9
, •. • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;<*•'• *****£^^ Tiir - : . , : - y . , . > ! ; : > . . . . " . ' > . - , 4 . ' . . ' . - . . ' . . ' . ' - . - , . : : . : : . « •••'>•••••,•/.: . . v y , . . - ^ - 7 ;:.••'•• •.' ®m&m. WCBANFC*U)(NJ.)CmZE^AhroCHRONia£ Thursday, uisine Served V, ^t h t l * school. spcfa as raousta;.... Itsto, at weU «s chef , JaQo molds and various .osssera wen servea to me school staff, teacher*, student teachers, PTA board mem- ben and invited guests. Invited guests included Superintendent of Schools Vincent Sarnowski and Bin. Sarnowski; Miss Beatrice Warner^ special services; Mrs. alaricaiallis, director of il and '" Anffibny~Ternglrio, assistant superintendent of schools; Mrs. Ruth Jaoovsik, director of personnel; Miss Jeane Devlin, school psychologist; Mrs. Bridget DePinto, family living instructor; Mrs. Diane Taylor, social worker; and Robert Ray, learning disability teacher consultant Mrs. Norman Wiener and Mrs. Uam Ryan were chairmen of the luncheon. BRAND NEW TRIUMPH TR4 SPITFIRE MARK IV NOW IHSTOCK IMMEDIATE DELIVERY The 4-H Programs of Vnlon County will sponsor a «Bon "Danc^Wfcon^on" Saturday, May s at the Cranford Community Center. To be eligible for. the cash prixes, an dancers must ap- pear at the Community Center before noon on Mays, Dancers must also be sponsored, with the sponsors agreeing to pay 25 cents or moreforeach hour the dancer participates. In case of a tie for the prizes of $25, us and 910, the dancer who has the highest total of sponsor pledges will win. Food and 10 minute rests every two- hour period will be provided for all sponsored dancers. All proceeds will be used to Send youngsters to 4-H Camp and provide assistance to the 4-H Opportunity Center. , industries in theNew York-New 4-H Dance Marathon [•TUNE-UP BONANZA Potato. Muss,CondtnMr, A d h S Mo*tcant...6Ori. •13.95 (6-cylinder; $15.9S) SO. ELMORA EXXON SERVICENTER Sou* EhnonAM.. Cor. Eric* AM. Bet«e«nStGeor|eAve ~ Cw* Et 3-9244 Wort done (ihdudint Sundays) IB 3 P.M. C«aforAppoiQtmMtS- alao at the 441 North Avenue field.-:- -:••••"•*:..•• The public is invited to watch and dance for> anen- trance fee ot.$l,.;--^'•:•-.-•: ••••'• For further information; contact W. RomandoJames, Union County 4-H Agent, at 2334366. > ••'.•" >•••• W-.•:'.;.;•. The schedule for dance music is as follows: noon to % p.m. 4-H disc jockey show with tapes; 2 p.m. to 6p.m. "Black Essence" combo; 6 pjn. to 7; p.m. 4jH disc jockey show; 7 p.m. b>9p.m. "Sweet Essence of Soul" and 9p.m.,to. Uf p.m. "Hotfce.'V Film Presented on Fire Safety Captain Leonard Dolan of theCranford Fire Department spoke to home economics students April 17 at Hillside Avenue Junior High School. He presented a film on babysitting and fire Safety. ' He said the-four most im- portant rules for a 'babysitter are: know escape routes and procedures for getting people out of a building in case of fire, keep bedroom doors closed, stay awake and know how to call the fire department. . W^''tiS^^»^to talk about their occupattonstothe children In Ueberman's Grade 4 in Roosevelt SfhooJ. The children have been involved in a aodal science study of human resources.• ; On April 9, Linda's father. Dr. Dennis Palumbo, a college professor who teaches Political Science at New York City University and' is the author of several books, came to discuss what an author does when he writes a book..He gave "the children an un- derstanding of the work in- volved when he completed his talk With, "Writing atook is 10 per cent inspiration and 90 per centwork!'^ ' Megyn's dad, Dr. WatUns John, who practices medicine in Cranford, came to talk to the group on April 12. The children listened tohim discuss his training, work, responsibilities and com- munity involvement. They were fascinated when he opened his black doctor's bag and explained as well as described each item. Beth's father, Burns, the township' engineer for Scotch Plains, visited the class on April 17.- Interest Day of Deposit to Day of Withdrawal Continuous Compounding ANNUM REGULAR PASSBOOK ACCOUNT New. and present depositors are invited to transfer to continuous compounding. Simply bring inyour passbook, — L and keep $25 or' more on deposit to the^ end of the quarter. 6* 5f TIME SAVINGS ACCOUNT * Annual rate from day of deposit guaranteed (or two years minimum $3,000 TIME SAVINGS ACCOUNT Anrtud] rale from day of deposit guaranteed for one year minimum $2,000 JIME SAVINGS ACCOUNT Annual, rate from day of deposit (jufffffnteod for eta months ' minimum 41,000 MONTHLY 10 DAY GRACE ACCOUNT Regular paiabook. compounded quarterly,. deposits made by the lOtn of each month eam from the 1«- - •,- ~:» ion. ©cecm and QomoMd a dinner on Sunday sponsored by the ; 1M<$i^it m Union Cwmty Robert J, French of i Cuxopings St'and Walter Orleanski of32 Concord St received the New Jersey Cdmmlstiooer of Laborawlliidustry Award of Distinguished Achievement last Thursday at the Union County Safety Council's annual awards dinner at the Starlight Lounge, linden. The two residents, who are union safety representatives, workfor hert she ii a freshman. ELLEN R. DAHLQU18T, daughter of Rev> and Mrs. AmoldDahJqulBtofll3Alden St., wu recently inducted into Pi ChairteV of Phi Beta Kappa at Muhlenberg Colleger Allentown, MACKEN- ZIE of 12 SaniosetRd. is on the honor roll for the winter term at East Carolina University,; Greenville,. N.C. J E JOHNSON <AlM JBsso Research and Engineering Co., Linden. To oualifv for Glenwood Rd. has been in- hrajor, is the the award, each of l §r la&orles ic«Sum^Sd»S;o5 ducted '— •"-•...,—*. .S-Am,^_ hoursof disabling tajur^free operaUon. French has 20 years of serviceand Orleanski has beenWth Esso 22 years. Mary Feldbauer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs..George Feldbauer of 27 Hamilton Ave., has-been nominated for an Emmy Award in the best program-classical music category for "Berstein inLondon," a special which she produced for National Educational Television in 1973. The Emmy Awards presentation will be held May 20 in Los Angeles. Miss Feldbaoer resides in New York City, where she does free lance film production. She has just returned front IM Angeles, where she was assistant,producer for an in- dependently produced feature film. Two Cranford residents, Mrs. Harlan Martin and Mrs. Irwin Kaplan, will be installed as vice-president and corresponding secretary, respectively, of the Guild for Jewish Children. The installation will take place during they guild's 28th annual donor luncheon May 15 at the Crestmoot County Club, West Orange. /.»_• Walter R. CalhoUn of 4 Fifth Ave., executive representative for the Canteen Corporation, Nutley, is assisting in a membership drive for the Greater Newark Chamber of Commerce. Calhoun attended City College of New York and served with the Marine Corps. He and his wifi< Anne, are the parents of four children. Bike Riders Benefit Group for Retarded fraternity, and other campus groups. Iversen, Miss Iversen and Johnson were among more than 200 persons who par- ticipated in the bik-a-thon. For Iversen, this was Just another biking day. He rides nearly every morning - weather permitting. -* Students Assist Eagle Prograiri Danny Karalis, Michelle Aker, Barbara Moran and Suellen Daly from Miss Dorothy Sauer's seventh grade class at St: Michael's School participated in a "Save the American Eagle" program. J The students brought food wrappers to. school and sent them to California.' Ap- proximately 80 square feet of land In the west was savedfor the eagle. The children received a poster and a sticker of the American eagle. Their names appear on a stone in the park where the preserve is located. into Alpha Lamda Delta, national academic honor society for freshman women at the University of Connecticut, Stars, Conn.' Four local students junior Olympic medals recent synchronised ming event at St. College, Convent/Station. MARlfc MCGUJtk, Of 9 Doering Way mi G There was no winner in th bik-a-thon competition 29 between Dr. Kennel Iversen, president of jtfnion College, and Michael of Plainfield, president of the Student Government Association of Uiiion College, except the Union County Chapter of/the National Association for Retarded Children. 's daughter, the 25-mUe result, the vernment sponsored board of College, Both/lversen and Johnson, as wi Cart CQOrse. As ... udent' G sociation, wl Iversen, and t! trustees of Ui which sponsored Johnson, wili contribute $100 each for the benefit of the National Association for Retarded Children. Iversen sponsored his daughter. By completing the 2Srmile course through CJark, Rah- way, Winfield, Linden and Roselle, Johnson actually earned $J46 for the association from all his sponsors, in- cluding the board of trustees, Alpha Sigma Mu, veterans' JHUlside Avenue Junior School instrumental music concert will be held Thursday evening,' May 17 in the school auditorium under the direction of Dennis Con- nelly, instrumental music teacher. The program will be presented by the concert band consisting of 75 musicians from grades seven through 10, 60 musicians who make up the seventh and eighth grade band, flute ensemble, clarinet ensemble and the brass en semble. Some of the highlights of the program are the "Egmont Overture" by Beethoven; "TaranteUe" featuring Mike Banks; baritone horn solo; "Bandology," concert march; "Die Meistersinger," ex- cerpts from the opera 'by Richard Wagner; "Dixieland Festival," a tribute to Louis Armstrong, featuring a dixieland band; highlights from "West Side Story;" "Get Together - Light My Fire," which features a rock sound adapted for concert band. The seventh and eighth grade band will play "Talkto the Animals, 1 ' "The Band Song," which features the various instruments of the' band; "The Syncopated Clock" which is one of Leroy Anderson's most famous compositions; and "Yankee Doodle Boy," from the musical by George M. Cohan. • In RICHARD ^KRt of Mr. andTurs. IWegerofl^Wdi ha«be« elet the Cardinal Muhlenborg t;:Ei| : MICHAEL JON GROSS, a 1969 graduate of Cranfo High School, is one of M students newly sleeted Trinity College Chapter of Phi B Gross, a senior > " " " " AMr. Mrs. Willlarn.M. Gross of 3 Maryland S t / H e will be in- sUUed into the 128-year-oW Trinity Phi Beta Kappa May 8-Gross is a Watsort Fellowship recipient, and plans to. use $e fellowship for researcii on a novel about a'draft reslster. He expects to, go to Toronto, London and Stockholm, to study the communities of American exiles. Serviceman First Lieutenant WALTER V. GILLES was named to participate in the Strategic Air Command missile cdmbat competition at Vandenberg AFB, California April 26 through May 4. , His wife, Miriam, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Petrik of 11 Burchfleld Ave. V Happenings By TOM W7 What Is eminent domain? Eminent domain may be defined as trie power of the state to take private property for public use according to a national authority on real estate. Both federal and state governments,' however, must provide compensation for the property. Eminent domain does not mean confiscation of land but entitles the owner to just payment for it. This is only to be used when some needed property is necessary for some public good. It's much easier to self your property through a real estate agent than byyourself. The staff at WADE ASSOCIATES REALTORS, 23 North Ave.. 276-1D33 has had many years ol experience and will get you the results you want Open: 9 a.m. - S p.m. Mon. thru Sat., 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. Sundays. HELPFUL HINT: Usually the owner of property receives market value for property received under eminent domain.. WADE ASSOCIATE REALTORS ts other Sapolin LATEX OUTSIDE WHITE 221*65 MS? 5YEARDURABIUTY GUARANTEE* Ci»en iclldly, l i i l «J tiiyl Sojp wd w i t « clejnupl Palul »ir> Ln djuip wejthtr—mlitl bllsllliof Jnd tiielinjl Uliei lit Vj haul... buf Ima aid ilusl fuel E«cell«ol color ultnllon-ieiijli bnsishtly chiUtlafl Sjpalin'l tested 2cojl lyslem itililt "ctJuhled" and other Umigbtly 11)! iljminj on Vmod lliintlu! "All purpose econom- ical paint for fences, sheds, etc. Reg. List $6.95 GAL. H03 on 9 AJ\JL to 6 fOll Clczud VVcdnaldays Union Avo. > 276-2S40 - OUR OWN DIRECT IMPORT 1971 VINTAGE BEAUJOLAISi VILLAGES $959 Not just an m-dinary Beaujolais but an Estate Bottled wine of a higher class and priced lower than others. An exceptional value in a rising wine market. AVAHAWAr DIAL KUWKY 1 | H £ t PARKING IN HtAH Ueo Hoar hitrincn 30 EASTMAN ST. (O p{) . Cr^.Word TfiooJ.ru) S«|^it^|iO|^ii^^ '•' ! -*y>,~ ' . . ; •-• '.-..• - • . ' , . , ' • . ; *,-«•.•. ' : . - . ' , \ •'•",.-'., ''"L* -'•• ; - ..'• 1 -:- 1 . •••''•••-;•..••• .,.-''(.••; *,v- p ^ '- ' • • ' ' • ' . - . , { } - . x f " <'• '•"'''•*'}•••, •'. ' l ' • <•'. •• ' :••". •"•-• '••>•••'.• •• " \:'<'-",':-^ .•:••,-, •'''•• '<•• \ V 1 '"' '''%•*' •••'•'•• l '.'-ii'. ••'"". ;i "'• ; ••,•'•'*-' VOL} 80 1JO>19 ^-•••^•''••;'' ; >, : -;. : ; •:;^''£'^\--iiV$^^ : %:- \> Second Class Postage Paid Cranford, N. J. 07016 15 CENTS •'.' ' : & ' contrasts past "r.'d By RobertOlma ' ..'' "'V :; " >,;" Vv;-. .'• • ':•; ••;:i^'- There are somany things u> an American way of life, contemporary life that have so Carangelo Massa lead long been a part of our lives "" ' that, most of us assume they have always been around. One of them is the police. National Police Week, May 13 to 18, calls attention to the fact that the police have not always beenjuround for people to depend on, even in usually tranquil Cranford, Garwood and Kenilworth. ' ^ , . In colonial days the agents of the proprietors were the agents of the law, and more often than not they were more interested in protecting the interests of their employers than they were in seeing that justice was served, •< Mutilation was a common punishment both before and after the Revolution, and criminal records from the period are replete with cases of ears being cut off and alleged thieves being branded on the hands and forehead. - : Hanging was the penalty for a wide variety of crimes. James Morgan, suspected of being a Loyalist agent, was tried and found guilty of . killing Parson Caldweu, a , chaplain in Washington's army in 1781. He f gave Cranford's Gallows Hill Road its ominous name. In the Revolutionary period suspected political sym- pathies were often used by force from 1933 to 1944, and William Fischer was in command from, 1944 to 1995. Lester PowelT was Cranford poUce chief from 1965 to 1967, when Matthew Haney took over the position, . Times have changed, the police have changed, but the need, for a professionally trained force remains a constant need of civilized society,. .. scored More than 50 homeowners attending an open hearing on the proposed college tone last Wednesday night voiced disapproval of .future development plans by Union College. A majority of those present expressed fears" that the college can do "whatever it wants." Explaining the proposed college zone ordinance, township planning consultant Harvey Moskowitz of senior In an otherwise uneventful township committee meeting, Cranford officlals heard a long stream of flood victims, senior . citizens andsoftie merchants complain about what " they labeled the governing body's inaction on such perennial S roblems as the Rahway iver spilling over its banks, the lack of housing for the elderly and the parking situation. Mrs. Charlotte LeDuc of 110 -Awarded contracts for the- purchase of flood pumps and trailers totaling over. $30,000. -Approved a bingo license for St. Michael r s Roman p y neighboring rivals to despoil Livingston said the township each other's land, and even to desires to regulate develop- ;e yet allowit educational kill, and there was no police force to halt the general brigandage... . With the return of peace after the Revolution, and no war activity in the area during the pointless War of 1812, sleepy rural communities like what was tobecome Cranford its mentofthe to pursue goals. / John Vasallo, planning board chairman, claimed such control is rare, He continued saying the township is looking to provide guidelines for future development while been done to provide for senior citizensyih the township. She also^noted that other municipalities offer senior citizens such con- STANDING ON THE siderationv&s minibus trans- STEPS of Cleveland School portatioX retail discounts and about 40 years ago are the freejarking while Cranford proud merpbers of d ^ not. Cranford's law-and-ofder;/ contingent. In the froof Mayor Jack McVey noted row from left to right^re »h« while jhere are as yet no completed plans for the Hillcrest Ave., president of the Cranford Senior Citizens Club; _ noted that extensive work has the/ experimental Park and -been—done in'the area of ^Shop system. Community swimming jpools/^ In reference to anti-flood yet "litUe, if anything* bald efforts, Flinn displayed a map the only Democrat on the committee. ; Alfred Brown of Brown's Variety Store on N. Union Avenue suggested a shift in the distribution of long and Catholic Church, and raffle short-term parking metert^licensesfer-the church and the between the Miln Street arid Jaycees. '••,- High Street parking idtSBUght -Adopted a capital planning improve the parking situation, budget McVey and Goodman He said he was not~a "rabble noted that it is only an "outline rouser" and thavhis interests of needs" without regard to were not selfjsti, as "has been resources and does net mean suggestediirSome quarters." the committee, intends-, to • Sevecal other merchants actually spend the amounts agaiamired their opposition to mentioned intfie budget. ' -Appointed Donald Fourre to the. Parking Committee. -Adopted on first reading the police and fire salary illustrated with ~ photographs ordinances covering police showing the work priorities of and fire chiefs and captains. the"program, as he bad been, Goodman noted- that pressed to by a representative negotiations ~ with the of the Mayor'8 .Flood Task uniformed men are continuing and the-ordinance does cover their salary scale. Kenilworth and Garwoftd r e t a i n i n g ^maximum depended on county law eh- protection" for residents. - - - The proposed ordinance sets requirements for building height, setback, ratio, building local forcement officers and vigilante committees. ' The Cranford Thief Detecting Society functioned from 1869 to 1889, and had its charter renewed in 1890 and was finally disbanded in 1897 when the paid Cranford Police Department was founded. THE BOYS IN BLUE In this early 1930s picture of the Cranford Police force display the well-polished splendor of their cars and a motorcycle. From left to right are Chief Carl Massa, William; Fischer who later became chief, Lawrence Bonnell Sr., Thomas Woods Jr. and Frank Caruso. The^se photos were loanedby Arthur San Gluliano to the Cranford Historical Society. Sgt. Lawrence Bonnell Sr., Lt. William ^Fischer, Commissioner^^ Edward Wolfe; ChiaTCarl Massa, Sgt. Edward AAetzger and Sgt. George Rosendale. Edward Lee,, Anton Kovacs, Frank Carusco, John McCaffrey and William Gassmann are in the second row. tn the third row are George Ward, Harry Craig, Thomas . Woods Jr., Edward Galvin, Harry Page, Archie Bird and Peter Miller. A number, of these men have descendents now serving on Cranford's force. floor area coverage, parking, open space ratioand screening. According to Moskowitz, the proposal will limit future enrollment to 2,000 students, Cleveland, Sherman will stay open Cleveland and Sherman Schools got a reprieve last Wednesday night when the William Jennings func- based upon the present ratio of Board of' Education voted tioned, and was called "chief" 143 square feet of building unanimously to keep the.two from 1897 on, but did not receive the official title until 1920 ... a week before he retired. Jennings tenure saw the department get its first motor vehicle, an item of hardware no modern police force could do without. In 1915 the police force got a single Ford used as a patrol car. James Hennessey was chief during the time period be- tween 1920 and 1933, when gang warfare became almost The^ighter side of law and order... 23 Dec. 1883 - Post Office safe is blown up. $23 in stamps, $25 in cash and a registered letter for Mrs. W. Chamberlin are taken. area per student. Although this ratio is favorable in light of state requirements, he said, the college desires a larger area, to student ratio. Admitting that in terms of expansion the proposal does •'cramp" the college, Moskowitz said it will force ingenuity on the college's part > to achieve maximum utility of the site. Echoing the responses of many of those present, Alex Silver man of 2 PrincetonRd. asked-the -board' to stop the growth of the college erturelyT" He claimed it is becoming a "monster," claiming "every time, they put something up they cause trouble." Mayor Jack McVey, cautioning against arbitrary restrictions against the college, said they would not stand up in court. Residents of Colby Lane claimed that the college's facilities cause added run-off problems. McVey, who lives in the area, countered that the particular street is not ef- fected as such. He said the buildings open school year. v for another The board had agreed previously to close the schools and provide portable classrooms, but rescinded that decision when it learned a referendum would be needed, looting that June 25 is the earliest a bond issue could be submitted to voters, board president George Strom said the_mobile classrooms, if approved; probably would hot be ready before mid-October or even December 1. Strom said the school system is not < facing an emergency situation, which would allow the leasing of mobile units without voter approval. According to an estimate from one firm, the portables would cost $95,000 annually for the first three years, withan option to purchase them for $45,000 the fourth year. Not included are architect's -fees, bonding costs and con- tingencies. . Prior to the board's vote on the Sherman and Cleveland issue. Superintendent of Schools Vtncent Sarnowski -read a statement recom- mending that the schools be kept open for another year. He maintained that voters are not ready to approve the funds for portable classrooms, and it is possible that in two years Sherman and Cleveland could be closed without any needfor additional housing. "We are phasing out Cleveland, and Sherman," Sarriowski emphasized. "This point must be clear in the community's mind. It's just a question of a year or two.' v Sarnowski said it would be "an error in educational judgment" to crowd the elementary school children into six buildings at this time. His statement was followed by applause , from the audience. ( Several board members, in voting for keeping Sherman and Cleveland open, said the children of those districts should not be shortchanged by substandard buildings. "\ye should provide the necessary funds to give the children in both schools .a' decent plant," said William Massa. . Harry Baron agreed, adding that itjnayjje necessary to seelCa'fef erendumr ——<=— affirmative votes. Baechtold pointed out that the board's reversal means there will be no savings to the community and no educational benefits. Strom reminded the board it will have to go into surplus for a_ $26,000 "keep alive" program at Cleveland and Sherman, and there are no Meeker Street project, all the land parcels have been pur- chased, which he called' a "major step." - A number of elderly people voiced opposition to the Meeker Street site, one of them referring to it as the "boondocks" of the township, and asserting that senior citizens were not consulted in the tract selection. Committeeman Burton Goodman said many factors, including land availability, neighborhood acceptance and utility provisions entered into the site choice. McVey suggested that the senior citizens ' attend the next meeting of the Cranford Housing Board , which will be announced, and air their complaints and suggestions there. Also during the public portion of the meeting, a number of Cranford Flood Action Committee members complained that they could see no. material progress in efforts to curb the periodic flooding that threatens their riverside properties. Force at the April 16 meeting. 'Committeeman Henry Koehler noted that he had recently talked with Congressman Matthew Rinaldo with regard to the idea of having communities reimbursed for projects they. Undertook at their ownex : pense, but were later found to more legitimately be in the realm of the state of federal governments. In other action the com- mittee: -Approved seven building permits totaling $9,940. -Received bids fdf the 1973 Clean-up Program. -Authorized issuance of taxi drivers' license to John Bennett of Linden. T . -Received a single bid for ' two American-made compact cars. ' .' not -Authorized the leasing of Patrick J. Grail and J. Walter Cof^| Little League- fields to the^R-anford Boys Baseball League for five years. -Passed aresolution calling on the board of freeholders to: remove the Public Service Dam. This had already been. votedv'.but the. county had asked the inclusion of a legal phrase absolving the county from responsibility for. damages incurred in the dam's removal. All votes were unanimous. Koehler noted that pool memberships are . still • available, andFlinn revealed that summer P i s are open in the Public Works Department for young Tnen, aod ''maybe a fewf Newarkjawcese to award Haney Matthew Haney, chief of police of Cranford, will receive the 1973 Archbishop Thomas A. Bolahd Award May 31 at a ^dinner i|i' the Robert TreaVHotel, Newark. Haneyjreeently led a county- wide raid on. stores selling pornographic material to minors. Committeeman Clare Flinn /llaney, whose background chdiocese and the Catholic War Veterans of New Jersey who are fighting to keep ob- scene material away from youth. Haney is also a member of the New Jersey State Police Chiefs Association, the In- ternational Association of Chiefs of Police, a life member of the New Jersey noted that the panel had just includes police education at State PBA, a past president of funds in the budget for any authorized the purchase of two/five, universities as well as the Cranford lions Club, a Mrs. Arleen Walsh suggested that money could be saved through some con- solidation and redistricting. Strom and Robert Baechtold voiced the strongest reser- vations about keeping the schools open, despite their Minibikers roar—in safety major renovation work. He added that the system will be operating with 80,000 square feet of excess space. ^Strom said it would cost ^bout $2 million dollars to bring Sherman and Cleveland -Jup4a4h4*etandarduof Lincoln and Roosevelt Schools for a 25- year period. A five-year renovation! plan, based on estimates of a year ago, would cost $519,730 at Sherman and $408,700 at Cleveland, not including architect's fees or bonding costs. The board received both applause and criticism for its action from residents who attended the meeting. 12-inch pumps, trailers to transport them, and passed a resolution in the correct legal terminology calling . on the Union County *6Uoard 1'of Freeholders to remove the Public Service riam from the river, which he called totally "ineffectual." Other FACmembers urged the officials to set a clear policy on when the flood gates would and would not be opened, and some called for more repair to dikes along the river. In a brief flash of.partisan humor, Goodman quipped that he had inadvertently written down "Watergate" instead of "flood gate" in his notes. He is 11 June 1897 - Constable John Schindler Jr. arrests a drunk and puts him in thtj-"ducklng township will work with the stool." " college to provide some form of water retention. . Frank Mettleberger, also of Princeton Koad suggested that attention be paid to height requirements which allow such things as air conditioning units to be erected! Also he suggested it he clear that If the college buys land in Westfield, that it should build there. 0 Sept. 1897 - Constable Schindler has his house and goods threatened by the sheriff over a $180 injury claimed by Mr. Dltzel when Schindler served a wurrant for Dltzel's arrest. 15 Jun«; luot^-- Humor has it that Patrolman William Jeiuiings punched Patrolman Otto Ik'lmert In the eye outside the Crunl'oid Opera House. At thu-^eoiiclUalon of the hearing, Moskowitz requested comments in writing .'from residents. 'l'lif (Vunford.Jaycees will hold their annual Junior Champ l'"ishing lierby for live to l;t year-oMs this .Saturday, (rum H a.m. until noon. YounRjingU'r-s will try to hook ^(.tlt trout j^rliidi will b»i swimming in (lit; Union College luke, courtesy of the Jaycees. Prizes will be (jiven for the largest trout, the most trout <-ailj;ht, and the smallest lisli of any kind caught. Capt. N.R. Fiske Post 335, V.F.W. joined forces with the Cranford Police Department and the Kawasaki Company to initiate u minibike safety program and competition at the'J.B, Williams Co. parking lot Sundaty afternoon. The primary purpose of the program was explained by Commander Michael Faver of the local V.F. W. post. "With the ever-increasing number of youngsters enjoying the spoM of minibiklng, it is imperative that a program such as this be initiatud to promote safety and proper road procedure. When we speak of road procedure" the comnilmder continued, "we do not mean public streets. But there are many niiniblke trails and roadways:" Sunday's kickoff drew about 50 young people. A regular course u'uu , % ;ct up- by the public- works department throut'.li use of rubber tratfic cones. Before u ijdei was permitted tin tilt* V'tit'rse, hltf bike- hud to be thoroughly Inspected, and his ability to handle the bike tested. Sgt. Donald Curry and Patrolman Leonard Miller supervised the track while Faver and Senior Vice Commander Charles Paez. checked the bikes. Faver is the owner of Mike Favor's Shell Station on South Avenue. A representative of the Kawasaki Company checked the riding ability of each youngster and also gave lessons to beginners. The program will continue through the summer with events taking place every two weeks. Hitlers may earn points in these events and trophjes will be awarded the high point-getter at the end of the season. . rt. Patrolman Miller, who has been associated with youth activities in Cranford for many years, stressed that although the program was designed for the enjoyment of riding, its primary purpose was to teach safety. "Riding a minibike does not have tobe dangerous" Miller said, "so long as the rRlers know the safe wuy to use tin's Knowledge." special training by the New Jersey State Police and the F.B.I., will be cited for his work in promoting moral welfare and improving the communications media in. New-Jersey. President of the Union County Association of Chiefs of Police, Haney is one of six recipients singled out this year by the communications office of the Newark Ar- chdiocese for making out- standing contributions toward maintaining a high code of community ethics. The Archbishop Thomas A. Boland Award is sponsored jointly by the Newark Ar- past director of the Jaycees, an advisory member of the Union College Police Science Program, education chairman of the Union County Association of Chiefs of Police, a member of the Knights of Columbus, and St., Michael's Holy Name Society, Plant sale The Brookside Place School PTA will hold its Mother's Day plant sale Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Brookside Place SchooKMany varieties of spring plants will be sold. Mrs. Mario Lombardo, first vice-president, is in charge of this event. Republican Municipal Chairman John Pfolffer, who is moving to Georgia, will be honored at a testimonial dinner. Details; on Page 2. I or "iin- : hlutorkji -,c(liimpuc at trw Garwood Police Department, sec Page 11. Church .. ...... Claimed .... Editorial Tood and Fun . Gardening . . . . ..a. 15 4 , . .3 ' Keiiilworth Social : 1.1, . .7, VRQOM FOR IMPROVEMENT --•'Minibike: wail on the startiiuj line of, the Cranford Department's; new track in the uouth J.B. Williams parking.lot. The track, offering a safe place for youth- ful competition, opened last Sunday after ,the vehicles were registered With the police. *-'-• ••:&' '•" r'r •.*'i

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Page 1: DigiFind-It · , •. • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;.-,4

, • . • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;<*•'• *****£^^

Tiir

• • • • - • • • • : . • , : - y . , . > ! ; : > . . . . " . ' > . - , 4 . ' . . ' . - . . • ' . • . • ' . ' - . - , . :

: . : • • : • . « • • • • ' > • • • • • , • / . : . • . • v y , . . • - • ^ • - • • 7 ; : . • • ' • • • •.'

®m&m.WCBANFC*U)(NJ.)CmZE^AhroCHRONia£ Thursday,

uisine Served

V,

^ t h t l * school.spcfa as raousta;....

Itsto, at weU «s chef, JaQo molds and various

.osssera wen servea to meschool staff, teacher*, studentteachers, PTA board mem-ben and invited guests.

Invited guests includedSuperintendent of SchoolsVincent Sarnowski and Bin.Sarnowski; Miss BeatriceWarner^ special services;

Mrs. alaricaiallis, director ofi l and ' "

Anffibny~Ternglrio, assistantsuperintendent of schools;Mrs. Ruth Jaoovsik, directorof personnel; Miss JeaneDevlin, school psychologist;

Mrs. Bridget DePinto, familyliving instructor; Mrs. DianeTaylor, social worker; andRobert Ray, learningdisability teacher consultant

Mrs. Norman Wiener andMrs. Uam Ryan werechairmen of the luncheon.

BRAND NEW

TRIUMPH TR 4 SPITFIRE MARK IV

NOW IH STOCKIMMEDIATE DELIVERY

The 4-H Programs of VnlonCounty will sponsor a

«Bon "Danc^Wfcon^on"Saturday, May s at theCranford Community Center.

To be eligible for. the cashprixes, an dancers must ap-pear at the Community Centerbefore noon on Mays, Dancersmust also be sponsored, withthe sponsors agreeing to pay25 cents or more for each hourthe dancer participates.

In case of a tie for the prizesof $25, u s and 910, the dancerwho has the highest total ofsponsor pledges will win. Foodand 10 minute rests every two-hour period will be providedfor all sponsored dancers.

All proceeds will be used toSend youngsters to 4-H Campand provide assistance to the4-H Opportunity Center. ,

industries in the New York-New

4-H Dance Marathon

[•TUNE-UP BONANZAPotato. Muss,CondtnMr,

A d h S

Mo*tcant...6Ori.

•13.95(6-cylinder; $15.9S)

SO. ELMORAEXXON S E R V I C E N T E R

Sou* Ehnon A M . . Cor. Eric* AM.Bet«e«nStGeor|eAve ~Cw* Et 3-9244

Wort done (ihdudint Sundays)IB 3 P.M. C«a for AppoiQtmMtS-

alao at the 441North Avenuefield.-:- -:••••"•*:..••

The public is invited towatch and dance for> an en-trance fee ot.$l,.;--^'•:•-.-•: ••••'•

For further information;contact W. RomandoJames,Union County 4-H Agent, at2 3 3 4 3 6 6 . > ••'.•" > • • • • W - . • : ' . ; . ; • .

The schedule for dancemusic is as follows: noon to %p.m. 4-H disc jockey show withtapes; 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. "BlackEssence" combo; 6 pjn. to 7;p.m. 4jH disc jockey show; 7p.m. b>9p.m. "Sweet Essenceof Soul" and 9 p.m.,to. Uf p.m."Hotfce.'V

Film Presentedon Fire Safety

Captain Leonard Dolan oftheCranford Fire Departmentspoke to home economicsstudents April 17 at HillsideAvenue Junior High School.

He presented a film onbabysitting and fire Safety.' He said the-four most im-portant rules for a 'babysitterare: know escape routes andprocedures for getting peopleout of a building in case of fire,keep bedroom doors closed,stay awake and know how tocall the fire department. .

W^''tiS^^»^to talkabout their occupattons to thechildren InUeberman's Grade 4 inRoosevelt SfhooJ. Thechildren have been involved ina aodal science study ofhuman resources .• ;

On April 9, Linda's father.Dr. Dennis Palumbo, a collegeprofessor who teachesPolitical Science at New YorkCity University and' is theauthor of several books, cameto discuss what an author doeswhen he writes a book..Hegave "the children an un-derstanding of the work in-volved when he completed histalk With, "Writing atook is 10per cent inspiration and 90 percentwork!'^ '

Megyn's dad, Dr. WatUnsJohn, who practices medicinein Cranford, came to talk tothe group on April 12. Thechildren listened to himdiscuss his training, work,responsibilities and com-munity involvement. Theywere fascinated when heopened his black doctor's bagand explained as well asdescribed each item.

Beth's father, Burns, thetownship' engineer for ScotchPlains, visited the class onApril 17.-

InterestDay of Deposit

to Day ofWithdrawal

Continuous Compounding

ANNUM

REGULARPASSBOOKACCOUNT

New. and present depositors are invited totransfer to continuous compounding. Simplybring in your passbook, — Land keep $25 or'more on deposit to the end of the quarter.

6* 5fTIME SAVINGS ACCOUNT

* Annual rate from day of depositguaranteed (or two years

minimum $3,000

TIME SAVINGS ACCOUNTAnrtud] rale from day of deposit

guaranteed for one yearminimum $2,000

JIME SAVINGS ACCOUNTAnnual, rate from day of deposit

(jufffffnteod for eta months' minimum 41,000

MONTHLY 10 DAY GRACE ACCOUNTRegular paiabook. compounded quarterly,.deposits made by the lOtn of each month

eam from the 1« - - •,- ~:»

ion. ©cecm and QomoMd

a dinner on Sunday sponsored by the;1M<$i^it m Union Cwmty

Robert J, French of i Cuxopings St'and Walter Orleanskiof32 Concord St received the New Jersey Cdmmlstiooer ofLaborawlliidustry Award of Distinguished Achievementlast Thursday at the Union County Safety Council's annualawards dinner at the Starlight Lounge, linden. The tworesidents, who are union safety representatives, work for

hert she ii a freshman.ELLEN R. DAHLQU18T,

daughter of Rev> and Mrs.AmoldDahJqulBtofll3AldenSt., w u recently inducted intoPi ChairteV of Phi Beta Kappaat Muhlenberg CollegerAllentown,

MACKEN-ZIE of 12 SaniosetRd. is on thehonor roll for the winter termat East Carolina University,;Greenville,. N.C.

J E JOHNSON <AlMJBsso Research and Engineering Co., Linden. To oualifv for Glenwood Rd. has been in- hrajor, is thethe award, each of l § r l a & o r l e s ic«Sum^Sd»S;o5 ducted '— • " - • . . . , — * . . S - A m , ^ _hoursof disabling tajur^free operaUon. French has 20 yearsof serviceand Orleanski has beenWth Esso 22 years.

Mary Feldbauer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs..GeorgeFeldbauer of 27 Hamilton Ave., has-been nominated for anEmmy Award in the best program-classical music categoryfor "Berstein in London," a special which she produced forNational Educational Television in 1973. The Emmy Awardspresentation will be held May 20 in Los Angeles.

Miss Feldbaoer resides in New York City, where she doesfree lance film production. She has just returned front IMAngeles, where she was assistant,producer for an in-dependently produced feature film.

Two Cranford residents, Mrs. Harlan Martin and Mrs.Irwin Kaplan, will be installed as vice-president andcorresponding secretary, respectively, of the Guild forJewish Children. The installation will take place during theyguild's 28th annual donor luncheon May 15 at the CrestmootCounty Club, West Orange. /.»_•

Walter R. CalhoUn of 4 Fifth Ave., executive representativefor the Canteen Corporation, Nutley, is assisting in amembership drive for the Greater Newark Chamber ofCommerce. Calhoun attended City College of New York andserved with the Marine Corps. He and his wifi< Anne, are theparents of four children.

Bike Riders BenefitGroup for Retarded

fraternity, and other campusgroups.

Iversen, Miss Iversen andJohnson were among morethan 200 persons who par-ticipated in the bik-a-thon.

For Iversen, this was Justanother biking day. He ridesnearly every morning -weather permitting. -*

Students AssistEagle Prograiri

Danny Karalis, MichelleAker, Barbara Moran andSuellen Daly from MissDorothy Sauer's seventhgrade class at St: Michael'sSchool participated in a "Savethe American Eagle"program. J

The students brought foodwrappers to. school and sentthem to California.' Ap-proximately 80 square feet ofland In the west was saved forthe eagle.

The children received aposter and a sticker of theAmerican eagle. Their namesappear on a stone in the parkwhere the preserve is located.

into Alpha LamdaDelta, national academichonor society for freshmanwomen at the University ofConnecticut, Stars, Conn.'

Four local studentsjunior Olympic medalsrecent synchronisedming event at St.College, Convent/Station.MARlfc MCGUJtk, Of 9Doering Way

miG

There was no winner in thbik-a-thon competition29 between Dr. KennelIversen, president of jtfnionCollege, and Michael

of Plainfield, president of theStudent GovernmentAssociation of Uiiion College,except the Union CountyChapter of/the NationalAssociation for RetardedChildren.

's daughter,the 25-mUeresult, thev e r n m e n t

sponsoredboard of

College,

Both/lversen and Johnson,as wiCartCQOrse. As ...

udent' Gsociation, wl

Iversen, and t!trustees of Uiwhich sponsored Johnson, wilicontribute $100 each for thebenefit of the NationalAssociation for RetardedChildren. Iversen sponsoredhis daughter.

By completing the 2Srmilecourse through CJark, Rah-way, Winfield, Linden andRoselle, Johnson actuallyearned $J46 for the associationfrom all his sponsors, in-cluding the board of trustees,Alpha Sigma Mu, veterans'

JHUlside Avenue JuniorSchool instrumental

music concert will be heldThursday evening,' May 17 inthe school auditorium underthe direction of Dennis Con-nelly, instrumental musicteacher.

The program will bepresented by the concert bandconsisting of 75 musiciansfrom grades seven through 10,60 musicians who make up theseventh and eighth gradeband, flute ensemble, clarinetensemble and the brass ensemble.

Some of the highlights of theprogram are the "EgmontOverture" by Beethoven;"TaranteUe" featuring MikeBanks; baritone horn solo;"Bandology," concert march;"Die Meistersinger," ex-cerpts from the opera 'byRichard Wagner; "DixielandFestival," a tribute to LouisArmstrong, featuring adixieland band; highlightsfrom "West Side Story;" "GetTogether - Light My Fire,"which features a rock soundadapted for concert band.

The seventh and eighthgrade band will play "Talk tothe Animals,1' "The BandSong," which features thevarious instruments of • the'band; "The SyncopatedClock" which is one of LeroyAnderson's most famouscompositions; and "YankeeDoodle Boy," from themusical by George M. Cohan.

• InRICHARD KRt

of Mr. andTurs.IWegerofl^Wdiha«be« e l e tthe CardinalMuhlenborgt ; : E i | :

MICHAEL JON GROSS, a1969 graduate of CranfoHigh School, is one of Mstudents newly sleetedTrinity CollegeChapter of Phi BGross, a senior >" " " " A Mr.Mrs. Willlarn.M. Gross of 3Maryland St/He will be in-sUUed into the 128-year-oWTrinity Phi Beta Kappa

May 8-Gross is aWatsort Fellowship

recipient, and plans to. use $ efellowship for researcii on anovel about a'draft reslster.He expects to, go to Toronto,London and Stockholm, tostudy the communities ofAmerican exiles.

ServicemanFirst Lieutenant WALTER

V. GILLES was named toparticipate in the StrategicAir Command missile cdmbatcompetition at VandenbergAFB, California April 26through May 4. ,

His wife, Miriam, is thedaughter of Mr. and Mrs.Joseph Petrik of 11 BurchfleldAve. V

HappeningsBy TOM W7

What Is eminent domain? Eminentdomain may be defined as triepower of the state to take privateproperty for public use accordingto a national authority on realestate. Both federal and stategovernments,' however, mustprovide compensation for theproperty. Eminent domain doesnot mean confiscation of land butentitles the owner to just paymentfor it. This is only to be used whensome needed property isnecessary for some public good.

It's much easier to self yourproperty through a real estateagent than by yourself. The staff atWADE ASSOCIATES REALTORS,23 North Ave.. 276-1D33 has hadmany years ol experience and willget you the results you wantOpen: 9 a.m. - S p.m. Mon. thruSat., 1 p.m. - 5 p.m. Sundays.

HELPFUL HINT: Usually the ownerof property receives market valuefor property received undereminent domain..

WADE ASSOCIATEREALTORS

ts other

Sapolin LATEXOUTSIDE WHITE

221*65 MS?

5YEARDURABIUTYGUARANTEE*

Ci»en iclldly, l i i l « J tiiyl Sojp wd wit« clejnuplPalul »ir> Ln djuip wejthtr—mlitl bllsllliof Jndtiielinjl Uliei lit Vj haul... buf Ima aid ilusl fuelE«cell«ol color ultnllon-ieiijli bnsishtly chiUtlaflSjpalin'l tested 2 cojl lyslem itililt "ctJuhled"and other Umigbtly 11)! iljminj on Vmod lliintlu!

"All purpose econom-ical paint for fences,sheds, etc.

Reg. List $6.95GAL.

H03on 9 AJ\JL to 6 fOll Clczud VVcdnaldays

Union Avo. > 276-2S40 -

OUR OWN

DIRECT IMPORT

1971 VINTAGE

BEAUJOLAISiVILLAGES

$959

Not just an m-dinary Beaujolais but

an Estate Bottled wine of a higher

class and priced lower than others.

An exceptional value in a rising

wine market.

AVAHAWAr

DIAL

KUWKY1

| H £ t PARKING IN HtAH

Ueo Hoar hitrincn

30 EASTMAN ST. (Op { ) . Cr^.Word TfiooJ.ru)

S«|^i t^ | iO|^i i^^'•' ! - * y > , ~ • ' . . ; • •-• ' . - . . • - • . ' , . , ' • . ; * , - « • . • . • ' : . - . ' , \ • ' • " , . - ' . , • ' ' " L * • - ' • • ; - . . ' • • 1 - : - 1 . • • • ' ' • • • - ; • . . • • • . , . - ' ' ( . • • ; * , v - p ^ '- ' • • ' ' • ' . - . , • • { } • - . x f " <'• ' • " ' ' ' • * ' } • • • , •'. ' l ' • <•'. • • ' : • • " . • " • - • ' • • > • • • ' . • •• " \ : ' < ' - " , ' : - ^ .•:••,-, • ' ' ' • • '<•• \ V 1 ' " ' ' ' ' % • * ' •••'•'•• l ' . ' - i i ' . • • ' " " . ; i " ' • ; • • , • ' • ' * - '

VOL} 8 0 1JO>19 • ^ - • • • ^ • ' ' • • ; ' ' ; > , : - ; . : ; • : ; ^ ' ' £ ' ^ \ - - i i V $ ^ ^ :%:-

\>

Second Class Postage Paid Cranford, N. J. 07016 15 CENTS

• ' . ' ' : • & ' • • •

contrasts past

"r.'d

B y R o b e r t O l m a ' ..'' " ' V : ; " >,;" V v ; - . .'• • ':•; • • ; : i ^ ' -

There are so many things u> an American way of life,contemporary life that have so Carangelo Massa leadlong been a part of our lives "" 'that, most of us assume theyhave always been around. Oneof them is the police.

National Police Week, May13 to 18, calls attention to thefact that the police have notalways beenjuround for peopleto depend on, even in usuallytranquil Cranford, Garwoodand Kenilworth. ' ^ , .

In colonial days the agentsof the proprietors were theagents of the law, and moreoften than not they were moreinterested in protecting theinterests of their employersthan they were in seeing thatjustice was served, •<

Mutilation was a commonpunishment both before andafter the Revolution, andcriminal records from theperiod are replete with casesof ears being cut off andalleged thieves being brandedon the hands and forehead.

-: Hanging was the penalty fora wide variety of crimes.

James Morgan, suspected ofbeing a Loyalist agent, wastried and found guilty of

. killing Parson Caldweu, a, chaplain in Washington's

army in 1781. He f gaveCranford's Gallows Hill Roadits ominous name.

In the Revolutionary periodsuspected political sym-pathies were often used by

force from 1933 to 1944, andWilliam Fischer was incommand from, 1944 to 1995.Lester PowelT was CranfordpoUce chief from 1965 to 1967,when Matthew Haney tookover the position, .

Times have changed, thepolice have changed, but theneed, for a professionallytrained force remains aconstant need of civilizedsociety,. ..

scoredMore than 50 homeowners

attending an open hearing onthe proposed college tone lastWednesday night voiceddisapproval of .futuredevelopment plans by UnionCollege.

A majority of those presentexpressed fears" that thecollege can do "whatever itwants."

Explaining the proposedcollege • zone ordinance,township planning consultantHarvey Moskowitz of

seniorIn an otherwise uneventful

township committee meeting,Cranford officlals heard a longstream of flood victims, senior

. citizens and softie merchantscomplain about what " theylabeled the governing body'sinaction on such perennial

Sroblems as the Rahwayiver spilling over its banks,

the lack of housing for theelderly and the parkingsituation.

Mrs. Charlotte LeDuc of 110

-Awarded contracts for the-purchase of flood pumps andtrailers totaling over. $30,000.

-Approved a bingo licensefor St. Michael rs Roman

p yneighboring rivals to despoil Livingston said the townshipeach other's land, and even to desires to regulate develop-

;e yet allow iteducational

kill, and there was no policeforce to halt the generalbrigandage... .

With the return of peaceafter the Revolution, and nowar activity in the area duringthe pointless War of 1812,sleepy rural communities likewhat was to become Cranford

itsmentoftheto pursuegoals. /

John Vasallo, planningboard chairman, claimed suchcontrol is rare, He continuedsaying the township is lookingto provide guidelines forfuture development while

been done to providefor senior citizensyih thetownship. She also^noted thatother municipalities offersenior citizens such con-

STANDING ON THE siderationv&s minibus trans-STEPS of Cleveland School portatioX retail discounts andabout 40 years ago are the freejarking while Cranfordproud merpbers of d ^ not.Cranford's law-and-ofder;/contingent. In the froof Mayor Jack McVey notedrow from left to right^re »h« while jhere are as yet no

completed plans for the

Hillcrest Ave., president of theCranford Senior Citizens Club; _noted that extensive work has the/ experimental Park and

-been—done in'the area of Shop system.Community swimming jpools/^ In reference to anti-floodyet "litUe, if anything* bald efforts, Flinn displayed a map

the only Democrat on thecommittee. ;

Alfred Brown of Brown'sVariety Store on N. UnionAvenue suggested a shift inthe distribution of long and Catholic Church, and raffleshort-term parking metert^licensesfer-the church and thebetween the Miln Street arid Jaycees. '••,-High Street parking idtSBUght -Adopted a capital planningimprove the parking situation, budget McVey and GoodmanHe said he was not~a "rabble noted that it is only an "outlinerouser" and thavhis interests of needs" without regard towere not selfjsti, as "has been resources and does net meansuggestediirSome quarters." the committee, intends-, to• Sevecal other merchants actually spend the amountsagaiamired their opposition to mentioned in tfie budget.

' -Appointed Donald Fourreto the. Parking Committee.

-Adopted on first readingthe police and fire salary

illustrated with ~ photographs ordinances covering policeshowing the work priorities of and fire chiefs and captains.the"program, as he bad been, Goodman noted- thatpressed to by a representative negotiations ~ with theof the Mayor'8 .Flood Task uniformed men are continuing

and the-ordinance doescover their salary scale.

Kenilworth and Garwoftd retaining ^maximumdepended on county law eh- protection" for residents.

- - - The proposed ordinance setsrequirements for buildingheight, setback,ratio, building

localforcement officers andvigilante committees.' The Cranford ThiefDetecting Society functionedfrom 1869 to 1889, and had itscharter renewed in 1890 andwas finally disbanded in 1897when the paid Cranford PoliceDepartment was founded.

THE BOYS IN BLUE In this early 1930s picture of the Cranford Police forcedisplay the well-polished splendor of their cars and a motorcycle. From left toright are Chief Carl Massa, William; Fischer who later became chief, LawrenceBonnell Sr., Thomas Woods Jr. and Frank Caruso. The se photos were loaned byArthur San Gluliano to the Cranford Historical Society.

Sgt. Lawrence Bonnell Sr.,Lt. William ^Fischer,Commissioner^^ EdwardWolfe; ChiaTCarl Massa,Sgt. Edward AAetzger andSgt. George Rosendale.Edward Lee,, AntonKovacs, Frank Carusco,John McCaffrey andWilliam Gassmann are inthe second row. tn the thirdrow are George Ward,Harry Craig, Thomas

. Woods Jr., Edward Galvin,Harry Page, Archie Birdand Peter Miller. Anumber, of these men havedescendents now servingon Cranford's force.

floor areacoverage,

parking, open space ratio andscreening.

According to Moskowitz, theproposal will limit futureenrollment to 2,000 students,

Cleveland, Sherman will stay openCleveland and Sherman

Schools got a reprieve lastWednesday night when the

William Jennings func- based upon the present ratio of Board of' Education votedtioned, and was called "chief" 143 square feet of building unanimously to keep the.twofrom 1897 on, but did notreceive the official title until1920 ... a week before heretired.

Jennings tenure saw thedepartment get its first motorvehicle, an item of hardwareno modern police force coulddo without. In 1915 the policeforce got a single Ford used asa patrol car.

James Hennessey was chiefduring the time period be-tween 1920 and 1933, whengang warfare became almost

The^ighterside of lawand order...23 Dec. 1883 - Post Office safeis blown up. $23 in stamps, $25in cash and a registered letterfor Mrs. W. Chamberlin aretaken.

area per student. Althoughthis ratio is favorable in lightof state requirements, he said,the college desires a largerarea, to student ratio.

Admitting that in terms ofexpansion the proposal does•'cramp" the college,Moskowitz said it will forceingenuity on the college's part >to achieve maximum utility ofthe site.

Echoing the responses ofmany of those present, AlexSilver man of 2 Princeton Rd.asked-the -board' to stop thegrowth of the college erturelyT"He claimed it is becoming a"monster," claiming "everytime, they put something upthey cause trouble."

Mayor Jack McVey,cautioning against arbitraryrestrictions against thecollege, said they would notstand up in court.

Residents of Colby Laneclaimed that the college'sfacilities cause added run-offproblems. McVey, who lives inthe area, countered that theparticular street is not ef-fected as such. He said the

buildings openschool year. v

for another

The board had agreedpreviously to close the schoolsand provide portableclassrooms, but rescindedthat decision when it learned areferendum would be needed,looting that June 25 is theearliest a bond issue could besubmitted to voters, boardpresident George Strom saidthe_mobile classrooms, ifapproved; probably would hotbe ready before mid-Octoberor even December 1.

Strom said the schoolsystem is not < facing anemergency situation, whichwould allow the leasing ofmobile units without voterapproval.

According to an estimatefrom one firm, the portables

would cost $95,000 annually forthe first three years, with anoption to purchase them for$45,000 the fourth year. Notincluded are architect's -fees,bonding costs and con-tingencies. .

Prior to the board's vote onthe Sherman and Clevelandissue. Superintendent ofSchools Vtncent Sarnowski-read a statement recom-mending that the schools bekept open for another year. Hemaintained that voters are notready to approve the funds forportable classrooms, and it ispossible that in two yearsSherman and Cleveland couldbe closed without any need foradditional housing.

"We are phasing outCleveland, and Sherman,"Sarriowski emphasized. "Thispoint must be clear in thecommunity's mind. It's just a

„ question of a year or two.'v

Sarnowski said it would be"an error in educational

judgment" to crowd theelementary school childreninto six buildings at this time.

His statement was followedby applause , from theaudience. (

Several board members, invoting for keeping Shermanand Cleveland open, said thechildren of those districtsshould not be shortchanged bysubstandard buildings.

"\ye should provide thenecessary funds to give thechildren in both schools .a'decent plant," said WilliamMassa. .

Harry Baron agreed, addingthat itjnayjje necessary to

• • seelCa'fef erendumr ——<=—

affirmative votes.Baechtold pointed out that

the board's reversal meansthere will be no savings to thecommunity and noeducational benefits.

Strom reminded the board itwill have to go into surplus fora_ $26,000 "keep alive"program at Cleveland andSherman, and there are no

Meeker Street project, all theland parcels have been pur-chased, which he called' a"major step."- A number of elderly peoplevoiced opposition to theMeeker Street site, one ofthem referring to it as the"boondocks" of the township,and asserting that seniorcitizens were not consulted inthe tract selection.

Committeeman BurtonGoodman said many factors,including land availability,neighborhood acceptance andutility provisions entered intothe site choice. McVeysuggested that the seniorcitizens ' attend the nextmeeting of the CranfordHousing Board , which will beannounced, and air theircomplaints and suggestionsthere.

Also during the publicportion of the meeting, anumber of Cranford FloodAction Committee memberscomplained that they couldsee no. material progress inefforts to curb the periodicflooding that threatens theirriverside properties.

Force at the April 16 meeting.'Committeeman Henry

Koehler noted that he hadrecently talked withCongressman MatthewRinaldo with regard to theidea of having communitiesreimbursed for projects they.Undertook at their own ex :

pense, but were later found tomore legitimately be in therealm of the state of federalgovernments.

In other action the com-mittee:-Approved seven buildingpermits totaling $9,940.

-Received bids fdf the 1973Clean-up Program.

-Authorized issuance of taxidrivers' license to JohnBennett of Linden.

T. -Received a single bid for' two American-made compactcars. ' .'

not

-Authorized the leasing ofPatrick J. Grail and J. WalterCof^| Little League- fields tothe^R-anford Boys BaseballLeague for five years.

-Passed a resolution callingon the board of freeholders to:remove the Public ServiceDam. This had already been.votedv'.but the. county hadasked the inclusion of a legalphrase absolving the countyfrom responsibility for.damages incurred in thedam's removal.

All votes were unanimous.Koehler noted that pool

memberships are . still• available, and Flinn revealedthat summer P i s are open inthe Public Works Departmentfor young Tnen, aod ''maybe afewf

Newarkjawceseto award Haney

Matthew Haney, chief ofpolice of Cranford, willreceive the 1973 ArchbishopThomas A. Bolahd AwardMay 31 at a dinner i|i' theRobert TreaVHotel, Newark.

Haneyjreeently led a county-wide raid on. stores sellingpornographic material tominors.

Committeeman Clare Flinn /llaney, whose background

chdiocese and the CatholicWar Veterans of New Jerseywho are fighting to keep ob-scene material away fromyouth.

Haney is also a member ofthe New Jersey State PoliceChiefs Association, the In-ternational Association ofChiefs of Police, a lifemember of the New Jersey

noted that the panel had just includes police education at State PBA, a past president offunds in the budget for any authorized the purchase of two/five, universities as well as the Cranford lions Club, a

Mrs. Arleen Walshsuggested that money could besaved through some con-solidation and redistricting.

Strom and Robert Baechtoldvoiced the strongest reser-vations about keeping theschools open, despite their

Minibikers roar—in safety

major renovation work. Headded that the system will beoperating with 80,000 squarefeet of excess space.

^Strom said it would cost^bout $2 million dollars tobring Sherman and Cleveland

-Jup4a4h4*etandarduof Lincolnand Roosevelt Schools for a 25-year period. A five-yearrenovation! plan, based onestimates of a year ago, wouldcost $519,730 at Sherman and$408,700 at Cleveland, notincluding architect's fees orbonding costs.

The board received bothapplause and criticism for itsaction from residents whoattended the meeting.

12-inch pumps, trailers totransport them, and passed aresolution in the correct legalterminology calling . on theUnion County *6Uoard 1'ofFreeholders to remove thePublic Service riam from theriver, which he called totally"ineffectual."

Other FAC members urgedthe officials to set a clearpolicy on when the flood gateswould and would not beopened, and some called formore repair to dikes along theriver.

In a brief flash of.partisanhumor, Goodman quipped thathe had inadvertently writtendown "Watergate" instead of"flood gate" in his notes. He is

11 June 1897 - Constable JohnSchindler Jr. arrests a drunkand puts him in thtj-"ducklng township will work with thestool." " college to provide some form

of water retention.. Frank Mettleberger, also of

Princeton Koad suggestedthat attention be paid to heightrequirements which allowsuch things as air conditioningunits to be erected! Also hesuggested it he clear that If thecollege buys land in Westfield,that it should build there.

0 Sept. 1897 - ConstableSchindler has his house andgoods threatened by thesheriff over a $180 injuryclaimed by Mr. Dltzel whenSchindler served a wurrantfor Dltzel's arrest.

15 Jun«; luot^-- Humor has itthat Patrolman WilliamJeiuiings punched PatrolmanOtto Ik'lmert In the eye outsidethe Crunl'oid Opera House.

At thu-^eoiiclUalon of thehearing, Moskowitz requestedcomments in writing .'fromresidents.

'l'lif (Vunford.Jaycees will hold their annual JuniorChamp l'"ishing lierby for live to l;t year-oMs this.Saturday, (rum H a.m. until noon.

YounRjingU'r-s will try to hook (.tlt trout j^rliidi will b»iswimming in (lit; Union College luke, courtesy of theJaycees.

Prizes will be (jiven for the largest trout, the mosttrout <-ailj;ht, and the smallest lisli of any kind caught.

Capt. N.R. Fiske Post 335,V.F.W. joined forces with theCranford Police Departmentand the Kawasaki Companyto initiate u minibike safetyprogram and competition atthe'J.B, Williams Co. parkinglot Sundaty afternoon.

The primary purpose of theprogram was explained byCommander Michael Faver ofthe local V.F. W. post. "Withthe ever-increasing number ofyoungsters enjoying the spoMof minibiklng, it is imperativethat a program such as this beinitiatud to promote safetyand proper road procedure.When we speak of roadprocedure" the comnilmdercontinued, "we do not meanpublic streets. But there aremany niiniblke trails androadways:"

Sunday's kickoff drew about50 young people. A regularcourse u'uu ,%;ct up- by thepublic- works departmentthrout'.li use of rubber tratficcones. Before u ijdei waspermitted tin tilt* V'tit'rse, hltfbike- hud to be thoroughlyInspected, and his ability tohandle the bike tested.

Sgt. Donald Curry and

Patrolman Leonard Millersupervised the track whileFaver and Senior ViceCommander Charles Paez.checked the bikes.

Faver is the owner of MikeFavor's Shell Station on SouthAvenue. A representative ofthe Kawasaki Companychecked the riding ability ofeach youngster and also gavelessons to beginners.

The program will continuethrough the summer withevents taking place every twoweeks. Hitlers may earnpoints in these events and

trophjes will be awarded thehigh point-getter at the end ofthe season. .rt. Patrolman Miller, who hasbeen associated with youthactivities in Cranford formany years, stressed thatalthough the program wasdesigned for the enjoyment ofriding, its primary purposewas to teach safety.

"Riding a minibike does nothave to be dangerous" Millersaid, "so long as the rRlersknow the safe wuy to use tin'sKnowledge."

special training by the NewJersey State Police and theF.B.I., will be cited for hiswork in promoting moralwelfare and improving thecommunications media in.New-Jersey.

President of the UnionCounty Association of Chiefsof Police, Haney is one of sixrecipients singled out thisyear by the communicationsoffice of the Newark Ar-chdiocese for making out-standing contributions towardmaintaining a high code ofcommunity ethics.

The Archbishop Thomas A.Boland Award is sponsoredjointly by the Newark Ar-

past director of the Jaycees,an advisory member of theUnion College Police ScienceProgram, education chairmanof the Union CountyAssociation of Chiefs ofPolice, a member of theKnights of Columbus, and St.,Michael's Holy Name Society,

Plant saleThe Brookside Place School

PTA will hold its Mother'sDay plant sale Friday from 9a.m. to 4 p.m. at BrooksidePlace SchooKMany varietiesof spring plants will be sold.Mrs. Mario Lombardo, firstvice-president, is in charge ofthis event. •

Republican Municipal Chairman JohnPfolffer, who is moving to Georgia, willbe honored at a testimonial dinner.Details; on Page 2.

• I or "iin-: hlutorkji -,c(liimpuc at trwGarwood Police Department, sec Page11.

Church .. . . . . . .C l a i m e d . . . .EditorialTood and Fun .Gardening . . . .

..a.15• 4 ,

. .3 '

KeiiilworthSocial

: 1.1,

. . 7 ,VRQOM FOR IMPROVEMENT --•'Minibike:wail on the startiiuj line of, the CranfordDepartment's; new track in the uouth J.B. Williams

parking.lot. The track, offering a safe place for youth-ful competition, opened last Sunday after ,thevehicles were registered With the police. *-'-•

••:&'

'•" r'r •.*'i

Page 2: DigiFind-It · , •. • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;.-,4

". -'*>. ,,

wmsmm'M\--,, , " \ " • • • ' . ' ' • • • : • . " • ' • . • • • • • . • ' . • " • • / • •

• . .• • . ; • ' : ; . • ; • / • : , - • : . " ' •' ' .••' ' • - \ . : • > . • • . • . • - - . v ^ r i ]

CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Thursday, May 10,1973 '

tot^ officers are to be asfollows: president, Mr*. MarioLombardo; first vice'"-—"" i t , ' Mr*. Patrick

Jr.; second viceMrs. Robert

Jr., MrsCharlesJunes

Swatmaa, Mrs. Ralph Taylorn d Philip Osa.Philip Osa.

Jtar tte-1173-74

vicePhilip Cea; recordingsecretary, Mr. RichardHntar; correspondingsecretary;-Mrs. Frank Cautand treasurer, Mrs. Robert

V-

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Member* of the. _.Acres Garden CSiib contiQi

.qprojedembankment of < ClevelandSchool on Tuesday: Ed Deb-mer of Dehnier's Floristdonated two pink hydrangeasto the dub, anoVMr. and Mrs.J. Donald Savercool donated,accefit evergreens.. i

The dub will install newoff teere at its June meeting.Those taking office are:President, Mrs. RudolphDanish; first vice president,Mrs. Ovid Catlin; second vicepresident, Mrs." Elmer Wolf;recording'secretary, Mrs.Martin Norr; correspondingsecretary, Mrs. Carl

TestimonialSaturday nightfor Pfeiffer

John Pfeiffer, CranfordRepublican municipalchairman, will be honored at atestimonial dinner Saturdayat Marisa's Restaurant,

Republican Citizens'Committee chairman, Ted'Bothman, has announced thatRidtafd Sdnel, former UnionCounty Republican diainnan,will save as toastmaster.Guest Speaker for the eveningwill be Assemblyman Mat-thew Rinaldo.

Pfeiffer, his wife Marilyn,and their two daughters,Linda and Stephanie, will bemoving to Atlanta, Ga., inJi

Holmquist,and 'treasurer,MrsiHamryBr *

Savercool home and gardwBooquets will be made for theannual trip to East Orange

talon June 15.L ^ e May meeting took

at the home of Mrs. IWolf. Mrs. Broughton madethe table flower arrangementenUUed "The Merrie Month ofMay," featuring pink axaleas,lilacs and turns from hergarden. Mrs. Frank Wagnerintroduced a guest, Mrs.Anthony Massonl. • • • . ; '

In the swim?Outdoor swimming pools,

operated by The Union CountyPark Commission, at JohnRussell Wheeler Park, Lin-den, and Rahway River Park;Rahway, will open at noon onSaturday, May 36.

Anxi

The State Sodety of theDaughters of the AmericanRevolution has announcedthat Miss Ann 'Darby,daughter of Mr. and Mrs.Arthur Darby of 60S WillowSt., is the redpient of theannual DAR scholarshipawarded by the New JersejState DAR Sodety for 1973.

Miss Darby was sponsoredby Crane's Ford Chapter o:

hat been ringing almost weveping, oooversatiopi inA and P have been productmy._adtei)ringi home the"tatest newt from her tennispartners and even at areception following a^ptanoconcert/.jtt>\ the college theother evening someone added

i t 's A WINNER - Mis* Arlene Hannlgaa Of 12Riverside Or. was $rnong the spectators at % flowershow Tuesday at the Cranford Public Library spon*sored by the Four Seasons Garden Club. The ob|ect of*her interest,Is a bird of paradise plant by HelenRozman, which won a first award. -/ '

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the DAR. Mrs. Robert H.Sutton, good dtiaens chair-man of the chapter; submittedher name to the state societylast January.

MissDaroy was in com-

from every chapter in thestate, and received this honorbecause of her outstandingscholastic record andleadership qualities. She has astraight A record for her fouryears in high school and is amember of the National HonorSodety.

She has been a delegate tothe Girls Citizenship Institute,a representative to the NewJersey State ChemistrySymposium, and.receivedNational Merit Scholarshipcommendation. She also hasheld. various class offices,been a varsity cheerleader,sports editor of the year book,and student councilrepresentative for threeyears. • • " • • ' •

In March Miss Darby ac^companied Mrs. Sutton to theAwards Day ceremonies atTrenton where she received aDAR pin. At this time withother Chapter winners, shetoured the State House andmet the Governor.

Miss Darby plans to attendDouglass College in the fall tomajor hr broadcast jour-nalism.

Ann Darby

CHSPTAnominationsThe nominating committee

of the Cranford High SchoolPTA will present a slate ofnew officers at the May 21meeting.' Officers will beelected, and installed at thattime.

Those nominated are:President, Mrs. C. E. Porter;first vice president, Mrs. JohnEichinger; second vicepresident, Mrs. H. N. Ar-neson; third vice president,Henry Doscher; correspond-ing secretary, Mrs. PaulBauknight; recordingsecretary, Mrs. R. MvChandler, and treasurer; Mrs.Richard Pfaff.

Pupils ^ost top scoresin Latin examination

Students of Latin at Cran-ford High School and OrangeAvenue. Junior High Schoolearned some of the highestscores in the nation on thea u x i l i u m L a t in'umexamination recently.

Medal pins and superlativemerit achievement cer-tificates' were awarded toMark Malzberg. LeslieWinokur, James Kastelman,Charles - Speer and JamesZielenbach.

Robert Bazewicz, MarkBillingtron, David Foppert,James Goodman, DianeKalinowski, KeUy K'Meyer,Malcolm Pringle, WaomiSchneider, Carol Terreginoand Linda Turzynski earnedcertificates'of eminent merit.

Certificates of superiormerit were earned by JohnBender, William Campbell,Donald Daniels, Brett Ellis,Dean Ellis, - JonathanFalkowski, Michael Ginsberg,Judy Gitterman, Evan John,

"Joseph Ladanye, MichaelMcNally, Nancy Neuman,Helen Penvenne, LaurelPringle, Michael Schutzer,Katherine Silcox, RobertSpeer, Charles Stevens,Edward Sarkisian and KarenRose.

Laurie Ammann, JanetBazewicz, Debra Berman,James Caprio, Ann Curcio,Andrea Forte, JessicaKessler,. Daniel More,Stephanie More, Carol AnnMcNally, Brian O'Brien,Timothy Slauson and StephenTomaszewskj were awardedcertificates —of hpnorablemerit.

A special trophy is beingawarded to Cranford HighSchool because it has a total ofthree medal pins awarded inone year. Since Cranford has atotal of five such scorers, 4heschool will receive *tredittoward next year's par-ticipation in the exam.

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• Mm. D.W. Beach andWG. Mallory of ColumbiaAvenue and Mr. and Mrs. ELL.Wdliol Sailer Street were themost active quartet. Much ofthe time they .went outtogether in a variety ofcon-btaatloiia. £ Among theirsightings were Swainun'sthruahr-fhoebe, a flock ofeedar waxwlngs^ yellowwarbler, catbird, scarlettanager, Baltimore oriole,Philadelphia vlreo, king-fisher, rose breastedgrosbeak, ovenbird, hairywoodpecker, black-billedcuckoo, hermit thrush, rubycrowned kinglet, yellowbellied sapsucker and atowhee.'Then on another occasion

they added warbling vireo,broad winged hawk, solitaryvireo, panda and black-and-white warblers, swampsparrow, green heron, woodthrush and a house wren.

Mrs. Beach added a P.S. toher' note that read, "Wish you"could have seen the two maleflickers .fighting over agorgeous female April 25!They circled the trunk of atree snapping and flappingtheir wings at each other whileshe clung to the trunk ofanother tree just watching..Have no idea which one won -think they may still be atit! The gold under theirwings was gorgeous."

Mrs. F.A. Wagner ofAlgonquin Drive sent a notereporting, a flock of 15 to 20evening grosbeaks on herfeeder. She also saw a yellowbellied sapsucker on the whiteash in her neighbor's yard.

MOTHERSNo greater love has anyman than that love which amother can give openly toevery child love so selfless... not defiled.'While motherlove does notdepend on aresponse, aswith a friend,deep In a imother's heart gj«. 'Jmust burn the wish to beloved In return.

You can depend on us tokeep your heating systemIn tip top shape. Thismeans' savings in fuelcosts. Have your burnerserviced by the RanklnFuel Company* 230 Cen-tennial Avenue, .Cranford.Phone 276-9200.

Rankin Fuel Company230 Centennial Ave.

Cranford.Phone 276-9200

HotsparksBy Warren Rankin

ngHtecked pheasant. ; •. - •/'. ••••••On another day Mir. Prink

and John Schmidt addedbrown thrasher* catbird.Baltimore oriole and yellowbellied sapsucker JWhtte thepair were out birding - theysaw a partially albino robinthat looked^llkeared-breastedmockini

j , when my Westfleldand Cranford Adult SchoolCUUMS were out on afield tripwe saw a northern water-thrush. •••'. -^—'—

• UHMrMwMdtk MtwJana*

MAY IB-IB

owm»pkm, •

• • % • •

>

season lays, "Happinesswears many disguises.H'5 !

"My Three Angels" M a• i which has brought

to many- in itsnlng v night audience.' from the approval of

the play is a

•' The cast, directed byMichael MarcusV is an

to meet.another top-notch

a fine actor.

turns inas Alfred

best performancetod«t«.UoundStrahlendarflnrare form as he put hte petsnakej Adolph, through his

. All Motet »nd cborih nolle** ihoitW'r«»ch the Cltliw «nd Chronici* ofilct' no latw than 1 p.m. Frld»y lor InwmoninttMntxlMlllon.

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t( 4 water fronidacier-fed^ J springs, and afjed in

the clear dry air ofthe Canadian Rockies.

stwMs'

^ a Parfitt and ChuckLeonard, both creating theirfirst major roles on the boardsof CDC, are superb. Parfltt'sportrayal of Marie Louise waspleasant as weU as gentle;Leonard was totally con-vincing as Paul, the op-

.portdnist whose desire tosucceed hi business was moreimportant than his feelbwstoward Marie Louise. I amcertain we~will hear> morefrom theae two fine actors.'

Carl Peterson, in His secondCDC role of the season, provea

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. a n j a / - • • • • : , • • " • . ' • ; • . : • : • ' ' f \ - A ' , • • • • - , ,

The technical staff, underthe chairmanship of Walt

On May lfi aV8>in. OrangeAvenue Junior! High Schoolresents its annual springoca! music concert. The

choral groups ufrder , the

mmm

toveOlMnM turns

Of the 1972-7?

Bob Buontempo

Thursday, May 10,1973 CRANFORD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHBONICLE

Ntetiel togetherbeautifully in . _the production. Hie lighting,created by Bill, Powers; wasskillful as was the staging "byBob Johnson. The props,under- thd charge of Marge

way, Roth Cunha and SueChandler were.perfect for the

y., The costumes by Clairand Peg Ruffes well as

the makeup byy DotStrahlendorf were jushand greatly enhancedproduction. My speciacongratulations to the personwho so lovingly plucked allthose chicken feathers!

At&Jiences have come toexpect nothing short of ex-cellence and professionalismfrom the Cranford Dramaticdub. Once again, they willfind it. "My Three Angels"will continue to hold thisbanner. The club has fulfilledthe audience's expectations byselecting a fine play,magnificent casting and

p e r b t e c h n i c a l

Juniorta present

Bob, Buontempo of 322Manor Ave., Cranford is the

f-producer of two television'programs that will bebroadcast on WNYC, Channel

Buontempo was one of thele behind "Escape

_. xh," a coffeehouse at 114Miln St. that periodicallyOffers rock concerts.

onaplayT)ie Drama Club of Orange

Avenue Junior High Schoolwill present "Curtain GoingUp" by Gregory Johnston this

suach

pevement.

The production will continuefor the next two weekends atthe club's theatre at 78 WinansAvenue. Reservations may besecured by calling evenings276-7611. I urge everyone tosee this production. Thepeople who have worked sohard to provide such excellententertainment certainlydeserve bur whole-heartedsupport. /

Friday and Saturday at 8;15p.m. in the school auditorium.

The comedy details are thetrials and tribulations ofproducing a high school playduring the 1950's. Popularmusic and dancing create thespMt of the decade.

This year's production isbeing 'greeted by SuzanneCassidy. ^Donna Mack andRichard xhillips withchoreographyXby DonnaWilliams.

Tomorrow, a t . 8 p.m.GunhiU Road," a New York

rock; groap that produced"Back,When My Hair WasLong," currenUy Number 48on Cashbox'magazine's Ust Of

LEARNELECTROLYSIS

the KREE way..Rewarding c«r«er In

The Ninth Grade Choirthe "Select 21 Plus" Ensembleof Orange Avenue Junior HighSchool will be among thoseparticipating in the NewJersey All State MiddleSchool-Junior High SchoolChoral Festival sponsoredjointly by the New JerseyMusic Educators Associationand , Westminster" ChoirCollege, Princeton; where thefestival will take place onSaturday. •

Miss Donna Williams is thedirector of the "Select 21Plus" Ensemble and RogerKent is director of the NinthGrade Choir. In all, twenty-

record; hits, will perform onthe videotaped "UniversityBroadcast" on the UHFstation.

On June 22, on the samestation^ program and at thesame time, Joey George ofRoselle and John Korba ofCranford will perform inanother videotaped, produc-tion by Buootempo" .i • • / '

, He is a junior and at NewYork University and a 1970graduate of Cranford HighSchool.

praiseschoirs will appear,choirs are directed by

members of the New JerseyMusic Educators Association.Each school is limited toperformance \ t ime of 10minutes. After th&dioirs havesung, individually andtogether, the Chapel Choir ofWestminster Choir Collegewill sing for all' those present:

The festival will be held inthe Westminster Choir CollegeChapel and Playhouse. Mrs.Winifred S. MacLachlan,director of vocal music inPlainfieW. schools, is chair-man of the i committee on

Day or Eve. M*tv Woman.Come, write or ptiom for. - Fr«a Booklet K. '

^lUCTH I « . 41 I t . NT. iftflJI •* n c u i < . i i u n n ' i R U M i u c m I I S

arrangements for the festival,

Richner/brilliant*By Elma Adams

Dr. Thomas Richner, in-ternational concertist.chairman of the pianodepartment al DouglassCollege and no stranger to theCranford area, performedbrilliantly classics for thepiano last Friday evening atUnion College. This was his

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Mozart's •"Sonata- in CMinor" and "Rbhdtii hiMajor- were Mozart as dnl>Richner can play his works.His fleet fingers, his controland interpretation weroutstanding especially in theRondo.

Chopin pieces, always A joy,were followed as encores"Mazurka/^ *«Amiripir\""Nocturne in C Minor**; andas a closing of the per-formance the favorite, "JesuJoy of Man's desiring.", byBach.

ic hath charms

directlff^andRoger Kent will perform aprogram ranging from Bacho rock. Performing groups

include the Tenth- GradeChorus, Ninth Grade Chorus,

Seventh and Eighth GradeChorus, Ninth Grades Girl*Gleeaub.Mastersinger Boysand "Select 2i."

^Highlights ~of * the * prograjn -include a setting of Psahn 33by Bach with a Ughter touch"as exemplified in "SeepytimeBach"; the folk song;."Shenandoah," the humorous

for special momIt used to be true that a

woman's work was neverdone, until the year 1914, thatis. It was to May of that pre-World War I year that.President Wilson land hisCongress ; voted formotherhood and gave ourmothers relief from theirhousehold chores for at leastone day a year.. . .

In 1914 WMson proclaimedthe second Sunday of each

ay as Mother's Day ..."whereas the service ren-dered by the Americanmother is the greatest sourceof the country's strength andinspiration."

Among the millions of NewJersey women who will have

kitchen duties this Mother'sDay Sundayyi&Mrs tElizabethMatter. Her husband, BUIMotter, has planned a superbfeast for her at The TowerSteak House, Route 22,Mountainside. It belongs tothe Motter Family.

For weeks, BUI Motter, hisfamily and virtually everyoneelse at thV restaurant, hasbeen preparing for the eventHundreds of pounds of primecuts of beef and importedlobster tails are arriving. Andan entire greenhouse ofcarnations has been orderedfor the table decor.

Among the delicacies BUIMotter plans offering his wifeand guests on Mother's Day isstuffed breast of veal. He hasrefined his recipe over a

period of many years and isjustifiably proud of this dish.He takes pains in preparingthe gravy and stuffing. Hisrecipe starts out with acarefully selected .„ -*->;

STUFPBO BREAST o * MATURE* ^

1 Breut of Nature* Select Veilaverage weight 5 to 6 poundsV/-> lbs. lean, wall trimmed ground pork1 ib. ground veal3 cups 10ft breed crvmbs3 chopped uuteed ontonj- - .</i cup chopped fren^xrsley '2 eggs slightly beatenVU teaspoon salt*/2 feaii^on ground pepper'/j teaspoon thyme</t teaspoon oreganp '13 cup creamery butterWhite wine (to taste)4 carrots (peeled and cut in pieces)2 onions (peeled and cut in pieces)

Have your butcher'prepare the vealbreast to be stuffed. Combine Hie groundpork and veal, the bread crumbs,uuteed onions, eggs, parsley, salt,pepper, thyme, oregano, butter andwine. Stuff the pocket of the veal breastwith this mixture'and fasten it withskewers or tie It. Mix onions and carrotstogether and fay^them on the bottom ofthe roasting pan. Sprinkle the bed ofvegetables with butter and place thestuffed veal on top. Sprinkle the meatwith salt and pepper and some white,wine. Rub the veal breast with butterand roast In preheated oven (450 degreesF) for 35 minutes, basting occasionally,As soon as the veal begins to brown,cover the pan and turn down the heat to(325 degrees F). Continue roasting forapproximately 2 to 2Vi hours. Shortlybefore the veal is done, remove the coverand complete the browning of the roastuntil golden brown. Serve piping hot withnatural pan yavy.

^Neighbors' Chorus" from aseldom beard Offenbachoperetta, Cat" Stevens'

Morning Is Broken"; Nor-man Dello 4oip's "Sweet

Tall Kentuckian"; plush : A i l hihl iht ill

; p: A special highlight will

be a semi-staged version ofGee, Officer Krupke" fromWest Side Story" as per-

formed by the MastersingerBoys. The final section of theprogram will be a massedversion for ail combinedgroups of Ernst Bloch's"America Anthem" from bisepic rhapsody, VAmerWa"accompanied by a trumpetensemble and organ.

Soloists include SbariBrown,-Timothy Moran andPatrick Roche. An incidentalobligato will be sung byBarbara Kuntzman. Piano'accompaniments will besupplied by both students andparent volunteers and includethe following students: AmyWright, Vanessa Anderson,Gerda Hollingsworth, JanetMitchell, Paul SacUowski andLeslie Webb: Ms. PhyllisBarmak, a parent volunteer,will accompany severalselections sung by. the NinthGrade Chorus and TenthGrade Chorus.

DiGiovine.sembleBarmak, E r i c . t o dGerUrd Shamey wcompany the final selections.

general admissionnts and

toward thepurchase of muncal equip-ment, bus transportation for.music field trips, program?printing, music awards andticket printing. _ _ _ i •

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n ' l i t i ' S ^ ' • ' • ; • : ' — — ~ ' : • ' . • • . . , ' . . , ; • . • ' - . • ! :;

. : • - . . • • • ; • , • • - . • : • • : • • • • • < • • • • ' . , \ - : . : ' . • S y - v . \ i ; : - , : ' - ' - - . :'• , • . , • , • " • : • , ' ' • . ; . :

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iiiiii tNJ.)CITIZEN ANDCHRONICLE Thursday,May 10,1973

W t t ^ & t ^ & K & i j t - ^ ' ^ %•••••••••.:

«' • " • . . » • • • • . : • , ' .

v V.'V1,1,,

i

Going nowhere £astTo the Editor:

The. committeeAfter a month-lrmg series of stead of addingrorttrtop? onTriS^^mm^Ttp^^m^-^^^

situation, the Board of mobile facilitiesBfluqatton is back where it started been reacty until, t as late ' aSfimn a year ago. Shennan and December? In that event the pupilsfrom a year ago. Sherman andCJeveland Schools, desbite theirserious • deficiencies* wul remain-oped another year and the schoolsystem willcpntinue to operate withexcess clas&gom space at tax-

furor arepp

could have been housed temporarily TWSUPI*** <*in the six remaining schools as they for our annual concert by . .are, Thomas RichwirW tip* Re^ Edward 6. PHce,Pa»tor

T h e r e h a s b e e n ^ m u c h t a l k a b o u t ^ W ^ ¥^*^82the detriments of "jamming" thechildren into six buildings; even

YmlliMl mfntna>no

Uwkchere «t tl« AraericknU«|ue field 'on AdamsAvenue were rebuilt. '

payers' expense* rv children into six buildings, even4M^taimngwS*a^qthe easiest way to handle a difficult same six buildings accommodated Jr OF

eFWendsofU*C6Uege

inllca• ttecyding program;

way Isituation. In this case it will pleasemany residents of the Sherman andCleveland districts who don't wantto lose the convenience the twoschools provide. Certainly they, andsome board members, would like tomake the needed repairs.to thebuildings immediately, but even afive-year renovation plan would costmore than a million dollars. Couldthe community be expected to pass areferendum of^that amount for

.--v— purity45Q?more pupils; Sherman ahd^Cleveland Schools were then-junior To the Editor:highs, hot "neighborhood"elementary schools, and people GodiSteadof'poSoiipto:.seemed to Uve with i t nhuAiTa sLnwWp2£

. ;,—-v- nography fa allowed in theIf the board had had the courage to movies, when the clergy has

put forth a referendum for mobUe »much to offer to our young

The raidTn thA R<Htnr> -

these same all' day psrierswho were their bestcustomers? After reading theletter to the Editor from all

e t l i n n a n d b i s s t a f f ! f o r ,'••':.••'.•..'•-••••/-•:' ,•.•,•',•.'•'.•'•'••'•'• '. ' •,;.,

s u p p l y i n g eQuipmeht•*aviS'''^^P%lw»"-l!i*y'M"..li '',, x. inm*personnel for mixlhg' the••v^^;^^..b.<p^vi-Bwd^.PI»wSdiq<i..PTA-.OBment, Mr, AlbeW Antoine Day plant sale aUto? schpoj. . • t . . i : t j i ^ i j i i ^for his conmbutiou aiid-eiF--^-i2;j»to»p4n,-Walnut AvwiieSchoorMotnersiWyTtoircoutasement and the sale in front of the Bchool. - ( t iOj^c le for their coverage 3 tp.3p.m. and 6:30 to 9 pin. • Industrial arts exhibit atand editorial. puWUelWalry;

voters a clear choice - that ofmaintaining the present level ofelementary education or' that of

Haney.With all

fl«. , . . . . . . .vandalism and official

i, it would seem thatthe Vnion County Police

storeowners can set the policyfor all the others.

We now have an empty

schools that may be phased out in taking a few steps backward until crackdown on-the9 sale oftwo or three years? the enrollment declines some more, pornographic material. There

We believe the board should hay e By agreeing to keep Cleveland and " * various bt ebalHeaguesstood ite ground and proposed a Sherman Schools open, thfr board S faSe5 UV'HOW^ « ?referendum for the lease or pur- merely gave in to vocal critics who youths survive when theirchase of portable classrooms, a plan apparently want to keep the candy stores are filled with

- - - • - - •-- .these books on their counters?

portant than whether or not.what they choose to label assmut can be. purchased by

minor . agent-

that would have saved money, in- ~ buUdings in .operation at all cost.r Hodgepodge of happenings

LWV students in vagus programs, techniques in testing soil and

Members of the League ofWomen Voters elected officersand heard a talk by EdwardWJlaynski of the public af-fairs department of PATH attheir annual meeting April 30.

The following officers wereelected for two year terms;president, Elaine Coburh;first vice president, RuthSmith; second vice president,Katy Engle; secretary,Marion Kelly; and treasurer,JeanineRowe.

Elected directors includeBarbara Cleveland, PatDoheney, Jen Rabinowitz, andSandy Itzkoff.

Appointed board membersinclude: membership, Nancy

. Asbedian; bulletin, DottieBurak; finance, Pat Doheney;community affairs, Mary

. Sullivan; voter service,B a r b a r a K i n n e a r ;publications, Susan Walsh;tfeuDftc relations, LorraineGuida; county councilpresident, Ruth < Banks;revision of "Know Your Townand Your Schools," GailDunigan; administration ofJustice, Katy Engle; fiscalpolicy, Jen Rabinowitz;education, Sandy Itzkoff;voting rights, Donna Sum-merville; Congress, GeorginaLancaster; environmentalquality and land use, BarbaraCleveland; human resources,Ruth Smith; development andtrade, Fran Gerson; river,Pam Trush; and housing,Ruth Smith.

WalshMidshipman Vincent A.

The sale of pornographyshould be prohibited betweenthe hours ot 8:00 a.m. and 8:00p.m., the time* our youths doiheir most purchasing of

I first of all object to theraids because what, precisely,Is pornographic has yet to bedefined. To a leather "freak"

printed. And last but not least,the two-way traffic and turnaround is hazardous andseveral accidents' havev;already occurred.

town need a place to parkwithout being gouged formoney and discriminatedagainsC . ' .

league field.James W, McNamara, Jr.Vtce-president American

League ' ' .Cranford Boys Baseball

• L e a g u e /:•. : : . r ..,;•: .-

bate shopper

acco (the) April 24to*081* «"*** regarding

sexually stimulating. Is ChiefHaney going to Slews themtoo?

^ thoSSv

e«ny Frank. MMtiin* pmwori.

be 3 to 5:30 p.m. student projects,and 6:30 to 9 p.m. weekdays . .Social Studies - Exhibit ofand 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Satur- maps, booklets, art - andday. . research papers.

Hteindustrjal arts exhibit jsjone of three exhibits by "theCranford public schoolsduring May and June. Theannual art exhibit by studentsin Cranford's secondaryschools will be held May 19-25.The annual exhibit of art workby pupils ill the elementaryschools will be held June 1-7.

Meet tonightThe Sunny Acres Civic and

Improvement Association willhold its regular businessmeeting tonight at 8:30 at thehome of Mr. and Mrs. WalterSosnowski, 1042 Raritan Rd.Plans for the next. year'sactivities will be formulated,and the results; of a recentemergency' meeting will bediscussed., All members areurged tor atleridVVii

p pArt - Display of arts and

crafts.Home economics - Baked

foods and sewn handicraft andgarments.

Physical , educationDisplays.

Music - Vocal music concertand instrumental musicconcert

After the instrumentalmusic concert on May 17, thecreative-arts exhibits will beopen to the parents.

Stella Schecter and RoseFeld, PTA cultural artschairmen, wish to thankBurton Mandell, IrwinFigman, the departmentchairmen and the studentswho worked on the program.

Silver citationA silver award, represen-

ting contributions of $15420

. . .-week course in sub-

the IBM office in Cranford atthe annual awards luncheon of

at . the Union CountyVocational Technical In-stitute, Scotch Plains, onTuesday, May 22, and con-tinue for seven more weeks on -consecutive Tuesdays ,starting at 7:30 p.m. andlasting for approximately' 45minutes. Adults andyoungsters are eligible toparticipate. Xf >'

This class is^ponsored bythe Union County 4-H Ex-

E a s t e ^T o w n

a n d

at theCampus

Colony

.cards should be presented. Ithink that this is a much worseproblem than liquor in ourtown today. As of June first weestimate that three to fivehundred pornographic books"will be sold to youths inCranford, and five to 10restricted movies will be inthe Cranford movie house.

•What ever happened to WaltDisney and comic books?

Reverend Dick RipkinJason Hooper

SalSteigerBobFlournoy

. C.OA.P-(Citizens Organization

Against Pornography)

Parochial aidTo the Editor:

For many years the op-ponents of any aid to non-public schools have opposedsuch aid, because they claim itwould be in violation of-the-"wall of separation, "betweenchurch and state. Recently, anew phrase seems to havecrept in, both with the decisionof the United States SupremeCourt, and the three-judgefederal panel, (which struckdown aid to non-public schoolsin Pennsylvania, arkfin thestate of New Jersey:

reject theShop-worn Puritanicalstricture that what isstimulating to the senses,particularly the sexual sensesis somehow wrong.

If there were no restrictionson pornography, as is muchthe case in Denmark, thepublic would soori becomejaded and this "evil" wouldsoon decline into the "ac-ceptable" vice category ofsmoking and drinking.

. ... . ._ coth-rtian, Lori Cam*rpn.Marg* MacFaydwv,Oaborah Wyman. Robert Oamltcfclk.Edim CaMwtll. Mary Orlando, RuttjNolan, Agnat Ountop, MaryAnh FJco,Doromy Mikw, Jackla tawrtnee JaanRtno^poit, fith Rowt»tham. wiiiwmHanoi*,*' Cqnttanc* Crltcuoto. HalanKotleromkl, Sylvia Oalan, JanaOlllnlck. Cathl* Flichtr, ValarlaPetront, Edpa Burnt, Mary, Patron*,Jama* Vloltottl. Lavella Jooat.Vr«>asaSctwoti, Lta Kouor, Mary OaFablo,Batty Emrdala. Rita Ann Renkiawlcz.Halen MaxfKU. Jana Glvtni, NathallaSullivan and Juna Kargu*.

Thanks hoardTo the Editor:

The Concerned Citizens ofCranford would like to, take

market

been a source of some of ourfinest political, educationaland professional leaders in thecommunity. Many Cranfordchildren have participated inthe youth activities sponsoredby the Jaycees. If communityservice can be measured inman-hours, the Jaycees havededicated years to thiscommunity.

Last year's flea marketbrought several thousandpeople to.the sale days whichcoincided with the fleamarket. It is beyond my

In summation, Ibut think the whole sleazeyincident was nothing morethan a self-glorifying publicitystunt aimed at winning favorwith the ranks of the con-temporary Puritans and othersociological retardates.

Gerry HallSan Diego, Calif.

ZSi^S^iSLS^ Phenomenal business lossesdecision of last Wednesday, »^ h 8 0 m a n y potent i< |1

Officers Association of theUnited States, Department ofIndiana, on May 22. Thisaward is made annually to aNavy midshipman of thesenior class for outstandingachievement in the Arts andSciences of National Defense.The medal was presented atthe battalion commander'schange . of . commandceremony at Notre Dame.

The May board meeting ofthe Colony Club of Cranfordwas held Monday at the homeof Mrs, John Cranley, 421Manor Ave. Mrs. DavidOlesjjy, president of the club,presided. • Mrs. WarrenLevine served as co-hostess.

Mrs. Raymond Van Jaeckel,chairman of the social ser-

tension Service, 300 NorthWalsh was. presented with the Ave Westfield, and the in-Medal Award of the Reserve struc'tor will be Mrs. Judith

of,Dogs must be at"least five vices department, announced

months of age to take part and the next meeting will be heldhave had their DHL shots by a Wednesday, May 16, at 1 p.m.veterinarian. at the home of Mrs. F. B.

Interested persons should Dollar, '23 Brookdale Rd.call the Union Comity 4-H Party favors will be made foroffice.

Workshop

SeniorsThe first Union County

Cranford Health and Ex-tended Care. Center.

Mrs. Warren Levine,chairman of the fine artsdepartment, announced thedepartment will have an allday. trip to F I emington, onMay 17.' .

The American Home

The latest phrase states thatthere would be ' -excessiveentanglement" of the statewith religion. I am not quitesure how the court coulddetermine without any priorobjective knowledge, that thisentanglement would takeplace. The supplementalteachers both nqrvcathoheshired by the school board, forSt. John's school, have beenteaching in fields not.religiously orientated.

Perhaps the ironid part ofthe who.le situation is that hereat St. John's, we ourselveshired a Jewish girl, who isbeing paid by us as a regularclassroom teacher. I am surethat neither she or the twosupplemental teachers findthemselves entangled inreligion, and certainly havenot had to compromise their

A six-week Drawing andPainting1 Workshop will beoffered at Union College this

uiuu.. ViUUJU summer, it-was announcedSenior CiUzens'^ir wiirThe t o d a y by Dr. Frank Dee^dean department will hold j t s j i n - rengiousjbeliefs_in^any_way,teld on Saturriav Mav 19 nt of educational services. niial picnic "at UYe "home of

The workshop, designed for Mrs. Billie Schaffer, 105those who have had some Edgewood Rd., on May '23 attraining in art, willinstruction by

held on Saturday, May 19, atBurnett Junior High School,Union, it was announcedrecently by Mrs. EvelynFrank, president of the SeniorCitizens Council of UnionCounty. •

All Union County seniorcitizens are invited to thisevent, which will mark SeniorCitizens Month. Tableexhibits, entertainment,speakers and refreshmentsare ' planned. All seniorcitizens arjf urged to par-ticipate witfi exhibits or en-tertainment. Those interestedcan contact RaymondMcElroy, chairman, of dieevent, at 27t>-6350 for furtherinformation.

The fourth annual exhibitionof work by. students enrolled irithe industrial arts proiy'amsof the Cranford public schoolswill open to tile public today althe Cranford Public Library.

Approximately 21)0 itemsmade of wood, metul; plasticsand .leather will be on view.Exhibit panels will displaypioject:> . m mtchauicaJ^ i h i

providethree

professional artists andteachers, under the directionof Mrs. Jane Law of Westfield,a member of Union College'sFine Arts Department.

The workshop will beconducted from June 2Gthrough August 2 with clashesmeeting Tuesday and Thur-sday evenings from,7 to 10p.m. I

Additional information andapplication forms may beobtained by contacting Dr.Dei-, Union College, Division-ol Special Services andC o n t i n u i n g E d u c a t i o n ,Springfield Avenue, Cranford,New Jersey 07010.

auto mechanic

Slide presphotographs

, electricity1

?i. A rnnMniinnj;ntation and

will .show

This month a variety of'creative art".; programs havebeen r>lai"it.-d at HillsideAvenue Junior High School.Displays will demonstrate theefforts of tiic- Undents in allsubjects .itid-wjll include:'

English lWlry exhibits,vor.ibuiary projects, film and

id

12:30 p.m.

Boat rideMarie Ernst , recreation

chairman of the CranfordSenior Citizens, announced aboat ride around ManhattanIsland on Circle Line for May24, at the May 7 meeting. Thebus will leave from theCommunity Center at 10 a.m.

Mrs. Charlotte LeDuc,president, announced the firstannual state jamboree toWildwood Crest from June 11to June 15.

Members will six- a per-1

forinaiiee of "Madame But-terfly" in Faterson on May 20.The bus will leave at 12:Mp.m.

.New members Welcomedwen- Kdith Ifansetman, HelenClark, Ann Roman, MarjorieTurner; Reginald Turner,Albert Knaski and Ann Ko*.

We surely would not haveany objections to s ta tesupervision of these teachers,because we know there wouldbe- nothing to fear. The twoteachers, accordiiig to- thelatest rulings will now berestored until the end of thepresent term m order that theprogram instituted since lastSeptember may come to an

To the Editor:- - l-faaye been working rt"therecycling center for two yearsand I simply cannot un-derstand the inconsiderateattitude of some of ourtownspeople. We don't askvery much, there are only afew rules concerning the

"center, yet it seems that for afew these rules cannot befollowed.

We ask that glass and metalno^b3 Jeft when the site is notopen. Items left at the site area health hazard. The glass andmetal is often not clean andbacteria grows in the con-tainers. Kids throw rocks tobreak the glass, so we musthandle broken glass mixedwith unbroken glass. Glassbrought to the center shouldbe clean and metal ringsremoved. The - metal cansshould have lids and paperremoved,, be clean andcrushed, not left filled withfood particles. .

. I believe the majority of thepeople'coming Jo the centerare behind the operation, butthe few who treat it like agarbage dump, sure beat aperson down. If you can't waitfor the center to open, bringyour glass to Westfield. Theyrecycle the second and fourth-Saturday of each month, butmost important if you can'tfollow some simple rules tomake the job easier at thecenter - Don't bother at all,just throw the garbage away.Our friends who do care willprovide us with enough glassand metal to do our con-servation work.

' JeanKoenig'.;.", -228 Hillside Ave.

another year, until a completestudy is made as to populationdecrease or increase.

Our hats are off to Mr.V i n c e n t S a r n o w s K i ,superintendent of schools, andboard members ArnoldWarhafug, William Massa,Thomas White, Harry Baron,Richard__ Hurley, Mrs.Rosemary Charles and Mrs.Arleen Walsh. If a referendumwas presented to the town, anddefeated, and the two schoolshad been closed; the childrenwould have been jammed intoremaining six schools.

It is unfortunate tnat two ex-board members cannot taketheir defeat gracefully.Statements made by Dr.Dougherty and Mr. Umland atthat meeting were absolutelyslanderous and obnoxious.Their remarks were aimed atthe members that voted tokeep the schools open. Mr.Umland wanted the board torescind their decision. What apity that the Board ofEducation members could notreply, in public, to these twomen. >

After weeks of extremetension for all concerned, it istime now for the residents toassist the board, in any .waypossible, in the further studyof Cleveland and ShermanSchools. With the help,of somereputable citizens of Cranford,in the proposed Lay Com-mittee that the Board ofEducation wants to form, webelieve this can be achieved.The concern of some parentsis now that the schools areopen, there will be nothing'done as far as repairs. With alay committee, we are surethat they will do their utmostto bring these repairs intobeing.

Once again the entire townhas come together to support •what we believed in. The CCCwish to convey our best wishes

am not a merchant. I am onlyon£ of the 28,000 Cranfordcitizens who .support andpatronize local merchants sixand.seven days a week, fiftytwo weeks' a year. It totallyrepulses me to think thesesame merchants cannotsupport one service project -auHed at the community thatsupports them.

Perhaps it is consoling toknow that God is not dead inthe merchant community ofCranford - he lives on the faceof a dollar bill for some. Suchshallow values were obviousat the township meeting.

Cynthia Hegna111 Spring Garden St.

A toast. . .To the Editor:

Your glowing article wasgreatly appreciated. I'mparticularly glad that youenjoyed yourself and selfishlypleased that your article wasso articulate (is that slightlyredundant?) .

Joan SmithRegional Director

Les Amis du Vin

Porno purgeTo the Editor:

I wish to extend my personalgratitude and congratulationsto ( Cranford Police ChiefMatthew Haney and the UnionCounty Police Chiefsssociation for their recentpornography raids.

At a time when numerousorganizations are attemptingto organize sports and otheractivitlesior our children, andstill others are explaining thedangers of using drugs, it isheart-warming to this parentto know that someone islooking out for the moralissues.

I sincerely hope that the.adverse newspaper publicitydoes not stop the association intheir efforts.

Paul Meade•IMBrookbidePl.

Sciencegraphic1"

.Mode-!:;splays

andand

Club |)n-..i(if/ii I Jr. i'.'dwardiU. (.'<K- invited liu: mrfiibt-rs ,snd ihvir families ti) attend :i!Und-i'ai:>Mij; picnic in hi;, yard'in .linn- Aroi'KT "Rotary-Ann !u!R'h<>ni will in: h<-l<jMay io at i.U- Kdio l_ik,-Country Club.

Anti-rabiesThe Cranford Board of

Health will hold its annual freeanti-rabies vaccination clinicstoday and 1-Yiday from 2 to -1and 7 to 9 p.m.

The clinics will be held atif\c Crunford Municipal Poolon Orange Avenue. Dr. C. J.Cheliayl of Westfield will bc-tlu- veterinarian in cliarge.

Residents are urged to Imvetheir dogs on a leash whenattending the clinics.

Cat owner:, ;jlso are urged tohavv: their pets iniiiiiuii/,edaj/ttinsl ral)i<-:,.

A number of peopleVolunteered their help HI lilt:

.Crjjil'urd ri-cyclin^ pro^ram't;center last month when tlieregulai'ly scheduled groupwas unable to. jx-n'onn its

duties.On April 7 the group of

volunteers included DickBaldwin, Doug Bonham, MikeEllenbacher, Cathy Garret-son, Kim Gluck, Bob Higbic,•Edna and Boyd Hudson, CarlIngeholin, John Kostick, RobMcArthur, Pat O'Brian, PetePorter, Jimmie Rae, BrendaItuch, Ted and Tom Kul-

-ijiayer, Jack Warrington andBill Wright.

Members of the FirstPresbyterian Church of

. Cranford Youth Councilhelped out on April VI. Theyincluded: Laurie Ainmaim,Sue Cliiy, laurel and I.indjDuckworth, Bob Hughes, HobMcArthur, and Carol iind ,I t lire 1 Pringlt;.' •• • »

The followin;.', members of -(iirl Scout Cadette Troop TJU!M) helped out. they areMichelle Aker, Meg abbitts,Cathy and Co/uiio Bufd, JeanDecry, Carol Khrenbeck, Amy

and Donna Kim, Kathy Leary,Kathy Lubas, Beth Sorber,Mary Jean Thorn and SusanWaters.

T/racy • McGeehan of GirlScout Cadeite Troop 665 alsohelped out.

TroopThe senior boys of Troop 178

of St. Michael's Church spentlasij.weekend on a cuno<; iripdowii| the Delaware Iliver-Leaving Dingman's F e r r yearly in thu morning, the fourcanoes manned by themembers of the troop paddleddown the river and arrived atWormington State Park late inthe afternoon.'

After stopping for lunch muisome ylfghtaccing the canot-sarrived at tlieir destination.early e/ioii[',h to yet up camp atthe slate park in the daylight.

Members of the leaderscouncil of the troop attendingincluded: Ron Marrota, JimSlowey, John and Tom lloff-man, Mike Mason, JohnSchneider Mike Lubay, JimGallagher and Keviu_ Mc-Closkey.

Adult leaders included: DunMason, Scoutmuster, JosephLubas- and Dick Schneider.

pClub, 78 Winans Ave,

Saturday, May 1Z ' ' ' "10 a.m. to 4 p.m.; Industrial arts exhibit at public library.

Monday, May 14 and Tuesday, May IS.3 to 5 p.m. and 6:30 to 9 p.m. - Industrial arts exhibit at

public library. . ' • • ' • » ' . »Monday, May 14 '•"'• - °

8p.m- • Mothers Auxiliary of CBBL monthly meeting in theBoard room at Lincoln School? v - ,

. Tuesday. May IS12:30p.m. - Duplicate bridge at the Community Center.

..2 to 7 p.m. - Red Cross Bloodmobile at Fellowship Hall ofFirst Presbyterian Church. .

8 p.m.'Boardof Education meeting at Lincoln School.

WednesaajrTMay 16I «i30p.m.-DuplicateJ)ridgeatthe7:30 p.m. - Walnut Avenue School8 p,m. - Orange Avenue Junior High

unity Center,concertspring concert.

Thursday, M a y 17 •• • •7:30 p.m. - Student participation program and Brookside

Avenue School PTA installation of officers.7:30 p.m. - Roosevelt School spririg concert.8 p.m.-Duplicate bridge at the Community Center.8 p.m. • Hillside Avenue Junior High School instrumental

music concert.. _ .

Friday, May 18 and Saturday.. May 1»8:40 p.m. - "My Three Angels" at the Cranford Dramatic

Club, 78 Winans Avev

Saturday, May 1910 a.m. to 4 p.m. - Glass and Aluminum collection at the

recycling center, Meeker Ave. .10 a.m. to 5 p.m. - Cranford Jaycees annual flea market

and sidewalk sales by the Chamber of Commerce, NorthUnion Avenue (from North to Springfield Avenues) andAlden Street (from Miln Street to N. Union Avenue).

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. - Secondary art exhibit at public library.

Sunday, May 201 to 5 p.m. - Mini bike track open at J.B. Williams, 750

Walnut Ave.

As We Were1 By Arthur^and Hazet BUTIHH ~ — ^ —

30 Years Ago Today.Sgt. Chester Lang, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Lang, 39 Southve., died of pneumonia at Fort Knox, Ky, (Street has beep

named in his honor.) -Alice Caldwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Butler

Caldwell of Norman Place and Stephen Gmelln, Son of thelate Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gmelin, married. (Mr. Caldwellserved as Cranford tax collector for some years.)

40 Years Ago TodayJames Durand, 36 years old, treasurer and assistant

secretary of the Cranford Trust Co., died. (Among his sur-vivors is his brother, Edwin M. Durand, former dean atRutgers University, now associated with Union College.)

Board of Education trustees cut $18,700 from the expenses.

50 Years Ago Today .,'••James McMahon's advertisemeqt for a clearance sale at

his High Grade Grocers lists: peas, 29 cents a can; catsup, 16oz., 29 cents, spaghetti - package, 17 cents.

60 Years Ago Today

Those directing the Boys Club would like to get the oldCranford Golf Club^ House and some of the property forathletics or to buy river property*.

Mayor Heins to goon a lengthy European trip.Bids for the new Lincoln School are all too high.

70 Years Ago Today .Thomas A. Sperry purchased a car.Judge and Mrs. William Mendell celebrate their 45th

wedding anniversary. (They lived at 110 Walnut Avci)Benjamin F . Ham removed as Township treasurer as he

refused to turn over the books to the auditor.. (His home stillstands atJkookside-Place and Gallows.Hill Road where it-has been used as a nursing home.)

Never too late

a. spesDemocratic Assemblyman

Alex Menza tjpcjku informallyto thirty Cranford supportersut the home of Mrs. KeiifraLayman, 2 Tuxedo PI., lastweek.

Men/a said lu- decided tolaunch his campaign for theState Senate in Cranfordbecause of the pivotal roleCranford plays in his race forthe Senate seat in theTwentieth Senatorial District..

A new program designed forstudents who have been out ofhigh school for at least fouryears will be introduced atUnion College tin's September,it was announced ttxiay by Dr.Kenneth W. Iversen.

"LiberalStudies: ExploringScience and the Arts" is in-tended to accommodate theincreasing number of adultsinterested in beginning orcontinuing college study,Iversen said.

'"It provides students theopportunity \ to develop in-terests that will lead to amore satisfying life us well asthe opportunity to explore

..different areas of .study," hesaid.

Though not specificallydesigned as a ti-ansferprogram, Liberal .Studiesleads to an associate inscience degree. Thu two-yearcourse of study encompassesEnglish, mathematics andnatural science:;, socialsciences, the humanities andbusiness and public jKilicy.

" I f H r ^ i r impression thatmany adult citizens in UnionCounty wish to take collegecredit courses lor purely in-tellectual or [k.i'sonal reasons

without being tied to a par-ticular major or to specificcourses," Dr. Iverson said."Our objective in establishingthis program in LiberalStudies is -to provide aframework within which these,people can take college creditcourses and earn an associatedegree when they accumulate

.60 credits."Adults interested in

enrolling < \p the LiberalStudies -'program shouldcontact the admissions officein Crunford. The program willIw available at the Crunford,Elizabeth, and Flainfieldcampuses in the, day andevening, and student:) mayenroll as full-timers or part-timers. . '

"Uberal Studies lu designedspecifically for mature menand women who haw been ouiof hi«h school ut least fouryearn," Dr. Ivcxsen suld. "Itis our hope that many UnionComity adultn w.ill lalce ad-vantage of this opportunity tolaunch or resume a collegecareer without, the usualrestrictions as to courses theytake. Come; and enroll in anycifinse lh;|t is avaibbkr andmeets v«ur 0('"'y "

• / •

following studentshonor roll grades at

end of the third markingperiod, it has been announced, Dr. Charles Posit, principal

01 Cranford High School: .\

, Pre.ideot twelcomed thoae backtotherdgn

trurtee of the society, outlinedhis procedures in tracingfamiUes and theirHe said that evwpuss atony the knowttdgetiiey

i are able to obtain on their own

mmmBENNER, INC.BODYANDPENOER

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H. Harriion . . . . . . ,hU collecttonofover 300 dudt families, becau>e Indecoys representing the

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Dr. Homer Hall, chairmanof the society's board oftrustees, spoke on types oflocks and keys from the

' • • • ' • • p r e s e n t ,one-

cdoiilal days to the pretHe distlnguJghed betweetr

three geherarfonr thisknowledge may * well disap*p e a r ; . . •• . ••:••

* Following the meeting, thegroup' adjourned to themuseum where Mrs. HaroW

l Jr., and her comihaltteeprepared refreshtnents

for the 75 in attendance.

For Mother's

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OPEN THUR. - FRI. - SAT. -EVE. TILL 9:00

Susan Elwertowski

Earns degreein reiaUuyfr^

Susan C. Elwertowski jof 301North Ave. E., received anassociate in fine arts degree inretailing from Grahm College,Boston*, Mass., on Tuesday.

As part of her studies, MissElwertowski trained on thejob with Lord & Taylor andBonwitt Teller Stores. She wason the dean's list both years atcollege. . V

She plans to pursue furtherstudies in the University ofRochester, Rochester, N.Y.

Miss Elwertowski' is thedaughter of Mr. and Mrs.Walter S. Elwertowski. Hermaternal grandparents, areMr. and Mrs. Edward J.Baranski of Cranford. .

Health Mobilevisits school

The "Careers in HealthMobile" will be stationed atHillside Avenue Junior HighSchool today for the benefit ofthe ninth and tenth gradeclasses. Three hospitals inElizabeth, Alexian Brothers,Elizabeth General, and St.Elizabeth's, are sponsoringthe van as part of a-'programto celebrate "NationalHospital Week." The slogan,"Sharing and Caring" shouldhave special meaning for thestudents who may finddirection in a health career.

The 35-foot mobile unit is afour unit demonstration vandesigned to demonstrate thevalues, purposes, andmethods? of two hundreddifferent careers in health.

Since tiiere will not be timefor all those interested to visitthe van, the public has1 beeninvited to visit Steinbach's inElizabeth during the week oMay 14. Hospital personnelwill be available to answerquestions about careers in thehospitals. Handwork will bedisplayed and a few medicatests will be "given. Studentsaged 14 to 18 may participatein a drawing for an outfit ofclothing for a boy and a girl

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Thur«dayiMay^o;Jl»73 CRANPORD <N;J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICtB

Orxte 12 - All A t : Cynthiatk*h. Mary Baflnit, /Mark Bllllngton;Richard Blngham, Donna BlaMfonnkl,Ann DarbyTVlrglnla Hugo, Shtrri Kati,Adtle Padnar, Marlanna. Popltl,Ellxabtlh Qoammtn, Jonathan Reich-man, Gaonw Sfhutpr, Scott Saidman,

Randy Turktl, Ltill* Vlncant, MargaretWalullk, Wary Walvllk and PatriciaWheeler. • . .. •

Grade 11 • All A**: Edwa«J>tratntan,Barbara Oeufsch, Diana vKlllnowikl,Robin Roman, Joan Rfcmano, MarkSchemel. Eric Schleslnger, NaomiSchneider, Cnarle* Saeer, GeorglanheTalarow»kl, MarK Walnger and KarenWright. ",..-,•,;.-.:' Grade 12 > All A'» and or B;»' PeterAegaard,. Oebra AcKerman; MichaelAgottlno, Laurie Angel beck, OavidAnmon, Jill Bator, Maureen Baker,Patricia Bartagllnl, Patricia- Baytaia,Anne Bandar, Sharon Bermteln, MorayBlinder, Karen Boyle, Marcy Breun-•teln, Judith Brltan, MIchell Brou,Linda Buontempo, AllMn Caoarle, Mark<hodoth, Karla 'Church. Svun Clay.Ellen Cohen, Pablo Corderb,' CarolCOqnan, Mark Csemlca and Anne Cure.

Maureen Oaviei, JIU DeCotlU, GaryDeLonge, Christine DeMtcco, HenryDraus. Thoma* Ftnllnl, Jane Farrell/Glenn Fedirko, Gall Foenter, TheresaFollnuer, Kathleen Fowter, France*Gall, Paul Garllck, Ellen Gladls. MallaCordon, Cheryl Hadlty, Gerard Haney,Oonald Hardman, Virginia Hart. WendyMtmtarth. Mellsti Herman, KrlstenHIMebrant, Kenneth Hopper and pebraHyams.

William Jackson, Barbara Jagerman,David Johnson. Judltn Kam'm, MaryKobyllnski. Linda ' Kov»c»,SybilKramer^Alchiird Krapf, Janet Kuhn,Joeeph Ladanye. Joan Leahey. Jame>Leahy, Linda Lefrancoij, LynneLelrancols, Stevtn Leonard, DaleLoderstedt, Leeann LukaHU, SylviaMacklln. Steven Mande.ll. Michael'McNally, Nancy Merrill and PeterMochun.—

Paul Nappen, Jarti*» Nolan, DenlsaNoto. Patricia 0'B.rlen. Linda Olsen,Peter PtiHIIpj,. Marcy Porinoft, JudithPotashkln, Jacqueline Rellly, JoyceReltemeyer, Rita Renklewlcz. NancyRhoads, Frederic Rollman, ThomasRutmayer. Stephen Salton, SusanSchelner, Oonna Schlemm, BrianSchoiield and Nancy Scull.

Thomas Seavy, Deborah Shier, KarenSlowey, Karen Smith, Wendy Smith,Kathy Sperling, Gary Sprlngsted; KamyStlefel, Deborah Strsuss. Linda Swetman, Michael ' Verg.' " . icholasWarchol. Barbara Waslewlcz. CynthiaWelnstein. Joanne Winhlck, LeslieWlnokor, Daniel Zebrowskl.yQale Zobaland Paula Zydilk.

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Grade 11. • All A'» and or B'»:Margaret'Ahlrhovle, Pairlcia Af-zenbecki Cheryl Baker, Marc Baacken,Joanna Beimls, Patricia, Berl, CardBlazeloynki, Kathryn Brooks. ThomasBucker. Katherlne Carlln, Ami* Chin,La* Ah Chong, Katherlne Clark, LisaCohen, Dear* Coin, Sally ' Cooney,Gregory Csemlca, Dennis DeJiarine,Stephen Delika't, John DeLoulsa, VivianDemas, Chris DILorenzo,' MarcyOvblnsky and Kathleen Dumlng. ':

Dean Ellis, Heidi Eloege, LeslieFarer, Pamela Few, Joan; Gllmore,James Goodman, Mary Gorgdl, WalterGuV, Karen Herbrt, Nancy Hudiik,Stuart Jacobs,Jenkins, Robin Jennings, Evan John,Walter Johnson; Gregory,-Kamelka,Daniel Kane, Elaloe Klam'e, KellyK'Meyer. Janls Kupenmldt and DianeLiberia •

Elaine Manhardt, James McCoy,Robin Murphy, Jam** O'Brien, ThomasPatemo, Helen Penverme, Rene* Pfaff,'Paul Phillips, Consuella Pockett,Malcom Pringle, Edward Sarfcitlan,Reba. Schecter, Dennis Schmati,Richard SektmenV Tomothy Slauson,Dawn Smollnske, Linda Soloder, Ellen

''Storch, Jeffrey Thornton, GralgWalters, Richard /V., Ward, DianaWarner, P«ul Wolansky, Holly Wrightand Monica Wronskl.

MissO'Learyin pageant

Miss Kathleen O'Leary,19, of 215 OFchard St. iscompeting in the Miss Union.County pageant to be held at 8p.m. May 19 at Fanwood-Scotch Plains High School.

Miss O'Leary, one of 13yotgig-woltlen in the contest,has completed one aftd a half<years of college and hopes toobtain a master's degree sothat she can teach drama. Herfavorite sport is football andher talent presentation will besinging. .,

The winner of the pageantwill go on to compete in theMiss New Jersey'contest inJuly, the next step towardcapturing the Miss Americatitle.

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Page 4: DigiFind-It · , •. • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;.-,4

I.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Thursday, May 10,1973

:>^-"«;V: ;:-, -A: ..yT:';--r;:;fe

•^v.rvV.^'-:;-''-;-;.<K^

i f warp :*'-.Iff

-Detective Clifford Dobbins and Detective GordonOstrowsky show the narcotics display which is the propertyof thp force. ." v •

Patrolman Linn M. Lockwobd receives the Police Chief'sAssociation's Valor award. Chief Haney Is at right.

V ! • ' •. i •

Lt. Lawrence Bonnell stands by while Sgt^Gerard Haneyparks one of the riewest of the thirteen mobile units of theCranford police force. • *- "

NATIONAL POLICE WEEKMay 13th to 19th

\ • • ' . ; •Officer Robert Nylen Mans the telephone and desklocated orv the first floor of the Municipal Building.

Detective Robert Guertln-demonstrates the new TDSspeed computer which requires no outside attachments andcan compute the speed of any given auto from a parkedposition or traveling in the same or opposite direction.

Jcfiriu- McNully (right), the metc-r'technician, DavidKirkas (center) Ct'.<n<ord\ line pointer ond Stanley P.Kuck the elec.tric.il technician sKind by in Cr.mfofd';, newbiyn pointing dep.ir.Trnent.

Ms tiarocontributed.Patrick,

• • ' • ; > ' • • • » . ' •

• . » • : • • • • • ' , ' • . • >

i\

LJ

l i e pulls his weight around town pro-

tecting our personal rights, guarding porsonal

property. Ho gives it all ho's got! And, like

all our policemen, he doesn't stop there. Ho

takes time to got involved in worthwhile com-•p

munity projects . . . sponsoring youth activities,

working for drug rehabilitation, backing local

clubs. He's a non-stop good guy on tho job,

and oH. Most folks think of him as *t friond.

THIS ADVERTISEMENT SPONSORED BY

(;KAY.lVllKM4>ltlAL IKUNIWAL HOME

0 •••••••• I s n ' t i t M i c e '" ": ""• '• ; . "" ' '' " ' " ' ' ' •"' • ' ; : :; : ; " ' •

Knowing the. Gmy Wearing the Badge Is On Ojxr Team"p

[ • : '•

^hrahw had threeWW, Cratap two and pjynh;Met Boehm and JlmrtyBeadle, one each;' MikeStevens caught a good game InUs tint start in that position.Mark Attanasi and JohnWblraeUdorf pitched for theCherokees while getting onehit each. Other Cherokeehitters were Engemann andS o n t a g . -:•;,. • ..••• ., ••-;:

C h e y e n n e s 0 ":.'••''•.,''•''•

; In the finest pitching per*forraance of the' season,Lowell Abrams led theApaches to a 5-0 victory overthe Cheyennes. Abramsstruck out 11 batten andwalked none as] one batterreached base safely, that wasPete Alvarez with a double inthe fifth inning. TommyCrater with three hits,1

Abrams and Jimmy Beadlewith two, each led the Apacheattack. John Colendenskipitched a fine game for the

. Cheyennes. Bill Schmidt of theCheyennes and Marc Slroc-kman of the Apaches each

• caught well in their first garnerbehind the plate.Navajos 10-

/ S e n i l n o l e s S • . IAfter losing three in a row,

the Navajos won their firstgame on the strength of agrand slam home run by RotoCarvallo, followed by a homerun by Alex D'Addio. MikeLetteno made the. defensiveplay of the seaaoa with anunassisted triple play in thefifth inning. Mike OWe was thewinning pitcher. Mike Som-merlaaf had a single for thewinners. The Seminoles had atotal of 13 hits with GaryKaplan getting two doublesana a single,'three single byJohn Cronley, and two singleseach by Jackie Siedler andBobby Cieslak. John Letieajand Billy Aldredge shared theSeminole pitching.

Pawnees 8-Seminoles 5

The Gra/s Funeral HomePawnees defeated the GibsonAssociates Seminoles 8 • 5 onthe 11 strikeout pitching ofMark Kalian. The game wascalled after five innings due to.rain and darkness.Berejka hit a triple and singleto lead the winners .while JoePijanowski also had a longtriple. Other hitters wereMarc Berejka, Jim Hjgginsand Mark Holian. Scott Rossy{urned in the fielding play ofthe game when' he fielded ahard hit ball that bounced offthe pitcher's glove, picked itup quickly and threw to JoePijanowsky covering secondfor a forceout that choked off aSeminole rally. Bobby Cieslakcollected two hits and pitchedwell for the Seminoles. JohnCranley had a single anddouble and Gary Kaplan, JohnLetlecq and Dick Hurley gotbase hits to keep the pressureon the Pawnees right up to thelast out. ^

Mohicans 9 -Pawnees 2

Richard Frungillo andRichard Colville once againcombined their pitchingtalents to pace the Mohicansto their fourth win withoutdefeat, besting the Pawnees 9 -2. The Mohicans received 11walks, cashing in five for runs,while the hitting was paced byRichard Colville's threesingles, Danny Kastleman'stwo singles, a triple byRichard Frungillo and a singleby Jeff Manhardt. Scott Rossyand Joe Pijanowski pitchedfor tho . Pawnees. JohnBerejka had two hits; hisbrother Mark one and MarkHolian a double to, pace thePawnees attack.

In an exciting contest lastSundayCheyennes13 -Navajos 10

In an exciting contest lastSunday' afternoon, theCheyennes came from behindto beat the Nuvajos 13-10.

Peter Alverez pitched all theway for the winners for histhird win of the season. JohnColendinski collected two hitsund I^iiry Blumenfeld, JackErbeek and Jim Hanaun allyhltfltjd for .the Cheyennes.

Mike Utferio bad twosnigtes and Don Lynch alsosingled for the.Nuvajoa. AlexD'Addio, Navajos secondbuscniun, made a great one-iiundi-d cutch to put down anearly Choyenno rully. MichuelSoiumorlad pluycd u finegame behind tho plate for theNuviijorf and waa creditedwith cutting down another

uii; at Uie plate.

Michael MacNainara Wasthe pitcher for the' Lions asthey defeated the Pumas.

J Gingwy led the lions with twohits along with MacNainara,Hartnett, Flohl, Bylto andSchenker each collecting a hit.Cerrato and Kay each had athree bagger for the Pumas.

w4f,

4Jt1\

L1)•i13•1

4S

,*-:,

®Sortw1. Firaone, Patrick andHowerton executed an ex*

The Badger bats were againput to action against theBearcats. Patrick. andHowerton both hit bomeruns.Also hitting for the Badgerswere Faraone, Patrick, DeliaSerra, Niro and Sorber,'Thewinning pitcher was Doug.Patrick. MarkParadlsodid anexcellent lob for the Bearcatson'defense as the catcher.

Lions 10-Wolverines 1

The Lions defeated theWolverines as Eric Shenkerpitched a sparkling one-hitter,striking out 12. Gingery,Schenker.. MacNamara,Donovan; Hicks and Hartnet^all had hits for the Lions 10-run attack.; • r •

Lions 1 1 - P u m a s 10

Wolverines 6 * Bobcats 5The PBA Wolverines came

from behind 5O to defeat theBobcats in a close game^ TheWolverines tied the game inthe sixth inning on a walk toJim Seamen anf a single byKevin Knight. Mark

iriatiano's single drove inthe hring run and he scored on

afK Langdon's hard hit ballto first base. Chip Ammonnand Kevin Knight shared themound duties for theWolverines. ".

Wolverines 11 -Leopards 5

The Wolverines won gametwo of the week against theLeopards. The Leopardsjumped out in front 2-0 whenJimTruah bit a double to driveJin two runabijt the Wplyerlnescame back in their half of thefirst to score eight' runs,sending 13 batters to the plate.The tutting was led by DavidAxtt, Mark Langdon, KevinKnight and Chip Ammonn.Stephen Farbman notched hisfourth pitching victory of theseason.

Jaguars 8 - Pumas 6The Jaguars, leading the B

division, came from behind todefeat the Pumas 8-6 on 14,'hits. Stanton, Kargus,Mclntyre and Senkarik all haddoubles and Gleadall,Williams and Belli chipped infor a single each. Hitting forthe Pumas were Cerrato,Dolin, Kay, Winkel, Willis andSmith.Jaguars 8 - Bobcats 0

The Jaguars extend theirwinning streak to four in & rowby a shutout pitched byKargus allowing only threehits. The Jaguars collected 15hits with triples by Senkarikand Mclntyre, a double byKargus and singles byStanton, Gleadall, Schusterand Pryor. Ferraro, Greenand Mulvaney had the threeBobcats, safeties.

Bobcats 14 - Lynx 11

The Bobcats defeated theLynx 14-11. Ferraro, Mc-Carroll and Green pitched forthe Bobcats with Green get-ting the victory coming on inrelief in the fourth inning andnipping a Lynx rally. Greencontinued to hold the opposingbatters in check for theremainder of the game. J.Zoltak and John Perdik led theBobcat batters with twodoubles and u single. Ericksonwas the leading Lynx hitterwith two doubles.

Bobcats 4 - Panthers 3y

In a very close contest, theBobcuts defeated tho Pan-thers. Hoger Thpmus was thewinning pitcher while GeorgeParcella took the loss for thePanthers. Both pitchersallowed seven hits und struckout 10 batters. Tim Kettlersupplied the hitting power fortho- Bobcats getting twosingles and two HBI'ti. ChrisDougherty led the 1'uiitliersJwith two hits.

Dlvbluntl

Tluoiu

4 1

33

o J0 -i

* '

) ' • J .••

'~^':-.-'-. • • . . * • • ' • ' ' • . • ' • • ' • ' • • ' . ' • • - . • V : - ': " ' ' ' . ' " . ' . • • • ' • " .

Thursday, Msy 10, »73 CRANFORD CN J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE

• • ' ' • * » ' • ' . ' • • / " ' . :

\ Livingston Mall

Montclair ••

Newark

Westfield

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Page 5: DigiFind-It · , •. • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;.-,4

lerhood to install

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::

onThe Sisterhood of _

ctrenMutial Installation of

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385 Walnut Ave.officer* for the

ing next ftwill be by Mrs. Joan

Nursery schoolset

The nursery school ofTemple Beth-El will holdregistration for the September1»R t o June 1974 school yearon Tuesday, Hay IS from 1.to 2am. in the nursery it TempleBeth-El, Walnut Avenue.

Interested parents may visitthe school with their

s to observe nurseryon weekday mor-

nings.Open toany pre-school child

who will be three years old bySeptember 1,1873, the nurserymeets from 9 to 11:30 a.m. andfrom 12:45 to 3:15 p.m. fivedays a week. The afternoonsession is for four year oldsonly. The school has met allstate department of earlychildhood requirements forcertification and is non-

- dntoninatibnaj.' However, allJewish holidays ~ andtraditions are observed.

-Further information may beobtained by calling theTemple office, at 276-9231 orMrs. Ted Pearlman, * headteacher, at home after noon at

OCEANGROVE

FOR A GREATFAMILY

VACATION!WRITE FOR COLOR

BROCHURE|niBUCITY BUREAU, P.O. Box 277

OCEAN GROVE. N J . 07756

Rose, who wm be serving herd i d t

Other officers to be In-stalled include Bint. JudyJ&upferberg, ways and means

dent; Mrs. BarbaraFolkart, membership vice-president; Mrs. Sheila Marks,programming vice-president;'and Mrs. Beverly Koh, youthvice-president.

Also to be installed are Mrs.Ul Schwartz, treasurer;0 Mrs.Joan Finkelstein, financialsecretary; Mrs. EllenBorken,recording secretary; and Mrs.Sandy SrW"*n, correspon-ding secretary.

Mrs. Marilyn Kaback, apast president/ will serve asinstalling officer.

The Temple Beth-El choirwill present the program! • •

OsceolaOsceola Presbyterian

Church announced thefollowing schedule of activitesfor next week:

Worship services areprovided each Sunday from 10to 10:45 a.m. Church schoolclasses for all ages areavailable from 11 to 11:50 a.m.William Elliott Jr., pastor,will preach. • . , .

Junior and Senior HighFellowship meets for. fun,supper and fellowship onSunday, May_13 at 5:30 p.m.

The Cherub Choir rehearsesat '4 p.m. today and seniorchoir at 8 p.m.

Everyone is welcome . toparticipate in "Prayer Call''each Friday at 9 a.ro. and 9plm. in Room A.

Circle 3 will meet at thehome of Mrs. Russell Schaar.30 Briarheath Lane, dark at 8pan. Monday, May 14.

Circle 1 win meet at thechurch on Tuesday, May 15 at1 p.m. with Mrs. Lula Knightas hostess.

All preschool nurseryclasses will visit Terry LouZoo, Scotch Plains on Wed-nesday, May 16 at 12:50 p.m.There will be no other sessionsof school that dav

'CRUCIBLE' CAST MEMBERS — Appearing In "The Crucible" 5unday nlL., the final round of the Urrton County CYO one-act play contest are* left to right,

Judy O'Brien, Ellen Gc4d, Karen Boyle, Chris Schneider and Ntork Sir kin'

nationsin the News

Special Limousine Service. T^P* to all airports, railway stations & piers

dill CHestnut 5-2581 — BRidge 6-2272

Limousines for weddings— Trips to anyplace

••Prices Very Reasonable—

Rosariansto installdnieers

GARWOOD-XBenedjptionand installationelected officers ofRosary Altar Society wulplace tonightatso'ichurch by Rev. JohnMcHale, pastor.

Those, being installed areMrs. John McCarthy,president; Mrs. WilliamBerry, vice president; Mrs.Arnold Santoro, treasurer;Mrs. Belford Millering,recording secretary, and Mrs.Frank Hirsch, correspondingsecretary.

The crowningof the statueof the Blessed Virgin Mary byMrs. Ralph Browne, spiritualdevelopment chairman, and afloral rosary win take place atthe regular meeting in St.Anne's School following thechurch ceremony. Theoutgoing officers, committeechairmen and vice chairmen

be

The Fellowship* Players ofthe Cranford United MethodistChurch will present "Inheritthe Wind" by JeromeLawrence and Robert E. Lee.

Directed by Mrs. CarolForeman, who presented the

~ t's former production ofIlhextausical "Oliver!," the

Inherit the Windon church: stage

play wiU be presented on Mayat 8 p.m, in18 and

ChurchThe play tett&of the "Scopes

Monkey Trial" held in Dayton,Tennessee in 1925 Nn whichClarence Darrowthe state law against teaiDarwin's theories of evin the public schools. He was

contested by William JenningsBryan who saw evolution asthe work of the devil andfought against it to his death.

The lead part are played byDavid Davis as Darrow andDennis DeJianne as Bryanwith Evan John featured inthe role of Scopes: Others hi

the leading roles are Welling Hanas Rachel, Thomas Hoffeckeras the Rev. Jeremiah Brownand WiUiam Campbell asHornbeck. There is. a'cast ofover SO characters.

Tickets are priced at $2.50and $2 and may be purchased

calling the Church office.

Rosary Society elects officers

DEDICATED TO DIGNIFIEDSERVICE SINCE 1897.

I,FUNERAL DIRECTORS

FRED HI GRAY, JR.DAVID BCRABIELEDWARD T.ENN1S

C. FREDERICK POPPY

WESTFIELD: 31&East Broad St., William A. Doyle, manager 233-014^CRANFORD: 12 Springfield Ave'., Fred H.<Jray, Jr., manager 276^)092

NG ENJOYMENT

7 24 Houri

The new slate of officers forSt. Michael's Rosary Societywere welcomed by theirmoderator, Msgr. John Davis,at the Monday meeting held inthe school dining room.

Mrs. Eugene Walshpresented the slate as follows:Mrs. John Qrrico, president;Mrs. Thomas Senkeleski, firstvice president; Mrs. LeeSbelhimer, second vicepresident;! Mrs. John Trotte,recording secretary; Mrs.Edward Sasso, correspondingsecretary and Mrs. ThomasMadonia, treasurer.

At the conclusion of thebusiness meeting, Msgr.Davis expressed his gratitude

May Cttfwmngat St. Michael's

St. Michael's School willhold a May crowningceremony Monday at the 1 :04p.m. mass..Colleen Ambrozy has been

selected to crown the BlessedVirgin. Crown bearer is KathyWilliamson and attendantsare Susan Kelly, Denise Pfaff,Tracey Roche, MargaretHobson and Constance Burd,

First communicants willserve as guards of honor andthe entire student body willattend the ceremony..-

to Mrs. JohXPfanne, retiringpresident and her officers andcommitteewomen for theirdedication and con&butionstoward the society's social andspiritual expansion.

"Where There's a Will,There's a Way" was thesubject presented, by MissMary C. Kanane, UnionCounty surrogate, guestspeaker. Husbands and guestswere invited and participatedin a question and answerperiod. Miss Kanane is thenational regent of the CatholicDaughters of America.

^'Survivors; include : adaughter, Mrs; George Dixon,with whom he lived; abrother, George of Beach-wood, and two grand*c h i l d r e n . .••-•.:••-. - - . ~ ~ f — - >

Services were held lastThursday at the DooleyFuneral Home, 218 W. NorthAve, Interment was atGracdand Memorial Park,KenUworth.' ,

. • • •

BoekGARWOOD- Services were

held yesterday at GrayMemorial Funeral Home* 12Springfield Ave., Cranford forGeorge Bock, 64, of 636. MyrtleAve.,who died Sunday atMuhlenberg H o s p i t a l ,Plainfleld after a brief ulness.

Rev. Stephen Sxabo of theUnited Church of Christ,Garwood officiated. In-terment was at FairviewCemetery, Westfidd.

Born in Baybnne, Mr. Bocklived in Garwood 23 yearsi Heretired in 1967 after beingemployed by the Singer Co.,Elizabeth as a foreman for 43years.

He belonged to the Singer 25Year Club.

Surviving are his widow,Mrs. Mildred Stier Bock; twosons, Robert of Colonia andDonald of Rah way; a sister,Mrs.* Mary Henorickson ofBayonne, and two grand->children.

Mrs. WakefieldKENILWORTH- Mrs.

Mamie Wakefield, 87, of 217 N.Ninth St. died Sunday inJersey City Medical Center.

She was born in Arlington,Ga. and came to New Jerseyin 1915. She moved toKenilworth the following year.

A founder of the UnionBaptist Church, KenUworth,Mrs! Wakefield served asMother of the Church. She alsowas a former churchtreasurer and-secretary andtaught Sunday school. She waspresident of the churchMissionary Society and theDeaconess Board. /

Survivors include a son,Arthur of Roselle; a daughter,

I Mrs. Zora McKinnie of

BRAND NEW •'Iv.'

TRIUMPH TH* SPITFIHEMARK iv

NOW IN STOCK

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY

OeBt»r>'tWaitfleJd aftar it

He was bora m Boston ittidlived hew M year*. Mr.Taylor retired in 1M5 fromHewlett and Lew, New YorkQty after SSyearsaervlceasatea and coffee broker, .',;•• •-; •

He wa» the huftband of thelate Mrs. Edna WlUiamiTaylor who died in November

yesterday af the UmonChurch. Amlngementi - were

m l t d b the Nesbltt

We will have Mother's

favorites, freshly baked

for you to take homefor 'Her' thy.

. See our delicious'selection, of'

Cakes, Rolls, Cookies,

Sweet nuns

So Fresh and Tasty, they'll melt in your mouth I• V

JeLtf©

1 Mrs. 'Lois'' y?f¥E>f TfihfMM,j formerly oi Craniora, pieu

May 4 in Houston, Tex. after a

is survived by herRobert Falrchild of

Houston; two daughters, Mrs.Virginia Rivera of Queens,N . Y m n d Mrs. Carolyn

4\igarino of Spring, Tex/, twobrothers, Walter ©uor Jr. ofElixabeth and Edwin Ensor ofEdison; a sister, Mrs.Eliiabeth Binns of Cranford,and two grandchildren.

The family said donations to.the. American Cancer Societyin her memory • wou|d beappreciated " •

Mr. DriscollGARWOOD - John DriscolL

61, of 249 Third Ave. died April30 in Deborah Hospital,Browns Mills after a longillness. . , •

Services were held Fridayfrom the Dooley FuneralHome, 218 W. North Ave.,Cranford. A funeral mass wascelebrated in St. Anne's

Reta survived by fab widow,Mn.Baea^ Burger Dri^U;

Mr».Mari>nePlatoWaoi

Mr* Franlc Dvorak ofPlamtWd; a brother, Mat-1thew, and a sister, Mrs.Uuretta KelMer, both of

and four

Mr, Hews tonWilBam P. Hewston, for-.

merly of M Hillcrest AVe, diedSunday in Cmllfomia.

He lived in Pleasanton.California and was employedby Western Hectric Corp. .;

Surviving ate a brother,Albert Nugent of Norm Ford,'Conn, and* a sister, EileenNugent Vanderbeck of Troy,M i c h . . ' • - . • - . ' . • • • • •

The funeral was heldyesterday to California.

mmkit

^j0620 KH 9:45 A.M.

15WKH 8:15 A.M.

KENILWORTH FUNERAL HOMEConrad J. Wozniah,

511 Washington A V M I MKenilworth, N.J.

(Cor.N.21stSt.)

, Air Conditioned Chaptl*Amplt Off-Strftt Parking

Telephone272-5112

DOOLEYFUNERAL HOME

218 NORTH AVE., W. 276^0255

A Funeral Home., of homelike atmosphere, completelymodern, air conditioned, offttreet parking facUUieM.

. ' . : : • ' • ' • ' . ; • •• V . ' a h o • "

DOOLEY COLONIAL HOME556 Wwtfkld Av»., WMffWd ^

23iO255

WAViim IAW. mw HAvtJi, n » m q » m a m o

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' • ' " " • -~f .4 am r^-w^—^^v^^r^^v^'^.^H^r^^^'^^^^^W • i ^ . • ^R

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SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

14 North Ave., W. 27«-l«4

1973 MEMBERSHIP '•••%

WATCHUNC* LAKE GLUB

STIRLING RD.; W ^ N J .

H ^ B A N D I n d W l f E a n d o n e C h W . . . . > : . - . : ' . - . . . . . . . . . . 'l J 1 3 5 . M- I n l S i H o n F e e . l » t Y « r . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . ' . • • • • •• • • • • . : • • M0 .00

• • ' • • , • ' • ' • • : ' • ' v ; - . v! '• ' s , : • . . • • , . . . ' . • . ' • ' . , ' • * . * • • ' . . ,

, For adUltional inforimatioM, call:

in McDorjough467-6>70 Of 376-5224 :

Fla.; and the Uniyersity of; Florida, Gainesville, f3*; is jisecnetary (or Monsanto Co.;

>i KenUworth. She is a member. of - Kappa Alpha : Theta^ f i i t ' ' V y £ >

im. fifiv Williams, agraduate otCranford High School and theUniyersity o( Florida, Is withFletcher Lincom Mercury,S u m m i t . : • • ' • ' - • ' : • • • ' ••- • '•;•*••

i ^ i ^ i - - e — , — — ^ E. Westfield Ave.,-Ro»eue

Shields-Downing trothMr. and Mrs. H. at the

BINGGR0MDAH1

J i L Ibrcdain AJS/Tht 5th Edition, from the creators of diefint Mother's Day plate, and the companythat started collector platemaklng 77 yearsago with the first Christmas plate —Pen-mirk's Blng St. GrondahL

iane smr137CINITRAI AVENU£. WESTFIELP. N.J. 07090

/ Phon© 232-4800OTENTHURS.TIL9FJM.

CwtoiMr Pariiihg In our Lot at 132 EhiMr Strart

Downing of Smlthiield, Me.,announced the engagement oftheir daughter,, Peggy, toDavid Matthew Shields, son of

,Bfr. and Mrsi VernonShields <rf Dover, ^ .H/ /

Miss Downing, a graduate ofWaterville (Maine) High.School, received her B;A.degree from St. LawrenceUiuvmBity. She is assistantdirector of admissions at theUniversity of New Hampshire,Durham, and is the grand-daughter of Mrs. Lloyd A.Briggs of 31 Spruce St.

• Mr. Shields graduated fromDover High School and at-tended New HampshireTechnics Jnslitute_Jn--Coiu

Mollands,Hessler

The engagement of MissJanice Louise Hessler toTnaddeus Mollands was an-nounced this week. MissHessler is the daughter of Mr,and Mrs. Harry MorganHessler, and her fiance is theson of Thaddeus W. Mollandsof Hamburg, N.Y., and thelate Mrs.'Mollands. .'.

Miss Hessler, a graduate ofCranford High School, is in herthird year at the University ofMiami^ Coral Gables, Fla.. Mrs. Mollands is a senior atthe Uniyersity of Miami.

The.wedding, is scheduledlor September 1 at St.Mkhaers Church.

Candlelightinstallation

New officers will be In-stalled during the annualbanquet of the CranfordJunior Woman's Club of theVTA at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday-at

WOOD, WALKER & CO.. Members

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGESINCE 1869

203 Elm Street Westfield, N.JOPEN THURSDAY EVENINGS

7-9P.M.

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Open Tutiday Vi dayW«d. & Sal. » to i 97ILJU11AOp«n Thurtday » to » ,*'°^"»"»

107 WALNUT AVE. CRANFORO

the East Winds RestaurantScotch Plains.

The candlelight installationwill be conducted by MrsMichael Galuppo of the VIAadviser to the Juniors.'

The following officers wilbe installed:. Mrs. JohnMurphy, president; Mrs.William Delaney, first vice-president; Mrs. ThomasMcCloskey, second vice-president; Mrs. Daniel Sassirecording secretary; Mrs.Addison Stitt, recordingsecretary; Mrs. ThomaWalsh, federation secretaryand Mrs. John Cappellatreasurer:'''" '• v';;n'-'l'';'*ii; '••' •.

Mrs., John'Murphy, ••membership chairman, will initiattMrs. Rea Brown into activmembership.

Arrangements for thdinner were made by MrsThomas Walsh, assisted byMrs. Albert Fresolone andMrs. David Gregory.

Enjoy your pool 6 full months a year!

WITH A GASPOOL HEATER

For In-ground orAbove-ground pools

You iloit'l li.iVf lo w.iil unlil Illin1 lo K«'l in llu- swim ' Sy ^^ '.fill..' |oi .1 lhn'f oi Inui-nionili swiiniinii);ol lliinic-. ln'.l.ill ,i H.'S swiiiiininn pool'ii<Ml<i .mil V>HI sc.isonf < >••! si\month swinnnnt^ in <m<- snoki'.(.•it I.IIK' llx1 pluiiK"' now.

G . r . . p i i n l ln -<i t»- i s .!!<• f u l l y . i i i h i n i . i t k O n e s.-

I oi luillit'i inloini.iiioii j i no nlili^.nioi^ wiiu- lo:I'ool lle.il.-. 1)< ii.utiiicnt, I li/.ili.'llil.nvn (.,,-,. Ul-I Urn

( ' , i - i i i . d n - , i l . - i s , I I . ' f u l l y . i n i . m i . i l k o n . - s . - i l l n n , . , ' ,, ' • ' • I . S i i t v i . U i - M l i i 1 i , N . . 0 / 0 ' ( I m t o i i i . i t i v m i i n . - . i i . ' s jk . ' . - p . , i i r w . i i i - i i f i M i H - i . K i i i . ' | i i s i w l n ' i v y o u w . i n i . , i i , • ^ ^

. , ' , , . - U j s w i i i i n u n ^ p o o l i o n i i . i i t i n o i . i l f . i l i ' i . I x f i i w m l i i ' i

I I . i l l s i ' . i j o i l o n j ; . l< y >.< i . i . y > " . ' " . ' ' s i i r i i i n i i i . U s . - o l i i . i u t l . i l I M - . 1-r M < > 1 . i l l . ' i l t d l i y l l l i '

I M s l . i l l , . 1 1 1 ( 1 . l « l ( l l o t i l l ' V . l l l l f O l V O i l l . p o o l K l V f . l l l l . ' l l l . ••• i s s i l l I I I

( o n - , . • ! « . • N . m i f . i l ( i . i s I t ' s I ' u n . I I L - I I ; \ !

andp y ^ will present, a)rbgram with: «udlehceparticipation. She studied

^ttworksonpahan<^ittworksonpahtiWybycontihental authoritioi Jn theoriginal language. During thecourse of numerous* trips tothe Middle and Far East, shefound the inspiration for*, herunique prese 'ntat ion,"Arabian NighW Fantasy.''

R. Bradfield^ Jr.,program consultant, willuitroduce Veuna, who oasappeared on top-rated TVprograms such as the DavidPVost, Meiiv Griffin and MikeDouglas shows.1 She has also

• K , - - „ r Allen, GeneRayburn, Skitch Hendersonand Virginia Graham. .-

The current affairsdepartment. wilL_Mld aplanning meeting Monday atthe home of the chairman,Mrs; E.A. Koyen, 715BrooksldePI, at lp.m.

The annual picnic of thedrama' department will beheld on Tuesday, May 15, atthe home -of Mrs. P.V;Euonaguro, 26 Central Aye^with Mrs. G.J. Paredes as co-hostess. Flans for. next year'sstudy will be discussed... Mrs. L.E. Montgomery,membership chairman,welcomed and introducedMrs. R.L /Glenwood Rd. as a newmember at the recent annualbusiness meeting.

Is your club or pr^ntia1^rff-qt'having a special event, election of officers^ ^ r ^ r o i n p/in(ere«t? Send us your story

so everyone will know what you 'aredoing.

Nur$e> medical studentto wed in December

Mr. and Mrs. Robert T.DonneUy1 of 7 Pittsfteld St.have announced the betrothalof their daughter PamelaJoan, to Fred ; T^atrick-Scialabba,'son of Mr. ana Mrs.Angelo Scialabba of Brooklyn,N . Y . ; \ . • • • ; • • . " • • : • • .

Miss Donnelly, is a 1969graduate of Cranford HighSchool and a 1972 graduate ofMufilenberg Hospital School ofNursing, Plainfield. She isworking with.the operating"room staff of MuhlenbergHospital.

Medicine and Surgery.A , December

planned.is

Mr. Scialabba wasraduated in 1966 from

of New-f\

Vork and received a B.A.degree in bilogy from LewisCollege in Illinois. He is in hisfourth year at the Universityof Rome, Italy, College, of Miss Pamela Donnelly

Club marks a milestoneThe Cranford Newcomers

Club celebrated its 25th an-niversary at a luncheon-fashion show at the TowerSteak House, Mountainside,on May 3.

The fashions were providedby Lydia's Boutique ofScotch,, Plains. Club'bersrwhbft#effid '^ei^'victor. Bartusjta:; ' Mrsf. fcthony Belmonte, Mrs. DennisElmore, Mrs. Edwin Heck-man, Mrs. Robert Manfre,Mrs. Robert Mattis, Mrs.Charles Polak and Mrs. PaulStinson.

Prospective new memberswere introduced. They are:

Jane Ellen Kraemerto wed A.'P. Cabral

Mr. and Mrs. William F.Kraemer of 131 RooseveltAve. announce theengagement of their daughter,Jane Ellen, to Anthony PaulCabral, son of Mr. and Mrs.Antonio B. Cabral of Bristol,R.I.

Miss Kraemer is a 1967graduate of Cranford HighSchool, and also . wasgraduated from Union Collegein 1969 and the University ofRhode Island, Kingston, R.L,in 1971 with atB.A. degree inEnglish. She is employed byTravelong, Inc. in Westfield asa travel counselor.

,,. Mr, Cabral is a graduate otColt Memorial High ..School,Bristol, R;I. in 1966 and theUniversity of Rhode Island in1971 with a B.A. in history. Heis a member of Sigma PhiEpsilon social fraternity. He isemployed by Virginia Brands,Inc., Swansea, Mass., asproduction manager.

The wedding date has beenset for October 7 /at St.Michael's Church:

Jane Ellen Kraemer

Guardsman eats a subBill Ray, freshman baseball

coach at Orange AvenueJunior High School, washonored lust Thursday nightat a party at the home of Mr.and Mrs. Ray Morati of 105County Park Dr. Mr. Ray wasleaving for two weeks ofmilitary duty with the

National Guard a fDrum, New York.

Camp

The entire fresliman teamattended the party, and foodconsisted of a giant six-footsubmarine sandwich. Mrs.Joseph Christiano helped withserving. ,

Summer, Camp At

Mrs Leslie Neuwirth, Mrs.Thomas W. Polak, Mrs.Ronald Schroeder and Mrs.James Stowe.

The monthly board meetingwas held hist evening at thehome of Mrs. James Vaughn,354 Retford Ave.

Interested .persons residing25 months or legs in CranfordPTe~?aj&ed;>to contact i themembership chairman, Mrs.Anthony Belmonte, 1 MyrtleSt. ,

Miss Karen Miller

TardifjMiller

The engagement of MissKaren Agnes Miller to Ken-neth Joseph Tardif, son of Mr.and Mrs. Philip ,M, Tardif of166 Mohawk Dr., has beenannounced by her parents,Mr. and Mrs. James 0. Millerof 110 Columbia Ave.

Miss Miller, a 1971 graduate-of Cranford High School, isemployed at the Cranfordaccounting office of the NewJersey Bell Telephone Co.

Her fiance, who also wasgraduated from CranfordHigh School in 1971, is withHorn Construction. He is amember of the ArmyReserves.

THE P I N G BY SCHO'O215 North Avenue, Hillside, New Jersey

June 25th - August 3rd, 1973Hours: 9:55 to 3:15

Five days a weekNursery Camp Girls «ind Boys Ages 3 and 4. . xJunior Camp - Girls and Boys Ages 5 and 6Senior Camp - Girls and Boys Ages 7 to 1-1

2 Pools - Arts and Crafts - Cook-OutsCall 355-69S0 for reservations

The l^n^ry School is u nondiscriininatory institution

STUDIO Of-

WEDDINGS* PORTRAITS* BAR-MITZVAHS

276 7749II NORTH AVENUE EAST. CRANFORD

O P P O S I T T C R R STAT ION i

THE VAIL-DEANE SCHOOLEstablished 1869' " \ V

• A npn-discMrtilijatory college^preparatorycoeducational school of 184 students,grades K-12 - \. .

• Comprehensive academic and ex-tracurricular programs - :

• Individualized instruction within 'gradelevels as well as. professional guidance

• 'sefvlces - ,',. ' "••.•;.. , •'• ..,; . ., .'.'-.:T E S T I N G DATES ;

/Way 19By appointment

618 Salem AvenueElizabeth, N.J. 07207

"•* gradesl-11Kindergarten

Telephone201-351-3141

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"LocationsKEMLWORTH

Community Metfiodist ChurchBoulevardMon. 9:30 a.m. * 7:30 p.m

WESTFIELD

First Baptist Church107 Elm St.Thurs. 9:30 a.m. & 7:30 p.m

M0TH6

I f s DifferentMother wi l l ap-preciate the classicbeauty of JKrementzjewelry. A^asterfullydrafted with realjewels. You'll appreciate that.it's fashionedin a heavy overlay of 14 Karat Gold. So thateach piece has much of the wearing qualityand all of the rich beauty of solid KaratGold. At a fraction of the cost.

Earrings ( M O W3.00 (r ight) $)S.00v '•I • Brooch $'24.00

lljudi CIIJUJO, IY-r:,imjl Clurnu, lUidi;..'t a L.iy-A-Wuy I'l

: , t • • • •

V:30 to S:30WED. 9:30 to 1:30

Thurs. 9:30 to U: 30

2'/o-671U

tLf.1 h yUlMBY SIS.

Page 6: DigiFind-It · , •. • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;.-,4

£3S__f__ !______ j_^^

^Mmmmmmm

AND CHRONICLE Thursday, May 10,1973

o

<tariag the_B_____________M_________0____ 1

Includei to

up tnick lor thertment, HO.OOO; in-

stallation of storm waterdrain*, |O0,000v nroad im-provements, W6.500,purchaseof 4 boottaeping machine forthe tax collector's office,

installation of traffics i g n a , $6,000, and in-atallation of a traffic blinker,»,ooo

A total of $27,000 for stormwater drains will be bonded.

Streets scheduled for im-vementB, according to

_____ Wh Street, SheridanAvenue from Hth to 17

WN

i ?•-

Slat Street, UnionAvenue, • Arthur Terrace and

In uother acUoit, themayornamed Michael Virkaitia toserve as an alternate memberof the Planning Board for aterm ending December 31.

Councilman Fred Sooa,public works chairman, an-

" there will be nj> end-th cleanup in'May.

will resume atthe endvof June.

a resolutionsaying it;ha&no objections tothe transfer of* liquor licenseto new owners of KenilworthLiquors Inc. at the corner of S.2lst Street and the Boulevard.The building,' recentlydemolished following a fire,will be reconstructed in aDutch colonial style with

will notfollow

'chard Salles, director;George Brokaw, Joan Clarkeand Lynn Cummlngs,supervisors, and BrendaRusw, Jamea Brokkw, Kareniateria and Jeffrey Clem-

niedd, leaders.

parkingsecond floor, Mayor Conradsaid. Conrad said the building

to townKENILWORTH- The 44

members of the KenilworthVolunteer Fire Departmentwill sponsor their secondannual spring carnival May IS.

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Accommodations5. Delicious Food6. Rates Begin At $122 Per. Week.

7. State Licensed.

a variance.wereMrltda*

to wonBrearley Regional HighSchool. Entrance may begained at Washington Avenueand North 18th Street

The carnival committee isheaded by Tony Peters.Assisting are;. Ron Scorese,Tony Lisa, Fred Rica, MikePenn, Bob Picone, Walt Bury,John Vasile, Dan DiFabio and :

Henry McGeehan.carnival midway will

consist of^a number, of ridesfor diildren and adults, gamjteof-chance and skill, food a"nddrink. _'.,•••-•

The gates will open at e&.rn.and dose at II p.m. during theweek. On the weekend gateswill open at 2 p.m. and close at11:30 p.m.

VFW electsnew officers

KENILWORTH - GeorgeHurst was elected commanderof Kenilworth Post 2230, VFW,at a recent mi

____Jecle4. indude thefollowing': Roger McGeehan,senior vice commander;Albert Grady, junior vicecommander; Vincent Werner,chaplain; Richard Penn,quartermaster; BartonLamont, -judge advocate;Steven Kubichek, surgeon;Joseph Jacobi, Arthur Russoand James Rowe, trustees,and Edward Romaine, ad-jutant.

Spring plantsbloom at bank

K.ENILWQRTH-- T h eKenilworth Garden Club willdisplay >• spring flowerarrangements in the lobby ofthe Kenilworth State Bank, 477Boulevard, during the bank's"Spring Flower FestivalWeek," May 14-18.

Exhibits will be on displayfrom 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. dailyand 6 to 8 Friday night. Thebank: will give qway aflowering plant to all visitorsduring the week. _ , . • • •

culaUonhaimonth tn,th«

PD-fcritarand anyone toh

terested ta education, . ^ f e

have also been purchased:"Cbn»umer Complaint

Future In"BetterFamily

Medical Guide" and^ Brit an nicajS i I Th Jxmsecutlve weeks.Science In The Future.'V

dded for children are

" ' * _ : • _ • _

mmm^^^mp^DANCE CONCERT AT BREARLEY — Students ofMiss Pat's Dance Studio of Roselle Park andKenilworth will perform Saturday night at David

Brearley Redance concert <of the New Jersev

at

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1967 FORD, 8 cy l . , Custom 4 dr., R&H, Auto., P.S.

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KENILWORTH - HardingSchool has announced thenames of honor students forthe third marking period."they are as follojvs:.

Grade four — Louis Baton,Diana Bilski, .Catherine Blunt,Sandra Buntele, Brian Cera,Helen Cereste, KeithColeman, Gail Chonke,William D'Arcy, Linda Fields,John Filippene, MaureenHarms, Deborah Hubinaer."Carolyn Joho, David Keenan,Christine Keeney, Paul Kish,Scott Klinder, Richard Laf-ferty, James Lebers, SusanIipke, Luanne Lohman, DawnLunga, Gerald Marko, LauraMe Sorley.

Also, Steven Nikorak,Deborah Papa, Gary Patrick,Ignazio Pontoriero, EdwardProkopik, Mark Reilly, DebraReo, Carol Ann Rohal, "LaurieRothbart, Rita Scorese,Thomas Spital, John Van deWater, Jo Ann Veiga, AndreaVentre, Ernest Vitale, KarenVon Uchtrup, Barbara Wasky,Diane Zagerskas. ' . . . ' .

Grade five — Susan An-tonczak, Diana Basso, CinchBauer, Scott Beffert, DeniseBoucher, Terry-.Lee Boyle,Faith Cooley, Karen DiFranco, Arthur Eggers,Lorraine Falkowski, CharlesFerrugia, James Fiamingo,Willie Ann Glasco, RobertGoodwin, Robert Hanke,Audrey Harms, Jill- Hogan,Dianne Jones, Richard Kropp,Camille Kwasnick, ThomasLamb, Cheri Lebers.'

Also, Michael Lordi,* Bar-bara Lospinoso,. ArthurLunga, Robert Lyons, MicheleMcClafferty, Nancy Miller,Toni Moore, Donna Pantina,Rosemarie. Paparatto, LisaPicaroni, Lori Pinder, JoannePrisco, Cheryl Rahmstorf,James Rego, TeresaRestuccia, Valerie ' Rohm,Betsy Ross, Jane S<.ara,Karen Scheldt, LorraineSelecky, Scott Sena tore, LisaSignorella, Susan SzalUs,Renee Tharaldsen, Bernard^Tomasky. Keith Walyus.

Grade six — GeorgeBoyden, William Boyle,Richard Brokaw, RobertCancillieri, Tracy De Marzo,Valerie De Stefano, Steven DiFranco, Cynthia Dopf, BrianEnnis, Jeffrey Eysoldt, JoanFice, Diane Fisher, DavidFrost, Michael Galasso,Cynthia Grapen\_hirt, GaryHaines, Patricia Hoffman,Todd Htiblnger, John Jadelis,Cruig Keyasko, Scott Lamont,Christine Lenuz, DebraL,imeira, PYank Longo.

Also, Donna Lospinoso,John Mankowski; KarenMartin, Denise Materia,Cheryl Melchior, •» JohnMooller,, Michael Moen, KeneePicaroni, Paula Piccillo,Silvano Pontoriero, DeborahPowanda, Theresa Black,Garry Borealo, Theresa

Powers, Lisa Reuter, UichardHizj_o, Laura IlohuijT SusanSkwis/V Greg Staclc, StevenThwaites, Donald Tisch,Sheila Tucker, Peter Van-derkerk, James Van de Water,Robert Wasky, JudithWilverding.

Grade seven- — KennethHagnall, Michut-1. Itaton,Diane Bieht-r, Martin Carroll,Arleen Cieinnivcki, PamelaCutnrnitigs, Itohert Curtis,Kathlc-on Driscoll, GlennKskin, Wayiic- 1','arro, Kevin

STerguson, Gail Forman,Macsha Geisler, • StevenHoffmann, Stanley Jaskot,lisa Keenan, Ronald Kropp.Patricia Kruse, PatriciaLamb, Elaine Lloyd, RitaLorenc, Michael- Morano,Sharon Patrick, Gail Pr-zybylek, Cynthia Rotolo,Ddrma Sanford, ' RuthSchlenker, Edward Stark,Maureen Vamos, SandraVanardenne, Scott WalyUsr

Susan Zampaglione.Grade eight — Robert

Antonczak, Michael Baker,Jill Boesgaard, Susan .Bury,Stephen Cancillieri, PatriciaCaruso, Dennis Ciemniecki,James D'Arcy, Gregg David,

Roberto De Maio,Fisher, Stefanie Grimaldt,Susan Haines, Johrv Hanke,Kenneth HoffmarKeyasko.

Also, Kenneth Korecky,Carolyn Kritak, Deborah-Lloyd, /Louis. Menditto,Catherine * Metzingeir. NancyMoeBef, Dolores Natale, CarlPaladino,RosejnariePiccillo,Elaine Richmond, Heidi Sana,James Schick, MaryTassitano, Donna Tauriellp,Donna Vamos, Palma Ventre,Regina Voegele,. DeborahYuhl

ICrttflttnirttf

Seniorto hold fair May 19KENILWORTH- The

Kenilworth Senior CitizensClub will have a booth of artsand crafts projects at a fairsponsored by the UnionCounty Council of SeniorCitizens on Saturday, May 19,at Burnett Junior High School,Union.' . '- Both admission and/ bustransportation are free,chairman Ray McElroy an-nounced at the May meeting ofthe local club. Mrs. SophieS_rack. U in charge of tran-sportation arrangements.

Two members of the club,Mrs. Gertrude Marion andMrs. Anna Safeolcheck, havevolunteerea fo -, serve asteachers,' aides in a readingprogram at St. Theresa-'sSchool. There are now eightclub members working in theprogram. '*'

A bus trip to Asbury Park isscheduled Tuesday, May 29.The bus will leave KasbarianHall at 10 a.m.

1965 PORDTrans.

CUSTOM, -i Door 6 Cylinder, R&H, Auto

1971 OPEL WAGON,Shift

R&H, auto, AM-FAA Radio, Standard

The May birthday party willbe on May 22 at 2 p.m. atKasbarian Hall.

Boy injuredin car accident

KENILWORTH - A 13-year-old Borough youth wasseriously injured last Thur-sday when he was struck by acar at the corner of SouthMichigan Avenue and NewarkAvenue.

Guido Mondelli of 245 N. 12thSt. was taken to MemorialGeneral Hospital, Union,where he was admitted incritical condition following the2:30 p.m. accident. He is' apatient in the intensive careunit. The hospital reportedyesterday his condition Was"slightly improved.",

The driver of the car,Alphonse Salvatociello ofWindsor PI., Cranford, wascharged with careless driving.

This is theseason forBLACKCARPENTER ANTSIn addition to beingtinsightly and unsanitary,Black Ants excavateextensive galleries in woodto servo as nosting placosand may cause extensivedamage to your home.

PLUMBING & HEATING

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KENILWORTH--' ChrisVitale, 22, of 2 Via Vitale is oneof 13 girls who will competefor the title of Miss UnionCounty on May 19 at the.Fanwood-Scotch Plains HighSchool at 8 p.m.

The winner of the pageantwhich is the first in a series ofsteps to capture, the covetedtitle of Miss, ,.America, WAtlantic City in September,will compete for the Miss NewJersey title in July. '

Miss.Vitale, a graduate olDavid Brearley Regional HighSchool, is employed as a hairdressertoShe enjoys knittingand cooking.' Her talenpresentation will be a modernjazz dance. -

one alxvolume sebbqka, one six-volume set ol a"Racing Wheel." -eries, a setof "SodalStudies Books," andthe 1973 "Comoton's En

e g i e , . hi%yservice* to diicuM.JjtureUbrary expansion with:.ltacomlittee. He is employed byW. J>. Snyder ConsMrocUon

borough's law enforcament offlwi lnof the Garwood police force are proudly displayed by the

-'•<"'

SGARWOOD-like towns all

over the nation, Garwood willbe observing National PoliceWeek May 13 to 18 It's a goodtime tonslect on the history of.Garwoqd't police force.

In thelMOs, John Maxwell,a former president of the

^Central Railroad of NewJersey bought large tracts ofland in what was than Crari-ford, and formed the GarwoodLand and imRrovementCompany, «ami_ag~the tract

. after Samuel GarwooQ, firstpresiden of the firm. Gar-wood depended on Cranfordfor various services, but that

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hool in the second annualiveau Dance Companyirf Music. , •

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s creationunable

to meet the needs of its own'urban" dtizens, let alone

provide ihem to Garwood._ It was_ pfittcipa.Uy_ JbCHcomplaints oflack of servicefrom Cranford that eventuallyled to the passage on Match19, IMS, St. Joseph's Day, ofthe Garwood Borough BJ11which created the neseparate munidpalil .

The lack of protectionthe Cranford PoUcemeht in then-rural jGarwoodwas one of the prime com-plaints that lead>6 Garwood'screation_as a separate entity.

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OPEN MOTHER'S DAY TIL 2 P.M.

New slate installedGARWOODylnstallation of

officers tooX place at theregular monthly meeting ofthe Garwood Woman's Club,VFW Hall, South Avenue, at

inn. Monday. Mrs. Henrysixth district vice

, was the installing

Roofing-SidingGutters-Leaders

JohnJ.DiFabio

\ \ •

The following officers havebeen elected for the comingyear: Mrs. Robert Harris,president; Mrs. James Guare,first vice president; Mrs.Peter Rizzo, second vicepresident; Mrs.-Rodney'VanNatta, secretary; Mrs JosephMe Govern, . correspondingsecretary, (and Mrs. JulesBalogh, treasurer.

The program for theevening was presented by themusic department: Mrs.Victor Greene, choir directorof St. Paul's United Church ofChrist, directed the program.

Mrs. Robert Harris andMrs. James Guare have beenelected as delegates to" theannual women's dub con-vention in Atlantic City, May29 through June 1. Thealternate delegates will beMrs. James Murphy and Mrs."

Garwood's first policeprotection camein the form ofHerman R-A/jtoetTier whoj_as-1appointed a mar-shal byMp first, Garwood

_da

, was set a t « perfar 10 hours of daytimeand |3.5d per day when

worked vidm. OOi f tiiansalary, the first expenditurefor police equipment wasmade on April 27 of that yearwhen two j n i n of .handcuffswere bought. On July 2,1903an assistant marsoal wasappointed, and Garwood'sfirst mayor, Frank W. Morse,resident agent for the landcompany, appointed all fivecoundlmen as unpaid boroughmarshals,

turn, the council made

^ _ w A p i i r t v b 1 ^ ^ ,earn $11,000 compared with,IM3B last Tear; a sergeantwin now earn $11,790 com-

ieutenaitti H2,3S8 compared$ll180 t i H30»

e i H, pdto $ll,180j a captain, H3,0»coiBDared to 911,858; and

914,060 conipved to

,.. _, police offleers willearn fSSO an hour comparedto $2.30 last year and 1611001crossing guards are slated f or$2:10 an hour, up Sto cents an

fim_et deu_rtment laborers/new rate will be 94.60 per hour.Last year it was 94 27.

Salaries will be retroactiveto January 1.

PobUc hearing will be heldTuesday, May 22 at 8:30 inCouncilchambers. Acomplete

f hcopy of the proposed or-dinance is published in this'edition of the Citizen and

In -be continuing matter ofoountyKirdered revaluation ofThrough property, financechairman Charles Horbaczannounced attorney RobertSheldon and tax assessor Johne t hAccartf will appear in theElizabeth Court House May 15to answer an order of show'cause and complaint againstGarwood and

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the mayor police chief.Later in. July, 1908 the

purchase of six revolvers, sixmore pairs of handcuff.; andsix billy clubs wereauthorized. t

In January, 1014 the firstregular police departmentwas formed, with Gus Neadand John Arnold serving as itsfirst two officers. In 1929 thefirst independent police chief,Al Ashfield, was appointed atan annual salary of 92,100. Sgt.Johnson Brewer was ap-pointed at a salary of $2,000per year, he later becamechief, and Patrolman DennisComlskey was to get $1,800.

Frank Falzone has beenGarwood's police •chief since1952. and the force now boastsone captain, one lieutenant,two sergeants, sevenpatrolmen,, six specialpatrolmen, one detective and10 auxiliary policemen. Eightschool crossing guards andtwo reserve guards are alsopart of the force. The force hastwo'patrol cars.

Five youthsface chargesin thefts

GARWOOD-Five Garwoodyouths will face juveniledelinquency charges in UnionCounty Juvenile Court inElizabeth tomorrow as aresult of arrests made byPatrolman Daniel Swayzeearly on Saturday.

At 2:30 a.m. Swayz« pur-sued a youth driving a carallegedly stolen from Eric'sGerman Car Repair on NorthAvenue until it struck a curband nearly turned over.Garwood Police Chief FrankFalzone reported that theyouth fled to his home on footbut was followed by Swayzeand arrested.

Just an hour later, Swayzearrested four more youths inanother car allegedly stolenfrom the same repair shop. Allfive were later released intheir parents' custody to facethe delinquency chargestomorrow.-

Mayor John McCarthy andCouncil had resistedrevaluation order* from theUnion County Board ofTaxation until two months agowhen Sheldon, advised theborough to comply.

Horbacz said contracts forrevaluation are almost readyand would probably be let forbidding at the next Councilmeeting. The court orderedthe revaluation be done by1974, but Horbacz said Councilmay have to seek a post-ponement Until 1975. He saidmost firms preparingrevaluations are busy.

McCarthy,' in commentingon borough compliance withthe county order, said,"Unfortunately we cannot gofurther and assume theburden of a law suit"

He said he hoped theborough's approach "has beenheard in the state" and thatthe legislature will makemodifications in the taxstructured •/.;•-

In noting the approachingsale of the Magnus Building toCasale Industries,' Horbaczrecommended establishing adtizens civic committee toexchange ideas about theneeds of the community,develop different projects andarrive at a consensus ofopinion. .

He asked that each civicorganization select arepresentative to attendmeetings and report back totheir organizations. He askedthat representatives be namedbefore summer. i A

McCarthy V-noted thatresidents and organizations.

Ho$att»miinded residentsof the spedal meeting nextTuesday. at 8:30 p.m. ;toreceive bids on the Magnus

&$&>'•:•;• ^•~:S;

• Fire commissioner Ben-ixleyAliinonttcoromffldwltheJaycees and Thomas Belveriofor tte Red Ball project. Hesaid additional stidiers wereavailable from him.: -Building and grounds

instanationofftwoinoreJUj^t*' '\Oii''j|ewiiid:!':'i!kviBnie''at

ground for the*

-Horbacz atuwunced theannual Fire Departmentceremony' in honor of'-&_M__f--_-_i____lt l ' r « M ' A M > l - l . l i _ l " ' ' ' M t l -'tt-Ekdeceasedhld M

bed mWheld May 17 at 8 p.m: at ttteFirst Aid btittdlng-WS| "

.m: a

ing noisecon

GARWOOD - Severalresidents of Willow Avenueappeared at the BoroughCouncil meeting Tuesday tolodge complaints againstbusiness operations in thea r e a . ' . ' • • • " • : • • ' . • ' • ; ' • • ' •.•;••'

Kyren Reed of .102WUlow Ave. presented MayorJohn McCarthy with a lettersigned by several residents ofWillow Avenue and NewStreet in which ithey com-plained about the IdealTrucking Co. on New StreetThe letter said the company

operating its. thicksdin| them at 6 a.m.,

creating excessive noise.Often, the letter continues, thetrucks operate at 10 p.m.

Mr. and Mrs. Reed also saidthe drivers for CometDelivery on South Avenuewere driving at excessivespeeds and posed a. danger for.neighborhood children.

McCarthy directed Police

Cbmmissioner Frank Wancato bring the matters to theattention of the PoliceDepartment and the Board ofHealth.

George Stanko of 107 WillowAve. said employes of IdealTrucking Co. and Ferro Corp."on the corner ofSouth AvenUeand New Street were parkingIheir cars in front of homes ofWillow Avenue. >5 •

McCarthy said he yrill speakToThe" owners To "find out "if "other parking arrangementscould be made. - <

Two other residents ofWillow Avenue complainedabout the area at the end of thestreet which has become filledwith debris and is beginning tocollect stagnant water. Themayor directed street androads chairman Frank Sperato arrange to have the areadeaned out and McCarthysalrf control devices would beinstalled to eliminate rats.

Crowning gloryfor 12-year-old

GARWOOD - Niki Swayze,12. daughter of Patrolman andMrs. Daniel Swayze. of 223Fifth Ave., was selected asMiss little League 1973-74 atthe opening ceremony Sundayat the James V. GuerrieroField" of the. , GarwodcCMemorial Parki She%UcceedsTheresa Sedlak.

Also selected were: Firstrunner up, Patty Renzo;second, Laura Gindel; third,Kim Sheehan and fourth,Nilda A. Diaz. '

The queen was crowned byMayor John McCarthy. Thewinners were presented withgifts. The queen also receiveda trophy.

Samuel L. Colwell waschairman of the festivities.

Among the guests weremembers of the BoroughCouncil. Councilman BennieyAlimpnti, recreation chair-man, spoke. Benediction wasgiven by Rev. Robert J.Rischmann, assistant pastordf' Fhe' CtiufclKiof'St,"Anne:L

Invocation was given by Rev.Stephen Szabo, pastor of St.Paul's .United Church ofChrist. Richard Beyer 1,president of the GarwoodLittle League, also spoke.

The first games were playedby the VFW and the PBA. Theformer team won 9-2.,

The refreshment standofficially was open for theseason under the direction o fthe Auxiliary to the GarwoodLittle League.

_>tffi!EuV<r

4-.*-«W«;.

pir

• • . ( ; £ ' •

l : • ' ) . • " ' •

'',:',:*.;

m

POLICE CH IEF HONORED—Garwood Police Chief Fred Falzone holds plaquehe received Saturday night at the annual ball of the Union County Police Chiefs

-Asso«:JationaHheS«lfur^|»rlngs<nn. Berkeley Heights. <ihleffal»ne was c4tedfor outstanding service to the police chiefs^ training programs. Also pictured areMrs. Falzone and the couple's daughter, Mjssjoann Falzone.

aOWERS and PLANTS% Hardy Azaleas

. •Geraniums• Hanging Baskets

• Annuals• Perennials

, e Dwarf Evergreens

AND OTHER PLANTS TO PLEASE MOM!

HERB DITZEL'S GARDEN CENTEROpen Sundays

2 » DENAdAN RD. 276^418 CRANFORD

33/ South Ave. Garwood /

129 visiteyemobile

GARWOOD - The GarwoodLions Club sponsored anEyemobile three days lastweek to check persona over 35years of age for glaucoma. Itwas stationed at the GarwoodMall.

Dominick B a r b u t o ,chairman of sight'and con-servation, reported that 129persons were checked. Sevenpersons were advised to go totheir own doctors.

The club sponsored aLadies' Night May 2 .jatTtheWestwood. The program in-cluded dinner and dancing.

THE FEEL OF LEATHER — John Kuberski ofWlnfleld, left, and Doug Sherrod of Cranford getplenty of that during working hours at LazarusLeather, a shop they operate at 103 Center St., Gar-wood.

SHOP GARWOOD

CUSTOM

-1194Corner South Ave. (Across from Fire Dept.)

How much you saveby dialing direct

is a matter of timing.

You always s;ive on long' distance calls by dialing direct*without operator assistance. And, if you dial direct on. theweekends or after 5 p.m. on weekdays, you sav<± even more.

How much more? Let's compare rates for a three-minute call dialed direct from New Jersey to Los Angeles.During daytime hours—8 a.m. to 5 p.m.—you pay $1.45.Hut after 5 p.m. you only pay 851_. And on the weekends(till 5 p.m. Sunday) all you pay is 70^.

So the next time you,call long distance, dial it yourself.w i t til j j l lli ti t ' d itAnd.wait until

g ,alling times to'do it.

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Page 7: DigiFind-It · , •. • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;.-,4

illmmmmmmm^&-?r-

• " : • ! "

.)CIT1ZEN.AND CHRONICLE Thursday, May 10,1973

Avenue Junior

bMketball - Dan ArthurfSike

Bob Coieman, EdwardGaven, John Grice, RogerHah^,Tim Iff*, Mark IT-win* Scott IQey, Lew Korngut;Bob Model, Jin) Murphy,

ParadiW) and MarkRavendl Williams

andLflaUeiyebb

basketball -HaveBannak, SUde Martin, PatGfMn, Can Dyer, Joe Dyer,Jun 1 Harrington, TtngtliyIforan, John De Angelo;

SCMl

match by defeating BerkeleyHeights 3-X in "a tough Wat-ching Conference battle andmove their record to 7-1.

First singles player BobKaplan barely worked up; asweat as he won easily fro, «-i.Tab Currie played strongtennis at the second singlesspot and came off with a 6-164victory. Third singles player,Jim Goodman, after winningthe first set 6-a, dropped thenext two °*vV **, so theCougars led1 2-1 after the

Lincolnbasketball-Ray

John Dd RVBSO, EricBob Speer, Mark;";

AhoTjV b Sieve

GeorgJack

- I a nMike

Deinsey,.McGrath,

Papp and

Leitman;Cameron, JimCermik,Brett Enis,Bob N(Charles

wrestling - DinoGary Burde, Dave

Steve Cannon, JeffBill Dobeny, Jim

r; Alan Gamza, RayBill HHihsky, Greg

Lent, Paul Morley, RandyNewman, Jay Rudd, JohnSerafin, Joe Thome, MikeMcCarthy, David Salvo andJohn Schneider.

J.V. wrestling - Sean Walsh,Jeff Meese, Chuck Stevens,David Rummer and LarryThomas.

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Ih a rain abbreviated•chedute mis past week, theCranford High School varsity• •••"-•••• m o t h e i r o n l y

singles matches,Cranford's first doubles

team of Kevin, Koeuner andRich Sabok* went to the limitbefore dropping their contestin three sets, 6-1, 6*. 3-6,

ting the pressure on die__ >nd doubles team of JohnBender and Bruce Levine.

This combination of a juniorand a sophomore responded tothe challenge with a tenskm-fflled M, 6-a, 6-1 triumph,.giving the match to theCougars.

ShermanHigh series in the Sherman

Bowling League wereby Lucille Pechinka,

High series in the LincolnSchool FTA Bowling Leaguewere rolled by Rose Knox, 436,Joan Segebade, 416 andGinny Marino,. 397. Highgames were posted by GinnyMarino, 167, Rose Knox, 161"and Dolores Janish, 145.. Two substitutes bowled well

- Peggy Conroy, with a highgame of 160 and series of 412,and Lorraine Dobrowski, highseries of 4J3.

O'Neil, 446, Cookie Kane, 432,and Lorraine Tami, 432.

High games were posted byLucille PechinkariW*, LydiaCarrajat, 172,- Come Kane,173. and Pat Swandrak, 166.

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Golfing winnerMrs. Wynn Kent of Cranford

t a d low gross 89 in the ASh^brook' Women's Golf Tour-nament on May 3.

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Van Shaw set a new countyrecord in the javelin with his

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|NOT 50 ft. - NOT IQO FI...BUT

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INSTALLEDALL TYPES OFPRIVACY FEN-CIR» IN STOCK

Cweek at the Rosetle Catholic -Cranford track m&t: CoachRay White*' said it was thefarthest throw on the, eastcoast

Cranford lost to RoselleCatholic 7r>55 but placed inseveral events. Milt Masonwon the 100 yard dash in 10.8and Bill Sherm came in thirdplace. Jeff Becher was first inthe two-mile run followed byDave Stehlin in third place.John Fedorchak won thediscus and high jump and VanShaw was second in thediscus. Dave Schurer wasthird in the high jump.

Russ Davis placed second inthe high hurdles and BillSherm was second in the lowhurdles. Tom Lenk was third

1 in low hurdles and the javelin.Mai Pringle was second in the88a and John Fedorchak wassecond in the shot put In the220-Kevin Quinn took thirdplace spot. ' . • . .-The team will be in the

Watchung Conference atWilliams Field, Elizabeth onSaturday. May 12.

American League$ito RanUn Fuel Red Seat

defeated be Senators 4-2. NeilShuttner of the ~buried all the w

eight-Red So* scored two, in

the,third inning oh a vlngte byDon Puwr and a triple tyChris Mtrte who later scored.on: a fielder's choice; Theyscored two more in tJte fifth onJoe' Warren's singW, a hitbatsman and some fiultySenators fielding.

Abo hitting for the Red Soxwere Dave Daniels, DonGajlupo and Chris Meade, asingle ih addition tchis three

Puteer and Joe Warrenteamed to bold the Senators tofive hits and only one walk.Along the way* Putzer and

Medley teamcaptures event

Dave Stehlin, MalcolmPringle, Bob Kale and JeffBecher, Cranford's distancemedley team', won first placeout of 21 teams last Saturdayat die Englewood InvitationalTrack Meet. They wereawarded a large plaque andindividual medals.

Dave He'ins, ScottGramling, Bob Shaarschmidt,all sophomores, and juniorSteve Ddicat, won medals fortheir fifth place win in the twhmile re|ay. The runners havebeen traveling on weekends toparticipate in various relaymeets including the Memorialrelays at West New, Yorkwhere the distance medleyteam took a fourth place andHighland Park relays wherethey came in third.

were

Schetebch with two.Each team had

h fild

SwbDonDi

in the fWd with Mikestarting a swift

* for the Senators.Heyburn and Dave

Daniels teamed for the RedSox to turn in a fine defensiveplay to nip a Senator rally.

Against the CJvempro In-dians, the Red Soxfound theirhitting eyes to pound Indianpitchers 13-2. For the Red Sox,Joe Warren, Don Putter andDave Daniels shared the

Itching duties whtte Robaber and Hali Harvin

etnickedfor the Indians. > . -Hitting for the Red Sox were

Dave Daniels, Ken Cteslak.Don Putzer, Chris Meade and

hits and Brian Kastner gettingone. For the Indians ManNovdlo, Matt Dyer, HenryMaQoVand Joe Ofarian eachhad o « single. ' • ' :

The Indians turned back theMartin Jewelers Orioles 74with Nick Fnmgello going allthe way for the win. Mike Sch-midt and Len Korn shareelthe mound duties for thelosers. Professor BrianO'Neill kept op his hot hittingwith three singles and MikeMerritt.jotaedIn with* triplefor the O's.' For the winning Indians,Hali Harvin had two singlesand Bob Kelly, Mark Novello,Phil Sanfora, Rob Marratoand Matt;Dyer each had asingle. Len Korn turned in agreat catch in centerfield.

The Athletics managed toturn back the Albeit AntoineTigers M in a real see-saw

MOTHER'S DAYfrom

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• ReservationsAppreciated

• ChildrenWelcome

• Cocktails• Homemade Desserts

MARISA'S RESTAURANT28 NORTH AVE.,W. . ~ 274-574*

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GAL.

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B A S KBoys - Grades 6/- 12

Monday, August 13th - Friday, August 24thInstruction by school and college coaches.

League competition.

Twb gyms available - Swimming after practice.,

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The Pingry School is a nondiscrimihatory institution

t i ^ awl ajxth knmgs. ttieT^enTaMwered backwlth a

1 Jetoninthefimajdtwon in thefourth and fifth and

closed out the scoring with arun in the bottoinof me sixth.

There was a total of 15 hitsin the game. For the A's MikeStorch, Pat Garrett, MikeKiley and John Cafarb ^achhad two whtte PhU McGovemand Ed Mitchell h»d a single.For the Tigers, Scott SchwartiBad two 'hits- and KevinKeimig, Mark JSych and Chris3ychhadone. . ' ;.

The Builders General Yanksbeat the Aledtcs Athletics «-abehind the pitching of Dave

while his pitching rival PhilMcGovernpitcaed well for theA's. Hitting for the Yankswere Dave Cree, RogerKaralis, Mike Prussack, DavePahren, Harold Berlewe;JoeScotti "and Jim McGean. Forthe A's, Pat Garrett had twosingles, Mike Storch and PhilMoGovern each had one.Storch made!a sparklingdefense play in centerfield.

The Martin Jewelers Orioleswalloped the Senators 13-4.Brian O'Neill supplied thehitting And. pitching. TheSenators "scored four "runs inthe first inning but after thatno Senators came home*: TheO's scored in all, innings ex-cept the second.' For the O'sO'Neill got the win striking outfour Senators. At the sametime Brian O'NeUl got twodoubles to go along with PaulRinaldi's double and triple.Greg Lawlor, Mike Schmidtand Mike Merritt chipped inwith a single each.-

For the losing Senators, RayDente, Tim Schetelich and StuFaber all pitched but to no

SoxNelBSulUvanofthePale <*m?

New Providencestronger oppositionCougan in the openingUnion County

•1W:' '

the one run on a w m , « » > »Joe Warren and excetteSt basenaming by Chris MAide.

Also hitting for the Red Sox Mike McNally, handling thewere- Dave Daniels, CSiris bulk of the Qiugar pitdungMeade and Ken Cieslak. For duties, won one and lost one inthe White Sox, Rick McCarthy the only two garnet mis week.

doubles and Alan Cunha hada be 5<<f With a .19 ERA it isdifficult to consider^ amediocre 3-2 log but the ERAdoesnot tell theentire story. ItIs the un-ERA which hurts,

the Cougar defense hassound, the victories

Reel-Strong Fuel WhiteBOX defeated the Tigers in athrilling down-to-the-Wire

the Whlt» Sox'in thepulled out 5-4 Seventh

The White Sox went in to thesixth inning trailing 4-3 whenRick McCarthy and DaveMoran singled. With the tyingrun on second, Neill Sullivanbelted a long hit to centerfieldwhich brought in the "run. ,

The White Sox scored againin me seventh when .< Joe'Attanosi tripled wiOv two menon^

Abo hitting for the Tigerswere Steve Campbell and RickMeisenberg, the only hitsallowed by Chuck Scoturo andJoe Attanosi who sharedpitching duties.^TteReel-StrongFuel White

Sox defeated the Yankees 11-1behind the fine pitching

However, Cranford helpedNew Providence a s i t h *Cougars committed «ev«»miscues, McNally, pitching astrong six hitter in whicfcstruck out six and walked itook the M loss. Jerry 1sterrnan, at shortstop playedthe only* fiblld game in the

Gary DeLonge andNewman bad the only two hitsas Cranford's offense wasagain stymied. The Cougarswere not without opportunities.as they Again had six walkswith Davis accounting for

of them.

• • • • • ' f > M - • • • ' . •Free official scoreavailable art the ref rat all LittleCommunatA

Compliments of

erforntance of k Me-He allowed two hits

and did not issue a walk inholding the Yanks to one run.

ffll]rtmtckj21 ALDEN STREET 201-276-60001

CRANFORD, N.J. 07016

Columil coiottUlUll^V KlUlII

• C«is(» loiidty, (ut led IJIJ! Soap ani wate/ cleiouptF&iol evca in tfimp •fljLbtf—lejiilt bUitciui| udpetlk|f Diits U V'j bou^...bu|ifte *ud tlusi dec!luflllinl colo/ ictCfllJofl-rejut* u.isi(btly cbilii;.(l

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Repair—RedecorateRemodel your homewith a low costhome improvement loanfrom your nearest CityFederal Savings office.

City Fodorul Savings and Loun AsNo

2U Oflicu:; in Eiyht Now J«r;:oy Gountioi;Ciiiruluii/Caitorol/CrarWord/Chotry Hill/Kast Oraiuj»)/Hataiitovvii/l'li/at)i)lti.rirnor;i/rrjiirviuW/Kr)riilworth/L.akoWood/L;ik(j Hi«wath;.i/Lin<iuii/l\/t<)r.riiijtowiiNew Provicturicu/Nonh [:liAibi.>th7Par:-;i[)"[j;iny/Pi!rth AtnL)oy/Philli|):;l)t.iri;j:

Plainliukl/Hahway/oOLilh Plainfiolct/Siimniil/Tom:; HivuiVUiiioii/WashiiujtonWhippdiiy/Woodbridcju .. ' '

r)<.ipj>sil:; l by .(-SI .\C

Bo1||^i;^thn^^lfl4i};tbeti^kMitHIW.fMllf l : . ' IWi> HSWal. , •wWrTMl

)enm« Sti-attou al^ addedsli^wtotbeSeafcause.

Ooimai,douWe),Mike ( iperiormsnee

Sam Di first thU year).? tirtl(by

namiallowed hits toAn-I M S ? Chow* 'orlhe

^ . combining for eight Wa.Cub -hitters wweTAugle

Jtete Roaae, Sc™, c 5 ' Q e * l? Voneluhaa,RlcE Jonei, llandy MilU,Steve? Orieco, Brtc BuntingandBobFrehch(3for4).RJcH<***& Urry Jones, andWalt PawowiU hit safety for

' t t » ' I W i i . . - ' . v • • - ; ; • ' ; • • • " • • • .•••• " ;

Cutwl-GiaQtsOAugie Semple (10 K's)

hurled we Cubs to a l-oshutout of the Klwanls Club

i>ti. Bob Ctarnat(eight K's) was tagged withthe low. Each pitcher allowed

r ttirtehiU and both teams' in excellent per-

. The Cubs scoredtonin tSemplehome oncenter. Bobthe Cubs. Gian!Larry Watson,and burler Czarnai

Redfl8-PhllUe82hi the first of three wins

week, jthe Reds downed the

HiWnjgfer; tee,Steve ;Markowlch . _doubles), Steve Peterman(three singles, double), RichGeorge (single, double,triple), La Magna (twofing^,j^I^n« : »ndiWWt

Reds^-PiraiesiThe Reds, next met |he

Benoer's Auto Body Piratesand came away with a 4-1 wimRich G«orge7four K's) wentall the way for the Reds;Carmine Yannie (nine K's)and Robbie Matyas tone K)

Bucs: Hitting for the Pirateswere Ed Lips. KevinO'Donnell (three), Yannie rindChris Sillito (twoapieceK TheReds' hits were off the bats of

Peterman,' George(double), Walt Pawowitz(two) and Ed La Taurette.

»n and Di Capua twicertmnersout at the

Pirates 6-Giants 1

The; Pirates downed the-Giants W on Gary Julo's fourUtter, The Pirate's attack wasled by a rarity - back to back,fence^earing home runs byCarmine Yannie and Ed Ups.George Goeller and Lips hadsafeUes for the Bucs. GiantMiters were Kevin Owens(single," double), LarryWutsui (Ouuble), Mike CUukeand Bob Czarnatowicz.Watson (three K's) wastagged with the loss.

Reds 6-Braves 4

whtittfstevecame

triple tosingledfortters were

Owens „ . -.Mark Pa

excellent in his mound debutfor the Reds, hurled his teamlo a M victory over the

Savings Braves.

pleasant everyy or PhcKosun

will enjoyftiir the

That your Mother's Day can be 1day with a gift of the new Photu,,^.lenses either in plain or prescription.them driving to pick up the children, sifamily or on the beach. What makes themithat they change density with the intensity ofi

CRANFORDOPTICIANS

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KENILWOF.THVOL. FIRE DEPT.

MAY 15 TO 20'<4lDAVID BREARLEY

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Hlrinul l lC l . 1 "

lclion

t j i i l - ' i

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. pli :•lint lilinr, l.ibiii: ;•;Ciirio, (iold

• insl.illation,Al;;o m.ilchnu,r, ;,l Lh.

wPk

tui..\bi-niO.i« F l ^ n MlJdV 500H

Hi.,,..1 111

- l . . . . /

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wiishorsuliniinatti:ii()il;tlion

ollur all ihtjye loaluro:;:oll-balanco load prbblnnisinauru:; laslur turnover o\

lyclio-spin" nnso coinbinos llushinr)nioval . .<|iiar,mliH

, 100'1'v moclKinical Irans-, assuios lonij trotiblu-'rou

lar<|i< capacilV wash and, Wuar cyclo,i.lUinui' di i

iilu. Pricuipt'iistir. Availablo in Avo-Ihcludiis dflivory, normal

survicu line) par Is. Turrn:^nv,iilablo.ackslono

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ibmi.

1114 |lm iljuti moo'

diydis. Sou both ul yourJiowrooin. , v

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O,l,, 0.I...I., I-...U llio gCml.11., 1 . . .u i i ,^ i'L,,o i i i j j / lau.jooo

„,„„ „,„.>, .,,d S,.u.d,y.. • •

Cardinals 25-Dodgers 2

The American LegionCardinalsv on eight solid Wtsand 18 walks, romped over theKohler-MacBean Dodgers.Marc Erickson, Card hurler,collected seven K's and gaveup only two hits and no walks.RichPawlick, Jim Babos (oneK), and Mike Gribble (fourK's) shared mound chores forthe Dodgers. PawUck, andcatcher Greg Kalescky, ac-counted for the Dodger hits.For the Cardinals, BobFischer doubled with basesloaded; Erickson doubled;Kevin OsiecU singled* Anddoubled. Gary Engelhardt(two), John Lorenz and BobDonovan hit safely.

Braves s -

, , JWng safelytwice. He also received solidbacking from Pat Green andJon Schwalbach who eachcontributed three hits to theRam attack. Mike Forrestal,Ted Kettler and BrianBradford rounded out' theRam's offensive punch withtimely saf ties. V ^

-Mike:Forrestal who turned in apitching gem and he did it withthe aid of fine defensive playsby his brother Jim, JimDelano,:Mike Sheehan andRich Schwalbach. But;hisbiggest support came fromsolFd hitting by RichMcKinnef with three hits,Geoff Walters; Pat Green, JonSchwalbaeh as well as himselfwith two hits and JoeChristiano, Jim Forrestal andMike Sheehan each with, oneh i t . .. .-.• ' . ;•• • * > ;

Theonly two hits off of Mikewere two solid singles fromthe bats of John Grice andJohn Barbour.

Seals 15 - Colts 3Seals 8 - Colts 5 -

The Seals won a pair fromthe Colts on Saturday with 15runs and 10 hits in the first

they wereoiithit, four to 10, in the second

ame thuv—managed to.

Sauer (eight K's) ledves to a 5-1 win aver

the PhUs' mound combinationof MarksColineri (three K's)and Scotk Buchanan (fiveK's). ffittingvfor the PhiUieswere Bob Resei (double),Colineri, Bill Aqcardi, JoeCosmas and Scott Dougherty.Bill Fitzula (douhleK TonyGaUuzzi (two doublesKBUlSodomora (two singles),CHdam and Dan Miller rthe Braves..

ies 15-Dodgers 5

s won their firstgame of he season when theydefeated the Dodgers 15-5.Behind the pitching of JoeCosmas, Scott Dougherty andEd Scott, the PhUllqs brokethe game open witMour rimsin the fourth. The losing pitch-er was Jon Banks with\relieffrom Mark MitchellDwyer. Hitting for thewere Mike Capobian.c(three), Cosmas (two), MarkColineri (two), Bill Accardi,Bob Rosei, Gerard Sabeh,Dougherty and Scott. TheDodgers received their hittingfrom Rich Pawlick (three),Dwyer (three), GregKalescky (two) and Banks(two). Jim Dwyer turned inthe fielding play of the gameby pulling off an unassisteddouble play.

CubsPiratnRedsCardinal*BravesGlantiPhilliesDodgers

StandingsW U

, . 5-14-J4-23 23 - 23 - 31-S0 - 6

PonyJim Sbeehan and his Rams

continued/their' bombasticpace as they won two games ina big waiy this weekend. Againit wa/ the artillery that im-pressed all. However, a pair ofshutouts by Rich McKinney^hd Mike Forrestal let the restof the league know that theRams are not just a group ofpretty bats. The Beaverscontinued the pace in the B

Bear safety, that the, magic

Ail toning later Greg Hart-nett gathered the second andfinal hit against Rich's out-standing SHching effort.McMnnevaiBo nelned hhnielf

Bontempo, Scott Aderson, Tom Serzan, JeffBaumannandagame-'double to Mike MitcheU whileStar pitcher Joe Gachko alsoallowed ,0ve hits but he wasable to hold th« scoring to onet m . . \ , J : : : ' y ^ .•;• / : - •••<- •

The big Mow for the Blueswas a triple off the bat of Tom

who scored on asingle by Bob Koelher; Keith'Jackson, Tony Colbert andMMce DeCato added hits to aBlue assault that came doseto giving .them. victorynumber one this season.

Colts 5 -RookieTerry Moran picked

up his first win of the seasonwhen he relieved BruceCorrenti in. the fourth inning ofSunday's game. .. .

Bruce Correnti led the Coltbatters with two hits and BobIntartaglio blasted his seconddouble of this young season.The other four Colt nibs wereprovided by Tim Fisher, KenOldam, Dean Roberts andK i O'Bi Th l

compile eight runs.In the first game Mark

Irwin scattered four Colt hitsoff the bate of Bob Intartalio,Mike Galuppo, Tim Fisherand Mark Bienkowski. He wassupported by teammatesElliot DorTh, Bobby Hahn,Dennis Stratum who eachslammed two safties and ArtWalch and Glenn Zuhl whosingled once apiece. In ad-dition, Mark helped his owncause with two hits and one

scoredthe second game the

was accomplishedby the Colt batters as

they gathered 10 hits from Bobfataitalio/Ray Gribble, DeanRoberts, Joel Bakie, MarkBienkowski, KdvPldam, MikeGaluppo, Tim jRisher andTerry Moran. However, theycould only put together fiveruns and that wasn'tto overcome the early Seallead.

Elliot Dorin, Bobby Hahn;Glenn Zuhl and MikeySchutzer supplied the powerfotvthe Seals as they put theirhits tt) work when it counted.

Beavers 11 - Stars IBeavers 6 - Seals 5UThe Beavers kept pace wiih

the Rams mis weekend bywinning two;N)ne from theStars and the other from theSeals. X

A pair of .hits-fromNUnof Bob Vicci and DaveNalong with singles byRubin and Ed Khouri .the way for 11 runs, and a1

victory, against the Stars onSaturday. Dave Koury pitchedwell and allowed only threehits, oqe each to .TonyBongiorno, Joe Bontempo aridRay Eilbacher.

On Sunday they had toscratch hard before theyfinally edged the Seals ih thelast inning on a double by EdKhouri that scored the tyingand winning runs. This, wasone of three hits by Khouriand, with assistance of DaveKoury, Jim Harrington, DaveHeins, Bob Vicci and BobStiefel, the Beavers were ableto put together a successfulattack.

Elliot Dorin, Art Walch and

bats

pavfed

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R A L P H V EVANS JC&3 30

21b NoWli Av/o. W., Woatfluid, 201 232-6740r04 Morris Turnpike, Short hills, 201 3V9-S933

l uU Pry (etna . Yuontjje'* • AJulH . Lddba' CUasojWeekly Kunlly & Cuo-jl Skallng . Individual Atbuition

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. — . •• i. 1.1 ,

relieved Gon^ancb* starter.Frank Ventura (three K's) inthe top of the third and alsowas credited with - theComanches'-sple hit Lenapehitters were John Pawowitz(three), Len Mro (triple) andJ e f f K r U g h ; ; V : ; : / ; , • ; • • • ; v :

eight/The Lenapes scored^ wcond. The Chics pulled^ ^ -- '--• themselves together in the

third and scored twice on adouble by Chris Chelston and

KevinbeltedW

O'Brien.out five

The Angelssingles but

t t t hg

Were only able to put togethertwo runs. Contributing to theAngel . attack was MarkSchultz, Brett Ellis, PeteSkrdlant, Bob Jones androokie Gary Lozier.

Bears 2 - Chiefs 0

Although they compiled onlytwo bits, both by Bill Folinusz,the Bears proved that wherethere is a will to win, there's away. TimMoran and Folinuszput the Bears in the wincolumn by scoring the game'sonly two runs. Marty Klein,the Chief pitcher, tossed a finegame but as all pitchers findout sometime, those walks canhurt. Bill Folinusz dideverything for the Bears as hefigured in every phase of histeam's win, which includedpitching a four-hitter.

Rookie. Dave Helinskihammered out two hits, JimKastleman singled and so didLars Swansen to sum. up theChief assault.

Marlins 5 - Blues 4In a close well-played game,

the Marlins, although out bitby thte Blues, gathered fiveruns to win a Saturday tilt.

John Espositb, Martinpitcher, struck out 12 batterswhile allowing three hits toBob Koehler, two hits each to

Alan Jacobs, and KeithJackson and a single to TomAagaard.

Bob>Qsolin, Bob Speer, JohnBarbourNMike Miller andEsposito alKhit safely in theirwinning effort. .

It was Jonh. Barbour'sdouble that finallyNsettled thegame in the late innings andbrought home win numberfour for the Marlins. X^fai another game, the Chiefs

downed the Angels 8-7. . . -s

Lenapes4-Comattcbe*lHurler Len Nlro (15 K'B) led

the Multi-Am T1 win over the J.B WilliamsComanches - diefbiit of threeLenape victories "Bob Lo GtiUBce v

Mike Colineri pitched theLenapes to their second win ofthe week; a 9-3 battle againstthe Michael's Custom KitchenChicasaw*. Joe Marsden,the moiind for the Chics, tookthe loss. Both pitchers fanned

first, tallying two runs on hitsby Jeff Inchalik (single anddouble), Mike Colineri (singleand double) and JohnPawowitz. The Chics cameback to tie the score in thethird on walks, a. triple byChris Chelston and a siqgleMiyLou Ventura.

The Lenapes took the lead inthe fourth when Niro tripled ina run and then beat a throwhome to score himself. SteveMyers singled. The scorelessfifth was highlighted by atriple play,_ r _., r off by Chicfielders - Gabe Noto to BillArmstrong to Chris Chelstonto Lou Ventura - that caughtthe-Lenaperunners off"base.-The Lenapes exploded for fiveruns in the sixth with doubles

Niro and Colineri andlies by Myers and Inchalik.

Pace got the lastChicasaw hit.Lenapes 23 - Crows 6

The Lenapes' third win thisweek came in an overtimegame against the CranfordJaycees Crows which wascalled at the end of four bymutual agreement of themanagers. What started outas a tie game going into thesecond, turned into a lopsided,affair with the Crows gettingonly one hit, a double for anRBI by Ron Sassi, TheLenapes collected 15. Lenapestarter, Liam Duddy, wasreplaced. in the first by JeffInchalik (10 K's). DennisMeehan (three K's) and RonSassi (oneK) shared the loss.Lenape hits were off the batsof Mike Colineri (infield homerun and a double), LenNiro(two singles and a double),Steve Myers and Jeff Krugh(single and a triple apiece),John Pawowitz (double andsingle), Inchalik (twosingles),.Duddy (triple) and'Jim Sillito. "

Comanches 17 - Iroquois 1In another lopsided game,

the Comanches swamped theIroquois, who\tried valiantlyto rally but wer^ able to score

Thursday, May 10,1»73 CRAWFORD (N.J.

, . . .«**• ;*n>l»e- '*&&•& i}d Grippo each bad sevendoubles by Sean Smith andJoe Tauru. Winning pitcherswere Gary Shubert (five K's),ami Rich Creighton(8ix K's).

mougd duties for thew o e Joe Tauris (10

,,, Rudi-Sebnberr andFrank Bellomo<two K's).Smith *nd Bellomo both hadsafeties for me IroquQis. TheComanches gathered 19. bits:home runs by Bob Lo Giudice(two), Gary Shubert and BobPeters; a triple by FrankVebtura; a double by LoGtndice; singles off the bats ofLo Giudice, Peters, Creightonand .Mike Newman (twoapiece), Ventura, PeterAmstutz and Shubert John LaMaflna and Chris McDonough

got then- first hits,Chicasaws 6 - Grees 1

Chic hurler, Gabe Noto, in athree hit - 14 strikeout per-formance, led his team to a 6-1victory over the Pathmark ofCranford Crecs. John Web-ster, with 12 K's Jn his mounddebut, was tagged with theloss'. The Crees maintained aone-run lead into .the third,

ft and Terry Bradford.Ballman also hit safely in the

singles by Gabe Noto and JoeMarsden. They* went on toscore twice in the fifth andhftce again in the sixth while,holding the Cree batters down. .For the Chics, Todd Tarvergot his first base hit, Marsdenand Lou Ventura homered;Noto singled and doubled; BobPace tripled; and Chelstonand Marsden had safeties.

Chicasaws 8-Shawnees 7In a see-saw battle, the

Chics edged the UnitedCounties Trust Co. Shawnees"on the arm-of Gabe Noto (11K's). His mound opponent wasKevin daypoole (eight; K's).'The chics took a three run leadon doubles by Chelston andMarsden and safeties by Pace,Marsden and Lou Ventura.The Shawnees countered withtwo runs on Claypoole's. triplein the third and tied the scorein the fourth on doubles byJohn Lesky and Joe DelGrippo. The next came upwith four on hits by Claypoole,Ed Helmstetter and TomYoung, but the Chics had goneahead to stay, collecting fiveruns on safeties by Pace,Chelston, Ventura andMarsden; Note's double; anda home run by Rich Caterino.

Shawnees 21 - Crows 10

The Shawnees opened upwith 11 runs in the first'tomake their game against theCrows a romp. Winning pit-chers Ed Helmstetter and Joe

K4,m~— TJohn Vkci (two. K's) "sharedthe loss. Crow batter, y dL b U t hthe loss. Crow batter, yacLubesU, never got a chance to>swing his bat getting a walkw*h ^t hit fwiy'tiwft n\ frfli

RonSassi and Vkci hit safely forthe'Crows. The Shawneebatters collected 12 hits;triples by Kevin Claypoole andJohn Maffey; doubles by DelGrippo, Maffey and RiokSonntag (bis jflrst. hit)isafeties by Del Grippo (two),Helmstetter (three), DnfcwScott and John Lesky. f-

Crows 14 - Iroquois 12The Crows,. coming from

behind to score three, runs inthe sixth; snatched^ an almostcertain victory, from theIroquois. John Barrett andJohn Mclntyre combined for11 K's in a losing canse. RichHudack (14 K's) got^je win.

, hitters were Tony

triple), Anthony Ferrone(two)f and Andy Amstutz (hisfirst). Hudack singled andtripled in his own cause; WardLubeski doubled. Safetieswere1 hit by Vied, ChuckO'Donnell, Jeff Samuelson,Dennis Meehan. and TomTrotter.

Hurons 7 - Crees 1Mark Zangrando hurled the

Baron Drun HmmiwHu'-•-fHwin over thebatters. Jfia

« * : • , * • , . _ _ _ _ ,

MacNamara, Pete Ahunorie(IwoJTGUKatack (double and^iple), Ed Spqttstwo doWes). FotBli»h nWhfrlff- fllfrSS'." Bllh

•'•,.•.'.::..>».•,•,.

and

had safeties.

:V' w

Comancli**

OrxmfiCTMCIroquolt

PintoBowden's Padres had a fine

week last week, scoring twowins to boost their standing to

' & % • " • : . ' ' ' . : . • , . • ' • : ^ : ' - • • • • - . • •

Their first win, against theBrewers, was bard fought. Atthe bottom of (he third inningthe Brewers were leading Mbut Haviland's hit triggeredoff the Padre team which then

fcwen-H*-Jeff Nemeth, the winning

pitcher, struck out nine,walked none and gave up onryfour hits. He also had one bitHUinsky had two doubles andFalkowski and Byrne each bito n e . , :• ' ' . ' • • • '

The pitcher for the Brewerswas Oshbener. Hitting singleswere Panetta, Tudor andPauniere. Marotolli had onedouble for the Brewer team,

e^adres beat the Astroson Saturday afternoon.

• • s \ : • \ t . . y - • ; • • * • '

GIFT IDEASMOTHER

• falls/ Shots, Socks, GlovosT

•BOWLING: Bog, Boll Shoes.

• S U N G L A S S E S

• GOLF ACCESSORIES, |

t GIFT CERTIFICATES. IS CRANFORD SPORT CENTER J• 38 NORTH AVENUE E. WM. FKEDBOCKS. Prop. •# opp. Finhoum •

How to buy aheated pool

witf * i

During the past few years many, manyswimming pool companies went under orchanged their names. Hundreds of poorowners got btirned—were left high anddry swimming if« a sea of regrets.

The best way to av/oid getting burnedin a bedeviled deal is to deal with a poolCompany whose responsibility is estab-.lished and documented.

Over 55.000 people have1 made theirdecision for Anthony Pools. Their endorse-ment has made Anthony the largest,soundest and most reliable pool companyin the entire world, the only pool companylisted on the American and Pacific CoastStock Exchanges.

By building pools for over 26 years atf,air, competitive prices and providingprompt service and superb engineering —Anthony's reputation is as solid as its poolfoundations.

An Anthony pool is nil Anthony —our filters, heaters', diving boards andother acces'jorie:; aro. manufactured atAnthony's 13-acro factory

Is now Included

MNoExiraCostonpoolspurehowdby

May 27. 1973!

Ovor the years—if little problemsshould develop, you cry on ono shoulderonly-the bio shoulder of the world's larg-est, most responsible pool builder.

Prices)? They are unbelievably low.SincoAnthony builds more pools than anyother pool builder, our high sales volumeallows very low competitive pricing.

WORLD'S LARGEST POOL BUILDER

UVU JtHStV -MtVj tOIlK - CONNtcriCUr

Call or write today . . .OPfc'N StVCN DAYS A Wt'llK

1376 U.S. HIGHWAY. 22- MOUNTAINSIDE,

NLW JLRShY 07091'

; AN1MONYI JU1 MIJIJI I

S..iic!lo tiro

(till culiu.

POOLS

.iU, N»w Jc

illud wtth l )ool pljimlr

. -on

I^IJOJS

l i p

• 0-1

ccc

". - -

I I

Page 8: DigiFind-It · , •. • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;.-,4

; > / . ? ... . ..> CITIZEN ANDCHRONICLE Thursday, May 1<U»73

r^^W^i&iW^M^^-^'''^&'#X+Z• :X•••• ;•••'• •- ^ ^ I ^ ^ ^ ^ l

: > . • : , ; .; • • • > • • . : , . > • • : v , . \

; 3 :

.•-, \ ::-'

TKunrtfounh north 12 d i * * , Mmlmrtw,» neon* wttt• dMMtnot

»• THAT lht_TOjij«Wp ofto 'tne Cranlbrd

/New Jersey .V-

tou Vako President of f b UNie league• . • /

Best Wishes to all Little Leaguers

Compliments of Victor Dennis - Realtor

sponsor of the Navajos in the Nomahegan League

member-Union County Multiple listing service

United Counties sponsors

the Shawnees in the Unami League

AJ L Browns sponsors ' ' . ' , .

the Mohicans in the Nomahegan League

\ , • : •

Hankin Fuel sponsors

the Red Sox in the American League

Builder's General sponsors

the Yankees in the American League.

Benner Auto IBodly sponsors

the Pirates in tine National--League

Cranford Sport Center sponsors

the Beavers in the Pony Leaguer '

Koehler MacBean sponsors

the Dodgers in the National League

i

Capital Savings sponsors

the Braves in the National League

Robbins and Al|ison sponsors

the Phillies in the National League

Cycles by George sponsors

flue Bearcats in the -Cougar League

. otir ^p

Realtor* and Insurers181 North Ave., E.

276.8110

THE DEACONAGENCY, W*C.

/ 274-5051117 N«ftk kt*U m.Ctmlord. N J.

WaiClrtienDoril Coyto

mt(Hm

2762316276-1791276-3522

dining room, farg* Hyingroom, iVt baths, garttj*. Buynow and chow* your cotor*.

1hAv». E. ;Cranford, NJ.070U

2 7 » . » 4 4 4 •,••.. . •

MO¥H«OOTOF»T»TEO I ^ K r t r t l

G. E. HOWLAND, I N C

NEWLY LISTED

INMtl

PI 9^^wm* mvifn •• IN

we.1 cw tarttt •

•XCMlMl

McPHERSONREAIH CO.

RealtorOp*n Oaly 9 • 5 • ' . Sundiy 1 .19AL0ENST

Sk

REALTOR 276^*00

LARGE HOUSEc«l*nlal win «ttack«4

flam* M i*rt»M. Nr a rwl karf«tamum iMftat, M# HM* tmm. can

PHIL F. HENEHANREALTOR

25AldtfiSbMl 276-7933MuliptolUtlmStrvlce

.HMBMiU*PMI»

2764400276-402327619952761995276 5215276-5705

KatMMfi JenkinsJohn A ThlewVU*Zoll*k /

EvenlnitCall

ItMn-inwMClHtMaa * M « wHH WwaTaca - • « • * » ;kKMa w. auwwilwr - M l dry'

M ttfc rac. w i m . AlmiiUwm

jr. HHhldwtl -MM « n .

i K«NM»UtChM • tWIMl «•!«•

D.S.KUZSMAREALTOR

./ «*.

H»MilnVr»»l ' Ct.nlora

272-833*.Multiple Uttini Service

E««nin|tCillBelly ttoyd 232 6437Let Rtjikow tlii 276-2735

' 272-6647276-1564272 8522

/ 276 0112

SHAHEEN AGENCYR E W O R S -

Louise MicinoEdward JmkowsliiJawet Marino

2761023232 1784276 1796

WADE ASSOCIATESR E A L T O R S

2SNoriBA««i..E. 276-1053 CratriordillllllllllUUlllt

RE N T A L Swith' «mall <l»t wanti

«»«r1m«nt n**r cwtttr elCrintwd. Call Vt-nn,

C*n*«« In M * I M • AvalUM* JUIM. July.I«al«mb«r. 1 r«emt ami bath on•MUtlftii Norway Late. SIMP* <ovr.flrtplact, boatitock. Sacludttf, y»l nur•happlnt and «oll. H 15.00 p«r W M * ,minimum rtntal. 2 wMkt. R.M. Swan, aWattarn Pranianada. South P«rl«.M»ln« 841*1. JJSJiU

L0XURV APT. ) bedroonu. I batht.liv/lng room, ttparale dining room, airconditioned, di>r)w*ih*r.s • .Cranlord Tow«fi . . - *

I I Springfield Av«. . '

UNorthAve, E.2764900 and 276.0777

OPEN WEEKENDSEveninqs Call

alttmen: :MariutrHeRearmrr . 276-44(6Eleanor Bradtldd 276-731keneKowalsU 272-567Ruthf Delarini 276-192;Paul P Hampton 276 6571Susan Humphrey .276-354Dwolhy Wosfco—— 276 1958Helen (Cyn)GatUnl 2724571

57 YEARS OF SEWICE

CENTER HALRANCH

Sunkan Hying room,w lireplacc, full dining roomlarga modern kitchan.badroomt, bath*

OPFICBSTORBNT

Cranford. •4 . 5 room ofllct. oOO sq. I I . , V NorthAvo.. W. Air conditioned. Reatonable.

magnificent paneled. familyroom w fireplace.' Superblybuilt by Larsan on a targ* lotwith many treat. S7«,50O.

SPACIOUS CAPE3 bedrooms 2 baths, largliving room w stonfireplace, dining room, eat-ikitchen. Stone front witcedar shake shingles. Pricedin low *40's - see and makioffer.C E N T E R H A L L

COLONIAL10 rooms - iVt. baths, 2 cargarage - now is the time to seethis spacious home - the pricehas been reduced to ' $74,900

VICTOR DENNISREALTOR

2 ALDEN ST

!276-7618

WATEttPROOFINOandREPAIKS

Slaps, walks, patios, drains: C W 0

' ', ". flalav*fliaa^afilatMW ' i •' '

ZIMMBRMAriallOTNaRt

, • Nuprtma RtpUcimtnl . '- . • • • • ; • - ; 1 W i n d o w * ; " : • . • : ; • .

< Storm andScMin Combinations

• Combination Doori 25 Stylw

Work But Is Perfect For AutoStudent or iomeone withSome Knowledge of Calrs.8 B « T O F F E R . , • -«•: • • - •": • : -Call a7i40M 1-5 P.M. Ask for

WANTCPT0BUY

Mea tMlr ieawia caf,««*H*vap«ni Awe.

L I F E T I M E A L U M I N U M 'PRODUCTS. INC.

IU7S6uthAve'W 276 3205

LANDICAPB^tBRVICEiCfemS p a f e i

Mipair a/IMIM naw .lawni.' fewerrakinf, aeaainf, atantn% or rapiantMshUMrv. Monthly, e»r». Call atter 7• M - 1 7 4 - H H • ' • : ' • • • • ' ' ' • ' • • '

HomeImprovements.

No JnbTm Small* , l « l tSliStAIES• NIGH I APPOINTMEtUS* rULlY INSURED

EDRICHREMODELING

2724334

Need nelp in preparing your adnauaoeT Call Theolllce at 3764000.

i«« i | r • Ma • ayw wf**"' ' " I f r » " " ""^ •veiirtino meuaoe? Call T.hi Citizen andChronicle

.FREELANCE < ,,PHOTOGRAPHY '

RONALD VAN WINCKEt. 'Atrtr • P M i i o i u

PUBLICITY of tna mo»t proltuloaaltort, al price* m. tmallett <lub canallord. tmaen pallthad and namnmade lM«teh»M word*, with good Mineand eo«d tatta. Oenaral Informatton

CJtlun a Chronicle, Cramord, NJ .«»eu. .

LANDSCAPING /'<Lawn cutting, and complete main-1lananca larvlcat. Wa tpeclallu In •thrubbarv, uddtn*. ptantt, 'treat, nirwlawnt. • roto-tilllng. Can 2414170.

WILLIAM KOBSaL InterMr and B»-ttrlar Palntiae- Skltiad mechanicftraanal uiporvltioa. 4M Manor Ava.,Cranfar*. call »*-ni|-PENNERS SERVICE POOL does m«Mcvarything., Carpentry, ' Plumklng^Ramodallnfl,,Electric Wiring, ApplianceReparr» CaHz74»iU '

HELP WANTEDHHtuiiiiMiiiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiuinunittiuiii

RITA T E M P O R A R I E SWE HAVE THE JOBS IF YOUHAVE THE TIME. CALL:

272494010 A Wen Street Cranford

imtrjumuuiuiuiiuimuuHisiOOwMkly JBMMW* addrtulng mall lorflrmi. ttoln Immwilaltly. OctalU undtUmpvi uMnuwl «nv«loa«. Crwallv*Gnttnrlut. Box UU, Cerptt* Chrlitl,T««ai ia4M .-••:

HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORSNEEDED

Oim TO INCREASED ACTIVITIES INTH8 HEAVY EQUIPMENT CON-STRUCTION INDUSTRY NEW MENARE EARNING MOO TO I I I 00 ANHOUR. EXPERIENCE NOTNeCESSARYl WILL TRAINI IF YOULIKE WORKINO OUTDOORS ANDWOULD LIKE TO MOVE INTO THEHIOH INCOME BRACKET CALL I I I -Ut-ttOS OR WRITE NEW HORIZONSUNLIMITED, S140 S. MADISON AVG.SUITE ) INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA44M7. >

CERTIFIED SEMI-DRIVERSEARN »JS0V»5 PERN/WEEKSHORT PERIOD OF CERTIFICATION.NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY'WILL TRAIN! PLACEMENTGUARANTEED. CALL 317 633 3334 ORWRITE TRAILMASTERS 5 HO S.MADISON AVE. SUITE 5 INDIANAPOLIS. INDIANA W

ESTATES APPRAISED

C. C. Noes(CRANFORD) i/.

"AGENT FOR THE OWNER'(Not A Dealer)

Experienced in Sales: • • • .-. ° t ••-.'

Hotne ContentsBy Appointment

272-5315

IYPISTiREEN LIGHT FOR YCHJIAApve Info this goodspoVJn our TrafficDejMirtment and get(tall: a good salary,outstanding benefits;and e x c e l l e n tworking conditions.To qualify you mustbe a High School gradwith* flood typingskills and defeniteclerical aptitude.Please apply Inperson or call Per-sonnel Department.

276-3900

Olv. ol Americaitftorne Prod; Corp.South Ave.,& Hale St,

Cranford. N.JAn Equal Opportunity Employer

doiSr a year, pur»want to40A-.1M4 the Patrick J.Orall and J>Walter CoWaeUttle League Field*,hereinafter more particularlydescribed, for me purpote of conductingLittle League aaaaball oamea thereonfor a period o f ^ e (5) ywars, terminablon fOdayt^ notice tf1 the hneeded for bli

f d

Flrt«»hallb«in»lnt»lo«dbV*rid[«l Iht

' ~ cbnoitl4|i

SECTIOrf 4. _Basaball t * i w « , Inc.; »haj| mm*•Mbmll • ricott to ««• oHlcar or

o f ^ e (5) ywars, terminnotice tf1 the premhaa

bli p r e t Iyt noior publdefault

i

ce tf he premhaa mic purpoaet or In the

t t Md r p c pp e

event of default, pursuant to a Mateigreemant in form . and aubatance

satltfactory to the Township engineerand Township Attorney: . 'ALL thai tract or parcel of land andpremise*, situated lying end being In theTownship of Cranford. union County,and State of New Jersey,. more par-llcularry bounded and' described asi o l l o w a : . •. ••• ; • , ' , . . • " • . " . - ' . - • .

Beginning at a point In the tooth,eaaterly tide of McClellen Street adistance of three hundred and for t f(34)00') from the corner formed Wthe northeMterty side of Cleery

Thence fIrtt North 57 degrees, 34minutes 40 seconds'East along thesoutheasterly tide of McCletlanStreet about five hundred andtwenty (5W) feet to a point in the'westerly right-of-way of the GardenState Parkway;

Thence second In a" southerlydlreetionalongthewestertyrlgntof-J»ay of 4he Cardan State Parkway'about two hundred and sixty ( w > ,feet hj a point of intersection withthe northwesterly side of BuchananStreet; •

c 4 ^ ( ^ t l o r » of the agreement setting forththe uses tp wrrich proaartywasput during each year,, the jctlvKknundertaken in furtherance of ««e publicpurpose for- whleti property wasdemised, me approximate value or co»t,

"•norif any, of such aetlvltlasifHurfharenof such purpose, and an «fHnn«lon of.the continued tax exemptsteh&of the.

Thtifdav Mav 10.1»73 CRANFORD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHR' . . . f '• 1 ' _ ' L J U " . ' : • • ' . . ; j • * ' . . _" 1 ' .. * .' ' • imaTi raaT • * > • laJVaaTkaVlAaU A ' ' t W » S f > t e l f af lV*t

jmaroflt corporation pursuant to bomsSSand FacUrai Law: T-v ••••• r-s •

SECTION J. THAT » » Owtrmoit #'th« TowtitWp t b m m l r l ^ and theToiMwMai Clark bt WMI Ittay hcraby « r *•uttiorlsMM «MC|rtt; MkfwwlaitM,MtfdMlMr Mid LtM* AgrMmant i»Tm flt*Crantord •or*' Uatp^fumim. Inc.,and^Wi»i»judvo»hjr witfllK1ti«;actlM

w M d e d /nVoaiM'yorapprcprlate to carry out thepurpoaesof theforegoing ardlwanoii

•Htct upon.publication' after finalpMHd* M proyMM by law. .

^ Jack CMcV«y, Chairman,. . ~ 'TiMWMMpCommin«*>

ATTEST: .• •• . '• • ••W«l*y N. Phllo, Townsnip CMrk- . . • ' •• NOTICE . , •-. .- .: The fortgolng ordlnano*" was In-,

troducadandpawadonflnt reading at am«ttlno of the Township Commntee oftno" Towfishlp of Cranford, N.J. onTuesday, May t, 1W3 and will be con-sidered for final passadw, after puMIehearing, at anothet1 meeting of saidTownship CommlHee-at MunicipalBuilding, Cranford, New Jersey, onTUESDAY, M»y ft, 1»73 at « "PM. (prevailing time).

. . NOTIC*OFlNT«NTI0f< / .Talw none* ttatvOAKlWOOO I A N M .

INC. has applied to the Mfrar andCtwKll ojtheiorougtjof Omma. N J :for. T~.'a ~- Fttnary., W M I . CsfajumptldfiOcamafar prwnMM tocateajit J4* NorthAvenue, Oarwood, HJ. 7T>•..,vNpnM| and: adoYaita|i ol Ihe1 of Hears

•---"'-• caul Travlhsky, 7a»BHtaeeth, NJ,

oABwqpo' • ' Petit TravlrMky,

Dated: May 3, .10, W71Pee: inst '"

n ."•"

Oated: May 10, 1*73Fee: S31.4S

WESLEY N.PHILOTownship Clerk'

MAIL CLERK

Wam*atUR«antn<MdiialU>atsiuM ntMMMMts •< thisposiUM. Libaral co«piny•watt*. Matl lor parsoatMabiikj to SBpfhwairt tbaktncoaa. Apply ki partoti orcat:- .

276-3900

Udwoypiv. of American Home Prod. Corp.\ . ' South Ave.4 Hale St.| cranford, N.J.Equal Opportunity Employer M / F

The Federal Reserve Bankof iNew % k ,

has immediate openingsfrom 10:00 P.M. - 6t00 ^

at Its new North Jers«y regional Check1 ProcessingC e n t e r i n ' • •'•'•','

CRANFORD, NJ.

CHECK PROCESSING CLERWSalaries commensurate with experience

10 '•}> night shift differential Prior business machlng and/>rClerical experience Is required . i

I T O arrange ah Interview call Roberta Green at-our New York orllce,|' ? ' . . . ' . • . ' . . •

"(212) 732-5700, ext. 372

fQRr APPLY ON SAT, AAAY 12thI Between the hours of 9am 3prr5 at 2 JACKSON DRIVE. Cranford, N.J. I

(Attached to the Coachman Irm, Exit 134on the Garden State ParKway.) I

iiming for afen milliondollar

We Invlt* you to axplore th«growth, future end tMmlngi po-tontlal waHlnoXfoir you •with Hi*

' recognized leader tn the RealE t t protewjon . . . QaHery of

if your aim ishigh-let's talk!OUR COMPANY. . .Recognized leader. In imaginativeReal Estate marketing with over 1,100Galleries throughout North America;

YOUR POSIT ION. . .Represent our established Companyto qualified prospects who wish tobuy or sell homes locally arid acrossthe country.

QUALIFICATIONS...A proven record in sales or a relatedfield, enthusiasm, integrity and a sin-cere interest In helping families buyor sell their homes.

S30 South Ave^E

Elizabeth

Real Estate Since 1905MANAGER- Mrs. Mae Kohler

Galleries inrlstown. Be

Cranford'

ardsvllle

I

PHIL F HENEHAN, SR A. Socletyef ,.

. Real Ettat* ApsraltersU Alden Street, Cranford

uiut|uuuuiHHiuiuriujuiiuiitiiulhitnniiuiuifiutuunuuiiAIR<ONOITIONBRS, one year old)also fan. sink and toilet, pink > J hanginglamp*. UMSM.

COLLECTORS AND INVESTORSBuy of your Itlttima. 'Breaking i * colUclion ol •< million>l<mp>, M.OOO. all dilterent, moil u>*d.Selling country lott at 10 - • » . ol catalogvalue. J7» Utt . . .

FULLTIME SALES PERSONtor gift shop. Knowledge ofChina, Crystal and flrtoPorcelains. See Mrs. Richards- JANE SMITH, 137 CentralAvenue, Westfield, N.J.

. SEMI OBIVeHJ NEEDEDLocal companyt na«<l Ctrtified Semi-Onvtrt. Earn UOO MOD ptr we*k No• «p«ri<nc* fwcttiary, iiill train. Forappltcalion call JH4J* 3»M. or writ*CoatrMay Amtrican Sytttmt. P.O BoxIIUS mdlanapollt. Indiana «4I0l

OAL FRIDAYI mmnilau opening for gal viho wishes toluve houMhold chorea Behind tar part-tlma work In a naw Springfield office.Accurate typing, itano and a datlra to«n|ov your |ob Is all that l> nacMtary.Contact JoluiC.Oacot.MMiSObefore It

Auto Machank - Bnparlanc* na<a»»ary.Full ilm« • tacur* |ob lor rlsh' man,wlda rano* of banalll.. Apply UnionCounty Park Cornmltilon, Acma St.,Dlliabalh - Monday lo Friday,» A.M. to J

Boohkaapar - thru ganaral ladgor plustorn. ll»hl typlna. Mo V a. L • •xcallantlocal company. Salary op«n - le« paid.SUM BMPLOYMDNT SERVICE, 31/South Ava., W. Watlllald, W.J. - jn-U4i.

ACCOONTINO CLCHKWith potential to »up«ry)i« »avaral otharclarm, attar training. Salary t»-r»«artWith l«o paid. EKCillanl banalllt. Baiyto raach location. '

CALL:RITAGIRL

10 Alden St.

CrarWord 1

Aj.ljlonl DookKootMr • P»rMlmo. Mu»fIIAV« vxpuHonca *nd iam« tVplnU s«IH.Moor« lo «ult. Car njcoMar/- Oooiopoortunlly wllli konllworlti llrm. WilltonilUor rollrod p«r»oil • Apply: Uox '»*. c o CmnluiU Clllian fl. Chronltlo-

' AVONYUMN YOUH fHl l l i TIMU INTOMOWUYI Many AVOM Ho|)r««nl«llv<i»<i*rn an oillmalod WO « ^"oK «' mo'"'JtufliiU lioor» Ihoy clwo»o llionuolvol.

' r W I ' J5J-Isoo (or Llndoii, Momllo.*u»ullo Kurk, Cronloid, Clork, OoC-UiooJ, Mahwny, kunllwortli, MlllllJx UndOnion.

SECRETARIESEXECUTIVE - CMCtlUnl local tpot forB «l /m with good iltllls plus detlre toorganlM and function Indapendently.Muit ba -paopl* penon" with outoolngp«non*llty. SIM 4- lea paid.PLUSH • Naw ipot In txacutlva offices.Idaal lor good tklllt, minimum ex-p«rl<n», but ability to create own let-l.r. and work on own. 17 Hour wa»k,•xcdUnt bandits - »U5 + foa paid.NO STENO - top ipot a" right hand tobuiy ak«c. Idaal for dark typist to mov*up. Olv«r»lllad, navtr dull dulias - Sill4- loo paid.

SUM EMPLOYMENT SERVICE

M7 South Ave., W .WesHield, N.J.

UILLINO CLUMKParMlmc. Mull liovu uUliorUncu «iUSOIIM lvpl"l) 'kill. Hours lo cull- <-«r.,ic«sary. Lnd »o.umu -"d ..(«««"•«lo f-O. UuU \U c • u Cranloro* Clllwn «•cnronlctn, I I Alrfon St., CKiilo«_^.iJ1jjYounu man, lOll-llmu. ililpiilnu.tloanlnu [DIUI«I«U' ixiiiBrol *IM» *«oru(<jr Morll.l Juwulois. Hono.W I'rlnlurxmulslla. Cal

poi b^yi or'ulrl* WJnlod foe OOm . 13 VQ°r> old. Cull JJaaJHI.

EarnExtra

MoneyThe

ManpowerWay ,

It'* ty WJV to ujrn Ihu hionuV Vol) Want oTtiu KCiiodulti lhaif nulli V*> * b«sf. W«i nuocpeoplo With uood oHko «klll» now --vxpofloncoJ »ocrwlorloS/ tupUla, oHIcutiuctiliia opofator*^ Illo clerk*. Slop Indtid find out about tomporary Work.You'll liku Iho chanfjo oipaco •- and tr»*j, ,JV • •* oMort.

FENCINGChain Link

Wood FencingPortable Dog Runs

Complete line includingstate, aluminum panels,etc.

FOR FREE ESTIMATECALL

TYPHOON 381-3111omlture - like naw; provincial triple

dresser, cocktail table, lamp, whit*double child's dretaer - bast offer. Call

Household Items for sale - moving out ottate Alter a P.M. - all day Saturday.

Call » M W .Whirlpool trainmaster compactor,whit* with b*lg* top, hardly used. Call!/J-\wa • S-f P.M." ' ,Pool Hltar, vacuum, top skimmer manual meat sllcar. Call »«- •»! .ONE of the finer things of Ufa—Blu*Lustra carpal cleaner. Rent electricshampooar t l .

Alban-Lawls Hardware

PETS FOR(ALeIllllllllUlllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllUmUl

AFGHANS • An Exquisite Llllir341-1001 Weekdays ',I7I-Mlf WaafcandsEvealnas

7 year old spayed - a toed tiger cat -looking tor good home - no children. Call

GERMAN shepherd pups, AKC,« waaks.Snots And wormed, females. Parents onpremises. U M I I t

Tehiporary Services23 North AvenueCrjnford, N.J.272-9120

Atl UqUJ. O|)por1unliy Cmp.ovor

to cam MOO-ttta mo Own. Call

AUTO FOR SALEUIIIIUIIlUllllllllllllllllUlllllllllUllllllUUIIII

ism . Chevrolet Impala -- 4dr. Hard top -d«rk groan With bl^ck Vinyl top andbJ*ck pleated vinyl uats • r«dlo< hojtor,powor1 ' ltoatlng, powor brakes,outomallc, A M > M radio - V l lowmllaaoo- i.;t]\9i9 - Monteoo - 3 door hard top - radlo^ho-jtor1/ bulomalW/ powor ttcorino^pawvr brakes - dark uroan With blackvlt»vMop- iwsI»/J Lincoln COnhfioutal M«rW IV llflhlblue wtth Whit** V(nfl top and gttnulno

1wln conilorf Inturlor, (ijll powcrair-, MICIHIIII I t.r«* - AM HMMany oothors - ^bsuluttilyI %169S

1V71 Lincoln Cuntlliuntal CoUpu -*ii\\l Wnliu With bUtk vinyl lop andi<j twin comlurt luunu«i »o«ts, full, factory air. *-H?V

HANDYMAN'S Sf*llClAL)VtiS - Chuvrulof Mallbu - 1 Ooof lianl lop,ft'aitiiuni urv<3ti w,lth dark urccn Vinyl topand u.ttltti Vinyl lalurlur - Va - automatic,radio an<J hctatcr, powtr ttuuriiuj, Somo

WvitU ii<\L I f wii» Vnry Wall - o» Is • wheroIJMHLOYMtJNT WANTKD

jn duiWos Hulil sawliltj and 111411-i

U ) i p i i r | 0 U C g No

ALUMINUM PRODUCTS

IFETIME ALUMINUMPRODUCTS, INC.

omi Improvement ProductsStorm Window «nd Doors,"' •..'."" ' 2 7 6 ^ 3 2 0 5 ' . ' V I102 South A M . , W. Cranford

AUTO BODY REPAIRS

BODYARTGeorge W. KocheraCoflbion SpedafotsAuio & Truck Relimshing24 Hour TowingBody & Fender Shop

SHOP: 78941330RES.: 799 0604

6 South Ave.' Ganvood

AUTO DEALERS

SERVICE AND DEPENDABILITY" FOR OV^K 40 YEARS

tor

BAVARIAN >W^HCEOESBENI MOTOR WORKS

. ^ales Service PartsEuropean Tratnjd Mpchanics

We Spectacle irvArranoomtjnl^£or EOropeanvDeliveries

f-'ul'v Equipped Body Shop

EDW. K. CUMMJNGCO INC

ELIZABETH4UMORRISAVE

ROTCHFORDPONTIAC433 North Ave. E.

WestfieldSales

New and Used Cars ;•232-3700

Seryico and Parts

054-3222

SAABOF SWEDEN

SFAomtttiTRIUMPH

232-6500

AUTO DEALERS

I E I L L Y OLOSMOBILE. INC.• • '• Authorized

OLDSAAQBILESales & Service

- ; - •• - - £ 3 2 - 7 6 5 1 -

560 North Ave. E Westfield

UNION COUNTYBUICK CO.

Authorized

BUICKSales & Service

GMC TRUCK SALESGOOD USED CARS

139 N. Broad' ElizabethSi;* 354-3300

AUTO REPAIRS

BOULEVARD HUMBLE

SERVICENTER

• Tune up• General Repairs /• Atlas Tires & Batteries• Lubrication /• Brake Service / ' .

FpR FAST ROAD SERVICE1 Dial 2^5371

Blvd. & 21stSt. Kenilworth

CRANFORD

(Sso)SERVICENTER

MEN MEIER. Prop

GENERAL REPAIRSTIRES - BATTERIES

INSPECTION WORK ONALL CARS

1 Dial 27G-980023 South Ave. W. Crantorc

BASIKS

KEINILWORTHS1A1K BANK'

Mviiibur Federal Reserve System

Beposil Insurance Corp.•Dial27?4S00

Boulevard-Kenilworth

THE NAT80NAL

YHOMASulli Av>' I W.".llli-ld

232-6SC0

•TWIHBOHO.AOTO CORP.Author 1/1HJ ford D<-.ilir

Sinci: VJ2OS.»ltn Scrvtcr M.*nt.iK

open fcvei. ill 9 ;1O p inS.i!. ( l ib pin

Hoiollo 24b't>100

MUSt \\UC\- lull

ilk AN^OWO OH- ICL

643 R J I Itdii Rodd Phone3UU-0800

Oiiurinr) You ,-

Complete- "one ^top"

S ^ . O . I . C .

Ample Flee Customer

I'.ii kimi

• i l i r v 11 Clitttfitid

TuUo Vou(

Any Jol) .•(<•<•*•)''••<'

Cjll3b2-8Jt.Oa J0 J 111 ly AM p »i Mou thiu I

BANKS

CLARK OFFICES

ummit and ElizabethTrust Company

060 RjnUn an — 10 We»»»ieM Ave

' . -„• . , : . . .331- .4aC!O, . - : - . ' . . . . ' '.Member F.D.I.C. ,:

TEWYUNAirMILL END STORES, INC

Custom-Made

• For Convenient "Full Service/'Banking in Cranlord

CRANFORO, OFFICE 931^6831100 South Ave. E.CR.ANFORO A U T O B A N KChestnut St. & Walnut Ave.

931-6833

united countiestrust company

where sow1 *><>ngt itort to Happen

• / , • • •

Member: Federal Reserve SystemFederal Deposit Insurance Corp.

BUILDINGCONTRAGTOttS

DAVIS BROS.BENNINGERCO•jack Davis Chuck Ben ninger

•fa Alterationsir Addilioni

if RemodelingFREE ESTIMATES

CALL CRANFORD276-1474 276-8758

BUILDING MATERIALS

J.S. IRVINGCOMPANY

Lumber & Millworkof Every Description

Fuel Oik*. Oil BurnersHardware... Paints

233-1492600 SouthAW.,W. Westfield

CLEANERS

2/6-3300 .44 North Ave., E. CriiWord

DELICATESSENS

, HOMt BAKING

SANOWICHES FOR PA I(• S

:>32

lUQuimby St.

, DOG.l l ' j N UNION AVI .CHANI OHO

«. «> MA.-HOGS a « u

Oualllv . vjnioiiiliiv) Ki ' j io iul i lvIJ.iK11. kiniiiw-^ Av.urftl' *o i«-•

•,v« s ..,• 272-7017 276 623

Visit TheLibrary.

DRAPERIES. SLIPCOVERS

DRAPERIES& SUP COVERS ••<

"Large«lectlonolFabrics by Vird

orBoftFoam Rubberheadquarters

Orapery Hardware

INTERIOR DECORATINGr SPECIALISTS

/ Col 688-9416962StuyvesantAve. ' Union

»• FUEL OIL

REEL-STRONG FUEL CODependable, Friendly

ierviceSince 1925

Heating OilsInstallations Service

3 North Ave> E. Cranford

FUNERAL DIRECTORS

DOOLEYFUNERAL SERVICE

Funeral Director!Phone 276 0255

-218 North Ave.W Crantord

^MEMORIALFuneral Directors

12 Springfield Ave.Cranford. N.J.

27IJ0092

FURNITURE

MARTIN'SFloor & Bedding

LINOLEUMFURNITURE

CARPETSBEDDING

Come In and Browse

67 WesHield Ave.Clwk'

FU 1-6886INTERIOR DESIGN

HtSIOtNTIAL .OMMtRCIAL

INT'L. DESIGNERSCONSULTANTS

' 420A IWrsido Urivi/,

Cr,mluld,N.J. 0701G

By Appointmuni Only(201) 272-5809

LAN!)S{:,VPIN«

LANDSCAPINGIndustfial -

ElOBERTTS

276-32JWI'.M IHOMASS)

I VJIESE276-3281

CHAWrOlU)

LUMBER

BUILDERS'GENERALSUPPLY CO.

Lumber •Building MaterialsMillwork

Dial 276-0605&6 Centennial Ave.* Cranford

MOVING & STORAGE

HENfeY P. TOWNSENDMOVING & STORAGE

PACKING241 North Ave., W.

Westfield232-4464

NURSING HOMES

CRANFORD HAILNURSING HOME

• 12 Acre Estate j: Fireproof Buildings .

Registered Nurses in Charge276-7100

600 Lincoln Pk., E.Cranford

OPTICIANS

" WE REPLACEBROKEN FRAMES

WHILE YOU WAIT!We replace all types ol

lenses, too. •Just bring in the piecesol your biokAi glasses

ROBT. I BRUNNERWestfieldCranford

Toms River

PLUMBERS

BRENNAN& TOYE

J.T. Griff in, Pi op.PLUMBING -HEATING

& TINNING

276-026920b South ftvo. E. Cianlord

ROOFING

ROOFING

FASTSREtlABUE

SERVICE

T; ARTHURJOHNSEN

CARPENTER, ROOFERCRANFORO, N.J.

DAY 276-9548EVE . . . . . . . 342-3984

YourBusinm

WTll

6R0Wif you

•dvertiul

Call 276 6000

SAVINGS & LOAN

Capital Savings& loan Assn.." Incorporated 1887 .

Insured Savings'Hours: Mon. to Fr i .8:30 - 6:00Thurs. Eve. 6 - 8

"276-55502 N. Union Ave.

Cranlord655 Raritan Road

Cranford

Roselle Savings& Loan Association

Mortgage LoansSavings Insured

2451885235 Chestnut Roselle

TELEVISION

ECONOMY ELECTRIC271 South Ave. E.

Westfield, N.J.Phone: 654-3060

• \

* for the be&l \& fastest servicewhile you wait or shop

•it il you can't come to uswe'U'Come to you

* NEW AND USEDTV SETS FOH SALE

A anlennus lepaiied &iilslalled _

In lh« "ftX? StiQiioli'ia Cenle'

iuuibiu^*-Healing -Coolii'ifNupjiry -Aliurationi

276-1320"Joith Ave.. t . Cianl

PLUMBING & HEATING,INC.

(»CO t^UoiiO loiiy DtJ-dljK*O^oi S'J Vis. Lxpuiidnt:*!

SAME ;>-iV SEUV1CE. H.ilhf ooni .iiid Kuclion .

A/todc*< oi juiioMS

SllJUlCt...SALES...KEKAlllSWu Uo

Ilio Cumpblo Job

'U /•.'.A.SON.UtlJ'.' HATES"

OIUI Av« , E.

TVS6RVICE"OUR BASIC COMMODITY'

ial«t & Review

I'b

WATCH KKl'AUtING

/ WALHUr Ml.ClIANr'OWO, N.J. ^ ^

-* .Vj£

Page 9: DigiFind-It · , •. • ••.: !'•%.• ft *jw: ;.-,4

ff

I85S*

l A t i IN ACCOHOAHCB•HJ TfUMl 0*;.--:TH«

Hi

! • • : ' , '

'• I • •

1 i .' i.''

TH* FULL TlXT- OF THEmtOLUTION f OLLOWI: . . :£>

\ '•']•[' T1XT'OF RMOLUTION / ,,,

•' RESOLUTION NO. l i f t' WHERRAS» tt>0 BwoMft pt GonNOOjlI* «w owotr o> wrrtln UirxJi. 4od

ithAV«nu*Mtr)o'MontliMu w

- , . afndLot*'mthmi*r25?,irw:mtlw»,on Block a asshown Brfa Map tntlthM "Scctjbn No. 1.Property Sltuattd. at earwood-WrtffMd. Union County, N#w Jtrwy.QtMnoIng to ttw Ntw York Suburbantand Company,:' 'tltod In ttw UnionCounty Rtgitttr't Office as Map No. 73-B, MM proptrty ( I M Ming kMntlltadtwroln at Tract No. l. and land andbu< Wing on property known a* Lot 3 B.•lock ttrOanwod Tax Atlas, consistingof • two-story brlck^uildlng at Ma SouthAvenue m the Borough of Garwood andWmtHlftf herein at Tract No. 3; and.

pavm«M '<ot tfw p w d i M 'any: In.wranc* claim to tttt borough to I Mvxttnt.tha) Mflnttrwt* may «pf»ar.

•, At tht t in* <*•. ctpung: • « « • •portionmtfit will I * madt flf. tt» tauttbatwi upon ttw-morod valy* • » oi

ctobtr l. )M». PaytntM will b*

Sknall wonders <ctnvbt M M at •

I !••!•• M 1

Jeieweii

VolkswageiM l E ElUahttb A»

4I662M

raatSrprwWtd. . _ . H t .X A puMK kaW of tht propariY «<tl bt

hMd at tht Borough Hail, Garwood; IMwJtrMy,onTut*day,.May IS. «•» • ' * *regularmMtlngorth*Governing Bodyat l:ID p-m.. or as »oon thtrtatttr as thtmattar can bt rtachtd. Al such tun* andptact. all pwsoni Inttrtstad In oMdlngon tht propirty In accordance jKith Jhttkrms and condition* provMtd tor, hartlnshall havt an opportunity to do to. As acondition of tht within salt, tht OMMtrsnalldtpotitacertlfltd check. cajiMDraCpjnbJn|IlflD « bath. in_m.anwj«» notexceeding one per cent (!•* ) of theminimum price provided lor herein, orthe amount ol the.bid. whichever Ishigher. • '

4. Tht Borough will accept a purchastmoney mortgage not to exceed eightyper cent (»•*) of the sales price for aperiod not to exceed 17 yearv with In-terest at the rate of 7> i'i per annum.Payment* on said mortghage shall b*made in equal monthly Installments;said payments being first applied tointern&nd thebalance to principal.

praw a pato »» vaam wornhe daft of eMtlnB the cflnstrucWbn o»

any buiwing or o * t j s>rwctur» tgjihaproperty lying on me south side ofSoult.Avenue and WetrtHled herein as Tract 1,The deed, ta addWon to « •» .«restriction, slyrJr' provide that

t ' T t JO • t r ' *P«<«*

ftllVj y t y tive M) days from the date

of the acceptance of Mdv The purchasershall provide fire insurance in anamount.sjtticient to cover the principalol'the mortgage and shall continue/tokeep such insurance in effect throughout-the period ot the mortgage. Said In

restr ico, y pproperty 'Tract JO •tr'*P«<«*1«>..%!years from tht date of clwlna shall beutliuad tor off-straet parking in con-unction with, the building on theroperty lying on the north sWe of SouttVAvenue and identified at Tract 2 or.ftr

off-straat parking tn conlunnion- withany other propert»or properties ad-olnlng such Tract J.

t p l No real Mtate commlnlon shall bepaid except that which tht Borough Isobliged to pay to Its real estate con-wltant. Albert Levlnsoh. Said com-mission to be In the amount of fivt percent (SS) of theiales price. The buildingand grounds may be Inspected by ap-pointment within* Borough1* real estateconsultant. Albert Levlnson. He may becontacted by phoning Ma-INO.

.9. The building Is to be sold in itspresent condition .without anywarranties, express or Implied,' other(han that the seller will have the heatingwidatr conditioning systems i>

* TUN WJP BONANZA* HgPoints. Plats. Coo4fiSaT:—

Adjust and Stt'Mostcars :.6Cyl

•12.W(8-cylinder; $15.»S)

SO. ELMORAE X X O N S E R V t C E N T E R

^otitt Ekaora Aw.. Cor. Erie© Ave.Bahreen S I Geoff* Ave. & BaywayCircle E l 34244

Work done (tnSScHnt Sundays)T« 3 P.M. Caf tor Appoantnettts.

^"YourAnrinvHed To Come To...Our.New Location

27 S. UNION AVENUE( I Mock From Sovth Awa.l

CRANFORD272-5755

T»wr».Vt'!'i«t. lo-lDa««« Sun. a M M .

, Ornaments. Kay flea Towels. Incense iBurners . Hand crafts . Miniatures aDried Flowers . Ecology Boxes . OraatCandle Making Supplies.

AMPLE FREE PARKING IN OUR LOT NEXT DOOR!

Come feelthe hills

and valleysof your

feet.

exercise sandals

Come re$t your feet in the•* hollowsand the rises. Experience

the qoolness; of polished beochwood against theWarmth of bare. skin. Feel the littlo mound We call theloe-grlp, that helps you turn mere steps into a beau-tiful toning and awakening for your legs. Scholl,the original Exercise Sandals. Belter than barefoot.

Wed, bluo, or bone cushloriodluuthor strap.Flut or raised heol.

FREE DELIVERY — T©1. 276-6100

34 £®ntm&n St.Opp. Cr«snffoird

Kocorvo TSi©To Llervnif

U:3O a.m. to 110 p.m.:30 u.ru. to 0 p.m.

A J . MOSCA, Borough Cter* •;•••• .Adopted May 1, WJ

By order «tt»-MeyftrjtnfJ CouncilA.T, M»ca, Borough ClerkMuntclR** Building

': WSFWKHOT

«fjd

sufficient working order at the time oVthe passing of title..

Marketabinty' ot title shall beestablished by the Issuance of a titleInsurance, polity at regular rates by acompany authorized to do business in theitate of New Jersey. .

U. At.the time'of sale, the highest bid" t d ll th bid b

are on file, with the Clerk of the Borougho» Carwood «nd are.available for In.jspection Monttay through Friday, at theOffice of the Clerk of the Borough ofGarwood. Center street. -Garwood. NewJersey, between the'hpurs of 9:00 a.m.and SrOO p.m. The sale ot the propertyshall be subtect to such tacti as aredepicted on said surveys. •

13. All fcids.sha.ll be bindtto tor-aperiod of « Oays from the date olrecelptthereof and may not,be withdrawn «><cept with the formal consent ,of the.Borough of Garwood. ' " ' .

14. In ttw event ttw Borough accepts apurchase money mortgage all mortgagedocuments shall be drawn by theBorough Attorney and the cost thereofand alt, "ling tees shall be paid by the

• LEGAL NOTICE1; •„

NOTICE OF INTENTION

* TAKE NOTICE, tha f lT B G, INC.trading as OAKLAND HOUSE, hasapplied >o the Mayor and Council of theBorough of Garwood, New Jersey for aplenary Retail Consumption license forpremises situated at 3 » North Avenue,Garwood. New Jersey.

The following are the names andaddresses of all Officers, Directors, andStockholder* holding more man 1' of thestock ot the said corporation:

GAETANO GIAROINA. 294Whltewood Road, Union. N.J.President .

DOMINICK BASILE, 3a Eagle Street,iselln, N.J. - Vlce-Preslde/it

ANTHONY BARTON E, 235 ForestDrive. Union. N.J. - Secy. • Treasurer

Obtectlom H any shoOld be made

;,.'..>'.. LEGAL NOTICE ' • .•:.' -\l••••:'.. NOTICE TOCRiOlTOHS'ESTATE OF CHARtiS £ :5I»«Rtoa**4

i. i>wrsuant to the-oq»er of MARY C.KANANe. Surrogate ot the County ofUnion, made on the *th day ot May A.O.,I t n . uflMi the application of the uft.derslgned. as Executrix ol the estate ofsaid deceased, notke Is nereb> given tothe creditors of said deceased to exhibitto .the subscriber under oath 'or at rflrmatlon their claims' and demands!against the estate of said deceasedwithin six months from the date of saidorder, or they will be forever barredfrom' prosecuting. or recovering . thesame against the subscriber,' . .• , : . - - ••••, „•.•".'••:• " ,• P a t i l a E . S p e e rEdward J. insley Attorney. ExecutrixMl South Ave. -:Fanwood, N.J.Dated: May 10. n n . Fee-.tA.42

BOROUGHOF KENILWORTHKENILWORTH N E * JERSEY

•'— JN9TICE TO BIDDERS(-or salt Addrenograpr* Multigraph

Class 1K». Addressograph qraphotypeClara e400 and'Addressograph Cabinettor storage of plates. Can be seen In Tax

OWlCT. ffm. nwv f i" ~bldi.wtiUJtrecelvedLin .Office. 547 Boulevard, Kenllworth nolater than May nth. \m.

MARGARETMcOEVNABorough Clerk

Dated: May 10, 1973F « : u n -•••• v '.;..• . . . . . . . . -.

LEGAL NOTICE .

' CRANFORD PUBLIC SCHOOLSCRANFORD. NEW JERSEY

PROPOSAL: MUSIC DEPARTMENT/EQUIPMENT .. /

PHYSICAL EPUCATION SUPPLIES—Sealed-proposals will be receive* Inthe Business Office, Board of Education,Thomas Street, Cranford, New Jersey attwo o'clock on Thursday. May 7/k. 1973tor the furnishing and delivery .of:MUSIC DEPARTMENT EOUIPMENTPHYSICAL EDUCATION SUPPLIES

to the Cranford Public School system.Specifications and proposal forms

may be secured upon' application at theBusiness Office; Board of Education,Lincoln School, Thomas Street.: Cranford. New Jersey. Only the bids ofvendor* "complying with New JerseyCivil Rights legislation will be consldercd. • •

• The Board of Education reserves theright to relect any. or all bids, waiveinformalities and award contract asmay be deemed best for the Interest otthe cranford Public Schools.

John E. Dwyer, Jr..School Business Administrator

Board SecretaryDated: May 10. 1973Fee: M.14 ,

IAUARY fOLICY FOR, AND TOFIX THK SALARIt* OF • T H IOFFICERS AND; MBMMR* OFTHt f O U C I AND f l K I'OIDARTMINTI .: OF THtTOWNSHIP OP CRANFORO J>0RTKKY«AR I t n :.•;: : .: '. ,'• V •

TOWNSHIP COMMITTM OF , ]M1TOWNSHIF OF CRANFORO, IN T M tCOUNTY OF UNION AND JTATB OF.NEW JfRSBY THAT! . ••,• . •-.. y'--:\

SjKtlof|..t« FlwntJV \ ,v •, ' -la) For «y» «**» year <* service the

annual salary lor ttw calendar year W Jshall be taMB. . •

' (b) For ttw secohU year ot service tht/annual saury tor ttw calender.vaar \mshall beta«S. .. '-.'.' -.• ' ,^y

<O For ttw third year ot service trannual alary for ttw calendar year l»t h W b o t M M . •""-

(d) For ttw fourth year ofannual salary for the calendar \shall bt »10.ro. ,

(e) For the fifth year otFor yennueiselarv tor the cashall ouju.000

service theyatr \m

Section'J. Pahrolmen.(a) For the first yeer

annual salary tor the nshall be. tiaJO. /

(b) For the second *ear ot service meannual salary for th/calendar year i mshall be t M H . . /

(c)'For the ihltH year of service theannual salary for the calendar year 1171shall be tMOO/

fd) For the Jourth' veer of service the

»tht base frierprogram

CO The annual Hlary rate tor theDetective Sergaant» for tha cal«n*ryear 1*73shall bathesKary asihown forSergeanti in Section 3, as above,dtsctibed,,plus Three Hundred Donarsper annum. Saitt, compensation M b *applltd to the baW prior to applyingincanllv* program percentaoev .

(d) TMJMUMWI salary rate for theDetective Sergeants First Clasi for me-calendar year i t » shall be the salary asshown for. Sergeants In Section 3. atabove descrlbad. plus Five HundredDollars per annom. Said compenutlont b l i d to tht Data prior to ap-

wrrtcaptain*..' . ,

The annual salary of Police Captainsand Fire Captains for the calendar yatrH73 ihall be 114.U0. In addition to the

saary iTMmtjfwlty paymanr firm bt^ a M m acwrdanca with the l«r«ayttypercantaBe tchtdul* a1* htrelnafterdescribed.

aactton i . Mttar MaM*.T I M annual salary for tna calendar

year \m snail ranpt fronirtMOO. ta

Section », Longevity.(•) in attention to tht Mlarltt paW to

Police LlevtanaaN and Fire Captain*.Pallet captains, and th* Chief of thef ^ l l ^ f j t W d t h O W f tfflra .Department, a .tonsaytty ptymantshall ba paw M additional etftpinutlanbased upon n * Hjngtti 61 wrvlce M M Mottlcers' accordlno to ttw following,-• C W l W l # ! • ' : . . ' , "••••-k.'.-'iy >. '

C O t t V p t V t t O A O f ' .'- ' - "• '•'' ' •••. ,Y e a r s serv ice .- ,. • - v . ' . ' ' - • -S y e a r s . • • • '.;• •• ;

l O y m a r f < • • " • :'•: >"•' ' ->!

/Additional Compensation •

Ur»eerrt u ^ ^ r S / o f th* or-3n*nXpr««i<<y tmi«id toliwyltvpercontaoe shall tar* fw* ptrwntyot

hVJithe

t-PlrttTum

l f.lg> * « Ptttjurnoti. PlrttTum

sergeants •wlnttdyprlf>r> fo .th;enactmant of thtt-tpjiffiaTte* trftir beawarded potntt atMtt t«loCln» batlt;

m Por each yaft-ol atfvie* > 1 potort.(J) Merit retina, for jaeh vatr of

:-;&iv^:::^3^t^^''t^ X:&(?:>; Mi:-^^

•'-'•' ••/•••tlti.&M

Township

•, , . . . L i j , . ; ,

Oattd; May 10,1»71ptiiu»j« ;

NoticePROPOSED ORDINANCE NO.7J;V

AN ORDINANCE FIXING THE SALARIES AND WAGES O>CERTAIN "OFFtoALS AND EMPLOYEES OF THE BOROUGH OF OARWOOD. INTHrcOUNTYOFUNION.ANOSTATEOFNEWJERSeY, ^ -•B S I T O R D A I N E D , by the Mayor and Countjl.of ttw Boroughio»Garwood. In the

W\tv of Union, Ntw ieney, as follows: " :„ » . '^ ™ v. The toHowIng timed officials and employoos ot. ttwi«prougho»

) shall ba entitled to an"annual salary of wage as iwrelnatter set torth• each respective classification: . . - • ««175.00

.'.'.".'.'.'..'...'.... »!l».00./ 13,433.00

5«0.00SSMIOO3400.00

.......900.00

.....3.300.001,2*100

, . . . .1,000.00. . . . . . .150.00

450.00...1.000.00

. ...rjoo.oo. . . 4 , 0 0 0 . 0 0lJOO.OOeach.4,«0perhT.. J.SOperhr.

MOperhr.2.30 per hr.3.jbperhr.

immediately, in writing, to A.T. MOSCA.CLERK of the Borough of Garwood, N.J.Municipal Building, Garwood, N.J.

BBG, INC.GAETANO GIAROINA. President

~ ANTHONY BARTONE. Secv.-Treas.Dated: May 10. 17. 1973Fee: J15.34

cT«i*Stenogra'pher'(A»»ijtanttotheBoro«ighClerk)........Superintendent ot Streets and Public Works.. . . .Borough Auditor . . . . . . : ^ • • • • • • •Borough Attorney..... ••Borough Cdllector-Treasurer , •Tax Searcher , '• -.;•••Judge, Municipal Court . . . . . . . . : : . : . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . ,Clerk. Municipal Court • • . . . . . . ' .prosecutor. Municipal Court •-• • • •,/• •Superintendent ot Fire Apparatus . . : , . . : ' • •Superlntendent-of Fire Alarm Syttem /••••inspector of. Buildings.». - . . . . . . .Plumbing inspector L ; -

1

Secretary. Board of Tax Attestors C-.Member. Board of Aueisors <}> . . . . . .Cebontn, Strett "Depart ment . . : ;Temobrary Laborers. Strett Oepartmeht +

1>art-TlmeClerk. Municipal OfficesPart-Time Clerk, Municipal Court , ;Part-Time Janitor, Municipal Building -.Fire inspector ttO.QO per day or . . \ . . . . J.SOperhr

Section 3; The salarle* fixed pursuant to Section l hereof for the Borough Cler.Borough Collector-Treauirer, Tax Searcher. Secretary and Members of Boardof Assessors. Judge, Municipal Court, Inspector of Buildings, Plumbing In-tpector. and Clerfc of the Municipal Court shall be In lieu of all feet which may becollected by said off Icert or employees and all said feet shall be turned over to theBorough Treasurer. i '

Section 3: The following named officers and employees of the Borough ofGarwood* shall be entitled to an annual salary at hereinafter tef forth oppotlteeach classification: .Chief of Police •... v .- ' . . : $14,010,00CaptAln of Police 13,030.00Lieutenant of Polfce .* : 12435.00Sergeant of Police:, .11,7*0.00Patrolman • Detective - • • • - • • H.33S.00Patrolman - Class A , . . . . . . . . ' 11^00.00Patrolman - Class B 10.495.00Patrolman - Class C •• • • • 9,»«.00Special Police Off leer. C lan A 2.50 per hr.Special Police Off leer. Class B 2.10 per hr.

(School Crossing Guard!'

damaging your trees and shrubs???

• • *

SCHMIEDE TREE EXPERT CO.for prompt safe spraying service

N . • '

322-9109

"WHY I'M RUNNINGFOR GOVERNOR"

" x i a r y •. . • •: •:.i p a r c e n t • •. ' • - . . . • , • . • • .

s p e r c a n t • - • • ••• • ' . ' • • • . . ' '

b) Policemen.' Firemen andSergeants art not Included In thelongevity program fdr. additionalcornpantatlon. Howavtr* titty • ara • In*'eluded In mt incentive merit oroaram.

Section 10. incentive Merit Proirem.(a) In addition to me annual salary an

Incantlv* merit ttep ptymant programIt hereby Inttltuted for all itn yaar.Patrolmen, Firemen' and Sergeants.Offlcert above the rank of Sergeant an*not Included In the meantlve meritprogram, such Incentive merit tteppayment shall ba determined accordingto the fd lowing schedule at of January l.

• 1 * 7 3 ; . " ' . . • • : . ' • ' ' .

5th Yaar Patrolmen"and Firemen. Additional

. . . • CompenutlonPercantaQt ofAnnual salaryincentive1* Point*

Step. RequiredtthStep l « 1*5th Step IM I I *4th Step M I3rd Step 10 *JndStep 43 4lststep JO" • •» • • •SergeantJrd Step 140 • •JndStep . .100 4lststep 40 2Ib) The Incentive merit program

points are to ba awarded as follows:1. Each class hour at approved

courses, of more-than 10 noun, con.ducted by state, federel or other training

-agencies outside ot departmental In-service training program* and Initialrecruit academy tralnlng-1 20 point:

2. Each full year of service In thedepartment • 1 paint.

(3) In-Strvlct Training for each yearof service -1 point.

(4) For each hour completion of Ap-proved Course a* Submitted by the Chiefof Each Department • 1 20 point.- Section 11. Holidays,

(a) The mtmbtrs of ttw Police andFire Departments shall tie paid In ad-dition to their annual salaries tor seven(7) Legal Holidays at ttw regular dallyrate of compensation, plus com-pensatory time of live (S) days lor the

WINES

. Section 4: The salaries and wages provided for In Sections I and 3 hereof shallbe payable bi-weekly unless otherwise ordered by resolution of the Mayor andCouncil. •

Section 5: The longevity benefits provided for under theprovlslonsof OrdinanceNo. 72 7 or such other subsequent ordinances hereafter adopted shall be M ad-dition to the salaries and wages-provided for herein.

Section A: The salaries herein fixed shall be retroactive and effectivt as ofJanuary 1. W 3 .

Section 7: All ordinances or parts of ordinances Inconsisttnt herewith shall beand they are hereby repealed upon the within ordinance becoming operative andtaking effect. .

Section 6: This ordinance Shall take effect at the tlmt and In the mannerprovltfccriiy taw. it shall become operatlvi twenty days alter the publicationthereof alter final passage and In accordance with law. , •

• • ' • , ' . ' " •••' ••'" ' Approved. John J. McCarthy, Mayor

Attest: •. .-. NA.T. Mosca. Borough Clerk

NOTICE, •• 'The foregoing ordinance was' introduced and passed on first reading at a

regular meeting of the Mayor and Council of the Borough of Garwood. N.J. heldon Tuesday. May 8.1973 and will be considered fofilnal passage; alter a publichearing, at another regular meeting of said Mayor and council at the MunicipalBulldlng> Garwood, New Jersey on Tuesday, May li. 1973 at 1:30 o'clocM'.M.(prevailing time) or as soon thereatter.as said matter can be reached. /

A.T/MOSCABorough Clerk

Dated: May 10, 1973yFee: U9.3»

by Ann Klein

We Need Tax ReformNobody has to tell you why we need

taX reform in New Jersey. Because youpay the country's highest property taxes,you know why. And although the Gov-ernor-aKreediha.t.ojiE-taX-Httucfn re needsrthaulinjf, once elected Ite couldn't_even

"j{et enough votes to have a bill paas theLegislature.

Property Tax Burdensthe Wrong People

The way the property tax works nowjt put.;; the burden oo the wrong people.

• It's not the small homeowner whoshould be paying more tax in New Jer-sey, than- he would in any other state,while corporations pay less than theywould anywhere else.

e It'u uoi tlm Senior Citizen wlmsi-'taxes should be so high, sometime* high-er than his mortgage payments, that he'is forced to sell his homy.

• It's.not the local mnimicipalitii-s whoshould be so pressed r'or funds tli^y mustencourage industrial construction rath-er than desperately-needed housing coh-struction.

• It's not the cities (like Oaniden,whciv the sniall homeowner pays twiceas much as his parallel in the suburbs)who should b<: payirjg for H. rvicrs like

• schools, wrlfare, courts.

Stato Help WoodedT h e stall.- m u s t a s s u n i r m o i y of t h e

c o s t of. t h e s e s c rWc . - s . 'i'\\<- s t a t e m u s ti n i t i a t e a t a x s t n i c h n v w h i c h U'ilJ I ' IV V '

un of tlii;i s t r a n g l i n g dt-p.;nd.' ' iicy on tin-p r o p e r t y f ax , a t a x t h a t i-i k i l l i n g <,urcitii.-j a n d o v e r b u r d e n i n g oil)' citi',:e/i...... • .

N ' n v i j ja i i l i e S t a t e - S u p r e m e ( ' o u r lh a s ru l ed t h a i o u r p u b l i c s r h n o l sy.-item!:: I ' l l i l i i H / ! " I ' u l l i l l i t J n i ; i ! i d . ' i h - i ' n r i - n n a l

opportunity the way is clear for, state-supported education.

The housing crisis will also be helpedby reducing tour dependency on the localproperty tax. Rents will become morestable because landlords will no longer beable to paas increases on to tenants as aresult of spiraling taxes. Apartmentswill becom^available because towiis willno longer .zone against them to av«Hdschooling ciwts. An outrage like Teter-boro, creatttd especially as a, tax havenfor industry, pushing the expense ofschools and other services onto neigh-boring towns, will no longer tye possible.

By reducing our dependency on thelocal property tax land use decisions canbegin to be based on what will he thebest long-term u.se for all the commUrnity and not just on.what will increasethe tax base. We can buifin.to protect and,enjoy our waters, our green spaces, ourair:. , .

Tax Must be Based onHealthy Growth

Once we begin to establish a tax struc-ture based on real wealth — not on achunk of land, a gallon of gasoline or apack of •cigarettes - - then New Jersey's

-rr-venues and servviees will come fromhealthy growth and not from a decayingcity </r an overly-taxed homeowner orrenter.

Hcciiiisi' I served on the State Tax I'ol-icr Commission and was Vice Chairmanof the Property Tax.Task Force I knowand understand the inequities and inef-ficiencies of out present, tax structure.I know how many of our other problemsaiv tied into this one. If I were CoVernorI uiiiild make tax reform the Number I

.prim if.V of my A drnini.it rat ion. -Thai isjiisi one ui' the''reason.) I am running for(Juvei'iiiii'and a.ik you In vote.for me inI hi- I ' r i m a r v .1 u u e T>,

NOTICE OF INTENTION ' .Take notice that KENILWORTH

VETERANS CENTER. INC., has ap.piled to the Mayor and Council of theBorough ot Kenllworth, N.J. for a Clublicense lor the premises situated at 33South 31st Street, Kenllworth, N.J.'Names end addresses of the officers

and trustees of the Kenllworth Veterans.Center, Inc., are:OFFICERS: . ' "

Edward Romalne, 121 So. 23rdSt..Kenllworth, N.J. President

Denis Moulder, 45 So. 23rd St.,Kenllworth, N.J., Vice President. -

Arthur .Russo, , B Via Vltale,

Bank assetsCapitjl' Savings and Loan,

Union County's oldest state-chartered savings and loanassociation, passed the $36million asset mark as of April30, according to Charles Pfost,president. This represented again of $3.2 million since thefirst of the year.

Pfost noted that Februarywas the second busiest monthin the 86-year history of thelocal institution, with savingsshowing an increase of nearlya million dollars. Capitalpresently has more than 10,000savings customers.

I:,1., . - . | , . . . u . 1 1 - , i • . . - . . . • . s . , , v i . r . , . / i , U.J . ::. ' l iu.i Kui.1,1, i r ^ i . m . ,

W t !Jl£HD YOUR H\ELP . . . fLEASS CAL'L US AY (201) 2fc>7-1939

1 • • • ' " . . . X

By TOM WADEWhen you are selling property, il isworth your while to be completelyhonest about il. You, as the sailerof property, must be presumed to.know whether what you say aboutit is true or lalso. if you do saysomething false, you haveCommittced a fraud. As a generalrule, if you don't know if what yousay is Iruo or false, you have leltyourself liable to be accused ofgross negligence .which may alsoconstitute 3 fraudl

When you need property the placeto come is WADE ASSOCIATESHfAl.roKS, 23 North Avu., 276-10!>J. We give full personalizedservice!, including appraisalsfinjnclng j i id mortgage:;. Our staffis equipped,, to advise. yyU onamiuu-mjl, induslrijl, rusiduntijljitti invostmont properly. Hours:Won. thru SJI . 'Jj.in.-bp.m.,Sundjys 1 p. ni.-bp.ni.

htL^CUL WtiX: When you jr'u inthe nurkcl fur j iiuusc, riuko sureIliu Ijndsoping is jll you Wjnl illo lie. If TIUI, how iniicli lime and

correct it.'

WADE ASSOCIATESREALTORS

fKenllworttt, N.J., SecreWry.Joseph F. Jecool. 17J4 Church St.,,

Rahway. N.J. Trenurar. iMEMBERS—TRUSTEES . I

Andrew Capnarlato. 16 So. 20th St..iKenllworth 070)].

Lee O'Brien, 114 Locust St.,tranford.N J. 07016. ' I

Nicholas Capece. 223 No. lath St.,'Kenllworth, N.J. 07033..

' O«nlel OeFablo 44 No. 30th. St.,Kenllwortri. N.J. 070)3.

Michael Veneila, v> Roselle St.Crantord, N.J. 07016.

Vincent Werner, 83 ivy Hill Rd.,Malayan, N.J. 07747.

Charles Reuter, 33 So, 23rd1 St.,Kenllworth, N.J. 07033.

Burton Lamont, 528 Newark Ave.,Kenllworth, N.J. 07033.

John Sturttnvnt. Ij3 • So. 23rd St.Kenllworth. N.J. 07033.

George Hunt, 312 Orchard St. Rah-way, N.J. 07065.

Al Grady, 423 Lafayette .Ave.,Kenllworth, N.J.

Jim Rowe, UPlnrst . , Cranford, N.J.

UQUEURSMAKE GREAT

MOTHER'S mGIFTS

LET US HEtP YOUSELECT THE RIGHTONE AIMDXMFT WRAP

IT FOR YOU

HUOi StlfCnONUHBEATABU SHMCE

Roger lAAcGeehan, 22 No. 14th St.,Kenllworth, N.J.

(Signed)Pres. Edward Romalne

Kenllworth Veterans Center, Inc.33 South 21st Street

^ Kenllworth, N.J. 07033Dated: Ma / 10, 17, 1973Fee: 124.94

Free Parking In Rear

•>•'. D I A L

FREE BR 6-1044 KUVBYVQUR WINE LINE

WINES AND LIQUORSFHEt PARKING IN REAR , •

Uat RMf Entrance30 EASTMAN ST. (Opp. Cranford

>\

TheBOSE9O1may well be the last speaker

you'll ever buy.

Visit us and listen to

the Boje, you'll be

astounded...If you're

interested wo will

QKplain flat power1,

oqualiiatlon, direct/

rofluctlrig and its

other unique doiiyn

concopts.

Vou cjn audition thuBoso In your ownhomo with fullroturn prlvlloyos ifyou don't bullovo itIs tho bu$t spojkoryou'uu uv/or hu j rd .V

i-i-l HUIIIII MlUUt.l /WISKIHD.Nl* SlKiU 0/0'JO.' PlIUNt J3J-04IIJLIMNH/ MALI / HI iUC / IIAMIAN. NfVTJlHitV UaDO'J / I'MONt b2lj 44J4Mu.l Ihun It Fn S 30 • SCO • tu«v 8. SJI tyO '• G U0 - Closed WoJ

\

VOLeo

" 1, K^iiijwprlh^ind Garwood

M a y 1 7 , l f l r a • v ' . • " ' • . - • :• ' ' ' " ' ' • •• . ' •','

ByRoJMrtOlma A recent visit to thefirehouie Impressed me with

In the lnevlb»htA Hir^, ffry not only the skillis both man's friend andenemy. It is an enemy largelyunreallied until it strikes, andthe men who have theresponsibility tf fighting thelimitless destruction anddeath, that fire can bring golargely unnoticed and'unappreciated. * ,v

The 31 officers and men ofthe Cranford Fire Department,are housed in a buildingseveral years older thanCleveland and Shermanschools, which were recentlyalmost closed because of theiradvanced.age.

The firehouse on NorthAvenue houses a variety ofladder trucks and pumpersand other emergency vehiclesthat can mean the differencebetween life and death, minordamage and vast destructionwhen fire strikes. Other thanwhen the piercing horn soundsat noon, and the inconvenience

3 Jan. 1894 - Five Cranfordfiremen are suspended forassault, highway robberyand arson.

6 March 1895 - Cigar startsfire in firehouse leaving two-foot square hole in the flrior.

12 Dec. 1899 - "Smoker" isheld for all firemen withseven years or more ofactive duty.

10 Sept. 1897 - Six firemenexpelled.

17 Sept. 1897 - Six firemenreinstated.

proficiency of Cranford'sfireme'n, but also theirsomewhat neglected status inthe area of- municipalpriorities. ^

There are few people ridingaround in 1948 cars, yetCranford's firemen hawe a

'1948 truck that is still seeinguse.-,' • • .

Because no provision wasmade when the building wasconstructed in 1909, thefiremen must fumble withequipment hanging on thegarage walls because there isnowhere else to put it Drivingequipment out of the hugedoors requires special skulbecause the building's angularconstruction leaves only a fewinches of clearance betweenfire vehicles. Sometimes firesrequire the use of vehiclesparked in the rear of thegarage areas. This means thatthe trucks in front of themmust be moved out first.

Captain Arthur Kiamiesnowed me the signal roomwhere alarms are received.He noted that when alarmboxes were first installed, thekeys were given to trustedcitizens, and only hey couldopen them to report a fire.The disadvantages' of this set-up became pretty obvious.Now, because anyone can turnin an alarm, the department isplagued with false alarms.For all their Inconveniencearid potential danger, the falsealarms obviously do not posethe threat that locked alarmboxes did.

Kiamie noted how thefunction, tactics and problemsthe firefighters face havechanged.

When Emmor Adams Jr.started taking donations tthe funding of a company

O N E OP s p e c t a c u l a r ^ ^ n f \ & 0 pcalled upon toexttogylsh was fheone that destroyed the Cranford Opera House on3 F e b . 1 9 1 2 . •- \ ; , ' . < : ' : " • . . : . ; • : • ' • ' • • * " . : X . ' • • ' ' : '. •• ' . • . - : • " • . ' • .-. .'.

PRACTICE makes perfectwith flrefighting oranything else. FiremanNorman Browne wields anaxe atop the aerial ladderin front of Cranford's~i909fjrehouse. Firemen RobertBendlln, at left, andRonald GueiHin man thecontrols below. ;.- ...

Second Qass Postage Paid Cranford, N. J. 87016 15 CENTS

Ronald Van Winckel

Club women to unveil• • • • • • • • • • • > 7 •

lip winnersVERY LITTLE has changed In the CranfordFirehouse since it was built in 1900. A 65-foot aerialladder truck, a 1,000-gallon pumper, three 750-gallonpumpers, a squad truck and,/the chief's car arecrammed into the area where these horse-drawnvehicles were housed In 1914, when this picture wastaken. ]•

Careers ranging fromteaching to medical researchhaye been followed by thewinners of the annualscholarships awarded by theCollege Women's Club ofCranford. since 1940. This

tending Cranford High Schoolduring the past school year.

Reservations for thebanquet may be sent to MissHelen Scott of 34 SpringfieldAve. Members and theirguests will meet at 6:30 for a

authored an article onisotopes.

Linda Pope received hermaster's degree fronvytheUniversity of Puerto Rico andis now teaching at a/juniorcollege in Puerto Rjco. She

motorists incur when trafficmust be halted to shift the firevehicles around, the average firefighters in 1872 therecitizen goes through life no automobiles Nowlargely ignorant of a firemen are frequentlyprofession absolutely vital to upon to help1 out in trafficthe safe conduct of modern mishaps, sometime/ ex-existence. : ! tinguishing blazes, or/simply

hosing down the road aftergasoline has been spilled on itafter fuel tanks rupture. Theyalso have devices calledportapowej-which are used topry, open crumpled vehiclesand extricate crash victims.-

Before the turn of thecentury, Cranford had a large

imber of barns and horseibles within its borders.,

Judging from the records ofthe Cranford Historical >

abit oi! catch-ing on fire, particularly duringthe dry sumjner months.Cranford's firemen no longerface that-headache, but thenew plastics, vinyls and other

year's winners will be honored social^period, which will be. plans to return to tile..United. at the club's banquet Monday followed at 7 p.m. by the States next month/ and con-

night at the Coachman Inn. dinner. tinue teaching in this country.synthetic materials present a / . . Among past winners of, Janice L. Hastnip, a formernew hazard: toxic gases^ f Since the first grant of $100 scholarships \s the former nwpiber of theJPeace Corps in• "Chi|rf.-'Bernard.-; Fiemijig wasawarded33 years ago?the Miss Judith Valla, who is now Guafemala, M now studyingnoted that adhesivesiike^iose dub has raised 164,750 For its Dr. Judith Ramirez, wife of for master^ and doctoralused to install tile and formica scholarship program, and Frank Ramirez and a teacher degrees inypsychology at theare highly inBanunaUe and more than 160 young women at Sacramento State College State University of New York

have been aided financially in

Pfeiffer speaks beforeparting; for/Dixie...' John Pfeiffer of °io&~Ridge-'WBWspapraB,Tet me say there you and'me and any. otherSt. is Georgia-bound after a1"6 many countries "in the business they can get the|p3 years as Republican world where politicians seized hands on. I honestly believemunicipal chairman. He was absolute power and muzzled^ the_bureaucratsand the witch-honored at a testimonial the press. Now I ask you to hunter^ are not going to stopdinner Saturday at Marisa's name only one country where until we all fight back!Restaurant. ' the press has seized absolute . . . .

power and muzzled theThe honor of the occasion politicians?"

did. not* leave Pfeiffer

there havebeen a number offires in the township caused byvapors from the adhesivesreaching pilot lights.

Aerosol cans present anadditional hazard that did not

back then. Theare often highly

and many timesin JJie cases where they arenot, the gas propellant used inthem is. ,/''

"The biggest part of our jobis not putting ,out fires,"Captain Leonard Dolan said,"it s getting people educatedabout fire hazards andthereby preventing fires from

their pursuit of' highereducation.

The College Club raisesmoney for the scholarships atspring and fall book .sales andthrough^ a biennial sub-scription drive for the Citizenand" Chronicle. The nextsubscription drive. isscheduled for this fall. f

Mrs. William S. Marsh ischairman of Monday night'sbanquet, which also will honor

in California. Her husband is ateacher and writer. Dr. Vallaearned a. Ph.D. degree fromStanford University.

Nancy Brooks is married toRichard A. Hunt and worksfull time for the Departmentof Labor. She has-postgraduate credits toward amaster's degree from thiUniversity of Pennsylvaniaand Temple University; Themother of a 2^-year-oldyon,Mrs. Hunt is now traveling inq

the highest ranking senior girland. 14 senior girls who- aredaughters of club members,Another guest of honor will beMiss Iisabeth Brogaard, an

ldeven getting started. Clothing American "Fieldand other flammable items student who has"are usually clearly markedwith warning labels, butpeople often don't read them.The danger of smoking in bedis obvious, yet plenty of peopledo it. Some of them don't liveto tell about it."

Prance.Alane Susan Petrfck is

married to George Khnes andhas a year-old daughter. Sheworked for. the University of

Service Missouri in the medicalbeen "at- research department and co-

at BiThe fbrmer Frances Tan-

nenbaum is married to GeorgeKuehn and the mother of an 8-yea/old daughter. She earnedan M.F.A. degree from

gers in 1971 and held anistantship there. An artist,

she has presented her work in'several exhibits.

Dorothy King has taughtremedial reading in Hillsborounder the Title I program. Inthe fall she will teach firstgrade in the Hillsboro district.

Mrs. . Valerie GeigerThomson is . residing inWaynesboro, Vir., with herhusband and two children. Sheis studying for a. master's sdegree.

County officials to meetFlood Action Committee

speechless, though he said hetold his vvife, Marilyn, "Iwon[t mention Watergate,since it makes me sick to thinkabout it too!" , '

Indirectly referring to theWatergate scandal and itsperipheral events, Pfeifferquipped that "As I left ourhouse this evening...my ,wifehanded me this note... 'If you-/you\ blame them?don't learn to keep your mouth really blame theclosed, you are going to beknown as the Martha Mitchellof Cranford.'" '

Mrs. Mitchell's husband,former U.S, Attorney GeneralJohn Mitchell, has been in-dicted on charges of ob-structing justice, conspiracyand perjury. Mrs. Mitchell,who has called for PresidentNixon's "retirement," has notbeen silent on the mutter.

-''Now if the liberal con-sumerist politicians ... don'tput you out of business andtake all our ' individualfreedoms, then you can besure the kids will. Not themajority of the kids, but asmall vocal minority ... Can

Can youaverage

Weatherman creep? All. hislife, he's been told business,Big Business is evil.

Kiamie noted that changesin building and constructioncodes have done a lot to helprestrict fires to relativelysmall areas. "We're findingout new things all the time.Everything from what

John Pfeiffor

• ' In ta Iking abofll what hewusn.'t going to talk about, heruled out Governor WilliamCuliill and the controversysurrounding his campaignfunding, tlie Cranford SchoolHoard and President Nixon'smulti-phased "economic

plan."

the

"Lance Bell (Pfoiffcr'sciiniloyor), on tho other handluul Ills own litst to avoid...don't uUu<;li TV,tube1' for its

inouns;

bin:)

, 'boohboriii}', Voitcii.

; and by all.don't knock tin;

p industry (or tlu-il'and , distorted jour-

further on llitiHelifer ;;aid,behalf of the

nctf/y media,"However, in

In commenting on sundryother topics Pfeiffer said:-"...why do some people setjkpolitical office? Forpossession of power, that'swhy!

-"At the same moment, I'mlooking at the weakest groupof people in the world ...American businessmen,elected officials and my fellowpoliticians ... you are all in theprocess of giving.it (power)away. You're giving it to asmall group of liberal con--sumorist^ who are slowly but

. inirely Zeroing • in olt everybusiness, industry und in-dividual freedom we possess

,ui the United States.

-••"Yt-.s, "I honestly believethe FT(\ the Food and DrugAdministration, the IKS, theSenate and government-bureaucrat:; are out to destroy

-"When is this all going toend? ... there was once acountry where -• men ofbusiness gave into the youngkids' who were going to changethe country to whut theythought it should be ... Thatonce was Germany in 1933.The*youiig group won. Theychanged the country, thegovernment won full control ofthe nation's economy .., Thereis very little difference be-tween thu punks who throwmud and paint to ruin andsmear a retail business, uGeneral Motors factory or apublic building and the Hi,tle.rYouth.

-"The only thing we can'tdo is sit on our hands andwatch industries und in-dividual freedoms .irouml usbeliig picked off one by one,.regululed one b y one,destroyed one by one.

. --"I'll let you in on one ad-ditional big secret ... look outLester Maddox ... (."rant mayhave (ciktMi Kielmumd, buthere comes PfeiflVr thepju'hydiinn from Craiilord toAtlaiUa. Ca."

The Flood "Action Com- M ^ ; . UP I 0 n C o u n t v

mittee of Cranford, tnc! will hydraulic engineer, will speakhold a public meeting on June l 0 ^ 8rouP- rhe a 8 ^ d a w i l]7 in Room 7 of the Municipal include elecUon of officers andBuilding at 8 p.m. at which f > a r d o f Trustees,

^ n Harold Seymour, Union / On Wednesday, May 23, thechernicals can best be used on County Freeholder, Al Linden/ Cranford Township Com-an • electrical fire to new director of the Union County mittee has scheduled a secondmethods of controlling burn- Planning Board, and Kennofii public meeting with Kennething liquids. There are new" ; -• " /rescue devices that didn't « •even exist a few years ago.Our men have to constantlylearn these things. Their

-training,- is a constant.education.

Kiamie is the training of-ficer for the Cranford force,and well-informed about thatarea of fire preparedness.

"It's strange, or.rather itsshameful thut New Jersey, themost urbanized and in-dustrialized state in' thecountry does not have u firecollege where firemen can(ruin on real building fires.That's the kind of training thefire college in Pennsylvaniaoffers, und it can meatiw thedifference between life and.death. After all, one of themost important skills itifirefitjhtmg is the ability toselect the riyht equipment andto use It. in the correctfashion."

"UnsilinJ heroes" is joint hercliche, .but: mayb^'its'an aptway to describe men who musttolerate everything from ihetedium of constantly marii-laininfj" equipment in poatccondition to putting their1 lifeon , the lino when 'uu infernoluges. Their title iuay.be acliche. Their service is not.

LAST YE', AW Iliobc- younystcis woto .nnoiuj theihroiujs ot shoppeiVtind browsers w-ho filled N. UnionAvenue <.»nd Alden StrOets dur ing the Cr\mtotdJoycee's Hen m.ifkei ,ind jnl iqut- >;how. ISiy ^nd li i l le

.putruni.ol th-jluivd i j i ^ i n y . event ufe expected v.'hotvihe street scene is repealed on S.iturcKiy troni 10 t<.m.to.S p.m. kesi ' iv j t io iu, lor dii.pl.<y j r c i s nui'y be nr.ideby cailiruj' DV. Kenneth Koneyen dl '2I.6-'1MS. The r.iind.ite Is the following Sjturd.iy, AA.ty Jo. •

Zippier of Cillam Associates,who will report of the progress

_of their study of the river andanswer questions from thepublic.

Last Thursday evening.May 10,* the nominating

. committee met at the home ofacting-president John Nagleand selected the followingslate of officers and trustees: •President, David. Shor;president-elect, Ralph TuccJ;secretary, Ruth Ann Buccini;treasurer;—Jim—Bobbins^trustees - Tom Davis, FrankFernicola, Dave >Kinnear,Robert Miller, iJuzanne Nagle,Wayne Schweitje and ClaireShainey.

To preclude the necessity oflifting larj^e appliances frombasements during floodsituations, the committeeplans to soil at the June 7meeting lar^e heavy gaugeplastic bags which will protectthese appliances from waterdamage.

The steering committee willmeet tonight at the home ofDavid Shor.

The Flood Action Com-mittee lias urgiul its nu-mbc-is

/'to attend two upcomingmeetings lvlaied to RahwayRiver, flooding. On Tuesday,May l!2, at » p.m. in ilu- Kah-w:iy City Hall, 1470 CampbdlSt., a-uu-vting will bo'li<-l<| to.discuss "'I.i-^iil Aspects otVVati'islud ManJigenifui," <it

. which Frank Kondiacki,executive • SA'C'rtriaiy <_>!' the.;^..iiii i , ,« . l - l ! ; , ]uu Moil ( . 'onservalion District, and l,i-vvisGoldshmv, di-puty auonn-yjjeiit'-i'al ol N<-\.v Jc i s t 'y , willsp<;ak.

A Union firm, Morrison,Zitnmer, Borton andO'Conrtor, was" appointedTuesday night by the Board ofEducation as professionalengineers for the conversionof the Cleveland Schoolneating system from coal tooU in compliance with adirective frqm the En-vironmental -ProtectionAgency. . . . . .

Board president GeorgeStrom said the board expectsto spend about $15,000 for theproject, including a $1,500 feefor the engineering firm.Plans call for installation of anoil burner, fire doors in theboiler room and an air exhaust,system, he said.

Strom noted that the boardcould appeal the EPA order,but feels such a move would betoo much of a gamble since theboard already has beengranted several extensions.Last year, he pointed out, theboard signed a consent orderagreeing to either convert theschool by October of 1973 orclose the building.

According to SchoolBusiness Administrator JohnDwyer, Deputy AttorneyGeneral Michael Grosswarned the school district hewould fight any attempt toseek a further delay incomplying with the order,,which was originally issued in1971.

If the board were to lose anappeal, there would not beenough time to complete theconversion in time for thestart of fall classes, Stromsaid.

"The state could then comein and shut down thebuilding," he said.

In commenting on the hiringof the consulting engineers,Strom said this is required byti)e state code. The engineersmust submit plans to the statedepartment for approval.. . •

Alan Bernard of 1 West EndPI. questioned the board aboutthe safety of Cleveland andSherman Schools, contendingthat the fire department wouldhave ordered the -buildingsclosed if there was. a severesafety hazard. • • j

"The children in Clevelandand Sherman Schools are safetoday," he asserted. \

Strom replied that the firedepartment, following a jrecent inspection of thebuildings, did not declare theschools safe, but merely^ saidthey are no more unsafe nowthan they were a year ago.

"The fire department in noway said these are secure,safe schools. They are notelectrical experts," Stromnoted.

Regarding the possibility ofanother referendum, theboard president said a bondissue wouldt have to be putbefore voters no later thanOctober if the board decides totake that step.

—Strom added that tho-bourd-will meet tonight with Dr.William West, • countysuperintendent of schools, whowill reveal the findings of arecent inspection of Shermanand Cleveland Schools byhimself and officials from theStale Department ofEducation.

In another action the boardapproved the 1973-7-1 schoolcalendar, which featuresseveral changes. For the firstUnit; there will be a week-longwinter recess in ' February.

The calendar also includessingle sessions on two.holidays, Veterans Day andMartin Luther King Day.Spring recess is scheduled forApril 22-26, two weeks, afterEaster;

The new calendar wasapproved 8-1, with RobertBaechtold voting against i t

The board also aouroved ajob descriptionior the positionof school plant engineer.

Strom said the new employe,will be responsible fordeveloping a planned main-tenance . program, whichhopefully will prevent thedevelopment of anotherCleveland-Sherman situation.'

The plant engineer is. toreport to the assistantsuperintendent of schools,rather than to the businessoffice., Reporting on the currentstrike of carpenters andtradesmen, William Massasaid the high school con-struction program is still onschedule, but there could be aproblem if the strike continuesfor, another two or three.weeks.... Strom announced thatOctober 28 is the tentativedate for dedication of thebuilding.

v v • <

pitchfor tar

. .The Cranford Citizen andChronicle received severalcalls last week regardingalleged con men offering todo paving repairs andresurfacing with leftovertar from another site atbargain prices,, and thendemanding excessivesums. . ,. • •

Cranford police reported-no cdmplaints of suchactivity, but area residentsare warned that con artistshaye long been known touse this ruse. The "tar" isoften worthless oil sludgethat washes off with thefirst heavy rain, and the'^bargain" prices oftenexceed the fees of alegitimate contractor.

Waiting listfor poolThe Cranford Recreation

Departmwit has announcedthere is a waiting list 'formembership to the CranfordIndoor Pool.

The pool will close onSunday, May 27, foe the 1OT2-73season. It-will reopen, for the -.1973-74 seaspn in October andclose the following May. AnyCranford residents who arenot presently members andare interested in a mem-be rsliip to the pool for the 1973- •74 season, should place theirnames on the waiting list assoon as possible.

There are still membershipsavailable in -the1 summerpools. Any Cranford residentsinterested in joining shouldcontact the RecreationDepartment.

Chronicle contents

Tlie Kenllworth Police Dep<jrtmenfhas been in existence since 1914. Seestory «.iiid picture.on Pts<j<_- 6.

Rt»ilfoad memories, even recent utios,ute Ihe lies thut.blnd. See Fucje -1.

ChurchClrtSSifiud .,Ed i to r ia lFood r ind fun-.......

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Gd I'WOod '.-KenllworthJioclnlSporh,

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