , Mrs Dominick S inopoli. J r ., Mr J M G ow orek an d Mr* G ordon Udell.

Mr* Rocco BotwHli is leader o f the B row nie^ with Mm Via * e n t Caaay and Mrs A nthony J . M aro t\i h i «ssi«tantv -

A w ards w ere

n . ib a r s B ilach played a piano solo and P atricia Reilly save a tw rlm g routine.

A film strip , "A Dinr at the Zoo” , w »s pro jected C m iW irntiry wa* b C hristine Falco. Carol Rysocki, |> iw ard Her,del.i and C harles

w ith an Army Reserve or Nation al G ulird l/n it

A fter the initial eight weeks, he w ill receive a tw o w eak I s s tn and then en te r eight w eeks of advan red individual tra in ing ; be saraU sd in one of th e specialist A rm y post fo* tra in ing .

Mr*. Jo sep h La C orte . Mr M rs. P h ilip D om anico an. and Mr* A nthony lm be L y ndhu rs t. an d Mr. -n d P iauU , o l K n r a y ,

L A U U N O ! CALLAGHAN

LmwrrrUi- C allaghan im F ern A venue, son of Mr. and Mr*. Jo h n

The d a « gave original d ram ati­sations of w inter sonf« sn d poems* T hera w a i a dem onstration of ry th m band instrum ents.

Minnte-edJust in th* event ..f m ore ^ o w — nd -don', be .

Highway C o m m w o n e r P erno r's adv,cv on how to .r a p p le with it in an autom obile U im portant Make su re the tank U M l. > « have U « ch*im „„ a « l h a w a shovel and b*» of » " d S tay in the proper lane G ,ve ■ » , . „k,w s th . right of way Avoid parking on m a„, highways and thorough, fares. M aybe the m ost im portant element is tha t bag of sond. lares M aj be the most m>pnrUnt elem ent is tha t t a t of sand c*n save.

b y ^ J m i r a l P u b l i c L i b r a r y , V a l l e y B r o o k A v e . . . y n d l * r , t . N . J

1 0

a n ti S O U T H H K R C K N R E V I K *

\ o l . 41 N o. — 2 ‘» LYNDHURST. -fi. J . , JANUARY 26. 1961 H * c o n 4 1 'i i iw p n M a f p a id k l f t a th a r f n r d . N . J . TIL tPH O N I OINIVA • S700 S7U

Curcio In Denial He Quit As Head Of Scout Fund

School T rustee P e te r F. Curcio —------------------------------------------today renounced as "un true a | n l , A ■ aa a Scurcilous a report he had re C O U I t t y B O O T C l

Adds BillionsTo Assessments

Signed as chairm an of the fund Campaign for the Lyndhurst Boy S cout Council because of reports a scout organization last week had not invited him to a m eeting ; concerning the Board of Educa tion election.

C urcio is a candidate for r« . I election The m other's group ol one of the scout troops h e h f i f m eeting last week, inviting mem ber* of a ticke* composed o f Mas*C harles Christ. Morris Settem * brino. William W ackwitz -jm«4;R obert Schuman Sozzio, another m em ber of the board who is active in scout work, also attended

Curcio and o ther candidates for th e board, including G eorge G raf fam J r ., long ac tive in scouting, w e re not invited.

**The report tha t i resigned as $45,224.«57 chairm an of *he fund d rive for I F ast R utherford, th e scouts is absolutely Untrue 2.12* percent fo r a total of $11. and is being spread by unprinci *22 .*>00 was increased to $40.W»s p led persons who are endeavoring 722to bring politics in th e scout pro I*ast week M ayor H arold Pa gram ," send Curcio reti signified th a t m ore grow th

in the fu tu re of the^ h illtop

Bergen C ounty assesses ta x ­able properly a t less th a n 25nerccnt of tru e value, according rv c ,r tv Board of T axation.

A lthough to ta l assessm ents stand only at $1,157.08*96* — tot*I value of rea lty ac tually is elnee to IS billion T he exact f ieu re set by the board is $ 0 5 7 .-

Mrs. John B. M l, 706 ln establish ing the as­sessm ents on w hich the m u a iri paHties must, pay th e ir county taxes the county board ordered ;m ex tra $3.300.0*4.7 K added

As a resu lt C arlstad t. w hich assessed a t 17 n of tru e value was increased from $17,181,100 to

Natural Gas For%

Lyndhurst Users Begins In AugustRev. Jewell Dies At Shore,

! Popular HereL yodhurst suffered a tragic loss

last Friday when Rev Robert B

I V NU H l KST AT VASSAR. S ince Ja c q u e h n tv e n n d - , the co u n tiy 's new O ra lady, w ent to V aasar It b only n a tu ra l V sssar girls v|,uuid favor a Jackie’s bouffant h a ir -d o and the hnlkv sw eater* *hc likes to w e a ^ Last w eek a Life m agastne pho tographer went t« the Vasoar campus looking lo r som e Ja c k ie loo*i-s!ik»s. In the a b o .c grmiji of tour he found one L yndhu rs t g irl, S tephan? W arick.

**nd from the left, an honor g ra d u a te of Lyndhurs: High Sch« n and a h u h f t m l^ndiip s tuden t a t Vavsar. She is the dauch ter of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen W arick of 27S W atson A vrnnc. Other* in th e ph«»t4»graph .ire Susan Joe lie, Kllen Jenn ings, Jan e lluPon t. read ing Ir f t to right. - . . . . *

“As I undpistand it tl - i «-cting]t^ in the fu tu re is held In a priva te home and t T«6fftQglCr

Italian Unit Is Organized Fo r Culture

l ! R utherford assessing at 22 T____________ _________________ _a lte rs . W hite 1 fool th a t a ll e»n I p w r tn t y a a i a tn m m i t n m S" < • e , i l * n » a Jc i e \ Is ;i irow tnj: • •

d idates lor the Board of Kduralmn 7SI ii«n to SI I0.77S.C93 w i l l T U I C p an d in g state. The new I960 ren-•hou ld be invited w hen a non l.-,ndhurst. using an 1*3* ra — ..... U us show s th a t in the last ID yearspolitical organization m eetm e tion was hiked from %1A.SS1.12,th is w as an unusual gathering to $101,040.9** I w rg e f t w est Hi»>on v n a p w r ol

Teachers Outline More Salary Facts K iw anis C lub M em bers of that organization w ere unanim ous in

______ . i »nd slmi 11 hail I"—1r — ‘MT*‘ KU ___T he te a r he i shortage i* nation- 'th e i r flow to otiier States

Aide. Tw o factors caused th is S m re 1830. teacher salaries in

L yndhurst and R utherfo rd a re to be pmong the first New Jersey m unicipalities converted to ’ n a ­tura l gas use. '

In le tte rs to users in thane com m unities Public Service E lec­tric & G as Company said thS t its agents will begin next m onth and inspection of gas facilities in the Mica. By August the conversion

Jew ell. 35, rector of St Thom as (will be under way.Episcopal Church. Lyndhurst. | The PH men will delerm inndied whil** attending a m inister 1 if appliances need changes to ial conference in A sbury Pari. .H-cept natu ral gas. If they do

A lthough Mr Jew ell has been ! I*S will hear th? expense, in L yndhurst only three month The gas-w ill come from T rans- he had already m ade his pres > ontinental Pjp* W orks w hich has ence felt m the church parish j extended its line into th is area w hich w orships in the beautiful I from Texas The cost of th e na-new building at S tuyvm ant and ■ tural gas will be approxim atelyForest Avenu«s | what was pajd for mixed gas.

Selected to o ffer the prayer at : P s has been m ixing n a tu ra l andthe annual ath letic aw ards dinner -utificial gas for some tim e.

■ o f the h igh school alumni. Mi O ther areas to be converted a re Jew el) scored heavily with seve Verona, and M ontclair. N orth ral hundred p resent at the af ffaledon. H aw thorne. G len Rock, fair M r Jew ell's good hum or Ridgewood. P rospect P ark . P atc r- ’m d his in tim ate know ledge of son. Haledon. Fast Patcm on and

j sports captivated man-, of those Fair L iu n in Passaic and Bergen w ho m et h im a t the a ffa ir and Springfield in Unw»n.

Upon his com ing to Lyndhurst The following le tter is beingMr Jew ell became active in the ; dispatched hv J Edw ard McGo-

because it was in a p riva te hmrn- N orth A rlington, assessing a» ,h* C en 'e r ol lt.ilian C ulture, an •n d the h o « and hostess had I9!>2 percent of tru e value w a , •*'“ n “ ‘‘t ‘OB T "perfec t r i f h t to m vite Whom th e , w m i H from SISJ7S J7S TUM UnwerMt -. was held S und -y

- - J • a l «H * k n tH a o f P i * t « rV t* n jin te f>

»fs pnpofatww jD tjca.sqd. .^boftajje Low salaries d u rin g and New Jersey have not gone up as2 p e r cent We have grbw n faste i t r igh t after" W orld W a rT T a e n t f:ffit a t t h r -nriim*-. »Uru

pleased“But I am shocked snd o u t­

raged a t the report tha t out of p ique I resigned a position which I hold m ost dear I was chair m an of the cam paign d riv e last y e a r—and 1 am chairm an agaui th is year I w orked hard last year and . if anything. I in tend to work h ard er this year.

“Reports to the contrary , I am th e active chairm an of the L ynd­h u rs t scout fund cam paign I am engaged m seeTng th a t we go over th e top for th is all im portan t cause and ! am sure tha t Lynd­h u rs t will I also urge our fai-' m inded residents to overlook this inc ident and to put all th e ir re ­sources behind the d riv e fo r these funds from which we draw such m agnificent dividends."

Celsbrstss Birthday

I

New Officers For Dem ocrats

The Democratic C lub of Lynd­hurst under th. . ^dership of its P resident, Ralph Pnfito. on Mon day , Jan u ary 23rd, ;<t its AMVETSH eadquarters . S tation Square, nom inated the foitowm g s ta te o f unopposed officers

Louis Tlssierc, P resident; An thony SeardirHJames'DaV.iist T?* 1 'f ; *V t .ta ry ; Mrs. V ictor S habum a. Co* aaspaadiflg Secretary.

A contention e x u ts betw een J o h n McAuliffe and Sylvio P arra lo r Vice Presidency. T h e election w ill be held on Monday. F ebruary 27th, combined w ith a social hour

W ould you buy a sack of i for a Penny? .

a t th e home o l P eter Domanico. 311 Livingston Ave., Lyndhurst.

A nother meeting was scheduled fo r F eb 3 at I pm . at L yndhurst H igh School.. Rev Dr Vincent M oneiirt executive director of the ■ late-w ide organization, urged all

s 1 in ftirMsa ewt- tu rc to attend the r . t.ng Feb. 3.

I ' Fath« r M o-.dla said the m ain p u rp o se of the organization is to p resen t to the comm%mrtv -at la rge an appreciation of Italy*!

a n d becom e m ore prosperous than m any teachers into industry and , w orkers whose salaries ' m ost states. In 19S0 the average d iseouritfed cUhers from en tering risen m uch faste r than living cost N ew Je r& y fam ily had over $50(M the profession. At the sam«* tim e. T eachers dropped fai behind to spend. This year it w ill hav. new teachers w ere com ing from o th e r groups in th t IMft's and w ell o ver $7000. New Jersey in a age groups born in the low -birtli- liave been slow ly ca tch ing up in good place to live, work and I ra te year* of the 1030's, while the 1050‘sra is e fam ilies T h a t m eans we |*m o lhnen t» w ere going up repid L yndhurst m ust com pete a ll w an t Good Schools What con !ly in the late 40’* and $0’s. S alary - wise w«th o u r neighborm*: s ti tu te s a ginn^ sehnolj First of j New Je rsey now has nearly com m unities LyndhurM has fal*

la i u t-h io d m »alar»*«~ fou<

wan of the R utherford office: ‘T o O ur Gas Custom ers:

__________"W e arc ftlanninn to send? na« .In the short" lim e we knew tu ra l gas in your area, instead o f

him he had already given all of the m ixed gas you are now using.• is a l i f e / ' said one m em ber fThis w ill assu ie yn* of an ade : A n js w la l - u n w y . with th c lq a a tn m p p ly of gas fur all ynu g tough Eighth Air Force, "Mr Jew |iiee<fl«; SfMJ t r v t t t he^p

II was active in veteran affairs t i e w as a m em ber and form er chap lain of F ran k M. Sell Post. A m erk 'an lag io n . of W est M il­ford.

In 1060 Mr Jew ell suffered atrag ic loss in .a n au tom obile

the problem of w veting the eve r increasing dem ands of the grow ­ing a rea in which you live.

‘‘T be conv^-sion to n a tu ra l gas 'ill be done in ‘w o step*. T be

first .o r “predrilling* s te p d \ ( l Ufke p lace som etinw d u rin g Jan -

g o o d > c h M o l h a ^ n u u l d i e d u x - a b u u l 1 U*acbM « u»Teed •tcnctVers, who. nt >nef4 y w p d rr 'rtl»"i< n rd

v e ry least, meet our state* m ini m u n i standards for teaching certi fica tes . C lasses shofild be small

pffmtnnntites.m ents for s tandard s ta te ce rtifi R u therfo rd . East R utherford . Has- caU's. T h e r e ' are some good ;b rouck H eights. N orth A rlington teachers w ith substandard certifi- j - a t the p resen t lim e have sain

en o u g h so tha t a ^teacher can c»U*s. b u t generally , those w h o ! ries ranging from $300 to $1050 re a lly teach—not fust keep order fully m eet s ta te s tandards w ill w ir e than Lyndhurst

t c u l tu ra l heritage. He ou tlined T e ach e rs can do th e ir "best w ork do lie tter than those who do not W hat ra n L yndhurst do’ H elpr a w n n in Ita lian language, lite r- I w ith not m ore (ban 2-S pupils

a tu re . a r t and history w hich a re A fte r tha t, th e re is no tim e fo. offered at Seton Hall to CIC in d iv idual instruction For each m em bers and the ir friends and c h ild we w ant the kind of educa encouraged members to ta k e ad tion th a t w ill fit him for the

cident Mr. Jew ell 's firs t w ife, ju a ry o r F ebruary . 1001 U*e Rm mer E thel G a rre tt , and i tim e. spccu»U>»*elr ilnTighlef Ceeo* W*nr« ••- ^ Wtw w>».Weta lly in ju red in a C hristm as Eve accident. He w as hadly h u rt He s i^ n t a year in the hospita l r e ­covering.

Mr Jew ell 's second w ife is the form er H elen H eidersbach of O radell She and Mr Jew ell’s son by his first m arriage. Mi-hael. II . have been living a t 454

(Coniinu^ri on Page $)

v an tage of these courses.Officers of the Chapter

te n ta tiv e ly elected. They | P e te r Domanico, president. E lea­

nor Villanova. vice-president.J e a n n e tte Schuffenhauer. record- c u rricu lu m to fit his INT ■siorcta ry ; Angela P i« i . eor- w h e th e r he is average, bright or

secretary; iP asquale Jeven slow. Schools, then to most

b es t’ tob he is capable of handling. S choo l should help m ake him a responsib le citizen; serve as a fo undation for fu rth e r education. T h is m eans a carefu lly planned

A HAPPY » . Mr*. Jeeephine F ranglpane. one «f L y n d h u n t’sm atriarchs. Sunday night eele brated her 09th b irthday A ll o f

children im agined, Mr*.

ef L yndhnrst'sShe wasb ro ther,

who Is a m en

R atta . treasurer: and M ildredPanfiio . membership chairm an O th ers present were: M r*.’ Rose F o ila ra Liberti. M rs C arm el S hadcl. Mrs M arietta Domanico. P e te r Curcio. Anthony Buscem i an d A nthony Di Taccom.

nrmm

g £ £ e d 4F rank Ron

of us, m eans a modern school bu ild in g , safe and sanitary w here

Future Teachers Attend Meeting

T h e F u lu re Teachers of A m erica aiKt*the B achelor “F u tu re Teachf4vMe* " tm m M --■» -T ll»IIMia ■ - V

Much of the teacher Mhortage ^support the n r s n l hud yetis a m a tte r of supply and de- though it Is still low er than o u tmand. Not enough schools pity su rround ing com m unities it is asalaries to a ttrac t an adequate step in the righ t d irectionsupply of goo<^ qualified teachers The r isc n t W hite House Confer ence on Education suggested tha t teacher salaries m ight have lo be doubled.

In a period of shortage, com , mujities bid against each other Three graduates of I .> (nlhiir*! Iligli School anti one offor I'ood teache rs .t and states S j MarvV High School of Kutlierforil were u»*ijfnc<l tothriMii^ th e ir m inim um salary} . . / . •law .ind state average salaries t r a in in g re g i in e n U a t F o r t l ) ix la s t w e e k . TheM* are. n e wc * " P " te With ^ C h to » •_______________ ;__________________

At th a t SUUjd servure-

S ^ t if»»We n M HK f Mgas-burning equipm ent, and w ill m ake p re lim inary ad justm en ts on ce rta in appll— rs s so as to spaad up the w ork on conversion day.

“T he >i*cond o r “ac tual co n v e r­sion" step w ill take place som e­tim e during A ugust. 1961. At th a t time, natu ral gas w ill be tu rn ed into the m ains, and it w ill then

(Continued ,,n Pa-, ,

LYNDHURST YOUTHS TAKING THEIR TRAINING AT FORT DIX, THREE FROM LOCAL HIGH SCHOOL ^

PTA FORUM ON FEB. 2

The f.yndhurst PTA Councilwill hold a public Forum SOXt

u T m t . r « r A v ™ r T n i e r t . i n e d ‘ ^ " " 'r tM r W ^ y n m t i r r s T T T tn lf '-m rn ^ ta r t ^ v rm rd tI4vin*«tnn Avenue, e n te r ta in e d ^ . . . . . . . ..vi,„.k . k . T ~ . uIon Tuesday ev en in , a t rard s. fo r 1 ^ ° ! ' Tth e benefit of the Tire A uxiliary T hursd ,,)f “ ' tr rn w ,n al lh '- sch' « l H er guests were Mmes E d w ard ^ R »| Ph pol,u> and ^ ' ‘‘P Aloct a.

M r and Mrs. Sam uel P ark er. B arb ieri, John Bilmski. A nita h a th s t P aterson S ta te123 Ja y avenue, had a silver w ed K ubatz Florence De Luca. G eorge ! C o llege, w ho a re now, prac tice d ing ann iversary last w eek Mrs G ab n e l. John Sam oski. David A r- , f iich ,n* *n L yndhurst H i g h P eter Aiello and Mrs. A nthony th u r . Joseph G uastella. Raym ond S<*h«»l, w ere guest speakers. They L avsll arranged a party of 25 fo r Roderick, Frank M arrone. Louis ,0 ‘d of choice of C urriculum nesesr —- - —- • r ” ‘ * 1 ““ “ ’ ■ . *■

- them , in ce lebration of the even t Adde*> and G race P erretti. s a ry to en te r college und the 'qu ir(*d scholastic standing to en te r T hey also answ ered question

A t a previous m eeting o f tbe R oeschke. principal of the Roose­v e lt School. told of the advan ta g es and opportun ities in a teach ing ca reer.

O fficers of tbe F u tu re Teachers a r e V ivian Rizzo, presiden t. Pa-

I tr ic ia Carueci. v le e ^ p rsa M e n t; M ary Ellen C assidy .'^secretary . ;.nd V irgini C a ra h H h A trea su re i M eetings »are held V v ery tw o

: w eeks on T hursday afternoon, M rs Alice lb* kson ks advisor.

eight o'clock at the Tow n lla ll to hear candidates fo r th eof fcdupnUod.

Mr Joseph Schultz, of R idge­field P ark, form er p res iden t of th* l.e rgen County PTA Council, and i.ow a m em ber of the S ta te PTA Board, w ill be m oderator.

Mi W arren Bogle w ill he chairm an. Mi* John Me Creo, tim ekeeper., and Mrs B urton |)av i has charge of publicity.

O ther m em bers of the com m it- t« »• o ' arrangem ents a re Mrs. A r­thur Taylor. Mrs W alt«r Ronson, Mrs Joseph Staw icki and Mrs. Jam es Allan.

JOHN BRYAN

III Kilt HI KKI I MANJOHN h lM K V

C ub |»ack H4, w hich me. t f W ashington school, h e ld a m ta i ing on T hursday evening wit'

. . * ^ - . . . . , , C ubm aster W illiam Jacobsen anH erbert D freem an . MS Union | t uhm w rtw K<,n n. th R.......................... Mrs M a, v » " * - ;» K . Tn charge .

P lans w ere m ada f s r t M f l• ‘' I d

nue, mmi of Mr and Mrs Patrick F ebruary ttth a t the Royal H B ryan. jw siian Palm s T he W etieloa d< Atm^iloyed hyFlintkol« Company. East R uther- fold, is the form er St Ma. v s boy.

Callaghan was em ployed at th u r G i.m m etta , Ri>t»ert Sh M anson C eram ioa B e llev ille ;; r r a n k - « aM ain«k . Ku. F t D enacke s t Bendig Corp.. Band . i w s t | ^ H i f l M |and Freem an went m tiO hc Arm y N icholas C ina ido . l>ennts r igh t from high school a

D uring the tr training^ they w ill Ma h a d O tknw »ki and D af I M*tam kg genera l P I s M H H H H ^ H

m ilitary subject* as well as char- ■ - j ■ac te r gutd m re program s u n d e r ' Mr and Mrs P e te r lm bes the post chaplain M ountain W ay, w ere m urr*

U nder the RFA program , they lyears la st W edne tay Gue. w ilt Nerve on active du ly for six th e ir hom<. m >ieiu ation o fH_ m onths of tra in ing and then be even t w c ie th e ir ch ild ie rt N,| tran si. nietow n d u ty and Mi I 'c te i J ]m-t.. m

W M M M k a j • a r k a i tm % h * a i?

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PACE TWO TH E COMMERCIAL LEADKK AND SOUTH BERGEN REVIEW THURSDAY, JANUARY 24,

Keep Yoi|f Faith, C q Jo Church Every Sunday And Holy Days\ A i W S a a A u i i i u i tv v c s i i n i n s T c r y w u n o w n i ^ s

nesses, stated th a t i t r r u w ill b e , I tacetl on the need te “Be Taught I toy Jehovah” at this assembly j

Some tw en ty convention depart* ' rrea ts operated by hundreds of volunteer w orkers w ill take care

r*»f y*c* needs of those attending tond make the ir stay com fortable. The cafe teria com prise* the larg­est departm en t and the re are

‘trucking and equipm ent, installs- ! Uo*L and music d e p a rt-; ments.

The program will feature dis- j course*, real-life experiences cUs. f ciMton.i. interview* and stage ; demonstration* highlight in v Bible j principles and their practi< )<- ap- I plication. •; “With God’s W ord” the Bible.: as th e basis o f a ll t h e -admooi- I lion we w ill receive a t the assem- 1 btv.' said Mr. SaiM hilL “I'm sure ! all will appreciate tha t, in tru th .} they are being tau g h t by Jeho- I vsh ."

Mr. S ain th ill o f the Lyndhurst- P ’>iherford P ib te S tudy G roup w ill be in the o rchestra at the

icoming c lm ir t assem bly

r« n ta > u o iu bene Juts a re ava il - •W e U> a il t.’tro u g h 'a fu ller com jm h e n s iu n of God as Love. This ■iea w ill be en larged upon at C k iM iM Science services S u n ­day aa th e Lenaon Serm on en

Read»*g.v from tht- B ible w ill ittrfcad* th is sele tiion from 1 John l 4 J l " In *hu » n m anifested ih# love uf (*od tow ard us. be- rfiit*- tha t C od sent his only h M Urn Son into the w orld, that d a m i |h ( live through him "

J W d o s in g citation to be rea«l | | p ‘ScsetMv and H ealth w ith U f lo th e Scrip tures" by M ary fig |*T ***> states <6 17-IB): * TJod is Love More th a n tin

Th* i n o u d W ort* D w *< P w*r wia t* «fc«rv«4 m T*r*vyIT*. ......... * U* lourLyiWUwm • u r d m in th* C oun­cil o t C h u r c W m et •» Uw home of Mr*. WUUam L Bivon* re- cently , and decided th a t Urn year L yndhurst w ill unite R utherford and a tten d th e ir services a t the F irs t P resby terian Church.

Those a ttend ing the com m ittee m eeting w are Mmes. W alter Rich- ar, Thom as D unn, Jam es H U pp- incott, U m a r C anw ay, N orm an Pen w arden , B enjam in G. D ivine, G len Sum pm an. Philip M anheim- e r and tm a n u e l Qauci, president of the co u n c il

look, fa r th e r we cannot go.”T he G olden T eat is from J e re

tm ah <t.24> Let him th a t gW fieth g lo r\ in this, th a t Im* lO hrT fahrteQ i in d kno\ « th n»T. th a t I am th e Lord w hich exerc ise iovingfcm dnet. judgm ent ami righteousness. in the e a rth *

CARD O F THANKSS fll .L lA — Deem mg it im pos­

sible to thank all in person, we wish to take this m eans of ex ­pressing ou r sincere and heartfelt th a n k s to all our friends, relatives and neighbors for the ir w ords of consolation and beautiful floral tr ib u tes s t the funeral of our be­loved husband and father. Mario SciUia.

Special thanks to the Rev. Joseph L ette il. snd the m em bers of the B iltm ore Pentacostal T ab ­ernacle. o u r doctor. V. L am berto th e L yndhurst Police and First Aid Squad, and to the staff of the

Sunday Jan . U9:45 a j n - C hurch School, w ith I

lessens te r agesm t a m - PuSJir wars h ip se r­

vices w ith sermon bv th e m in is ter on -C h ris t’' S ervants"

7 tO p jn . - Youth group?, meet. Wrw • f f tc e n <>1 *he Ju n io r In te r m ed lata fettew idiip s .e L in d a Calieo. pm adi-nt w ith Rit hard

AGATA BEAUTY SALON

ROSA PLUMBING 1 HEATING CORP.

WE. *-7115736 Valley Brook Awe.

L y n d l iu r t i , N , J .

L O U I S M IO N T I L E C O N T R A C T O R

O C A U T T n W V C D I T M A S T U MECHANICS

GEh c ti 8-5015 •VMM * O l t e : M KMAMMT S T , i m i C U T , X. J.

CARD O P THANKS APPKLLO — We wish to take

th is m eans of expressing our m ost sincere and heartfelt thanks to all o u r relatives, friends and neighbors for th e ir consoling word*, beautifu l floral expressions and m any sp iritual bouquets at the funeral of our beloved w ife and m other, M ildred Appello.

We especially w ish to ih sn k the clergy of the C h urrh of Tbe N ativ ity Of M idland P ark. N J . th e clergy of Sscred H esrt It. C C hurch , Lyndhurst. and to the staff of the N azare M emorial Home. Inc for the sym pathetic and efficient services.

Bereaved H usbsnd and C hildren

Dr. Howard S. W aiter

CHIROPRACTOR839 Kearny A t* .

Kearny, N. J. ,

WY. 8*2454Hfmm CmlU Mmdm

akgJI always have a ^*r>ifp nf fine

c h a r a c te r th a t %«til be within the financial

n rrsu b ta m m t»f the faniiiic* whom we are

privileged to serve.

C*U Beer-Wine & Liquors Free Delivery

^ j a 4 n a 4 s a j s C a a a a l n ^ -v o m p i c T c w a T e n n g d t r v i c t

* H O M E .M A D E Col* Slaw Balwd Boom

Potato Salad •Macaroni Salad

G*»e«rr C 1,1 f* . N.J.

NABISCO RITZ CRACKERS SUNSHINE MUSTY CRACKERSC r F u n e r a ] H eZlS*r Any

q u M t l O M f

JMfZKA sad KIELSASY

Ha w Paflyi t A Jd. to i l f i i* n RIDGE ROAD LYNDHURST. N. J

i - G F j r a 8-4664

F orking fo c l/iW w O n F re m ito ta m COND ITIO N ED TEAR lUM’NP

FUNERAL DIRECTORS3 P , 4 f R<»d 464.71 Palkade* Avenue

l .y f tu r M , N. J . Jetw y Cily 7, N. J.W Ebttar 9-0490 OUTwM 9-4571

" t a r k S m r v i c * f o r S i x t y Y o a r t "

4 » |iM S*V S .(C ar.C h aw >aw jgsn.iu.

WE 9-2950PHARMACY.

XM STUYVESANTGB t-iua

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- -

TTTUBSDAY, J ANUARY 26,1061

Miss Judith Phillips Becomes Bride ' 1 Of Gerald Hailisey At Sacred Heart

H er a ttendan ts wore street length Hiess*s of w hite peau de *oie made along lines sim ilar to Ihe bridal row n. They w ore w hite fo r hats with dark m e ,« d im m ing and carried dark o r­chid cam ellias tied w ith w hite ribbon for the m atron of honor and with dark orchid ribbon for the bridesm aids

The flow er mri K aren O 'Keefe, niece of the bride, of N orth Ar lington. wore a w hite organdy dregs with a lace hat and carried dark nechid Pompoms Kevin llallisey . of R aritan, nephew of the groom, was ring bearer./ T he couple a re spending th e ir honeym oon in the Poeonoa Thev will live a t 446 Post A venue Both are graduates o f *t.vndhur*t High School Mrs. H ailisey is n secretary w ith the S tandard Tool and M anufacturing Company in Lyndhurst. H er husband. U.S. Navy veteran w ith tw o years of service, is a senior a t F airleigh Dickinson U niversity.

T IIE COMMERCIAL I E \DFR ANT) SOtTTtT BERGEN REVIEW

1

s■u-

i t P f .

m

Miss Ju d ith Phillips, daughtei of Mr and M rs. Jam es Phillips. 244 Forest A vepue. becam e the bride of G erald Hailisey. son of M r. and Mrs. A ndrew Hailisey, 514 W eart A venue, on Saturday.

The cerem ony was perform ed a t a N uptial Mass at 10 a m at Sacred H eart R. C. C hurch A feception was hold at the Royal H aw aiian Palm s.

Mrs. John O 'K eefe was her sis­te r’s m atron of honor B rides­m aids w ere Miss G race Domino and Miss Man, Ellen Hailisey, sister of the groom.# Jo h n H ailisey served h is b ro th ­e r as best man. A nother brother, Donald Hailisey. o f R aritan , and g b ro ther-in -law of the groom. Rusaell Kopp, o f L yndhurst, ushered.

T he bride w ore a gow n of silk peau de soie w ith square neck­line trim m ed w ith Aleneon lace, long sleeves pointed a t the w rist, and a double row of buttons dow n th e back of the fitted bodice. T here wen* apliques of Aleneon lace on the sk irt which w as finished tn a chapel train . H er elbow length veil fell from w h ite roses and lillies of the valley.

ENGAGED

Plan Dance For Kaycee Council

Lyndhurst K nights of C olum ­bus, Council *2396. will hold its annual b a m dance th is Saturday night. Jan u a ry 24th a t St. Mi cbael's H all, Page A venue, L ynd­hurst.

For the price of $1.25 patrons w ill be able to swing to the m usic of F red P ercy and his barnyard band. T ickets may be purchased from the C hairm an of the diuwee. F rank F e rra ra or a t the barn door tha t night.

T he a ffa ir is one of the high* f light social events sponsored by

th e local Council th roughout the year. M embers of the com m ittee have assured all those in terested th a t noth ing has been overlooked to make th is evening ano ther g rand nice ess.

Those w ho received tickets in the m ail a re requested to m ake re tu rn s a t the Council Club House on V alleybrook A venue to ­

n ight.

Mrs. M. Rodgers To Entertain

Miss M ary E. Rodgers, w ho has charge of arrang ing the book re­view fo r th e Book Tea to be given by C ourt L yndhurst. Catholic D aughters of Am erica, on Sunday F eb ru ary a l Sacred H eartSchool, w ill en te rta in the hos­tesses for tha t day a t a b reak ­fas t m eeting a t he r hom e in F ern A venue, next M onday m orning.

Hostesses will be Miss Jean n e tte B urke and Mmes Sam uel Bath- hairst. W illiam Coles, W ilmer Decker. Joseph Duffy. Ann H ard ­man. E dw ard Me C arthy , Wid P ain ter. Joseph Phelan. R udolph Skyta and W illiam V arik. Mrs. Edw ard Hughes, grand regent, w ill also be present.

M argaret Mulligan Ha* Surprite Shower

M iss M argaret M ulligan, daugh ­te r of M r and Mrs. Thom as Mul ligan, 713 Fourth S treet, w as guest of honor a t a surprise bridal show er given at her hom e on S atu rday evening by Mrs. Robert K arasiew itz and Miss Joanne G rikis, ot N orth A rlington, and Miss E dna W eir, ot Secaucus, who will be her brida l a ttendan ts at her w edding, on S aturday.

Mias M ulligan w ill become the b ride of Joseph Triano, son of Mr. and Mrs. A rchie T riano, of Beech S tree t, K earny, th is S a tu r­day. T he cerem ony w ill be p e r­form ed a t S acred H eart R. C. C hurch at 4 p.m.

Mr and Mrs Law rence G au ­thier, 22 Garfield Rd.. W ayne, for­m erly of Lyndhurst, announce the engagem ent of the ir daugh­ter, L aura , to Rusaell Ralph Sa- far, son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell K. Safar. 350 T ontine Avenue. Lyndhurst.

Fornyil announcem ent w a s made at a party for SO guests given at the S afar home, in honor of the couple, on Sunday evening.

Both a re graduates of Lynd l.u rst High School, Miss G au­th ier is w ith the P ruden tia l In ­surance Company, N ew ark. H er fiance is a sophom ore a t F a ir­leigh Dtckmaon U niversity.

No date is set fo r the w edding

FT C E TOREK

SPEECHES WERE MADE BV: Left lo rl(M , U nder Sheriff Jo*eph . dea t; H elen Gumriaa. presiden t; J im O f f l t i w , honorable p resident

On S aturday evening Jan u ary 14th. The Civility Labor and Po­litical O rganization of L yndhurst held a Jo in t Installation of it’s Officers Installing officer was Under-SfieflfT Joseph Melrilo of Bergen County who is also a m em ber The organization re ­cen tly held the ir 50th anniversary d inner Officers installed w ere as follows:

MENPresiden t. Morris. S ettem brino;

Vice P resident, Jo h n Settem brino; Recording Secretary , P at Cat a

pano; F inancial S ecretary , Sal Ca-' tena ; T reasu re r. M ario Rizzo; T rustees, Sam Palum bo, Joseph Settem brino , Joseph Domanico; Counsellors, John Paluzzi. V ictor Yosco. Louis S ettem brino; Joseph Ciggiano, Cataldo M enta S er- gen t-a t Arms, John De Jessa ; S an itary Officer. Santo Pater* nostro ; Doctor, Dr Vincent P. Candio.

WOMENf*resident. Mis.* H elen G uarif\o;

Vice P resident. Mrs. Sam Palum -

M elllle, M orris Setteosbrtao , presl- aa d only living ch a rte r m em ber.

bo; Recording S ecretary , Mrs. Joseph Di Pisa; F inancial S ecre­ta ry . Mrs Carm ine Zarillo ; T reas­u re r . Mrs. Stanley Pinnacchio; C orresponding Secretary , Mrs. Joseph Nazare; T rustees. Mrs. A. C rupi. Mis C atherine Settem brino. Mrs. Alda P alian ; Sergent- at-A rm s. Mrs. J. Rizzolo. Mrs. V ictor Yosco.

Refreshm ents w ere served after the installation. “Chico’s Band and Mrs. Guy M ento en terta ined fo r the

JOY DIVINE. EDITOR

LeClon Parade

Rev. Jewel Dies(C ontinued From Page 1)

S tuyvesant A venue.Form er rec to r o f the Episco­

pal Church of the Incarnation for th ree years, Mr. Jew ell ap ­peared to have been happy in his L yndhurst assignm ent.

Born in Rochelle P ark , Mr. Jew ell was graduated from Gads- ten H igh School, G adsten, Ala., and the School of Theology of the U niversity of T he S ou th in Sew anee, Tenn. He was a s tu ­d en t m inister in Sew anee seven years and w as ordained in T rin ity C athedral, N ew ark, in 1957.

Mi. Jew etl w as the you th d i­rector of the A rchdeanconry of W est Bergen, and w as a m em ber of th e . N ew ark Diocesan Youth Com m ittee. He w as also d irector of th e sum m er high school con­ference of the diocese and a m em ­ber of the D epartm ent o f C hris­tian Social Relations.

He was a m em ber of the Pi G am m a Mu. national social science honor society, and was nam ed to the Who's Who in A m erican College in 1955

He leaves his wife. Mrs. Helen H eidersbach Jew ell; a son. Mich­ael R , his father. H arold B Jew ell of V irginia; and a b ro ther, R ichard C .«Jew ell of Cyprus.

T he . funera l was held in the church Monday at 10 a.m.

Last Monday evening tw enty Legionnaires from posts in Lynd hurst. East R utherford , C arlstad t and R utherfo rd staged a double- header W ard P arty for the p a ­tien ts in East O range V A Hos­p ita l. County V ice-Crtmm ander W illiam Anonie, of R idgefield P ark , in charge of Bergen County D istrict N um ber One, headed the party He w as accom panied by Com m ander G eorge S tegu ra <tl R ivervale Bingo was played in tw o separate w ards, w ith canteen books as prizes. D uring th e games Legionnaires d is tribu ted cigar­ettes. candy and chew ing gum Representing Lyndhurst w ere An .thony Puleo, Tim Regan, John H artigan . A rthu r FeiUtOgcr, Jack Ryan, S teve H ackett, Dave Tucker. J im F e m e ro and Al Ralph. Follow ing the gardes Post 139 men had an opportun ity of m eeting w ith Com rade Tony K ie­fe r who is aw aiting su rgery In th e hospital. He sends his regards to his m any friends in L yndhurst.

e • aService "Officer R alph Lecoque

rem inds all persons d raw ing pen­sions from the V eterans A dm ini­s tra tio n not to delay re tu rn in g th e ir annual income question­naires. They w ere sent out early in Jan u a ry and m ust be re tu rned p roperly filled o u t w ith in 30 days of th e ir rece ip t o r paym ents will be stopped.

• a • - , •The L yndhurst rep resen ta tive

in th is year s N ational O ratorical C ontest is being selected tonight, T hursday, a t the High School.

W illiam Link, of F ifth S tree t, is a pa tien t in St. M ary's Hospital, Passaic, w here he w ill undergo su rg try .

o t c-mi

TUXEDOSFOR YOUR

PROM *

WEDDINGS

Each year high school studen ts across the nation engage in this contest concerning the C onstitu­tion of the U nited S ta tes S ta te and N ational w inners receive 4 yea r college scholarships.

♦ » •O ur squadron of Sons of the

A m erican Legion ia la rgest in Bergen C ounty. T hey m eet a t Post headquarters 2nd and 4th afternoons. This S atu rday , J a n ­u ary 28th, they w ill be taken for a tr ip th rough a modern food w arehouse They w ill learn bow all the various item s a re handled from the tim e they are received from suppliers un til they find them selves on the shelves of a super-m arket. A lt pons of m em ­bers a re eligible and welcome.

• ♦. •We have Just learned tha t our

Boy Scout chairm an . Bob M iner is confined to C lara Maas H ospi­ta l, Belleville . H ere’s best w ishes for a speedy and com plete re ­covery, Bob. Good wishes, also, to Sid Z uba tk in w ho is re ro p e r ­ating a t home.

• • •N ew est m em ber of the Poet is

Eugene Sova w ho was accepted at the last m eeting W elcome aboard O n e , m ake you rse lf a t home.• • « ”

A le tte r has been received from an a rea o rphanage thanking th. Post fo r g ifts presented a t a re cen t C hristm as party .

• • *D ates to rem em ber; Post meet

mgs F eb ruary 7 and 21; P ig Roast S atu rday . F eb ruary 25th.

Joan Mikofitch Is Homemaker

T he 1961 Betty C rocker H om e­m aker of Tom orrow fo r L ynd­hu rst High School is Joan Miko- litch. H aving received the highest tco re in a w ritten exam ination on hom em aking know ledge and a tti­tudes taken by g raduating seniors in her school, she becomes a can­didate for the s ta te H om em aker aw ard which w ill be announced in March.

G eneral m ills offers a $1500 scholarship to th e first ranking girl in each s ta te and a $500 Scholarship to the aecond rank ing participant.

There are still h igher aw ards on the N ational level. The testing and judging ia conducted by Science Research Associates of Chicago. 402,7M girls in 12.633

, schools p artic ipa ted in th is year's

SENIORSMiss W isneski, head of the E ng­

lish D epartm ent of our school, w ants to sponsor a Senior Class I r * to P rinceton to tee th e .P rin ceton P layers in a production of one of Stoakespear's plays C ongratu lations to those who re ­ceived parts in the School Show T h e K ing and I” . Leading roles w ent to P eter C hrist. Sand a Vance, L inda Polase. S teven Cer* efice. and Lucille M ilici . . . A fond farew ell to the student teachers leaving th is week, and a hearty welcome to those ju s t a r rived . . The S en io r Y earbook has nam ed “U rsa M ajor", tbe Big B ear" . . . Now tha t th e TrK

gonom etry exam is over, the Seniors can b rea th e easily fo r a w hile T ha t w hile m ay be a day. Hello to Solid G eom etry.

JOY D IVINE S en io r C lam R eporter

JU N IO RST he C lifton—L yndhurst basket,

bail gam e, scheduled for la st F ri­day. w as postponed (You know w hy) till fu r th e r notice

"R usty” S um pm an has re tu rned to school a fte r a hospital stay due to pneum onia H appy to see you back . . \ Boys’ in in trarm irals s ta rt nex t w eek. B everly Pegnato to th e ir delight. W elcome back, has rejo ined h e r classm ates, much Bevvy

PH Y LLIS M ARIANO

SOPHOMOKRT he L atin II s tuden ts of Lynd­

hurst H igh a r e planning a tr ip to New York to see the movie "Ben H ur ” T he twu I .a tin II < I.ism 's are taught t*y Mi JohnK eeter, w ho w ill ac t as chaperon. The tr ip is planned for F*l, 3 The w ord has been passed by all th e . a th letic coaches tha t any

I Lyndhurst Higti School ith le t . (caught smoking in or out of sea (son w ill be suspended from i l l sports for one year

G IO R G I s a v i v o

IH IM IM IVT he School Show en titled “The

King and f* , had its first rehearsa l [yesterday. F reshm an appearing m the gav m usical a re: Sendra

[Vance, Jack Aaron* b teve Uujoiii, iCarol Ciarco, Mike Cip*.la. Ellen F rank , Susan R itto lo . Bill Forties.

Nataral Gas(C ontinued F rom P * ! 1)

fina l •ur gas

(Chris Stroller. F ram :s'M »zzitelli. :and Bob Sturges . C lass assem ­bly set for last F riday has been

(rescheduled and will be held tom ­orrow Freshm en football heroes

j Will receive the ir hard earned I num erals . . S orry , but Frosh basketball recordin last w eek's issue was incorrect, it was 5 ami 2 not 5 and 0 as I stated The F reshm en defend a 6 and 2 p e r­centage against Passaic tom orrow In the first gam e a fte r the Christ- mas Jam boree the Frosh edged Passaic by I point another dose gam e is expected

► rewh man Reporter«.i ■» n v m o

Would n m buy a sack of tor a Penny?

be neci v*ry fm u « to rnjjt,adjustm ents <»n each of appliances

"Ihe cost of converting your appliances to use n a tu ra l gas w ill be paid for by the C om pany.

T h e charges for n a tu ra l gsa service wiH be equ iv a len t o n a heat unit basis to the charges fo r /n ix ed gas service.

"Enclosed is a m ap o f th e area to be converted, and a p am ph le t wh^ch gives additional in fo rm a­tion about the conversion and im- (Mirient farts you should know atsuut n a tu ra l gas serv ice P rin te d instructions w ill be sent to you later, inform ing you of th e pro ccfiure to b e followed d u rin g con* version, and the date th a t you r

1 be m ade. If you desire additional in fo rm a­tion abou t our conversion plans, please call our C onversion H ead ­quarters. The telephone num ber to call ia shown above.

Please accept our th a n k s and appreciation for your cooperation in this im portant undertak ing . We will do the job w ith _ th e least possible inconvenience to you.**

Mr and Mrs H erbert S tein , 231Sayre Wood South. S a y e rtille . are the paren ts of a daugh ter, bomon M onday m orning a t St. M ary's Hospital. Passaic. T he ir o th e r th ree children , John. J a n e and Jeffrey , a re guests at th* hom e of tfieir m aternal g randparen ts , Mr and Mr* Douglas H ursh , of S ix th Avenue.

ChiropractorDR. W. J. CUNNINGHAM

mW • PW—1 ̂ WwW,

565 Belgrove D r if t

Kearny, N. J .

Phone WYman 1-013*

M A G IC TOUCH BEAUTY SALON

86t K earny A venue K earnyCor. P ike 4c K earny Av«. - I (light up

C.ntnfUrtr Personalised Beauty Service Permanent Waving ■ Hair Culling

and Hair Styling.Specialist in Tinting

A.b • Beige ■ Sil(ver Platinum Rlnnding

For Appointm ents Coll * W Ym an 1-2720Open 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. - Friday 'til 9

Cloned Wednesday

I u u

STARTS TODAY

MID WINTER

Of MEN’S, BOYS and WOMEN’S■ CL0THM6 'SPORTSWEAR ' FURNISHINGS

All from our regular s t o m of famous name* . , al remarkaMe

$ 'mmerman’f j71 Park Avenne, Rutherford

Open daily lo t Moadlr and Friday to •

M em ber ccp cha rge plan In te rnationa l charge plan and o th e r convenient charge

plana

Just moved? See us . about a low-cost personal loanIf you am i yo u r, fam ily ju*l moved into our neigh , hoc hood. y o u 'v e p ro b a b ly spimt conuderablc money in gelling relocated. If mt. a n d you w o u ld lilir a lo a n , why not d ro p a ro u n d and «re u*. Y o u can ar ­range ibi r..,iii <lViT. n r .mrf f rnl t i i l u w n lly . - r —

l a c t i i . y o u J i u n c c r a p e rs o n a l lo a n fo rtr an y y •worthwhile purptiae. Education. Medical expend^*. In virtually every ca«e, you pay a lower rate ot fc. terr.1 iban you'd pay anywhere else.

A n d bcrauu- we’re a ftU -m m t B a n k , w r r s t n i

other money need* a a w e l l . C h e c k i n g A f c a x i j

Saving* Account*. A u t o m o b i l e l o a n . W i a n

cart of all your f i n a n c i a l n m l < u n d e r o n e n r n f j

\ \ < < m d i a l l \ i i i m i c M i l l h i M - I I U-- a m l i m e .

W hat I* a lu ll- ta rv lc a B ank T It o-er* you more toth*< paying* ii. M ution. IT* lha only plac a that in* your banking need* Mar* ar* to m t of th* many i ovailatila a t luM-Mnnca Hank*.

k»Checking accounts YESSavings ' YES

VF<1

Car loans YESllama loans YESBusinas* A farm loans YESParson* bank standing YES

N A T IO N A L C O M M U N IT Y B A N K .

S * O 'f k r a i a Hera**** IM w-Ma a- Hteaen p. M. t.

~ n r iM i M .

R lT H I .R lO k D • l i s t 1‘ A lk .U S tiN • HAST ICAR* It 1.0 • - \k l .M A P T • RllH.fcl IK l.ll • 1

N O R T U A U l.IH tf T O M • I > M » M l K S I • L V ____hi •>•**•!.< A v«. Rkigr I

Page 4: Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r Mo-.dla said the main purpose of the organization is to present to the comm%mrtv

I L I U M T O F Q U A L I T Y

D P l v k I N T M I A T I M

T H E C O M M E R C IA L L E A D E R JLVD S O U T H f i F R G E N f tE V l E lP T H U R S D A Y , J A N T A R Y 5 6 . 1 0 6 1

Movies Are Greater Than EverWhere To Go — What 'to O b

This WeekendTo See In South

l*Iaint of cjffrcm e cruelty . They have tw o cfcildirn.

Cail I’arbo. 70 Hcrafri Avenue.' North A rlington, from Klorene* Ptirbo of K earny The com plaint was desertion. T he couple hlut two children .

Veronica Com tess, 4lh P a r :< Avenue. R utherford , front E»»- Reno, 4K. 17 ^ o t ta g r Plat Huth erford. M am e d Juno 5. 1950. in Lyndhurst. th e couple has on** child. Th® charge w as d tim tio n

Mr G riffith s wan a te rrito ria l -.ale* rep resen ta tive for the Den ver division, w ith sale* respom ihiln tes for m uch of the Rock M ountain area.

lie holds a B.A. degree from Tem ple U niversity . Philadelphia. Pa . and also a ttended Dickinson School of Law . {Carlisle, Pa. He (In f.) fo r tw o years.

Mr. G riffiths, his w ife and one chifcl live on Long Hill Road. L ittle Falls, N. J .

presen tative of In te rnationa l Cor­respondence School*, has te r n named tn Ih e 1981 C entury Club by Joseph H B iro, Vice President and D irector o f M arketing

Tht ICS C en tu ry C lub is cent (•owd of th e ICS Field Repie scntatjves w ho h a> f achieved nr .surpassed th e ir objectives in e n ­rolling m en and yeomen for heme study tra in ing . ICS, the world s

'o ldest and la rgest hom e-study institution, w ith headquarter^ in Scranton, P a , established th< Club ,in ?d25 to recognize and bon**.- o u ts tan d in g m em beis of the ir F ield O rgan iza tion The pre­sent C en tu ry C lub represents the l«*P echelon o f m ore than 600 R epresen tatives th roughou t the United S tates.

: 8fl fio tiia Tsrst Tin

Spotlight on Your Stars!W M M V V M M M M V M ^ M W W W W V V V V U V V V V V m A '

B-D Pick* Griffith*In Line Sale* Divition

Bruce G riffiths has been ap ­pointed assistan t to the d irector of Becton. D ickinson and .Com ­pany's general* line sales division. It. N. Shaw , d ire c to r of general

P rio r to his recen t prom otion

Scores m ade by th e Light Brigade bow lers last w eek w ere 102 foi H arbld D aiker. W for Bob O 'H ara, and 91, for Daniel Cronin.

FOXTROT - WALTZ JITTERBUG

CHA-CHA . MERENGUE PEABODY - RHUMBA

TANGO - MAMBO DORIS O P B YK E

WE 9-477€ w * 1 M M

A # 522 38th St.Union City

bet. H udson Blvd. & B ergenhne Avenue

T hree S ou th Bemen m an iage* I w ere d isso lved last w eek by 1 County J u d g e L aw rence A. Ca- vinato in H ackensack.

These inc luded .Mrs. A ngelina Donofrio. 12T> j

M ozart S tre e t, East Rutherford, j fom P a tsy DomoI >, 143 Carm rta j

Avenue, R u th e rfo rd on the com *

The Epics Orch.DANCING 8 to 12 30

ADM ISSION 89e Am ple P ark ing

E rich M. Sctrw eikert, 331 Ma iison S tree t. C arlstad t, area Re

ROLLER SKATINGTbe New Belleville Rink Fun, Thrill*, and Game*

(or tbe Entire Family “T h e K ink o f Refinement”O pen F rid ay * Sat. NighU

to U :M P.M. Ma th w aa S a la rd a j, Saaday. M M i n t M N L t o l M r j l

Specia l Bataa P a t P a r t j Greapa

7 0 1 V w l i i n f t a a A v e n a *Belleville, T t J.-PL 9-4969

The Ultimate In Custom Crafted

STEREOPHONIC HIGH FIDELITY0m L u xury P o r t a b le s a n d C o n s o l e s

“I DREAMT

DOLLY HAD HER ARMSFU L L ...

. .W a lk in g O u t O f

B o il in g S p r in g '

ahows which a re owned and op»-i s ted by s ta rs of o ther shows?# A nybody ra n see tha t pressures

r a n begin to build up With only a lim ited num ber o f “good hours" on TV availab le , the boys, w ork ing toge ther wUh the a g e n ^ can

f i ^ R v r n u c h call the ir own shots J T / g \ » e aee it, it restrain t of [T Ia- * |A w hat-not. And it m akes ‘T l j t V du ll television ' X V Z LAUGH TRACK

\ \ a n f e r- w hy should th e TV ^ ^ ^ * a r e ? If. as a nation, we 9? T c m 'n l to perm it the horrib le * - l i - m g h t e r to be em ployed 1 T ^ h y sho u ld artyfcody. tn-

luA ’.hc R ussian v w orry abouto o f " * ,ity?f is little doubt tha t the

W illiam H olden

2 Big O nes T ogether

F rank S inatraNew Showing T h ru Tuesday — One O f The Beat—

W illiam NancyHolden K,wan

“WORLD OFS I ZIE WONG**

Plus"BOATS A POPW N "

SaL A Sun . < M atinee Ita ly > B ark by dem and: —“J WORLDS O F O U L U VER"

a s i Bow ery Be vs Hit

Seo the ELEGANT DUMONT RADIO-PHONOGRAPH COMBINATIONSia fiaaaiaa Furniture Styled Hardwood Cabinets ,M arlon B rando

R u the rfo rd I n L yndhurst(Aw* ta t. otlca)615 Ridge Road

(Maib otfiw«> *

tS P a rk -Avenue

J E F F E R S O NA n A N T t e c m r

H«W JUSOVK U a t i f a k n • PM/AM SumIqmi Radio with AJC

G&L Stewart CompanyTHE BEST FOR LESS WITH SERVICE

292 BsHsvills Pike WY 8 - 7070 Arlington, fc j.

Caahal lacaMaa a»»Haaliwa laardwat and camaaiant ta Kart, C lu l i ii and Thaatraa — Naar Rail and lut Tarminab — lavitiaq Labbiaa and Parian — Clattd and Open Sun Dads Afap — A t Ream Delightful* FumMwd — Modified aad h r apaaa Haw — Caoduriad by HatpiUbla OwMnkip Managamaaft tka* da-

I* catering ta lha withat af Amaritaa Familiar Write far literature and Rata*

■ •te l JefferassAtlantia City. Naw Jaraay

H at aaap a a d aU k in d , ol void c a b . M adw lcke,. p k a i l Mads of bevera^aa, caAce aad aaka.

JO E DOBKOW OLSKI# Prop.

W E b * te r 9-9861H i U W M D O W H I 8TBKET. L V N D H I K.1T N. I.Lem m on

Page 5: Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r Mo-.dla said the main purpose of the organization is to present to the comm%mrtv

» # *.» .« ft I t . f S

M m 'i All Wttl

ACKS

SALS' MEN'SPAJAMAS219 3 ‘ $6

SAW RIG. 19.95 to $55

] > lpace r m

BILL MACY SEMI-ANNUALB ^ e s h e m l

SALE STARTS TODAY! SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS

SattRo%. 49.95 to 99 JO

NOW OH SALE

felH a w k , sis.ro us.

4099TO

ALL FAMOUS BRANDS

w * r

69'% TOPCOATS OVERCOATS

Reg. S4S. It f t S .NOW ON SALE

n g SALl! Men's Reg. 4 .98 i 5.98

FLANNEL ROBES

i99

MEN'S M l WOO.

20“ 35"

SALE!ONNOWOf

h u s k y

ion

, * * m f C t l t n I Sty I** Tt C b w i F rM

| FI H ALTERATIONS' . V -J&L

SALE!

STRETCH SOCKSKeg. $1 t $1.50

* 3 «2

R««. 17.95 to 29.95

BOY'S 1C95 SUITS 1 9 TO 2 4 *

SAUI H it's

SPORT SOX

>t«. S5c

39‘J p n . SI

b f . SI

79fI t * . 75«

,59'

Reg. 12.95 It 19.9S

SPORT JACKETS

9 " .‘16EXPERT TAILORING

FREE ALTERATIONS!

*36 67u m n T AIMING

I FREE ALTERATIONS

SALfl BOYS' ORION

9k SKI s S L SWEATERS

REC 6.9S

A WMt Stitt tita

•f Styles WASHABLE

SALE! Boy's ZIPPER

JACKETS*«». 4.96 la 16 95

Sole! Boys'ZIPPED OFF

H00KB JACKETSQUILTED L IN IN G

WASHABLE* < f . I M 4 J I .

NOW 1

N O W O N

MEN'S MG. 4.00 TO t.9S

1 4 ”

SWUBAB MCKETS o iu

SAUI BOV'S SUBURBAN

JACKETSH » f H *6 «• $26

B1 9 9S

r MOW X SAW

MG SAVINGS ONB O Y S

SPORT SHIRTS

•t«. 7.99

19

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Page 6: Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r Mo-.dla said the main purpose of the organization is to present to the comm%mrtv

THURSDAY. flWTTAKT S . W8I H B M B a r

THE O T M E R C fte M5WEK TNT) SOTTH HRHCM nfcViLW

The Voice Of Stuyvesant Avenue MerchantsWeddings 4 Birthday ( ak<+ P R E S C R I P T I O N S ,

L E V Y ' S ’ iP H A R M A C Y i

a ( b p u f y u a r * . 1

not a sideline. - *

Tim Saved Is Money Save#Or Stayycsait Avenue Yaa Cai Bay

Anything Fraai Saap Ta Bat*

212 Stuyvesant Avenue M odern B ath Rooms . G as B urner* - H ydrom c 1 Pow der Rooms - Oil B u rn e n - Ba*a Board Ri

K itchen Rem odeling V E lectric Radiators Races* o r F ree S tand ing R adiators

Open all d a y S u n d a y , C lm nl Monday*

Sooth Itr^M's LeocBng Jowrior S. POLLINA, JIWILER 4

Hamilton - Cm ea • Bulova Walefcoa F' Jeweb By Trifari tm i Cw*

BUDGET mod TIM E P A YM E N T PLANe x p e r t r e p a i r s d o n e o n p r e m is e s

238 Stnyraant A r e n e LyafiuwM

ANGELO’S PIZZERIA Men’s Jackets' 0 9 9

r«*g. to 25.00

LYNDHURST MEN’S SHOP Call WE 9-9122 298 Stuyvesant Avenue Lyndhurst

WEbster 9-1076-7

The Bogle Agency Inc.REAL ESTATE — INSURANCE

"S a rv in AU-Wayt"

900 StuTvrsant Are. L j« » u rH . N. J.

225 Stuyvesant Avenue Lyndhurst

Eat Here or Take Out Spaghetti - Ravioli - Lasagne - Veal 4 Peppers

Clam Chowder Full Creain Ricotta - M ouarella -

N B A * «' ■ 'Free Delivery

RICCI'S DINER /O n e r StuyTeaant aad Second A n n a

NEW MENUS f 1

STEAKS and CHOPS OUR SPECIALTY

Nam Dining Roam — A ir C am Stitm ad t M

W E 3-4422

SAME DAY FILM DEVELOPING EXCEPT SATURDAYS

BEFORE 9 JO —READY 4:30 P J I

CAMERA HOUSE213 Stuyvesant Ave.

WEbater 9-4260

S A F A R ' SPAM CLEANING COMPANY

SowoPoyPry C la—h | Sorvico(INCLUDING SATURDAY)

115 Stsyveaant Avenue, Lj aAnrrt, N. I .

W l DO OUR OWN CLEANING

. W IN E .S * S E E R[ Iw I m i k * » * d i »!■*»* a« Hand"] | R i b K ( K . C l o u t s « N » » • * >

» r * O A * r F * t e B U M * ' *

SAN CARLO RESTAURANTFACILITIES FOR BANQUETS m

AND PARTIES S M SM W W W W M A M M M n H H

O f Course . . . The Stuyvesant Avenue Merchanls.

on February 3rd arid 4th will sell h a p of inoney - for one

cent! All you have to do is to buy something and lie in the right

store at the proper time . . . I f you happen to lie the customer at

that moment the merchant will offer to sell you a liag of roins

. . . worth at least $5.00 for ONE CENT. Let's See You»

There! *EDNA MAE SHOPPE

StuyvMant A van*. G E-eva 8-1234

RELIGIOUS GIFTS FOR A LL OCCASIONS

FURNITURE

It's a Pleasure tow ear clothes cleaned at FELDMAN' CLEANERS

TH R EE STORES LN LYNDHURST

P i n t Bad Main Store al 200 Stuyvesant Avenue

SCHWARZ CONFECTIONERY

(Say Hallo To Harman)

239 Stayveaant Avenue WE 9-9882

STATE FARM INSURANCE CO.

209 Stuyve*ant Avenue

STUYVESANT LAUNDRYMUM

M W W AM P — —

S A V ! 2 0 % M P

CASH SC A B B Y

NATIONALLY ADVERTISED SIMMONS. DAYSTROM, ECLIPSE. IN TERN A TIO NA L

AND M ANY O TH ER FAVORITES

ITALIAN POO VINCI A L • DANISMP U N C H PROVINCIAL • TRADITIONALMODERN • EARLY AMERICAN

• LABOR BEDDING DEPARTMENT

23S Stuyveaant A rena*

WE 3-1800

LEA S SPECIALTY SHOP

219 Stuyvesant AvenueCHILDREN

TEEN-AGERSBOYS

GE 8-8903

WE BU Y A SEI.I. USED BO ATS 4 OUTBOARD

M OTORS— W E BU Y 4 SELL USED GUNS

WILLIAMS’ DEPT. STOREh o u s e o r ieei i t e m s

L am a* Sataattana a tCards - Dacorations - Toys

And Wrappings In TownC o m p le te Line O f Rental Tools For The Handy - Man

HARRY'S HARDWARELAY AWAY PLANS WELCOME

212 STUYVESANT AVE. LYNDHURST, N, J.LILLIAN DANIELS, T R O T .

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rH UkSDAT, JANUARY 2 6 ,1 % { i h i vomttemctxc leadft? tv d south bergeh review MCE sms*

PTA DOTESC O f M K T S PTA

T be Colum bus PTA had as th e ir guest speaker at a P aren t Educa­tion m eeting on M onday a fte r­noon. M ichael Testa, of Living­ston A venue, san itarian fo r Ver- ma.

He spoke on “Home Swimifejng Pools" H e em phasized especian^ th# use of ch lorine m th e w ater, say ing th a t it should be put in very ea rly in the morning, o r in th e evening Chlorine testers are out but a t present it is not m an­dato ry tha t they be used He m tm tm e n d fd a booklet put out by R utgers university . "C are of W ater for Sw im m ing’ i

G uesta at the m eeting were Mu cnael G uan rv sanitarian f o r Lyndhurst, and tw o m em bers of tb e B oard of Education. Mrs. C harles W Chrrst and M om s Set-

Gambsy Wins At Okinawa

60 Girls Show For Dol Hour

T here w ere 80 girls, each with a doll, a* the story hour held

; la st T hursday afternoon a t the Public Library. Miss Jennings, d irec to r of the library, read two stories and a poem in which dolls w ere mentioned.

P atricia Curcto, o t the K inder­garten in Sacred H eart School, received the aw ard for the most orig inal doll; Patricia Powell, first grade, Jefferson School, for the most unusual doll; Linda Borow- ski, fourth grade F rank lin School, the most beautiful. Susan Perry* six th grade. St M ichael’s School, honorable m ention for her doll.

Judges w ere five girls from the F u tu re Teachers of A m erica, Carol Borowski, DoloVes Punto- lillo, Ida Natiello, Ilona W angler and Ann Hoglund.

A rm y P F C W illiam J . G»m- MRS. CHRIST- TEL1.SR efreshm ents w ere served dur-

Mr D.vj-[or HEYACitvrriES■ v ™ G » m * y »nd gr»nd*on of O p la in

and Mrs Joseph Wooby, M anto- I Edna M. C h riit, C andidate for ■1GB SCHOOL rT A Inkm*. N J form ally from re-election to the th ree year te rm .

T he Hich School PTA w ill Lyndhurst, recently won ftr»t [declared to-day tha t w hile aerv-m eet n u t W ednesday e v e n in * ., p la « . ia the wood w prkm g cate F eb ru ary I. a t the v h o o l. and cory of the annua l crafts andw ill hear candidates for the 'how a t Fort Buchner, O kinaw aB oard of Education. (Jamxhy won w ith his en try of a

All caihdidabx have been invit S tereo and Hi Fi cabinet An or-ed to com e and give b rief ta lk s dinance supply specialist, in the

Cirl Scout News

on th e ir qualifications for board

Eli Kane, snperint endeni of schools, will; exp la in the srhool

U. S. Army transporta tion group in O kinaw a He was also honored by being chosen Soldier of th f

ing on the board she has kep t in constant touch w ith the school system, w orked at all *imes to im­prove i t ’s educational needs, sup­ported necessary repairs to the st hool buildings, and fostered a closer re lationship w ith It’s p e r ­sonnel

H*r belief in educating the

TROOP 1—We made final plans for our cam ping trip . Mrs. K leff showed us a film en titled “Follow the Girls'*. It was about G irl Scouting in 1918. L eader — Miss E. Lindsay- R eporter—Lo- w ayne Nolan.

TROOP 7—We opened w ith the horseshoe. Linda Wall was flag bearer; B arbara PoX and Dolores Gonzales w ere colorguards with C arla McCrea as caller. We w orked on fhe cook badge- and w e played ‘ S tree ts and Alleys” . We closed the m eeting w ith a goodnight* circle and sang "Now the Day is O ver". "T aps” and said the G irl Scout prayer Mrs D. Greco and vMrs I McC cam e to help. Leader Mrs L. Nolan. R eporter—M arlene Ureco.

TROOP IS—We had flag ex ­ercises today. The new girls held the flags. They w ere Jean e tte Brill. Linda LoPresti Debbie Dawson and Carolee Mahgano. K athy M itchell and Judy Bulk<m- ski helped them . K athy M itchell showed slides of Bam bi and Snow W hite. Leaders—Mrs. R H M it­chell and Mrs K K««».;t. H. j>..i te r—B arba ra Keogh

TROOP 18—Th ce Brownies flew up to T roop 18. They are, M argaret G orm an. C arolann To- mosieski and Jan e Aulenbach K athy G oodbeart and G ail D’Arey received them t h e new Browni'-s

Past P residents hav»* been in ­v ited to a tten d the m eeting. Foun­der’s Day will be observed. Mrs. W alter L ryh is president

W A S m G T O K PTA“P reparing C hildren for High

School" w as the them e discussed a t the P aren t Education meeting o f the W ashington PTA held last W ednesday at the school

Mrs. W alter Leyh told how im- | p o rta n t it as to select the proper courses o f s tudy So tha t the grad u ating studen t may be able to e n te r the college o r vocational school o f h is c h o k e Unless prop­e rty guided th e re m ay be a lack o f pocats for college en trance The pupil* desire* and talents m ust like w ise be considered.

M rs E C W hutm an, spoke of th e expectancy of the child e n ­te ring High School A djustm ent Is needed to cope w ith the being p laced w ith a w ider area of town M other and Dad need to restrain and advise a t times, though ch il­d ren w ill o ften become critic le I t is im port sap t h g they to clubs and go to affairs Through H igh School th e re com es an u n ­folding of life, w hich, if channel­ed correctly . sriJ] .nean m uch to (

i comini!

M r and M rs A ngelo D Checki. of Valley Brook A venue, had as

tinner guests on Sunday Meltlto. un d ersh en ff of

B ergea C ounty, and M rs Melilki of W ebster Ai

M onth in S eptem ber 1959. and whole child led her to support an w ai up f i r the aame aw ard in ( < * P » « < le d phynca l education and D ecem ber 1960 G am sby ia a g raduate of S t M ary s H«;’h ad^nu’c n n lS in c e "School in R utherford, before en- 1 It is he r desire to continue serv- tering the A rm y he was em ployed *ng the com m unity by helping

vocational cu rricu lum and to back a plan designed to recognize ac-

at the Dale's Y acht Basin Bay- Head. N. J . He is expected to be released from the Arm y in M arch

provide an im proved, m odem ed ucational program w ithin the m eans of the taxpayer for qur youth of to-day and to m orrow in ou r every changing society.

a re K athy Mazur, D iane Bonelli, C .ithann Pendleton, Toni«Mottola, B ernadette Florio, and D eborah Koraearowtiki F lagbearers were R uth Groves, Jud ith Wolf, and S usan Jacob*. W e played “D ant-

Jing Broom" and "Brow nies Smile". We made valentines, le a d e r s —Mrs. V. A. M aturo and Mrs. F- Bulger. R eporter—Joanne Scalpallo

TROOP 19—O ur troop w el­com ed the fly-uffc ( r a n T roop 17. They a re Patricia Sinopoli. P a ­tric ia G oworek ancf Nancy Albino. W r divided into three patrols. We learned to make the sheetbend knot, square knot and clove hitch. We ar»- going to cover hangers. Mrs. Bulkow ski and Mrs. G irgen tl w ill Work with us on the Cook badge and Mrs staw ick i and o th e r .Scouts will work on the f*at and Dog Badge. le a d e r s — Mrs. J A Stawicki. Mrs F. B ul­kowski, Mrs J. G irgenti and Mrs. R. G oworek Reporter—Nancy Al­bino.

TRO O P 23—We opened ourm eeting with the Scout p rayer. A few G irl Scouts w ere at our m ee t­ing and played gam es w ith usw hich w ill "o fo ♦h*ir mer»* We said farew ell and sang songsto ou r four Brow nies w h o •• flying up. Leaders—M rs. K. Mol- ler, and Mrs Schulte. R ep o rte r-- P a tty Schulte

LYNDHURSTO n T hursday evening Ja n u a ry

12, the follow ing m em bers a tten d ­ed the B ergen County CD - DC Rescue A ssociation M eeting:

F irst Lt. Joseph A. Leone, M ike M angano. F rank A lbanese. John fVuhertone This was the initial m eeting and elections of officers for the com ing yea r was the first orde.- of business.

O f the officers elected, Mike M angano w as elected secretary.

!John R ubertone executive board and F rank A lbanese delegate.

T h is g iving L yndhn rs t, w tth Itsth ree votes, a voice In th e associ­a tion* functions.

T his A ssociation is composed of th e Rescue Squad representing m any B ergen County m unic ipa ls "M L

O n M onday evening Jan . I«. L yndhurst Rescue Squad, rep o rt­ed to Em ersonyfor a tra in ing m is­sion involving "H eavy Rescue Em ergencv F irst Aid " The in s tru c to r w as Ralph Sw ilienger who is in charge of the Emerson F irs t Aid Rescue Squad. This w as L yndhu rs t Rescue Squad 's f irs t tra in ing of the year with m any m ore An progress

Dr. I. DanskyOPTOMETRIST

Eyes Examined Opposite Town Hall

405 KEARNY AVE.KEARNY

Phone WY man l* 0 (l2 h

Mt*. T ietlrhaum To T alk At Kahn Auxil. Meeting

The special guest at tonftflit’a m eeting of Sanford L. K ahn Lad­ies A uxiliary JVW 538 w ill be Mrs. Elias Teiflebaum , jun io r v ice-president of the D epartm en t o f New Jersey Ladies A uxiliary JW V. Mrs T eitlebaum w ill con ­duct a school of instruction. T he m eeting, to h e held at C ongrega­tion B’nai Israel, K earny, w ill b e ­gin at h 30 Mrs David N ym an, p resident of the local aux ilia ry , looks fo rw ard to an excellen t a t­tendance of m em bers, as follow ­ing the b u s in en r of the even ing

I a belated H anukah gift exchange w ill be held.

DON’T DISCARD YOUR OLD MATTRESS

Robiilt Equal To Now Only S I 2.95ADDITIONAL CHARGE IF NEW COVER NEEDED

We also convert hair, cotton and wool m atresses into com fortable innersprtngs. A ll w ork guaran teed

BRAVERMAN'S BEDDING CENTER3. " ’

6 Banta Place 244 Broad AvenueHackensack Palisade Park ,

Diamond 2-3666 W indsor 4-7577

$ u j(e A $ l o i v n

HARRISON SHOE221 Ildrrinoo Ave. Harriaun, N. J.

H i: 3-15%For one ii( tlir Mont Important Slrp* in h it life

AM EXTENSION PHONE in any room of your home helps you ’ get more done. Makes you so much more efficient. The cost is remarkably tow - only 90« a month for either a table model or waN phone. And you’ll find the extra cost to make it a deluxe color phone or a lovely new Princess phone surprisingly reasonable. Why not get aM the facts from the Telephone Business Office?Or ask your telephone serviceman NEW JERSEY BELL

Gel S&H Green Stamps too!Lancaster Brand Oven Ready Pan Ready Fresh Whole

Rib Roast 79‘fryers 29*® r . a I L . il. 1 1 .

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4 £ 3 3

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Lancaster Brand Rone In

2-o*

I J-o* pkg

Cut Up ib 33c

Chuck Roast »49*Lancaster Brand Boneless

Cross Cut Roast*-89'Lancaster Brand

California Roast *-69'Ua»ett#i traw l t a~ fit> i

Arm Pot Roost * 69* Short RibsUwc»»N» %'ond r.asS ImnDW Baby

Ground B ee f 49* Beef Liverl* *«•»•*•> S«««d U w ltsa U M HS. • trnmd l « e M

Franks ^ 5 5 * Beef Tongue k 49*Cadet liverw urst

Dog food 10 99Campbell s Tomato

CampbelT* VegeUW#

9 * r j r ° °

M*00M o o < 4 * ’ ,

Soup 6 -' 51°°Vagatabla Cocltail

Vegomato 1 0 -Imperial

M a r g a r i n e 2 ^ 6 9 c

Large Juicy

* 49*

* 49*

^ 29* Salam i X 49*Ma la a y t

2 99* Sauerkraut i i 15*

T l n s l 3 m i l s & V e g . t a M e s

C am pbell s Chicken Noodle*

Tangerines -19«Estra F̂ ncy

V *

Anjou Pears . . 2 >~29<l«'*a W » Wkrt. , ,

C au liflow er ^ 2 9 * Tossed Sa lad £ 19*

ColossalT J m z r n

Shrimp 5 Ib box 04.09 99Mm I C«t a rreeck S»yU

Flounder 49* Green Beans 2 ’X 39*t<MHM*» s ' — 4 S t m M Vm( * o rk Mewl

Steaks 2^, M” G rape Ju ice 2 H 2 9 *

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STAMPSpu- ck. - o t i » . . o . . - a C oupoa -

256 - 60 Stuyvesant Avenue Lyndhurst, N. J .

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PACE EIGHT TH E COMMERCIAL LEADER AND SOUTH BERGEN REVIEW THURSDAY, JANUARY 26,1961

Basketball Team Having Worst Loses Tight Tilt Ta Don Bosco,

lecord, lame To. Garfield

T l i r p r r » r n l r r n n o f l.yn« tliu r> t lTif(l i 'S r f i v o t e a g e r . k **1 atM he H i m t' bo liw irk also a th r l l l- r w ith Coach Donnea _ . . . . A b. M l 1/ anW V p i ^ a u ik i I I D i i ’ i n a ' r Ui-«i a l o a i i t u .. I . * , ■ il

t i l l f in a tK r v i c to r ) r a n , , t r o u b l e s a n , , , U yEast R utherford five. Carm ine T irone ta llied seventt • n.

G arfield , a team w hich no and both Eugene M aschio and An- doubt should have a b e tte r record thony Ranu scored eleven api«*ce than th e one they poisew , started to feature for the L y ndhu rst’s re­fas t against L yndhurst. They serves,^forged ahead qu ick ly , g rabbing a Against Don lio sc o the pattern 7 to 0 lead before a pa ir of goals of p la ;1 was th e opposite of the by Eddie Guzzo and a four eon- G arfieid name. L yndhu rs t s tarted version by Joe P ie rro reduced good but finished poorly m go ng

rwulted in two more lost.es. In a P aw iif Valley ( i n ­ference tilt at hom e la-t Tuesday the (io ldm Bears stuped a p fa t second ha lf comeback liefore |ising down to a .*># to 57 defeat at the hand* of Caifn ld. On Monday evening the Blue and Gold were at Kamaev where a pnod Don Hoseo cluh came on with a 6*> to 52 triumph.

Coach H arold “B u ck '’ B row n'snuintet have now su ffered seven It will be m ade up la te r in the the count to 9*5. T he sp u rt d idn 't t down to a 69 to 52 defeat A fterJosses in nine gam es T hey hold season last Iona and th e Boilerm akers jum ping off to a 5-1 lead Lynd-wins over I» d i and P ate rson Cen- The im m ediate fu tu re is not w ent on lo aaaume a 20 to 9 lead hurst played the favored Irontrot and have lust to G arfield promising as tom orrow n igh t the a t the q u a rte r m ark . j Dukes on even basis and whentxjfe-e, R u therfo rd , Passaic, East Golden Bears go to Passaic to do Lad by G eorge Lucckese’s th i r - ! the buzzer sounded ended theIU |therw e< P ate rson Eastside and battle w ith a high rank ing Indian teen poin ts in th e second q u arte r Golden Bears w ere still out inDan H ouo The road ta m e w ith aggregation by Dick. T a rra a t th e invaders had m atte rs well Iron♦. 14 to 12

Young Bosketeers Conctyde Their fifth Round At Saturday Od i l t l'

Game* played on Saturday afternoon in tke Recrea­tion Basketball League at tke High Sehool G y m n a s ia saw both St. John's and Notre Dame enter the « r ia a ii | eokuaa fur tlie first time. As the eight team league, for youogstera lietween ten and thirteen, sponsored by the D e y i r y f n ( a f Parks and Public Property, completed ita fifA raood o l fourteen, the Princeton quintet leads the circuit with a 5-0 record.

Coach Floyd Van N orthw ick'* Piacentino. f T igres upended S eton H all 4 to K eller, c 21 w hile the Navy cagers. coach- Minor, c ed by C arl M cDonald and Tom Consoli. c Carney, took over undiaf<uted Kist, g hold pf second place b y edging G eer>, g

SA C K ED H EARTga m *tw im » m

Coach M ike K o ra n 's SacredA. nnill

t r t a n + b U i w eek ago a a a r I t M ary 's a t f r t b s r t e r d by

t o t t l l a f wty CYO J u a io r D ivision tilt, w as

e r (Pith to read

th f Mustangs of C lifton w as a vie. {Next week the locals w ill be bacl tup of last F r ld a \ 's snow stom . m ore in the ir ow n ..'ass as the>

Hawk's CornerBy W ALTER “HAW K- ROWE

T O IT H WC8T BE SERVED, Back some th ir ty th re e years ago in the tow nsh ip the gam t

p f basketball w as a dead issue. This was brought on by a Jack o cighusia*m and th e absence of a good playing cou rt. The Hig) -■fcool had a q u in te t knd the lone senior d u b was th e U nion A A

T f t Unions p layed its hom e games on th e Roosevelt School * •''*»(t gymnasAim.

The m ain reason for the lack of enthusiasm tow ard the gam- wbs a stric t ru lin g of th e Board of Education. w hich forb»d. “outside' team s from using the High School gym nasium . Thei on January 8, 1928 a larg.* delegation appeared before the B oarf o | Education to p ro test the board's ruling T he group was 1«

Reverend f a th e r K enny, assistant roctor of Sacred H eart Church School <ajper viaors w ere dead set aga inst giving local o rgan i/a

tinfts use of the gym as they staled that the -students m ade u s - m the gym alm ost f v r t f evening Among th*' crow d w ere tow ns pfople who agreed w ith the school supervisors. A nd w hen Fathei Kenny pleaded hi* case t/»c discussion got hot and th e m e e tin g w»* filled with unk ind and uncalled for rem arks.

The first • b re a k ’* for the use of the gym cam e w hen Truste* A rthur Sutton, c h a irm an o t the R«le#i and R egulation* Com m ittee stated he had no lis t of date* when the gym w as to be used even *ngs. Im m ediately a fte r th a t T rustee F rank Lopinto m ade a motion for perm ission to be g ran ted for the use of the gym by outsiders y m * — S u tton seconded the motion and the p a ir gained the affirm *tjve votes of T rustees John Ruggiero. F rank K oehler. Howard B ri0nrm an and Jo sep h Paw loski. The vote parsed six to th ree and tlW C atho lic C lub w as g ran ted perm ission to u*e th e gymnasiun> for basket ball.

From tha t day un til th e s ta rt of W orld W ar II the gym wa* used by outside team s. The present day Board o f Education have lOen mpet co -opera tivc and at the present a R ecreation Basketball Laague, sponsored by M a jv r William F. G allagher's D epartm ent of P arks and P ub lic B uildings, have been using the gym on S atu r day afternoons and M onday evenings.

Back before W orld W ar II it was not unusual to see a graduate of high school con tinue on in basketball for anyw here from five to ten years after K 'uduution Today the gam e of basketball i* hi«l* with enthusiast)• and a good playing court ia av a ilab le E x .epting boys who are f la y in g p rep sehool o r college freshm an basketball ta n wc nam e a g rad u a te of a year ago partu ipatm g in basketball ’

We a re not only concerned w ith the g radua te but w ith the under g raduate studen t as well. Except for basket hall at a varsitv. juniof-varsity and freshm en level and a lim ited program by the

H eart CY O th e sport has been "dead ' in L yndhurst lo r ;» num ber of y ea rs W hat actually set th is co lum n off w as a

It look a t th e d a te c e h n d a r for use of the High School gy-n. We Were shocked to see tha t a fter dates for vars ity hom ,' gan»«-

and o ther achaol functions such as dances th a t th e re w ere soon th irty to forty even ings during the m onths of Ja n u a ry and F ebrro ttj tl«at the gym nasium , w as in daikness. As the school uuslodians ai« on duty up u n til m idn igh t and no fee «for jan itor a] services neces sary it is a cry in g sham e that the beautiful g -nnasium is not ii use.

The use o f tiie gym need nut Ik- en tire ly lo r ba-kojball as : \o t l ty ball league or g> m na>itic period could w ell be y it to use Many folks wci_e alarm ed last week when A ttorney G eneral Rober K eam dy m a ta lk out in Ohio stated tha t th e m ilita ry was in . poor physical cond ition during the K orean conflict. T hat is easy U see especially w hen m any of the high school team s in variou: sports are com posed of the &ame athletes. In i-roportion the per t tn ta g c of the to ta l en ro llm ent participating in a sp o rt is nil.

We here in L y n d h u rs t i r e mighty proud of o u r L ittle League Baaeball. M idget Football and Biddy B asketball p rogram s. Then** p rogram s a re ju s t w onderfu l for the boys u p lo th irtee n years of *»t*. The U t t l e L eague can graduate a m ax im um of seventy two boys each senson but only th irty can be consum ed by Babe Rutli le a g u e baseball, fo r boys up to sixteen years of age. Rarebi doe.* a boy not se lec ted on a Babe Ruth team a f te r finishing Little| ~ag«r r sg ’nn j j» |h e gam e. _ ____

In th e B iddy B asketball program , now IU V /II Iw s l ly 'as tb* Recreation B ask e tb a ll League, some fifty boys g rad u a te | each season Few o f them w ait anrf l*rt< h itn to the* frosh squad and eventually varsity p lsy . T h e m any o thers do mat get the oppo rtun ity to carry on. ,

A fter th e C atho lic C lu b ’s succe«sful fight to use the High School f ; m in 192B th e U nion A. A. moved from the Roosevelt School t* the High School O n M arch 22, 1929 the U nion A. A. staged Um first bask e tb a ll d oub leheader with dancing a fte r the gam sa. Tin first gam e, a g irls gam e, saw the Lyndhurst G irls’ A thletic Clul led by L ibby L indsay s fourteen points del at the K earny Baptists 23 to 10. T h e U nion A. A downed the la te Jack ie G reggS 5 aie.itP rep in th e m am attrac tio n 45 to 29 w ith H erm an Endclkof.*.•coring fo u rteen , an d l**lh Bill Breslm and M arty Dolan pettini eleven. T he gym w as crow ded as 300 looked on in the first afTaii Of its k ind in th e tow nship

F ollow ing th e U nions w;*re the organizing of the C ard ina l' A irow s. T ro ja n s and th e Lincoln A, C T he Young M en’s Leagu* alSo cam e on w ith a lieavier club to do l»attle v. itti tlie Unions foi tow nship su p rap iocy O n Marc h 7, 1930 the first local cage tourna m ent, to r te am s in th e int . i m ediate claas. g«H underw ay O rganired by Jam es A. B reslm and Guy Savlno, eight team s liegan to liattle for a trophy p u l u p by Ureslm. ^

The field in th e In te rm ed ia te Tournam ent included the C ardin­als. L incoln A C . Lille> Brothers. Eagles. Polish-A m ericans. Phan toms. S ham rock A. C and the P a l A C ?-In th e final round xham p lonship th e L illey B ro th e rs defeated the C ardinals. 32 to 27 P lay in* for the Lalley B ro th e rs w ere the la te C het E lm an, Herm DutchReiger and E ddie. Boli^ John and W alt Lilley The line-up of th*C ardinals inc luded D uke and ( 'h a rlie P f O i n i t . Dody Sheridan A! J le rg a n h am . J o e K earney and M ayor Bill G allagher

It w as in OctolHjr ol 1931 th a t haakclball really look s new ileaae on life in th e tow nship The Board o f Education a t that tmw

greed to go a long w ith the L yndhurst S ports League to proinoh an al!-*easi»n lo ^ k e tb a ll loop w iih LyncH*.irsl team s tha t w ere com poaed of L y n d h u rs t p la y ers T b a first all-season league was c o n posed of ti»e tm g in a l C ardinal . fndi pendents. Poli%h-Amerk-aas l iuon* B ra v e an d Athleticv Th.- o rig inal O rd in a ls . \*-d by Bol PattitMn. w ia i ttie iI.aiopionr4»*p b * dK ith in g tlie title w ith a 24 to 22 lu u rn p h o v e r «!**.- I '.av# . *

Tl*e Spo«ta la a g u e lieaded by J im B ieslm w as a great tuna for !<*s) b a sk e tb a ll Hut w ithin several reasons the pressure te a*low out'O f lu w n p la y e rs pet form won <»ul and just as quickl> brought ab«Hit d iaband ing ot the league

A fter th a t cam e tlie era ol the Rocknes and Acmes and folbiwed w ith th e fo rm ation of the .Coll ?gia%es-end the Alum ni Ciat> the la tte r in th e pow erfu l N orth Jersey League. The popular Sundaj afternoon b ask e tb a ll gam es and daaces a t the High School ayn l.rld sway un til th e s ta r t oI W arld W ar 11

To th is w rite r th e re tu rn to the old day of basketball in th*b w n sh ip is needed W ith about the only eapenses being th e put«ha»e of u n ifo rm s and the hiring of gam£ officials w e're all fo r*he i('O rganizing of the Sports Laague. We know that the Board of m y i t f r a rw tiu ld b o -anhd- Imhnal au i h Jupr«»graui, |io wtmt a re a v^um g lor* This w id e r u opeie 10 all S>o'geaUoo-v

nder control and afte r building The second period w as nip and rp an eighteen po in t sp read set- t tuck except fo r s lapse of good 1«d for a 38 to 23 m argin at th e 'sh o o tin g m idw ay through ?he n term usion . j period by the tw o team s. A lone

P ierro ’s two d riv e • in itoals, a I foul was caged in fifteen shots 'a ir of foul successes by Lou I before P ierro sliced the cord> oij "arlaV^io and goals by MrVe Ze- ja jum p shot. The first half ended

w ith L yndhurst in front. 25 to 22.Coach Buck F reem an, th e for­

m er St. John ’s W onder team men­tor. pot his Don Bosco team click­ing after the interm ission. A tap in, v pair of fouls and a drive aw the hom e team go ahead 2B

to 20. P ierro cam e th rough on a jum p shot and on the receiving end of a fast break to regain the lead for L yndhurst at 29 to 28.

However. Dun W araksa came% __________ _____through w ith ten oi h is tw elve

•ead but a hook shot by C a r la s - ' point total and a set and pair of

past B radley 32 to 31. St. Jo h n ' ! English, g gained a 22 to 21 nod over Ford- W ntorff. g ham w hile th e fo rth gam e of the afternoon saw N otre Dame con- Totalsq u e r A rm y 37 to 'JB. PRINCETON

Coach A lbert H vnes’ Setonian« ■ SETON HALL

utskv in d M ickey Spino reduced he deficit to nine ooints at 42

m idw ay th rough th e th ird peri­od. A fter G arfield built up it lead to fou rteen points Lynd­hurst got hot as Spino connected 'm th ree baskets. Zelinsky one md P ierro added a point from *he free th row lane. This cu t G ar- 'ie ld ’s lead at end of th ree q u a r­ter* to five 47 to 42

For five of th e final e ight m in­utes the yisitors m ain ta ined a safe

cheeked the ta lle r P rinceton team in the in itia l period as they at lowed the T igers to build up but a .10 to I lead. H ow ever. P rince­ton opened up w ith a 14 to 4 second period an d a 14 to 7 ad ­vantage in th e th ird period to record its fifth easy w in of th e

Officials — 1

io, a jum p shot by P ierro, a onc- hander by Spino and a rebound 'nnverted into a deuce by Vince C am ranella cu t th e load to just one a t 50-55. W ith a m inu te re ­nam ing a foul toss by W ally M enhart m ade th e score 57-51 in G arfield’s favor.

Local follow ers raised bedlam as C arlasclo connected on a jum p shot to tie the gam e at 57 all. With th irty five seconds left. G reg Borvczewski w as aw arded two free tosses and connected on both to give th e Boilerm akers a r>9-57 lead. A d espera tion heave bv Zelinsky was off the m ark and a lte r G arfield 's K en H uebner m is­sed. .i foul tune still rem ained but an a ttem p t by Spino w as off.

Each team had th ree players in double fifure*. Lucckeses had tw enty three. G. Boryzew ski fou r­teen and Art B ielen tw elve for the w inners. Spino w ith fifteen. P ierro w ith fo u rteen and Zelinsky with tw elve led the G olden Bcar< in scoring.

The junior - varsity gam e was

fouls by the la tte r p u t Don Bosco ahead for keep*. A rebound by Zelinsky tu rned into a basket and a Vi io of charity throws- by Pier* ro cut into the home side's load, reducing it to 45-43. Then a jum p sho t sligh tly before th e buzzer by Richie Y eung moved Don Bos­co ahead 47 to 43

Roth team s fared badly on their ea rly shooting in the last period. But th e hom e team ta llied four­teen of Ihe first fifteen points scored to w in going aw ay. With a tw en ty one point lead the win­ners’ edge was cut when Joe Melillo canned a pa ir of fouls and Spino ta llied v ia a fast break.

P ierro finished high w ith tw en­ty one points w ith Zelinsky scor­ing tw elve and Spino ten.

■Hie Jayvees cam e m ighty close to handing Don Bosco's scrubs its first loan of th e season In an overtim e ti lte the hom e team pulled out a th rilling 55 to 54 decision. M elillo s ta rred f o r Lyndhurst w i t h tw en ty tw o points.

Tony Antoria Smashes Pins For A 713 Series

Tnwmhip golf champion Anthony \n torio . Sr.. cut quite a caper on the bowling alleys lost week. Participating with The Hut Caterers in the Rec Major Bowling League nt the Lyndhurst Recreation Center, Antorio delivered a staggering 713 series. Antorio'* feat led The Hut (.atercrs to a triple win over Sorensen Realtors and a move up to third place in the league standing*.

Antoro sm ashed out game* of *!45-234-234 in getting h is 712 total md leading his team to a rousing .otai pins of 3.085. The C aterers rolled 1010-1035-104%. to easily subdue the previous th ird place occupants. S orensen Realtors C harlie M essina chipped in with a 611 on 193-200-221 w h ile other eontributlons w ere gam es of 103 and 2%l by Ed M asters, e pair o t 203 gam es by Jo hnny F usaro and

Filly S parta scored a B39 for Sorensens’ on 194-221-213 while Bob S auer had a 235 and Richie Pieluc a 210

Miles M ercury moved nine games ahead o f Ihe J. R. Polito Agency by w hipping the la tte r qu in tet in th re e gam es The cir cuit leaders had gam es of 95fi 914 for Ihe P olito AgeQcy. ITiti

Seecafico fea tu red the latest Mcr- u ry uprising by cracking out

688 series on 213 260 209 Pete Cim ino checked in w ith a 621 on Mike F lo rie’s 002 on 171-204-227 was best for P olito to aid the victory. M ike F lorie’s 902 on 171 204-227 w as best for Polito Agency, w ho had Hilly B rennan rolling a 218planted th e P ao lazn B rothers in fifth p lace by w inning all three gam es from the Excavators. The opponents w ith 958-941, 1002-988 a n d . 1944-910 m ajorities Leading• he R ealtors to a 3.00T w n e s w as Johnny B rennan w ho fired a 867 on 202-210 255. C harlie C arlo ta m e m w ith a 62d on 157-248 223, G eorge M orrell had a 607 on >911 on 216-210-173 and Sal Q cr- m inario scored a 208 all for the winners. Best for the Paolazti B rothers w a s Eddie H ackett w ith a 615 on 194 216-193 while Ru#* R ordelb ronn had games of JQ6 and 209. Wally* f*airirk S 203 uul C harier lU*u> a 2U1.

Tlie Iroeitiois dropped the m- ti;U gam e to Vendola Plumbing.

1047 to 851 but rallied lo take the nex t tw o games, 1008 to 990 and 9 *9 to 943. to cop the' laurels Ray K earney w ith games of 204 and 216. and both Dom DeLuca .<nd Bill M athiesen with 224* featured fo r the Iroquois A sparking 284 hit, second highest •n the M ajor League this season, by Paul Tew es of Vendola’s Plum bing led to s 653 finish for♦ h e you th fu l kegler Johnny C ia rn tx k i had gam es of 211 Twice tv*t»e K oiaite Ziael 2U? and

213. Jack F lores had 202 and 20*1 .iml Je rry S parta a 216 fo r the Vendolas’

Bou F ire R estaurant took--a p air from Ihe Bogle Agency. Bon F ire Restaurant- took the opener g32 t<> 893 and the nightcap. Ul to 881. Bogle Agency won the m iddle game. 97 to 926 Chippy C h ris t w ith a 614 on 212-161-221 and Johnny Jag e t wilJh a 609 on

>, >$3-236-202 co-featuredw inner* T o fT "Agenc;, w ere a 226 by H airy Halm, a 218 by Ted Berghqm , a 213 by Richie Sell and a 206 by IW Myre.,

ST. JOH N ’S ( t f ) O r TSomma. f 6 6 0It. Lembo, f 2 1lc klan, c 1 2 4Vuono. c 1 I IS parta , g t %1 I

season. Eddie N eville canned Penney, g I I Snineteen poin ts and Sal A lbanese R Rizzuto, g 2 t ♦tallied fifteen to fea tu re for th« «>ddo g 1 § Jfirst place occupants. Ronnie Kist 1 ................led the P ira tes w ith th irteen I Totalsm arkers. , ► OUHMJ* ( I I )

Navy Ju m p ed off to a 19 to 12 • sam m arone f first ha lf lead against Coach Earl fH anley’s and then staved off a S attere lli fla te com eback by the Brav?*s to g m j^ fregister a spectacu la r 32 to 31 ctrium ph. B radley got bock into R * the gam e w ith a 10 to 3 th ird .period m ajo rity and forged to the , cfront at 3l to 30 w ith fuat sec- (W iteftg g onds rem aining. A neat pass o f f i r . , ’ by Bobby G iangersuso into John ny Daily set up th< w inning goal j T otals • 5 21for the M iddies. Joey A bate and JO H N ’S 2 5 6 5 4—12Dally led N avy w ith nine points jroRDHAM 4 3 • 2 3—11a p i w w ith G ian g rrto gptlinjt fWficia| , _ O 'H are * T h o rwseven. F o r the Braves. TommyDiMaggio ta llied six teen and m a v v <2t> G W TRichie D anieli had seven. c«ronat»» f 1 1 6

C « o h F rank L ow d. , 1 S t ( J D l C h w t $ $ IJohn s q u in te t w ere forced to go ^ ^ f • , 0 6 0

into an overtim e period in j f 6 6 0

o rder lo pick up iU victory G ia n f rn m>. e * 1 1of the season T he Indians dead r . 6 6 6locked Coach B illy G a llag h e rs t • •Fordham five at I8-ali a t end ot - 1 S •regulation time. In the overtim e - 6 1 1period goals by Richie Rizzuto - S I Sand Johnny Ic&lan of the Indians ’ . -offset a basket by W alter N erliek Totals 11 1# S Iand a foul conversion by S an t mSam m arone to gam , M to I I “ ■ADL* 7 '*»> ® * *win. N erliek of the Ram s was D anieli f atop individual scorer ne tting th ir Nasta, fb-en points. f # *

N otre Dam e, coached by Joe Swellato, t ^ ■Bradley, held an ea rly lead and c. . a a awent on to a 3 to 33 trium ph -wxoebridge. c . „•ver the A rm y, eo-coached by D“ «*an. g t i t

Jim Scotti and A nthony Fresso Baeinski. g •A fter a 7-7 firs t period stalem ate OaMo*sca«. g a a iathe Irish had tw o good inner I ” H olihe rr. g o a operiods, 6-5 in th e second and12-8 in the th ird . The A rm y , _ _« a*ed a la te ra lly in w hich they [J*V Y « IJhew a 13 io », Ia«t period edge BRADLEY I 10 1# »—aih.,1 Itm e ran out w .thT hem tra il - J. (T H ar. fc C c « h lmmg by fuur. Leonard M arcian. . - ■ .ilunke^ in n ineteen and Dannv A doniram Cou<t.K enny .co red seventeen lo lu rn A m aranth, w ill w w a m n a n n m outstanding perform ances for ^ ‘P* * A dom ram Tem pteNotre Dame M ike M cSweenev -Second A venuew ith ten and Bobby Pecorarx. J -n u a ry r% h, from 5.36 p jn . ta w ith n ine w ere ou tstand ing for ? » p m ^ D inners w ill aUo. b j the ^H dw rs «>»<* tok ao o u t M rs E arl

TH E BOX-SCORES C hapm an i» chairm an,__________PRINCETON I47> _ G F T

3 1 i i 0 1 1 .7 1 1 58 3 19 0 0 0 2 1 5

2 1 50 0 0

day Bight w on m * by a 41 » K

f e n d H eart M a l t a (act on S m f e g and took a I M n u n * lead w hich th a y »« t— M to al­ia at Ik* In (arm i l l — : The to ta l c t f l a i than to a k a tha gam a « U a <>pan w ith a IS ta 1 apeaad in tha local fa r io d . In a law acorio* fourth fu a r ta r B aen d H aarl held a » la i edge.

C a r o tea T iran a a n d Jim B r n r a w ar* au u tan d in g fa r Sae- rad R aa rt w ith eleven poteta

O 'H are h T horne apiece, rran fc D ull a* tha laaara w ar high point perform er with tw elve

League, w ag rolled la ri Tueaday a t re lb a l 'a S ac in Taaneak. N

La Dtw wag h i | im er o l 309 and 125

Coach Gu< P a ta r te l 'i B u n to 111-M I and 717-M t de- cisiona o ver _ Bergen Calkolic. L yndhu rst picked up an addition­a l po in t on total pins. 1 4 tt o t 130a B etides La Due, o ther m em bers of the IH S n uarte t w ere Jack ie Q ueriein. B<S Dan- id s and Bobby Koraen.

Tha sw eep enabled L yndhu rrt to pick u p a full gam e on lew*»e iM ding H ackensack, who w on a 1 to 1 m atch from N orthern Val­ley. L yndhurst, ia second place w ith a 10 and record tra ils lh» Com ets b y five games.

• a »I t M 14 t —17

• 4 1 4— S I

• M O W IK A I____Tim a, f T u n a to , f E ckhardt. t Brown,c Coughlin, e ?

CBenedict, gD uffy, g Lembo. g Borgia, g Oeneac. g

Totals f t . M A S T 'S <M) O tillJ Boyle. »Segal, (SL&an. 1

Harrigan. g Oantle. g English, g Conway, g Kerwin. g

T otals S atSACKED H EA RT i t 11 11 S - t t ST M A R T S t i l 4—21

G r t5 i 113 6 66 0 o3 5 II0 3 26 1 10 6 41 0 21 6 2I 1 30 6 i

14 11 36O r f3 6 122 1 56 6 •6 6 02 1 56 6 06 • t0 6 00 6 06 t t

INTERMEDIATES LOSE BY 66-54

Coach A nthony A m brosio’s Sacred H eart In term ediates d rop­ped a 66 to 54 decision to St. Lao’s o f East Paterson last Tuts- day n igh t. The game, a Bergen C oun ty CYO In term edia te D ivi­sion ti lt , w as played at the Sacred H eart G ym nasium . The viaitors w ert ahead throughout the gam e a s thev took a 16 to 10 q u arte r lead an d w ere in front 22 to 24 a t th e m idw sy m ark. Sacred H eart p layed im proved ball in th e second half but the St. Lao’s cagers still held com mand, 34 to 20.

A tr io of St. Leo's p lavers w ere m double figures a* Al S tack fea­tu red w ith 16, Mike N ovak bad 16 and Ed K lypka ta llied sixteen. For Sacred H eart, Joey O rlando was outstanding w ith 21 points w ith R alph Testa, John R rkert and A rtie Bre.mmer all getting te n m arkers apiece.St. Leo’s (661N ovak, f ........K lypka. f . . . .- 11. e ...........

H IG H SC H O O L ALLEY W IN N ER

F io rd DIDue m ade a trium ­ph an t r e tu rn on the bowling a i­

rs a l ta r being sidlined w ith in- rlaa subeta ined in an autom o­

b ile acc iden t and led L #ndhurst H igh School to a 3 to 6 victory av e r B ir gan Catholic. Tha m atch. In th e Be rg en Scholastic Bowling

Kow alczyk, g A. S tack, g R. S tack , g . . .

T otals . . . S acred H eart (54) O rlando, f . .Festa , f ........E ckert, c . . . R icrardella , g C un to. g . . . . B rem m er, g .

T o tals .................. 22 10 54St. Lao 's 16 16 16 16—66S acred H eart 10 14 14 16—54

W eald y ea b a y -a sack e f aaaoey fee a Penny?

G F T. . . . 7 4 16■ wa. 7 2 18. . 1 . 1 0 2. . . . 1 1 2. . . . 3 0 6. . . 9 1 I f

1 0 2

. . . 29 6 661 G F T. . . . 9 2 21. . . . 5 0 10. . . 4 2 10

. . . . 0 1 1

. . . . 1 0 2

. . . . 2 4 10

12 5 21

47 13 J38 22!35 25!3J 27|28 3227 33,26 3425 3524 3817 43

M.i-* M ercury Polito Agency The H ut C aterers Sorensen Realtors South Bergen Reators Bon F ire Restaurant Paolaaei B rothers Iioquofk,Bogle Agency Vendola s Plum bing

P.S. OUTPUT UPO utput of elertru ity by Public j

Serv ice E lectric and Gas Com- pany for the week ended January ; 19, 1961. was 272,785.900 kilow att- hours com pared with 266.261.400 kilow att-hours in the correspond- fog week a year Sgp. an increase of 6.524,500 or 2.5 per c e n t \ T

The Ladies A uxiliary of Boy Si-out T roop 81, which meets at , St. Michael*! School, announces •

card party to be held this evening at the school beginning at eight o’clock. Mrs. Joseph Bres- Itn is president.

Would you buy a sack al laeoeyfor a Penny?

T otals 20 7 47SETON HALL <21> G F TI) G lee son. f . 1 0 6J. Lembo, f 0 0 0Gibbons, f -0 0 0

Tax Returns

By AppointmentA n th o n y S id a ri, Jr. 477 R oaterrh Avenue

I vndhora . N. J. <;F.nev. szssa Tux A m m m im t

A nd A uditor

I t h i I [ GEHEM L)■ T IH E H

Salciy Service Specialists

BRAKE MID FRONT END SPECI AL

Fast Courteous Service by Fort or y Trained Experts

All T he S t m c e s All U nder O ne Roof

• r R K J PARKING • DR1VI IS W1NIX >W a S A W D EPOSIT BOXES

above and beyond con­sisten tly high ea rn ings on m aared savings. May we serve you?

HOURS:D aily 9 06 A.M. ia 3:66 P M M onday Evenings 7 00 to 6.26 P.M.

8 0 V T H B E R G E N 8 1 V IH G 8 and Loan Agsniriattm

W Ebster 9 3400

HERE'S WHAT WE DO1. Inspect F ron t B rake

D rum s and Lii 1 Repack IVont

6- C are fu lly test B rakes 7 C o rrec t caster A

* cam ber

0. C orrect toe-in and toe-out2. In sp ec t G rease Seals

4. C heck and add b rake SuiA i l necessary

I . A d ju st B rakes

* C a rt w ith K ing P in Suspension

6. B alance fron t tw o w heels and install w heel w eights free.

CA RS WITH BA LL JO IN T SUSPENSION

CA RS WITH TORSION LEV EL A ND AIR SU SPEN SIO N

*11“* 1 3 9 5

4 1 Ireks Rslias Jsbs

30,000 IM s s s r lY r .GUARANTEEDsa pre-rats bssis

Call W M >kter 3-5700 f o r A p p o in tm e n t

Herb Jtrisa’s

GENERAL TIREo f V n r J e r s e y

■ I. 11 A C alan A re , East R a th erfe rd Phene W E 1 -flM S taea ■ a n rs : f A M te • P.M . - S atu rday : • A M to 4 P.M.

HLSVH R TOU r.AN TRt'ST SAVINt.S TOt: C\KH ( .O r NT ON

Page 9: Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r Mo-.dla said the main purpose of the organization is to present to the comm%mrtv

THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1961 5 TH E COMMERCIAL LEADER a n d SOUTH BERGEN REVIEW

SPORT-W ISEREC LEAGUE PIN RESULTS

COMMUNITY REC RESULTS

- P A G E N B *

For the purposes lo the ever

B e rm ie ’s Express picked up • full gam e to take a tw o gam e • seven and lead on M ajor Realtv in the Rec the Rec

up

•nd lirshers 0 , 1, „ ^liT..,.1'? T." " Vfr t : M cNamara, chief o l th* Bureau ..fw ild life M anagem ent for New Jersey . In a speech January 16 *■ ore the North A m erican G am e Breeders Association M cNamara

presented a paper tha t should have the a tten tion of every one interested in outdoor sports, conservation and w hat the burgeoning population grow th o f our s ta te and country m eans to those things

Therefore, the following is the first half of M r M cN am ara *'*»*. Next week the second

Now. Mr M cN am ara: —>A

Jo -Jo 's P izzeria openeda half length lead in C om m unity Bowling

Prim rUm UaAetrer-Belt K ordhu i Team

Action in the ketball League on i t the High School Coach F lo jtl V an

PETER CURCIO TELLS VIEWS

P e te r F. Curcio. candidate for G y * saw 1 reelect ion to the Board oi Edu­

cation, today outlined his per-

hurst Recreation Center. T he tw« top qu in te ts m et in the latest action last w eek and the Truck** >. cam e o u t on top twice.

B^rnsie* scored im pressive 93tt- H36 and 919 867 verdicts beloig M ajor Realty cam e up w ith a 912-653 decision in the finale F rank S ivolella w ith a 222 gam e and Rav G uidetti with

I-eague a* the Lyndhurst Re. n n- P rinceton five beat Portfham S2 t o , , ^ u i history to the voters of the of H*r r ‘*°n ’■'•s re-elected Presi lion Center T he league lending . The w in m arked the uK th in a tow nship A lifelong resident of den* 0f Association Robert 4 I 'ir ta qu in tet continued its m i- row for the T ijre s w ithou t a loss L yndhurst. C urcio was graduated KM'n“n •* 473 R iverview Avenue.

i k ,r*'VW“ ' *nd ■**»<lation« »r New Jersey r.-l»live ,ed !m ’ the T ea .u " l e a d e d Twoin hunting and fishing, indicates tha t even in colonial times, the l le P u o 's 200 topped th t losers ! overning body of the province was faced w ith the itilem m u of BUka . 'M T , n£| 0 r j || tooh pl>̂ _

<• *ssion of ' * *

sling guce on T hursday night as they won all th ree gam es from to t D riftw ood Bar Jo Jo s now possess a 40 won and 17 hist iecord a fter n ine teen weeks of league bowling

Jo -Jo 's P izzeria pu t together «»n»* of 981-1022-899 in record

th is season O ther gam es caw a trip le tie crea ted for second p lace as N otre Dame <urprtsed Navy 20 to 18, Seton H41I bent A rm y 33 to 26 and Bradley conquered St. John 's 34 to 17.

land Avenues. A t tha t tim e the O'Malley. Thom as Hi assets of the Association w ere O ther D irectors a re W ilh a a A. $6,500.000.00 K<*eg«n, Isidor Mirrtz. K cnortK A.

A t the annual m eeting F rank McClinchie, William R. W ]M Q p n , M annigan of H8 S tuyvesan t A ve. Krank M asgullian. K eenan and nue, Arlington. P residen t of the M anniganM annigan Sheet M etal Company j Association atto rneys appoin ted

fdr the present vaar a re F ran k J. Johnson. Frederick T. Law, Rich*

L yndhurst, C urcio was graduated ls‘w n an °* «73 O v erv iew Avenue. «rd Froelich and W illiam B. WUk- from local schools. L yndhurst Jfo rlh A rl‘n Kt‘>* w®» re-elected inson.High School and attended Ford- V*’e Presid«’n t O ther ______________ham and Long Island U niversities ®” ,cer* re-elected arc. H enry G. #

C u rrio was one of L yndhurst Cjrau’ v ,ce President; Thom as A M atthew Me Clane, J r . , aon of H igh School's outstanding ath- Dun?*n - T r**sur* r . K enneth A Mr and Mrs M atthew Me Clane. le tes He won his le tte rs in foot Ass,,,tant T reasu re r;

II. baseball and track As » P 0"*.*- S_ Hackett. C om ptro ller.■f u . . . . vail, m a ru i i i aim u «vn. n.s n , 1 r 1m an he w as captain of the S ecretary ;

mg a 2902 series Their opponents yOUn***"* m the lgn to. th ,r t* f» team and was

222f**d the D riftwoods.

Three H Tavern

Hiving the privilege of hunting , and fishing to the public and at session of th ird ’he sam e tim e recygnm ng the right of the landow ners to control j th ree gam e rout 'respass A bounty i.g u la tio n on w olves tha t was passed in 16VfS it<Kiy and Fender wiw orobabK th* m»*»wl effo rt of the m lonv to m anage the resource :ihe series, w inning 909-849 90M of w ildlife, and purported ly th is effort was followed by a trespass K96 and 890-870 Eddie Scacchetti law in 1678. This ea rly law stated th a t the inhabitants of west New pushed a 605 set on 216-187-202 Jersey had the liberty of fishing in the D elaw are R iver and sen to lead ’he w inners, who had Al coast, th e liberty of hun ting deer, w ild beasts, and fowl w ith in . WlMtehead shooting a big 237 the province, provided they did not kill, shoot o r take such ' gam e Ben Rizzuto's 221 featureddeer, beasts, or fowl on lands surveyed, taken up. enclosed, sbwn, jfor the H ighwaymen second p lace as a resu lt of th e irand p lanted , except the ow ners of such lands and the ir assigns I All Window Products drew Ih ree ply w in over Brookdale A fter statehood, the righ ts of the landow ner w ere still recognized | w ithin a hatf gam e o f th e fourth , Beverages. The T avern Bovs intensification of industry- and agricu lture , im proved travel and place B uff s D iner by w inning a ! "w ept the series as they won about m ore s tringen t restric tions to pro tect the landow ner, lessee, pair from the la tte r outfit. Buff’s ‘Hit 919-826. 877-798 and 977 825, o r assignee again* trespass and infringem ents of property righ ts started on the righ t note, w inning Rich Sell s ta rred for the w innersThese trespass laws and th e ir recognition by the courts rep resen ts * —* * '* L ^ v ---------* *— —a fundam ental requ irem ent for shooting p reserve m anagem ent

New Jersey rs s till faced w ith the difficult problem o f fu rn ish ­ing those of otir population w ho wish to fish* and hun t an opportun ity to partic ipa te in th is recreation and at the sam e tim e give to the landow ner, leasee or assignee adequate protection

trespass. This condition is aggravated by a continuously hum an population and a constant reduction in land

age bracket, sponsored by th e ' D epartm ent of P ark s and Public

• he D riftw ood B ar could total but m— 744-825 821. Bobby Jones was out- — - — ----- -------place w ith i ts l standing for the part* setters as 1 ^ r °P*rfy-.w ill reach the half-w ay

of H ighway he registered a neat 653 set on m irk on ***• ****<»'* scheduleB tlkas’ swept tfames of 214-235 204. Also com

mg through w ith big names for 1,00,1the w inners w ere Eddie D aw soo I P rince ton s tarted poorly inw ith a 246 and Nate M yre w ith a ,h e ir skirm ish w rth Coach Billy

Paul K raft's 200 game top- G allagher'* F ordham q u in te t The| ta ll and high scoring T igers w ere

leaped in to *hut-out in th e firs t period andtra iled • to 5 a t th e half Sol A l­banese. held to one goal in the

Agnes Aird, Clarice . G rinned. M arie Conlon, A ssistant S ecre­ta ry . A ssistant T reasurer.

732 S ix th S tree t, w ho w as a Medical Specialist, in th e Re­serves, at the Brooke A rm y Medical Center. F t Sam H ouston, Texas, was discharged ju s t ahead of last w eek's snow storm . He

his team repre­sen ta tiv e in the 100 yard and 440 y ard dashes. * . ...

A fter service in Europe in directors re elected fo r a started hom e by plane b u t hadW orld W ar II, C urcio re tu rned ' hr1‘-' -v,'“ r Pen»d « • : L °ren D «» change at W ashington, D C .

gam es on S a tu rd a y after- ,n L yndhurst and established his Co,on- H enry G G rau . Edwui J and reached hom e safely, ow n business Today he operates f[*

used truck business on Route

Diner.

against increasingarea su itab le for hunting. Th^ census of 1960 show ed the population of New Jersey to have reached a to tal of 6.066,762 persons, a population increase of 25.5% in 10 years. This figure represents the largest 'population per u n it a rea of any s ta te in the nation. In tu rn , the acreage of farm land , w etlands, and wooded lands w here gam e life could propagate, live and be harvested has decreased

O n the o ther hand, th e re has been no significant decrease in the desire of a segm ent of o u r population to hunt. In 1959, a iota) of 154.468 residen t hun ting licenses. 1,861 non - resident hun ting licenses. 23.625 resident bow and arrow licenses, and 196 non -ie sid en | bow and arrow licenses w ere purchased. This num ber ot hun te rs m ust find th e ir recrea tion on 7.504.80 tq . mi. o f upland

an mi lirlnl m arak inland mflr.-h Bflrl >1 f tu r -i rui. '* Z S 21 1

the ftrst tilt 901 to 832 but the ' as he recorded a 629 on 204-206^ All .W indow Products bounced 31® w hile o th e r contributions Mo back w ith 919 884 and 908 8 7 4 1 the victory w ere 203 gam es by trium phs to cop m atch honors ; Ronnie C lem ente and Nu k Della Johnny Fusaro was the big gun- ' Valle.

£ k e r , h e A m .p T e r £ T a M7 on w ^ T h egam es o , ,9 ,- 220 - « , R ich* De neT, w h ^ T - m ^Cecco had a 202 game for B u ffs i fourth place by

A nthony 's C am era House.

share u i aw eeping Tom

Espo-

and 699 57 sq. mi of tidal marsh, inland m arsh, and w&fer area.

as the defendm e B /.. .I l l» — I ( K t tn s g.H f„r the t a m e r .House keglers Er/iie C s p o d t , With gam es of 205.and 207 Ron n ie Esposito w ith a 2:i», Jack Cal- le ja w ith a 212 and Lou L eider w ith a 203 featured fo r the w in­ners. S tand-outs for the C am era House w ere A1 P in to w ith a 210 and H arry B ow m io and Johnny Fuscarino w ith 203’s.

was tfte defending Royal Hawai ian Palm s. Com ing out of its I ea rly slum p the last season's ; • ham ps took the m easure of G ar 1 den D elicatessen in th ree gam es to e fu a l its record a t 30-30 T he !

) llaw aiians won out. 899-872, 857- (771 and 886-790 Jason L ic itra 's i 622 on 189 231-202 and Ray

game highlighted ;• he H aw aiians' attack.m uch of which has been rem oved as hun ting area by the p o w th I “ " ’T " " * A nother trip le w inner w as the

of cities, suburban areas, resort developm ent, industry , local f . * R estauran t de O rient Express w ith the cellarrestric tive legislation, and m ajo r transportation arte ries Space ‘,,sloI'«d th e Savino Agency in dw elling K elly’s "5" the victim s.ior th e recreational use of hun ting and fishing represents the two games. San Carlo 's won the Tfte Truckers rolled 826-919 889 inforem ost problem facing our fish and gam e adm in istra to rs and the ‘n and to°k the com parison to 792 792-869 for thelicensed sportsm en of th e state . . / W6-889 after the Real- K ellys’. Andy Greco led the w in-

This need for spare fo r hun ting and fishing was recognized ^ ^ ,73-2 n |-over 30 years ago and the public shooting and fishing grounds lf)<} Bob H orvath iviJh m ch« ‘ked mfund was legislated in to being in 1932 U nder th is act. lar.cU and San CaH o'I ln « I t T l! */ 23* . V"* 'r B urke s 2tM wasw aters could* be purchased or M developed, and m a .nU ined ' ^ r" d f w “h ? I S H H S , f * * 'for the specific purpose of hunting and fishing by dedicating a j Was high to r Savino A aenrv w ith . D elicatessen cam e fromportion of the hyn ting and fishing licenses for tha t end. Legislation p a u j p etty ro iiin s a ‘̂ h in d to topple the H illtop Serv-paaaed in 1960 increased th e proportionate am ounts of hun ting fton F ire rP- taar*n t ! ,i*e S la ,|o n ,n ,w o gsmes. The Ionsand fishing Ixenses dedicated to public shooting ground facilities. basem ent Dositmn and ***« H illtops into th irdS ta rtin g in 1961, $160 of each resident snd non-resident hun ting passed both the Savino AeerJC P The m ,,to P8 s tarted w ith license; 55e of e ^ h resident and non-resident fishing h c e n * ; 55c .4nd G%rden £ „ £ £ £ g T S jof each 3-day fishing license; and $1.60 of each resident and non le siden t bow and arrow license are now dedicated to th is purpose

The utilization by hu n te rs of the developed public hun ting and fishing grounds has increased a t a ra te faster than our

over ten th posKion. T h is was ae- ! with 951-91* and w ii s i sI Z r Z . 01 " Gedrimas^ and T^ n n ,G allagher A ssociation by scores I k «, i iv _____ an<J

inonetaiy incqp>t>(or the purchase and th e developm ent_ol t h « e w afw r D o 'h m jt^ w i th ’f 2 2 < j! m fh'e'^wi'nnel-,” '1*' * 10' ,U r ,e d ,urH unting p re m ire and com parative ly long hunting seasons | ( ; Uida with a 210 and Eddie D aw .

fa r exceeds the po tentia l o f these areas to produce natu ra lly a .on w ith a 20* stood out for the sufficient gam e crop to m eet the dem ands of the hunting public | Bon Fire combine.As a result, these publicly-ow ned tracts of land a re heavily stocVedw ith gam e th a t can be produced by artific ial propagation This practice gives to the public shooting grounds an aspect of preserve m anage ment U ndoubtedly, the public shooting and fishing grounds w ill continue to be an im portan t facto r in the hun ting sy stem of New Jersey , b u t in a ll p robab ility , th e ir m anagem ent w ill be su b jec t to change as acquisition and developm ent progress and th e coat of stocking is eva luated in the light of changing times However, th e re are indications tha t p resent m ethods of m anage­m ent have made some of our hun te rs preserve-conscious and as a result, they rep resen t a po tentia l source of custom ers to the com mercial shooting p reserve operator

New Jersey legislated its initia l effo rt of com m ercial shooting into reality in the ea rly l»30 s under the semi - wild shooting p reserve law At tha t tune th e re was considerable opposition to th is type of legislation, but over the years, th is opposition has alm ost disappeared and the system has grow n substan tially Under th is law, an opera to r can establish a sem i - w ild shooting p reserve by purchasing a license to do so f o r $2.00. He must clearly define th e boundaries of the area on w hich he w ill operate and post the sam e a t in tervals not exceeding 500 ft. w ith signs prescribed by the N. J Division of Fish and Game. P rio r to May i he m ust release or aTrtaD-f h ave orr th e land described in his application 10 fem ale an d 2 m ale pheasants or at least ( fem ale and « m ale p artridge or quail to each 100 acre* of land, or a proputtiutuitc num ber of such b irds for areas less than 100 acres A ll birds taken on a sefM--w1M p reaerva a a u s l be tag*ed and th » e tags may be pui chased at a ra te of 4 tim es the num ber of binfs liberated p rio r to May I. M pheasants, quail, or partr id g e a re liberated after May I. th e operato r may then purchase tags up to 4/5 o l the b irds liberated at tha t tim e The sem i-w ild licensee is allow ed to h u n t Irom N ovem ber 10 to Jan u ary 20 and h srvest pheasants, partridge. <»iail. and wild tu rkey of both sexes. Produc non of evidence tha t he has liberated o r w ill libera te s t least 100 pheasants and p artridge or com bination thereof for any acreage op to IOO acre*, and one pheasant o r quail or p artridge for each additional 100 ac re* and one pheasan , o r quail <* ? + * * * ■ » each additional acre, he then can hun t up to snd including F ebruary 2® U nder This system , hun ting is M r i on Sunday the h „ v ^ ^

preserves w ere operated by

Sacred Heart Is CYO Winner

Ricci's D iner took the odd game in its series w ith P runerano

{Builders. Ricci’s D iner won the ftrst test. 910-874 and broke

| deadlock w ith a 944-820 trium ph ! in the n ightcap T he B uilders sal­vaged the m iddle outing. 911 to 183, Johnny DeCeccu w ith a 612 on 205-202-206 and Johnny Jaget w ith a 603 on a 205 190-218 card featured for the w inners. Chet M izeski's 223 w as high for the Builders.The Standings:Jo -Jo ’s Pizzeria

H. Tavern

In a B ergen County CYO Ju n io r D ivision basketball gam e played last Tuesday n ight a t Sacred H eart Oym the host S a­c red H eart cagers setback St.M ary’s of R utherford , 41 to 27 _____Coach M ike M oran's Ju n io rs held Three a slim 8-7 lead at the q u a rte r and ’ H illtop Serv Sta. w idened its gap to 19-11 at th e Esposito’s N ursery interm ission A fter Sacred H eart P runerano Builders contro lled action in the th ird period w ith a 14 to 6 m ajo rity the G aels held a 10-8 upper hand in th e final stanza

G eorge E ckhardt excelled for Sacred H eart w ith tw elve points Bobby Coughlin ta llied eigtii points F rank Dull of th e Gaels' w as the gam e's high scorer w ith th irteen digits.

B rookdaleJo e’s D elicatessen O rient Express Ricci’s D in er . , t ’am era House . Driftw ood Bar K elly’s -S’’

40 * * 3231 31

Beverages 302 tH28»242217

IT 24*j 2 >2626272 7 *2931333540

first half, sparked a th ird period Uprising w ith five baskets as the T igers blanked th e Ram s 14 to • T he final period also saw the T igres in com plete com m and w ith 19 points and Ed N eville w ith 11 fea tu red for the w inners.

Navy, co-coached by C arl Mc­D onald snd Tom C arney, played Rs w orst b rand o f hall o f the season over the firs t th re e periods against Coach Jo e B radley 's No­tre Dame team Tlie Ir is h led 7-2 a t the q u a rte r and 14 to 2 a l them i d u M • , r k r „ r « ,m © t h e l a s t

period the M iddies tra iled U U> Si S uddenly the N avy cam e to life

I w ith the fan s s tream ing rolled up a ,11 to • spread to tie the gam e and send it in to over- tim e

In th e taro m inu te over t im e period D anny K enny m ade a spec­tacu lar hook shot from th e sad* court to provide N otre D u n e w ith a 20 to l i trium ph Lenny M arci­ano w ith eight and K enny w ith

poin ts fea tu red fa r N otre D am e Johnny D ally and Billy C orona to ta llied seven m arkers ap iece for the Navy.

Coach A lbert Hysies’ S etpn H all sggregstion led all . th e w ay in th e ir 33 to 26 w m ov er th e A rm y forces, co-cooched by J o n Scotti and A nthony F rvsao T ra iling 11

14 a t the s ta rt of th e fourth q u a rte r A rm y m atched goals w ith th e Setonians b u t w ere unab le to pick up the ea rty deficit Bonnie K ist w ith fifteen and D owns English w ith f i n stsurred %m th e w inners R ichie M ustardo netted tw elve and S teve G uadetti had eleven fo r th e L ittle Soldiers

T he first h a lf o f th e St. John 's- B radley gam e w as n ip and tuck w ith th e B raves h u t on* over th e Indians a t l l - D at the m term ianon B ut C oarb Earl ley’s B radley q u in te t 'b ro k e in the second haM ar 12 to 1 and 6 to 1 Coach F ta rik Lewd to w i i B |> B .

Tom m y ChMaggio again spear­headed th e w inner’s a ttack by slicing the cords fo r tw en ty points w ith R ichie Darneli getting eight and Bobby J io a chipped in w ith six.

17. R utherford . He ow ns his own hom e on Livingston A venue w here he lives w ith his w ife, the fo rm er La V erne Edw ards, and th ree daugh ters, C arm ela. 12. C harlene, 1L both studen ts in Jefferson School and Lucy, three.

A rtive in Com m unity affairs, C urcio w as head of the cancer d rive here tw o years, th e m u l­tip le sclerosis d riv e and is now cha irm an of the Boy Scout drive

C urcio w as one of th re e men w ho estab lished the L yndhurst Boosters C lub, the high school s lum n i organ isa tion w hich h on ­o rs the school s ath letes.

A m em ber of L yndhu rs t Lodge of Elks. C urcio devotes m uch of h is tim e to the sid of the handi capped. He is a m em ber of Boystow n of K earny

" I seek reelect»on to the Board of Education because I enjoy w orking in the best in terests of you th .” C urcio said. “In the th ree years I have served I believe I have m ade a real contribution to th e betterm en t of o u r educa- t*onal system. In the Weeks to com e I p lan to o u tline in detail th e things fo r which I have w orked in o u r school system."

M r. C urcio is also a m em ber of the Ita lian A m erican C ircle C lub. T h e L jrndhurst C ivility C lub and is C hairm an of the L yndhurst Juv en ile Com m ittee

S Mtton Gain In Assets Made •y Equity Assn.

A yea r end progress Deport was presented at the A nnual M eeting of the Equuy Savings Association held last T hursday

At the close of IM1 assets to ta l­ed $28,818,600 an increase of $5.- 111.000 over Decem ber I Mo Sav-

« * mgs and m ortgage loans increas- " P ed m ore than $3.00(1.000 and re ­

serves passed the tw o m illion dol la r m ark by increasing $107,150- •#. D ividends paid a t the annual rat* of 4% com pounded quarterly to u te d $953.100 00.

This year's grow th is the g rea t est in the history of the Equity A nocia tion In IW I E quity’s new colonial building w as com pleted at the corner of K earny and Mid-

of ouraverage of 212 7 acres per preserve.85 o f the 143 sem i-w ild shootingsoorlsm en's r lu h a a fu rther indication th a t . segm ent ^ H u n t e r s a re becom ing — re of th e privileges o f P reservehunting. ______ _______ .— — — — -------------------— - —

Army. Mrs G allagher is w ith him in G erm any.

M rs Joseph D elia Vplpe, of F o r­est Avenue, en terta ined on Tues­day evening for M mes Thom as M arotti. John Mazzei. Elizabeth De Mazzio. C alvato re Castiglia. Jsm es Castiglia. Dom inick C hier- ico and Joseph Liberti.

IS ON DESTROYERUlchard B endo ritiv signalm an

th ird class. USN. son of M r wvd M rs. Joaeph B endoritis. o l *42 Page ave., L yndhurst. is serv ing aboard the destroyer USS B ristol operating w ith the S ix th Fleet in the M editerranean

T he Bristol spent the C hrist­mas and New Y ear’s holidays in V illefrsnche on th e F rench R i­v ie ra

Robert G allagher, son o l M r and M rs F red G allagher. 712 R utherford A venue, has been pro­moted to th e ran k of F irst L ieu­tenant in G erm any w here he u p resently serv ing w ith the U S

BEACON Television Serv.All Work Guarantied

WE 9-9310

Sacred H eart Jrs.B row n, f Duffy.f Tam aro. f Danese fScotte. f Abate, f Eckert, c Coughlin, g Lembo, g < Lepore. g

Totals M. M ary’s (S) Dull, f Boyle, f Sloan, f H arrigan , f S icuerella , 1 G entle, c Walsh, c S tanley, c English, g K erw in, g

Totals Sacred H eart $ 8 t M ary’s 7

Would yea buy a sack af

<41 >

SEE RAMBLER

FOR 1961 BENNER SALES

249 H a rk e n sa r t S tree t East R u tb e if tx t t N. X

Same L aeatiaa O ver M Tea

CE S-464* — C E S 4M 2O pen TUI • P M

FRASER CERAMIC STUDIO•119 Harrison St. Pas*alr

SALE STARTING JANUARY 301 0 ', off o n R e w a rd G la x e s a n d I n«lefg1a*rH

5d®J » ff n it ( > r r e n w a re

I 3 o ff o n n e w M«»I<1«

40*;, o ff on Brushes

INDUSTRIAL HAULAGE CORP.

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218 WASHINGTON AVENUE

NUTLET, N. X

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QUALITY COALNONE BETTER

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$ , M *• “ , 19.95 17.45 15.9S

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Buckw hest 16.51

For Prompt Service Cod

WE. 3-5370

uG

4310006200

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10—27

W eald y aa hay a sack af fa r a P e m y ?

BETTER DRIVEWAYS Asphalt Blacktop

PARKING LOTS, CURBS AND CEMENT WORK

W * 1 S T TO M A C ! TMKM M I T O TMAJK T H■ ■ •T AND DIF------------------------- --------

NOrth 7 8977. 1842

VIOLA CONTRACTING CO.

VIOLA BROTHERS. INC180 WASHINGTON AVENUE, NUTLEY, N. J .

Phone N O rth 7 7000

COMPLETE LINE O S v

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BOTH WAYS!

We diin t rxf>ect you lo tramp all the way over here when ihe weather's had! Sure, it's nice lo see yon, lull we lielievc in making it easy (or you lo save . . . ami it's ihe |>erfr<i way lo open an ai'ronnl loo, anil slay snug al home. — ~ •

DIVIDENDS ONYOUR SAVINGS

• ACCOUNTS O PFN ED BY TH E 10th EARN DIVIDENDS FROM THE 1st

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PA Y A BLE QUARTERLY

The OUett VintncitI I m l it m lion In Town — Since 1H4

Kearny Federal SavingsPkCNTV o r

r a i l PARKING at ootm o r n c c a

iM lIMM IS . MSSMY « |N<Mf« &«*$cro«orocf

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( H A R U K E l ) o nd S U P I R V I S I D by th . U N IT E D S T A I I S O O V S R N M f N T

Page 10: Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r Mo-.dla said the main purpose of the organization is to present to the comm%mrtv

T m H SD A Y . JANUARY 26. 1961THE COMMERCIAL T.KADER ANT) SOT7TH BERGEN REVIEW

WALTER KELLY ENDS TRAININGLYNDHURST EIGHTH G R A D ER WRITES REVIEW

i j ^ K o f CI N O T E S !

W aiter J Kelly, son of Mi and \fvs W illiam K rlljr <*f 41 J K«»it tiiv«\. Lyndhurst, was g raduated from rec ru it tra in ing , .Tun 14. a t I lie Naval T ra in in s C enter, G rea t Lakes, 111.

lh«- graduation exetvb*es, m arking the end of nine week, of boot lam p", included a full dress parade and review beton* m ilitary officials and civ ilian d ignitaries.

In n ine weeks of instruction, the "faw rec ru it" is developed into a Navy B luejacket, read> for duty ith the fleet.

A treat for your living room

Slip C o v en From MARY l.EM l’KRT

I I RM(C R<u4 . N orth A r lla f tM J

w y i om

W M M W M W V W V V V V W f

SAVE in the easy, convenient way . . .Direct from the Driver's Seat!

. . . It'* r«*y! h*» tinif-»iivinn l<> J r h f n|> lo our l)K I\K -1 IN M IM M lN k *«imI Iran-art y i u r » t i n n |jrf>lal<-iii>. without delay ! In matter a t second* y o u a r c on m u r HJty.

BUY NOW AND SAVE PREMIUM QUALITY COAL

NONE BETTER AT ANY PRICE_Nut or Stove $22.00 Buckwheat $17.50 Poa C oal $18.50 Stoker Rice $16.50

hum or T hese a re characteristics which I adm ire in a book C ef- vante* fulfills the essential obli­gations w hich I require , thus I feel I would anxious hr read m any .m ore of h is books T hese books, 'how ever, a re beyond my u n d er- standing, and thus 1 ^ o u ld hesi­ta te before ven tu ring to read CURRENT

DIVIDENDSPA1P

QUARTERLY

GU ARANTEED SATISFACTIO N| g 191)

MORRIS DEMEL[ ST R E E T I D . M i a ■

c*r appreciation . A fter I have acquired a la rger vocabulary , snd know ledge of book* w ill I then begin to read Cerv an tes classics.

EQ U ITY SAVINGS2 0 ( M rny A*». (cornw M idtard Aw.), K»omy, K . J . T«k WYmon 1-0101 . Daily. 9-3: Thurvdoy* to 7 p.m. DRIVE-IN WINDOW • « £ E PAHKING an pr«mt<MBOOKKEEPING* TAXES

REASONABLE TERMS

Part-time Bookkeeping to r S m a l l Firm*

J. Louis Lwnpert13 V n l Governeur Avenue, Rutherford, N. J.

I.Eneva 8.5082

Surely, nothing contrihuii-. m art to the seme af supreme wrll-brnig you en|oy in » l% l I adillar than the — silence of the car’s powerful engine. I h rrr i« w orth ing atun to magic in an atitumolxle so super U> c omfartable and cfTortles.sk obedient to yuur lightest tilth, which

performs so q u ie tly th a t y o u h e a r on ly th e soft w h i 'p e r of the passing b re e r e . 1 hi»>«Hrr stillness ai te sts as w ellto the level of craftsmanship employed in n n \ p h a se

of Cadillac desiKn. Ya«r t adill.u dealer invites you to experience Cadillac’* tranquillity,in motion—soon.

BUY ANa u t o m a t i c

ELECTRICBLANKET

UBALERH SIT YOl H LOCAL AI THORIZKU

DeMASSI MOTO R CAR COWE 9-0876 at your favorite stortLYNDHURST. N. JPARK and RIVERSIDE AVENUES

Page 11: Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r Mo-.dla said the main purpose of the organization is to present to the comm%mrtv

THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1961T H E COMMERCIAL LEADER AND SOUTO B E R G E N R E V IE W PAGE ELEVEN

Mrs. Wm. Foster Guest Of Honor

SJK>W iL O W in . ( T # ro * r Pp>. |S1«S; S o a w p lo w t G ra v e ly 5 hp ) k ( jW a N r a t r i g e r a t o r a n * ( rM M r. ( I l l ; | B te rM »vn » ltft« r. n e v e r u M (B pgan • 0 9 Z*Z 1 fSS: r e c p r d c * ijn g « r <W *tKor) i t a S B o a * h MW n e v e r U|M < t«*r*

Mo**4 M il tS S R o y a l T yper w r , t a r SSO .** C alf W E

' */»«M O W H O W sh o v e l S i: F o r im c i

* < tc* o a •««. f t S ; S t w a r d r o b e . »M>.! • * * • < *•••» c h a i r tl1# ; M ahogany' • H k $10. b a * * .n e t te S3 D tL u i* M ay ; t a p r c n o r $60 B>ona H t F i i » d H " | T V S n C all W K S 4140 2 /2

J K I A M S u R O 10 a u m m e r c ib m i ,1 ' r * “ »»S. 2 b lock* t ro w b each .**.*00 « Im 2 f a m i ly c o rn e r h o u t* (A

#***d •S' w v naawy repair, |1.S00.i A top 7 a r r e * io M .v ib o ro T o w n sh ip . S^JSO Jtm mw n*w*r uMd. ISO. Call w i i m tf

P A R T - T l M t . E V E N IN G S ^ • • S r N a w l a a C * . w ill in lp r v l tw

w o m an tp b o t r a l n a d a t h a a u ty a * v iM re ; M a r t w o r k in g a t • P H . a m i • m a s a t I i P . M . ; m r n $ 2 1 0 a n hp*ir *nS m e r e . p ln p o a n t a n d d t |m f le d Soaw ty a p rv ic p j e a p a r ie n c e n o t np«pp. • a r y ; w o w ill t r a i n y o u ; m a rn o d w o ­m an o r K i a r r i a i w o m e n w i th c h ild re n p ro fp r ro d C a l l IV « 3 40*4 - GC S S0*t

W O M A N , p a r t t im « e v e n in g w o rk , • ■ co llo n l j r n i f i j i in f a s h io n f.oM , no• n v a p tm e n t . C a l l W t 3 31S1 o r G E -• WO. tf

M j y - ^ M a p y | p ) « |

O wraUri, Saw. la^MSBPt V. Pam it-C iiflaa **l«jSSUCTV. Haabrouck Hat a. MSs K v * r \ r h ‘ **‘s * * isSVM O t. Many u i n

2 S 2 fZ E m f i tr f F H i ? * • Tm<ns W*lA fk TotMiciin ftpan

iUVRa RIAn

.sr serj g j . s r * v r " zW t X - r X ' S t i f * *"■ “ - SU y Off Man. Dot Ts f t Opw .S t! Knpw SI0 SS.OOSIB M TAB N>fhta MaxL A B A oat. Same C a p . S7S-S0A IR -C O N O R e fr ig . S uparw . M Ma ^ C O n o n t r i / mmV jiT o ?O R O E R P .cK ar Go r a r t C a p . |S0- IPS C N I M I S T Jr . O o p re e P . j *

O pen S atu rday * S0 ta 12 00 O pen Tuesday T U T OO P M.

RUTHCRFORO ■m ploym ant A| H >

• O H w M « T a» » » » ■ I .M M

land Aveffu*’ who re tired fn De- ceBOoi tram D river-H arris, steel w ire manufacturer* of H arrison, was *uest i>t honor a t a d in n e r party * iv rn last W ednesday even . in§ bv the secre taria l o l the C om ­pany a t the PatKi tn H arrison

In Decembci there wan ano ther part> lo r he r at C arbone * ,n H ar. r i« n . "ivcn by the Laboratory and E n(ine*rin« liep artm en ti w hich waa attenUed by men and the ir wive?. M r Toater accom­panying har on thi« occasion

A sked w hat *he w ill do now,' M rs. Kosiir naid. ‘ Til be r a n a house wife for a w hile and then Mr fo s te r and l w ill tou r th* U nited S tates and snip to see m y s is te r in C alifo rn ia .*

A»»AS8*eO*. 4*r aeean 2.SM rp n p . aar i u » i.«aiOOOOK. l - r SU• U IC K M r M i . t MP O O O K . M r H a rp to n tMP L Y M O U T H 4 «*r S a ^ a n •« ? H A M S L B R 2<r imN A M S L K R 4 # r JM

Th« Evcnm * M em bership De­p a rtm en t of the Woman * Club of L yndhurst had a goodly num ber of husbands of m em bers present folr th e ir m eeting on last W ednes­day evenlrtf**

T>ie p rogram was a p resen ta­tion o f Judo , which Is the p rm o - pBi o l b reak ing a m an ’s balsnve, sn d Ju -J itsu , the a r t of self d e ­fense. K enneth H snselm an. who lad his m en In th e dem onstration, s ta ted tha t speed is the fa tto r in the success of these a c ts '

Mr. H anselm an was an in s tru c ­tor. w hen serv ing in the U 8 M arine Corps. He now conduct* Meekly classes in Passaic and is a p a rtn e r in Passaic-C lifton Judo, Inc.. a school tha t teaches begin­ners an d advanced studen ts m Judo and Ju -J itsu

T>ie dem onstra tion grvvn cm

W ednesday n igh t was m ore thaninteresting and entertain ing .

The A m erican Home group of the departm en t wiil meet on the rven ii of Feb* im y 7tb j ! Um home of Mrs. Norman T*hompson. Page A venue, w hen ihe them e will b r in tc rto v D ecorating".

On .'Saturday, February 4th. Mrs. Halph SantuDi, chairm an of ihe departm ent, will head a dele­gation to attend the Spring Con­ference at the Essex Mouse in Newark.

The next rcgula m eeting w ill be held on F ebruary lftth, when the them e w ill he * Know Your Tow n-'

M a id i dales include Club W o­m an I)av a t H ahne’s S tore on the 9th and a bus tr ip tn Patricia M urphy k un the 22rd.

Bill C aputo has announced tha t Engine Com pany No, 3 will hold its annual D inner s t San Carlo 's R estauran t on February 11th An

Me evening ha* been planned fo r all m em bers who at- t«ml

Next reg u la r m eeting of the D epartm ent w ill be held on Feb 10th. A ttendance the past lew m onths has been good. Let’s carry it .on th rough the >*ar giving you r officer* the support they need.

■ - w a wwm-I *0SS o r o t S I M t f

RuTHKRroWD H o w ty l ^ t s a or w w . O a a W ta ta a prM or.pM . W B *- SASv I IT T IR I w>ntad <jjv* Sor

working mpthtr Call at 12 On*fioipA » t. , U y n d h u r a t . ^ f t i

F A M O U S C a r t C o a m a tic * h .iv» open - • " I • p e o t t p n r t i p p fp r p rc m p tip n a a* bM w ly d o m o n a tra to r% . t a i n w h ile you Ipp rn . F or f rp p *am p l» » ,-«nd t i ta lo g a n a f u r th o r d e ta i l* c a l l W V S 7704 or

1 S i I S . _________________________ 1/24

• T I N O O H A P H K R T y p is t i a r t l im e r i a l o a t a t c i n i u r j n t e o th c o . P ioaao w n t p | i v m g d o ta ila Ip L ead p r Boa 274 2/»

ELM A U T O S A L E S

WSS C H g V R O L K T I , 4 d o o r , p ow or »«M pnaB lp. CaM IV S-3TSS. t/M

tSBS C A D IL L A C 49, 4 P ppr «M p p w p r. r a e io . h e a te r w v 'wa* opp W I 1 -H 42 .

NOT iC SN o T h i : IH Ifl.lttCHY G IV K S tn

Ih r H M v..«*.r » of Hi*, grfi,.,,! r»UUIsT**? T » W * « » t £ <>K iIh th o * nun iv o f It. r a m Jrr<«o>.f>Mt t* * x n iiu .i l xw W ii.K „ f »#.•- V^TT* **u l *<»*♦»*• i *«r i u * ow- i.hm

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T».a M W fin c w ill a . h « U mmI ih o Ifgal vi.ipra i j n ,* *• (%.».I tMMSI. t w ill vu t.- i t ( h r r r n p i ' i l y p pc4HnB »>!».*•» » | . l |« t M v W

T U H i.K I I K M H U V W llaL . UK n u t T i m g g v V A i^

I M K U U K H W i l l . H K R I j S t IU In m i v k \ r

A t t k * PH id m o ^ f io a M ill h a >wh- ii i i i le d i>r<>i<«MM(iuai< fu r VMiln* iiucad fo r th* follow in p iwopo. u « e p u * a u P * r.► **p (arrwNi KapwH^r |l.l l |,4 ,« h*I► ••r i ui-iiM.1 «>utlA> SSS '.ip-

T h # to ta l a m o tm i ih m w h i ~*• *1** n», -»wppry la . . . 1.M3.MS.3S •llt> a»laV W # th a t ih.- R<>ai<d * t

I .tlu< ui ion of Ih r T pw nah lp of Lyn«- i in m t a u h ir . i |« ih o ipm tuviU e l Umi r !»•* I <«o<I e. ^ppr«|>ri.)fr ®O l^ r •C ap ita l O a t lay hi ia * p« honl Y ra r 'i S * l * S * i T>|1'' •ei'f'UH-lullun a Ml h « ••‘ i i f r n M to p u n h i K Ra p fo n o ip ro t**4 fur a ll uf u u r a. h.*.la-\* a ( T aan M S n # ■ -mKialo llp ih lliip Aid T,I IS.)#

T o ta l .................................... In .0000B aT h P pAlltnii M a. wo f , n u jM d n a *

»n4 th o lr rwa|MM-U«v polllrm d ia lr ic ta <I d w m r l l^ d h> ralw rw m w t«» r h r r l o r - IIUM d u ir l r iM m*rnH a t th o la a t U a n o e a t * Klc. lW mi h w v Im-wh d . -H tiait.-A hoM w .

n » i» r a n n „h«U » o u I t w ald m p e tin a «*a-whwrw th a n . 1 m * p o llln S 1 p la ^ o tl .» i* in .i ii fu r i t.o v .iio n . <4 M * : |H .m a« a iw tr lo t In w h lr h h r a r S l a .m n m : ■ ---------•—PMMtesr^ iH p tr t .- t Mo i —r .a iu m h u a •

P o llin g | Mait h i No. 9— I.lm 'o ln HrhoA) « I ‘<>1II iic i H m t n i N*. B ~ W ^ » b m |iu n

pahonl _■ ( S ^ »fo il.Its fM*lr1.t JtM • W W aw hlaal.H t |

Malar nlt*nHla* M w tr tr l M a ,' K - fto eaw v rIt ;

...! '.M « a t H « n . t S u S I h r i

S r S o i 11” 1 ’ t'•.aiiaa tHMrici No • — j el term * 'M Ml » i l , n p J l la t r u i N p, * — KranW'in

M> ho<t| 0 *t> l.lr fc . | No. W — l Y n M i m ,

s . Bm |Wv*-' * . *ll*4 U If Ih , I ’p i i a e F tp te p ■

o f fhd* P a r ?I y*Mr*. Who m h » n b - to Tl>aPh a r rx i iU n i «rf i h r H «atp alKUMmlha a n d o f th * . o u . i ly la w h l. h t B a c l a i m . In* \ o$o w iaty e * v a a a a i h o fn r.- i h r H r.-H o n a n d w h o h a * h a r p ) p* i n iaM aa ily rw « u ip r« . | | n t a p * * „ * ,* . j M l ahK -llon U la te it 'f a l l . - a - | f o r t y , d a y a P fkor In th * d o - .»f th o M p<TM al x h a ll W • •in itl» d t o v p | r a t fh « « rh o » < , • f e t t 4*** A i» B .n t lM i fo r u i i lU a ry t • Iv llla n a l a e n ip p h a l lo ia m a y Im> m a tla to t h e «r<ew ipey ml the- H o a rd a f ,l .I., . it,..i,

M> A u th o r i ty a f th * n o . i H l i US' F I i r i ’A TlO N

T h o n iP a ] . I l l r p a y *B p rro tp r j r

l i a lp d Jarttasr> 2*. ISSI . wr « r . l i t 111 ’

r i t L O B aiaa M * r..S H IP P IN G C la ra , JC • N O B ales M p r., S loeT J& P * * c*"»*C O M P . C lm s. low .A C jtT ., O .voraoA B IM .. CK c M ach t ,« i . O " " I »Pap « T e c h P e p

* T L a tM . N ite s IB M T a bM AC H IM I S T B , l e t . « 2n* d .

T ra .a o afa*,‘,‘ Tfcr». rmMI N O •. « i»m . M o th . M vy. C a p .

•▼ » •••!. W pH i B o p .

P»*»*1*>!* i lm o a t BRPORD BKi'RETAHiALS s * ‘

SAWS — TOOLS LAWN MOVERS

DEL SKIDUORX O U A R O . T p p R e (C H B M A n a ly s t . N i te tW

a o a r .c .z v : ; , r .I l S v V i ^ - T'* T«B K ^ O . C lk • T y p le t C O O R D IN A T O R f V f l B T . S p a e d , e r r L eo . B ilN oo I I C N B . P . t . L y a d ^•K-Typiot P A Y R O L L C lk A O V . Bpc.N C ItA BBT. Bee . Mo S t* n oC O U N T E R C lk . S o m a Saw .

Coast Guard To InstructT he g reen light has been given

to th e D epartm en t to go ahead w ith ita p lans fo r ce lebrating its 7Mh ann iversary . H ere lies a tre ­m endous task T he m em bers have long ta lk ed about and looked for w ard w ith an tu ip a tio n for this m em orable occasion If each m em ber does his share in the p re. V a rat ion th e day of celebration w ill be long rem em bered. In the m ( few wedfcs K en Sum m ers, w ho has been appointed chairm an of the affair, w ill continue some of the m em bers to head up various com m ittees TYiose wish mg to w ork on o r head up a particu lar com m ittee, p leaae contact Ken,

This S a tu rday evening tho D e­partm ent wiM hold its annual D in m r'D an ce As of the last m eet­ing cha irm an Schual inform s tha t re tu rn s w ere in for 103 person* Looks like a 100 per cent turnout T he tim e - 730. The place M aschio’s R estaurant Don’t for­get your dancing shoes!

S torm o r no storm the women held th e ir m rtaliation of offk-er* th is past T hursday evening, and a good tu rnou t was on hand Best w ishes go out to Mrs Dick L ind­say /o r a successful ye#r. Also th e boat is w ished lo h e r staff of officers C hief D anny C astleg ran ' and F ire Com m issioner Monaco a ttended the cerem onies w ith a g roup of fire departm ent m em ­bers. M adam President had to be inform ed tha t the th re e ftremen doing K .P th a t n ight w ere not p erm anen t pa rty C red it for the refreshm ents th a t everyone seem ed to enjoy go to chairiady E sther Sum me is and Mrs. Joan Lem ise and M rs G inny Luddecke

K B A R N V AVE. A r m if to n . F .v o •m s. aunrtom WV r urmah own pas M l. R a c a n t ly d e c o ra te d . A dw lta o n ly O b e ta . “ e l * r e n t f , e a rH * n p o d C alirv 1-w n. 1 / 2% 1 sm satisfied th a t w e are less

convinced by w hst w e hear than by w hat we see.

— 4 —H erodotus

h O S T H A r lin g to n S iv a ro o m a p t M P*t, o ra to r , g aa n d el*. *• c a..pp*»pM A v a ila b le F e p r u a r y 1. C a ll W Y V l 4 t ?

Directory For Service RequirementsPlumbing

P lectra Sedan F u lly Equipped P ow er Steering & Brakes E xcellent condition, one ow ner, easy term s and trade arran fo d P riced right

BE VOCN G WITH MUSIC t r a m to P f c r A r

PIANO - ORGANACCORDION

Foundation Rock V Roll TESTIMONIALS

A. TurieHo & SonComplete Rrm oJrliitf W ork

A h r r a t i o n t a n d R e p a i r s A ttics - D o n te n . G araee*

“D# - It - Ysnrsitf" Phiabisg Heating

Elsctricil SuppliesSink*. Batb Tuba, Toild i, Basins. Cm R n p n , I Her- trical Supplies • Paints, OiU

& Varnishes P ip es C u t * Tkreodod

T o O d o r

CAST RVTHEKFORB SUPPLY COMPACT

W W PaCtrMD A n " 'E. R u th e rfo rd W I X -10*-l-4

Roofing,

Aluminum Siding Oar Specialty

W» 4e ear ev a VMft.WY U 7 5 6

1956 LincolnP rem ier Sedan. B eautiful black color. F ull pow er s tee r­ing, b rakes, seat, w indows, W W all tires, etc H ere’s a good chance for a buy. Come and see it.

TELEVISIONCOMPLETE SERVICE

414 r a r e s t At*. L r

C Esrva R-:I66.1School of the Ml Sit ARTS

No. A rlingtonW Ymaa 1 :iW).i

1959 Ford* 'I* , .

S tation Wagon, 6 cyl. 9 pass E xcellent clean ca r Economic al and good looking. Easj te rm s and guarantee.

CaM Aoyttme _______ OBf Bm4 Ivan lopn t B T K a DEGERDON

New * 4 Rms. H eatedC buple ' *VAL C COLOMBO

BERGEN AUTOW T 1*4369

v o Comm ission or Finders Fee References R equired

12 Apts. A vailableON ALLUAKCS

and Rathe Repair Service

t - t m

I Keerpf A re. Krarojr

A ll W m * Cmormirrd

Sunday Aid Night Cols

Our SpecialtyI *eJ TV Bought and Sold

E njoy s o a r leseoae arttli

Victor F t s m I m m

Ttascry fm hsdsdCom poser and A rran g er fo r th e

C en tury - S chuberth and H e n ta c - M ussc Co. of

New T. rk C str I N K T B I H H m

Real F>tale - InsuranceSpecializing - H om e O w ners

And T enan ts Package Policies t s t S tuyvesan t A ve, L yndhurst

WE V-2<m-2l

It r fM Typsvriter Ssrvics

233 Main Si., HackensackDlamonil < 2-53ID _

rjrpew n tera - A ddin« Machine*

All Make. . New A Used £e*v Poymrnt Smlm B c u l e J . Krpaired

220 VOLT Electrir Service

I m la l M lo r l*C>Call

Bauer Electrict i h i d t l r r t r i i ia n

i f Kearny Ave., Kearny, H. J. WYman 1 -iaas

WF, S I 532

FOR BETTER tIOMES IN ItFRCEIS COUNTY

SEEG IB B S A G E N C Y

I ua*e ad. LradhwaWK * IM* 0*0* Roads; | a I

INTERIOR PAINTINK AND DECORATING

AQ W orltouasM p O oarsaleedf a i l a. W. fra a r ia al

(iE nes. 8-0727I 24

T h e Rev Robert Encelke. of the W e s t m i n i s t e r P resbyterianChurch, was anvinK those to have lunch last T hursday with form erG o v ern o r A llred E. Lhiscoil, at th e H otel H ubert Trt-at in New­ark .

H U N K ’S G A R A G E

Page 12: Curcio In Denial Natural Gas For He Quit As Head Lyndhurst Users … · 2015-05-16 · I' Fath« r Mo-.dla said the main purpose of the organization is to present to the comm%mrtv

GEneva 8-87004701

f Ag e T V C L T I T H E C 0M M E R O X I LEADER AND SOUTH BERGEN REVTEW THURSDAY, JANUARY 2d, 196 t

Commercial leaderAND THE 8 0 l ’TH BERGEN REVIEW » •

Established m i Tbe C—i n rrto l L eader is ik e official new spaper of

LYRDHURST ROME 0F CHAMPIONSPublished e v e ry Thirr*da> l»y The C(Hnmrrri«l le a d e r Prin ting Com pany

EditorB annrN Mgr. Ernest J. Dabinett

JOHN SAVINO Advertising Mgr. Samuel C. Pierson

Entered as second class matter April 7, 1938 at the Post Office of Rutherford, N. j . under the Act of iV^airh 3, 1879

Subscription U S O Per Year £ Ten Cents Per dopyLyndliur.%t, N. J . January 26, 1961

through South Bergen mea«1ow1and to thf Hackensack River where it crosses to Hud- son County and then to Manhattan great

•quantities of natural gas flo*Public Service Electric ami f»a* Company

has been using the natural gas for some years. Now it is busy changing over much o f its supply in New Jersey to natural ga*.

In the East Rutherford meadows off Paterson Plank Road is a new building. It is a metering division by which the natural ga»

MORE NICE GUYISM?Tfc«T never was a nicer guy than Boh

M fyarr. There may never have lieen a more lae frc liv p governor.

S Ith the commuter service* collapsing **’ ‘ “Ur head* there have been from Tren-

honied words ami no action. With •be state faced with problem* of every sort *** b iw had in Trenton the handsomest •Mile this nide of Cary Grant—and a com­plete absence of action.

Now a Sashington faction is seeking to fa iri upon the Republican party a man ■b**e chief daim to fame is he is a nice• f t“Good old Jim ," is the way the hoy* say b ’■ Washington when describing James M itfbrll. former secretary of labor.

Mitchell has held a voting residence in New Jersey. He hgsn’t lived in the stale for 2S years. Back in the days when FDR was trying to pump some life into the economic •yotcm with the WPA he named Mitchell to ■ supervisory job in New York. There Mitchell became close to Gen. Somtnerwell and followed the General lo Washington in W orld War II.

fro m then on M itrhdl held a series of Washington assignments, first under FDR and then under Harry Truman. When Eisenhower was elected he carried Mitchell along with him. Eventually Mitchel became secretary »f labor.

During all that long period Mitchell wa- o l New Jersey. His asquaintance

with state probems was and is nil. He has

Oa The MoveMayor Harold Pareti's promite that there

astir developments in Carlatadt's 1 **e certain to be borne o u t . Even if

> o f the negotiations now under way (ail la materialise, Carlatadt's progress and p w t b ia assured.

W hat is not realised by many is Carl- ■tadt. with 4.20 square miles of territory ia South Bergen's second biggest. Therefore, the borough represents the greatest chance fa r growth.

Square mileage in the long run will deter- a u ae the ultimate growth of a community.

East Rutherford has but 3.70 square R utherford only 2.60 miles, Lynd- of course, is the largest with 4.70

• a d North Arlington has 2.30 miles.Caristadt'a opportunity rises from the (art

that ia spite of its land sice it is probably tS e aaoat speesaly settled i a the.whole area. At the last census there were but 6.009 resi- deats as compared to Lyndhurst's 21,761.

There is plenty of room in < arlstadt. That b why the borough soon will have a 70- house development on Garden Street. Plans far a 40-(amily apartment house arc under c<ioaidrration. And that vast meadowland area, bisected by Washington Avenue, offers tremendous promise.

Ia Harold Paretti. Carlstadt has a youth­ful, hard-hitting imaginative chief executive. Many would like to he in his shoes. He has • community that is throbbing with life, ready to burst into great bloom. H r ran do aiach to channel that growth into orderly, f t a fc r t ive lines.

Oar East Rutherford-! Arlstadt newspaper The I radrr Free Press, the oldest in Bergen C iB M j, has seen much in its 83-year-old history. But as the saying goe«. “ Hang on,

naa aia’f seen nothing yet!"

no strong roots in the state, although his mother still lives in~Elisabeth. It will take Mitchell two years— if ever to catch up with Ihe enormity of the crisis faring Trenton in the nest fpur years.

Mitchell’s announcement of candidacy was a complex of platitudes. Of course, it was. How was he to come to grips with slate problem* with which he is unfamiliar?

A nice guy ? Mitchell is all of th a t At 60, Mitchell, however, is hardly the dynamic, forceful, leadership type which modern politics asks. He has never shown the ca­pacity for organisation which is so essen­tial in the next governor of New Jersey. Against the kind of candidates proposed by the Democrats— Frank Thompson of Mer­cer, Donald Fox of Essex and Harrison Williams, Mitchell would have a tough task.

The one man who has the qualifications, the experience and the organisational ability to give the Republican party a winner and the state a good governor it* Bergen's own W alter H. Jones.

Not long ago Mitchell was holding an open ear for the Republican vice presiden­tial nomination. There is no reason to believe he has given up on national am­bitions.

Isn’t it time we had a governor who is satisfied to be governor—and who will work at it around the clock?

Such a man is Jones— and such is the kind of governor he would make. Let's have him.

the harvest. Mr. Sansom'p successor will find he indeed planted well and the evidence of the fine harvest are all mltout the parish.

Good Conduct Medal For AN

Reorganisation of the North Arlington l.il»rar> Board last week callcd attention lo til#* fart llt.il Mr-. John Stover wa- rr- elected secretary—and she was beginning her 24th year of service.

The other menil>er* of the board have long served on the unit. In Lyndhurst, Ruth­erford and in other communities the library boards serve long periods with neither pub­lic |ousts nor private feuds. Compared to the travail of the average member of the Board of Education, the library trustar 'has clear swimming._ Pcrhai** it is all an argtimrnt for appoint­

ive rather than elective t^ncatioiTBMlrd^T^r isn’t it?

Out Damned TaxiIn Lyndliiir»t an ordinance eliminating

the personal property tax on household item* ha- been introduced. In Rutherford likewise. In other communities the tax has been voted out or m m i i i will be. It is ju s t as well.

And New Jersey should give more atten­tion to solving the problem of the personal tax, anyway. Industry fears i t In other states the personal tax is called Jersey Lightning which may strike without warn­ing.

Anyway, getting rid of the household per­sonal tax is a good move.

flowing up from Texas is measured.The next development hereabout* will be

conversion of the flow in Lyndhurst and Rutherford to natural gas. Users in the area are now receiving letters and maps showing how the conversion will be done. The actual conversion will not be until August. But by then all system* in the area must be inspect­ed and, if nec«*s-ary, c.onverted for the natural gas use. The company will stand the expense.

Special To The LeaderHACKENSACK—Not in a gen­

era tion has there been as ex­plosive a political situation as th..t now facing the Republican parly in New Jersey . C orridor pund i’s h ere say they 've never seen any- th ing like it. The effo rt of the W ashington corps to take over the state party is som ething never w itnessed before—at least not w ith in the m em ory of tho g rayest of the beards hereabouts

a * •For. w hen it is all boiled down,

tl»e effort of the W ashington crow d to pu t across J im M itchell, an unem ployed g randfather, as the Republican choice /o r gover­nor is the baldest, most nak td pow er d rive in New Jersey h is­to ry . I t is also one o t the biggest bluffs in the gam e of political poker.

• • •W hat is happening is some of

S enato r C ase s advisors, plus the pow er-hungry Bill Cahill of Cam ­d en and the peripetic F lorence D w yer of Union, have • decided has happened in Union County? on the basis of th e ir victories T hree out of the fo a r assembly- fast N ovem ber the p a rty is theirs, men the re are Dem ocrats. O nly T he only opposition to th is little ! a stand-ou t like S enato r C rane dream is W alter Jones o f B ergen kept the senato rial spot - and by County. The fact Jones has kep t a handful of votes T he Board of toge ther in the face o f the m ost F reeholders have long since gone trem endous opposition the single ! Democratic, itrong Republican o rganization in j • • •New Jersey m eans nothing to the | C aw and Flo D w yer, who now pow er hungry. They, for reasons , are te lling folks how to win in best know n to them selves, w an t New Jersey , h aven ’t been able the p arty . to te ll th e ir ow n coun ty how to

iha t a big vote g e tte r like Case is sponsoring M itchell would seem to w ipe the slate clean of o ther candidates. B ut does it?

• • aThe o ld sto ry abou t a m an be-

inj; able to elect h im self—b u t not his friend ha* had too m any illustrations to requ ire m ere docu m entation But ta k e the case of K isenhower Tw ice he sw ept the state clean as a w histle . And the next yea r a fte r each o f hts trium phs Bob M eyner w hacked his w ay to the gubernato ria l.

• • •But w hy take it o u t on poor

Ike. L e t's take a look a t Unionunty it i ( ,,n " • -

stem s. A nd it is th e happy h u n t­ing ground of F lo D w yer Re­m em ber. Case has been in Wash ington fo r going on seven years as a U. S. senator. Before tha t he w as an all-w inn ing congress­man Flo D w yer j o t ta W ashing­ton the hard w Sy—by knocking H arrison W illiam s out of the box A pair of cham ps, eh? B ut what

T he big question is: w ill the W ashingtons get it? And the answ er to tha t lies in the b reast of the said W alter Joneti. In the poker gam e now being played the big b lu ff is on. The W ashington s tra teg is ts have Case's thum ping 330,000 vote victory in November. They have the fact tha t Cahill and D w yer won w hile N ixon w as losing. They w ould seem, on the basis of the gures, to have strength . • •—a

A ctually , the only w ay M itchell could get th e nom ination is to • ►luff Jone of iht i .impaign.As it s tands now Jones has the nom ination loeked up. His suppo rt in Bergen, Hudson, Passaic, Mid dlesex. Som erset and O cean Counties insure his nom ination if he d id n ’t get a vote in ano ther county. T he fight, rem em ber, is Ihe p rim ary—and Jones has it won going away.

• # •W hat the W ashington people

have had, of course, is a favorable press Every Ume M itchell has sneezed it has du tifu lly been re ­ported on Page One Th*- f a r t

win. The only R epublican assem b lym an i s IMas C oun ty is one Nelson A. S tam ler. S tam ler doesn 't speak to Ca.se o r Dwyer —which indicates how m uch sup­port he needed from them to win

SetteabrHio Tells Of His Stand

W ashington crow d. T hey’re really stupid. They have put on the line the repu ta tion of C liff Case, a m an afte r th e general election one of the b iggest Republicans in the country. If old grandpop M itchell loses. C ase is sunk With him. If M itchell w ins he w ill have to go against the sharpest cookies in the D em ocratic party .

• • tAnd w hat does M itchell offer?

W ere by some m iracle M itchell elected governor he w ould be 64 by the end of his first term . This is the p ic tu re being pain ted by the brains of W ashington—at a tim e when the D em ocrats have m ade the ir m ark by offering yo u n g , energetic , egg-heads. M it­chell is one of those old-fashioned types. His form al education ended in h igh school. His experience has been as WPA supervisor, labor consu ltan t and the like. He hasn 't been in New Jersey for 20 years.

• * *The ey fcN w i Is d a a r . T i t h

n<* i'i*■•iWi-k al contest here. A handful of W ashington sm art a lecks feel t h i n is a c h w r i f a r a pow er grab. T hey have no money, no organization , nothing —ju s t the desire to g rab hold of som ething. W hat they have g rab ­bed is a red hot poker.

Morris A. Settemtormo, in seek­ing re-election for a fo u rth terra to the Board of Education states his qualilcations and his past r e ­cord for the n ine y ea rs w hile serv ing the people of Lyndhurst. He said: It is my desire to con­tinue to serve our youth and the people of our com m unity. “I am a native of L yndhurst, parent, tax payer.. I am m arried to the form er T heresa Cafaro. Soon w e w ill ce leb ra te o u r tw enty-ftfth w edding anniversary

“We have th ree ch ildren . P h il­lis age 10 a ttend ing St. M ichaels School; Jam es age IS a ttending L yndhurst High School; M orris J r . age 20 g raduated from L ynd­hurst H igh School Ju n e 1058. He He recently re tu rn ed from K orea a fte r a tw o yea r stay w ith the A rm ed Forces. I have been a m em ber of the L yndhurst Vol­un teer F ire D e p t for IR yrs. S e r ­ved as C hief in 1K4. This D ept, is ra ted one of th e h ighest in the S tate. I am a m em ber o f Sacred H eart C hurch ; K nights of C ol­um bus; B.P.O.E. Elks; L yndhurst K iw anis. serv ing as V ocational G uidance C hairm an; C ivility L ab­o r Society fo r IR yrs.. P res. ft y rs.; D wight M orrow Rep. C lub; L ynd­h u rs t C hap ter Unico N ational, S cholarsh ip C hairm an, In th is o r ­ganization under the L eadership of Dr. V.P. Candto.. I w as instru -

ntal m obta in ing tw o $500 00 Scholarships for ou r L yndhurst High School Last Y ear. Last w eek I received approval to g ran t tw o m ore $500.00 Scholarships fo r th is

T a ta l f s y a w h la D ate1s t* 92,875 00

2nd. 85,740 00 3rd. 88.757 00

D ear Editor:O n behalf o f the L yndhurst

G irl Scout A ssociation I’d like to thank you for tbe “ fron t page” spot you gave the photograph and story concerning our v isito r from N ational H eadquarters.

Y our w illing cooperation is g rea tly appreciated .

S incerely,Kvelyn D. S taw icki (M rs. Joseph A. S taw icki) Public R elations C hairm an

To m em bers of Board of Edu­cation, P ast and P resent:

X taka th is m eans of thanking a ll, o f you, th rough yo u r local new spaper fo r the m any cards and w ishes fo r my speedy recov­e ry during my confinem ent in the M em orial H ospital, New York.

I T hey w ere ce rta in ly an inspir­ation and gave me the sp irit to fight. I have re tu rn ed to work.

Union County la s t going dow n m y i*pp rp rl*,ion ,n di h o r u . m . U'i -u i a ■ n u _* [ m a n K S ,

W J T erry ,the D em ocratic d ra in - - in sp ite of j Case, in sp ite o f D wyer.

com ing June. H eaded drives lo? our Paasatc-Bergen Retarded Children. A ll of the above because I have been in terested in Civic A ffairs and our ybuth.

“Listed b^low is a portion of the w ork th a t has been accom p­lished in our School System in the past N ine years w hile serv ing on the Board o f Education:

A ll of our Schools have new lighting system s. New Flooring in most of our schools and o ld fur* n itu re being replaced by new. Installed a ll new ex terio r doors in a ll o f o u r schools and new oil burners replacing coal for all schools. This program was sta rted by Mr. D aniel C oranato w hile he was a school commissioner. Mac­adam ized most of our piay areas. Pain ted a ll schools. Law ns w ere put in fron t of our buildings w hile I w as Building and G rounds C hairm an. T h u cost very little. New and up to date T ex t Books are being purchased every year. We m ust continue th is program if we a re to go forw ard. N ew and up to date science equipm ent pur* chased. If we a re to build a b igger and b e tte r A m erica w e m ust con­tinue. O u r High School M oderni­zation program w as com pleted. This cost $198,000.00. L yndhurst con tribu ted $73,000.00 th e S ta te $123,000.00. This is paid fo r and w e a re under no obligation to th e S tate This w as a arise m ove fo t Lyndhurst. T he High School Ad­dition arhich I w as C hairm an o f was com pleted. Paym ents as foi* lows.

$ 41,750 0034.268 0042.401 00

$118,419.0073.000 00

$ 51,125.0 51.472.00 48,358.08

$463,372 00 T otal P aid $191,41».00 Lynd. S hare $271,953.00S ta te Aid received

“T his w as accom plished on ly a fte r m any m eetings w ith S ta te O fficials a t T renton. This costs m oney and requ ired a consider­ab le am ount of tim e. O u r Bonds

ere sold a t a very low ra te of in terest, unbelieveable to our m any nearby com m unities. This was accom plished because of p ro ­per tim ing and p ro p er handling

“These a re some of the accom ­p lishm ents w hile serv ing for nine years. In 1954 I served as P re s i­den t, also as Vice P residen t, se r­ved on a ll m ajor com m ittees. F in ­ance, Purchasing , Personel, etc. Because of m y 15 years e x p e ri­ence in business w hich is in L yndhurst. I am kep t in L y n d ­hu rs t a ll day T his enables m e to v isit o u r schools ev e ry day. We have one problem , all s ta te o f­ficials prom ise they w ill ge t us m ore S ta te P up il Aid. th is is be­fore they a re elected to office.

The real opera to r in the Wash­ington plo t is Bill C ahill of C am ­den, .second to H udson as the most co rrup t in Am erica, has a com pletely D em ocratic assembly delegation and freeho lder set-up It w en t overw helm ingly for K en. nedy in the p res iden tia l—although C ahill w on strongly.

• • •W hat accom odations Cahill

made w ith th e D em ocrats who w ere o therw ise all w inning in his area is unknow n up here. B ut w hat m akes him feel th a t a Re publican cand ida te o f h is selec­tion w ill be sa tisfac to ry to the Cam den voters w hen he has been unable to m ake them th ink Re­publican on th e m unicipal and county level?

• • s 'One thing can be said for the

NOW OPEN SERVICEREPAIRMEN WELCOME

AER-O APPLIANCE PARTSSpecializing in new replacement parts

for all home appliances AU Maket And Models

360 PATERSON AVE. EAST RUTHERFORD WEfejtar 3-3170

Open every evening till 7 P.M.

then they com pletely forget. H we a re to continue forw ard, and look fo r s b rig h t fu tu re fo r ou r students and our people, w e m ust have additional money and not ta lk .”

M r and Mrs. H arry Formica. 718 F ilth A venue, en tertained a t

fam ily d inne r on Sunday, in ce lebration o f Mrs. Form ica’s b irthday . G uests w ere Mr. and Mrs Joseph S hortino and child­ren. Joanne and Iainda, of G ar- field, snd Mr. and Mrs. S tephen Form ica and children. S tephen and Ellen, of Lyndhurst.

Chiropractic effectively treats the following conditions:

Nervous Disorders

NeuritisBurtitUDigestive Disorder*

Dr. L Ackerman

Good Friend Leaves0 * 0 mi South Bergen's outstanding

M m m , the Rev. John 11. Sansom. rector of It. P t a l ' l Epiacopal Church, North Arling- l a ^ Jg r 19 year*, leaves, us to assume the p a d ml Church of the Incarnation in Cor- jm Ckriati, Texas.

Mr. Season*! work Will he long reiuem- hirrd A a active leader in the community, he waa the spark of many movements for civic betterm ent. As a member of the L ibrary Board of North Arlington for eleven y e a n b e perf ormed iavahsahla functions for lha iSfldi r of the community

h I* the le t o f the eiergy to visit for a (h m a a d then asove on. S 'h ile they v is it (Say saw w ell. O ftea their imeeeaaora reap

Bergen's GrowthWhy Bergen County thrives is indicated

in the most recent compilation of the numlier of dwelling units by ihe state. From

to 1959 -477,716 units were built — with 67.6.->6 of them in Bergen. Paramus alone issueil 1.18*) of them.

Middlesex followed with 49,451. Union had 40,.'t65.

New- Neighbort oniing u[Mm us practically uiiawarr*, we

in South Bergen have a new and vital neigh­bor. Il is tlie Transcontinental Pipe Com­pany which has received publicity from time to time as it acquired rights to stretch its tines clear up from Texas into the teem* ing metropolis of New York.

— Through the huge pipeline which courses

A s t o B i a d t

Delivery^ S fin e fear laal tank Mled.

. W «a * e “Dagra, DajT *atem XeaS hem aa a n a worriaa.

2 4 Hr. Oil la r a e r ServiceBaaidaa aall ng CM! — we alas (arvica Oil Burners

Beea, alaa, we baBere la dotng Ihe Job right Wa rwid.r ■ ^ • e «a*a>d the eleek (Sundaya and holidaya taaluded». ■ ■ .................... ........ ........

Oar toucha arrive at yaar hame equipped ta aarvics fcade al aaakae and aodale af ril faaneea.

ipleia

KELLERINOfNOMfee CO.

Fuel Oil — OH B u rn e ri —

Lyndhw i f, N *w J t r w y

WEbster 9-0060PistrihnlasM G issa l

At PAUL’S Hobby and Sports Shop

PAU L’S it the Skiing for the Metrofmlitan A I ’a u t i utoclu the be$t.

W hile Slag - Hummel and Kranconia Ski (Nothing. Sweaters - Parkaa

Stretch Pants - (.loves.Hurt n Northland Metal N Wood SK IS

S tf Pslts WaxBindings Gogglss

Ski Bssti Car Tsp GanisrsMan’s Woaen’s

Children’s

ICE SKATESFigure and Hockey

Hobby and Sport Shop

306 Union Avenue GE 8-0192 RutherfordHour-: 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Monday thru Friday Saturday 9 to 6