Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of...

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_, £*> Today 16,475 VOL. S3, NO. 129 Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second Clan Matter at the'Poit Office at Red Bank. N. J.. under tba Act o( March 3. 1879. RED BANK, N. J., TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1961 7c PER COPY 3Se PER WEEK BY CARRIER BAC.V Appointments Split Council In Borough NEW SHREWSBURY - Both fides came out of their corners slugging yesterday when the borough's governing body organ- ized for 1961 with three Demo- crats and four Republicans as members. Two newly-elected councilmen, Republican Lawrence Malone and Democrat Robert Davidson, re- placed retiring Councilmen Clar- ence Unterberg and Robert Mc- Call, both Republicans. Thus, Democratic Mayor Karl K. Baron presides over a coun- cil in which the Republicans have a 4-2 majority. By a vote of four to two the council turned down the mayor's appointment of Christiana Wil- liams to the Local Assistance Board for a four-year term. Mrs. Williams, a Democratic committeewoman, would have re- placed Beulah Reevy, a Repub- lican committeewoman. The council also split its vote on election of Herbert L. Willett, 3d, as president of the body, and on the appointment of council committees. Demos Opposed In both cases Democrats Davidson and Daniel E, Ren- ihav voted nay. Republicans Willett, Malone, Donald Cole and John Lemon, Jr., voted yes on council ap- pointments. Councilman Willett abstained in his own election as council president and the three other Republicans voted for it. Mayor Baron, after appoint- ments were ratified, protested that the Republican majority had "disregarded the mandate of the people of New Shrews bury." (See COUNCIL, Pg. 2) Council Post For Hensler Is Rumored SHREWSBURY — Charles I. Hensler of Shady La., chairman of the Zoning Board of Adjust- ment is reported to be in line lor appointment to the Borough Council. His appointment is expected to be announced Thursday night at this borough's organization meet- ing, which was postponed from yesterday in respect to Council- man Edgar W, Heller, Jr., who died New Year's Day. Mr. Hensler will fill the va- cancy caused by the election of Councilman James W. Ely to mayor. Mr. Bly's term as coun cilman has one year to run. The selection of Mr. Hensler h understood to have the unani- mous approval of the local County Republican Executive Committee. A successor to Mr. Heller's post will not be named by Mayor elect Bly until later in the year, it is understood. Frederick Forrest Industrial Unit Post To Forrest NEW SHREWSBURY - Fred erick Forrest, Knollwood Dr. was appointed director of the New Shrewsbury Industrial Con gress yesterday by Mayor Karl K. Baron. He succeeds Robert L. David- son, who served in that post for two years ending yesterday, when he took office as a mem ber of the Borough Council. Mr. Forrest is vice presideni and general manager of Excel Automatic Products, Newark. Be- fore he came to that post he was personnel and labor relations di rector of Horsman Dolls, Inc. Trenton. From 1946 to 1952 he was in dustriat real estate sales repre- sentative for Leslie Blau, Inc. and Lnuis Schlesinger Co., both of Newark. Mr. Forrest has a bachelor of arts degree from Rutgers, and has been a member of the New Jersey Bar since 1942. He was a founder of the New Shrewsbury Civic Association. Before moving to this borough he was a member of the Red Bank Planning Board, under the administration of Mayor Kathar- ine Elkus White. He has been an active member of the Indus- trial Congress since its incep- tion in 1958. Mr. Davidson endorsed the ap- pointment of his successor, point- ing out that Mr. Forrest has an unusually broad background in industrial realty, law and man- agement. "Fred has the imagination and drive needed to hold the pro- gress made to date and register new gains," Mr. Davidson said. The function of the Industrial Congress is to attract new in- dustrial ratables to the bor- ough. Blanda Named Mayor RARITAN TOWNSHIP-Town ship Committe # eman Philip J Blanda, Jr., a' Democrat, wa: elected mayor at the governing body's re-organization meeting yesterday. The vote was unanimous. At 31, Mr. Blanda is one of the youngest mayors in the state. An attorney, he has lived in the township for 3J4 years. Mr. Blanda's first venture in- to politics was a year ago, when he was elected to the governing body. During the past year, he served as president of the Board of Health and chairman of the public utilities committee. Cut Costs In his inaugural address yes- terday, he called on all township departments to "pare expendi- tures and eliminate unnecessary spending." "And," he said, "I trust that other township agencies, includ- ing those over which the govern ing body has no direct control will make the same effort." The mayor said later that he was referring, in particular, to the Board of Education, and its proposed 1961-62 budget of $1,890,- 035, which, if approved in its present form, would hike the tax rate an estimated $2.96 per $100 assessed valuation. The governing body will meet with the school board later this month, he said, to urge the board "to revise its budget in an effort to hold the line on taxes and keep the rate within the realm of the taxpayers' ability to pay." "The Township Committee wil attempt to hold the line as far as (See BLANDA Pg. 2) President Said Hopeful In Tense Laos Situation Dittmar Is New Mayor In Atlantic ATLANTIC TOWNSHIP - George J. Dittmar, Jr., was sworn in as mayor at yesterday's Township Committee reorganiza- tion meeting. Sworn in to his second three- year term was Committeeman Joseph L. Moreau, Jr. Mr. Dittmar succeeds Commit tceman William Buck as mayo of the all-Republican three-man committee. The governing body annually rotates the mayor's post. Also sworn in was Assessor Joseph Crine. The committee made the fol- lowing reappointments for the year: Richard R. Stout, attorney; Leslie H. Douglass, Planning Board; Warwick H. Halbrook Board of Adjustment; Mrs. Ann Wylie, treasurer, deputy clerk welfare director, and violations clerk; Mrs. Ann Bobzin, coun clerk; Joseph J. Seaman, audi- tor; Fred Dressier, zoning of- ficer; Howard Quabeck, building inspector, and Raymond English health officer. Marlboro Man Killed One Auto Death Reported In County MARLBORO — A father of four about to turn his car into his driveway Saturday morning when it was hit from behind was the county's only highway fatality over the long New Year's week- end. The death of Robert Clayton, 27, of Rt, 79, was the only auto death reported in the county be- tween Friday night and this morn- ing. State Police nt Howell Barrncks reported Mr. Clayton was turning Ms car to the. left when it was struck from the rear by a vehi- cle driven by Wriyno Grinrlp, 17, nf Colts Neck Rd., Colls Neck, a Ll, S. Air Force recruit. In the state, seven persons died in traffic during the week-end and a hunter was killed in a shooting accident. The National Safety Council had predicted nine holiday traf- fic fatalities in the state. 150 Less The nation's traffic death toll for the week-end, some 150 less than at Christmas, today ap- peared likely to equal or surpass the pre-holiday estimate of 340. The count for the 78-hour holi- day period ended at midnight yesterday. At that lime deaths in traffic accidents reported num- bered 333. However, as in all: major holiday traffic surveys, fi- nal figures are not reported for several hours after the midnight deadline. The death rate eased during the closing hours of the week-end, ap parently averting what safety ex ports feared would be a record for a three-day celebration of the holiday. The record toll was 374 traffic fatalities a year ago. This New Year's holiday also was marred by scores of other accidental deaths, including 63 in fires and 77 in miscellaneous mis haps for nn over-all totnl of -173. The totals compared to fi3 fire deaths and 7G killed in miscel- laneous accidents a year ago (See MARLBORO, Pg. 2) Report Key City Retaken VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) —Prince Boun Oum's gov- ernment announced today that its forces recaptured the key northeastern city of Xiengkhouang from pro- Communist rebels last night. Information Minister Bouavan Norasing said the city was re- taken by a battalion of para troopers that jumped 3!4 miles east of Xiengkhouang. Norasing's announcement was the government's first admission that the rebels • had taken Xiengkhouang. The minister said yesterday troops loyal to his pro- Western government were hold- ing out at Ban Ban, 3D miles northeast of Xiengkhouang, and that as far as he knew the key city had not fallen to the rebels who last week seized the strate- gic Plaine Des Jarres, with its cross-country highway, and an airfield outside Xienkhouang. Ambassadors of the eight na- tions forming the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) met in Bangkok, capital of neighboring Thailand, with SEA- TO Secretary-General P o t e Sarasin. The ambassadors, who included U. Alexis Johnson of the United States, took no action. Sarasin told newsman SEATO has circumstantial evidence of foreign communist intervention in the fighting but the Laotian government already i had dis- closed the evidence he cited — airdrops by Russian planes to the rebels and two captives'the Laotian government said were North Vietnamese troops. Western observers in Vientiane maintained serious doubts about (See RETAKEN, Pg. 2) MIDDLETOWN COMMITTiEMEN — Township Cleric Howard W. Roberts, center, yes- terday administered oath of office to John T. Lav/ley Jr., left and Ernest Kavalek, right, to serve on Middletown Township Committee. Mr. Lawley was reappointed mayor. Mr. Kavalek replaces Elmer Hesse who did not run for re-election. Both are Republicans. Lawley Named Again Middletown Shade Tree Unit Is Appointed MIDDLETOWN-John T. Law- ley, Jr. was named to his second term as mayor yesterday. The action came at the reorgan- ization meeting of the Township Committee. Mayor Lawley was sworn in for his third term on the govern- ing body and Ernest G. Kavalek took the oath of office for his first term. Both were elected in November. Mr. Kavalek replaces Elmer Hesse who did not seek re-elec- tion. In a prepared statement, May- or Lawley listed the completion Congress Opens Democrats Demanding Changes WASHINGTON ( A P ) - T h e 87th Congress opens today with Demo- cratic insurgents in both Senate and House demanding changes in the way their business is run. Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., had a resolution ready for a Demo- cratic caucus before the noon opening session. The resolution provides for filling all vacancies Christmas Eve Crash Victim Dies NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township Christmas Eve, died in Fitkin Hospital this morning. State Police at the Howell barracks said Mr. Wacyra's pick- truck was westbound on School Road East, Marlboro, when it collided with a car driven north by Edwin S. Allen, 15 Westside Ave., Red Bank, on Dutch Lane Rd. Mr. Wacyra was partially knocked from the struck, police said, and dragged along the road for some distance. He was ad- mitted to Fitkin with multiple cuts anj bruises, mainly of the head. Both scheduled drivers had been to appear Jan. 21 on the policy and steering com- mittees by direct vote of senators. The House controversy in- volved the stranglehold the con- servative rules committee has on what legislation can be con- sidered by the House. Speaker Sam Raybum of Texas yesterday agreed that this road block to many liberal measures congress opens gp 1 lance must be broken down—if neces- sary by purging Rep. William Colmer, D-Miss., from the com- mittee. Colmer, who did not support President-elect John F. Kennedy in the campaign, and chairman Howard W. Smith, D-Va., often have voted with four conservative Republican committee members to block the kind of legislation Kennedy •'- "'-••'"—' «n support. See Resistance It was not at all certain the House Democratic caucus would knock Colmer off the committee, however, or that the entire House would sustain the action if it did. If enough Republicans join southern Democrats, the move could be defeated. Gore's resolution in the Senate caucus seemed likely to be resist- ed by Sen. Mike Mansfield, D Mont, wiio is scheduled to be elected by the caucus as majority leader, succeedine Sen. Lvndon B. Johnson of Texas. Johnson was exnected to resign immedi atelv after being sworn in for a new Senate term, in order to be- of the new administrative build- ing, completion of sidewalks for Leonardville Rd., drainage and sewer studies and acquisition of new ratables as the prime goals for the new year. The committee also called upon residents to consider other means of raising revenues besides the property tax to finance increased services "which are needed and required." The committee asked residents to study other means of revenue (sales tax and income tax) and advise the state Legislature of their feelings on the subject. Cite Accomplishments The committee also listed the realignment of the township voting districts as another goal. The new zoning ordinance, start of work on the administration building, drainage studies, and operation of the landfill were list- ed as major accomplishments of the past year. With the exception of one change on the Planning Board and appointment of a five-man Shade Tree Commission, munici- pal appointments remained the same. Committeeman Paul J. Pandol- fi was named to replace J. Craw- ford Compton on the Planning Board. Mr. Compton said committee work and other business pres- sures forced him to drop the plan- ning post. before Magistrate Earl Harring- c o m e v i c e presidcnt Jan . , 0 . ton. Mr. Wacyra was charged with going through a stop sign without due caution, and Mr. Allen was charged with failing to yield the right of way to a car that had entered the inter- section. Resolution Be it resolved by the Mayor and Council of the Borough of Rum- son that the time and place for the regular meetings of the Gov- erning Body be and the same are hereby fixed as the second and fourth Thursdays of each an& every month, at the hour of 8:30 o'clock p. m., at the Coun- cil Chamber of Memorial Bor- ough Hall, and that the Clerk be and is hereby authorized and di- rected to publish notice thereof in The Red Bank Register for one publication. ALBERT A. KERR, JR., Borough Administrator •Advertisement Gore predicted acceptance of his resolutioon bv the caucus. Mansfield said onlv that he was studying the proposal. INDEX Amusement* 12 Births 2 Jim Sishop 6 Bridge 5 Classified 17 Comics 16 Crossword Puale 547 Editorials S Hcrblock 8 Kilty Kelly 9 Movie Timetable 12 Obituaries 2 Sylvia Porter Radio-Television Social 6 12 ft George Sokolsky 6 Sports 14-15 W. S. White 6 Members of the Shade Tree unit, formed last year, are; Robert B. Clark, John Duryea, icsrge A. Hoffmire, Jr., Jess Jor- dan and William E. Hewitt. The following re-appointments were made: Lawrence A. Carton, Jr., attor- ney; J. Francis Rauch,\treas urcr; Earl K. Eastmond, tax searcher; Howard W. Roberts, as- sessment searcher; Dr. Marc Krohn, physician; William C. Johnson, Planning Board, and Walter Bills local assistance board. Other Appointments Also Whitney Crowell, Zoning Board of Adjustment; Wyndham Gary, Planning Board; James A. Me Carthy, auditor; Mrs. Gladys Her, five-year term. Library Commission; David W. Simpson, building inspector; Newton A. Mallet, assistant building inspec- tor (full time post); Charles Schnoor ( and Paul Tarnow, Comp- ton Creek Commission; Frank DeMaria: Recreation Commis- sion, and Charles J. Kupper, en- gineer. Richard W. Seuffert was re- named director of Civil Defense and Disaster Control; Michael J. Mahoney, deputy director, and Robert Seeley, Chief of Radio Communications. Members of the Mosquito Com- mission will be John A. Murray, chairman; Calvin G. Ohlsen Henry Karl, Robert H. Yard and Henry W. Klitsch. (See LAWLEY Page 2) May Lose Post Carling Reappointment in Doubt EATONTOWN-Leo J. Carling, chairman of the Planning Board, will not be reappointed to that body, according to present plans of the mayor and Borough Coun- cil, it was learned from reliable sources yesterday. The question is: When does Mr. Carling's term on the board expire? No one seems to know. Mr. Carling said last night: "Some think it expires this year; some don't. I don't know, since 1 have never paid any at- tention to length of term." The chairman said he had not been officially informed of plans not to reappoint him, and there- fore had no comment at that time. "Certainly, if I find I am no longer a member of the Planning Board, I will have something to say," he added. 10 Years Mr. Carling has be?n a mem- ber of the body for 10 years. He is also a member of the board of directors of the American So- ciety of Planning Officials and an associate director and past president of the New Jersey Federation of Official Planning Boards. In the recent past he has pre- sided over the formulation and adoption of a new borough zon- ng code, over the construction of a master plan which has not however been officially adopted yet—and over many t long and loud controversy on planning mat- ters. Eatontown sources say that during Leo J. Carling these years a certain amount of public opinion against the board chairman has grown up. He also, however, has a num- ber of ardent supporters among borough residents, observers note. No Appointment No appointment for a six-year term on the Planning Board was made at yesterday's organization meeting of council, pending re- search to see whether the Carling term actually falls vacant this year. The mimeographed list of new appointments, however, oears the name nf Bruce J. Mangan for the (See CARLING, Pg. 2) Pacific Forces Alerted WASHINGTON (AP) — President Eisenhower to- day was reported con- vinced that fast and clear action is the best way. to stop the Communists be- fore they become irretrievably committed to a course of aggres- sion in Laos. And the President was said to be still hopeful, despite the seri- ousness of the situation in Laos, of a solution short of military intervention by outside powers. This reasoning was given in connection with the series of U. S. government announcements over the holiday week-end while top officials huddled over reports of Communist advances in Laos. On Saturday, after word ar- rived here of what the Laotian government said was an inva- sion by seven battalions from neighboring Communist North Viet Nam, Eisenhower met with his top diplomatic, military and intelligence advisers. That afternoon the United States issued • public warning to North Viet Nam, Red China and other Communist powers not to intervene in behalf of the Red Pathet Lao rebels. It also re- erred pointedly to the U. S. ob- igation in the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization for defense of the area. Council Meeting On Sunday the United States called for a meeting in Bangkok of the council of SEATO, whose memben include the United States, Britain, France, Aus- tralia, New Zealand, the Philip- pines, Thailand and Pakistan. Yesterday- the Pentagon an- nounced — w i t h White House backing—orders to step up the readiness of U. S. forces in the Pacific, including fast-moving airlift capability, "in view of the present situation in Laos." Press Secretary James C. Ha- gerty said Eisenhower had ap- proved the move "in light of the SEATO obligations." He spoke after the President had finished another White House session with Secretary of State Christian A. Herter, Undersecre- tary Livingston T. Merchant, acting Secretary of Defense James H. Douglas, Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, and Central (See PRESIDENT, Pg. 2) Garrity And Stout Named By Split Vote OCEAN TOWNSHIP — Demo- cratic moves to replace Republi- can Mayor James J. Garrity and Borough Attorney Richard R. Stout, Monmouth County's state senator, met with predicted de- feat yesterday at the Township C o m m i 11 e e's re-organization meeting. The mayor, Sen Stout, and all other incumbent officeholders, won reappointment on a 3-2 vote on the strength of Republican majority control of the com- mittee. Democrats John J. Reilly and Donald V. Crosta, whose elec- tions last November were con- sidered major political upsets ever Republican organization in- cumbents, proposed a number of changes. But all were defeated. The Democrats sought parties. larly to abolish the office of assistant township attorney, held by Mr. Stout's law partner, Sidney J. Hertz, But they failed. Tenure of the new township committee may be shortlived. With backing of both parties, a study to determine whether the township could profit from a new form of government is dua to be made this year. Voters will decide at a public referendum whether to adopt whatever recommendations the study group submits. Notice The reorganization meeting of the Borough of Shrewsbury wil! be held Thursday, Jan. 5, 1961, at 8 p. m. at the Broad Street School Auditorium. The first reg- ular meeting of the Mayor and Council will be the thirdi Tues- day, Jan. 17, laiil. ORTRUDE C. VANVLIET Borough Clerk —Advertisement.

Transcript of Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of...

Page 1: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

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Today

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VOL. S3, NO. 129 Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad a i Second Clan Matterat the'Poit Office at Red Bank. N. J.. under tba Act o( March 3. 1879. RED BANK, N. J., TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1961 7c PER COPY 3Se PER WEEK

BY CARRIERBAC.V

AppointmentsSplit CouncilIn Borough

NEW SHREWSBURY - Bothfides came out of their cornersslugging yesterday when theborough's governing body organ-ized for 1961 with three Demo-crats and four Republicans asmembers.

Two newly-elected councilmen,Republican Lawrence Malone andDemocrat Robert Davidson, re-placed retiring Councilmen Clar-ence Unterberg and Robert Mc-Call, both Republicans.

Thus, Democratic Mayor KarlK. Baron presides over a coun-cil in which the Republicans havea 4-2 majority.

By a vote of four to two thecouncil turned down the mayor'sappointment of Christiana Wil-liams to the Local AssistanceBoard for a four-year term.

Mrs. Williams, a Democraticcommitteewoman, would have re-placed Beulah Reevy, a Repub-lican committeewoman.

The council also split its voteon election of Herbert L. Willett,3d, as president of the body, andon the appointment of councilcommittees.

Demos OpposedIn b o t h cases Democrats

Davidson and Daniel E, Ren-ihav voted nay.

Republicans Willett, Malone,Donald Cole and John Lemon,Jr., voted yes on council ap-pointments.

Councilman Willett abstained inhis own election as councilpresident and the three otherRepublicans voted for it.

Mayor Baron, after appoint-ments were ratified, protestedthat the Republican majorityhad "disregarded the mandateof the people of New Shrewsbury."

(See COUNCIL, Pg. 2)

Council PostFor HenslerIs Rumored

SHREWSBURY — Charles I.Hensler of Shady La., chairmanof the Zoning Board of Adjust-ment is reported to be in linelor appointment to the BoroughCouncil.

His appointment is expected tobe announced Thursday night atthis borough's organization meet-ing, which was postponed fromyesterday in respect to Council-man Edgar W, Heller, Jr., whodied New Year's Day.

Mr. Hensler will fill the va-cancy caused by the election ofCouncilman James W. Ely tomayor. Mr. Bly's term as councilman has one year to run.

The selection of Mr. Henslerh understood to have the unani-mous approval of the localCounty Republican ExecutiveCommittee.

A successor to Mr. Heller'spost will not be named by Mayorelect Bly until later in the year,it is understood.

Frederick Forrest

IndustrialUnit PostTo Forrest

NEW SHREWSBURY - Frederick Forrest, Knollwood Dr.was appointed director of theNew Shrewsbury Industrial Congress yesterday by Mayor KarlK. Baron.

He succeeds Robert L. David-son, who served in that post fortwo years ending yesterday,when he took office as a member of the Borough Council.

Mr. Forrest is vice presideniand general manager of ExcelAutomatic Products, Newark. Be-fore he came to that post he waspersonnel and labor relations director of Horsman Dolls, Inc.Trenton.

From 1946 to 1952 he was industriat real estate sales repre-sentative for Leslie Blau, Inc.and Lnuis Schlesinger Co., bothof Newark.

Mr. Forrest has a bachelor ofarts degree from Rutgers, andhas been a member of the NewJersey Bar since 1942.

He was a founder of the NewShrewsbury Civic Association.Before moving to this boroughhe was a member of the RedBank Planning Board, under theadministration of Mayor Kathar-ine Elkus White. He has beenan active member of the Indus-trial Congress since its incep-tion in 1958.

Mr. Davidson endorsed the ap-pointment of his successor, point-ing out that Mr. Forrest has anunusually broad background inindustrial realty, law and man-agement.

"Fred has the imagination anddrive needed to hold the pro-gress made to date and registernew gains," Mr. Davidson said.

The function of the IndustrialCongress is to attract new in-dustrial ratables to the bor-ough.

BlandaNamedMayorRARITAN TOWNSHIP-Town

ship Committe#eman Philip JBlanda, Jr., a' Democrat, wa:elected mayor at the governingbody's re-organization meetingyesterday.

The vote was unanimous.At 31, Mr. Blanda is one of

the youngest mayors in the state.An attorney, he has lived in the

township for 3J4 years.Mr. Blanda's first venture in-

to politics was a year ago, whenhe was elected to the governingbody. During the past year, heserved as president of the Boardof Health and chairman of thepublic utilities committee.

Cut CostsIn his inaugural address yes-

terday, he called on all townshipdepartments to "pare expendi-tures and eliminate unnecessaryspending."

"And," he said, "I trust thatother township agencies, includ-ing those over which the governing body has no direct controlwill make the same effort."

The mayor said later that hewas referring, in particular, tothe Board of Education, and itsproposed 1961-62 budget of $1,890,-035, which, if approved in itspresent form, would hike the taxrate an estimated $2.96 per $100assessed valuation.

The governing body will meetwith the school board later thismonth, he said, to urge theboard "to revise its budget in aneffort to hold the line on taxesand keep the rate within therealm of the taxpayers' ability topay."

"The Township Committee wilattempt to hold the line as far as

(See BLANDA Pg. 2)

President Said HopefulIn Tense Laos Situation

Dittmar IsNew MayorIn Atlantic

ATLANTIC TOWNSHIP -George J. Dittmar, Jr., wassworn in as mayor at yesterday'sTownship Committee reorganiza-tion meeting.

Sworn in to his second three-year term was CommitteemanJoseph L. Moreau, Jr.

Mr. Dittmar succeeds Committceman William Buck as mayoof the all-Republican three-mancommittee.

The governing body annuallyrotates the mayor's post.

Also sworn in was AssessorJoseph Crine.

The committee made the fol-lowing reappointments for theyear:

Richard R. Stout, attorney;Leslie H. Douglass, PlanningBoard; Warwick H. HalbrookBoard of Adjustment; Mrs. AnnWylie, treasurer, deputy clerkwelfare director, and violationsclerk; Mrs. Ann Bobzin, counclerk; Joseph J. Seaman, audi-tor; Fred Dressier, zoning of-ficer; Howard Quabeck, buildinginspector, and Raymond Englishhealth officer.

Marlboro Man KilledOne Auto Death Reported In County

MARLBORO — A father of fourabout to turn his car into hisdriveway Saturday morning whenit was hit from behind was thecounty's only highway fatalityover the long New Year's week-end.

The death of Robert Clayton,27, of Rt, 79, was the only autodeath reported in the county be-tween Friday night and this morn-ing.

State Police nt Howell Barrncksreported Mr. Clayton was turningMs car to the. left when it wasstruck from the rear by a vehi-cle driven by Wriyno Grinrlp, 17,nf Colts Neck Rd., Colls Neck, aLl, S. Air Force recruit.

In the state, seven persons diedin traffic during the week-endand a hunter was killed in ashooting accident.

The National Safety Councilhad predicted nine holiday traf-fic fatalities in the state.

150 LessThe nation's traffic death toll

for the week-end, some 150 lessthan at Christmas, today ap-peared likely to equal or surpassthe pre-holiday estimate of 340.

The count for the 78-hour holi-day period ended at midnightyesterday. At that lime deathsin traffic accidents reported num-bered 333. However, as in all:major holiday traffic surveys, fi-

nal figures are not reported forseveral hours after the midnightdeadline.

The death rate eased during theclosing hours of the week-end, apparently averting what safety exports feared would be a recordfor a three-day celebration of theholiday. The record toll was 374traffic fatalities a year ago.

This New Year's holiday alsowas marred by scores of otheraccidental deaths, including 63 infires and 77 in miscellaneous mishaps for nn over-all totnl of -173.

The totals compared to fi3 firedeaths and 7G killed in miscel-laneous accidents a year ago

(See MARLBORO, Pg. 2)

ReportKey CityRetaken

VIENTIANE, Laos (AP)—Prince Boun Oum's gov-ernment announced todaythat its forces recapturedthe key northeastern cityof Xiengkhouang from pro-Communist rebels last night.

Information Minister BouavanNorasing said the city was re-taken by a battalion of paratroopers that jumped 3!4 mileseast of Xiengkhouang.

Norasing's announcement wasthe government's first admissionthat the rebels • had takenXiengkhouang. The minister saidyesterday troops loyal to his pro-Western government were hold-ing out at Ban Ban, 3D milesnortheast of Xiengkhouang, andthat as far as he knew the keycity had not fallen to the rebelswho last week seized the strate-gic Plaine Des Jarres, with itscross-country highway, and anairfield outside Xienkhouang.

Ambassadors of the eight na-tions forming the Southeast AsiaTreaty Organization (SEATO)met in Bangkok, capital ofneighboring Thailand, with SEA-TO Secretary-General P o t eSarasin. The ambassadors, whoincluded U. Alexis Johnson of theUnited States, took no action.

Sarasin told newsman SEATOhas circumstantial evidence offoreign communist interventionin the fighting but the Laotiangovernment already i had dis-closed the evidence he cited —airdrops by Russian planes tothe rebels and two captives'theLaotian government said wereNorth Vietnamese troops.

Western observers in Vientianemaintained serious doubts about

(See RETAKEN, Pg. 2)

MIDDLETOWN COMMITTiEMEN — Township Cleric Howard W. Roberts, center, yes-terday administered oath of office to John T. Lav/ley Jr., left and Ernest Kavalek,right, to serve on Middletown Township Committee. Mr. Lawley was reappointedmayor. Mr. Kavalek replaces Elmer Hesse who did not run for re-election. Both areRepublicans.

Lawley Named AgainMiddletown Shade Tree Unit Is Appointed

MIDDLETOWN-John T. Law-ley, Jr. was named to his secondterm as mayor yesterday.

The action came at the reorgan-ization meeting of the TownshipCommittee.

Mayor Lawley was sworn infor his third term on the govern-ing body and Ernest G. Kavalektook the oath of office for hisfirst term.

Both were elected in November.Mr. Kavalek replaces Elmer

Hesse who did not seek re-elec-tion.

In a prepared statement, May-or Lawley listed the completion

Congress OpensDemocrats Demanding ChangesWASHINGTON (AP)-The 87th

Congress opens today with Demo-cratic insurgents in both Senateand House demanding changes inthe way their business is run.

Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., hada resolution ready for a Demo-cratic caucus before the noonopening session. The resolutionprovides for filling all vacancies

ChristmasEve CrashVictim Dies

NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra,71, of Dutch Lane Rd., FreeholdTownship, injured in a two-caraccident in Marlboro TownshipChristmas Eve, died in FitkinHospital this morning.

State Police at the Howellbarracks said Mr. Wacyra's pick-

truck was westbound onSchool Road East, Marlboro,when it collided with a cardriven north by Edwin S. Allen,15 Westside Ave., Red Bank, onDutch Lane Rd.

Mr. Wacyra was partiallyknocked from the struck, policesaid, and dragged along the roadfor some distance. He was ad-mitted to Fitkin with multiplecuts anj bruises, mainly of thehead.

B o t hscheduled

drivers had beento appear Jan. 21

on the policy and steering com-mittees by direct vote ofsenators.

The House controversy in-volved the stranglehold the con-servative rules committee has onwhat legislation can be con-sidered by the House.

Speaker Sam Raybum of Texasyesterday agreed that this roadblock to many liberal measurescongress opens gp 1 lancemust be broken down—if neces-sary by purging Rep. WilliamColmer, D-Miss., from the com-mittee.

Colmer, who did not supportPresident-elect John F. Kennedyin the campaign, and chairmanHoward W. Smith, D-Va., oftenhave voted with four conservativeRepublican committee membersto block the kind of legislationKennedy •'- "'-••'"—' «n support.

See ResistanceIt was not at all certain the

House Democratic caucus wouldknock Colmer off the committee,however, or that the entire Housewould sustain the action if it did.If enough Republicans joinsouthern Democrats, the movecould be defeated.

Gore's resolution in the Senatecaucus seemed likely to be resist-ed by Sen. Mike Mansfield, DMont, wiio is scheduled to beelected by the caucus as majorityleader, succeedine Sen. LvndonB. Johnson of Texas. Johnsonwas exnected to resign immediatelv after being sworn in for anew Senate term, in order to be-

of the new administrative build-ing, completion of sidewalks forLeonardville Rd., drainage andsewer studies and acquisition ofnew ratables as the prime goalsfor the new year.

The committee also called uponresidents to consider other meansof raising revenues besides theproperty tax to finance increasedservices "which are needed andrequired."

The committee asked residentsto study other means of revenue(sales tax and income tax) andadvise the state Legislature oftheir feelings on the subject.

Cite AccomplishmentsThe committee also listed the

realignment of the townshipvoting districts as another goal.

The new zoning ordinance, startof work on the administrationbuilding, drainage studies, andoperation of the landfill were list-ed as major accomplishments ofthe past year.

With the exception of onechange on the Planning Boardand appointment of a five-manShade Tree Commission, munici-pal appointments remained thesame.

Committeeman Paul J. Pandol-fi was named to replace J. Craw-ford Compton on the PlanningBoard.

Mr. Compton said committeework and other business pres-sures forced him to drop the plan-ning post.

before Magistrate Earl Harring- c o m e v i c e p r e s i d c n t J a n . ,0 .ton. Mr. Wacyra was chargedwith going through a stop signwithout due caution, and Mr.Allen was charged with failingto yield the right of way to acar that had entered the inter-section.

ResolutionBe it resolved by the Mayor andCouncil of the Borough of Rum-son that the time and place forthe regular meetings of the Gov-erning Body be and the sameare hereby fixed as the secondand fourth Thursdays of each an&every month, at the hour of8:30 o'clock p. m., at the Coun-cil Chamber of Memorial Bor-ough Hall, and that the Clerk beand is hereby authorized and di-rected to publish notice thereofin The Red Bank Register for onepublication.

ALBERT A. KERR, JR.,Borough Administrator

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Gore predicted acceptance ofhis resolutioon bv the caucus.Mansfield said onlv that he wasstudying the proposal.

INDEXAmusement* 12Births 2Jim Sishop 6Bridge 5Classified 17Comics 16Crossword Puale 5 4 7Editorials SHcrblock 8Kilty Kelly 9Movie Timetable 12Obituaries 2Sylvia PorterRadio-TelevisionSocial

612ft

George Sokolsky 6Sports 14-15W. S. White 6

Members of the Shade Treeunit, formed last year, are;

Robert B. Clark, John Duryea,icsrge A. Hoffmire, Jr., Jess Jor-

dan and William E. Hewitt.The following re-appointments

were made:Lawrence A. Carton, Jr., attor-

ney; J. Francis Rauch,\treasurcr; Earl K. Eastmond, taxsearcher; Howard W. Roberts, as-sessment searcher; Dr. MarcKrohn, physician; William C.Johnson, Planning Board, andWalter Bills local assistanceboard.

Other AppointmentsAlso Whitney Crowell, Zoning

Board of Adjustment; WyndhamGary, Planning Board; James A.Me Carthy, auditor; Mrs. GladysHer, five-year term. LibraryCommission; David W. Simpson,building inspector; Newton A.Mallet, assistant building inspec-tor (full time post); CharlesSchnoor(and Paul Tarnow, Comp-ton Creek Commission; FrankDeMaria: Recreation Commis-sion, and Charles J. Kupper, en-gineer.

Richard W. Seuffert was re-named director of Civil Defenseand Disaster Control; Michael J.Mahoney, deputy director, andRobert Seeley, Chief of RadioCommunications.

Members of the Mosquito Com-mission will be John A. Murray,chairman; Calvin G. OhlsenHenry Karl, Robert H. Yard andHenry W. Klitsch.

(See LAWLEY Page 2)

May Lose PostCarling Reappointment in Doubt

EATONTOWN-Leo J. Carling,chairman of the Planning Board,will not be reappointed to thatbody, according to present plansof the mayor and Borough Coun-cil, it was learned from reliablesources yesterday.

The question is:When does Mr. Carling's term

on the board expire? No oneseems to know.

Mr. Carling said last night:"Some think it expires this

year; some don't. I don't know,since 1 have never paid any at-tention to length of term."

The chairman said he had notbeen officially informed of plansnot to reappoint him, and there-fore had no comment at thattime.

"Certainly, if I find I am nolonger a member of the PlanningBoard, I will have something tosay," he added.

10 YearsMr. Carling has be?n a mem-

ber of the body for 10 years. Heis also a member of the boardof directors of the American So-ciety of Planning Officials andan associate director and pastpresident of the New JerseyFederation of Official PlanningBoards.

In the recent past he has pre-sided over the formulation andadoption of a new borough zon-ng code, over the construction

of a master plan which has nothowever been officially adoptedyet—and over many t long andloud controversy on planning mat-ters.

Eatontown sources say that

during

Leo J. Carling

these years a certainamount of public opinion againstthe board chairman has grownup. He also, however, has a num-ber of ardent supporters amongborough residents, observersnote.

No AppointmentNo appointment for a six-year

term on the Planning Board wasmade at yesterday's organizationmeeting of council, pending re-search to see whether the Carlingterm actually falls vacant thisyear.

The mimeographed list of newappointments, however, oears thename nf Bruce J. Mangan for the

(See CARLING, Pg. 2)

PacificForcesAlerted

WASHINGTON (AP) —President Eisenhower to-day was reported con-vinced that fast and clearaction is the best way. tostop the Communists be-fore they become irretrievablycommitted to a course of aggres-sion in Laos.

And the President was said tobe still hopeful, despite the seri-ousness of the situation in Laos,of a solution short of militaryintervention by outside powers.

This reasoning was given inconnection with the series ofU. S. government announcementsover the holiday week-end whiletop officials huddled over reportsof Communist advances in Laos.

On Saturday, after word ar-rived here of what the Laotiangovernment said was an inva-sion by seven battalions fromneighboring Communist NorthViet Nam, Eisenhower met withhis top diplomatic, military andintelligence advisers.

That afternoon t h e UnitedStates issued • public warningto North Viet Nam, Red Chinaand other Communist powers notto intervene in behalf of the RedPathet Lao rebels. It also re-erred pointedly to the U. S. ob-igation in the Southeast Asia

Treaty Organization for defenseof the area.

Council MeetingOn Sunday the United States

called for a meeting in Bangkokof the council of SEATO, whosememben include the UnitedStates, Britain, France, Aus-tralia, New Zealand, the Philip-pines, Thailand and Pakistan.

Yesterday- the Pentagon an-nounced — w i t h White Housebacking—orders to step up thereadiness of U. S. forces in thePacific, including fast-movingairlift capability, "in view of thepresent situation in Laos."

Press Secretary James C. Ha-gerty said Eisenhower had ap-proved the move "in light of theSEATO obligations."

He spoke after the Presidenthad finished another White Housesession with Secretary of StateChristian A. Herter, Undersecre-tary Livingston T. Merchant,a c t i n g Secretary of DefenseJames H. Douglas, Gen. LymanL. Lemnitzer, chairman of thejoint chiefs of staff, and Central

(See PRESIDENT, Pg. 2)

Garrity AndStout NamedBy Split Vote

OCEAN TOWNSHIP — Demo-cratic moves to replace Republi-can Mayor James J. Garrity andBorough Attorney Richard R.Stout, Monmouth County's statesenator, met with predicted de-feat yesterday at the TownshipC o m m i 11 e e's re-organizationmeeting.

The mayor, Sen Stout, and allother incumbent officeholders,won reappointment on a 3-2 voteon the strength of Republicanmajority control of the com-mittee.

Democrats John J. Reilly andDonald V. Crosta, whose elec-tions last November were con-sidered major political upsetsever Republican organization in-cumbents, proposed a number ofchanges. But all were defeated.

The Democrats sought parties. •larly to abolish the office ofassistant township attorney, heldby Mr. Stout's law partner,Sidney J. Hertz, But they failed.

Tenure of the new townshipcommittee may be shortlived.

With backing of both parties, astudy to determine whether thetownship could profit from a newform of government is dua to bemade this year.

Voters will decide at a publicreferendum whether to adoptwhatever recommendations thestudy group submits.

NoticeThe reorganization meeting ofthe Borough of Shrewsbury wil!be held Thursday, Jan. 5, 1961,at 8 p. m. at the Broad StreetSchool Auditorium. The first reg-ular meeting of the Mayor andCouncil will be the thirdi Tues-day, Jan. 17, laiil.

ORTRUDE C. VANVLIETBorough Clerk

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Page 2: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

Rto iANK MBUtfti

ijror Sees Boroughs'ax Structure StabilizingNEW SHREWSBURY - This

borough'sr+ched a

Ux structure hasStabilizing point, as

fir as borough operations areconcerned, Mayor Karl K. Barontold the year's first council meet-ing yesterday.

The 1961 t.ix rate now dependsoi the regional and townshipSoftool budgets, he added.'.*'l feel optimistic," he said,

"(hat if the two Boards of Ed-uiation submit sound, economicalbudgets, this coming year willafcain reflect a very minor taxadjustment."

in his inauguration messagethis newly re-elected chW exec-utive warned against anotherntoss influx of residential devel-opment, with the extension of Rt.IS through the borough.•le asked for reviewing and re-

v^ion of zoning laws, remindingtlfc council that the borough'sRJ and R3 requirements are con-siderably less than the one-acrerequired for building in RI zones.}ft also asked for zoning changesto* permit the construction of com-mercial enterprises that wantinvest in the Tinton Falls area.

ProgramThe mayor, in his program fi

1961, urged the following:Action on business license fei

to establish proper controls.A study of municipal govern

ment as jointly requested by tmayor and Councilman Dona!Cole;

'A full-fledged borough post o'fice;

'Action on the Library Commtee report to be presented Ja5;'

Better co-ordination betweeithe various codes and variouborough inspection functions;

Adoption of the Fire Undeiwriters Code;

A long range plan for imprwIng borough drainage and road:.Action to get the county

tjke over Hope Rd. and to privide better maintenance ttfance Ave. and Shafto Rd., boinow county-maintained;. Adoption of the fiscal and bud

et practices outlined in the rport by Bernard Schwartz;

Increased recreational • npark facilities, especially in thsouthern part of the borough;

Plans to reserve borough lanifpr future schools, fire housesetc.;

Constant checki to providimaximum protection at crossing:used by school children.

Study Group!The mayor also expressed th

hone that the newly appointeestudy group for acquistion oistate-owned property, to be heade1 bv retiring Councilman Claence Unterberg, will be able tisilvc "the objectionable condit'on that exists because of th(widely separated areas thahouse our borough administra-tive services, including executive,police and court functions."

Jrhe mayor appointed MrsI^orence Peskoe and BernarcSchwartz as co-chairmen of thMunicipal Government Organization Study Committee.

-As members of this body hnamed Vincent Roache, Al Dor-gay, Thomas K. Shafto, Law-rence Kirk, Richard Westee,Stanley Lenox, Milton Mausner,faho will serve without fee, aa,private citizen rather than aWrough attorney,) Charles Hub-bird, Clinton Crocker, RobertMcCarthy, Councilman RobertDavidson, and Tax Assessor An-djew Shepard.

The Study Group for Acquisi-tion of State Property, headedby Mr. Unterberg, will be madeup of Justin Henshell, Vincen*Rbache, Councilman Herbert L,WHett, 3d, and Adm. Shepard,yKs Industrial Congress mem

wjrs, in addition to ChairmanFrederick Forrest, the followingwere appointed: Joseph Trible,

Richard E. Westee, S. F. Eisen-berg, William J. Kane, AlfredM. MacMoyle, Stuart C Hand,Frank J. Connelly, Jr., HaroldSherman, Thomas Ruzicka,Frank L. Cooper and Council-men Donald Cole and RobertDavidson.

Bernard Schwartz V/KS namedchairman of the Library Com-mittee, with the following ap-pointed as members: MarvinDavid, Agnes Epps, Florence

Harriet Knauff, SarahZcldin. Mar-K. Reid, fe

garet Dunbar, Amelia Cooper,

Births |[ Strung SwitchesMr, imA Mr*. Irk* fireman,

Brown Ave., West Keansburg,son, Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. George Mayer,Line Rd., Matawan, daughter,Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Ted Grantham,55 Howard Ave., New Shrews-bury, daughter, Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Ha!!,

Giving Republican* ControlKEYPORT - Democratic

Councilman Robert J. Strtng,who declared last month that hewould be an "Independent" dur-ing 1961, yesterday swung hissupport behind the Republicansthus giving the GOP bloc con-

jtro^of the governing body.~" Republicans were sworn

Sylvia Miller, Doris Brcnnen and Mr. and Mrs. John Bottger,125 Warren St., Keyport, son,

fr.** Republicans were sworn13 Clanuge Dr., Middletown,|into office, : Charles E. Apple-dauRhter, Friday. a t e a d H i j

Mr ana Mrs. J rank Farber,93 Black Point Rd., Rumson, son,Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lam-bny-M, 5A Rose La , UnionBeach, daughter, Saturday.

Leona Littman.

Council(Continued)

As a result, he said, neither ofthe two Democrats on the coun-cil headed a major committee.

Furthermore, he protested, theDemocrats do not have an equal

W.

President(Continued)

Intelligence Director AllenDulles.

The Defense Department or-ders were regarded as a pre-liminary alert to U. S. militarycommanders to be on the readyshould further orders come.SQme U. S. air and amphibiousunits are already headed for thecrisis area.

• Mere Bluff^Eisenhower was reported to be

ofj the opinion that statementsalone from Washington would bedisregarded as mere bluff by theOammunists unless accompaniedbjj actions showing the UnitedStates is prepared to followthrough.

On the diplomatic front, U. S.officials concentrated for thetime being on getting a firmerpicture of the situation. Any further action was planned to bechanneled through SEATO.

Although they are convincedthat sizable aid has been sentto the rebels from across theNorth Vietnamese border, U. Sauthorities have been unwillingto specify the amount or origin.

They need harder evidence topersuade dubious allies. But theysay the distant terrain, the poorcommunications in the jungle andmountain area, the racial simi-larity of the neighboring peopleand the ease with which troopscan move across the border

vote on any committee at all.Sees 'Bad Faith'

The mayor charged the Repub-licans with bad faith in renegingon a "gentlemen's agreement"to rotate the council presidency.

The mayor said that, accord-ing to an agreement of two yearsago. Councilman Renshaw shouldhave held this post" for 1961, in-stead of Councilman Willett.

After the meeting Mr. Willettsaid that as far as he was con-cerned there was no such agree-ment.

"We have never had any pol-icy on rotations of the councilpresidency," he stated.

Actually the post doesn'tamount to much. I have beencouncil president for six yearsn the past, but as far as I re-cajl I presided over only twomeetings in that time."

"I was a little surprised at themayor's remarks," Mr. Willettcontinued.

"Councilman Renshaw is headof the parks, playgrounds, recre-ation and conservation commit-tee which will be a very import-ant one," he stated.

"Mr. Davidson heads the in-dustrial relations committee,where he will have a fine oppor-tunity to use his previous ex-perience on the Industrial Con-gress.

"Mr. Davidson also heads thepublic assistance committee, so

Saturday.Mr. and Mrs. Lester Will, 490

Pine Brook Rd., Eatontnwn,daughter, Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mcmmolo,124 Park Ave., Keansburg, son,Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cantelmo,126 Winding Way, Little Silver,daughter, Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Leon Hoyt, 103Orchard Hill Dr., Lincroft, daugh-ter, Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Tinker,14 Coach Dr., East Hazledaughter, Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wynberg49A Chestnut St., Red Bank, sonSunday.

Mr. and Mrs. James Sullivan,2G Statesir PI., Middlctown,daughter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Craig Policastro,144 12th St., Belford, daughter,yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Leahy, 6Bromley Dr., Hazlet, son, yester-day.

Mr. and Mrs. John F. Fitzpatrick, 3 Willow St., Port Monmouth, daughter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Gallag-her, 18 Beach Ave., Leonardo,daughter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. James Jackson40 Leonard Ave., Atlantic High-lands, son, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. James IversonFreehold Rd., Freehold, son, yestcrday.

Mr. and Mrs. Anthony RicciCliffwood Ave., C l i f f w o o ddaughter, this morning.

Monmouth Medical CenterMr. and Mrs. Donald Smith

29 Third Ave., Long Branch, son,Friday.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Joyner,1104 Bangs Ave., Asbury Park,son, Friday.

hat he has two chairmanships, Mr. and Mrs. William Griffiths,while the new Republican mem-!45 Cliftwood Ave., Eatontown,ber, Lawrence Malone, headsonly one committee."

Two more Republican council-men replied to the mayor's re-marks alter the meeting.

Councilman John Lemon, Jr.,who was named yesterday to'Sunday.head the important public safety Mr. and Mrs. Felix Guidctti,

daughter, Saturday,Mr. and Mrs. John Papianni,

109 Pavilion Ave., Long Branch,son, Saturday.

Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Murray,183 Ninth St., Belford, daughter,

committee, said:"When we discussed committee

264 Second Ave, Long Branch,daughter, Sunday.

appointments, t h e Democratic Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Lopez,councilman had no objections tothe committee structures,

"Mayor Baron wanted David-:on to be head of the publicsafety committee,Davidson, himself,

but Mr.suggested

hat someone with more experi-mce should be named to thejost."

Councilman Donald Cole said:"The entire council felt Lemon

'as the logical man to head theiublic safety committee. He hasmd experience as a member ofhe Fire Department and the"irst Aid Squad, and he is the•nly present councilman who

Marlboro State Hospital, daugh-ter, Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McGuin-ess, 52 Bec-chwood Dr., Shrews-bury, daughter, Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Victor Shaheen.29 Ward Ave., Rumson, daugh-ter, Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cressy,37 Stratford Re!., New Shrews-bury, son, Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. John D Fatoro-si, 227 West End Ave., LongBranch, daughter, yesterday.

Mr. and Mrs. Mario Menedez,152 Shrewsbury Ave., Red Bank,son. yesterday.

gate, as mayor, and HenriHansen (incumbent) and DysonWoqdhouse, as councilmeh.

The council thus split intofactions, with Democratic Council-men John J. Dane, Frank JConway and Hayman Korobowsitting on one side of the table,and the other faction, Mr. Hansen, Mr. Strang and Mr. Wood-house sitting on the oppositeside.

There was a 3-3 tie vote ontwo major appointments—thoseof Roberts, Pillsbury and Car-ton, Middletown, as borough at-torney, and Joseph J. Seamanand Co., Perth Amboy, as bor-ough auditor.

In both cases, Mr. Strangvoted with the GOP and Mr.Applegate broke the ris vote, inSavor of the Republicans.

The other GOP appointmentsall of which went through without opposition from the Democratic faction, were as follows:

Henry F. Labrecque, Red Bankengineer; Mrs. Irene M. Apple-gate, court clerk (threff-yearterm); Mrs. Margaret Burroweslibrary trustee (five-year term);Howard T. Jeandron, PlanningBoard (four-year term); GeorgeCreed, Zoning Board of Ajust-ment (threeTyear term); ElgarWalling, fire inspector; Arthur J.Collins, Board of Health (four-year term; Mr. Strang, WelfareBoard (one-year term) and MrsGeorge Totten, Welfare Board(four-year term).

Mr. Hansen was elected councilpresident by unanimous vote.

The governing body also votedto consolidate its cimmittees,from six to three, and namedcommittee heads, as follows:

Finance and fire, Mr. Wood-house: police public safety andwelfare, Mr. Strang, and publicworks, streets, water and sewer,Mr. Hansen.

Council will continue to meet

Me termed the appointmentlast week of Mr. Currie's brother, Edward W. Curne, as special counsel for the sewer project as "illegal and unnecessaryand declared that the new go'erning body will "move for himmediate removal" from thapost at its Jan. 9 meeting.

He said that during 1961, hiadministration will attempt t(hold the tax rate at its presenlevel. -

Mr. Applegate strongly critcized the Currie administratioiregarding the sever project.

"They are going to put thiborough in debt for $363,000," hideclared, "whereas fie projeccould have been accomplishefor $175,000."

He said the Currie administration had "stooped to every pol1

tical trick known," and termethe council appointment (lastmonth) of Mr. Korobow as "po-litical maneuvering of a minority faction which lost the elec-tion."

Blanda(Continued)

its own budget is concerned,'the mayor added.

Three Democrats were sworninto office: Marvin Olinsky, fora three-year committee term;Donald J. Malloy, for a nnp-yeaunexpired term (replacing formerCommitteeman Thomas B. Shin-kos), and Mrs. Kathryn M. Me-Hugh, as township clerk.

Committeeman Hurry P. Seamen, the lone Republican Iefon the governing body, abstainedfrom voting on the appointmenlof Mr. Malloy.

Other appointments:Benedict R. Nicosia, Red Bank

attorney (replacing the firm olRoberts, Pillsbury and Carton);H. Thomas Carr, Perth Amboyengineer; Alfred T. HennessyJr., Union Beach, magistrate(replacing Seymour R. Kleinberg); Joseph J. Seaman andCo., Perth Amboy. auditor;James McAdam, buiiding insnector; Walter J. Wickley. treas-urer; Dr. James A. Weldon. phy-sician; Albert Masch, Zoning

the second and fourth Monday:of each month.

Sworn in as new officers olhe Fire Department wereieorge Leone, chief; Joseph

Collins, first assistant chief, andEdmund Walker, second as-sistant chief.

Named as school crossingguards were:

Howard S. Creed, Sr. LloydWalling, George W. Finger, Wi!Ham Kennedy, Clarence Mounind John Wilson.Appointed as special policemen

IT re:Frank Vanoelt, Louis Sappio

Fleetius Wilbur, Edward Lockwood, Jay Baker, Michael Halleran, Robert Bohn, Percy Washington, Richard Barlow, JohnVlazuroski, Richard Hill, JosephEnglish, Raymond RifenbergGeorge Cooksey, John Fitz-Gerald, Seymour Pappas, Alfred^andeloro, Richard Poling, Jayeandron and Edwin Wilson.Mayor Applegate rapped the

outgoing administration of for-mer Mayor Norman J. Currie.

erved on the police committee Mr. and Mrs. Alan E. Davis,ast year."

"There is163 Franklin Ave.. Long Branch.

Retaken(Continued)

a Democrat on'dauehter, yesterday. j Laotian charges that as manyvery committee, except onej. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Siewert, 1 i ; a s 3 ' 0 W invaders from Red Northvhich has only one member,"<lr. Cole pointed out.Republicans head seven out of

0 committees. The appointmentsvere as follows, with the firstamed, in each case, as chair-an:Public safety — Lemon, David-

on, Malone; building and zon-g — Willett, Renshaw, Cole;

anitation and health — Cole,illett,illett,

Renshaw;Renshaw.

finance —Ma ! o n e;

treets, lights and water — Cole,tenshaw, Willett; public assist-ance — Davidson, Lemon; pub-ic relations — Malone, David-

East Broadwav, Long Branch, v i e t N a m h a v c i°ine<' the pro-son, this morning. Communist Pathet Lao and left-

Lawleyist rebels in central Laos.

Laos is not a member of SEA-TO. Sarasin said the organiza-tion is pledged to help the jun-gle kingdom combat any Com-munist invasion, but the Laotiangovernment has not asked forhelp, he added.

___ Military sources in VientianeMatthew J. Gill, Edward J. Koe'-jsa'd " l e m a ' n attacking force innig, Peter Landskroner, Marc MeiCentral Laos apparently is leu

(Continued)Renamed to the economic de-

velopment Commission wereEvan R. Beecher, George Butler,Rockford Ern, William J. Grant;

Board of Adjustment; Mr. Sea-men and Mrs. Muriel Lynch,Welfare Board; Mr. Olinsky. Mr.Carr and James McGorty, Plan-nine Board and Joseph Davis,Civil Defense director.

Aopointed as regular membersof the police department were:

Gerard F. Guntner, chief; RoyHilton and William J. Soarks,sergeants, and William J. Smith,Dayton Wilson, Henry C. Spring-steen, Jr., Salvatore J. Straniero.Holmes J. Gormerly, Joseph Baf-fono, Donald Warren, LPO Gal-lino, Edward Schram, WarrenRoggcman, William Coffey andAnthony D'Ambrosia, all patrol

Marlboro-m MM rf Ml

OBITUARIES

In the Marlboro crash, AirmanGrinde and two passengers of the Wells, 64, of 98 Robinson PI., died

wwmwiwtUM , wmm. t,mmatSHREWSBURY-Winfield Scott BELFORD-Monroe Z. George,

two cars were injured and wereadmitted to Fitkin Hospital, Nep-tune.

Mr. Grinde and the other two,Joseph Boywitt, 22, of BoundaryRd., Colts Neck, a passenger withGrinde, and Fred Bullard, 29. ofRoute 79, a passenger with Clay-ton, were reported in fair condition today.

Police naid Grinde facescharges of causing death by auto,reckless driving, and driving anunsafe Vehicle.

The Clayton car was forced60 feet up the road and into autility pole. Police said the Grindecar stopped 120 feet from thepoint of impact.

Mr. Clayton is survived by hiswife, Lillie; sons, Robert andKenneth; daughters, Carolyn andCynthia, and mother, Mrs. GeorgeSankey.

Arrangements for Mr. Clayton':funeral are under direction of thiW. H. Freeman and Son FuneralHome, Freehold.

Sunday at the Veterans Hospital,East Orange, where he was' a I a long illness.

55, of 111 Seventh St., died Sun-day in Riverview Hospital after

WALTER L. DIXONNEPTUNE CITY - Walter L.

Dixon, 70, vice president of Dix-on Marine Industrials, Inc., Rt.35, boat parts manufacturingslant at Neptune City, died Sat-rday at his apartment here.A former Major League pro-

fessional baseball player, Mr.Dixon was born at Plainfield andhad lived there and in Highland'ark most of his life. His homet Highland Park at his death,'as at 225 Adelaide Ave.His son, Leo R. Dixon of Bel-

mar, was president of the familybusiness which formerly had of-ices in New York and Phila-lelphia before consolidating athe Rt. 35 headquarters in Nep-une City.Walter Dixon was a member

if the Long Branch Ice Boat andr"acht Club, the Atlantic City

Tuna Club, the Society of Auto-motive Engineers of Nnw York,the Sea Horse Institute of thenternational Nickel Co., theVmerican Ordnance Associationnd the American Boat andfacht Council.Besides his son he is survived

iy a daughter, Mrs. FlorenceGaffney, Wall Township; a

rother, John Dixon of Plain-ield, and two sisters, Mrs.ames Mahoney and Mrs. Franklulany of Plainfield.Funeral services will be con-

jcted tomorrow at the DanielRcilly Funeral Home, Belmar.

crvices will be priv.ne.

ARTHUR J. MOUNTOCEAN GROVE — Arthur J.

patient three months.Mr, Wells was born in Pomp-

ton Lakes, son of the late HoraceL. and Minnie Maxon Wells, andwas a resident here 13 years.

He was a member of the Pres-byterian Church here, and was aformer deacon of the church.

A veteran of World War I, Mr.Wells was a past commander ofthe Veterans of Foreign WarsPost, Hillside, and was a charter member of the American Le-gion Post, Pompton Lakes.

He retired last September as alinotype operator in Newark.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Elsie Jacquin Wells; a daughter,Mrs. Ruth W. Smith, at home;three grandchildren; three sis-ters, Mrs. Lida Rome of Btoom-field, Mrs. Ella Ball of Pomp-ton Lakes and Mrs. Bessie My-ers of Saguerties, N. Y.. and twobrothers, Howard L. and Clar-ence E. Wells, both of PomptonLakes.

Services will be held tomorrowat 2 p.m. in the Worden FuneralHome, with Rev. John R. Col-lins, pastor of the ShrewsburyPresbyterian Church, officiating.Burial will be in the churchyard.

MRS. MARY B. SMITHRED BANK — The funeral for

Mrs. Mary Belle Smith, 86, of140 Mechanic St.. will be heldtomorrow at 2 p.m. in the AdamsMemorial Home with Rev. Stan-ley Mugridge, pastor of Red BankBaptist Church, officiating. Burialwill be in Fair .View Cemetery,Middletown.

Mrs. Smith died Sunday morn-ing at the home of her daughter,Mrs. Harold Marks, 121 WaterSt., Tinton Falls.

She was the widow of Allen H.Imith, former Red Bank police-

man. Born in New York, daugh-ter of the late Mr. and Mrs.James LaBau, she was a residenthere of her life. Mrs. Smithwas a member of the Red BankBaptist Church.

Also surviving are a son, LeroySmith of Sea Bright, and three

He was born in Wilkes-Barre,Pa., son of Mrs. Elizabeth J.George of Edwardsville, Pa., andthe late John T. George. He waia resident here seven years.

Mr. George was ah engineerwith the Central Railroad of NewJersey. He was a member of theBrotherhood of Railroad Train-men; Abacus Lodge, -F&AM,Long Branch, and the MonmouthChap'.3r, Order of the EasternStar, Atlantic Highlands.

Besides his mother, he is sur-vived by his wife, Mrs. MargaretWilliams George; two sons,Thomas M. and Richard L.George, both of this place; threedaughters, Mrs. Alex Sinilnikoffand Miss Lucy Ann George, bothof this place, and Miss ElizabethJ. George of California; twograndchildren; a brother, DavidGeorge, and two sisters, Mrs.Elizabeth Leach and Mrs. JessieHumphries, all of Plymouth, Pa.

Local arrangements are underthe direction of the Scott FuneralHome.

g , dother daughters, Mrs. VirginiaVan Brunt of this place, Mrs.Charles Douglas of Oceanport,and Mrs. Frank Lawler of As-bury Park.

KERMIT R. JOHNSONNEW SHREWSBURY-Kermit

R. Johnson, 50, of 95 SpringdaleAve., died Sunday at his Home.

He was a member of St. Au-gustine's Episcopal Church, As-bury Park.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Eleanor Johnson: three brothers.

CHARLES BENNETTLONG BRANCH — Services

were held this morning forharles Bennett, 38, of 339 Chel-

sea Ave., at the John W. FlockFuneral Home. Burial was inWestminster Cemetery, Cran-bury.

Mr. Bennett died Friday at hishome after a long illness.

Born here, he was a son of Mrs.Nellie H. Bennett of this placeand the late Cornelius Bennett.Mr. Bennett was a meter repair-man with New Jersey NaturalGas Co. He was a member of theLong Branch Baptist Church andthe International Brotherhood ofElectrical Workers Union.

Besides his mother, he is sur-vived by his wife, Mrs. FrancesWardell Bennett; five brothers,Cornelius Bennett of ManhattanBeach, Calif., Alfred, William.

place, and H. Malcolm Bennett ofWall Township, and six sisters,Mrs. Lee Larew of Fair Haven,Mrs. J. Rutherford Stout of thisplace, Mrs. Larry Waters of Liv-ingston, Mrs. Edmund Glasgow ofNorth Plainfield, Mrs. C.S. Rock-well, Jr., of Little Silver, andMrs. Charles Curry of NorthMiami, Fla.

men.An education liason committee

which will confer with the Boardof Education from time to timeon matters relating to schoolboard-township affairs, was established, with Mr. Olinsky ap-pointed as chairman and Mr.Blanda and CommitteemanJames G. Brady as members.

Nine other governing bodv com-mittees were set up, with the fol-lowing chairmen:

Finance and central purchas-ing, Mr. Blanda; fire and firstaid, Mr. Malloy; streets, Mr.Olinsky; police, Mr. Bradv; in-surance, Mr. Seamen; public util-ities, Mr. Blanda; welfare, Mr.

ount, 61, of 148 Franklin Ave., H . rry Johnson of Richmond Va.street superintendent here fpr35 years, died at home yester-day.

Marsyas Johnson of New York,and Phillip Johnson of Brooklyn,and two sisters, Mrs. Gertrude

Mr. Mount is survived by his; w i n i a m s o n o f R u s s b u r j , t V a a n d

wife He en; two sons, Arthur, j Mrs_ L o u i s c P o w c r s of N e w a r k .Jr. of Belmar, and Joseph Mountof Neptune; three brothers, Wil-lard Mount of Bradley Beach.Alonzo Mount of Ocean City andHarry Mount of Elmonte, Calif.,and a sister. Mrs. Giace For- M R S . JOHN B. PURCELL

Funeral arrangements are un-der the direction of the F. LeonHarris Funeral Home, AsburyPark.

sythc, of Balboa, Canal Zone.He was a member of the Holy

Spirit Catholic Church, AsburyPark. Funeral arrangements willbe announced by the Francioni,Taylor and Lopez Funeral Home,Asbury Park.

EAST ORANGE - A requiem

MRS. ANTHONY MUNOZKEANSBURG-Mrs. Stephanie

T. Munoz, 65, of 49 Coliins St.,died Saturday in Monmouth Med-ical Center after a long illness.

She was born in Staten Island,N.Y., daughter of the late Janand Eugenia Kovaleski. She wasa resident here 10 years. Shewas a member of St. Ann's Cath-olic Church here.

Surviving are her husband, An-thony Munoz; a daughter, Mrs.Theresa Suarez of this place; twobrothers, William Kovaleski ofSummit, and Joseph Peters ofMatawan; two sisters, Mrs. Al-bert McCusker of Lambertville,and Mrs. Loretta Quinn of Statf-n

mass for Mrs. Clara F. Purcell. I s L a n ^ ' a " d • w . l l r a n _ d 5 h i I d r e "-164 North 16th St., was offeredthis morning in Our Lady of AllSouls Catholic Church here. Bur-ial was in Gate of Heaven Ceme-tery under the direction of Mur-phy's Funeral Home.

A high requiem mass will beoffered tomorrow at 9 a.m. inSt. Ann's Church, with Rev. Stan-ley Levandosky officiating. Burialwill be in Mt. Olivet Cemetery

INFANT HUTCHINSONMATAWAN — The three-day-! East Orange General

old infant daughter of Warren; after a loniz illness.

., „ . -,.,.-.„ 1C. | Middletown under the direction ofMrs. Purcell died Friday at j t h e S c o t t F u n c r a ' Home, Belford.

Hospital}

Seamen, and recreation, Mr., and Florence Dougherty Hutchin-! Surviving" arc her husband! LEONARDO-Scrviccsy'«- . . . . • s o n ' 13 Sclicncl< Ave., died Satur John B. Purcell; a son, John B ! | F - S t o l z ' M- of ]v- B

Complaint Sessions i day at Fitkin Hospital, NeptuneA new committee, the com- Besides her parents, she is sur-

ilaint, information and service vived by a brother, Thomas Hut-committee, was formed. OnO|Chinson, and two sisters, Patriciamember of the Township Com-Und Ann Hutchinson, all at home* % « i f f A A v i t i l l » t S t n * * A » I M _ 1 > ; _ i _ _ t f . _ _ _ ._mittee will sit at township hallfrom 8:30 to 10 p. m. every"uesday, starting tonight, to hear:omp!aints and receive requestsor information and snrvice, from:itizens.

her paternal grandfather, WarrenB. Hutchinson of this place, andher maternal grandparents, Mr.and Mrs. John Dougherty olLanoka Harbor.

Services will be held today a

Clain, Mr. Kavalek, Richard R.Schwartz, Leslie T. Secley, Jr.,Paul Bova and Ralph L. Wohi-forth.

makecult.

a clear accounting diffi-

The British Foreign Office saidlast night it had no confirmation

Vietnameseborder. In

1(15!}. after Vientiane had claimed

of regular Northunits crossing the

in, Cole; parks, playgrounds,! Mr. Mallet was appointed pub-scrcation and conservation —; lie officer for the Substandard

Housing Committee.Dr. Krohn; Harlan Hogan, fire

chief; Chester Henry, welfare di-rector; Joseph P. Quail; DirkHofman, plumbing inspector; Mr.Simpson, and Henry Pulsch werenamed to the Substandard Hous-ing Committee.

In connection with the state's300th anniversary in 1964, the fol-lowing were named to the localcommission for that celebration.

Mr. Carton. Rev. Robert T. Bul-man, Mr. Field. Mrs. MaryBrasch, M. Harold Kelly, PaulLcfcver, Victor C. ' Leiker,Thomas F. Mordord, William C.North and Rev. Andrew M. Van

enshaw, Willett, Davidson;lunicipal public service co-or-inating representative — Cole;idustrial relations — Davidson,[alone.Councilman WilluU explained

hat the committee system waseorganized this year. Theirevious fire and water com-'ttee was abandoned, he said.re was placed in the public

ifety committee, with police,disaster control and first aid.'Water became a matter for thecommittee dealing also withstreets and lights.

Membership was divided sothat no councilman will serve on

by rebel paratroop Capt. KonLe, who touched off the civstrife by overthrowing the pro-Western government last Aun.

Kong Le was driven fronVientiane Dec. 15 by PremieiBonn's forces and moved northward, apparently linking up witPathet Lao guerrillas.

If the government informationis correct, the rebels have cap-tured a deep wedge In the heartof the country, between Vientiane,the administrative capital on thMekong River, and Luang Pra-bang, the royal capital 140 milesnorth.

Two

both of these committees which,jDyke.Mr Willett e x l i d h i ThMr. Willett explained, are themost time-consuming of all.

Curlingpost.

(Continued)This appointment

Keansburs-Middlclnwn Na-tional Bank and the MonmouthCounty National Bank werenamed as official depositories fortownship funds.

A temporary budget of $419,309.-5 was adopted pending complc-

was]tion of the final financial sched-

I 71-.'

ulc.crossed out before the list wasreleased.

George Morgan was appointedident of 'he health board," Mr.Mr. Lawley was named prcsi-

nn invasion in the same area, aON inspection team failedfind supporting evidence.

to the Planning Board for a two-.'car term yesterday. Mayor Her-bert E. Werner will take theplace on the board of formerMayor F. Bliss Price.

Mayor Werner, questionedabout whether Mr. Carling wouldbe rcappointed, said:

"To that I cannot say yes orno until we settle the question ofwhether or not his term expires."

The new mayor explained thatto the confusion had arisen because

Roberts, secretary, and D..Krohn, inspector and registrar ofcommunicable diseases.

some years ago the statute gov- to us."

erning length of term on theboard was changed.

"We had believed that Mr.Calling's term expired thisyear," Mayor Werner said.

"Since that has been called in-to doubt, the next stop is forBorough Clork Andrew Becker tochock into the records and report

U.S. Navy transportswith 1,400 combat-ready Marinesaboard have sailed from SubicBay Naval Base in the Philip-pines. Their destination was notdisclosed but it seemed clearthey . would join other units ofthe Seventh Fleet in the SouthChina Sea, in the vicinity ofLaos.

In Tokvo, a high foreign ministry official indicaled Japanwould oppose the United Statesusing bases in Japan to supportaction in Laos, The o[ficial..nidhis government will insist theUnited States consult with it be-fore using the bases Tor suchpurposes, a process required bythe U.S.-Japan security pact.

Soviet Premier Khrushchev re-newed his demand for a confer-ence along the lines of the 1954Geneva conference on Indochinato "quench the dangerous fireflaming up in Laos." Khrushchevalso called for a revival of theInternational Control Commis-sion for Laos which the Genevaconference set up. The commis-sion, composed of India, Polandand Canada, was disbanded in1058.

A central purchasing commit-:? p . m . j n the Day Funeral Home,tee was established and a resolu-j Keyport. Burial will be in St,tion adopted stipulating that all J Joseph's Cemetery, Keyport.purchases by heads ofdepartments be made through the

township

committee.A resolution,

ROBERT PICKERELL| BRONX - Robert Pickerel!, 40,

requiring that. a worid War II paraplegic vet-township records, including those Cran. died Saturday in Bronxof the treasurer, Planning Board veterans Hospital, where he hasand Zoning Board, be filed in been undergoing treatment sincetownship hall, to be available for 11953.inspection by any citizen during] A native of Montclair, N.J., heregular business hours, wasadopted by 4-1 vote, with Mr.Seamen voting ' no."

Four other new committeeswere organized: a committee forcommerce, trade and industry;a code of ethics committee, ashade tree committee and abuilding committee.

The committee for enmmr-rce,trade and industry will meet thehird Tuesday of each month.

and will issue reports quarterly.The first meeting will be nextMonday night.

had formerly lived with his bro-ther, Fred Pickerel!, 296 River-edge Rd., New Shrewsoury, N. J.

Mr. Pickerell was a past vicepresident of the Eastern Para-lyzed Veterans Association.

Also surviving are his mother,Mrs. Emma Pickerell of Cler-mont, Fla., and a sister, Mrs.Julian P. Muller of New York.

WeatherNew Jersey: Partly cloudy to-

Appointments of members of day and tonight and only athese groups were announced last chance of some snow in coastalweek. j areas tonight. Wednesday partly

Purcell, Jr., of Holmdel: a daugh-ter, Miss Marie Prucell, at home,and three grandchildren.

INFANT MONTEFORTEWEST LONG BRANCH-Grace

Monteforte, five-day-old daughterof Frank and Caroline Monteforte,17 Nolan Dr., died Friday in Mon-mouth Medical Center.

Besides her parents, she is sur-vived by two brothers, Frank andj

JOHN F. STOLZfor John

BurlingtonAve., will be held tomorrow at2 p.m. in the Scott Funeral Home,Belford, with Rev. William E.Bisgrove, pastor of New Mon-mouth Baptist Church, officiating.Cremation will follow in Rosehil!Crematory, Linden.

Mr. Stolz died Saturday in Mon-mouth Medical Center after along illness.

Born in Newark, son of the lateMr. and Mrs. John Stolz, he was

James Monteforte, and a sister, '1 r e s l d c n t here 40 years. Mr.Stolz was a television repairmanAnne Monteforte, all at home:

her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.Vincent Monteforte of LongBranch, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred-crick Scialla of this place.

Private services were under thedirection of the Woolley FuneralHome, Long Branch.

MRS. ETILIO AIAZZONECHATHAM — Funeral services

for Mrs. Bertha Aiazzone, 92 Con-er Ave., will be held today at 2

p.m. in the Warren E. PattenFuneral Home here.

Mrs. Aiazzone died Friday ather home after a long illness.

Surviving are her husband, Et-ilio Aiazzone, and two sisters, ,Mr;. Catherine Burns of Kcans- h o m e a ! t e r a lon& '"burg and Mrs. Lena Monks of , B o r " l n I r c l a nd. daughter of theNew York. l a t c J o h n and Brigit O'Toole

and was a member of the Leon-ardo Field Club.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Helen Pletnik Stolz; a brother,Henry Stolz, and a sister, Mrs.John Schankland, both of Verona.

MRS. PATRICK J. GAVINPORT MONMOUTH - High

requiem mass for Mrs. Mary A.Gavin, 71, of 106 Brainard Ave.,was offered this morning in St.Mary's Catholic Church, NewMonmouth. Burial was in Mt.Olivet Cemetery, under the direc-tion of the Scott Funeral HomeBelford.

Mrs. Gavin died Friday at her

The governing body certified [he new Fire Dcnartment of-'icers. They are: Frank Siano,:hief; Salvatore Straniero, firstissistant chief, and Victor Bay-rs. second assistant chief.Mr. Seamen voted "no" on a

otal of nine motions, and ab-itained from voting on sevenithers.Among other motions, he reg-

istered a "no" vote on the com-merce, trade and industry com-mittee, the recreation committee,the education liason committee,the committee on complaints, in-formation and service (comment-ing that "a committeeman shouldbe on the job 24 hours a day")and voted against the police de-partment appointments and theresolution to file township rec-ords in the township hall.

cloudy. High today and Wednes-day in upper 30s. Low tonight in20s.

MarineCape Miy to Block Island:

Westerly winds this morning be-coming northerly this afternoonand north to northeast tonightand northwesterly on Wednesday.Velocities five to 10 knots todaychanging to 15 to 20 knots tonightand averaging 15 to 25 knotsWednesday. Visibility five mileswith partly cloudy weather to-day lowering with just a chanceof snowv or rain tonight and be-coming five miles or moreWednesday with clouds breaking.

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

' tcr.—Advertisement. '

lames W. Bain,66, Newsman

NEWARK - James W. Bain, acopy editor for the Newark Star-Ledger and veteran newsman,died Sunday of a heart attackwhile on his way home. He was66. Mr. Bain, who lived at 82North Arlington St., East Or-ange, had complained earlier ofnot feeling well.

He retired as night editor ofthe New York World Telegram(now the New York World Tele-gram and Sun) in 1952, workedfor a short time in the publicrelations department of the NewYork Transit Authority, and thenjoined the Star-Ledger ns a copyeditor in 1953 He was born inGrayson dunty, Va.

No problem finding tenants.vhen you advertise The Register•vay.—Advertisement.

late John andO'Malley, she came to this coun-try in 1006 and was a residenthere 32 years. Mrs. Gavin was amember of St. Mary's Church.

Surviving are her husband, Pat-rick J, Gavin; a daughter, Mrs.Calvin Meyer of this place: asister, Mrs. William O'Donnell ofBrooklyn, and two grandchildren.

ERICH ZWILSKYFREEHOLD - Erich Zwilsky,

G4, of 63 South St., died Sundayat his Home.

He was born in Germany, sonor the late Samuel and EmmaZwilsky, Ho was employed as apharmacist at Marlboro StateHospital. Mr. Zwilsky was amember of Congregation AgudathAchim here.

Surviving are his wife, Mrs.Ruth Zwilsky; a son, Dr. KlausM. Zwilsky of Waterlown, Mass.,and a grandchild.

Services were held yesterday at!;e Freeman Funeral Home, iiur-a| was in Mt. Sinai Cemetery,

Lakcwood.

Page 3: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

* % ' , 'V j l ' •*,

•EGIN NEW YEAR — New Shrewsbury Borough Council organized for 1961 yesterday with Democratic MayorKarl K. Baron presiding over a council made up of four Republicans and two Democrats. Left to right are, seated,Councilmen Lawrence Malcne and Robert Davidson. Mayor Baron, Councilmen Herbert L. Willett, 3d, and W. Don-ald Cole; standing, Councilmen Daniel E. Renshaw and John Lemon, Jr., and Borough Clerk Jerome S. Reed.

SOME NEW FACES —Mayor Herbert E. Werner and Councilmen Edward O. Clark and Theodore Zebrowski weresworn in as the Eatontown governing body organized for 1961 yesterday. Left to right are, seated, Henry Saling,borough attorney; Andrew G. Becker, borough clerk; Mayor Werner and Councilmen Clark and Zebrowski; stand-ing, Councilmen Anthony F. DeVito, Joseph A. Kellenyi, Leon B. Smock,and Ralph Lewis.

OFFICIAL FAMILY — Rumson's official family, left to rljht, Councilmen Harry Sundermeyer, Harry S. Cronanand Charles B. Harding, Borough Attorney Theodore D. Parsons, Mayor Peter Cartmell, Borough AdministratorAlbert A. Kerr, Jr., and Councilmen W. Dinsmore Banks, William F. Halleran and Charles S. Callman. The govern-ing body organized for 1961 yesterday.

STILL FIGHTING — The two Democratic factions in Union Beach yesterday agreed toenly one thing—not to agree. Here, before voting started on 1961 appointments, thefour men who were sworn into office were all smiles. It didn't last. They areGeorge R. Ross, second from left, assessor, and Councilman Bernard T. Marciniak,second from right, of the Democratic Organization, and Councilmen William F. Rod-gers, right, and Paul J. Smith, center, of the Democratic Club. Borough Clerk AlfredT. Hennessy, Jr., left, administered the oath of office.

NEW POSTS — Republicans line up after being sworn in at yesterday's reorganizationmeeting of Freehold Township Committee. Left to right are Committeeman Albert V.McCormick, Mayor Leroy Daniels, and Committeeman Norman Wagner.

Lose Republican,Gain Democrat

WASHINGTON (AP) - NewJersey loses one Republican andgains one Democratic Housemember today—the opening ofthe 87th Congress.

Eight New Jersey Republicansand six Democrats will be swornIn as House members at $22,500• year. Republicans held a 9-5edge during the 86th Congress.

The only change among the 14New Jersey House members wasthe election Nov. 8 of CharlesS. Joelsnn, a Democrat, to suc-ceed the retiring Rep. GordonCanfiekl, a Republican, in Pas-gate County.

Joelsnn selected for his officea fourth-floor suite In the oldHouse Office Building occupiedduring the 8Cth Congress by Rep.Emlllo Q. Daddarlo, D-Conn,

Cite FieldsAs Borough'Life Citizen'

NEW SHREWSBURY - The,outgoing Borough Council as its;last official act yesterday, made!the borough's first mayor, Ken-jthe borough, the resolution said,neth Fields, and honorary citizen'Council wished him health andfor life. The resolution of coun-j happiness wherever he goes,cil said: I This was the last official doca

DOWN THE MIDDLE — Keyport, known for its political squabbles, appears to be in for another "busy" year. Withthe switch of Democratic Councilman Robert J. Strang to the GOP bloc, council is split down the middle, withRepublican Mayor Charles E. Applegate, however, in a position to break the 3-3 tie in favor of the GOP. Thiswas the pose yesterday as the body organized for 1961: left to right, Councilmen Henri J. Hansen (R), Mr. Strang,Dyson Woodhouse (Rl, Mr. Applegate, Frank J. Conway (D), Hyman Korobow (D), Clerk Mn. Adelaide B.Crammer, and John J. Dane (D).

"Kenneth Fields has been a 'rnent to bear the signature ofUnter-residenTof this "municfpalitv" for1 Councilmen Clarence E.

manv years, has always been a b e / 8 a " d I ' . , ' £ fmodel citizen identified with a l l ; w h o s e t c r m s e n d e d a t m i d d a y

that is good and constructive; yesterday.and for 27 years, including thetrying years of the great de-pression and World War II, heserved us as a member of theShrewsbury Township Committee, I

SEAMAN APPOINTED

•EATONTOWN — Otis R. Seaman, Long Branch, was ap-

as chairman of the Shrewsbury.pointed borough engineer yester-Township Committee, and then • daX b.v t l l e m a>'o r a n d Boroughas the first mayor of New'Council.Shrewsbury; and during all this j He replaces Henry Labrecque,long period his leadership was!who was appointed to the postexemplary and won the love and two years ago after the death ofaffection of all our citizens." I the former engineer, 0. W. Mor-

Mr. Fields now plans to leave,ris.

CONGRATULATIONS —Joseph L. Moreau, Jr., left,sworn in for his second new three-year term, congratu-lates George J. Dittmar, Jr., after being named Atlan-tic Township mayor at yesterday's reorganization meet-ing in Colts Neck.

SEVENTH TERM — Holmdel Mayor James-H. Acke.'-son, center, was named to his seventh term as head ofthe Township Committee yesterday. Mayor Ackersonwas re-elected to his third term in November. A Demo-crat, he is flanked on the left by Edwin Liobenow andAlfred C. Poole, Republicans.

NEW FACES —Taking oath of office as Atlantic High-lands councilmen yesterday are Elbert A. Frimpter, left,and Richard Stryker, center, both Republicans. Admin-istering oath at reorganization meeting is Borough ClorkNelson Roborts.

DEMOCRATS TAKE CONTROL — With the seating of Marvin Olinsky, second fromright, and Donald J. Malloy, right, at yesterday's organization meeting in RaritanTownship, the Democrats took control of the governing body, 4-1. CommitteemanPhilip J. Blanda, Jr., center, was elected mayor. At left is Committeeman (and form-er mayor) Harry P. Seamen, the lone Republican. Next to him is CommitteemanJames G. Brady.

ALL-REPUBLICAN — The Matawan Township Committee, with the induction lastnight of Myndert Bonnema, right, went all-Republican, for the first time in half ajcentury. Mr. Bonnema in November defeated Democrat John Man Jr., who had!been township mayor for 25 years. At loft is Committeeman Sigmund V. Kowalski.Committeeman Peter J. Waters, center, was re-elected mayor, for his second termin that post.

Duncan HeadsFire Department

HIGHLANDS — John Duncanrecently was elected chief of theborough Fire Department. Hesucceeds Martin D, Fehlhaber,

Kill) ISAXK REGISTERTuesday, Jan. .?, 1061—3

Other officers elected wereTed Chodnicki, assistant chief;William R. Beatty, captain of ._."."ll'."_i.'_"Company I; Francis Schmedes,! . W o r , h ,captain of Company 2; Andrew . . . °M. Daino, lieutenant of Company1; Sivert M. Walstrom, lieuten-ant of Company 2; John J

chief.

It pays to advertise In TheMucker, captain" of firs police Register.—Advertisement.

Page 4: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

enlists Explore Invisible WorldWhere Near-Nothing Is Everything

(EDITOR'S NOTE: While seme •dentUu have tet pioneering lights ea the *Un, etbcrt are probing a dlffcreat Mlverae — Ikeauaage, Inflnltwlnul world of the atom. And they are uncovering accrete thtt could lead to aew power eourcef, dltrait aad evea aew form* of matter Itself.)

By ALTON BLAKESLEEAisociated Preti Science Writer

Scientists in brilliant explorations are coaxing out secrets of the inner universe.This is the universe of the atom — invisible, so tiny, so empty it is almost nothing. Yet it is everything.The quest to understand it engages many, of the world's keenest brains, ingenious instruments and some of the largest machines

oo earth. And scores of millions of tax dollars each year.Due to all this effort, scientists in effect are peeling the atom as you might peel an onion.

They find tinier wheels whirling within tiny wheels.

Smashing atoms into smither-eens, they discover 30 bits andpieces can come flying out. Manydisappear within millionths orhundredths of millionths of asecond.

The great goal is to understandthe true nature of the puzzlingheart of atoms and where thisfits into the great scheme ofnature. That can mean under-etanding the entire immense uni-verse. Jt can tell us what we are.

For atoms make up everythingin the universe—the stars, theflesh and brain cells of humans,houses, clothes, the air wekreathe, the ink with which this}s written. The ink to form onesingle letter contains billions ofatoms.

Cracking the r i d d l e of theatom's nucleus might bring daz-Iling dividends. Perhaps unex-pected new sources of power,perhaps the means to create newtinds of matter. Perhaps aston-thing controls over diseases.; Thirst For Fundamentals

But physicists promise nothing. Their thirst is purely tounderstand this immense, funda-mental secret of nature.

It is pure, basic research. But

New Many Wtor

FALSE TEETHWith Mart Comfort

PA8TEETH, » pleuint alkaline(non-add) powder, hold» falM teethmore nnnly.To rat anil talk ID mor*Oor.Uort, Jun tprlnkl* • llttlt FAB-TEETH en your plate*. No fummy,too*?, party t u t * or teellng. Check*"plata odor" (dtntun bruth). actFASTEETH at aqi drug counter.

no.l specialistin storage)

BASIC RESEARCHERS: Technicians man their posts on the atom smasher or "particle acceler-ator" at Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, N. Y. Such costly accelerator* are probingthe secrete of the Inner universe, a basic research which, though seemingly aimless, could lead tonew sources of power or control over disease.

atom-smashersaccelerators."

The world's

ANDERSON BROS, meMala Offtct ft Wartfcowt.11-53 Mtebonle StRtd Icmh

TEL SH 1-0030- truck Offlfa ••« WiKfciiM

T*k ••.•••Ml | . l t « TTit IRINLIV AVINUI

- BRADLEY MACM••i i • • o. a. ait twin

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Na. 1 la looi Commoolti

.basic research has led to someof man's greatest technologicaladvances, including atomic ener-gy, transistors, drugs and vac-cines.

Basic research is the reasonfor building dozens of powerful

or "particle

most powerfulmachine—half-a-mile around andcosting 31 million dollars—juststarted operating at BrookhavenNational Laboratory, Upton, N.Y.Physicists plan more, and some-times costlier, machines.

They gleefully announce dis-covery of the anti-proton or aparticle called sigma zero. Theytalk of a curious "zoo" of nuclearparticles detected within or com-ing from the cores of atoms. Theyponder the meaning.

Is this all beyond the under-standing of the average citizen?

By no means, at least in broadoutline of this fascinating inneruniverse. As a caution, though,some of it may seem preposter-ous, our usual concepts of com-mon sense.

To begin, an atom Is similarto a miniature solar system.

It has a nucleus (like a sun)with electrons (like planets)whirling about it. Electrons formthe outer shell, giving the atomshape and form.

But there is only empty spacebetween the electrons and nucle-us, like the space between theearth and sun.

If the nucleus were the size ofa baseball, the nearest electronsin various atoms might be half-a-mile to 20 miles away.

The nucleus represents vir-

ball would weight nearly as muchas the earth.

The hearts of all the atoms inyour body would amount to aninfinitesimal speck. We and everything else are mostly emptyspace.

Thirty years ago, the nucleuswas thought to consist of just twokinds of pieces of matter—theproton, and the neutron. Protonshave a postive electric charge,the neutron no charge. Pothweigh about the same. An atom-has one circling electron, with a

tually all the mass or weight ofthe atom. Electrons are so light-weight they scarcely count.

Heavy Little BallThe nucleus is so tighty packed

that—if all the electrons werestripped away—all the nuclei ofall the atoms on earth could forma ball only 400 feet across, Dr.Robert Hofstadter of StanfordUniversity estimates. Yet this

HYDROGENATOM

1 IUCTRON

Even before World War II andthe A-bomb, scientists had evi-dence and suspicions that theheart of the atom was 'ar morewondrously organized than firstsuspected.

Brilliant deductions and theories and studies with cosmic raysand atom-smashers have bornethem out and advanced the story

WONDROUS DIFFERENCE: An atom of hydrogen has but oaeelectron revolving about its nucleus. An atom of oxygen has 16—one for each proton In its nucleus. It's the only difference be-tween them. And when two atoms of hydrogen and one atom ofoxygen share electrons they make up a molecule of water.

Dear Cwrge:I wu iilliof la tht movie hold-

tag haadi with my girl. It waian exciting movie and I gueu :got confused. My girl was fittinjon myleft and I ended up holdiag hands with the

times better than the girl I westin the movies with. So everythingworked out fine.

Happy as Can Be

Dear Happy:You trying to get me fired, or

something? Quit working out yourown problems. That is my advice

With all the pre-packaged stuffd

p p gat the supermarkets bow long doyou think it will be before Amerlean women forget completely

Hankhow to cook?

Dear Hank:I would have said five years,

Mkl|«Ma]IM

tkmr (wftotawr ft* to > artos. This may spread, ao don'tgive up.

Norm Halberstadt, a junior onthe Virginia Military Institutequintet, comes from Brooklyn,N.Y. Last season he led the Key-dets in scoring with 372 poinU

20

ouncinaA NEW BANKING SERVICE FROM

THE MONMOUTH COUNTY NATIONAL BANK

AUTOMATIC SAVINGS!

u

i .

If you're one of those people who wants to save but alwaysseems to put it off, an AUTOMATIC SAVINGS account maybe just rigiil fur you.

With AUTOMATIC SAVINGS, you hang on to part ofevery paycheck in spite of yourself. This new kind of accountlets you write the checks you want—and saves for you auto-matically. Naturally, you get interest on your savings, com-pounded every three months.

HOW IT WORKS

J u s t step into one of the Monmouth County National's 6neighborhood offices. Tell us how much a month you wantto save—from $10 on up. Then, on the 5th or 18th of themonth—whichever is best for you—we automatically tuck thatamount away for you.

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negative charge, for every protonin the core.

Atoms make up all the known102 chemical elements

Wondrously,ence an atom

the only differof silver—or any

KIDS AWAY?Tell them to phone and reverse thecharges. Better than a letter 'causeyou visit in person. Costs little. 3 min.station call to Cleveland from AtlanticCity, for example-only 85* after6 PM-10% tax not included.

NOTICE!MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY

BUS SERVICEfrom

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and Newman Springs Road at . . .•:40 A. M. and 7:20 A. M.

Exp. via Parkway

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other atom—is the total numberof protons and neutrons in thecore (with a circling electron foreach proton.)

The simplest atom, hydrogen,has just one proton and one elec-tron. Oxygen has 16 protons andneutrons. Gold has 197, silver107, explosive uranium has 235.

The nucleus is not alteredwhen one atom joins anotheratom to form a molecule. Twoatoms of hydrogen and one ofoxygen form a molecule of water.But all they do is share electrons.

The stupendous energy of everyatom was this which was setfree when scientists learned howto split atoms for bombs and forpeacetime atomic power plants.

What happens is that part ofthe material in the nucleus issuddenly transformed into energy

Turner HeadsNa Tsi Hi

WEST DEAL — Explorer ScoutDennis Turner, of Post 45, WestLong Branch, was elected chief ofNa Tsi Hi Lodge, Order of theArrow, at the organization's ninthannual father and son dinner inthe Georgian House.

Turner, an Eagle Scout, lives at465 Dewey St., Long Branch.

More than 160 scouts and theirfathers attended the affair. Thelodge is sponsored by MonmouthCouncil of Boy Scouts.

Other lodge officers elected for1961 were William B. Morgan,troop 45, West Long Branch, vicechief; Raymond Poplar, Sea Ex-plorer Ship 7, Neptune, secretary,and John D. Flockhart, Troop 110,Lincroft, treasurer.

Superior Court Judge TheodoreJ. Labrecque, Fair Haven, laudedthe lodge members on their ac-complishments.

George M. Pope, 3d, retiringlodge chief, was master of cere-monies. Rev W. Robert Oswald,pastor of the Reformation Evan-gelical Lutheran Church, WestLong Branch, gave the invocation.

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

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Page 5: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

•A JET IS JUST UKEASE6ULM AIRPLANE,

MEDICALMEMOS

ly H. L Hertcttensohn,MO.

We sometimes become angrywith relatives who spend muchof their time on the telephone or

Quickest

anywherePortland,Maine 75fYoungstown,Ohio 85*

writing lengthy letters, some ofwhich are never mailed.

I'; should be obivous that thesepersons are "ventilating," whichis another way of saying theyare giving vent to their emo-tions in much the same way assteam escapes through a safetyvalve when the pressure gets toohigh. Before being too critical ofsuch persons because they are"wasting time" it would pay tounderstand them better therebyfinding a bettef way for them toexpress their feelings.

Sometimes the person has noone at home who will listen toher problems. She may even de-cide to visit a doctor, not be-cause she is ill, but because shewill then have an opportunity totalk to someone who will listen.Unfortunately, most doctors donot have time to chat for hourseven though to do so would begood for the patient. It is there-fore important for such a person to choose a doctor who iswarmly sympathetic during thetime that is spent with him.

The point is that most personsfind if they are given an oppor-tunity to bring their problems upto the surface and express theirthoughts either in writing or inwords the problems do not lookso bad after all and life is thatmuch easier to face.

ColumnBy ALFRED SHEMWOLD

The beginning of the year is agood time to make a resolutionthat will sava you a large num-ber of tricks: Don't bother tofinesse when the opponent's kingis singleton. If you confess thatyou don't know when the king isjnguarded, I'll amend the rule:It seldom pays to take a finessethat is sure to lose.

Take this hand by way of example. When it was played induplicate geme last year, veryfew players followed the righresolution.

West opened the king of dia-monds, getting a hearty ninefrom East. West followed withthe aep of diamonds and a thirddiamond.

At most tables, South ruffedthe third diamond and immedi-ately led the queen of spades fora finesse. As you can see, thefinesse lost to the singleton king,and South had to lose a clubtrick as well. Dow one.

A few players caught the singleton king of spades. They didn'peek. It was just a matter ollogic.

After ruffing the third round ofdiamonds, South's correct play isto lead the king of clubs. Con-ceivably, an opponent may de-cide to hold up the ace of clubs,and then South will be home free.

But there is another reasonfor the club play: South wants tifind out which opponent has theace of clubs. And he finis outthat West started with thi. aciof clubs in addition to the • Pe-king of diamonds.

T—tti, • Pa* ON* ;»aHy•farted Hviu twin* (Mf years

I retire I'm going to start <*•-estimates he now hasrolling it at the Post Office andabout seven miles wrapped in a

ball weighingDounds.

live at the point where the stringruns out."

West deaierNorth-South vulnerable

NORTH4k A 9 8V J 9 5• J 10 6• Q J 8 7

WEST EAST4 7 5 4 * K• 8 4 3 • 7 6 2• A K 7 2 • Q 9 8 4• A 6 3 * 10 9 5 4 2

SOUTH• Q J 10 6 3 2« A K Q 10• 5 3• K

We* North East SoafhPass Pass Pass l ' APus 2 * Pass 4 4kAll Pass

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ffav T.rk, n. T. <Sp~l.l> - For thefrit time science has found a newfettling substance with the aston-ishing ability to shrink hemor-rhoids, stop itching, and relievepain — without surgery.

In ease after case, while irentlyrelieving pain, actual reduction(shrinkage) took place.

Host amaring of all-result* wera

•o thorough that sufferers madiastonishing statement* like "Fileihave ceased to be a problem!"

The secret is a new healing substane* (Bio-Dyne*)-discovery ola world-famous research institute

This substance is now availabliin tupporifory or ointmtnt formunder the name Preparation H*At all drug counters.

And how much have youtavad? What If you hadsaved 10% of all you'd•arned? Or 20%? Da-cirJt on a percentage andbring or mail that percent-age to us FIRST, everytine you get money.

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If South stops to think he sayto himself: "West passed origin-ally with the ace of clubs amthe ace-king of diamonds. He cannot possibly have the king ospades as well,"

Since a spade finesse cannoipossibly work, South leads ouldummy's ace of spades. It ipure luck that the king happento fall, but this is South's onlychance when he discovers thaithe finesse is sure to lose.

DAILY QUESTIONPartner opens with 1 NT (16 to

18 points), and the next playerpasses. You hold: Spades—A 9 8,hearts—J 9 5, diamonds—J 10 6,clubs—Q J 8 7. What do you say?

Answer: Bid 3 NT. The combined count is at least 25 points,and you have a fine collection onines and eights to bolster upthe honor cards.

Dress Up Her Doll!

Printed Pattern

RUMSON MAYOR Cartmell swearing in, left to right, Hyatt Cunningham, at fire chief,and Alfred West, as assistant chief. At extreme right is Edward McSoriey, retiringchief. Mr. Cunningham is sports editor of The Red Bank Register.

CROSSWORD PUZZLE AniV"r t0 8lturdivi Pui2li

ACROSS

1-AlgongulanIndian

4-Snare*•-Knock

12-Artillcl»llanguage

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ornamentU-f'art of

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of Athena24-Negativtt26-Saucy29-Playthlng*31-Armed

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ear«1-Tht self62-Burdened64-Sallor

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for wasteS-Part of

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title8«-Soft foodS8-Tlny

There are an estimated 2,590chamber music groups in American colleges and universities.

Iroquois Indians carried min-iature canoes as amulets to keepfrom drowning.

— 3 TUD'O -

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Futura Syndicate, 1

BeliordCaptain James Doherty, fourth

Missile Battalion, 71st Artillery.Fort Hancock, will be guestspeaker at the Bayview Parent-Teacher Association meeting to-morrow. His topic will be airdefense. A film will oe shownPaul Le Fever, superintendent

of Middletown schools, will speakon the proposed school budgetfor 1961-62. Members of theBoard of Education will also bepresent.

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Viviancelebrated their 33rd wedding an-niversary recently with Mr. andMrs. Arthur Kalberer of NewHyde Park at a family dinner.

HOME IMPROVEMENT

ATTIC CONVERSION

Hi t wastt space in your attic can btcomt handsomtliving quarters . . . and at a mast amaxlngly lowprice. Call and set.

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la order to keep our crewof expert workmen busyduring the winter months,we are having a gigantichome improvement tale.Save like never before onany type improvement —Urge or small. Phone to-day (or a free estimate andtee how big your savingscan be!

No Money Down1st Paym't—April

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Surprise your little girl withthis glamor wardrobe for hernew grown-up doll! Beginner-easy pattern includes 3 dresses,blouse, ped»I pushers, coat andpetticoat. Use remnants.

Printed Pattern 9302: For slim,grown-up dolls W/i, 18, 20, 22Inches tall. State size.

Send SOc (coins) for this pat-tern — add 10c for each patternfor Ist-class mailing. Send toMari.in Martin, Red Bank Regis-ter, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18thSt., New York 11, N. V. Printplainly nnme, address with zone,he and stylo number.101) 1'ASrilON FINDS—the best,

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Joshua Trent suits of imported and domestic fabrics, reg. 75.00 to 105.00 now 58.90 lo 78.90

Topcoats, zip-lined coats, overcoats, all-weather carcoats, reg. 35.00 lo 95.00 now 28.90 to 68.90

Sportcoats, Joshua Trent and others, in tweeds, checks, muted plaids, reg. 35.00 to 65.00 now 24.90 to 48.90

Boys' and Young Men's outerwear coats, assorted fabrics, reg. 16.95 to 49.95 now 12.99 to 39.99

Men's sweaters, pullovers and coat styles, heavy weight and light, reg. 10.95 to 25.00 now 7.99 to 16.90

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Page 6: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

KM fade KqtorTHOMAS IKVINC HROWN,

JAMES J. HOGAN; Editor M. HAROLD KELLY, GeaertJ MuagerW. HARRY PENNINGTON, Production Muafcr

Member of the Associated PressTht Associated Press if entitled exclusively to the UM [or rrpubllc»tlon or mil th* local otwi printed

i l ocwipiper M well aa all AT news dispatches.

Member Audit Bureau of Circulation

Tht Red bank Register assumes no financial responsibilities for typographic!) trrora In advertlsa-Btnta. but will reprint without charge, lhat part o! an advertisement In which the typographical error oc*•uri. Advertisers will please notify the management immediately of tny error which may occur.

Thli newspaper assumes no responsibilities for statement! of oplnloni In letterl from ltf readers.

•ubicrlpllon Prices In Advance•lnfl* copy at counter. 7 centi

One year 115.00; SIX months 19.00copy by mall, ft M D U

TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 19C1

Toward the HorizonRumson - Fair Haven Regional cal "average" student, with the re

High School's reputation as one of suit that the bright were bored, the

the state's progressive high schools! slower students abandoned.

was enhanced recently when the

Board of Education approved eight

more curriculum changes for 1961-62.

The modifications, prepared un-

der the direction of the assistant su-

perintendent Donald F. Trotter, are

neither startling nor unique. All

eight, in fact, have gained wide ac-

ceptance—at least in theory—among

educators who take the time to

study fact-finding reports of the

various educational investigation

committees.

Several of the changes, however,

deserve comment. Starting with

next year's ninth grade, the school

will provide special instruction for

students classified as "dull normal,"

I.e.—childr«n in the 75-90 I.Q. range.

These students would carry only

four "major" courses, one of which

would be in the special study area.

The administration frankly hopes to

extend the program through gradua-

tion.

Homogeneous curriculum plan-

ring of this type was practically un-

known, certainly not openly prac-

ticed, five or 10 years ago. High

school instruction, even in the col-

lege preparatory sections, was al-

most exclusively aimed at the mythi-

Special programs for "dull nor-

mal" students, of course, are stiil on

a voluntary basis, and educators ad

rnit and are frustrated by the deter-

mination of many parents to keep

their children in programs beyond

their capabilities. But the inclusion

of such a program is encouraging.

The regional is also instituting

two other "modern" concepts which

other county schools might well con-

sider. In line with recommendations

to strengthen the secondary English

program, the school has relieved its

English teachers of all study hall as-

signments. The extra time is de-

signed to give the teachers more

time to read and grade additional

themes and essays by the students.

Chemistry students next year

will be treated to the "team teach-

ing approach," in which one in-

structor will lecture both sections,

thus freeing the other instructor for

individual laboratory work with

slower students. College graduates

dating back to 1872 may recognize

this as a variation of the lecture-

seminar system, but on the high

school level it may prove an effect-

ive solution to growing problems of

staffing and student distribution.

These Bays:

The New Administration Begins to Take ShapeBy GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY

The new Administration is be-ginning to take shape. The taskis not simple. President-electKennedy will have to appoint aVast number of persons to all

sorts of posi-tions. He canpursue a politi-cal course ands e l e c t onlythose who arepartisans; h e

appoint

in many respects not in the publicinterest.

It was anticipated before theelection that should Kennedy beelected, he might have appointed^Eugene R. Black of the Inter-'national Bank or John Jay Me-Cloy who is chairman of theChase Manhattan Bank. Insteadhe chose Douglas Dillon, out ofthe State Department.

stabbing. During the EisenhowerArministration, the a t t o r n e ygeneral's office was not politically very effective which may beone of many reasons why in areaslike New York State, the Republican party fell apart, President Eisenhower never managedto understand the nature ofpolitical structure. Vice Presi-dent Nixon's principal adviser in

The attorney general has often h l s c a m P*?, n w " t h e

,nn 3 nniit;r.,i =nnnintn» r j g e n e r a l , William Rogers.been a political appointee. Thethose who are most recent ones in that officer e commendedby various per-

SOKOLSKY s o n s- f o r o b v i -ously he can

• not kn-w all who have to bechosen; he can keep on manyEisenhower appointees.

have been Homer Cummings,Frank Murphy, Robert Jackson,Francis Biddle, Tom C. Clark,J. Howard McGrath, James P.McGranery, Horberl Brownell,Jr., and William P. Rogers,and Tom Clark went to the

The Department of Labor iscomparatively recent. Created in1903 as the Department of Commercn and Labor, in 1913 it wasseparated from Commerce. Nogreat national figure or evenoutstanding labor leader has thusfar served in this office. The fol-

Thus far, his pattern seems to j Supreme Court.be to select non-political persons | Tni> attorney general has a

.who are efficient but who will!large amount of patronage toI not have too great a voice in I dispense and he can use that as

a political club to keep Congressin line for a President. He canrebuild a political party by

j lowing have been secretaries oflabor since 11)13: William B. Wil-

has not b<?en in office, i,e I patronage. The appointment of: i n ( e d ,„ , h i s o f f i c e A r t h u r

yed no public role. When he Robert Kennedy would indicate Goidbcrgj a ] a ^ o r lawyer withoutspoken, decided opinions on

relationship of organizedlabor to the national economyA man of unusual attainments,completely independent of politi-cal pressures, he is likely to be

' a policy-maker. He touches on afield in which Robert Kennedyis an expert. The combination ofan upright secretary of laborwith a co-operative attorneygeneral could open a new era inAmerican unionism.

policy. The State Department isan example. Dean Rusk is not apolicy man. During the years thatheplayed no public role. When hewas in the State Department,during the Truman Administra-tion, he was not concerned withpolicy which was the function ofDean Acheson, a forceful per-sonality. Chester Bowles, theunder secretary, has opinions onmany s u b j e c t s , particularlyAsia, but in his position he isnot likely to have too much timefor policy. Paul Nitze, who plan-ned policy for Dean Acheson, is«ent to the Pentagon where hewill surely not be involved inforeign policy. Adlai Stevensongoes to the United Nations wherehe will have to compete with thereputation of Henry Cabot Lodgewhich will not be easy. At any;rate, if Khrushchev rattles a!shoe at Stevenson, we shall see!what a fighter he is. Douglas j

• Dillon who helped PresidentEisenhower make policy is over:In the Treasury tinder the new!regime. \

; Obviously, as one looks at this!•personnel, it is clear that John!•F. Kennedy, as President, will;make his own foreign policy. I;have read his campaign speechesto discover a pattern. There isnone in the speeches. We shallhave to wait for the policy tounfold.

So far as the Treasury is con-cerned, the appointment of Doug-las Dillon as secretary of thetreasury would indicate that tliejPresident elect would favor abalanced budget and hard money.1

On the oilier hand, although,Douglas Dillon starled life as abanker and the r.on of a banker, t

he has never been dominated by« Wall Street concept of national;financing, which is narrow andl 0—Tuesday, Jan, 3, 1961

• ' "'•')

Your Money's Worth:

Recession Bottom DueBy SYLVIA PORTER

The probability continue? that the current busi-

ness recession will bottom out in the second quarter

of this new year—roughly a year after the 1960-61

downturn began.

The odds still are that this fourth recession ofpost-World War II also will shape upas comparatively mild—meaning with-in the range of the 1953-54 and 1957-58declines.

None of the statistics you'll be

reading in the next several weeks wil

suggest this conclusion is warranted

Quite the contrary, we're now into the

PORTER period when the economic news is cer-

tain tc get worse for the simple reason

hat we're into the winter months. Even in booms the

winter is a phase of letdown and it's painfully obvious

:hat today's situation is far, far ffom a boom. Just the

act this is winter and the big Christmas buying season

is directly behind us will push up the total of jobless

ness, flatten retail sales, cut instalment buying, reduce

total industrial production, etc. The statistics to come

out in these weeks are bound to be dreary, give the

impression that the recession is deepening, spreading.

Perspective

Thus, it'll be more imperative than usual to keepthe gloomy figures in perspective. The encouragingfact is that even though the figures will be depressingn January, February and March, the most informed

and objective students of the business cycle in thenation stick to the reassuring view that we'll be experiencing the worst in these months and by mid-1961we'll be shifting back to a cycle of growth, be on theupbeat again. Here are some key reasons why:

(1) As significant as any factor is that this reces-sion has not snowballed, not fed on itself. We've beenin a downturn since the spring of 1960. The downspiral in steel, the slump in housing, the sag in indusries tied to housing—these have been serious enough:o cause a snowballing. Yet, the fears have not spreadout from the depressed areas through the entire na-ion; heaviest unemployment has remained concen-

son, James J. Davis, William N.ltrated in industrial regions, not drastically affectedDoak, Frances Perkins. L. B.. service and commercial centers. Over-all, retail sales

WILLIAMS. WHITE

WASHINGTON — Of all themen everywhere who wonderwhat the new year will bring,few are in greater doubt as towhat immediate course to takethan is Richard M. Nixon.

ReporterThe Hotel wow

MIAMI, Fla.—In the penthouse a t the Fontaine-bleau is a fast talker and poor listener named BenNovack. He is 52 and he owns the place. He has thincurly hair, eloquent fingers, and a hearing aid. He' ithe Brooklyn kid who ran $1,800 up to $20,000,000

in 20 years.He mispronounces words, but his

arithmetic is ideal. Ben arrived in MiamiBeach in 1940 and leased the MonroeTowers for $10,000. He didn't have thatmuch, so he took two partners in, andlater bought one out. Then he purchasedthe hotel for $168,000 just before theU.S. Army asked for it.

BISHOP Never fight the Army. Novack was

kicked out, at a profit, and leased the Cornell Hotel.He sold the lease—at a profit, what else?—and boughtthe Atlantis for $500,000. It was a good place, but BenNovack wanted a bigger, better place than the countryclub his parents owned in the Catskill Mountains.

In 1947, he had enough cash and enough creditto build a place. Ben Novack built the Sans Souci. Hefound out it means "Without Care." The Atlantis wassold for $1,500,000 and the Sans Souci cost .$3,000,000.Ben was always in hock, but, happily, in bigger hockall the time. He sold the Sans Souci for $4,650,000 andkept title to the land under it.

Novack didn't have to learn to become shrewd.When he was born, he refused to cry until the doctorgave him an extra whack. At 44th Street and MiamiBeach, he sauntered around the old Harvey FirestoneEstate and the Albert Warner home. One day he boughtthe land—950 feet along the beach and 350 feet deep—for $2,500,000. The next day, Ben was offered $3,-500,000 for it and turned it down.

He wanted to build a classy hotel, a hotel to endall hotels. He had married Beniice Stempel, a red-headed model, and he told her that he was going tospend $12,000,000 on the building alone. There wasan old friend up north named Morris Lapidis. Mr.

Thp retiring Republican Vice- Lapidis was an architect, but his main work was de-resident, so narrowly defeated . _: _._„„ *„„„*„ <•„_ _u : ___. n.._ .,.,„»

Schwellenbach, Maurice J. Tobin,Martin P. Durkin and James P.Mitchell.

President-elect Kennedy has

that the President-elect is pro-tecting his rear from political

FOR A*JVPUT THE

P A T E —DELAYED BY PRACTICE

BALTIMORE (AP) - MadameAgi Jambor, concert pianist, toldErnest R. Fink of Baltimoreabout the incident at a musicalfestival in Pennsylvania.

Kn route by train (o an en-lagement in Kalamazoo, Mich.,

Madame Jambor opened up herportable practice keyboard in

sleeping car c.'rth andj clacked away on the gadget tojkeco her fingers limber.

Next day, the train arrived inKalamazoo two hours late. WhenMadame Jambor asked why, theconductor said they had stoppedfor two hours during the night tomake a fruitless search for thesource of a dangerous clackingnoise in one of the sleeping cars.

AID TO EDUCATIONTALI.AIIASSF.F., Fla. (AP) -

[There's a f.nrxl chance that ai Florida Stale University student

W |who pays a campus 'raffle fine is!' helping to finance his education.

Revenue from speeding andovertime-parking fines goes intoa scholarship fund or pays thesalaries of student traffic pa-trolmen.

have held up remarkably well and so have personal in-comes. The recession has spread, yes, but it has notsnowballed—and that's a votal distinction.

(2) In some key areas, the recession has been sharp—or to put it in the vernacular, the rolling adjustmentof 1960 already has done a fair amount of rolling.

The collapse in steel needs no elaboration. Thehousing decline has been severe by any yardstick. In-ventories have been slashed across the board. Pricesof many raw materials and of finished goods too havebeen cut more than is apparent on the surface. Thecleanout in inventories should be over in the first halfof 1961 and even modest increases in demand willforce lots of corporations to refill their shelves.

Anti-Recession

(3) Several major anti-recession forces have beenoperating for some months now and they surely musthave an impact.

The Federal Reserve System began retreating fromtight money and moving toward easy money early in1960—and credit now is abundant and cheaper. Gov-ernment spending has been on the rise and the federalbudget is back in the red. These are classical anti-slumpweapons.

(4) And now comes a concerted U.S. governmentdrive to get the economy moving ahead once more.There is no doubt that the Kennedy administration willact to stimulate the economy through more spendingon defense, highways, schools, housing, urban rede-velopment, etc. There is no doubt that as corporationsreceive new government contracts, they will hire andrehire, increase payrolls, help spur listless communities.

Prefor the Presidency itself onlylast month, is receiving shoals ofadvice. An endless line of sug-gestions—from his staff, fromfellow Republicans in and out ofCongress, from the public—flowsacross the Capitol desk he isabout to vacate after eight years.

On Jan. 9 Nixon will reachthe not too-advanced age of 48.And this milestone in his life iscuriously paralleled by an op-portunity to take any one of alarge number of forks in theroad in his career.

Amid allwhich surround him, (here areonly two certainties. He will not

| signing store fronts for shopping centers. Ben sentMorris a drawing of the land and said: "Come on down,but, before you get here, draw some hotels to fit thisland."

Lapidis arrived with 27 drawings. Ben said: "Whoowns these?" Morris said "You do." So Novack torethem up. "I want a hotel," he said sarcastically, "with500 rooms, one on each floor." Ben went out and gotsome books on architecture. He was reading one inthe bathroom when he emerged in triumph. He had adrawing from a Brazilian building.

"Bernice," he said, "how would you like to seethe uncertainties a j , j g beautiful hotel in a curve facing southeast withrl htm Ihprrt ivp °

big beautiful sunken gardens like we saw in Fontaine-bleau, France?" Mrs. Novack is bright. She said yes.

Lapidis and Novack worked over the plans. Ber-nice went out and bought big statues for the lobby.Ben and Morris did the decor of the entire establish-

for a moment forfeit, in anyway, the titular leadership ofthe Republican party which heearned by carrying the GO.P.fight in the recent campaign.And he has no intention of al- m e n t s i n c e t h e p i a c e h a s b e e n o p e n N o v a c k h a s b u i l t

a new tower to the north, and a ballroom that seats5,000 between the original building and the new one.

The cost of the Fontainebleau ran to $13,500,000.The land cost $2,500,000. Improvements ran to $4,000,-000. Lapidis was paid $65,000. "He was worth twiceas much," Ben said.

The Fontainebleau has 1,038 rooms, all king-sized.In the summer, the rates run from $16 to $30 a day.In the winter, it costs $37 to $65 a day, without foodor a nod from a bellboy. Suites cost $105 to $200 aday. There are 300 cabanas, tennis courts, sunken gar-dens, beautiful public'rooms; the coffee shop is bigger

lowing the party to be capturedin Congress — the only placewhere it now has any nationalforum—either by the left wingled by Gov. Nelson Rockefeller!of New York or the riqht wingled bv Sen. Barry Goldwater ofArizona.

And there is, also, one next-to-certainty. This is that Nixonwill actively seek tha Republi-can Presidential nominationagain in 1964. Mr. Nixon himselfdoes not put his ambition thisstrongly, nor do his closest asso-ciates. All the same, all hisplanning - necessarily fluid in ' ' " " ' . — . - , i.,v. v.v,..,detail as it is for the time be-j tnan Bll 'y Roses Gay Nineties Club,ing—has one constant, basic fae-j Novack must take in $12,000,000 a year to make

the place pay. He can do this with 60 per cent roomoccupancy, and the Fontainebleau has averaged 78 percent. So he's solvent. In fact, out of $20,000,000 incosts, Mr. Novack owes the banks only $7,500,000. Heowns 72 per cent of his hotel, and has two mysteriouspartners who own the rest.

Jack Benny was a flop at the Fontainebleau at$35,000 a week. But Ben doesn't mind. His kitchencost $1,000,000 and has stainless steel boxes that will

tor: he intends so to cnnduct hislife as to remain readily avail-able for '64.

Thus the probabilities are thathe will not accept any corpora-tion job: will not run 'or Gov-ernor of California, will not takea college presidency. He is mostlikely to return to California toa large, lucrative and i.mlemand-ing law practice—undemandingin that he can pick h's casesand make his time his own.

k e eP a S°od s t e a k l l 0 t f o r h o u r s ' o r cold allhZZnl^T a,test an imperfect solution, andl night. Dishes run on conveyor belts into huge wash-Nixon knows it well. For he ers. One of the coffee urns makes 250 gallons of cof-

fee at a time.

So what's $35,000? The oldest joke at the Fon-tainebleau is about the man who dropped a quarterand, when a bellhop picked it up, denied it was his be-cause he didn't want to give the kid a dollar tip inreturn . . .

As 1960 ended on a downtrend, so 1961 should f m m w h i c h '." sPcak-

needs some sort of national ros-trum from which to keen hisname and views consistently he-fore the national public. TheCalifornia governorship wouldserve fairly well for this, as'alaw firm would not.

But the trouble with the gov-ernorship would be that Nixonwould instantly become involvedin all sorts of local ami regionalissues blurring and oerhans evendistorting the picture of na-tional leadership he must con-tinue somehow to offer.

So the strong odds are thatn the end Nixon will decidehat the least unsatisfactory ofall the routes open to him willbe to return to the law—but tokeep his engagement book wideopen to lecturing and perhapswriting at places and in publica-tions guaranteeing him some na-ional audience.His problem is deenly signifi-

cant not because it is RichardNixon's problem and not evensolely because it involves aman for whom so many voted sorecently for President.

The central problem 's In thisnew illustration of the humanwastefulness of our political sys-em. After Inauguration Day,Jan. 20, we shall have three liv-ing and unemployed ex-Presi-dents as well as a newly retiredVice-President entitled tn speakor verv nearly half the country

but larking much of a place!

"Here Goes A Beautiful Relationship'

end on an upturn. And most important is the likelihoodthat when the superficial business picture appears thedarkest this winter, the fundamentals should be flash-ing the timing of the next broad recovery.

I The two rivals of Nixon forthe headship of the Republicanparty, Governor Rockefeller andSenator Goldwater, will, more-over, have megaphones notavailable to Nixon himself.

Page 7: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

' 7 4 " .

Wtm-

1: Democracy Fails A Testcxonwoto PUZZLE

EDITOR'S NOTE—Next Sunday Americans begin the com-memoration of the great war that rent the Union a centuryago. Was this actually an "irrepressible conflict" or a tragedyof errors that could have been avoided? In the first of afour-part series adapted from atl address delivered before theAssociated Press managing editors convention, one of the na-tion's leading Civil War historians discusses that question andits meaning for Americans today.

By BRUCE CATTONFor the Associated Press

It is sometimes said that the Civil War came because the machinery of democracy had broken down.!

not been handled. Yet there wasi "4'mo!!ii'iw

That is not quite true. It came because the machinery!not necessarily anything in it.of democracy was not used. . \*«£^'dfffetnf"stated <T

To see how this happened, go back one centuryiunion to go to war with one:

it ought to be abolished every-where as speedily as possible.Sentiment was by no meansunited, however; there were!many people in the North who:disliked slavery but were perfect-ly willing to go along with it on!

[the ground that it was really a| problem for the southerners. [

j For a long time this slavery

outburst1 j-Tt-titonic

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to the presidential election!of 1860.

An enormous issue dis-

[another — nothing that would, J.'.:j|™s'"ii,,,but Dowerful crouo ! c o r n P e l 600,000 young men to die; 45-<• I'tTaiV o'r"

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" ndbuttrra'sed "by" all""sorts' of" |Tre-|beforethe nation could come to; f l ^ of r a c #

judices and habits of mind; a n ja f i n a I

jinstitution, furthermore, that was;

As * about it.of fact, this issue

Issueshandle

humanit was

beings haveextremely com

plicated and its deeper implica-tions were not always clear, butin the main it had to do with theexistence in America of theinstitution of chattel slavery.There were of course other issuesIn that year, but in one way or

so"deepl7imbedded i n ' t h e ' s o c ^ s periphera, even in >860. The;a n d e c o n o m j c framework of the|blK argument centered on the,

to cotton South that no one could ^.ues! lon o f slavery in the tor-s e e how to get rid of it without ritories. Not even the Republi-

c a n s acausing a shattering convulsion. c a n s a r 8 l l e d t h a t t h c federalgovernment had any authority to,

Was Withering j]jmj t o r abolish the institution inIn the more northerly tier of I the separate states.

southernly but visiblyvine. It was still

states slavery was slow-jisibly withering on the

Territorial1 1 ne whole problem revolved

somethingiarollnc] the territorial issue —andanother they all seemed to re- everyone was adjusted to, and(il w a s already becoming obvious'volve around this question ofj oeople tended to approach it with]tjlat slavery was not going to putilavery. j their emotions rather than withjd(nvn l a s t j n j , roots j n u,e ter-

There was no unanimity offeeling, because the institution it-lelf affected different people in•uch different ways.

In the cotton states of the deepSouth slavery in 1860 was a goingconcern, immensely profitable to

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their minds, but it was not quite)ritories no matter what thethe same here, as in the deep | fecieral government mitiht do.South. JNcver did the American people

North of the Mason and Dixonlgct s o worked up over a problem of the principal ones seems toh b i l h i

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Line slavery had been discardedias remote as this. have been, quite simply, that itbl f

Lee tocould not have been uprooted'the ordinary American in I860 to M | ] | I r l p v ' t tovernight from the states where sit down and think things U U l l U C l O

y e q pyaltogether, and more and more We can easily see that slavery was just too much trouble forpeople were coming to feel that d1

SEA BRIGHT — Police Patiol-man Gerald Cranmer yesterdaywas sworn in as this resort's newfire chief as Borough Council Franklyn Young, Harry Lakf.held its 19G1 organization meet- Burgess Kmmons and ' Charlesin8- Dillione, h(Kik and ladder drivers

, Burgess F.mmons, Harry Lake.'.]. I ranklvn Young. John J.: Keunan, Jr., J. Harry Robertson.William A. Smith. Cyril Smack.J r . Edward Price, VictorPerotti, Sr.. Thomas l.i'anClarence Eilenbcrger. John R.

i Deckert, Waller Johnson. Arthur1 Raylan. George liinke. Jr..Thomas Johnson, Janes Feliu,

; Axol Forsman. Jack Fitcher, An-• drew Johnson. Harold D. F'stelle,Walter Covert, Jr., Ralph W.Lawrence, Edv^ard Dillon. Jer-ome Welch and Leroy f<ork.special police

I These men are to be paid onlywhen called to work.

Rev. Donald Higbee wasconfirmed as a member of theborough's Juvenile Conference,and Frank M. Festejo. Jr., amember of thc Recreation Com-mittee.

The council decided to continueits regular meetings on the sec-

Mr. Cranmer, sworn into office n n t l an<i !mnh Tuesday of eachby Borough Attorney A. Henry m o n t h ' parting at 8 p.m. duringGiordano, is the successor of l h e E a s t c r n Standard Time peri-James Feliu as chief. A new fire'™' a " d a t 9 P m- d"rinK t l l e

pumper will be added to depart- ^ SavinR r ' T h ' l u r s

ment equipment in 10G1, accord-ing to council plans.

In a move to strengthen bor-

MD YOU

KNOW?There's a

to serve you in

EATONi OWNMonmouth

Shopping CenterMIDDLETOWNRoute 35 and

Middletown Rd.

Gerald Cranmer

Saving Time hfiurs.The Sea Bright National Bank

was redesignated as the bor-ough's official depository.

jough protection, Mayor Thomas i s s u e b r u | s e r e s u I t s c o m e f a s .Farrell thi year won Boroughlight

jit was central to the social and through.was easier just to feel —

j yiFarrell this year won Borough:

j political organization — not with- It was'out an upset too fundamental fnr;resjx)nd

WALL TOWNSHIP -Rnm^nn hiiilrior u/'li hp

Jersey Shore Builders Associa-tion at the annual

I society to bear. We can just as.'tum emotions loose, to let angerjclearlv that in the very nature and fear and suspicion have theiror things slavery was a" doomed!way, to settle down in a fix^jmcetin-institution. It could not endure position and wait for the °tlier |B c a u ^ i v a O ( ,verv much longer in the develop-!fellow to back down. Politics! °in»'19th century. Host its flexibility. The willing-! Jet-Heet, Inc.,

I ' ,0 ' I, r ™ . »•?'«*!& "[ "r«™ Mictael F. Lynch, who joins Dr.

iter.—Advertisement.

Prompt Service!inauguration

in at Ih c r e '

John D. Powers in this detail.

rnanufacturers

Council gave complete endorse-ment to the mayor's other ap-

ipointments,, which follow:

I P ' I . H M ^ L l l l U I N . j . v ^ . n u j . . . . n u n . . . , , . . . * _ •• ^ , ; • j

Furthermnre,' in April of 1860 ness to debate, to negotiate and o f a new lype of heating equip-Appointees

'all nf the machincrv' of the^at"l"as't"to"f'ind''some"goo'd"'middie.lncn': will be host at a cocktail! A. Henry Giordano, borough;idemocracy was at hand, ready ground disappeared. ^arty and will demonstrate the!attorney; Mrs Joan Axelsen, borjto he used. The I>rmirratic Par- Tomorrow: Compromise Spurned h o m e heating apparatus.11v was about to hold its presi-; Slated to be indue'ed by

jough clerk and treasurer; Ed-L e o i w a r d Dillr>n. assistant clerk; Otis

jdential nominating convention; a' EATING DOWNlittle later, the Republican Party: MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) —jsey State Home Builders Associawas going to <lo the same. After! Believe it or not, Americans are] tion, are Philip Solondz, Lake-the nominations there would bejeating less today than i gener-jwood, first vice president; Josephthe campaign itself, in whichjation ogo, a food chain executive,Scalise, West Long Branch, sec-nominees, party workers and says.

[Chmil, president of the New Jer-|R- Seaman, borough engineer;:- !sev State Home Builders Associa. J o s e P h J- S c a m a n & C o - borough j

auditor. jJack Ryan, street superinten-

dent; Lester E. Perrine, buildinginspector; Mrs.

GOING TO NEWARK?

Iretary, and Allen Katz, Lake- inspector; Mrs. lta Jacobsen,| newspaper pundits could examine! Consumption of potatoes and'wood, treasurer. overseer of the poor; Steffinia(the issue in detail. Then there!sweet potatoes has been cut iiv The following members will i , e ' S w ° n s e n ' l l b r a r i a n ; J- H a r r y]|would be an election and thehalf. according to Myer B.|installed as directors: Joseph:R o b c r 's™. three-year member,jpeoplc themselves would renderjMarcus. iFabiano, Shrewsbury; Charles'isome sort of verdict. Then there* Department of Agriculture fig-;Froehlich. Freehold, one year;would be a new President and a ures show per capita consump-istuart S. Robertson, Red Bank,new Congress; presumably, they'tion of food declined from 1,641 • two years; and Benjamin Mann,

Andrew Hccht, one-year1

DEPENDAILE WORK

BY OUR EXPERTS

MIXES'36 IROAD ST.

RED IANK

Oakhurst: John W. Post, Rumson,and Anton Mannik, Lakcwood,

! three years.! Due to be honored iluring the

BORO BUSES

would he able to provide some pounds in 190!) to 1,488 poundssort of solution. in 1959, lie said.

Showdown •The opportunity and the means' SOMETHING FISHY

to get the nation nut of its tragic RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Yes.; program is past president, Rob-fix existed. Unfortunately, they there was something fishy about c r t j . Schmertz of Lakcwood;were not used. In this one in-(the balloting in Henrico County.: former treasurer, Jack lacopinostance, democracy failed to moot'When the heavy vote in the presi-:of Laurclton; former secretary,the test. Instead of working forjdential election caused the reg-!RObert Holder of Soring Lakea settlement it worked for ajular ballot boxes to be filled to:nejEritS| and Richard E. Sharpeshowdown — which, within a-overflowing County Purchasing|of Manasquan, who has servedyear, it got, at a staggering!Agent A. E. Bcrlington boiightjon the board of directors sinceprice. The reason for its failure:20 fishing tackle boxes to take: 1953,aie extremely complex, hut one th"? overflow. j F.ntertainment will be provid-

; !ed during the cocktail and din-!ner hour by Candy and herj Beau. Credentials nf member-I ship will be given to MiUon Kass.of Jackson, and Vincent J. Rus-so, Rumson builder.

The largest solar furnace inthe United States can generatetemperatures up to 2.760 degreescentigrade. It's located in Natick,Mass.

Gay, Cozy, Easy!

Tbmpest puts safety-mindedperformance in a gas-saving 4!

(Kange of horsepower choices from 110 to 155)

Take a Tempest out on the highway and put it uuouo,iits paces. This car is a whiz at moving into fast-steppingcompany on an expressway. Takes you from a standingstart to a safe operating speed in seconds . . . gets you upa steep hill in high gear.

Run the Tempest over the roughest road you can find. Itrides like the big ones because it's balanced! The engine'sup front—the transmission's in the rear. And it's gotindependent suspension at all four wheels. Tires dig infirm on curves and turns. Full 15-inch wheels make carlook big. Tires last. Brakes run cooler.

Before it hit the market, Tempest had 3,000,000 miles oftesting by engineers, pro drivers and a team of teenagers.Its reliability checked out 100%. Owners have rolled upmillions more. The only kick is the one it puts back indriving. Try it!

THE NEW TEMPEST IS SOLD AND SERVICED HY YOLK LOCAL AUTHORIZED 1'ONTIAC DEALER

THE HOT TOPIC IS THE NEWTEMPEST RYPONTIAO

RASSAS BROTHERS395 BROAD .STREET BANK

Family treasure! Take thiseasy-tn-knit afghan on trips, togames, or use on wintry nights.

Choose a lively '(-color schemenr scraps for this attractiveafglu'n. Knitted shell medallions—join later. Pattern 718: knittingdirections.

Send ,15c (coins) for this pat-tern—add 10c lur each pattern,for lst-elass mailing. Send toRevl Bank Register, NeedlecrnftDept., P.O. Bcix Ifil, Old ChelseaStation, New York 11, N. Y. Print 'plainly pattern number, name,addres's and zone.

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123 BROAD ST. RED BANK

Page 8: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

Retired TalentBY JAMES MARLOW

AfMdated Prctf Newt AnalystWASHINGTON (AP) — The nation will have three ex-presi

lent! and three former vice presidents — but will probably findittle or nothing for them to do — when Dwight D. Eisenhowertteps out of the White House Jan. 20. ,

The three former Presidents — Eisenhower, 70, Truman, 7G,ind Hoover, 88 — have had vast governmental experience.

Iff been »rgued the country could well use that experience.rhat'« debatable.

President Kennedy almost cer-tainly won't call on the three,'ormer vice presidents: RichardM. Nixon, 47; Heniy Wallace,(2, and John Nance Garner, 92.His reasons in each case wouldbe different.

Practical PoliticianKennedy, a practical politician

who may be looking for re-elec-tion in 1964, is not likely to buildup the prestige of Nixon, whoran against him in 196O.and mayrun again.

As for Wallace and Garner:Wallace, who wived one teimunder President Roosevelt, hasbeen unattractive to Democratssince he broke with them in1948 to run on the Progressiveticket for President against Tru-man.

And Garner, too old for strenu-ous activity, has been out of thepolitical picture since 1941 whenhe retired to his Texas farm af-ter two terms under Roosevelt.

Blasted IkeBoth Truman and Eisenhower

used Hoover to head commissionsfor reorganizing ths government.Both men got on well with him.But neither assignment requiredany advice from Hoover onbroad White House problems.

Eisenhower not only made nouse of Truman, who blasted himin the 1952 presidential cam-paign, but carefully avoided anycontact with him.

Kennedy may ask Eisenhowerto undertake some goodwill mislions abroad.

But he can hardly ask advicefrom the man whose two adminIstrations he called inept.

It's doubtful, because of Hoov-er's advanced age, that Ken

SELF SERVICE

WASH

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nedy will want to burden himanymore.

As for Truman—Kennedy hasno particular reason to love theman from Missouri.

Truman rooted for him in thelater stages of the 1960 cam-paign. But the former Presidenttried to wreck Kennedy's WhiteHouse chances before the Demo-cratic convention started.• S t i l l there's the question:Shouldn't some way be found touse the experience of ex-Presi-dents? There has been a suggestion that they should automatically become senators withouthaving to be elected.

Speak Their MindsThey would have no vote but

could speak their minds sincethey would have insight intogovernment which the experienceof no senator could match.

Nothing ever came of this no-tion.

But there are arguments onthe other side:

That when a man becomes anex-President the nation shouldthank him for his services butsay goodbye to his opinion.

By putting a two-term limit onthe presidency, the nation itselfhas shown it wants a limit onthe guidance of any one man.

Further, an ex-President maybe, and probably is, miles apartfrom the new President's thinking.

It's questionable whether anex-President, g e n e r a l l y wellalong in years before he stepsout, is still flexible enough tochange a lifetime's thinking tomeet situations different fromthose he encountered.

OceanportMrs. John T. Wilson had as

her guests recently her twodaughters, Mrs. Ernest Brauti-gam and Mrs. Howard McGinty,both of Matawan.

Mayor and Mrs. Edward C.Wilson, Sr., had as holiday visi-tors, Mr. and Mrs. WilliamD'Amato and children, Margaretand Christopher, a n d Mrs.D'Amato's mother. Mrs. DorothyH. Wilson, all of Newburgh,N. Y.

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Mr. and Mrs. Charles VanBrackle are spending a fewweeks with their son-in-law anddaughter, Mr. and Mrs. EdwardC. Wilson, Jr., of Hialeah, Fla.

Andy Barnes, young son ofMr. and Mrs. Morton A. Barnes,has returned to his home fromChildren's Hospital, Philadel-phia, where he was a patient forfive weeks.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wilson,son Richard, Jr., and daughter,Margaret, of Keyport, visitedMr. Wilson's mother, Mrs. JohnT. Wilson, of Oceanport Ave.

start coming in and you mayhave to revise your budget tem-porarily to take care of them.It will all work out, so just bethankful you had such a joyfulholiday. Do not, however, makeany large-scale purchases untiloutstanding accounts are paid infull.

Past • • • Louis Braille, bornJan. 4,1809, was blinded at theage of three. He developed hissytem of printing for the blindafter a French army captain toldhim of a "night writing" systemof raised dots designed for useon battlefields.

Future • • • Among the medicaldevelopments that can be ex-pected before 1970 are: a mea-slcs vaccine; better commoncold vaccines; new addition! tothe spare-parts banks, includingm a n - m a d e artificial organs(work on a spare heart is inprogress).

The Day Under Your SignA.RIES (Bom M«cH i t »o April I jVmmgstrri may rrqtiir* discipline **thinits Ret out of -hand during theholidays.

TAURUS (April 20 to May 20)People Bre receptive to •uKgrstioni, todon t hesitate to i]>eak your mind.

GEMINI (M*/2I to JuntJIJA itirpmc early in the niorninjr couldbriciiU-n joui ciitiic tuy. GIK-U luckj

C A N C E R U u n y UYou can rrlax with the knowledne tliatthe planets are promoting your welfare.LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21)People's feelings are easily hurt underjut sent •vitiations, to tit iboughiuA.VIRGO (Aug. 22 to S*pt. 22)Most of your trmtblfs «re imaginary.IJircct your thought! toward optimism.

Devote yourself to family neerlf. Talkover problemt with youiiRlteri now.

SCORPIO ( O c t . 23 t o Nov . 21)Have lunch with the group. Doi't playit sola with a. bonk foe company.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dtc. 21)An impulsive move could result ,in fi-nancial lost, so proceed with caution-

CAPRICORN (D« . 22 to J«r». 20)Thingi may RO wrong around home —appliance*! get out of kilter, «tc.AQUARIUS (J«n. 21 to F«b. 19)The words you read in s good, bookcould inspire you with new ambition.

PISCES <Ftb. 20 to March 20)You mav meet a friend, but rememberyou've done your celebrating for theweek.

ekl Eul«j«U«B, Tut.

Prizes AwardedFor Decorations

EATONTOWN — A four-footreplica of a white church withtwo illuminated angels in thebackground won the iirst prizein the religious category of thehome decorating contest for J.Ely Miller, South St.

Second prize in this divisionwas awarded to James White,Reynolds Dr. Carol Guerci, alsoof Reynolds Dr., won tlilrd prize.

Because of the difficulty in se-lecting the winners in the artis-tic division, the judges decidedto award four prizes in this cate-gory, eliminating the award of agrand prize. Top award in thegroup went to Mr. and Mrs.Michael Tereo, Campbell Dr., fortheir twin window display.

Second prize winners were Mr.and Mrs. Robert Dixon, also ofCampbell Dr.

Mr. and Mrs. M. J. McMillan,Turner St., requested that theirthird prize be donated to theocal First Aid Squad. Mr. and

Mrs. John Renter, Grant Ave.,were recipients of the fourthprize.

In the Santa Claus category,Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Vetrano,Villa PI., were judged first fortheir lawn display. Mr. and MrsLeonard Farnung, Wyckoff Rd.,won second place, and Mr. andMrs. Edward H. Emmons, RoseCt.. third.

Judging was done by Mrs. Ed-win Tate of the Tate GardenCenter, Mayor-elect Herbert E.Werner, and Mrs. G. CraigGrubb. The annual event wassponsored by the Borough Improvement League.

Planning bImportant

FREEHOLD—Successful opera-tion of a commercial egg farmnvolved careful planning andorganization to carry out theplan. It is now time to plan forthe brooding season and the firststep is a check of existing equip-ment

Begin to overhaul broodingequipment to get ready for the1961 season and order any needednew parts, advises Richard OR i c e , associate agriculturaagent.

Thermostats that are apt to gobad during the brooding seasonshould be ordered in quantity tohave a supply always availablefor replacements, he says.

In fact, a supply of needed re-placement parts is good proteC'tion.

Keep in mind that your brooding equipment and its unfailingoperation is a big factor in grow-ing replacement chicks, Mr. Ricecautions.

TAKE THAT, DOC!DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -

A four-year-old Des Moinej boy,deeply resentful because a pedi-atrician made his sffck babybrother cry with necessary prob-ing, got a pair of scissors andcut the doctor's hat allsmithereens.

S*U Semi!? Owge* ItyAffect Some NX Farms*

FREEHOLD - CfeMgM to O*Social Security law to go intoeffect this month may affectmany New Jersey farmers.

Short CoursesAre BeginningAt Rutgers U

FREEHOLD — January is themonth of short courses at theRutgers College of Agriculture in ]New Brunswick, and County Ag-ent Marvin A. Clark urges Mon-mouth County residents who areinterested in any of these coursesof instruction to write directly toWestervelt Griffin, College of Ag-riculture, New Brunswick.

A short course in ornamentallandscape design begins tomor-row.

Thii latter course it not con-tinuous because it includes lec-tures every Wednesday for 12weeks.

Next Monday, two courses startoff, one in animal husbandry, onein dairy farming.

On Jan. 16, a four-day coursein turf grasses will begin.

People who are interested inreceiving a license for milk test-ing can starr a four-day coursein that subject also Jan. 16.

that if you are a parent you maywork for your son or daughterin the farm business. But thisdoes not mean housework.

John Hunter, extension agricultural economist at Rutgers University, calls attention to thechanges. He adds that some par-ents who have been working fortheir sons or daughters in thefarm business may have to getsocial security cards if theydon't have them.

MM \*mt&i-» to HM wfftoorwtoctfw.

Other changes may affect spe-cific situation!, particularly ofdisabled worker* and dependentchildren.

If you want to make surayou're not missing out on anySocial Security benefit*, gn *copy of Social Security Amend-ments for 1961. You can pick upa copy from Marvin A. Clark, 20Court St., your county agricul-tural agent.

2 From County

Win ParolesTRENTON (AP) — The New

Jersey Parole Board today an-nounced it will release AndersonRogers, formerly of Newark, after 16 years in prison for robberyand murder.

Rogers, 38, held up a bar inNewark with a toy pistol in 1944.He was given an 8-12 year sen-tence and sent to Bordentown Re-formatory.

In 1946, he stabbed Louis Bad-ger, a fellow inmate, in a fightat the reformatory. Badger diedand Rogers was given an added15-20 year sentence for murder.

Rogers lived in Newark beforestarting his prison sentences. Hewill live with relatives in Berke-ley, Calif., after his release.

The board announced parolesfor other convicts, including twosentenced from M o n m o u t hlounty.They are William Morton, As-

bury Park, sentenced April 29,1960, two years, worthless checksand Charles Biddle. Red Bank,(to previous sentence) March 6.1959, two to five years, grandlarceny.

GINGER • f Gettermana

"There's lots of meatles in town, so I thought. . ."

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THEY GO BY BUSMADISON, N. J. (AP) - Mr.

and Mrs. William A. Britten andtheir three active children loveto take free bus rides.

This might pose a problem formost families, but it doesn't forthe Brittens. They own ;heir ownbus. They purchased the 1947-model, 25-passenger bus re-cently and had the interior re-built. Now it's a mobile cottagewith beds for five, a galley, bath-room, and dinning area.

MORRIS FORTNER, C.P.A.IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE

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WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY TO I

Temporary Location . _ .f l r o o d S t . MoaysMt 1-7500 Rtd lank

Holiday dinner guests at thehome of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. C, D.Hurley were George Hurley, Jr.,Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hurley,Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Acerraand children, Donna Marie andRicky.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Van Noteand children, Denise, Keith andCindy Lee, have returned to theirhome in Jacksonville, Fla., afterspending the holidays with Mr.and Mrs. Charles Guillaudeu.Other guests at the Guillaudeuresidence were Mr. and Mrs.Kenneth Little of Silver Spring,Md., Capt. and Mrs. Arthur R.Mason, Mrs. Florence Staplelonand daughters, Eileen and Ju-dith, Mrs. Grace Covert andchildren, Kathy and Gregory,all of this place; Mrs. VernaThrockorton, Howard Guillau-deu and Donald Henry, all ofLong Branch.

Capt. and Mrs. Arthur R.Mason with their aon-in-law anddaughter, Mr. and Mrs. KennethLittle, S i l v e r Springs, Md.,motored to Lancaster, Pa., wherethey were the guests of Mr.and Mrs. Floyd Little forChristmas Day.

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T E L Hll I<MK)1

The Monmouth County National BankDIRECTORS

F. P. ARMSTRONGChairman of the Board

FRANK K. ARNOLDBuilding Contractor

ALSTON BEEKMAN, JR.Attorney

GEORGE L. BIELITZPresident

WKEBER W. BROOKReal Estate and Insurance

C. M. CUBBAGEPresident, J. Howard Smith, Inc.

J. H. IIENDRICKSONVice President

y\. IIA ISOLD KELLYTreasurer, The Red Bank Register

WILLIAM B. LVMANHonorary Chairman of the Board

JOHN .M. 1'ILLSBL'RYAttorney

CLIFFORD A. SI'OERLRetired

W. RAYMOND VAN HORNReal Estate and Insurance

J. B. VAN MATERChairman of Executive Committee

HONORARY DIRECTOR

HOWARD W. ROBERTSAttorney

Statement of Conditionas of

December 31, 1960A S S E T S

Cash and Due from Banks $ 5,920,425.09

U. S. Government Securities 16,659,933.63

Other Bonds and Securities 6,609,861.23

Federal Reserve Bank Stock 78,000.00

Loans and Discounts 28,174,146.28

Banking Houses 583,198.63

Banking Equipment 192,263.65

Accrued Income andOther Assets 379,139.69

L I A B I L I T I E S

Capital $ 1,268,000.00

Surplus 1,332,000.00

Undivided Profits 922,625.30

$58,596,968.20

Total Capital Funds 3,522,625.30

•Reserve 1,175,000.00

Unearned Income andOther Liabilities 788,764.99

Deposits 53,110,577.91

$58,596,968.20

•This reserve is entirely available for the absorbtion of any loanlosses that may develop in the future and has been set asideout of accumulated profits by the Board of Directors under aformula approved by the United States Treasury Department andInternal Revenue Service.

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

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NEW SHREWSBURY33 Newman Springs Road

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RED BANK53 Broad Street

SHadyside 1-IOOO

Page 9: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

bmjoy WeiFriday to Ensign Howard Seeley

t • Mitt JoM ]Lovejoy, daughter of Col. CUr-ince E. Lovejoy, AUS (ret ) , «ndMrs. Lovejoy, Horseneck Point,Oceanport, was married Fridayin St. George's By-the RiverEpiscopal Church to Ensign How-ard George Seeley (USN), son ofMr, and Mrs. George M. Seeleyof Long Branch.

Rev. Canon George A. Robert-shaw, rector, officiated. A recep-tion and supper was held in GibbsHall, Fort Monmouth Officer*Club, Eatontown.

Col. Lovejoy gave his daughterin marriage. She wore a gown ofItalian silk designed with a Sa-brlna neckline trimmed withAlencon lace and seed pearls andher bouffant skirt with Alenconlace appliques and draped back,terminated in * chapel train. Herveil was attached to i crown ofcrystal and pearls and she car-ried a white marabou muff withwhite orchids

The bride's sister, Mrs. CharlesThoma? Stranghn, 2d, a mcmbe.-of the Parsons College staff, Fairfield, Iowa, was matron of honor.

Bridesmaid were Miss Mary E.Leuin, Long Branch, a senior atMonmouth College; Miss PatriciaE. Merrill, Little Silver, a juniorat Hood ColIeRe, and Miss Carolyn A. Tarutis, Ashley, Pa., asenior at Pennsylvania State Uni-versity.

The attendants wore dresses ofwinterberry red velvet and car-ried white fur muffs trimmedwith holly.

For her daughter's weddingMrs. Lovejoy chose a dress ofsapphire blue draped chiffonmatching accessories and s cor-• g e of cymbidium orchids. Thebridegroom's mother wore adress of candlelight brocade withaccessories ir Dior blue and acorsage of orchids.

Mervil Seeley of Ridgewcodwas best man for his brother.Ushers were George Parker of

M M . Howard G. Seeley

•y M/f. Aftwt X Hhwfct

tie* year** Ev« w«s ill pretty tn/kr Mert/ of Umut; 'tfcewonderful, even to its rainy end. | Thomas Fields of Middletown,After all, rain doesn't have to be! Mr. and Mrs. John F, Klem, Mr.shovelled out the driveway. |and Mrs. Robert E. Nagle, John

MO M9QC IDMflUI

The Beacon Hill Golf Club hadtwo parties — one on Saturdaynight, reservations for whichwere sold out weeks ago, and anegg nog party Sunday afternoonthat attracted many out-of-townmembers. Among them were Mr.and Mrs. Herbert A. (FidelityU.nion Bank vice president) Berg-hof of Mountainside and Leonar-do.

The John Valentines of Rum-son entertained at a cocktailparty . and late buffet supper.Their guests included Harold(Molly Pitcher Hotel) Valentine,Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Lillie,Mrs. Herbert Rush, Mr. and Mrs.James Nolan and Mr. and Mrs.Jack Brennan, all of RumsonMrs. Kay Robinson, Sea Bright,and many others.

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Friede

Gardella (wearing the hand-somest black silk embroideredred velvet dinner jacket this sideof Via Condotti in Rome) andthe William .1, Olearys, all ofRumson; the Ira Millers of LittleSilver, and so many, many oth-ers. The Glover house on Nave-sink River Rd. in Locust wassparkling with laughter and lilt-ing with the music of ;trio.

strolling

Dick and Jim Clark, sons ofthe John B. Clarks of Ridge Rd.,Rumson, were hosts to a largeparty for the younger set. Amongthose present were Barbara Mc-Kenzie of Sea Girt with Bill Barton of Rumson, and EllenMcEvilley with Bill Boland, alsoof Rumson.

The A. J. Haselmans of SailersWay, Rumson, have their daughter and son-in-law, Lt. and Mrs.

of Rumson Rd., Rumson, had Robert Boese of San Antonio,open house New Year's Eve, andbefore the New Year bells wereringing, more than 30 friends ar-rived to spend the evening withthem.

It is impossible to list the morethan 120 guests that attended theWilliam H. Glover, Jr., party butnoted among the guests were theLawrence A. Cartons and Alex-

Caldwell Girl is MarriedTo Lt. Gordon Roger Beck

Camdcn,bridegroom

classmateat Kings

of thePoint;

Charles T. Straughn, 2d, Fair-

BLOOMFIEtD - Miss Kath-leen Ann Morehouse, daughter olMr. and Mrs. Walter Morehouseof Arlington Ave., Caldwell, wasmarried here Friday in BrookdaleBaptist Church to Lt. (j.g.) Gor-don Roger Beck, USNR, son ofMr. and Mrs. Alfred C. Beck, 163Hudson Ave., Red Bank.

field, Iowa, a student at Parsons I Rev. Charles Anderson andCollege; Richard Barbour of! Rev. John Wyrtzen officiated.Long Branch a law student at j A reception followed at the HotelWashington and Lee University, I Suburban, East Orangeand Michael Berg of Oceanport,alumnus of Bethany College,West Va.

The bride was graduated InJune from Pennsylvania StateUniversity where she was amember of the Pi Beta Phi soror-ity-

She is a member of the Shrews-bury Towne Chapter, Daughtersof the American Revolution. Sheis a direct descendant of JohnLovejoy, one of the founders ofAndover, Mass., where he settledin 1635, and of Capt. Abiel Love-joy of Pownalborough, Maine, anofficer in the American Revolu

Miss Susan Morehouse, a sis-ter of the bride, was maid of hon-or.

Bridesmaids were Misses Pa-tricia Gloeckner, Shirley Kind-berg and Mary Robson. The jun-ior bridesmaid was Miss MaryMorehouse, sister of the bride.

Lt. (j.g.) James Blair was bestman. Ushers were Lt. (j.g.) CarlAraerding, Lt. Steven Robey,Lt. John Zesewite and Lt. RobertRychlik.

The bride, a graduate of Caldwell High School and SheltonCollege, teaches in a North Cald

guid-ance and counseling books, in-cluding "Lovejoy's Co 11 e g eGuide" and "Lovejoy's PreSchool Guide."

The bridegroom, a graduate ofLong Branch High School, wasgraduated in July from theUnited States Merchant MarineAcademy at Kings Point, N. Y.,and returned last week from FarEastern waters. He is an officeron the USS Noble. His father is

College, is a

a graduate ofand Houghton

naval pilot for theMilitary Air Transport Service,McGuire Air Force Base.

oretired head of the science de-

h H i h

Bingo GroupEntertained

ASBURY PARK — Mr. andMrs. John D. Flynn, 1701 Drum-

d bmond Ct., entertained membersof the Mf. Carmel Catholic

partment of Long Branch High'church bingo committee andSchool. I their wives last week at a

Ensign and Mrs. Seeley left »y j Christmas buffet supper.Mrs. Flynn is chairman of the

committee.Jet Saturday for San Franciscowhere the ensign reported yester- _day for three-month's duty in the G i f t s w e r e p r e s ented to the pas-Navy's Damage Control School ( o r i R e v Ma r c enino Romagno,on Treasure Island, San Francisco Bay, where the couple willmake their home until springwhen they will move to the SanDiego Naval base.

LINED OUT OF OFFICEPENDLETON, Ore (AP) -

Councilman Jack Stangier toldthe City Council he had heardreports he lived outside the citylimits and thus was not eligibleto be a member of the council.

The council ordered a survey,found the city limits n n thoughhis living room and said thatStrangler, indeed, was noteligible to be a member.

and curates, Rev. Edward Bal-esteri and Rev. Bernard Chicca.

Father Romagno presentedeach emmber of the committeea personal gift for their serviceon the committee. Members alsoexchanged gifts

Attending were Mr. and Mrs.Carl Pisano, Mr, and Mrs. PatsyFortunato, Mr. and Mrs. CharlesAquilino, Mrs John Pisano, MissJulia DeCesare, Garrett Falco,Frank Campanile, Mr. and Mrs.Dominic Pisano, Mr. and Mrs.Joseph Freda, Miss JeancttePagnoli, Mr. a nd Mrs. Joseph

Texas, as house guests for twoweeks. . . Bruce Haselman ofCanoga Park, Calif., joined hissister and parents for a Christ-mas visit, too. And Betty JaneHaselman who has been in SantaBarbara, Calif., for the holidayswill return today, making thefamily reunion complete. Lt. andMrs. Boose will leave for Denverabout Jan. 10. Lt. Boese will at-tend missile school there.

The third and last hunt tea ofthe season is set for SaturdayJan. 14, at the Rumson CountryClub. Acting as co-hosts will beMr. and Mrs. Frank K. Blaisdel'of River Plaza, Mr. and MrsLawrence Clarke of Locust, Drand Mrs. Clarence Combs ofTinton Falls, and Mr. and Mrs.George B. Howell of Scobey-ville.

P. S.. If all the New Year reso-lutions made on Sundav morning,and Hie renewed intentions onMonday, are kept, thorp will be

rising fash'nn fnr tea partiesthat really serve tea.

Mrs. Gordon R. Beck

Human Relations Specialist GivesAdvice on New Year Resolutions

FREEHOLD — A new year has!it moans that this is importantit many:to the other person, but noteasy to!us. What makes it important

arrived, bringing withgood resolutions, somake, so difficult to keep. Hnwjus is the feeling we have of want-

to please someone. If wewant to please that person enoughwe feel it is important to keepthe resolution even though theresolution itself is of little im-

many of these resolutions will beiingkept in 1961? How manv of those warkeptmade for 1960 fell by the way-side?

Whether good resolutions arekept depends to a great ex-tent upon how important they areto the person making them. Manytimes resolutions to do better are

'Do Re Mi1

Sets Critics'Aooroval

NEW YORK (AP) — The Finalshow of 1960, a musical "Do ReMi," opened last week at theSt. James Theater.

Of the seven daily newspapercritics, five approved, one disapproved and one had a mixedreaction.

Among the votes of praise, theDaily News called it "A grcabig razzle-dazzle of a musical.'

The dissent was expressed bythe World Telegram & Sun whichsaid it was "An extravagant dis-aster."

The Associated Press said"The entertainment is intermit-tent."

The show concerns what hap-pens when a band of cx-thugstry to take over the jukeboxbusiness.

The David Merrick productionis based on a story by GarsonKanin, who prepared and direct-ed the stage version. Headingthe cast are Phil Silvers, NancyWalker, Nancy Dussault and JohnReardon. Score by Jule Styne

| Lyrics by Betty Comden "andAdolph Green; Choreography byMarc Breaux and Deedee Wood;Scenery by Boris Aronson; costumes by Irene Sharaff.

portance."However, many times even

these resolutions fall by the way-side because of the many pres-

made to please someone else, surcs of living.This is a good reason ami shows "A, wife resolves always to getthoughtfulness and consideration.Yet these are the resolutions that

dressed up, look her best and becheerful and loving when her

usually forgotten somewhere tired husband comes home fromalong the way, says Mrs. Phyl-ja hard day's work. Then, the ba-lis B. Grcer, specialist in humanlby has a cold and is fretful,relations at Rutgers University.jthe •(-year old spills finger paints

a l 1 o v e r t h c l l v n R r o o m |^eCostanzo and Mr. and Mrs. Rich-1 Mrs. Grccr adds: "When w c ja l l over the living roomard Najar. do something for someone else! w;asll<-r brc.aks. d ° ™ a m l ,

YULETIDE DECORATION by Mrs. Floyd Steadman, right, at her home, 20 MarsandDr., Hazlet, receives first prize ribbon from Mrs. Charles Meyer, president of thelaurel Garden Club, sponsors of a "Living Green" home decoration contest. At loftis Mrs. Robert Spongier, ono of the judges for th« contost conductod in the HiddenHills, East, development in Hailot.

theplumber is in the kitchen almostall day. Is there need to go on?

" B e i n g considerate a n dthoughtful al others is a resolu-tion more likely to be kept thanspecific ones that have little realmeaning."

Miss SidermanIs Feted At

Sweet 16 Party'SHREWSBURY — A sweet six-

teen parly wa= given Miss CaroleSiderman Monday by her parents,Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Siderman,in their home at 41 Obre PI.

Guests were Beverly Bcrger,Charles Borgman, Daniel Brown,Ronald Cuhcn, Susan Covici, Ted-dy Gast, Ronald Ginsburg, LauraGonodman, Richard Heim, Rosal-

Larryic Lichtcr, Aaron Rasass,Sklnr, Lynn Stein, Sheila Stein,Sheila Siderman, Carol VanBrunt,Joyce Van Wagner.. Sonny Gwin-Williams, MelvinMeredith Wilson.

Weinstein and

ROASTING CHICKENSFREEHOLD — To prepare

roast chicken breasts with dress-in a

a paning, place Ihe dressingmound in the bottom oflined with fnil. Then cover theCrossing with chicken breasts androast in a 325 degree oven, sayshome agent Mrs. Lonia K. White,

Junior-JuniorsHave Record Hop

RED BANK — The Junior-Juniors of the Monmouth Boat Clubheld a Christmas record hopThursday at the club.

A guest appearance by a newcombo was made, including Bob•Marko, piano; Denis Wildanger,tenor guitar; Tony Manfredi, Jr.

Bob Clark, saxoHerbert Sinclair,

bass guitar;phone, anddrummer.

^Serving on the committee wereM*r. and Mrs. Svan Beecher, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. George WorthleyMrs. Charles Raynor and Mr.and Mrs. William Magee. Alsothe junior commodore, ThomasField, 3d, Jere Drew, Bill Mahoney and Miss Bonnie Weeks

Dance prizes went to WayneTate, Louis Levinson and JimBaine.

Also attend'ng were David Cra-ver, Lee Park, Skidgc MoonThimothy Hennessey, Robert Ro-gevcen, Renee Marko, Kathy Pe-ciuio, Karen and Kose Manfredi,Barbara Merrick, Margo Haring,Greg and David Devlin, DavidAnderson, Ronnie Beecher, PeteGale, Stephen Stern, Sam Land-back, Leon Stout, Clayton Walton,Ronald MacDonalJ, Mitchell Hall,Nicky Novcllin, Don Halsey,Mark Finucane, William Jacko,Roy Reinalda, Barbara Stern,Pat Gan, Ginny Stanley, SherryClifton, Jan S^hlcif, loAnne Ghez-zi, Suzy Levi, Martha Macdnnald,Joanne Coote, Sue Forrest, AimeeEdelstcin, Joan Tcmko, NancyWhite, Barbara Renshaw, JohnWopat, Andy Masscll, Lancy M.Massey, Chip Worthley, Jim An-drew.', Doug Rnynor, Neal Mur-ray, John Golden. Bill Egolf,Jim Heron, Terry Connor, TomHandy, Bob Moncrief, GeorgeLansclowne, Paul O'Rourkc, Don-ald llonck, Harry Westlakc, ChipNevius, Jack Kessler and SusanGuarino, Rayncll Courten, MaryJane Corpcy.

FOND FAREWELL—Mist Louella Fr«y it presented gift by Peter R. Hoffman of TheRegister news staff at luncheon Friday in Old Union House. Miss Frey, social editorof The Register, resigned her position to accept a post with the publicity departmentof Monmouth Shopping Center.

FarewellDinner For

Louella FreySHREWSBURY — A farewell

dinner parly for Miss LouellaFrey of 74 South St., Red Bank,was given Thursday by womenemployees of the Red Bank Reg-ister where Miss Frcv has been

18 Organizations Entertain2,900 Patients at Marlboro

social editor for 23 years.Miss Frey left this week to

assume the position as assistantto the director of promotion andpublic relations at the MonmouthShopping Center, Eatontown.

The women presented

MARLBORO — More than 2,900patients at Marlboro State Hos-pital participated in parties givenby 17 outside organizations andthe auxiliary during Christmasweek.

Mrs. Elna Anable, director ofvolunteers, made her report atthe monthly meeting of the auxil-iary Wednesday in the home ofMrs. J. Berkeley Gordon.

Gift-filled bags were distribu-ted by auxiliary members to thepatients during the party. Thegifts were purchased from funds

scribed desk clock to her as a'contributed by civic, social andparting gift.

Attending were Mrs. Frank|church groups throughout thecounty

Barnard, Mrs. John Foster, Mrs.Evelyn A. Alverson, Mrs. WilliamKirk, Miss Barbara Giaimo, Mrs.A. Robert Goode, Mrs. JosephSencher, Jr., Mrs. Theodore M.Marko, Mrs. William Bonnett,Mrs.Lyle

Ruti- Wiedelman, Mrs. A.Lever-h, Mrs. Arthur J.

Lynch, Mrs. Thomas Lloyd andMrs. Edward A. Morrow.

More than $1,400 was receivedin cash donations to help defraycost of patients' Christmas gifts.

Many of the groups who cameout to the hospital to give a partybrought gaily decorated cup-cakes, sandwiches, fresh fruitand candy. Punch or coffee wassupplied by the hospital.

Organizations which visited the

Kitty Kelly:

Sister's Tantrums AreBaby Sitter's Problem

Dear Kitty;My father is out of a job and

my mother works. I have to ba-by-sit for my sisters every week-end. When I ask them for helpon the dishes or other housework,they throw a fit.

My older sister has a terribletemper and screams at the topof her lungs at me until she'sred in the face. Once in desper-ation I hit her. Tonight she hada tantrum. When I came to mysenses, I found myself on myknees screaming too, poundingthe wall and shouting, "Shut up!"until I was hoarse.

When I mentioned this to moth-er she said, "I suppose I'll haveto quit my job, stay home andkeep peace in the family." Helpme!—A. B.

Dear A. B.: The family ten-sion will ease once your fa-ther lands a job. Your motherinstinctively hit upon the an-swer to your problem. Herplace is with her growing farh-.ily. Putting the-responsibility ofsupport where it belongs," onyour father, will force him totake any work he can find,which would be all to the goodfor his family and his ownself-respect.

Talk this over with him andyour mother. Be constructive.Just because your sister actsthe baby is no reason for youto give way to hysterics too.

Dear Kitty:I reside several hundred miles

from my parents' home. Occa-sionally I drive down to visitthem on long week-ends.

Is it proper for my parents toinvite my girl friend on such anoccasion? We are soon to be en-gaged.

My girl's mother objects thoughshe gives no reason. My girlfriend is over 21 and would liketo meet my folks. But since shelives at home, her mntlmrV cor.tinual objections have caused herto doubt whether it is proper, andI am even becoming confused byall the fuss Please set usstraight.—Socially Confused

Dear Socially Confused: Bas-

ically, this is a moral issueand not a question of etiquette.

Your girl at 21 has come ofage. In the eyes of the lawshe is free to make her owndecisions and responsible toherself for them. Therefore,the decision of whether she canvisit your parents lies with her,not her mother. If she wantsto go, she should go. To lether mother decide for herbodes ill for your future happi-ness together.

Socially, it is entirely properfor her to go with you to visityour parents.

Dear Kitty:I am 16 but you wouldn't be-

lieve it because I am so short. |The boys by-pass me as a re-sult. How can I get through tohem?-A. A.

Dear A. A.: Be your bestself; head high, chin >.ip, shoul-ders squared to really take lifein your stride. Be sought af-ter instead of seeking. Itshouldn't be a question of howto "got through" to the boys.Let them worry about how to"get through' 'to you!"

ENTERTAINNEW MONMOUTH - Mr. and

Mrs. Joseph Venerus, Arthur PI.,entertained over the holidays forMr. und Mrs. Albert Wllderman,\!r. and Mrs. Anthony Kapp,Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hniart, Mr.and Mrs. Joseph Skouonski, Mr.and Mrs. Gerald Stein und Mr.and Mrs. Elmer Baker.

hospital and sponsored parties in> •eluded Liberty Grange, Marl-boro; Women's Society of Christ-ian Service, Matawan MethodistChurch; Woman's Club of LongBranch, evening department;Womans Club, Red Bank; Wom-an's Auxiliary of Christ Church,Shrewsbury; Junior S e r v i c eLeague, Red Bank; MonmouthCounty Mental Health Associa-tion; League of Mercy, Salva-tion Army; Raritan Woman'*club; Middlesex County MentalHealth Association; Women ofUnited Lutheran Church, RedBank; ladies ' Auxiliary of St.Leo's Catholic Church, Lincroft;Men's Club, Congregation BnaiIsrael, Rumson; WestminsterFellowship, Presbyterian Church,Red Bank; Old Guard of RedBank, and Junior Mental Healthvolunteers. ;

Mrs. Spencer D. Embree,Holmdel, reported that the aux-iliary volunteers contributed 749 •direct and 318 indirect patientservice hoirrs in November.

Mrs. Morton Winer, Red Bank,president, reported that 349 ar-ticles of clothing were distributedto 183 women patients in Novem-ber. She cited the great need forwomen's winter coats.

Mrs. F. P; Destito, Little Sil-ver, and Mrs. K. L. Lessing,Rumson, were accepted as newmembers.

Other board members attend-ing were Mrs. Mark McClain,Middletown; Mrs. Laurence Man-ning, Highlands; Miss JamesMcCosker, Rumson; Mrs. Stan-ley Butkus, Long Branch; Mrs.Donald McClintock, Lincroft, andMrs. William Zillger, Little Sil-ver.

LIKE FATHER, LIKE SONTRINIDAD, Colo. (AP) - On

the same day Rep. J. EdgarChenoweth, R-Colo, was re-elected to the House of Repre-sentatives, his son, William, wa*elected to the Colorado Senate.

STEPHENHAIRDRESSERS

* i l l; D( tuthoui appointm.-n.

Monmouth Shopping Centc

Phone LI 2-3444

Campbells Junction, BetfoidPhone 787-Q655

Send your problem to Kitty Kel-ly. Be sure to enclose a stamped,self-addressed envelope and address her care of The Register.Helpful leaflets available. Writefor "Firm Friends."

INVENTORY

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AlsoAll Day-time and CocktailClothes, Sweaters, Bags

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FORDraperiesSlipcoversBedspreadsUpholsteringWindow ShadesTable Pads

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HAIR PROBLEMS!Come to Mld'i Hair Clinic

PERMANENT WAVEGUARANTEED

90 W. Front St., Red BankPhont SH 1-9800

why pay retail prices? i

Shop ALAN'S Long BranchFURNITURE SHOWROOMS

Manufacturer* - UpholNtertirw • Furniture niHtrlbiitom

BUY RIGHT! SAVE MONEY!FURNITURE SHOWROOMS

South 7th Avt. Long BranchDally 9 to 6 - Wed. & Frl, 'HI 9 - CA 1)0350

ALAN'S

Page 10: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

ji Labor GangObliterates Temple ^MM A ^ ^

NIPPUR, Iraq <AP) — At •mound of sand and rubble 100miles southeast of Baghdad thepicks of an Iraqi labor gang areobliterating last traces of an an-

some 47 Centurie* ago.Supervising the work is Rich

ard C. Haines, archaeologist fromthe University of Chicago's Orien-ts! Institute. He is assisted b;

ouiiteraiine lasi u»»-c& m an on- - .i .iunn-i.*.. -•*- •« -.cient Sumerian temple raised iolDr. Donald P. Hansen and Jatne

Tkwv km mr* * ftatoWpfercfce Mw <yw w <k* MM-thick mwMxU*. write Of tot mx*magnificent 'temple crumble todust around his feet. But thereis a constant watchfulness, forthe site has yielded one of therichest stores of archaeologicaltreasures ever found in Iraq.

iTo reach these he and hit team

are destroying t.he remains of thepresent temple.

The mound rises like a sprawl-ing ant-hill from a desolate land-scape of gray-brown earth,

tm mytmim, mi turn of Br vtW mi JtHtMii toIII, god o< the norm.His shrine, the ziggurat or "highplace," was a prize for succes-sive generations of princes am-bitious to control the vast plainaround the Tigris and EuphratesRivers.

of \m§ M& »$r, wtumposition in ancient Sumer corre-sponded roughly to that of Aph-rodite in later times. The presenttemple is one of an estimated ISbuilt on the same site over a pe-riod of more than 4,000 years.

ftm srewM t,W %, *,,It W H t VMt eomplex-#oor«

of offices, store rooms, bathchambers, altar rooms, colonnaded courtyards and narrow pass-»ge»—measuring 310 by 70 feet.The ruins have yielded as muchtreasure as the average archae

neath tite floor when one of (heseven later temples was erected,consists of more than 50 pieces,including exquisitely carved rit-ual objects and temple gifts madeof alabaster, lapis lazuli, marbleand limestone.

CIRCLENEW JERSEY'S GREATEST STORE, ONE OF AMERICA'S HNtST

Hurry—this is your chance to makesome truly exceptional fashion buys

Sale Sweaters 23% to 44% off REGULARPRICES

EVERY BEAUTIFUL STYLE YOU CAN THINK OF FROM THE MOST FAMOUS MAKERS IN THE LAND

3.99 to 9.99Regularly 5.98 to 17.98

1,090 sweaters, reg. 5.98

1,170 sweaters, reg. 7.98-8.98 ,„,.

1,340 sweaters, reg. 10.98-12.98

530 sweaters, reg. 12.98-17.98

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Jantzen, Darlenc, Dorset, Premier and more, more, more. Orlons®, wools,

brushed and shaggy, bulky knits, wool-fur blends. Pullovers, cardigans,

novelties, classics, even elegant dressy styles. Thousands upon thousands

to choose from—sizes 34 to 40 in every color imaginable—and then

some. No phone or mail, just be here and be here early for the sweater

buy cf the season.

Better Sweaters, Mall Level, Boulevard «( Fashion. Bamberger'* Monmouth.And at Newark, Paramus, Plalnfield, Morrlstown and Menlo Park.

. DuPoiit trademark

! A •,--•

ORDERTHESESTYLESBY PHONEOR MAIL

A. Regularly 14.98 . . .scoop neck Arnel*triacetate jerseyprint with impressedpleated skirt. 10 to 20in blue, brown, plum.

B. Resularly 12.98jacket dress of magicrayon crepe. Sleeve-less sheath, seat-lined. Blue, brown,plum in 10-18.

Sale6.99 B.

Until today, we sold these famousmake dresses for 10.98, 12.98 and 14.98

!6 .d i f fcrn:! ;!y!e; !o rrnr ri~!;t :!;!; r.iii.iilc--iiil^ri' „,„! mill

siics, too. Wools, magic rayon crepes, Arnel* triacclate jer-

sies, rayon brocade, Dacron* polyester prints, winler cottons,

full skirts, sheaths, jacket dresses, rnRPtnhlcs, shirtwaists.

700—reguiariy 10.98

300—regularly 12.98

1143—regularly 14.989 Keg. DuPont trademark •Reg. Celaneae trademark

Sale29

These winter coats were never meantto sell for anywhere near this price

The November heat wave hit winter coat manufacturers so hard that Ramhcrgcr's was

able to buy their finest fashions for a song. Come early—they'll go fast.

• Button fronts, clutch coats, bracelet sleeves

• Luxury plushes, pebbly chinchillas, fluffy alpacas

• Wool interlinings, Orion® acrylic pile ....lugs

• Pushup sleeves, braid trims, unusual pockets

• Tweeds, plaids, elegant zibelincs, zip-out linings

• Petites 6 to 10, Misses' 8 to 18, Women 12</2 to 2 |

ileg. tml'ant trademark

Daytime Dresses, Mall Level. Bambergcr's Monmouth. And at Newark, Paramus,Plainfleld, Morrislown and Menlo Park.

No Telcservlce or Mail. Budget Coats, Mall Level. Bamherger's Monmoulh.And at Newark, Paramus, Plainfleld, Morristown and Menlo Park.

CALL YOUR LOCAL TELESERVICE NUMBER AND REDUCE TOLL CHARGES—OSborne 1-2500 or KEIIogg 1-2400

EXTRA TUESDAY NIGHT OPENING AT BAMBERGER'S MONMOUTH-SHOP TONIGHT till 9:30SHOP WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY FROM 10 A. M. TILL 9:30 AS USUAL

Page 11: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

V* Our Want Adifar

Quick Resultt

BANKI Independent Dotty f

Hem* Delivery

35' *Week

Section Two RED BANK, N. J., TUESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1961 7c PER COPY

Werner Takes OfficeAs Eaton town Mayor

EATONTOWN — Herbert E.Werner took office as mayor yes-terday, succeeding F. Bliss Price,who has served as chief execu-tive for the past 12 years.

The oath of office was alsoadministered to two new coun-cilmen: Edward O. Clark andTheodore Zebrowski, who re-placed councilmen Carley Garo-falo and Howard Meyer, neitherof whom ran for re-election.

Anthony F. DeVito was ap-pointed to fill Mayor Werner'sunexpired council term.

The new mayor announced adinner meeting Jan. 10 of allelected and appointed officialsof the borough in FellowshipHall or th' First MethodistChurch, WycJtoff Rd., to co-•rdinate proposed borough proj-

ects.

Coming DownWorkmen from J. H. Hick* company, Red Bank, ere de-molishing four stores on Broad St., scene of e fire testAugust. Frown'* Department Store, 47 Broad St., andSherman's, 45 Broad St., were destroyed by the fire.Wolcott's Children's Store, 43 Broad St., and Loft'sCandy Store, 43-A Broad St., also are being torn downto make way for new buildings.

Waters Is Mayor

Township CreatesDeputy Clerk Post

MATAWAN TOWNSHIP - TheTownship Committee, at its re-organization meeting last night,created a new post— that ofdeputy township clerk.

Mrs. Eileen Kelly, Rt. 34, wasappointed to the position. The•alary for the job has not yetbeen established.

Mrs. Kelly is account clerk inthe office of the townshiptreasurer and collector, a postthe has held for the past 12years.

Born in Jersey City, she haslived here 22 years. She hasone son, Donald.

Mrs. Rose Wenzel Is town-ship clerk.

All other major appointmentswere the same as last year.

Myndert Bonnema was swornIn as a committeeman— givingthe Republicans complete controlof the governing body—and Committeeman Peter J. Waters wasre-elected mayor.

Under terms of the new zoningordinance, a Zoning Board ofAdjustment was created, withPaul Wright, Raymond Sheetz,Joseph Grimaldi, Joseph Ret-tagliata and George Rutier, asmembers.

Other appointments:The law firm of Stout and

O'Hagan, Allenhurst, attorney;

Joseph J. Seaman and Co., PerthAmboy, auditor; Karl Heuser,engineer; Mrs. Elizabeth Domnick, collector of water rents

Mrs. Pauline Behr, treasurerFrank Devino, building inspector; John McGinty, poliopatrolman; Dr. Francis W. Hoiman, physician;Grimm, library

Mrs.trustee.

Jean

Ackerson IsNamed ToMayor Post

HOLMDEL — James H. Ackerson was re-elected to his seventhterm as mayor yesterday at theTownship' Committee reorganiza-tion meeting.

Mayor Ackerson, a Democrat,was re-elected to his third termin November.

The mayor in his acceptancetalk promised to try to the bestof his ability to do everythingpossible for the good of thepeople of Holmdel."

He was also named presidentof the Board of Health.

Mayor Ackerson named the fol-lowing standing committees:

Roads —Alfred C. Poole andEdwin Liebenow; health — Mr.Liebenow and Mr. Poole, andfinance, Mr'. Ackerson and MrLiebenow.

Poole NamedMr. Poole will also serve on

the Recreation Commission andMr. Liebenow will serve on thelibrary board.

The following officials were re-appointed for 1961:

Lawrence A. Carton, Jr., i t

Mr. Devino and Rudolph Grimm,Planning Board.

Committeeman Sigmund V.Kowalski will head the policecommittee, Mr. Bonnema thepublic works and recreation com-mittees, and Mr. Waters, thefinance committee.

An Industrial Commission wasformed with Joseph Stenger, Mr.Grimm, John Armitage, Jr.,James Kelly, Harry Oeiss, Wil-liam Gross and Mr. Bonnemaas members.

The following special policemenwere appointed:

William H. Andrews, AnthonyDellaPietro, Earl Dennis, RobertW. Hayes, Samuel L. Gumbs,George M. Gumbs, Kenneth R.Schneider, Louis Grimaldi, Mrs.Fannie Pastore, Mrs. GraceDellapietro, William Smith,George H. Van Glahn, CharlesCandiloro and Earl Gregory.

The governing body will -con-tinue to meet the first and thirdMondays of each month.

torney; Harry S. Cowles, wel-tare director; Joseph P. Sea-man, auditor: Dr. Harry M. Pop-pick, physician; Otis R. Seaman,engineer; Walter Smale, build-ing inspector; Joseph W. Phi:lips, police chief: Fred Har-rison, septic tank inspector; andMrs. Helen Ryder, registrar ofdogs.

Mr. Liebenow w a s nameiBoard of Health secretary anJohn H. Mount, registrar of vita!statistics.

Daniel S. Ely, was named as-sessment searcher and treasurer.

The People's National Bankwas named official depositoryfor township funds and the Mon-mouth County National Bank anShadow Lawn Savings and LoanCo., depository for savings ac-counts.

Mrs. Frances Stillwell wassworn in to her third term as taxcollector. She was re-elected tothe post in November.

The committee will meet onthe first Thursday of the monthat 8 p.m. in township hall.

Mr. Werner also announcedthat he will be available in themagistrate's room of the bor-ough hall every Saturday morning from 9 o'clock until noon todiscuss borough problems withcitizens.

Tax OfficeIn addition, he said, Mrs. Elsie

M. Demarest will keep the taxoffice open Friday evenings forthe convenience of citizens.

He lauded the administrationof former Mayor Price, andpraised Spencer M. Patterson,wh» has been unpaid director ofCivil Defense for the boroughfor the past 20 years.

The new mayor said the bor-ough "desparately" needs a newmunicipal building and improve-ment of its streets and roads.

Ralph L. Lewis, a councilman'or 10 years arid president of the:puncil last year, was againtamed president of the body.

CommitteesCouncil committee appoint-

ments were as follows, with thefirst man named, in each case,is chairman:

Finance and ordinance — De-Vito, Zebrowski, and Clark;roads, street*, and sanitation —Joseph A. Kellenyi, Clark, andLewis; fire and water — LewisDeVito, and f-eon B. Smock, Jr.;parks, parking and playgrounds— Smock, DeVito and Lewis; po-lice, lights, and public welfare— Clark, Zebrowski, and Kel-lenyi; borough property, buildngs and insurance — Zebrow-ski, Smock and Keilenyi.

AppointeesThe following officials were ap-

pointed: borough attorney, Rob-erts, Pillsbury and Carton; mem-ber of the Board of Health, Dr.Norman Thetford; deputy bor-Jugh clerk and variations clerk,Marjorie Becker; treasurer andtax searcher, Elsie A, Demar-est; assessments searcher, An-drew G. Becker; Library Board,Katherine Adams, Angie Mon-aci, Jane Rau, Mary Backlund,and Carolyn Wood; auditor, Her-bert A. Carusoe; court clerkJames N. Wolcott, Jr.; Board ofAdjustment member for a five-year term, Leslie D. Seeley;

RumsonReorganizationMayor Lisls Borough Plans, Accomplishments

RUMSON — At the reorganiza-tion meeting of the Mayor andCouncil yesterday, William F.Halleran and Harry C. Cronanwore sworn in for new terms ascouncilmen by Mayor Peter Cart-mell. The mayor also adminis-tered the oath of office to the newfire chief, Hyatt Cunningham,and the assistant chief, AlfredWest.

Charles B. Harding was re-elected president of the councilfor his 10th year.

Mayor Cartmell outlined someof the major accomplishmentsof the borough administrationduring 1960. These included: In-stallation of the boat-launchingsite back of the borough hall;adoption of an ordinance re-quiring fencing around swim-ming pools; purchase of two-wayraiiiu systems IUI iiie Fiie Dpartment; installation of newbulkheads; installation of a traf-fic light at the intersection ofRiver Rd. and Bingham Ave.

The Recreation Commission, hesaid, "is becoming one of the in-creasingly important services."Ha said plans have been com-pleted for the development ofthe former Lafayette Streetschool properly next spring.Planned are two new tenniscourts, shufflcbonrd courts, com-bination badminton and outdoorbasketball areas and a kiddieplayground.

1961 Plans

Under consideration for thecoming year are Hie establish-ment of an additional voting illstrict, icceplance and paving of((.•vcrnl seml-privnto streetswhich (Intfi back prior lo Rum-son's incorporation, revision of

the zoning ordinance and consid- of zoning board of adjustmenteration of a new ordinance cov-ering repairs or demolition ofsubstandard housing.

Referring to the new state lawwhich permits abolition of thepersonal property tax commen-cing in the taxing year 1962, themayor said: "If after our pres-ent study, we determine no onewill be affected too harshly wewill probably abolish this tax."

Copies of the mayor's messagewill be sent to all the residentsof the borough.

Borough Officers

The following borough officerswere appointed by the mayor:

Albert A. Kerr. Jr., businessa d m i n i s t r a t o r ; Mary M.O'Rourke, borough treasurer;

n hnroupb at-torney; Frank E. Mitchell, bor-ough engineer; Thomas J. Gilli-gan, street superintendent; Ed-win F. Connor, borough mechan-ic; Walter R. Neuhauser, custo-dian of borough hall; JosephCicjka, building inspector andzoning enforcement officer; MaryM. O'Rourke, official search of-ficer; J. Stanley Tcunon, boroughauditor; Mary N. Hackett, cleri-cal assistant; Charles R. Thompson, street department foreman;Albert A. Kerr, Jr., clerk of zoning board of adjustment and sec-retary of planning board.

Dorothy R. McHugh, clerk ofmunicipal court; Frederick Gopel, Thomas Warke, Edward Mor-Ran, Stephen Stevens, Jacob E.W. Kupcr and Thomas J. Gllli-gan, special police officers; An-drew .]. lleckt, Inspector of sewerdistrict; Norman Ramsey andMarshal] R. Sloecker, members

RESORT LEADERS —Here is the newly constituted, Democratic dominated, Sea Bright Borough Council. Fromleft to right .around the table, are Councilman Walter Johnson (fire); Councilwoman Mildred N. Anderson (beach)Councilman Sam L. Diggle (sewers and sanitation); Mayor Thomas Farrell; Attorney A. Henry Giordano; Mri. JoanAxalsen, dark; Councilman John S. Foriman (police); Councilwoman Cecil* Frankel Norton (finance); and Coun-cilman William J. Darby (streets and lights).

E. W. Heller,Councilman,Dies at 56

three years.Elizabeth Zobel, member of loc

al assistance board, two yearsHyatt Cunningham, member o:recreation council, five years;Dr. Louis Mellaci, member o:board of health, three years;John Dill, member of planningboard, six years; Francis Taylor,member of shade tree commis-sion, three years, and Thorna-A. Shea, custodian of fire equipment.

No changes were madecouncilmanic committees. Theyare as follows, the chairman be-ing named first in each case:

Finance, Charles B. Harding,W. Dinsmore Banks, Harry S,Cronan, Harry Sundermeycr; po-lice, Sundermeyer, Harding, William F. Halleran, Banks; finuauka, Sunuciiiit-yei, diaries S.Callman, Halleran; streets, Hal-leran, Callman, Harding, Cron-an; public properties and utili-ties, Cronan, Halleran, Banks,Callman; sanitation, Callman,Cronan, Halleran, Sundermeycr.

The ex-chief's badge was pres-ented to Edward McSorley, retir-ing chief of the Fire Department.

Named depositories of boroughfunds were the Monmouth CountyNational Bank, Sea Bright Na-tional Bank and Fidelity UnionTrust Company of "Newark.

Meeting ni^lits of the councilremain the same: The secondand fourth Thursdays of themonth at 8:30 p. m.

The invocation was given byRev. Canon George A. Robert-shaw, rector of St. Gcorge's-by-Ihc-Rivcr Episcopal Church, andbenediction by Rev. NicholasMurphy, curate of Holy CrossCatholic Church.

Sewerage Authority member, foi'ive years, Theodore Nnsler; anbuilding impeetor, Robert C.Hayes.

Council confirmed the elec-tion of the Fire Department of-ficers: chief, Richard Zadoroz-ny; assistant chief, KennethFary; captain, Stanley Richards;first lieutenant, Stanley Cain;second lieutenant, Peter To-maino; fire marshal, Henry Rid-dle; and chief engineer, RussellTomaino.

All the councilmen were ap-pointed as special officers, aswere:

Edward Chasey, Ashley Sher-man, Elmer Cook, Clarence Hy-slop, J. Ely Miller, John Kav-chack, Stanley Dussman, CharlesLavene, William Harris, ArthurPaterson, Fred Stillwell, RoccoFerano, Marjorie Becker, Ken-neth T. Sargent, 9. WalterBranin, Harry N. Kirkegard,Charles B. Dreyer, NicholasMarcello, Benjamin V»n Keuren,Daniel Terry, Clifford Brower,Ralph Norwood, Edward Em-mons, Spencer Patterson, Wil-iam Wood, Russell Tomaino, Jo-

seph Marcello, James Ramsey,Henry V. Zebrowski, Charles B.Dowen, Daniel Kaufman, and Ed-ward Taylor.

Regular meetings again will beheld on the second and fourthWednesdays of each month at8 p.m. at the borough hall.-

School BoardStays WithIts Budget

MIDDLETOWN — After twoconferences, one last Thursdayand the other yesterday, theBoard of Education has decidedto leave its proposed $4.2 millionbudget as is.

The budget which will raise theschool tax rate an estimated21V2 cents per $100 of assessedvaluation, has been termed "toohigh" by members of the Town-ship Committee.

mhnrf of th*> hn^rrl'e ficommittee met last Thursdayon the governing body to discussbudget.

The board then met in executive session for about two hoursyesterday to go over the recom-mendations of the TownshipCommittee.

After the session, Harold Cope-land, board president, said theboard had decided to stay with itsoriginal proposal.

The total budget is set at $4,-279,982-an increase of $643,129over the current budget.

It will require a tax levy of$2,935,538. This is up $541,312over this year.

Increases in the budget are re-flected In teacher pay Increases,funds fur additional teachers, ad-ditional transportation require-ments and funds for maintenancenf three schools which arc slatedto open during the 1961-1962school year.

Edgar W. Heller, Jr.

SHREWSBURY — Funeralservices for Councilman EdgarW. Heller, Jr., 56, of 468 Syca-more Ave., will be held sit noontomorrow in St. George's-by-the-River Episcopal Church, Rumson, with Rev. Canon George A.Robertshaw, rector, officiating.

Burial will be in Fair ViewCemetery, Middletown, under thedirection of Adams MemorialHome, Red Bank.

Mr. Heller died early Sundayat his home.

Re-elected to his' council poshere in November, Mr. Hellerwas to have been sworn in forhis third consecutive term ayesterday's organization meet-ng, which was postponed untiThursday.

Mr. Heller, who served lastyear as police committee chair-man of this borough, was firstelected to the council in 1954. Heserved on the borough's Plan-ning Board for two years priorto his election.

Born in Oakhurst, son of Ed-oar W. Heller. Sr., of 3!versideHeights, and the late Sarah G.Heller, he was a resident here15 years and was a former resi-dent of Rumso'n.

A 1926 graduate of Yale Uni-versity, Mr. Heller was promotedlast month to purchasing agent ofraw materials and containers o1American Cyanamid Co.. BounBrook, where he has been employed since graduation.

Mr. Heller served with the U.SNavy in World War II and wasreleased in 1945 with the rankof lieutenant commander.

Besides his father, he is survived by his wife, Mrs. Laura RNelson Heller; a daughter, MissLaura R. Heller, at home;brother, Frederick Heller olVienna, Austria, and three sis-ters, Mrs, Joseph f. Lord otLittle Silver, Mrs. George S.Howell of Scobeyville, and Mrs.George D. Smith of Summit.

Mayor Bernard B. White, whodescribed Councilman Heller asa personal friend, said Ms deathrepresents a loss to 'he bor-ough that can not be replaced.

The mayor said he ?nd Mr.Heller had worked side by side,and that Mr Heller had been "avery stable influence i:i the con-duct of borough affairs."

Mayor-elect James W. Bly ex-pressed similar sentiments. Hesaid Mr. Heller was the oldestmember of council in point ofyears' service, and "in ex-tremely well liked person in theborough."

swung yesterday into Democratichands with a warning to BoroughCouncil that "either we do a goodjob for the people or it will bethe last of the Democratic Partyere." 'With the swearing in of Coun-

cilwoman Cecile Frankel Nortonand Councilman William J. Dar-by, local government took asharp swing in its political make-up.

Led by Democratic MayorThomas Farrell, beginning his22d year in the borough's localgovernment—16 years as mayor,six as a councilman—the boardnow comprises four Democrats,'ouncilmen Walter Johnson and

John S. Forsman in addition tothe two newcomers—and Repub-lican holdovers, CouncilwomanMildred N. Anderson and Councilman Sam L. Diggle, Jr.

2 GOP Men OutVoters in November discarded

two Republicans—Neils Jacobsenwho had been on the body almostcontinuously since the late 1920'sand John A. Carlson, the formerpolice commissioner.

Democrats in Firm ControlAs Sea Bright Organizes

SEA BRIGHT — This resort.and two Democratic councilmenand four Republicans. The newone takes in the same mayor andfour Democrats.

The changeover gives Mr. Far-rell more of a party advantagethan the one he gained in 1951when he held the balance of par-ty power by having three Demo-crats on the council—LawrenceMcCormick, John Donnelly andHarry Lovgren, balanced againstthree Republicans.

'Something Special'But Mayor Farrell yesterday

refused to recognize or take ad-vantage of this position. He *aidthat the only way it wouid orcould work would be to do"something special—like lowerthe taxes—for our people."

The last time the Democratsheld sway, all was not harmonyon the Borough Council, members of which, amongthings disputed the mayor's com-mittee assignments to the pointof setting up their own, whichMr. Farrell never did recognize.Nor, for that matter, did they ac-cept his designates.

This time, no conflict of anykind was evidenced at the start

beachfront, recreation, licensesand leases committe.

Mayor Farrell held to a mini-mum his New Year's message.The main job of the borough, hesaid, continues to be an effort toguard itself against sea damage.

In this effort, he recalled, withstate help, $78,000 was spent in1959 for seawall repairs and re-construction of a sand-capturingjetty offshore from Trade WindsBeach Club on the South Beach.Then, in 1960, in a program nownearing completion, $169,000 wasappropriated by state and localsources. This took care of theinstallation of new jetties off Wa-terview Way and 240 OceanAve., respectively costing $38,-829 and $40,316, as well as jettiesoff Atlantic Way, $27,408; CenterSt., $43,126, and a further ex-tension at Trade Winds, South

The 1960 council, thus was of t h e n e w session.made up of a Democratic mayor

10th TermFor Leuin

WEST LONG BRANC H — Har-vey Leuin was named to his 10thterm as borough magistrateyesterday, assuring him ofseniority from point of serviceamong presiding judges in Mon-mouth County's local courts.

The 57-year old lawyer, whoseprincipal occupation for manyyears has been as a chamber ofcommerce executive, may alsoset a magistrate's record for NewJersey when he completes his31st year in office in 1963.

Borough Clerk J. RussellWool ley said at yesterday'sorganization meeting of theMayor and Council he knew ofno one else in the state whohas served more years.

ApartmentHouse Burns

LONG BRANCH — A five-fam-ily apartment house at 416 SairsAve. was burned out Sunday inwhat police called a $50,000 loss.

Eighteen occupants of theframe structure were made home-less.

Gilbert Smith, the owner, wholived in one apartment, said thatabout eight people were in the

It adds up! More and morepeople use The Register ads eachissae bnc; results come fas-ter.—Advertisement,

lie me mui\e UULand that all reached safety with-out injury.

Among the occupants were Wil-liam Betts, his wife, and fourchildren.

They, and other residents, foundtemporary quarters with relativesin the city.

25 KilledVAASA, Finland (AP) -All 25

persons aboard a Finnish airlinerwere killed early today when theDC3 crashed into a wooded areanorth of the west coast port ofVaasa, Finnish police reported

A farmer who rushed to thescene of the crash, said theremust have been children aboardthe plane because school booksand toys were scattered over thearea. He said he also found arubber nipple from a baby's bot-tle.

Councilman Johnson acceptedcouncil appointment as councilpresident although there hadbeen some beforehand thoughtthat the job might go to Council-man Forsman.

Mr. Johnson retained his chair-manship over the fire and watercommittee.

New Commissioner. Councilman Forsman, by res-

olution, became the new policecommissioner, succeeding Com-missioner Carlson. On the lastcouncil, Mr. Forsman hadworked as chairman of the sew-ers and sanitation committee,winning general credit for a widerange of general improvementsto the Sea Bright sewage disposalsystem and its plant.

Mr. Norton took the place ofMr. Diggle as chairman of theimportant finance, insurance andpublic buildings committee.

Mr. Darby filled the notch longheld by Mr. .Jacobsen as chair-man of the streets and lightscommittee.

Mr. Diggle moved to Council-man Forsman's old spot, incharge of sewers and sanitation.

Mrs. Anderson held her posi-tion—the one held by her latehusband—as ihairman of the

Two YouthsSaved WhenIce Collapses

RUMSON — Alert action by aLittle Silver man skating on theShrewsbury R i v e r Saturdayhelped avert tragedy when two12-year-old boys plunged throughthin ice off the Rumson CountryClub.

The boys, Henry Jeffries,Gooseneck Point Rd., Oceanport,and his friend, William Dixon,Lincoln, N.J., were treated forsubmersion and exposure at Rlv-erview Hospital and released.

The first rescuer on the scenewas Richard Ackerman, 401Prospect Ave.. Little Silver, whoraced across the ice when heheard their cries for help.

Assisting in the rescue werePatrolman John Gaynor and anunidentified duck hunter.

Police, who were summoned tothe scene by Joseph Hoagland,Rldgc Rd., said the youths werepulled from the water with a

other B e a c h ' J19'199-o u l e r Now, said Mayor Farrell, the

state recently put up $50,000for sewall damages caused bythe big blow of Hurricane Donnalast September. And he said herecently has talked with Free-holder Director Joseph C. Irwin,Red Bank, who assured him that—because the sea walls protectOcean Ave., a county road, andShrewsbury River bridges be-tween this borough and Rumsonand Highlands—the borough willhave to put up only a "tokenpayment" toward a $100,000 pro-gram for the repairs. "We maypay for the enginering involved,"he said.

Seeks New MoneyBeyond this, the mayor said

that Sea Bright, through BoroughEngineer Otis R. Seaman, at astate meeting at Island Beach,recently requested another stateappropriation of $50,000 toward anew anti-erosion project. Wordon the outcome of this session,he said, is not expected beforenext summer, "possibly July."He said all there were somewhatdisappointed to learn that thestate had put up a total of onlyall such programs whereas mu-nicipalities attending put in re-quests for 2.8 million dollars.

The mayor also informed thenew council that Borough AuditorJoseph J. Seaman, Perth Amboy,had decided that, because of thegood financial condition of SeaBright, it would not be necessaryto sell bonds to purchase a newpiece of fire equipment expectedto be ordered at council's nextmeeting Jan. 10. "We can financethe deal ourselves," said Mr.Farrell.

All departments in 1960 hadmanaged very well with theirbudgeted finances, the mayorsaid. All he could see ahead asa direct need for 1961 was newwiring in the sewage disposalplant, a job he estimated wouldcost about J2.0QO.

CommitteesWorking committees the mayor

announced for 1961, the chairmanbeing the first member named,were:

Finance, insurance and publicbuildings—Mrs. Norton, Mrs. An-derson and Mr. Darby, policeand town hall—CommissionerForsman, Mr. Diggle and Mrs.Anderson, fire and water—Mr.Johnson, Mr. Darby and Mr.Forsman; streets and lights—Mr.Darby, Mr. Norton and Mr. Dig-gle; beachfront, recreation andleases—Mrs. Anderson, Mr. John-son and Mrs. Norton; sewersand sanitation—Mr. Diggle, Mr.Forsman and Mr. Johnson.

Both Mrs. Norton and Mr.Darby expressed thanks to thevoters for their election and bothsaid they looked forward lo workon the council under Mnyor Far-

rope from a nearby sailboat. | roll's leadership.

Page 12: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

SOUILY HAPPV—David and Steven Born Heft toright or is it right to left?) are the two year-oldtwins who play the title role of "Happy," the NBC-TVNetwork Friday night situation- comedy series. Theyoungsters, who spell each other because of time prob-lems concerned with filming infants, are featured asChristopher Hapgood Day, a precocious "talking baby."

Hal Humphrey;

Shows to WatchTONIGHT

10: CO-NBC (Ch. ^ - P r o j e c t 20—(Choice Viewing)-A pair ofProject 20s will be repeated thismonth. First is "The TwistedCross," study of the rise andfall of Adolf Eichmann in thenews, this fourth showing is par-ticularly timely. This excellent-ly edited documentary is to befollowed on Jan. 24 with "LifeIn the 30s."

10:0w-CBS (Ch 2)-Garry MooreShow-(Cholce Vlewlng)-CountBasie and his orchestra, comedi-enne Jean Carroll, plus regularsMarion Lome, Carol Burnett andDurward Kirby on tap for an en-tertaining hour. Carol, Durwardand Garry are in one skit called"The Cleaning Nut." During"that wonderful year" (1931) seg-ment, Durward turns up as"Dracula."

7:00-ABC (Ch. 7)—Expedition

—"War Clubs of the Amazon" re-lates the story of the first nonbelligerent contact made bywhite men with one of the moshostile and feared tribes in theworld, the Txukarramae. JamesMarshall, American ethnologiswho narrates the film, made thetrip up the Xingu River in theAmazon jungles of Brazil. Adventure films still have a fascination for most people.

8:3»-CBS (Ch. 2) -Dobie Oillis—Reluctant to vote a pay raisefor the schoolteachers, the students' parents take over classesat high school for a day to provethat teaching is an easy job. Asyou can well imagine, this ereates all sorts of situations, es-pecially for Dobic's parentsComedy in the "Henry Aldrich'tradition.

RADIOWASCWCBSWHTGWNBC

770880

1410MO

WNEWWORWPATWQXR

1130710930

1560

AFTIRNOONIliOt—WAtC Newa: Dick Shtpaid

WCM NawaWHTO Monraoutb-Ocaaa

Nawa SummaryWNK Nawa; Jim LowaWOR Nawa, John Scott

a l l l l—WO* The KitigeraldaWCM Lanny Koaa

IJllw—WHTO County AgentIllSw—WCM Allan Gray

WHTO Nawa;Relaxing Muala

IlltS—WABC Neva; Dick ShapardWNBC Emphaila

HO*—WCM NewaWHTO Haadlinea, Egg

Pricea, Mu»icWNBC Nawa; Jim LowaWOK Nawa

lltO—WCHS Man And Wifatits—WCBS Bob Dixon

WOR Carlton Fredrick!ttlO—WHTO News;

, Relaxing Muilc(i4t—WCBS Second Mr a. Burtontill—'WABC News: Jack Carney

WNBC Empkasia|:OO—WCBt News; Woman •

WHTO Headlinea, MusicWNBC Newa: Jim LowaWOR Nawa. Ua Smith

Kenort On Washing-ton

till—WCBt Bob Dixona>10—WHTO Newa:

Relaxing MmleI l l l - W M C Newa; .lack Carney

WNBC Emphaaia1:00—WCBI News: Martha

WrightWHTO Headlinea, MualaWNBC Newa: Jim LoweWOR Newa: I.yle Van

tilt—WOK Arlane FranclelllO—WHTO N'ewi:

Relaxing MdtloBill—WABC Hewn; .lack Carney

WNBC Emphaaia4100—WCBS New*: Information

CentralWHTO Closing Stock

Tteport: MusicWNBC Hewa: Art ForrlWOR News. John WlngaU

4:11—WCM Kenneth Banehart«iao—WHTO Monmouth-nrean

News Summary(Kitrn Off 4:30 p.m.)

4111—WABC NV-.vs; .lack Came;WNBC Emphasis

|:0O—WCBt News: Riili-licMaWNBC Newa. Art FordWOR News. John Scott

HIS—WCBS Kenneth Banjthart•US—WABC Newa

• VCNINOCOO—WABC Jack Carney

WCBS NewsWNK News: Spo-'tWOR News. I.vie Van

•111—WABC News. Ed SllvarmanWCBS Sport*. Poh fookeWNBC Art FordWOR Ne»h; .luhn Wiiig.l.

«:SO— WCBS News: nu.inf-sWABC John DalyWOR News,

•!40—WCBt T'n'uMlarv/v ""'WCB* Financial N«?waWNiC Financial N'ewa

f:4l—WABC Howard CojfllWCBS Lowell ThomasWOR Snorts. Stan I.omaxWNBC Three Star Extra

• III—WCBS Sporls TimeTlOO—WARC Edward P Morean

WCBt N'ews: Intprvirw.WNBC Newa: Wnyna HowrllWOR Fulton l « i .

TltS—WABC Farrell SmithWOR Rnslness: Nrwa

TlSO—WCBS News: K'l JoycaWNBC Morgan Realty

WOR Newa.Gabrial Heater

Tilt—WOR Capitol Close-UpIl4t—WNBC Wayn. Howell Show

WOR Carlton FradrickaTllS—WABC News: Farrell SmithaiOO—WCBt World Tonight

WOR Newa, World Today•ill—WCBS Eil Joyce•ISO—WCBS Ed Joyca

WOR Sporta;McCulioueh * Eliot

lltt—WABC News; Farrell Smith• ,00—WNBC Newa: Boh Haymea

WOR News: UN Review""!B1 Newa; World Of

Mufiio• :SS—WOR McCullongh ft Eliot•US—WABC News: Ed Jordan

1OIPO—WCBS News:WNBC News: Bob HaymeaWOR News. Lei Smith

SOUS—WOar MrCullnuB-h & EliotWCBS Dance Music

IO:SS—WABC News; Ed JordanlllOO—WCBS News

WNBC NOWP: Ron HaymeaWOR News

11:1S—WCBS StnrliKht Salut.WOR McCuiloiich

Eliot11:10—WCBS Music 'Til Dawn11.45—WOR Kihle Rca'dlnglilts—WABC Newa: Happinesa

Exchangel*:00—WNBC News; All Night In

N. T.WOR Lonj? John

MORNINO PROGRAMST:00—WABC News. Al Lohman

WCBS Jack SterlingWHTQ Monmouth-Ocean

News SummaryEcu Prices

WOH New-;John Gambling

WNBC News; Bill CullenT:JO—WHTO News:

Wake up to MuiicTI4S—WHTO Civil Service Newa1:00—WABC News: Al Lohman

WHTO Headlines:Wnke UpTn .Music

WCBS News: Jack SterlingShow

WOR News.WNBC News: Bill Cullo,

I:1S—WOR Dorolhy nnil Dick8:39—WHTG News:

Ttoiaxini? Musio• :SS«— WABC News Reports(.00—WABC n*rakfa*t Tluh

WCBS News: .Inck SlerllnWHTO Headlines:

Strictly for \vomenWNBC News: Hill CullenWOR Nrws: Galpn Drnka

t:SO—WHTO News:Relnxinrr Music

• :S»—WNBC Rmphn-ls •10:00—WABC Pick Shepnnl

WCBS \ ' w . ' .\,i|,,,rfiodfrry

WHTO Mr.vllini-s Mu«teWNBC News: Art FordWOR NVws Report,

10:18—WOR Mnrtrm Peana>10:10—WHTO N'IMVC.

Relnxii - MusicWOR Interviews.

Martha T'pnn*10:55—WABC News: Hick Shrpan

WNBC Kmphnsis11:00—WCBS Nfws: House Party

WHTC Hnadllnea: Mu-lo •WHBC News: Art FordWOR News.

UllS—WOR McCnnnn Ht HnmtWCBS (lurry MooreWHTO Reri Rank Becllter

Newi. Fete HoffmanWOR Mi-rnnn. al Home

11:30—WCBS Carry Monrel l lSS I«ARR V«MVI

WNBC EmnhnaialllS»—WNTO Midday S'ock Report

Centrally located In Ealonlown—New ShrewsburyMonmouth-Ocean News Summaries at

7 A.M., 12 Noen, 4:20 P.M.

Vfewf**TVThe IVon-Actore

HOLLYWOOD — MacdonaidCarey enrolled in a judo andkarat* school not long ago (kar-ate is for killing somebody withthe edge of your hand), becausehe discovered that' such knowl-edge gets him farther today thanhis degree in acting and stage-craft.

"Let's face it," says Carey,"television now is mostly concerned with non-actors doing nonscripts. The average TV serieshas no germ of literacy, so theactor really has nothing to say.Hence, why employ actors? A bigguy who looks good hitting ari'other guy is all that's needed."I don't think this will last. JohnL. Sullivan tried to become anactor and did some Shakespeare,until the public almost gave upShakespeare. Many people al-ready have given up looking atTV since they found out that itreally is the same show ever;'night."

Carey's comments may read asif he were bitter, but he isn't. AtJimmy Durante would say,"Those are the conditions thatprevail," and Carey simply is de-scribing them.

"There is no sense in beingbitter about it," he says. "Thingschange, and one must adapt him-self. I fell fortunate to have ashow going at this time."

Carey's current TV series is"Lock Up," a Ziv production syn-dicated in over 100 cities. Heplays Herb Maris, the humani-tarian Philadelphia lawyer. Likeall of Ziv's series, "Lock Up" isa medium-grade potboiler, withCarey its greatest asset.

"Don't forget',' says the star,"we shoot them in two days. Thatdoesn't giv« much time for pol-ishing, rewriting or rehearsal."

Still, Carey feels fortunate, ashe says, and the reason can befound by looking over the mem-bership list of the Screen ActorsGuild. More good actors are outof work now than ever before.

TV used ifi be hailed as theland of plenty for the actor, andin the first five or six years it didrevive many acting careers with-ering on' the Hollywood vine. Butthen TV producers discoveredthat stamina was as importantas talent in the weekly grind ofa series. A good-looking non-actorwas cheaper, too, and didn'tworry so much about the scripts.

"Anyone can learn to act infront of a camera unless he suf-fers from some major mentalproblem," says Carey. "Once ina while one of these newcomerswill fall on his face, but the cast-ing director just shrugs it off andsays, 'Well, he was great in theoffice.'"

What hurts Carey's professionalpride as much as anything is themanner in which local stationshack up a syndicated film tosplice in an overdose of commercials.

"I saw one of our episodes upin Las Vegas, and the cuts in itwere horrible. The whole firstact was gone. I couldn't figureout the plot myself," Carey says.

Like most of his actor colleagues, Carey believes that theonly way television's decline andfall can be averted is with theadvent of pay-TV. It will bringactors and writers back to themedium, because the viewerswill only pay for quality.

The thinking around Hollywoodnow is that pay-TV can't bestopped. Networks still pooh-poohsuch talk, but ironically it is thenetworks and their uninspiredprogramming this season whichhave contributed more to pay-TV-s eventuality than anythingelse.

Meanwhile, Carey will continueto practice his judo lessons.There are lots of criminals, Indians and bad sheriffs still looseon TV, and Carey has a wifeand six little Careys to feed.

Guess Who

is going to resign.

rWFAST

RELIABLESERVICE

on all models• Hemt

Radio• Phono• Hi-Fi

AuthorizedADMIRAL

DEALERServing

h

Cmwmuwut(7) Texan(») Guy Madison

(11) Great Plays InRehearsal

(It) Day Watch12: J*— (2) Search for Tomorrow

(4) It Could Be You(5) Cartoons

' (7) Beat The Clock(I) Meet Corliss Arcbsr

12:45— (2) Guiding Light12:55— (I) News

!:•>— (2) News(4) Dr. Joyce Brother*(5) Cartoons(7) About Faces(») Movie

(11) Fun At One1:15 - (2) Burns and Allen1:25— (4) News

(5) News1 : 1 0 - (2) As The World Turns

(4) Dial Four(5) Movie(7) Susie

(II) Science Corner1:59—(II) Journey Into Math2:99— (2) Full Circle

(4) Jan Murray(7) Day In Court

2:1*—(11> Our World Neighbors2 : 3 * - (2) House Party

(4) Loretta Young(7) Road to Reality

(II) New Frontiers ofScience

2:55— (5) NewsJ:0«— (2) Millionaire

(4) Young Dr. Malone(5) Dateline Europe(7) Queen For A Day(I) Film Drama

(11) Science for Teachers(IS) Day Watch

J:JI— (2) Verdict Is Yours(4) From These Root*(5) Doorway To Destiny(7) Who Do You Trust?(S) Movie

(11) Star Performance4 : 0 0 - (2) Brighter Day

(4) Make Room forDaddy

(5) Douglas Fairbanks(7) American Bandstand

(II) Abbott and Costello4:15— (2) Secret Storm4 : J » - (2) Edge of Night

(4) Here's Hollywood(5) Mr. District Attorney

• (11) Laurel and Hardy(II) Women's Club

4 : 5 5 - 0 0 Spunky and Tadpole5 : 0 0 - (2) Life of Riley

(4) Movie(5) I Led Three Lives( i) Mischief Makers

(II), Bozo the Clown(13) Crunch and Des

5:23—<11> Clutch Cargo5 : 3 0 - (2) Movie •

(5) Texas Rangers(7) Rocky and His

Friends(») Movie

(11) Three Stooges(IS) Studio 99Vi

m0 1 ) Popcye(IS) Highway Patrol

. : « - (4) MovieI: I S - (7) Q.T. Hush( : 3 t - (4) Local News

(5) Cartoons(7) Tommy Seven

(11) Quick Draw McGraw(13) Movie—1958

"Thundering Jets"i : 4 « - (4) Weather 6• : 4 5 - (4) News7 : W - (2) News

(4) Phil Silvers(5) Coronado 9(7) Expedition!(S) Terrytoons

(II) News7:05- (2) Local News7:10- (2) Weather

(11) News7:15- (2) News7:25—(11) Weather7 : 3 0 - (2) Tallahassee 7000

(4) Laramie(5) Tightrope!(7) Bugs Bunny(9) Movie-1S«

"I Remember Mama"(11) Broken Arrow

8:00— (2) Father Knows Best(5) City Assignment(7) Rifleman

(11) Divorce Court(13) Mike Wallace

(1:20—(13) Dialing the News8:30— (2) Dobie Gillis

(4) Alfred Hitchcock(5) Mackenzie's Raiders(7) Wyatt Earp

(13) Play of the Week>:00- (2) Tom Ewell

(4) Thriller(5) Wrestling(7) Stagecoach West(I ) Movie

(11) Flight1 :30 - (2) Red Skelton

(11) Danger Zone10:00— (2) Garry Moore

(4) Project 20(7) Alcoa Presents

(11) New YorkConfidential

10:30— (7) Dangerous Robin(9) Movie—1948

"I Remember Mama"(11) San Francisco Beat(13) Playback

10:35—(IS) Movie-1957"The Abductors"

11:00- (2) News(4) News(5) News(7) News

(11) News11:05— (5) Movie—1948

"Blanche Fury"11:10— (2) Weather

(4) Weather(7) Weather

11:15— (2) Movie—1947"The Woman fromTangier"

(4) Jack Paar(7) Movie—1945

"Hangover Square"

TV & Radio:

The Week-endBy CYNTHIA LOWRY

NEW YORK (AP) - Stars ofthe New Year week-end tele-vision were, without doubt, thecollege gridiron warriors whosestruggles dominated the livingroom screens Saturday and yes-terday. And by the time theRose Bowl game finally hoveinto view, this reviewer had seenenough pileups, runs and kicksto last until next fall.

Over the long weekend therewas also the premiere, on NBC,of a new opera, "Deseret," whichhad a fine production, goodvoices and agreeable if not mem-orable music. What it also had

"Ellery Queen'sPenthouse Mystery"

12:30- (2) Movie—1944"Andy Hardy'sBlonde Trouble"

12:45— (5) News; Call to Prayer(7) Evening Prayer

1:00- (4) News1:§5- (4) Dr. Brothers1 : 1 * - (4) 13th Hour

1 (I) Almanac Newsreel1:40— (4) Sermonette2:35— (2) News :

2:40— (2) Give Us This DayWEDNESDAY MORNING

5:55— (4) Sermonette1:00— (4) Continental

Classroom0:15— (2) Previews0 : 2 0 - (2) Give Us This Day«:25= (2) News0:30— (2) Sunrise Semester7 : 0 0 - (2) News

(4) Dave Garroway7 : 1 5 - (5) Call to Prayer7:20— (7) Morning Prayer7:30— (5) Ding Dong School

(7) Early Bird Cartoons8 : 0 0 - (2) News

(5) Sandy Becker(7) Little Rascals

8 : 1 0 - (2) News8:15— (2) Captain Kangaroo8:30—(13) Religious Program8:45—(13) Community NewsreelJ:00-r (2) People's Choice

(4) Family(7) I Married Joan

(13) Physical Culture9:25— (5) News9:30— (2) My Little Margia

(5) Topper(7) Memory Lane

(13) Day Watch10:08— (2) December Bride

(4) Say When(5) Movie

10:30- (2) Video Village(4) Play Your Hunch(7) Ray Milland

10:40—(U) world of Numbers10:50- (9) Winky Dink11:00- (2) I Love Lucy

(4) Price Is Right(7) Morning Court(9) Herb Sheldon

(11) Speaking English11:25— (5) News11:30- (2) Clear Horizon

(4) Concentration(5) Romper Room(7) Love That Bob!

11:40—(11) La PuertaAbierta

ANNA MARIA AllERGHETTI receives Jerry Lewis incourt, in • scene from the Technicolor fantasy, "Cinder-fella." Paramount releeie. Startt tomorrow «t bothCerlton, Red B«nk, end EetontOwn Drive-ln.

The Luscious Erika'Takes In Laundry9

By JAMES BACON

AP Movie-TV Writer

HOLLYWOOD — Erika Peters,a luscious German import, isunique. She'i the only Hollywoodactress who takes in laundry.

"Sometimes when I don't getthe part, on an interview," sheconfesses, "I startle the producer

happened to Desi Arnaz?Lesson In Ingenuity

She's only been in this countrythree years but those three yearsare a lesson in German ingenuity.

First of all, she speaks Englishfluently with little or no accent.

"I worked so hard to lose myaccent that I have just beensigned to make a movie in Ger-many to play an American girl,"she beams.

In fact, she has only playedone German character since com-ing here — a recent role on "TheUntouchables." She had to fakea German accent.

Real Name: KnabHer real name is Erika Knab—

and she still uses that name forGerman films.

"I changed it to Peters overjhere because it's easier to pro-

participation showjnounce than Knab. I am wellbowed in: NBC's daytime "Say known by that name in Germany

What's more, it's a lucrativebusiness that leaves her plenty ofnme for acting. She's a TV regu-lar and recently starred in AlliedArtists' "Heroes Die Young."

Russians Killed Pirenti

She's also up for "The Eich-mann Story" at the same studio.

Where did she learn such selfreliance? Such innate businesssense?

"Both my mother and fatherwere killed by the Russians in

probably wind up owning a studio | the war," she says. "I have beenone day. Remember. wh a t on my own since I was a little

by recommending myservice."

laundry

Erika, 25, sacrifices no glamourwith her sideline. She's just ashrewd business woman who will

girl. Either you become self re-liant when you are alone — oryou become a bum or a waif inan orphanage."

• Movie Discount look *

GOOD AT ANYWALTER READE THEATRE$9,00 VALUE $-V50

« * FOR mm

'ARLTON

audience

When." It was like a lot of otheraudience participation programsand sort of a reverse switch on"The Price Is Right," producedby the same people. It's the firstnew show of the year — whichisn't a very auspicious start. Butmaybe the housewives will likethe show.

—and my voice is even betterknown. I used to be the voice ofMickey Mouse when Walt Disneycartoons were dubbed into Ger-man."

She was still under contract toBerolina Studios in Berlin whenshe first came over here. She

— LAST TIMES TODAY"Village of the Damned'

'Crowded Shy' I

.. .... hag made six trips back andCBS' "The Carshwin Years" Is! forth for films. A sideline on the

really turning out to be a hard-! trips earned her more moneyluck show. First came Moss than the acting.Hart's heart atack, which removed him as the host and nar-rator of the Jan. 15 90-minute

Sold Autos"I wasn't here long before 1

noticed everybody was on a wait-special. Then Eileen Farrell, the ing list for Volkswagens, 50opera star, walked out in a dis-jeverytime I took a trip to Berlin,

jpute over billing (she wanted it: I bought a half-dozen or so Volks-was an old television disease—script trouble. The plot skeietonjaiphabetical. which put her namewas weak and nothing else wasstrong enough to overcome it.

Following the opera Sundayon NBC was another "Omni-bus," this a sampling of whatone may expect (o see andhear In Manhattan's plannedLincoln Center for (he per-forming arts. It was a gentle,cultured hour of music, sink-ing and dancing but had no-thing of the stimulation weonce expected from that pro-gram.

New Show

higher on the list than EthelMerman's).

Toughest BreakProducer Leland Howard

coped with these situations:he* signed composer RichardRodgers to replace Hart—andwill play one Rodgers numberamid the all-Gershwin scores.He recovered magnifircntlyfrom (he Farrell situation bynabbing Maurice Chevalier forthe show (although Chevalier'srelationship to Gershwin is

Television WatchingBy Childern Studied

By JOHN BARBOUR

AP Science Writer

pretty well limited to the factAnd yesterday morning a new; he met him in Paris during the

years on which the show isbased.

But the toughest break of allcame Dec. 5, when dancers anda technical crew went to a smallisland in New York's JamaicaBay and taped the catfish num-

|ber of "Porgy and Bess," a| number which nibbled about $10,-

area, Witty charted how program 00» f r o m t h e (

s . h o w b u d 8 e t

NEW YORK - Televisionwatching by children is a prob-lem mostly when parents let i t | d r e n

become and remain a problem, a "H n u ' :

researcher says.

preferences change:

Favorites of '50

Children need a varied, well-balanced day of outdoor exer-cise, rest, play, reading and thecompanionship of parents.

Tf you feel your child is watch-ing TV too much, ask yourself ifhe is turning to TV as a refugefrom boredom or frustration.,

'Mediocre or Worse'

That is the recommendation ofPaul Witty of Northwestern Uni-versity before the American As-sociation for the Advancement ofScience.

"It is true that some programsare mediocre or worse. But thereare some genuinely informativeofferings and occasionally a trulynspirinc or beautiful presenta-

tion," Witty said.Both parents and teachers can

encourage better TV programs,and they can help cuib the pres-ent preponderance of Westernand crime programs that chil-dren see.

Parents, Teachers

In 1950, elementary school chil-Iiked "Hopalong Cassidy,"

Howdy Doody," "The LoneRanger" and Milton Berle in thatorder.

Somehow, the tapes got intothe wrong bin at the network'stape processing center and halfthe sequence was accidentallyerased.

To re-shoot the footage, thefour dancers plus the crew —

'about 50 in all—must fly to KeyTheir parents preferred Arthur]West, Fla., Thursday. Snow and

Godfrey, Milton Berle and sports'cold weather make it impossiblepresentations in that order. !to repeat locally, and the trip

Bv 1953 children's tastes had I South will take another big un-shifted to "I Love Lucy," "Super-1 anticipated bite out of theman," and Red Buttons. Their:budget.

Children on a constant diet of | ick."

parents liked "I Love Lucy,""What's My Line" and 'Omni-bus.' Teachers liked "Meet thePress," "Omnibus" and newsshows.

Think It's SwellBy 1955 "Disneyland" had tak-

en over elementary school children's preferences, high schoolstudents liked George Gobel, par-ents preferred "Person to Per-son" and teachers liked "Life isWorth Living."

Then for children, "Disney-land" gave way to "Zorro," "Zor-ro" gave way to "77 SunsetStrip" — and in 1960 to 'Dennisthe Menace.'

For teenagers the top spotshifted to Steve Allen, and forthe past three years to "Mavcr-

this sort of program enn gradu-ally come to accept violence, hateand destruction as almost nor-mal ways or life, Witty said. Hoadded:

"Their sensitivity to humansuffering may gradually becomeblunted by frequent exposure toantisocial behavior. . .Parent andlenchors enn aid by encouracini;

For parents the swing wasfrom "I Love Lucy" to "Play-house 90," which has held honorsfor the past three years.

Teachers' likes swung from the"$64,000 Question" to LawrenceWelk to "Playhouse 90," whichhas led for the past three yenrs.

Whatever parents, teachers orothers think of television, young

nhildrnn in snlect programs with elementary school children thinkdiscrimination and to evaluate jit's swell, Witty said.thorn carefully."

In an 11-year study nf teleview-ing l>y children in (lie Chicago

A porcupine has about 30,000quills,

ABC's next "Close-Up" is astudy of the new nations ofAfrica called "The Red and theBlack," just about the last ofthe specials made under thesupervision of departed vicepresident John Daly. IncomingJames Hagerty, who will takeDaly's place as head of newsand special events, is likely tofind the cupboard of showsquite bare upon his arrivalafter Jan. 20, inaugurationday.

RecommendedTwisted Cross," NBC, 10-11—re-

wagons and exported them here."Now that Volkswagens are

easier to pet, I have invested mymoney in laundromats. They arccoin operated and require littleor no personal supervision."

MOVIE TIMETABLERED BANK

Carlton—Crowded Sky 2:00; 8:15; Village Of The Damned 3:40; 7:00; 10:05, '

EATONTOWNDrive-In — Village Of HieDamned 7:05; 10:15; The AngryRed Planet 8:50.

HAZLETLoew's Drive-In—Cartoon 7:00;Village Of The Damned 7:05;9:50; Boy And The Pirates 8:-40.

ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS

Atlantic—Night Fighters 6:50;9:50; One Foot In Hell 8:20.

KEYPORTStrand—Seven Ways To Sun-down 8:28: Village Of TheDamned 6:45; 9:45.

LONG BRANCHBaronet — Village Of TheDamned 3:30; 7:10; 10:00;Nightfighters 2:00; 8:30.

ASBURY PARKLyric—I'm All Right Jack 7:20;9:30.Mayfair—Hie World Of SuzicWong 2:45; 7:15; 9:50.

St. James—The Sundowners 2:-40; 7:10; 9:40.

• STARTS TOMORROW •

""JERRY LEWIS"

HENRY SUVA-ROBERTNITTON

. . 'COIVT BASIE i*jk.i»«ialiaxaal lui (nlirifii Jot Willuu

ALBERGHETTIa I V Primus"

EATONTOWNO B I V f - I N T H E A T R E

R O U T E I D * t t h e C I R C L C

Uri'ltcla>» Oinn «::io— Movlri M 1:01)Aundayi Only Open 5:IK) Movlri 8:00

,—LAST TIMES TONITE _ ,'Villoge cf the Damned'

'Angry Red Planet'

• STARTS TOMORROW •

WEtKDAVS O P I N £ : ] 0 - M O V I I S AT 7 0 0 11SUNDAYS ONLY-OPEN S 3 0 - M O V I E S AT 100

mini i mi • urn in,in mm-mili>;> mi [

run of an impressive Project 20

ZELECH'TRONICS

EDWYNN-JI [»ITH AMIEKSOSANNA MARIA ALBERGHETTI

ai"The Princws"A >««..! w u . • TECHNICOLOR _

Pus 2nd HIT FEATURE

JOHN WAYNE'HIGH AND THE MIGHTY'

Free In-Car Heaters

Comic Mnsturplccc

"I'm All Right .lack"

Page 13: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

TAKING THE OATH — George F. Barrett, right, and Franklin Ingram, are sworn into Oceanport Borough Council by William B. Flacknar, borough clerk, under watchfuleye of Mayor Edward C. Wilson, Sr., left at the council's organization meeting. Mr.Barrett raplacei Lloyd N. Sickels.

Two Councilmen SeatedAt Oceanport Meeting

OCEANPORT-George. F. Bar-rett, a newcomer, and Franklinfngram, an incumbent, weresworn to seats on the BoroughCouncil at the governing body'sorganization meeting yesterday.

George CD. Hurley, Jr., wassworn in for the three-year unex-pired tax collector term of hislate father, who had been collec-tor for 38 years until his deathlast July.

Replaces SickelsMr. Barrett replaces Lloyd N.

Sickles on the governing body.Mr. Barrett was a member of thePlanning Board nine years.

Mr. Ingram, who polled 804votes Nov. 8, has been a memberof the council nine years.

Mayor Edward C. Wilson, Sr.,offered a number of recommenda-tions for 19GI

Included was another sewerage

searcher of assessment liens;Thomas Davison, Board ofHealth; Alexander Boross, Zon-ing Board of Adjustment; Mr.Ingram, Planning Board; MayorWilson, local assistance board;

Elimination of the persona!; Charles W. Jones, borough at-property tax effective in 1962;; torney, and Armour S. Hulsart,passage of an ordinance requiring; auditor.mercantile licenses; constructionof a borough storage building;

Council AppointmentsThe following council appoint-

better mosquito and caterpillar j m e n t s w e r« announced, with thecontrol; amendment of the pres-|cl lJ irmal | named first:ent building f:ode, and forma- t7'~~ '"""" *" ** " 'tion of a citizens' shade tree com-mittee.

Among the accomplishments inI960 reviewed by the mayor were:

Fire, John D. Rieck and Clem-ent V. Sommers; finance,Harry S. Koch and Mr. Ingram;parks, Mr. Sommers and Mr.Barrett; police, Mr. Ingram and

Awarding of contracts for the Mr- R'«*; ordinances, Mr. Som-dredging of Parker's Creek in' mers and Mr. Barrett; water, Mr.Little Silver and Blackberry B . a "? t t »nd

DMr- *"*•• « « ?

C k i O h f ''gntin8, Mr. Barrett and Felix J.F M ' I d

Creek in Oceanport; purchase ofa new fire truck; beginning of in-stallation of water meters in thePortaupeck section, and a stabletax rate in spite of a higher budg-et.

The council approved the fol-lowing reappointments offered byMayor Wilson:

system study—this time by a citi-| Mr. Hurley, treasurer; Otis R.zens1 committee. He indicated thei Seaman, borough engineer; An-final decision on whether a sys-jthony J. DeSantis, court clerk;tern should be installed would be Harlan Bryant, road supervisor;left to the voters in a referendum.

Mayor Wiison also called for:Henry J. Anderson, building in-spector; William P. Fleckner,

Foggia; streets, Mr.'Ingram andMr. Sommers; sanitation, Mr.Rieck and Mr. Koch, and prop-erty, Mr. Ingram, Mr. Koch andMr. Barrett

Edward F. Brady was sworn inas chief of the Fire Department,replacing Robert Rosch. Takingthe oath as first assistant chiefwas John V. Hauser, and swornas second assistant was EdwardF. Clayton.

Rev. Donald Higbee, pastor ofthe Methodist Church, offered theinvocation.

Mrs. Holden will be the onlyb from the southern dis-2 of the borough. She is a

epublican committeewoman.Mayor Baron, a Democrat,

ited her appointment, which didlot require council confirmation,

evidence that he does not al-ow political lines to stop his

use of "the best qualified people"i borough service.

Mrs. Holden is an advertising:opywriter for radio station

HTG, Eatontown. The wife of aetired physician, she has been

permanent resident of NewShrewsbury for 10 years, and aiummer resident since 1922.

Other new appointments madeit yesterday's organization meet-ng of Borough Council were:Richard B. Hamilton, MD, policehysician; Dr. Donald S. Litt-

mann. Recreation Commissionmember for a five-year term;Col. Allen G. Spitz, member of.he Board of Health for a three-ear term; Mrs. Arlene Westee,

member of the Shade Tree Com-mission for a three-year term.

Left OpenSeveral borough positions were

lot filled at yesterday's meeting.A borough attorney was not

ippointed. Milton Mausner, in-:umbent in that post, will con-inue to serve until an appoint

ment is made.Mayor Karl K. Baron said he•as "thinking over" the appoint-

ment. Council members statedhey would vote for Mr. Mausner

he were nominated.No building or heating inspec

OATH OF OFFICE —Two newcomers and two incumbents are sworn in by Fred LAyeri, borough clerk, at yetterday's organixation meeting of Little* Silver BoroughCouncil. Receiving the oath of office are, left to right, Asseisor Louis S. Van Brunt,re-elected to a four-year term, and Councilmen Michael J. Rafferty, Robert Fred-•riekwn, and August E. Roemer. Three-year terms went to Mr. Rafferty and Mr. Fred-erickion, an incumbent. Mr. Roemer was installed to fill out one-year unexpiredterm of Douglas C. Wright.

Mosquito FightPromised by Campi in Little Silver

LITTLE SILVER — Mayor P.Paul Campi yesterday promisedto follow through in 1561 with hisprogram to secure state and fed-eral aid to combat salt marshmosquitoes.

The mayor said that prelimin-ary arrangements were com-pleted in 1960 for joint actionagainst the insects by surround-ing communities.

He also predicted that hearingswill be called "in the near fu-ture" to draw up requests forState and federal funds withwhich to fight the insect prob-lem.

Mayor Campi's promises werecontained in his annual publicmessage delivered at yesterday'sorganization meeting of the Bor-ough Council.

New OfficialsSworn into office at the meet-

ing were Councilmen Michael J.Rafferty, Robert Frederickson,August E. Roemer.

Assessor Louis S. Van Brunt,who was unopposed for re-elec-tion to a four-year term, also re-ceived the oath of office.

Mr. Frederickson and Mr. Raf-ferty were elected to three-yearterms and will replace Council-men Edward F. Torre andCharles E. Folsom, who did notseek re-election,

Mr. Roemer wns elected tocomplete the one-year uncxplrcdterm vacated by the resignationlast year of Douglas C. Wright.

Mr. Wright's council scat ori-ginally wns filled by the appoint-ment of Mr. Frederickson.

Mayor Campi's message alsocontained three other prominentrecommendations for 1061.

He called for the selection ofa committee to study and offera program of bcautification ofthe borough.

He asked that arrangements becompleted to engage professionalassistance for the planning of thecommunity's future growth andprogress.

And he said that codificationof all municipal ordinances is al-ready under way.

Among the 1960 borpugh proj-ects cited by Mayor Campi werethe dredging of Little SilverCreek and the expanded libraryfacilities on the second floor ofborough hall.

'Increasing Interest'"It has been noted," the mayor

concluded "that increasing inter-est has been manifested by res-ident's in attending meetings ofthe mayor and council.

"I want to encourage this andurge that more of Little Silver'scitizens take it upon themselvesto devote the time necessary todetermine how and where theirtax dollars are being spent,"

The council approved the fol-lowing appointments offered byMayor Campi:

Otis R. Seaman, bordugh en-gineer; Roberts, Pillsbury &Carton, borough attorney; CalvinA. Rowe, chief fiscal officer;John W. Bordcn, street superin-tendent; Mrs. Harriet Balkan,borough librarian and director otwelfare; Robert T. Mavcr, build-

! inspector; Samuel Sacco,building custodian, and WarrenM. Herbert, Albeit .1. Kolman,Richard D. Tetlcy, Mrs. MamaCroft, David Benton, Fred Zlgler,

and Mrs. Dorothy Herrnecker,special officers.

Council AssignmentsThe following council commit-

tee assignments were announced,with the chairman named first:

Finance and bonds—Mr. Raf-ferty, Charles W. Stephens, andRaymond E. Garrison; roads andsanitation—Nelson M. Ayers, Mr.Garrison, and Mr. Roemer;lights, ordinances and insurance—Mr. Stephens, Mr. Frederick-son, and Mr. Ayersi fire andwater—Mr. Frederickson, Mr.Rafferty, and Mr. Stephens; po-lice—Mr. Roemer, Mr. Ayers,and Mr. Frederickson, and publicbuildings and grounds—Mr. Gar-rison, Mr. Roemer, and Mr. Raf-ferty.

Council voted to meet on thesecond and fourth Tuesdays ofeach month at 8: IS p. m., exceptduring July and August, when thegoverning body will meet on thesecond Tuesday only.

A temporary budget of $53,220was approved. Council voted toappoint Joseph J. Seaman &Co. as borough auditor and or-dered the borough's books aud-ited.

Mr. Stephens was reappointedcouncil president.

Rev. Ralph L. Barrett, pastorof Embury Methodist Church, of-fered the invocation.

DRIVER IS INJUREDATLANTIC TOWNSHIP - Jo-

seph L. Day, 30, of SycamoreAve., New Shrewsbury, receiveda careless driving summonsearly .Saturday after his carskidded on Tinton Ave. and hita utility pole.

Day was taken to Fltkin Hos-pital where he was treated forhead cuts and released.

It adds up! More and morepeople use The Register ads eachIssue bccau.ic results come fas-ter.— Advertisement.

o Attorney Nai ...of * IRepuWican,Shrewsbury^ Named

NEW SHREWSBURY — Mrs.elson M. Holden was appointedesterday by Mayor Karl K. Bar-

Mi to a six-year term on the bor-ugh's Planning Board.

tors were appointed. IncumbentsJohn H. Osborne and AlfredSchibell, respectively, will ferveuntil appointments are made.

Searcher for subdivision of landwas not appointed. This post isusually held by the clerk of thePlanning Board and that bodyhas not yet named its clerk forthe year.

A defeated Democratic candi-date for council, Francis Cooper,has been clerk of the board, andit was at his own suggestion thatthe body made no selection for1961 until its organization meetingthis month.

TheReappointed

following were reap-pointed: Daniel E. Renshaw, ascouncil member of the PlanningBoard for one year; Jerome S.Reed, borough clerk and assess-ment searcher; Ruth B. Craw-ford, treasurer and tax searcher;Henry Labrccquc, borough engi-neer; Joseph Seaman, auditor;Ernest Hiltbrunner, superinten-dent of highways and superin-tendent of sanitation; M. Jean-ette Cobb, clerk of the munici-pal court; Edmund J. Norris,Board of Adjustment member fora three-year term; William H.Brown, Jr., full-time special of-ficer; and Bessie Holley andJanet Frost, special officers.

Council, by resolution, set twosalaries: borough clerk, at $5,-000 a year and municipal courtclerk, at $1,000.

The time and place for Bor-ough Council meetings will re-main the same: first and thirdThursdays at 8 p. m. at TintonFalls School.

The invocation for the organ-ization meeting was delivered byRabbi Gilbert Rosenthal.

PALM BEACH, Fia. (Ap) —Republican John J. McCloy, anold hand at dealing *ith theRiRussians, will have roleyin the new Democratic admin-istration's quest for nuclear dis-armament

President-elect John c . Ken-nedy last night announced ap-pointment of McCloy, former al-lied high commissioner !n Ger-many, as director of the UnitedStates Disarmament Administra-tion. In that field McCloy, 65, willbe Kennedy's chief adviser andpolicy planner.

During the campaign Kennedysharply criticized the Fisenhow-er administration for what hecalled insufficient effort towardworking out a disarmamentagreement with the Soviet Un-ion. He pledged that ;f elected hewould make "one last great ef-fort."

Wide ExperienceMcCloy is a man of wide ex-

perience in fields of law, bank-ing and government. We was anassistant secretary of war in theTruman administration and herecently resigned as board chair-man of the Chase-ManhattanBank in New York.

In a statement Kennedy saidMcCloy's "long interest in • thesubject of disarmament, his real-istic approach to the key issuesfacing the world today will as-sure the United States of theablest leadership in this criticalfield."

McCloyd became famii'.ar withthe headaches of dealing withthe Russians in his period ashigh commissioner in Germany10 years ago.

There is no present plan forhim to sit down at the 4isarma

President-elect chow another'****1** «**•** CWTCITAMHarvard man. McCloy won his; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest E. P«seux.law degree there in 1921 after|Bethany Rd., entertained onfirst graduating from *mherst|Christmas Day Mr. and Mrs.College. He interrupted his Donald W. Pescux ind daughter!,studies at Amherst to serve »s Ella Michelc and Donna Marie,a field artillery captain in World!of Little Silver, Mr. and Mri.War I.

Kennedy also yesterdayI Ralph W. Ronson and daughter,

an-1 Linda Jean, of Morganville; Mr.nounced appointment nf Law-|and Mrs. Frank A. Cerrati andrence F.'O'Brien of Springfield,.Susan Ruth Peseux, Hazlet.

3 MONMOUTH

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SHOP BAMBERGER'S MONMCUTH WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY FROM 10 A.M. TILL 9:30 P.M. AS USUAL

Page 14: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

avyMissouri's Line Halts Joe BellinoAs Tigers Defeat Navy Team, 21-14

Bv BEN FUNK was held in close check by' Thereafter, Missouri controlledh '

^ yMIAMI Fla~(AI')— Missouri1*1 fierce Missouri defense. The'(he ball, gaining heavy yardage

stopped Joe Bellino on theground and the Tigers' massive

l « end sweeps in which Melvin

fhe g a m e g o t off t o a n Cli_< ' i West was the most sparkling

Kennedy, who will be theNavy's n e x t commander-in-chief, jumped to his feet inelation when Mather raced to

end attacks overpowered Navy,ip]Osive~stait in the first periodirunncr. 'Navy's first touchdown. But he21-14, yesterday in a wildly ex-!when the defense of each team| The Tigers scored their second:was impartial enough to leap upciting Oranpe Bowl football game came up with a long touch- touchdown on a drive of 80 also when Missouri scored. Thewitnessed by President - Hort down production. Navy's Greg; d s a n d t h e t h i r d Qn a m a r c h : p r c s i d e n t . e l c c l s n e d his greyJohn F Kennedy and 71,217 Mather pounded 98 yards with a• . . . ,ofhers [recovered fumble-the longest;0' 64 y a r d s ' *>«* threatened|p.nstripe tu.t coat shortly after

Except for the last quarter,!run in Orange Bowl history -Iseveral other times but had to;the-game started in sultry 75-when he made a beautiful leap-land Norman Beal sped 90 yards'yield the ball to a Navy de-degree weather,ing catch of Hal Spooner's 27-! for Missouri with an intercepted! fense that got tough when its I Tn e victory was the first inyard pass in the end zone, Bel-ipass. goal was threatened.

By BILL ROBINSON

The year of 1960 was an important one in theworld of boats in many respects. From a competitivestandpoint, there were a few outstanding winners anda list as long as your arm of those who did well in thethousands of sail and power events held on all partsof the continent.

MISSOURI O N THE M O V E — N o r m a n Beal ( 2 1 ) , Missouri back, makes short gain in

first quarter against Navy in Orange Bowl at Miami yesterday. Navy fullback Jo*

Matalavage (38! made the tackle. A t right it Missouri's Edward Mehrer ( 3 5 ) , full-

back. Missouri won, 21-14. ' (APWiraphoto)

Duke's Blue Devils UpsetArkansas, 7-6, in Dallas

DALLAS (AP)—Lonesome end,was the lonesome end, Moorman,Tee Moorman, the toe of Artjwho kept that desperate drive go-Browning and some little things,ing and it was Moorman, a lone-turned into breaks vindicated I ly man in the end zone, whoDuke's angry Blue Devils with a;caught Don Altman's nine-yard

;evcu bowl appearances for theTigers and they made it an im-pressive win with their slashingground attack and the bottlingjob they did on Bellino.

The Middie and Tiger defenses _ _ . „ _ _ . , „ _, _ „ , „ . c . .came up with their spactacular ORANGE-AID — The Orange Bowl queen, Pat Finn doesfirst quarter touchdowns just the honors her* as Joe Bellino Navy's All-Ameriean half-when the enemy was threaten- b a c k $ . t h e footba|| w n i c n w a , pre»ented to Preji-i n g t o s c o r e . . . • . . • _ v • • I L I KI i i x

Missouri made the first big dent-elect John Kennedy« »on, John, Jr . Navy lo«t toflurry and was knocking on the Missouri, 21-14, as the Tigers held Bellino t o only fourNavy goal from the two when d j t n r o U g h the tin*. Mr. Kennedy a t tended the game.the ball squirted out of Donnie ' "Smith's hands. Mather grabbedit in the air and set sail on hisrecord run.

Then, when Navy was makingits first threat, at the Missouri20, Beal picked off a Spooner!pass, picked up three blockers,and clattered down the north!sideline to tie the score. Bill!fobin's 23d straight conversionput Missouri in front to stay at]7-6. " !

The Big Eight champions iboosted their margin to 14-6 in-the second period, driving 80yards to score on Smith's four-yard run. Norris Stevenson andjEd Mehrer were the big guns inthis attack. ;

Missouri threatened twice in:

the third period, then went 64 " j [ ' s O C JJyards in the fourth, with West; 'rippint; off solid gains, to score USCC1 t h i s flCW w a l l -

Phil MillionCops OnlyIceboat Race

RED BSMK - Phil Minton,, |sailing Devil Dream, scored a;second and two firsts in the Ejclass iceboat race held by the:North Shrewsbury Ice Boat andYacht Club here yesterday. ; OUTSTANDING IOATING story of the year was an un-

Going over a six mile coursej p r e Cedented third straight win in tha Bermuda Race,Minton took the starting gun at b | | j - r j b b < ) n o c e a n r - c i n g c ( a t t i C | b y Carleton Mitchell'i

yawl Finist*rre.11:01 and finished at 11:22.17.

Tony Mancini was second in

iJigger in, after finishing fifth; The number one news story has to be the un-

o n Ron Taylor's one-yard n a n p r • f h e „ . , „ ' • " " " " "* ' T H e . m o v c d u p precedented feat of a third straight victory in thep a p e r in t n c pia> room; to second inquarterback sneak.

The ferocity of the Missouri: I haVCIVt lost a g a m c ! " i h e finished the race.titirl Anfeincn U'ac T\iptlirr»rl in _. ._ ... I...* A*f Him* i** Uic U/I

in the second lap w h e r e . B e i . m u d a R a c e Q c o a n r a c i n g - s b ! u c r i hbon classic, by

7-6 victory over Arkansas in theCotton Bowl.

The dogged Blue Devils, driv-ing to atone for defeats in theirlast two games of the regularleason, waited until the clockhad nearly run its course yester-day before they rolled 73 yardsfor the touchdown that gave themthe triumph in their first ap-

ynabbed it in a verv difficult try. the Tigers rolled for 296.

' During the crazy first

ground defense was pictured inthe final statistics, which showed \that the sailors were thrown for;a net loss of eight yards, while

l f

JNBA aiBy Thp A»

But he missed and Moorman During the crazy first half, the,<li"rin

v"ii1ilT.6! s j i rn"

: for a three-yard loss.;Had Alworth taken the throw he

!b»« c ! l a n £ e d J i a n d s

would have been home free for

Missouri's Andy Russell inter-t w o Spooner

Ira Miller in his Win Jammer,!got off third and stayed in thati position all the way. Allan Conk-;lin, sailing Jet, took the fourthposition. Conklin was first at

; the first lap but dropped back| to fifth and finished in the fourth

jCarleton Mitchell's 39-foot yawl Finisterre from An-napolis, Md. Never before has any boat won this moststoried of all offshore grinds more than twice, andFinisterre has done it three times now against a recordfleet on each occasion.

The 1960 entry of 135 top-flight ocean racing\vrnnnp »t .\>« York

HfMliicMlay'* Schnliilt1

pass for the touchdown that j a 67-yard touchdown run.broke Arkansas' heart. But it actually would have been

Browning, the big guard,!something of a miracle had Al-planted the ball between the goalposts for the point that won thegame. It was more than MickeyCissell, the Arkansas place-kick-ing ace, could do after the Arkan-

worth intercepted the pass underthe circumstances.

Mather and DriscoH each re-covered Missouri fumbles, n«*i<m

Although Bellino was unable to 1,'J'II,"!],' ''1

get any running yardage of his N ~ •own, he figured in one slick'

K«.lern IIUMnnW I . I ' l l . <i . '

i position at the end of the f inal |y a c h t s (between 35 and 73 feet) from all parts of thelap.

other finishers were Bob Ko-u - s - a n d Canada, plus European and South American

~\t

It wasn't thatthe lonesome end did his stuff ;

half,to Mehrer, who broke throughll'i1?.^!!?'!'."-^^••„::_.'." :

and Duke had won the game it s o . k ] „ latnnioH tr> inosas touchdown. But Cissell had to desperately wanted to win t o j S J J ' " J £ t e ^ i t

t0,0 t crnntpnH with rhnnkv n.iv» iinsxr , , ; ^ ; ^ i . k » ™ n-,.,i »«n.. f«, Mataia\agc, wno made it to tnecontend with chunky Dave Unser. Cotton Bowl folks forpcarance in the Cotton Bowl. | the surging Duke wingman.!picking it to play here. Missouri 19. It was shortly after!

that Mather made his

maneuver and how tough it would'27-yard line despite two ,5-yardJ ^ ^ ' . ^ f f i t ^ a T ^ ^ ^ '° **"

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"srovle? was a soothsayer-it^ „ » , ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ I r ^ ^ T *»?* &"* *'. . . J r i r e n R " o u t o r """"as on the, the third quarter. One drive to;

1 * ™ z c a ~°" jDuke tw-o. ~i.? Blue Devils had to1 Navy's 27 was slopped by arink » t ! p u n t O l " a n d A I w o r t h r a n l i k e a holding penalty. Another, to" theuiiKe quarter- 7 i g . z a s g i n g r a b b j t f o r 4fl v a r <j s ; i R s t a l ! c d w h e n R o n T a y l o r w a s

is idii(j- and the Arksnsas touchdown !dimmed for a lose nn an at. '

. : Little things hurt Duke, too. •tempetd pass. IThree times Arkansas movedjju s t before the half Billy Moore, ] Despite the fine weather and;

into Duke territory in the first (Arkansas quarterback, " fumbled; the attractiveness of the con-!half and Duke could get into a n d g u a r d J e a n B e r r v o f Duke: test, the crowd was the smallestrazorback land just once, then on recovered on the Arkansas 34. to see an Orange Bowl gamea recovered fumble. Yet Arkan-!Duke moved to the Arkansas 20;since 1955. There were 5,000

|Sas couldnt score. ;n n a n Altman pass and runs by.empty seats in the stadium.I Early in the third period Ar-j,iotln Tinncll and Jack Wilson. Tobin kicked the extra pointjkansas pushed froVi us 33 to theiAitman then heaved to Wilson on^after each of Missouri's touch|Duke 28 but Butch Allie, Duke^ , . f i v e b u t h e fumbled and Al-|downs and now has a record ofjcenter, intercepted a McKinneyjworth recovered on the razorback!25 straight conversions. Naw gotpass to stop a most dangerous three. jtwo points after its touchdown

. e a . • ,_ , ' Alworth fumbled the kickoffion a pass from Spooner to JimAnd just before Duke scored its,after the Duke touchdown andiLuper.

touchdown with 2:45 left in the t h p n i u e Devils recovered on the! West was the game's topgame. Lance Alworth, the great Arkansas 40. But thev ran out of ground gainer with 108 yardsjArkansas halfback who was voted l i m e a s t h c v r ( , a c h e d t n e Arkan-i followed by Smith with S3. Prich-tops for the day. overran a pass s a s one-yard line with a downiard's net gain of nine yards was

$^ ^ J ^ B i bal|rCaf I'lTsp d b'v and a'lrno^'0" t 0 rt'ake a t 0 U C h d°W n- ! h i ? f° r 1 ' ^ " , MISSISSIPPI RETURNS KICKOFF - Jerry Daniels (80)7^ ^ ^ ^ • • ^ r ^ p a oy a a a l n l 0 S I The breaks prettv well evenedi Spooner's passes accounted or . , , . . . . , '

n i l L ~ 7 ^ ^ 1 ~ up and Duke, laving back like a 11™ Navy £,rds as he com- Miss.ssipp, end, runs down .idelme a, he returns opening^ • ^ • ^ ^ " ™ |N boxer who's taking a hammeringi P le ted l 3 of 21. Four were in. kickoff in the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans yesterday. An

but is able to absorb it while] tercepted. Taylor completed u nidentified Rice player g rab i Danieli to bring him downwaiting to get over his Sundayionlv o n e ° ' s l x throws for . r .' ,. - . . . , , ',mmch finally managed to drive Missouri for a gain of five on *h« Mis* 35-yard l .n.. R.ce players m backgroundinto Arkansas territorv under its yards. Harry Dietz threw twice! are Bobby Lively (66) and George Karam 172) . Missii-own nowcr for the only time— j for the Tigers but missed both! ,;__) w o nand the lonesome end did the itimes. ^v

r e s t . i •:• • .Each team cot $165,000. Arkan-!

sas will keep $75,750 with the restiof its share going to the South-i west Conference for distributionjto the other seven members.JDiike retains half its take, with(thp half—$82,500—going to the At-: lantic Coast Conference.

Selected as outstanding linemanof the game was the keyman in

^Duke's defense, 237-pound tackleIDwighl Bumgarner. Bumgarncrwas one of the massive men inthe Duke line that finally beatArkansas down in the fading min-utes.

foed, Buckaroo II. fifth; Don countries, was the finest collection of boats ever gath-:'ii(i injHubbard, Sno Use, sixth; Johnjere(j for a n offshore race. The race itself was a record-"' ^ ^ l S S ' X l b r e a k e r of sorts, the slowest ever held, with days of

Dislocate, fog and calm topped by the worst storm ever to hitthe event.

Through all these obstacles, Mitchell and hiscrack crew of seasoned ocean racing veteransmanaged to keep Finisterre, one of the smallestboats in the fleet, moving well in light air anddriving hard through the storm. She saved hertime allowance by 25 minutes on her nearestcompetitor, beating the cream of the world's oceanracing crop for one of the outstanding feats'in thehistory of sailing.

In power racing, the big news was the retentionof the Harmsworth Trophy for international competi-tion, equivalent to the America's Cup in sailing, bythe Canadian defender Miss Supertest III ov/ned byJames Thompson. She soundly defeated a learn ofAmerican challengers in races on the Bay of Quinteat Picton, Ont., to dramatize the end of long years ofAmerican domination of the fixture.

The other big news in inboard racing was of anegative nature—the washout of the Gold Cup Regattaat Lake Mead clue to bad weather, the first year since

ijust after World War II that the historic event was

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G A I N FOR MISSOURI — M i s s o u r i halfback Mclvin West (26) hustles around end

for a gain in opening quartor of Orango Bowl game against Navy in M iami y m -

ferdf ly. A t leFt is Missouri ful lback Ed Mohror ( 3 5 ) . Navy playors are tack lo Ron

Erchul (761 and J i m Lupor (821 , an end. Missouri won, 21-14. l A P W i r o p h o t o ) '

*jnot held.Outboards made a mass assault on the speed

i record for this kind of boat, raising it well over 100m.p.h. in a series of runs sponsored by the variousmanufacturers.

The other big story in sailing was the Olym-pics, with George O'Day of Boston winning theonly U.S. gold medal, the Russian Timir Pinegin asurprise winner in .an American boat and PaulElvstroem of Denmark gaining an unprecedentedfourth straight gold medal in the one-man class.

In a business way, this was the year of the merger.~;Many big companies from the world of general indus-

try added boats to their line as part of a diversifica-tion program. Some of the most important companiesin the boat business were bought by outside investors,

land the trend toward the big getting bigger and theIsmail getting squeezed out became more noticeable.: Companies manufacturing stock outboards ap-proached mass production standards and attacked theirdistribution problems by building plants in variousparts of the United States and Canada.

In construction materials, fiberglass continued togain in all types, but especially in the field of cruisingsailboats, while new methods of using aluminum keptit in the picture quite well. The general business pic-ture softened a bit over the year, but there was noreal gloom about it.

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Page 15: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

itigton Defeats Minnesota, 17-7SURF, FIELD AND STREAM

Timely Notes on the Great OutdoorsBy NELSON BENEDICT

First day of an unprecedented, supplementary buckseason was something of a disappointment because ofhighly inclement weather conditions. Snow, sieet andrain combined to hold down both the turnout of hunt-ers and the kill last week. Conservation officersdescribed gunning pressure in western Monmouth aslight.

The three-day shoot resulted in another generalexodus of local sportsmen to the pines of Ocean andBurlington Counties. Deer clubs which had beenboarded up £t termination of the regular shotgun sea-son Dec. 17 were hurriedly reopened on an emergencybasis. Bert Emmons of Sea Bright nailed his buck earlyin the morning in Ocean.

It was freely predicted that a sizable percentageof bucks had shed their horns prior to yesterday'srenewal of hostilities in'the woods. Despite even thathandicap to gunning success, Division of Fish andGame indicated that well over 5,000 bucks had beenfelled during six hunting days earlier in the month.The kill in both Ocean and Monmouth stood up remarkably weir* in the face of a blizzard which para-lyzed hunters' movements both in the woods and onthe roads.

Fears that extension of the season would re-•ult in poor hunting next December were brushedoff as so much poppycock by informed game man-agement authorities. They pointed out once againthat the does had been bred well in advance ofregular and bonus seasons. Indeed, one Trentonexpert declared that hunters could comb overbucks for even another week or two without ma-terially affecting welfare of the herd.

Iceboaters, skaters and eelers have been en-Joying that wall-to-wall carpet of ice on bothrivers. Hurting, however, have been duck huntersand party boat skippers based in Highlands andAtlantic Highlands. The latter have been unableto sail because of Ice in the harbors.

Wildfowlers who manage to rig out in whatlittle open water there is in the east channel ofthe Shrewsbury back of Monmouth Beach and SeaBright are doing well. It's been no real trick tokill » limit of blacks and mallards there. But allthose blinds on the Rumson shore might just aswell be in Siberia for all the good they're doingtheir owners.

Conservation Officer Karl Kristiansen of Lit-tle Silver figures it is just as well some of the besthunting territory for diving fowl is frozen out.Otherwise, he notes, inexperienced gunners couldeasily get into trouble with the law. There arethat many canvasbacks and redheads mixed inwith the broadbill now in residence on Raritanand Sandy Hook Bays.

Barnegat Bay is iced over north of Manahawkin.Even so, broadbill are still using on the limited, openwaters of the Bay. Irving J. Feist, Shrewsbury residentand state chairman of Ducks Unlimited, says he hasenjoyed the best broadie gunning in 20 years at CedarRun.

Ice is pestering hunters on the Mullica River, butmost of Great Bay is open. There are loads of blackducks down that way, but present pattern of blackiejbehavior is erratic enough to confuse and frustrateany wildfowler. The birds are trading in bluebirdweather and sitting still when the wind howls and thetemperature plummets far below the freezing mark.

Last week, this reporter and two compan-ions limited out on blacks near Tuckerton. Shoot-Ing from the same blinds in all that nasty weatheryesterday, Larry Clarke and his two sons of Locusthad to settle for four ducks among them.

Les Rice, Middletown, had the somewhat uniqueexperience of shooting blacks on the ice. Heset out several brace of decoys on a frozen pond. Iceor no ice, the blacks wanted in, and Les was on deckto greet them. Canadian redlegs, incidentally, havemoved into South Jersey in strength.

The striped bass season ended last Saturday,but there will be few mourners in local angling cir-cles. After that spate of sterling sport in the first10 days of the month, fishing activity tailed off tovirtually nothing. Bass will be protected this monthand February.

Barnegat and Great Bays are presently carry-Ing heavy populations of wintering stripers. Thefish in Great Bay range in size from eight-inchrunts on up to 20 and 25-pounders. Coastal ward-ens have yet to find any outbreaks of illegal netfishing in an area where wildcat haul seiners andgill netters are always ready to pounce at thefirst sign of laxity on the part of enforcement men.

Otto Reut, dean of Highlands bass guides, knewwhat he was doing when he auled his skiff severalweeks ago. He is presently vacationing in Floridawhere, he postcards, it might get a little chilly on oc-casion but ice and snow are unknown.

Several cod weighing in excess of 50 pounds werelanded in the past week aboard party boats sailingfrom Shark River and Manasquan Inlets. Fishing hasbeen good on the wrecks.

Unleashing Speed and Fury HuskiesDown Golden Gophers 17-7

FULL QUOTA — Assemblyman Al Beadleston of Shrewi-bury returned from a two-day shooting party last weekat South Jtrsey duck club with his possession limit ofsix black ducks. The duck season will continue throughJan. 7, 1961.

Washington's Surprise PitchoutSweeps Defeats Minnesota Eleven

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) —jSchloredt played real well. SoWashington's surprise pitcliout.did Ray Jackson and many ofsweeps and Minnesota's failure their linemen. George Flemingto handle two first period puntsjis a tremendousheaded the Gophers toward de-jkicker."

placement

feat in the Rose Bowl, a grim! Sandy Stephens, a star in de-coach Murray Warmath of Min-jfeat from Minnesota, called Donnesota said yesterday. JMcKeta's defensive play on him

"We were put on the defensive!in the fourth period the clutchearly, and we didn't recover un-j Washington move of the game,til it was too late," Warmath The veteran Husky halfbacksaid of his national champions' broke through to hurl Stephens

-7 loss to Washington. 'for a 13-yard loss on the in at a"We hadn't seen Washington j point when Minnesota was head-

make much use of those wideswing pitchouts in the game filmwe saw," he explained. The

ing for a second touchdown."Washington had speed and is

a good team, but I wouldn't say

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) —\Washington's remarkable Huskiesunleashed a display of speed and:

fury in the first half yesterday,held off a determined second half jchallenge and rolled on to topple jnational champion Minnesota inthe Rose Bowl, 17-7. \

Breaking loose with the same:explosive attack that demolished!another Big Ten favorite a yearago, Wisconsin, 44-8, the Big Fivechampions from Seattle struckfor a field goal in (he firs', quar-ter. They added two touchdownsin the second lo take a 17-0 leadthat the Golden Gophers couldnot overcome.

A roaring crowd of 97,314jammed into the historic bowlunder bright sunny skies saw theunderdog Huskies start as if onanother rout of the Big Ten op-position.

But Minnesota in its first andonly appearance in this post sea-son classic came back in thelast two quarters to dominatethe game, scored a touchdownand kept its supporters in a stateof hope until the final minutesof the bruising contest.

Once again it was a deadlycombination of Washington starswhich pulled off the wreckingjob—quarterback Bob Schloredtwho hadn't played a game sincehe was injured last Oct. 15; halfback George Fleming, the ghosrunner; halfback Don McKetaoutstanding on defense as well asoffense, and fullback Ray Jackson.

The Huskies led off with a 44yard field goal by the giftedFleming which must be a recordfor this traditional game.

But it was the double touchdown strike in the second quarterthat ruined the chances of thevisitors from Minneapolis.

Schloredt, 1959 All-Americaquarterback, led the Huskies 62yards in 11 plays and flipped apass for four yards into the endzone to Brent Wooten for thetouchdown.

Fleming kicked the first of histwo extras points.

Then the smaller but quickerWashington line stopped the firstscoring threat by Minnesota on

his team's loft end for 18 yards; ing's 17-yard punt return put the player by tho Helms athleticand the lone Gopher touchdown. Huskies into scoring position. foundation board.

Jim Rogers added the extra But a 41-yard punt by Hivner '! ho one-eyed wonder threwpoint and that was all for the ii,at rolled dead on the Gopher only four passes but completedafternuun for Minnesota. • :i\x had put them in a hole. two for 16 and a touchdown. He

Minnesota, beaten only by Pur-; Schloredt's brisk 12-yard pass tarried the ball five times fordue in nine games in the regular to the speedy Jackson started a n e t 68' scoring one louchdownseason, took the field as a favor-! Washington off on its initial, and averaging 41.2 yards punting,ite by seven points. : louchdown thrust. Jackson un- Hagherg was the leading Goph-

But the Gophers made only two'corked a rush through the big er rusher, with a net 44 in 11first downs in the first half andjGopher line for 19 yards to the carries.could get only 61 yards net on the j Minnesota 29, and soon Washing-1 Over all, however, the Huskiesground against the hustling but I ton had it by 10-0. | defense on the crucial third andout-weighed Husky hne. Scliioredt for the second; fourth down Minnpsnra plays

The second half was somethingelse, however. The Gophers inthe third quarter alone out-gained Washington 95 lo 19 yards,and they were still in the bailgame until late in .the final per-iod.

The penalties cost the Gophers.early in this phase of action.But as the minutes ticked off

itephens, Roger Hagbcrg, Mun-ey, Judge Dickson and theiophers fought their way to the

Washington six.But on third down and six, full-

>ack McKeta barged through to;pill Stephens for a 13-yard loss.

And then, in his second straight;ey defensive play, McKeta inter-:epted a Stephens' pass intendedor Tom Hall. McKeta took it>n the one, ran it back out ofianger and, the Minnesota hopes,f not chilled before, were killedm this play.

Highlights of Washington's twoicoring drives were numerous.Dn the first field goal boot Flem-

Huskies' George Fleming, Ray,™ outstanding one/' he added.| the H u s k y 32 a n d t h c gchloredtJackson and Charlie Mitchell cie-j All-America Tom Brown, obvi- I»H H..CH». ,„»,..,« k.^k ea , , , ^ .livered crucial yardage on the iplay in the first half.

Warmath's Gophers, toppled inthe game they had set their

ously deeply affected by the loss,credited the Huskies' All-Amer-ica center Don Me Kasson withan "outstanding" d e f e n s i v e

hearts on, trooped silently and| a a n i C i

bitterly into the dressing roomj" . .T h e y d i d n . t d o u W e biock me,after the game. and I thought I

260-pound tackle Frank Brixius.'that line"We weren't ready."

played fairlyft

of

led Huskies roared back 63 yardsin nine plays. The drive was high-lighted by a 31-yard quarterb?.ck"sneak play" with the countthird down and one-yard to go—,and Schlorrdt was the man onthe go.

It was Schloredt who on thi

y"I don't know why we didn't;

Were the Gophers flat at thestart? Warmath didn't think so.

Dickget

iwas," said end Larson,

AlQS

^ZZt^Z'^™- "' k-°w what »Halfback Bill Munsey, one of / ' 1 ™' 1 J^ ,

the safety men on punts by BobiHivner and Bob Schloredt in the!early minutes, said he decided |to lot the punts roll "because;they were inside the 10 and it's|not good to field them there." ;

Warmath, the coach of the year'and a man who called this bowli LOS ANGELES (AP)-Coachesbattle beforehand "the biggest I Bl|ck Shaw and Vince Lombardigame of my life," walked word-jnamed their aides yesterday forlessly and with his jaw set from!the annual All-Star Pro Bowlthe dressing room to an inter- Same here Jan. 15.viewing room. Shaw of the Eastern Confer-

"This was an excellent, a fineience named Nick Skorich andWashington t e a m , " he said.'jerry Williams, who worked with"After the first half, however, lihim for the Philadelphia Eagles,felt we were the stronger team. Skoricii is rumored as a possibleI want to reflect favorably on the successor to Shaw, who quit atwhole Washington team. Bobseason's end.

I So Coach Jim Owens trotted oflthe green field with a 17-pointlead just as a year ago they quitthe half against Wisconsin with a24-a lead.

But Murry Warmath rallied hissquad in the intermission and theGophers gave the Huskies allthey could ask for or more in thelast half.

But they had to settle for justone touchdown, and that one ona break in a sense.

Washington had stopped Minnesota on a fourth and inchessituation on its own 35.

But Bob Hivner, Washington'salternate quarterback star, fumbled a handoff. The Gophers BobDcgan recovered and this timeMinnesota was not to be denied.

From the 32 quarterback SandyStephens reeled off right end fornine. Dave Mulholland • pickedup five and then on a pitchouthalfback Bill Munsey sailed off

Ten Monrmnn Charley JohnsonOnkn New Me.x, St,

SPOTLIGHT BOWLERS — Two of the nation's top offensive leader* were on stageover tho woek-ond holiday as Charley Johnson of Now Mexico State tossed hispasses at Utah State in the Sun Bowl and To» Moorman of Duke gats set to receiveagainst Arkansas in tho Cotton Bowl. Johnson piled up 13 touchdowns passing anda total of 1,511 yards this soason. Moorman caught 46 for 431 yards for Duko.In ono of tho upsots of tho day Duko dofoatod Arkansas, 7-6.

straight unprecedented time was, marked a vital part in the vic-dvoted game's outstanding |tory.

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will I, wider eilher of Ihone smranlora Kfd on tread wea d b d Kprorated on tread w a r and "baaed on K

our retail list price current at time of adjustment. 3

Firestone's superior quAurr allowi us to gm» yon aSiMBAirm against tire failure from biowouta, aria,brniaes or breaks caused by BOJU> H*z«BM...gtaa,•tones, boles in the road, cnifas. etc. H U B earLifetime Guarantee!

New guarantee provides guaranta*periods extending from It months up to

36 MONTHSW ftara » • tlgDt Mr* a* la* rr*M price • * * «ketlgtit gnrafif.. p*rlod...to ttt AMY Irtrtmf m—4.Firestona Premium Quality Ores 36 •oathsFirettona Butylair* tirts 30 moethsFirettoiM 'NYLON SOO* tires »7 mono*Firtttont D* Lui* Champion tires *4 mowiaaFireitone Safety Champion nylon tiret.. 211Firestone Safety Champion rayon tires.. ! • 1Firestone Champiop nylon tires IS 1Firestone Champion rayon tires I l l

EASY PAYDAY TERMS.. .1 DOWNLONG-LIFE

LIGHTBULBS

THISWEEK'S BEST BUY SELECTIONS

60. ISor 100 Watt*Limit 12 p«r cuilomtr

7-V-93

MARYPROCTOR

Steam, Spray and Dry

IRON14S47$16«

: LAZY! SUSAN' 6G156

SE.9Se Beautiful Chrome Basee 5 Individual Glass

Compartments

res ton il SEE USFOR TIRES

where your dollar buys MILES more

Maple Ave. at White St., Red BankSH 7-5700

1000 Asbury Avc. PR 5-8700 Asbury Park

DOWN

A WEEK

HAM; KI;GISTI;I{ Tuesday, Jan. .'?, 1961—IS

Page 16: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

dHHB

I'LL LEAVE THEIODINE AND

BANDAGES LAIDOUT FOR WU, PAL/

By WALT DISNE\MICKEY MOUSEBy WALT DISNEYMICKEY MOUSEAH I JUST MV

SIZE!

r ^ i T I I . .if

BARNABY

- I f willgivefhe ad that extrafillip my colleagues at fhe lives,leprechauns, Gnomes, and liHleMen'i Club hove com* »o e*pec»in alt of my varied endeavors—

By CROCKETT JOHNSON

I'll slip the little Marvel VoiceThrower in my mouth, like this,and thai dumb beast will say—

Temperament.'...The problems ofan impresqrio.'

Say, where'! he going, Barnoby?

BARNABY By CROCKETT JOHNSON

He domn't want to be the dummy 'in your ventriloquist ad at theElves, Leprechauns, Gnomes, andlittle Men's Club. Mr. O'Malley.

\ I admit H'sS a SMALLfj\audience-

—But influential... (n notirne we'llbe guests of Dinah Shore. Then theCd Sullivan show. And-assoonaiwe can slap our autobiographies onthe press-Jack Poor! famel Pell-

All right, tarnoby,I'II gel hi/no bone.

MARK TRAIL By ED DODD MARK TRAIL By ED DODD

HANG ON,COLE/

COUE WHIP5TONE,SACRIFICING HIS CHANCEOF SURVIVAL TO SAVEHIS BROTHER TONY. ISBEING SWEPT AWAV BV

RAGING FLOOD

STUFFY, VOO OLDRASCAL, THANKS.'I KNOW YOU GOTOPF YOUR HOH5E

TO SAVE M E /

TONY. WAIT-THERE'S SOME-THING I MUST

TELL VOU '

NUBBIN By JIM BURNETT and GEORGE CRA1SDALL NUBBIN Bv mi BVRNETT and GEORGE CRANDALL

POGO By WALTKELLY

WHAfHf HAPINMIN9.

POGO By WALT KELLY

MARY WORTH By /ILLE/V SAVNDERS and KEN ERNST

MEPJ! IMS^IAmx WALLY!

v<

AGO AND SHE WAS READING, . . . „ , „IN RED.1 I GUESS SHE IS_X WORTH •BACK TO NORMAL! ^ V W 0 H H #AH, YOUTH,

AFTtR A BLOW THATBU&HTED HER U K , BUTTOH

MATURITY. MR.BRID6E6

MARY WORTH By /iUE/V SAVNDERS and KEN ERNST

VTHE°siyMO^OER!!!y » * " Auourmv

REVEREND

\ \

s«J-

•W////II

By BILL O'MALLEY

THEIR ART WILL PRDVIOL TOMORROW'SMA5TERPIECES! 100K! - DID YOU EVER

A MORE WALRUSV WALRUS ?

AND THEIR VICTORY OVER THE EICMfNT?!.. IFTHERE SHOULD BE AN ATOMIC CATACLYSM, ONLYTHEY CAN SURVIVE!-- THEY ARE THE LAST HOPE

THE HUMAN RACE!. I AM GOING TO DEVOTEMY LIFE TO THEM!

'I DID YOU SAY SOMETHING) T t * : » . THEY'RE• I ABOUT". ESKIMOS, ^/WONDERFUL,

BUTTON? - ^ T u o l o i J a ' A B O U T THEIR\ AMA7IKG CULTURE!

REVEREND By BILL O'MALLEY

THE RYAnS

-• AMD I CAM'T BEAR T O ^BO IT WHtLt THEY W4TCM,'

MOTHER,COWEGET MISSY AMD

WE'RE ALREAW LATETAKIMG VOWH THECHRISTMAS TREE

By CAL ALLEY r H E RYATTS By CAL ALLEY

Page 17: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

Blma »i)j"uilni'Tlii p.'O. E t i :5c actrt.

Yearly Coatract Kates on RequestMlalmam Luertln Tkrt* Uacs

Eight to cltiilly, adit or rejtct any tdv.rtlirmtnt If ztuivibt Th» Rnrinter.

W« will not be reiponllblt for trrori. unlell thty »f» <»ttcln)btfor* th* iccnnri Insertion.

NO cancellation! win bi accepted or changei madi In advertlM-ratnti ont hour alter receipt at office.

DEADLINE 5:00 P.M. Day M o r e Publication 'CLASSIFIED OlSPLA*

I:IHI A.M. D»y Before rubUcktloa wit* proof I K * «»>• kefor*publication.

Call Classified—SH 1-0010 or OS 1-0525NIGHTS, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY

Dial SH 1.1110Calif on private telephones art toll-free to 0 9 1-0525 from the

following itatlom: LOwell ( , COlfai «, 767 (Keanaburi) WHllnev a.nalla nn prlvalv 1H»phnnn are toll-free to Irl 1-0010 from the

followlni itationa: ATlantlc Hlfhlandi 1, CApltal 2 and t. Liberty 2,HlKhlands 3, OSborne 1. RUmion 1, BE a Brlfht 2, and IHadyildt Iand 7.

vr, #rvi fUm« *A4 ocMtialf fro over 40 hour* In any one week.

1 f you are offered leas by cove redfirms or if you lime questions con-cerning the activities of the 10 Bur-eaus ol the U. S. Labor l'ept. nowserving you write, call or visit U. S.Department of Labor at Ttoomii 201.202. Old Post Office Building, 202 EastState St., Trenton. N. J.EXPERIENCED furniture salesmen,saleslady and decorator wanted forbranch of The Mani« Shop openlnRApril 3, Monmouth Shopping Contpr,Eiitontown. Telephone Mr. Hazard,TW 9-6956.PORTER — Red Bank tavern. Hour*.0-12. Call SE 2-1725-M between 2-5p.m.

SITUATIONS WANTED. Female

ANNOUNCEMENTSLOST AND FOUND

LOST — Collie imp. female, eigmonthi old. Black, white, tan. Answer*" J " " ' " " "Dpe", reward. 767-4800.l-f'f-T - Tuy i'limrrani.'ui, vicinity St.Catherine's Church, East Keiinsburg.Christmas «ve. Answers to "Peanu t . "Female. Jtew?.rri. IMeasp return, baby'spet. Call 7H7-9740 or 787-6911.LOST — Woman's blnck leather p u » econtaining valuable personal pa pen , li-cense*, large •um of money. In vicinityof Superama. Reward. SH 1-1979.LOST — One black figure •kate,•Izc 10. Reward.

811 1-9040

AUTOMOTIVEAUTOS AND TRUCKS

10.15 OLOSMOR1LE — Two-door hardtop, iiisw while stdewnll tiros, veryItoorl mechanical condition. lUdio. IIPRI*r power brake*. CA. 2-0tiS6, 138 Allantic Avt., Long Branch.1B55 PLYMOUTH — Four-door. Autn.mutfc. Rood condition. Ideal station carfor a commuter. J385. BH 7-3069.

AUTO PARTS-REPAIRSIBM CHEVROLET 2t« WRlne. Heartyto run, fiOOO mllei sine* rebuilt. |40.SH 1-7RS2.

IOATS t ACCESSORIESBAHOAIN — Any boal you want to

own. Low bank rates. Financing ar-rangements completed In one cull Rtany ol our oftlcci. THE MONMOUTHCOUNTY NATIONAL BANK. Ell t-inno.INSURANCE ^Marine,, oulboard^aiiformi. Rolaton Waterbury. Realtor,•lnr« IMS. 1< W. Front St., I l l 7-3300.

BARGAIN16' Old Town runabout, perfectcondition. Convertible top, moor-ins cover, winter storage cover.Fully equipped. Many extras.Electric starting, 50 h.p. Johnsonengine with generator and con-trols. May be seen at InvinYacht Works, Marine Park. Ask-ing price $995 complete.

ICK I1OAT — Cl»m E Y«nkM, two-»»«ter. Price I1HO0. Phona

Rt' 1-2369

IUSINESS NOTICES

ICE SKATESSHARPENED

ihnrpfn your ice akatfi lor the coMwint*r flays. Also knlvti, ictssors,ihearx, ganlrn tool*.

Sander's Fix-It Shop111 Haddon Avt. Shrewsbury

ERT Hl'lLDlNO — R p n o v » t t o .estlmttts cheerfully. Ptione SU 7-

CARPENTRY and n u o n work. Attic.recreation rooms, addition!, cabinet

work, itorm doom, wlndowi. LO 6-4574.Call day or niRlit for frre estimate.y o i t TREE WORK, CAQ tret service.

Topping, trimming, removal. Call LI3-4210 tor i r « titlmnt*. Full insurancecoverage.

Ol>l> JOHfl — ralnt lng. pnv*r hanflnit.repairs , etc. Winter ra t rs . Call

PASEMKNT WATKHri'.OOFINO —Written Kiiarantep, 20 y e a n rxpcrlcnce

I I 70!*X

ELKCTKONIC KITS WIREO — Teny t n r s wirinK expcrleticf. HoasotiRbleMltoa. Call 7S7-572O or CO 4-XM1.

EMPLOYMENTHELP WANTED-FEMALE

r T ARIER. CALL

— AQK NO 8AR-

SH 1-flSOOOPKNINd for J..IVN. nnd «xperlcncpdnursf 'n aides. Hilltop Niiralng Homi\Mfiirtlrtown. '.'all Mrs, Hakpr, for ap-rii lntmtnl. OS 1-0177.

TKM ALE " BXKTEN"UE"R • - Plr.mantworking condltinnfl. No txpertenceBfceaanry. Steady employment. U 2-•7S1. brlwrcn l-.r» p.m. _COSMKTICIAN for <lniK slurp. Write• 'Drue," Uox Sll . Rod Hank givlnK <•*-prrlonce, qualifications, &KC

HELP WANTED-FEMALE

CIRCULATION CLERKMail subneription*. Divpr«ifi»rf «n-?tiiiiuiiiMi work. ' Must be accurate.Between 25 and 40 years of age. Ex-perience preferred, but not essential.Apply in person at 40-41 Broad St.,Red Bank.

PBX OPERATOR — Part-time work.3-11 p.m. and weekends, could developInto full time. Call SH 1-4700,YOUNG LADY — General office work.Steady position. Apply by writing toAnderson Bros., Inc., P. O. Box 327,Red Bank.

EXPERIENCED sewing machine oper-atora, hutton sewprn, all around pres-acrn and floor hoi p. Steady work.Clnliirrn'd coftlfi. Apply Lone BrunchMqmirnrjtiirine Co., 2f\ t h i r d Ave., LongBranch. Or phone OA 2-f»B4.Y

T>BNTAL. A S S F S T V N T - - FlfLL~TlME.WHITE "A. TV, BOX 511, UEDRANK.NO EXPERIENCE neceasary — Runlittle jmop-by-mat! club. Two hoursweek, 10 weeks. Earn JM ur more infamoui products. Club chopping gjivi'syour friends money. Write tmiay (orfree 276 pagu catalog, No obligation.Popular Ciub Plan, Dept, C , Lynbrook,

EXPERIENCED CLEANING WOMANone or two d«y» a wtek or part-time.Ileferencei. Call SH 1-2603.

STORE MANAGERLeading .lational apparel chain forladles and children. Unusual oppor-tunities Specialty thop or depart-ment stort experience necessary, r.oodsalary, many employee benefits. Statein detail preient position, salary andexperience. All repllei held confiden-tial. Wrlti "Manager," Box 511, RedBank.

WOMEN—Married, or married womenwith children, like to earn $in-$ifi perevening after the children are put tobed? Work from S lo 11 p.m. by ap-pointment only. No delivery, no Invest-ment. PLEASE do not answer this ndif you are looking for hotme-to-hnusecanvassing. PR 4-0420. 7874103. Li 2-0722.

HELP WANTED-MALE

DOES 1961 HOLD ENOUGHPROMISE FOR Y O U ? ?

Would you ilk* to Increase ynur incomeand bcttpr your position In life ? NA-T1ONWIDK INSURANCE COMPAN-IES handling a full competitive line olInsurance i>Um mutual funds, Viave lm-mediatp opening* for full t ime careermen in the a r r a s of Little Stiver.Runnon, Long Branch, Key port «ncithe Highland!, ThSf In immediate em-ployment for the RICIHT MEN ! Alull Um*. three wp»k school will beginJanuary 16, to qualify the men selectedfor thir New Jersey State InsuranceExaminations.

Write G. W. Stenzliorn. District SalesManager. 702 Berkeley Lane, NeptuneN. J. r n 5-S2SS.

KXPERIRNCCD all around presscri.Apply 1/ing Branch ManufacturlnB Co.,20 Third Av.e, Long Branch or phoneCA. :-PS43.

HEAL ESTATE SALESMAN for activeoffice with good location. Real Estate

experience not necessary, but you mustknow how to iPtl. Write particulari to"Estate" Box 511. Red Bank. N. J.

TEN MENMechanically inclined to start immedi-ately. $2.40 per hour to i t art. CallSU 1*4019.

FIRE-SECURITYMust hav* extensive fire preventionand fire ficMing experience. Write ftat-Ing nil qualifications and salary rie*MTPII. BOX 331, Bowling Green, NewYo r k.

SALES CO-RESPONDENT for custonvor contacts (letter, telephone* with ex-perience in handling industrial chemi-cals. Good opportunity (or person withi i t l i i t ivf nnd ahlltty to work Independ-

tly. Wrlle "Sales," iJox 511, RedK

Xir Eicefy for riRht porion. Sri« Mr.

R g y , Sachs Furniture, In care ofAtlantic Suporaiiia, Shrewsbury Ave.,New Shrewsbury.SALESMAN—New and used cars. Ex-perience nece.nsiry. Hood opportunity.F ft H Motors. Inr. Lt 2-1117.

It pays to advertise In The Register.

ft pc. Cofiyerllbl* liylnf fwtq6 pc. Modern bedroom5 pc. formica Dinette

1 Originally $4SS.Balance Duo J2S6, .

pay S3 weekly15 Down Delivers All Furniture

THRIFT WAREHOUSE7-11 E. FRONT STREET1

KEYPORT, N. J.for appointment dial CO 4-3022

WILL HELP WITH PARTIES, dinner!,or other occasion*. Babysitting also,llfht housekeeping. Call 6H 1-8881.

21" BfMONT CONSOLE TV. {G5. In-quire Service Departmeijt. I^atunlownTV, llwy ::5. Eatontown. LI 2-1)100.

iiiiTl~~Ai.T7lMATl'ri ~ TI ME fr~iii>~ranBcTCUrotne liot (i!;!tc ;UK! Ijrutlpr, (ilHpound chest '.v|jr: frepzer. Excellentromlltlnn. Call r..\ ;-3ini. after 6.

R t U A B L E WullAW wishes to take, c*r» of. children In her home. 15*MflpI* A v i SH 7-2609. Will board. IWOMAN wisl>e« to mind children Inher home by day or week. Llncroftarea. Phona SH 1-5669.

SITUATIONS WANTED, MaleYARDS. CELLARS. ATTICS cleaned.

Any and all trash removed. Larce'liiinn truck. BH 7-2144

B P ANI> w n i ' K PONE? rclr.l, moving, cleaning. Any odd job.

SH 1-1889.

FINANCIALBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

MAJOR OIL COMPANY has servicestation for lea.ne In Red Hank. ModerateInvestment necessary for sotck nndequipment only. Good opportunity forsales minded person. Call MI ;t-010i)9-5 p.m., or Bit, 6-0388 iirtrr 7 p.m.

MODERN — Two bay service stationiitid parking lot. lleasoiialiie rental andlow Initial investment. PRji-31S8. _

NEED^PARTNEli - - MnteTnr fpiiialp.to invest $5,000 in rstaliiishrd business.No work or t ime involved. Income810.000 JILT year ami upward. Write

Par tner" , Box 511. Red Hank.

HED BANK BUSINESS AREA — Withniijolning parking lot. approximately2000 »q. ft. Desirable ground floor of-fice ipaca or morel . Phone SH 7-1102.

MORTGAGES

CASH NOWFirst , Second, Third MnrtKaRei

Home Improvement LoansOnp Day Service

AMERICAN FUNDINGSllatiyaiile 1-470.'

Our Personal Ror>re3entrtt!ve WillCnll AI Vnur Hum'

We Ray Yes Where Others Fa t !

INSTRUCTIONVIOLIN INSTRUCTION Bt your home.Call

VAlley G-0M9

MERCHANDISEFOR SALE

VENETIAN BLINDS

2 FOR $5All atzei to 36", mite.

Nmv at Dew temporary inuatlon.tROWS'S t BROAD ST.

KKD BANK 8H 1-750D

(wo fttf tftmV * CO

•rcKhOnt or ( fttfKKKKV * CO, »T,

HOUSES FOR RENTUNFURNISHED split level. Three bedrooms, den. 2!j batlia. |165. Unfurrusher., two bedroom SI 10. Many furnislied rentals. Ella Wiltshire, Agency.HSU Ocean Ave., Sea Brljht. £ E 2-(J004.

WIDE SELECTION OP RENTALS -Furnished and unfurnished. Immed

ate occupancy. S a m n d Telcher Agency,Ur.eariiorl Ave., Ocean por t Call o r dialLI 2-3500 or Ll 2-350LiiUMSON — Fine location. Four rnnjnBplus large screenoa porch. Call RU 1131:', a!!»r 6 p. in.

THREE IIOOMS nnd bath, completelyfurnished v i t h utilities. $82 mo-itli. Cal787-57411.NEAR MAT A WAN — New three-bed-room, I1- iuith Ciipe Cn<\. S.I30 tnontltlyVn.irty U>aEP. n-lulls. Imnn-diate occupanry. PA 1-7077 between 11 and 4:^0.

CONSIGN YOUR ANTIQUES. Objectsof Art. Household Qoodi and Fur-

nlslilnfis to Coats Gallerlei, Inc., 28SNorwood Ave.. Deal, N. J. Next loA&P Auctionedrs-Lliiuidators-Appraisers• K<MI)t4 »g»tit«. Oppn Hq|1v ** ".TT!. ff l5 p.m. Sunday a t appointment. PhoneKKllogn l-34til.MASSAGE K C ^ ' T P M E N T — For rentor faulu. Free delivery. SOUTH JERSEYKUKG1CAL. KM 7-^G14.

TWO RTOP.Y HOME — Thre t bedjoins, 1 ' i I»atii5. Ijvliiff ronm, dinfnj;:)MIH. don. enclosed porch, two-car

garage. $175 month.RANCH IIOMB — Six roomi, threebc.ituninK. LV.M tiaths, otu'-r«r g a r i pImmediate occupancy, f 200 month.liolston Waterbury, Rpaltnr, Iti WestFront SI., Red Hank. SH 7-3500.

Shirred Eggs Are Forgotten Dish

ALTENBURGPIANO HOUSE

Rent A Piano$12 per Month

CNABE, MASON-IIAMUN. SOHMEr.,GABJ.B NKLSON. EVEKETT. STBCK.Cookman Ave. A Main Ht.. Asbury Fk.

Open dally till V - Sat. till 6:30

PR 5-9301

OAK1IUUST. fnur bedrooms, two baths.Karapo. NEPTUNE, eight-room «pllt.P i Ij.ltlla, LI 4Z-X62H.

H L . M J A I . U I V - - h urnisiioa ur unliif'rii.siictl. Living room, dining room. Itltch

jrti, two hedrnoms. and bath. $95. Thellmwstnt AKP'icy. ^H 1-87((U.TACK I'.OO.M APARTMENT on estatp.Two hodrooms, largn UvinB room withfireplace, lnrpc lntchen nnd bath. Im-mediate occupancy. $1011 per month.TWO BEDROOM HOUSE — Livingroom wilh fireplace. UHchen, diningroom, porch, garage. Oil heat, availableJanuary 15. $150 per month. RolstonWaterbury Realtor, 16 West Front St.,Itrd Rank. N.J . SH 7.35O0.

§f CECILY MraWOTOME iAssociated Prcct Food EditorGIVE THE EGG its due. Nu-

tritionists agree that it's a goodidea for each member of thefamily to eat an egg a day.

Why? Because eggs are an ex-cellent source of high - qualityprotein — just as are meat, poul-try and fish — and protein isneeded for body growth and re-pair. In addition eggs offer vita-mins and iron.

One delicious way to cook eggsis to shirr them; we're constant-ly surprised that more cooks donot use this method. Webstersays that to shirr is "to breakeggs into a dish with cream orcrumbs and bake in the oven orcook in hot water on the fire.",\s usual the dictionary is right.

Recently we choose to substitute crisp corn flakes for thecrumbs and at our house bothgrownups and visiting small frypproved the variation. If youry the following recipe, don'tvorry, as we did, about howrou are going to get the egglests out of the custard cups;e find they lift out beautifully.

I.INCIIOFT — Center hall. 2'4 hntlis.split level. 'I- acre lot. Phone Sit 1-4008.Available af lrr January 15.HIX K00M HOt'HK. Three bedoomn.ill )ip;it, lleil K;tNk. residential. Wear>u.i line. Sll l-L'782 a d e r 7 p.m.

SEASONED OAK AND LOCUBT FIRE-PLACK WOOD. CALL

BH 1-O9901980 WHIRLPOOL WASHER — Neverbeen used. S1S0.

CA 2-5920IIKDi:oOM SUITE—Bed. two rireisrri.bench. Modern, blond. |45. CallCA 2-7562.

WINDOW SHADES

98cSizes to 33". whltt nr ffgsheU, Onyour roller. Bring them In. Shadesmade whllt you wait. Now at newtemporary location. PROWN'B 9Broad St.. EH 1-7500. Call Today.

MERCHANDISE WANTEDPIANOS - HlKbeil prlcei paid. H. Ten.

zer. 316 Main St.. I/tluwood or FOlcroft 3-21D0.

ARGE, SL'NNf nluely furninhert roomlomplikft ntmnspherp, llsht housekeep-

ing If desired. Quiet residential Incatlnn. near town, for refined man. SH 18394.

HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID—Forentire or par; content! of bomei and

estates. Furniture, antique!. Orientalrugs, paintings, etc. FRIEDMAN GAL

KlilKS. PR 4-3143. Evening! CA 2-74B2WANTED — USED. SMALL, FIRE-PROOF SAFE. PHONE

LI 2-2463

HAMMONDORGAN STUDIO

of fSBURY PARKAll Models on Display

HAMMOND EXTHAVOICE s fins,WI'ItLITZER SPINET. BLOND ...5 C»lCV OHGAN WITH

JP., 20 RPKAKEIt - JH35HAMMOND M —

SPINET ORGAN. WALNUT ... I 995BAHY fiRAND PIANO.

RECONDITIONED J 3110UPRIGHT PI.AYEH PIANO -...$ 75PUMP OP.OAN-

MASON * HAMLIN J 20SALES AND SERVICE

RENTAL AND INSTRUCTIONOpen Dally Till !> — Saturday Till 5:30

COOKMAN AVE. AND MAIN ST.

PR 5-9300

fETS AND LIVESTOCKCOLLIE PUPS — Two blue malei,three months, raised with children,very reasonable. Ll 2-35G3.

TYPEWRITERS, ADDING machine*AU makes new or used. Guaranteed

bow as $25. Scrptco'a. 101 Monmouth81. Next lo theater SU 7-04&5

KKN.MOHB AUTOMATIC IKONEH withchair. Almost new $75. Call CA 2-

27!»2

CASH REOISTERS - New and used.many models, reasonable. We sell.

rent, repair. Talco Cash Rerliter Co.CA 2-0414.

TIIKKK i;OOMS and hath, privateentrance, furnished or unfurnished. Allutilitfcs .supplied. SE 2-0519

STOP IN anil see tho fabulous newKinsman Electronic Organ at our Fur-niture show rooms. BURDGE & SON(next to Stelntmch'a parking lot) 24Clay St.. Keil Bank. Open daily fl-121-3. VVeiinpsiiay and Friday evening! 7-9

PIANOS — Save $200 or more- of! listprice nn brand new S3 noto Spinet

pianos. Ten year fiunrantoe. Come secnnd save. We service what wo ne\l.Tcnzer's Mimic Store, 306 Main St.,Lakewood. VQ 3-1M90.

AKMSTRONC—Woolen mill rarpetlnp.New, in oriKinul wrappinp, SolUl nndI weed, with non-skid loam riibtiorhacks, room si^cs, ami wall-to-wall.Private home. SK 2-0.')^.

KKHIT-1MKCK liedroom fif'Trtcht-plrr'ellvlnp room art. torch lamp, 9x12 ruK,12" TV. 20 ami If) ftillon fl h tnnks.stand nnd eiiuipment. lonjf nnd shortwave radio with phoiioqmph. WIVHI.MIclothes closet, carr iage, lmby scale,e l . All In pood, clean rnmtitum. Sil "•

S

rtuoa — NEVKiT0sEir9xV2; j5a!>xlO. $35. OBier alzen. C.E vacuum.$20. CA 2-U75.

CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORYA HANDY GUIDE OF BUSINESS SERVICES TO SUIT YOUR MANY NEEDS!

'Adding Machines—TypewritersAnniNlfTfACli iNEg — Tweivrliorisold, rfnted. r^pnlrrrt. Serpico'n. 101Monmmiih St., lircl Hank. SH 7-0455.

Appliance RepairsAP ruA N( • K~ ll: K i-A i \r 7mi i~i™Taiiir(Ion. Ki'dldontlal unit cnnitnirrial wlr-inr- Allon KlPctrlc. Sll 7-0til2.

AuctioneerH. a. CHATS — An rsniMillai AticticnApprnl5Bl Servlr* "anywlicrp." 288Norwood Avp., llpnl. Thoiin KEIlogKI-S4BI.

Auto and Truck RentalAVIS—TCont a tipw cur or truck. LowrntP« Jlaplr AVP., lipd Hank. Sll 7-ll.'IOB. Til < K H . fially 7 a.m.—10 p.m.

Awnings — Canopies

s m a i l p iiTofiirrI-'rpp p.itlmntf's. Ktfinilaril Awning d ' . ,015 Ulvpr ltd.. Fair Ilavpn. Sll l-mi!lti.

China and Glass Repair

"EXPERT MENDING — China. ciai»Tallvpr rpflnlshlnK and plntinp. Therm-o.i liuckpts. Chhm *• (tlas!* Slunt, 117Uroml St., Rpd Hank. Sll 7-1Cno.

Floor Waxing— Fioor~"wax7n7~an(I

Janntorlal sorvlcp. ('oinmprclnl. rpsi-dpntlal. Low ratp«. 787-2779.

Furniture Repair

FHIINITUUK Kerinlalicil, rppa'rpd.caltliirt innklnB. Frpp pstimntPH.pickup, drllvery. W. Murray, 787-4077.

Fuel Oil — Heating

l 'UEU OIL t HKATING—Call Sll I-Ofilll. Oil Pcllvory, Inc.. Service *Snip*. 3 llprbprt St., l!pd Bank.

Home Improvements

Boating SuppliesN A V K S A N D l

Av». , Rp.i I lrlsht . EK 2 - l i n i . "

BuildlnR ContractorO ft C Ili;iLllKI!S

^ncclnll/.liiK in iiltuulnuui RtilliiK pluncnniptrtp InilliliiiK scrvli'p. and rpinnd-I'llllK. <•<> 4-MI7B nr CO I ItnT.

I). 1'ltI.MKKANO ••Till! Carpenter ."Kxprrirncrd alteratlim.s. repair work,iilit-lnaiilr. Sll 1-11.11. Sll 7-5I11I.WOKKl.Ni; MAN'S i-(inlrat:tnr- AHpr-atlon.4. aildlllonn. palntlnc, ma^iinry.all Ihnse llllle Joh.i. I.O li-171 I

Insurance

A l X K i N S n A N 1 5 ~ . — A i l f i raccident, lionip, fire. Insurance. Lowraip.s. Call John P. Mcllujh, Anent.nv i-inni.

Painting and Decoratingk r i V ~ p l o p n K

liifr. dPCornthiK. and pnprr hanplnc.Estimates rh'-erlully Riven. W. W.Slllea. Ill S-'.TiM.

Pel SuppliesHKLKN MILLEIl — Dry and frownfish foods to order hy mail or «p>polntment. Call AT l-!6"!i.

Plumbing & Heating

24-hour Kervlcp, seven days. Martin J.McOulrr. Inc., Sll 7-37H".

Radio-Television RepairA. C. RADIO * TELEVlSI(iN"co —l-'3 Shrevvslrary Ave. 811 1-470S.'SERV-ICE Wlllt.B YOU WAIT.

Roofing, Siding and InsulationInaulaTlon & Slcllnc Corp. "cerlTfleiiJdhns-.Manvllle coidi'actor, PIl .VS107or Adam I.iu^mayrr AT l-fl:i(IJ.

OLSON CO. INC. - - lU>iifln(-7sicllnB *Insulation. Insl:iUeil atul tuianinti'cutot 1(1 yp;ir». I'll S-nTflS AT 1 0311).

Tel. Answering Servicep

nnnwpr tor von', - i luniv ftvrvicf. Telephnite AnMvrrinK Servire. SH 1-170H.

ALL TYI'K linprKvi'ineiits uml newwork (itiaraidecd. Klti-henH,- ilornier.'..1. Cndwnllmler. Since. 1KHI. HU 1-04.58

IVSTEFANO f.'ONSTHI'CTMN -N''Wliomps, nltprntlnnn. repairs, ttmp pay-nienl.i. I'lione 1.1 1 l)h.ril—7H7-Uli'.'s.

NKW 11OMRH, alteration*, repairs.IIIRhPflL qunllty work. Kor e.-dimatenall Iterliert ElKenrauch. Slf l-.Vjni.

ItBIl MANIC AI.U.MIN'I'M I'lUllH'CTHrUorm wltii'ovv.i, .sldltiK, awnltips.Sll 7-M5;l or fill L4S2K.

Cesspool denningSIBt ' l ' l f! T A N H S . ilrv wellii nervlee i l .U a c h l n c field a d d e d , ll.lclilinn W K I I I .n . II. Wll.vm. S l l I-1SKI.

Kitchen RemodelingKITClil':.N r"c.UllNE'i'S-I' 'nnnlca~«itlktnp.H, hnllt-lti ovenfi and ratifies, com-plete remodeling.. Klnnnclnf; arranKetl•legal Klluh.-liM. 787-lllliK.

Odd Jobs

CELLARS, K'iruKes cleaned. Treesremoveil. llaullnff. Applfnnces.furniture nioveil. t'A 2-77.J7.

JTKIITT IIAUMNn — Evpnl^K»~iuidweek-ends. Kra»i»nfilili* nttes. CallOi'iiiRe llnrdni. fill 1-7777.

Painting and Decoratingi . l i l ' lrt 1'ASHAN PnltilVr~li''i!iirnior^pnlirrhancer, '.Ti year:. e\iifi'tence 1,1Cha|ilr) Aw. fi l l 1-17HH nfler fi p.m.

CAMI, 11. J U N K S - I'll Inline "mill " d e e -NlatltlK. ( J ene ra l eontrdi ' l l i iK. I''l'iee . i t l ina len . Cnll S l l l-l:it;i. 21 h o u r s .

Tile Ceramic

---New work , cni ' liwilri1^, all acci 'l e s , flo.M-«. wal l s , c e l l i n g . I t t - cmat I \t i les ti> j n u r o n l r r . 1 ' au l ' s TilliiK S e r \Ice. CO I..V.1I.

Tree Service

HUSH SETTKR — AKO, male, ninemonths, inoculated. Rood looking dog,frleinlly, excellent with children. Willell only to family who can assure good

home to a Rood dog. \VH 6-4242.SIX. LuVABLK P L ' I ' P T E S JlO-lS —MOTHER Pl- 'KEBUEP AUSTRALIANTERRIER. SMALL, SMART, FRIEND-LY BRKEP THAT IS ALL P E K J J O V * .LITY. GENTLE. WONDKP.FL'L WITHSMALL r i l l L I l R E N . CAIA, NOW KO11PICK-OF-LITTER. I.T 2-O7«O.

REAL ESTATE FOR RENTAPARTMENTS

GARDEN' APARTMENTS AVAILABLE— 3 ' ^ . 4 ' i . anJ 5 rooms. Molly Pltchrr.VII la Re In tint re Apartment 24. Mr.O'Neil. Sll 1-0115.

F l 'RSISUED — ONE. TWO AND Tlirpebrdroom apart m m ta. Heat and watersupplied. CA !M553.

KL'MSON — Smnll tliroe-room furnislirdapartment . Pr ivate entrance, near bus.Suitable for couple or slnple person. Allutilities supplied. Rent $70. Phone RL'1-OGtjO.

THREE-nooM apartment, bath, hotwater, heit. Located at 199 Port Mon-immth ltd., I'ort Monmontli. 787-O20S.FO U11 fT(TdKf~A~P AH T ME NT in coun-try. Oil heal fncludoii, $65. PntindaryRoad, off Route, 5CU near MarlboroState Hospital. \VH 6-IM2.THREK ROOMS nnd bath. Hent andelectric stipp'.icd. Rent $75. Fhone Sll7HI'S 7

OL'R WEEKLY RVJrZCAAL — Move incozy three-lied room home. Freshly

painted, new stove, large, refrigerator,gas furnace, nunny enclosed porch.Year 's lease required. Rent JSO month-ly, plus utilities. Adults preferred, V.A. Gciilhmis, Real Estate, Hwy 3fi.next to Blue and White Bus Terminal.Leonardo. AT 1-0188. Please phone (orappointment.

FURNISHED ROOMSFURNISHED ROOMS

Call8H 7-2609

SINGLE ROOM — Furnished. In private home. Convenient location to shop-pine and buses. SH 1-Sfins.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALEHOUSES FOR SALE

BEST BUY .'

Attractive split level home witha 4!4% G.I. mortgage assump-tion, $95.00 per month; recreationroom, wall to wall carpet in liv-ing room and dining room; l/4

acre and fenced plot perfect forchildren; complete with patio andbarbecue. Excellent close inlocation. Priced to sell at $17,-900.00

WALKER & WALKERR E A L T O R S

Highway 35 ShrewsburySHadyside 1-5212

Open 7 Days

NOTICK

oTiri-: TO ri:its»\s DESIRING AB-SKNTEK BALLOTS.If you are R qualified and regintered

oter of thp fitate who expects to beibseiit outside the State on Tunstlay,'ehruary H , 1961, or a qualified and'Rglatered voter who will be within theitate on Tuesday, February 14, 1061,ttjt hecaust* of illness or physical dis-hility, or because of the observancef a religious holiday pursuant to theends of your religion, or heciiuse o(esldnnt attendance at a Bchool, colleRer university, will he unable to castour ballot a t the polling place In your

listrlct on salrl dnte, and you desireo vote in HIP Board of Education elec-lon. to be held on Tuesday. February4. Iftfll, kindly write or apply In per-on lo thp undersigned a t once re-HieMlnp that a civilian absentee hal-lot be forwarded to you. Buch requestmust atate your home address, andhe artdrum to whtcU *al»l ballot shoultlie scut, and must he 'signed with yourIgnnture, and state the reason whyou will not bo able to vote at your

I poll ing place. No civilian ab-fc ballot will bm furnished or for-

wartled in any applicant Unless T*q\itherefor is received not less than 8lays prior to the election, and con-a im the foreRotnr information.

December 23. 1960. *OEORfiE S. KINKADK. JR..

Secr t ia ry . Holmilel TownfhlpBoard of Education, P. O. box312. Holmdel, New Jersey.

Jan. 3 J7.92

WIDOW SELLS$15,000 HOME FOR $12,000.

Very clean five-ropm bungalowwith expansion attic, full base-ment. Plot 50x125. Lots of ex-tras. Small down payment.

Beach Agency

OS 1-2727

Hwy. 35

Middletown

M1DDLETOWN-SPLIT LEVEL, ImmiH e occupancy, low down payment.Seven rooms, l f i bath, enclosed jalou-sie pDrcn, attached garage. Phon* OSl-n'ios.

TUEE-BEimoOM ranch home In v«ryileslrahle location. Attached Knra(e,(nil basprnenl anrl porch. Excellent cor:illtion. OS 11928.

r.IVKR PLAZA — Four rooms un-[urnlshcd.

SH 1-.'P2I3.

SEfOND FI.OOH — Four rooms, hnth.plus storitRe. Qootl location on hus line,.mlnrnlsheil. SH 1-OMI.FOUR K00.MS — Hnth. unfurnljlml.Mdtlorn Improvements, ftronnd floor,centrally locati'tl Rml Hank. }S5 niontli.Ailiilu only. Sll 1-5M6 aTler 7 p.m.

ATTV'.NTION — 11 you need two roomsrail KM i.S3!M ami sci> llu- Invely lied-livlnp room and kitchen apar tment I 'mmi t inc . Mnft convenient location.

FdlT!!~R()OMSv~n~lT,Tr"iirnlshe7C Healliot water, Keanstmrp.-

7 i n q

ONE-ROOM furnished apartment, fullkitchen ami lialli. all utilities. UntilApril 1. Sll 7-0537.

COMMERCIAL RENTALS

FACTORY LOFTFor rent

H jq. it. Call Sll 7-1100.

HOLMI1EL TOWNSHIP — Three-bedrnom ranch attached Karape. larcekitchen, finished hasemenl. Full sesdlon nchool5. Pr ice $16,500. Call 787-6840

NwnsilRlSWSIUrriY — Two-heciroomhome, newly ileeorated. \vall-to-w«llcarpeltnc throUKhout. Expansion stile,full cellar, lurce Int. Will sacrifice /or<iulck sale. SH 1-1327.

LOTS AND ACREAGEEASTERN SHORE MARYLAND — 2r9acre grain farm. '2iV2 tillable Two potirisfor Irrigation. Leas than J200 per acre .Ml'tual 1-lSilP.

REAL ESTATE WANTEDLIST YOL'R HOME WITH WALKER *

WALKER tho office that offcri complcte service. Wo tako house! In tradewe finance. u*e appralne, and belt or allwe «>U. Walker J. Walker. Real Estate.Insurance. Open 7 days. Shr«wsburyoffice. SH 1-5211 Hirltlti OHIO, CO 45212.

STORK FOR RENTOn Whim SI

Call Sll 71100

It adds up! More and more

'people use The Register ads each

"j issue because results come fas-AIRCO.NDITlONBli OFFICES [or rent.;Also lirat nml liRht furnished. Write ! . „ - A J , , Q P H c n m n n t••Tradhic" BOX 5u, Red Bank or phonei tcr.—Advertisement.sii l-isia. I .

QUICKIES By KEN REYNOLDS

Tpral carp (if trei'.t. IL'l Helshaw AvtEatonlown. I,I 2-2127.

Vacuum Cleaner RepairK I . K C T R O L l ' X

H a l e s S c i - u c i ' Hlll>|.l !•7211 M a t l U n n A n - . . A x l m r y P , i r k . IMp r t u n p l l i u l n e .'in \ l c e in- f r e e r l l c i - l a pu n y o u r K l f r h o l u x , i-flll VV. .1 IHilil

T I M V K I I I I I U F . S a n i l lli<l>i«l''l,{| r 'Minr u t . I ' n r l d l l l n U T I I I I I I K . Atl .- l l i t l r W e l d -liiK * K n l n l i n t l i i K I ' o . S H 7-377S.

S T O C K

"Lot's turn over a new leaf and just uso Tho Rod BankRegister Want Ads thi i year!"

cream (usually 1 tablespoon for!ihe cream method of shirring each dish) is poured in. Then the

ggs may be used with one or dishes are placed in a slow (325wo eggs in a shirred-egg dish.f you haven't any of the latter,substitute individual heat-resis-ant glass pie plates. These areibout 6 inches across and 1 inchleep, widely available and inex-pensive. We suggest glass be-muse they make presentable:ablewear, and cream-type shir-red eggs must be served in thelishes in which they are cooked,

Before the eggs are slipped in-o the buttered dishes, a little

degrees) oven for 10 minutes orso to set. Salt and pepper are flakes tossing lightly as you doadded by eaters to suit their owntastes.

This is a basic method onwhich many variations may bemade. Sometimes we arrange

-LEGAL NOTICE-

MODERN BREAKFAST: b«ta! In corn fluke* nest* areM %?,

a new breakfast wrinkle and go well with juice, crisp bacon,English muffins and coffee.

package) corn flakes, 4 eggs,salt, white pepper, '/4 cup gratedcheddar cheese (if desired).Method: Pour butter over corn

so to mix. Place nest-fashion in4 buttered custard cups. Slip anegg into the center of each nest.Sprinkle with salt and pepperand cheese, if used. If cheese is

strips of cooked ham in the not used, do not season beforecream in the dishes, slip in theeggs and top with grated cheese.

CRISPY SHIRRED EGGS

baking. Place in slow (325 de-grees) oven until eggs are firm—15 to 20 minutes. Loosen out-

Ingredients: V/2 teaspoons butter side of nests with spatula and(melted), cups (or 1-ounce

-LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICKNOTirT TO FKltSONH IN MILITARY

SKKVICK UK PAT1KSTS IN VKT-KRANS* HOSPITALS AND TOTIIKIK RK1ATIVKS AVJJ MIITNUSIf you are In the military service

or are. a patient In a veterans' hos-pital mid desire to vole, or If you area relative or friend of a person who• In the military service or 1« a

patient in a veterans' hospital who.you believe, will dealre to vote In theIfolmdrd Township Board of Educa-tion election to be held on Tuesday,February 14, 1961. kindly write to theundersigned at once making applica-tion for a military sprvlce ballot toha voted In said election to be for-warded to you, If you are In the mil-itary service or are a patient In &veterans' hospital, stating your name,age, serial number, home address andthe address at which you are stationedor can be found, or If you dealrethe military service hallot for a rela-tive or friend then make an applica-tion under oath for a military serviceballot to he forwarded to him, statingIn your application that he Is overthe age of 21 years and. statlnc hisname, serial number, home addressand the address at which he Is sta-tioned or can he found. Forms ofapplications can be obtained from the

"'December 29. 1960.GEORGE R. KINKADE, JR.Secretary, Holmdel Twp. Bd, ofRducatlon, P. O. Box 312, Holm-del, N. J.

Jan. 3 f*.2S

lift out gently. Makes 4 servings.

KeansburgIntermediate Girl Scout Troop

234, senior patrol, attended KadiOCity and the NBC studio thisweek with Mrs. Russell Wyckoffand Mrs. Edward Martin co*leaders. They had luncheonthere. Some of the mothers tltoaccompanied the girls.

The Junior Patrol of Troop 234held a party in the Veterans ofForeign Wars building. Giftlwere exchanged a n d gameiplayed. Mrs. Martin and Mri.Wyckoff assisted the girls.

San Salvador, capital of El Sal-vador, wag founded in 152S bySpanish conquistadAres under Pe-dro de Alvarez.

The leading products of the Is-raeli city of Sodom are potashand bromine, not irreverence.

Register Classified AdsTake The Worry Out ofWhich Firms To CallFor Dependable Service

It's no problem to get those jobs around your home done, and done right,

when you cell one of the reliable firms offering their services in "Business

Notices" in Classified. Just the fact they advertise lets you know they are

anxious to build their business—and expect to do it with good work and

dependability. Cheek these columns and confidently call the firms listed there.

REGISTER CLASSIFIED ADSMODERN MARKET PLACE OF DEPENDABLE SERVICES

' II you »r« a rcllahlc u t v l o * (Inn u i d want (a

• row, dial Sl l 1-0010 tixlay tu l e t the

!ml> •tiotll tho liciirilli ol m dally «il In Ihfi

".Si'rvlrrft" aihminii In Din Clasftlllrd ici'llon.

Page 18: Itiued Dally. Monday through Friday, anterad ai Second ... · NEPTUNE - Stanley Wacyra, 71, of Dutch Lane Rd., Freehold Township, injured in a two-car accident in Marlboro Township

• > - / ' \ ^

N W BWI^^BV mKKM&mJfmilw j|*B^^^^t,p*^T*t

Mr*. Frank Kolmgr*n, Byrne*

' o V ^ ^ y

^W WJW w^^wP^^ t^^^f ^^^OJ*v^e* f

Bfnrrrr- TJJUJI;J ^ ^ P ^ ^ a^^^^^^^»^ a U a ^ B^ ^^^^^^^^09 P

Mr and Mrs Malcolm King ofi Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Comp-Merchantville were week-end i ton and family, Youmans Ave.,guests of Mrs. William Hunter, have returned from a two-weekByrnes La ' s t a y in W e s t P a l m Be«ch, Fla,

|with Mrs. Compton's parents,Anson Rarisum entertained

Thursday night at his home onMyrtle Avz. for the ninth gradeSunday school class of the First

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Liming.JAIso accompanying them wereMrs. Compton's brother and sis-ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert

Mr. and Mr«. Nelson Gallonjhave returned to Washington, D.C. after spending the Christmasholidays as house guests of Mr.and Mrs. Leslie D. Seely, SouthSt.

Mr. and Mrs. Hrward Frost,South St., welcomed the NewYear in Paoli, Pa. at a family

ymembers of her card group at aChi G

gChristmas party. GuestsMrs. Hubert Woodside. Mrs.Charles Casano, Mrs. WilliamSchwartz, and Mrs. Gary Worth-ley.

UMM CUb ttrimtf H Urn Cry*t»\ Brook >nn CtrUey Garofalo uSanta presented favors and giftsto the children. Adults also ex-changed gifts and witnessed smagician act The club's nextmeeting is set for Thursday, Jan.12.

Mrs. Augustus Smith, South

Mr, mi Mm, Cmrtm tmmt

'\Ormmmm rty to fwm,

Miss Marion Ransom, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. Anson Ransom,Myrtle Ave., returned yesterdayto Middlebury College, Middle-bury, Vt., where she i» a fresh-

Week-end guests of Mr. andMr. aud Mis. Benjamin Van|.St., was guest of honor at a fare-iMrs. W. Lester Whitfield, Broad

&9f P i

week at hi« bom*.

Barry Evert, son of Mr. andMrs. Theodore Evert, CampbellDr., entertamed at a Yuletideparty Friday night at his home.

Christmas dinner guests of Mr.and Mrs. Howard Frost, SouthSt., were Mr. and Mrs. Andrew

i from a Jwo-wa*day ia Elmira Heights, N. V,,where they were house guests ofMr. Anderson's parents, Mr. andMrs. Gustav Anderson.

Mrs. Annie Reynolds, SouthSt., and her daughter, Mrs. ElsieDemarest, spent Christmas inNeptune as guests of Mr. andMrs. Frank Dangler.

Infants*

Layette Items

Cofton Knit Kimono. Whit* with pink, blut or main frim 1,00

Cotton Knit Gown. Whita with pink, blue or maize trim 1,00

Cotton Kn it Sacqu*. Whita with pink, blue or maixa trim 89C

Cotton Knit Sacqu* in atsorted printi 89C

Terry Knit Towel. Whita with pink, blue or maixa trim 89c

Terry Knit Bath Sheet. Whita with pink, blue or maixa trim .... 1,88

Terry Hooded Towal. Maixa or aqua 1«98

Carter's Infant Snap Shirts, long or short sleeves 1*00

Receiving Blankets, several assorted colon 7 9 C

Cotton Quilted Pidi, I5"xl7" 4 5 C

Cotton Quilted Padi, I8"x34" 1,00

Cotton Quilted Padi, 27"x34" 1.50

Cotton Quilted Pads, 34"x52" 2.98

Kleinert's double-textured Dryedowne Sheeting, I8"x27" 1.00

Kleinert's double-textured Dryedowne Sheeting, 27"x36" 1,85

Kleinert's double-textured Dryedowne Sheeting, 36"x54" 3.75

Infants' Orion Sweaters, sixes I, 2, 3 3.98

Infants' Dresses, matching slips. White, pink, blue. 3 . 9 8 t O 5 . 9 8

North Star All-Orion Blanket. Whita, pink, blue or maize.

40"x60" 7 . 9 8 36"xS0"

Birdseye Diaper,, 27"x27" 2 .

STEINBACH'S INFANTS' SHOP, Second Floor and Aibury Park

Great January

Corset SALE!Girdles:

Regularly 5.95- 18.95 A, Q

Bras:Regularly $2 • 5.95 1.

12 Famous Foundation

• Warner's •

• Nemo •

• Lily of Franet •

• Cerdt de Parie •

Youthcraft

Poirtrrt

Jan tien

Surprise

5-12.9

594-9Makers:

• Maiden Form

• Ptttr Pan

• Sarong

• Carnival

Sketched: Nemo Girdlewith lightly boned lace front panel. Reg. 12.50 9.95

Lilees lace bra Reg. 3.95 2.95

Famous styles for all figures. Pull-on or zipper style girdles; long

line, regulation or contour bras.

STEINBACH'S CORSETS and BRAS, Street Floor and Asbury Park

Semi Annual

of Red Crossand Cobbies

8.90 &-10.90Regularly 10.98 to 14.98

• Pumps • Casuals • Hats

• Straps • Wtdgies

Regular Stock Shoes in Discontinued Styles

At the year's beginning we offer two famous make shoes ai unusual

savings. Misses' and women's sizes but not every size in every

style or color.

•Thli product haa no connection wHiMKver with the American National R H r r a i

STEINBACH'S SHOES, First Floor and Asbury Park

Medium Firm Pillows

Down and Feather

2 for 12.99

• 20% White Goose Down, 80% Goose

Feathers.

• Sanitized for protection. Floral print.

• Corded edges and Down-proof ticking.

• Extra zippered polished cotton cover with

each pillow.

Mail and Phone Orders Filled

January WHITE SALE! Silky Smooth 180-Thread

White Percale Sheets72x108" andTwin Fitted, Reg. 3.19 2.59

Pillow CasesReg. 89c 42x38" Caie^i 79a)

Reg. 99c 45x38Vi" Cases 84?

Size: _ Reg. Sale!81x108" Long Full 3.49 2 .98

Double Fitted Sheets 3.49 2 .98

% Fitted Sheets 3.49 2 .98

Long Double Sheets 3.79 3,39

King Bottom Sheets 5.98 4 ,93

100x 120" .....5.95 5,49

108x 122 Vi" i: ..7.98 O , 49

STEINBACH'S LINENS, Second Floor and A.slmy Park

SHOP STEINBACH'S WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY TIL 9Use Our Convenient Free Parking Lot Adjacent to the Store