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...... »••. I -. ' - I . . . -,-• •.»•*•.-..<• ?-••: Page l4|CRAr«!t)RD I N.J. > CITIZEN AND CHRONIC! £ Thursday. Juno SO. 1977 CHRONICLE CLASSIFIED Call 276-6000 Open Weekdays: 9 5 Deadline: Tuesday 3 p.m. REAL ESTATE RENTALS HELP WANTED REAL ESTATE FOR SALE th Btit§ Pttpk Homtl' ' Sellers! WeTcan help you get top price for your house. - .; We have buyers! The Boyle Company has developed effective selling methods including our unique Boyle Mar*e»-Value Analysis. We tell you how we can ^effectively merchandise your house and realize the highest price possible. Then, through advertising. Corporate contracts, multiple listings and our exclusive membership In this area In "The"Gallery of ^H^J8«'lwe_cwnjHnd a buyer at the least amount of inconvenience to you. '" " "" •^-.••••- •-— : - For your next move, call for the' Boyle Market-Value Analysis of your house. lii'dl 1 stair .Since. 530 South Ave . E , C ran ford 772 9-14-J in Elizabeth, Morristown, E Hanover MAKE AN OFFER on this 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL with eat in kitchen and BEAMED CEILING in the -c Dining Room. A PERFECT STARTER HOME- Asking $43,900. READY FOR YOUR INSPECTION! New Art Exhibit ,. Paintings by DARLASTEPHENS MEMBERS OF CftftNFORD BOARD. WESTFIELDBO AND UNION COUNTY MULTIPLE LISTING SYSTI ELEGANT FRENCH NORMAN $110,000 Elegance plus liability abound in this gracious (our bedroom, ?;V> bath beautifully situated home with tower entrance hall, all largely proportioned rooms including a first floor family room and olfice. Fully air-conditioned. 2 car attached garage. Also included: burglar alarm, tire detector, all modern kitchen appliances including built-in refrigerator treejer, built-in vacuum system. A ONE OF A KIND BEAUTY. RANDOLPH WIEGMAN CO. 153 Mountain »»•„ WestlMd Realtors 232-6609 PAUSE And Think of the Lasting Enjoyment you Can Give Your Family With This Home! AND AT A REASONABLE PRICE... \ Nicely situated on a Tree shaded Residential Street...6 room Colonial with an extra Den and Surf room on the first floorr r Mod*(n kitchen and Bath, Wood-Burning Fireplace, finished Basement Room, 2 car Garage. We Shall Enjoy Showing You Through This Sparkling Home at your pleasure. G. G. NUNN, Realtors 276-9110 181 North Ave. E.jCranford SHAHIEM AGENCY "KKALTOtt li^NOKTII AVK.. K. VRANKOKO SV'YEARS OF SERVICE S276-1900 NEWLY LISTED Delightful Cape situated in Sunny Acres area. 1st floor have, living loom, 2 bedrooms, new science kitchen and bath, 2nd floor has ^tractive bedroom and storage, possible 4th bedroom. Attached garage. Home Is. in A t condition. Must to see to- appreciate. W8.900. McPHERSON REAITY CO. ' 1VALOEN STREET fRANFORO 276-0400 Of EN OMIT 9 5: SUNDAY 1 J TMURSDOYS 7 9 COOP APARTMENT - for sale. CiestwooU Village, Whiting. N.i; front apartment. 4 rooms. Heated, panelled porch »nd small patio. I74,!)OO. (Ml) 350-9481 S38.900 - 3 bedrooms, Colonial just listed. Modern kitchen and. bath, formal dining room, enclosed porch, sitting room, w/w o*rpet, 1 car garage.All in excellent condition: SILVER KEY REALTORS. 233 8500. OWNERS ARE RETIRING and wont us to sell this CLEAN & COZY BUNGALOW featuring living room with fireplace, dining room, eat- In kitchen,? bedroom and bath ALL ONI FLOOR large expansion attic, all hot water. heat> 2 car garage, lovely property 66 X '46. in a convenient location. Why not call for an appointment this weekend? VICTOR DENNIS WALH>H KENILWORTH TWO FAMILY. 12 room, house, Gobd condition, 6 garages, taxes SI.100, repainted. Principles Only. S60.000's: 245-2816. , , RENTALS APARTMENTS CRANFORD - 5 targe rooms facing park, near Garden State Parkway. 276-2114. . * 5 ROOM MODERN APT in 2 family home. Business£ouple. Convenient location'.! $350 per month including heat, hot water- Available Aug. 1. 276-79U. RU)LDING BUILDING FOR RENT -'2200 sq. feet, new building, ground floor. Will •. renovate to suit tenant. Located in Kenilworth. Ideal location. Sufficient parking. Reasonable Rent. Contact Sisto Realty Co.' tt 276-4444. - • : MOBILE HOMES LOVELY ADULT PARK - We will pay '. firsryears'fent for you. Good place to live. .(201) 364.2235 evt». VACATION RENTALS ~~ ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS,- 3 or 4 bedroom .Chalets. ^Swimming, Jennis, boating and trout fishing. > Weekly, reasonable rates. Call 464- 2222 or. 4641515. . , HELP WANTED . f / " / '•-.—Hi-, 1 . -• ^ •• •• ••• COZY and NEAT '•••"'*" •This lovely 2 bedroom bungalow'features a large living room and tormal dining room, entrance porch and partially finished basement. . The back yard and nice trees offer shade from summer's heat. A peeled buy lor the new bride or young elderly. . : mn HIM* « « A OPEN:'9-9Daily . •''. .' ' -A;.. 9-5Sat. ' 12- 5 Sun. - . . . Gentiiry 21 D.S. Kuzsma Realty 115 Miln'Street"" REALTOR 272-8337 ' All ojflces independently6wried'tiiid'6fieraied! O.iv,d tu.-jrl.'y i/f M Old \ ' J RENTAtS'WANTEd " SOUTH CRANFORD ORCLARK AREA ' Quiet young (nan.,desires 3 or 4 rooms in 2 • family house (preferred). .Eat-in' kitchen, reasonable' rate. Cad 399-9439, 7:30 p.m.-9 JO p.m. week nights or . Sat. and;Sun. a.m.. APPRAISAL^ - WIIifflC.KIumas,S.RA SENIOR RESIDENTIflL APPRAISER Society of Real Estate Appraisers KLUMASSGAIS ' 663 RariUn Rd. Cnmford, N J. 272*100 BUSINESS OPPS. -OWN A HIGHLY PROFITABLE AND BEAUTIFUL JEAN SHOP OF YOUR OWN. Featuring the latest in JEANS, SPORTSWEAR, and HIGH FASHIONS. $14,500.00 Includes Beginning Merchandise, Store Fixtures, Training, Grand Opening Promotion. We are a D & B Rated Corporation We have over 100 Stores. Call Mr. Hltliird (501)945- 9661. HEIR WAITED": HOMEWORKERS: S85 00 weekly addressing, stuffing envelopes Start Immediately. Details, rush 25 cents and self addressed stamped envelope: Bestco, 3209 N.W. 75th Terrace, Hollywood; Fla, 33024 Dept. YW6. ~ PRODUCT IOJ^ CONTROL P6TStJMjajited with 1-2 years experience in productiqrrplannlng and control. Full time days". IdeaHiosition'for night school student Job duties varied and will include inventory control, scheduling, loading, • planning, shipping and/exeivingjiend reply in confidence, indicating present or last saia^ to, P.O. Box 227, c-o Cranford Citizen and Chronicle, 21 Aldw St., Cranford.NJ. 07016 CRANFORD. NEW JERSEY O7O16 2W-4020 •-._.-• WOMEN WORK OVERSEAS!! Australia Europe Japan The South Pacific Farjast South America Centra! America OVER 100 COUNTRO^ ALL OCCUPATIONS - s k i l l e d - unskilled U.S. Government Private Corporations and Organi- zations'; .- ; '-.•'-• •'./:. '•'• . ''-: ; -'v. :''-. Construction Engineering Sales Transpor- tation Teaching — Oil Refining—- Medical Accounting —Manufacturing Secretarial r-Air- craft, etc., etc., $800.00 to $5,000,00 per month. In most jobs overseas you win receive FREE TRANSPORTATION, HIGHER SALARIES and WAGES, TRAVEL PAY, GENEROUS VACATION and BONUS, FREE MEDICAL CARE, FREE MEALSand HOUSING, more AtWANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES, NOUS. INCOME TAX under the Government For- eign Resident Rule (civil service excluded). To allow anyone the opportunity to explore overseas employment we have publisheda complete set of OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT GUIDES, Our OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT GUIDES contain the following infor- mation.;: '• : ./; • •'.-, ,:'. .-,• ../ .'••.•" '. • •'-. •List ot CURRENT OVERSEAS JOB OPPORTUNITIES with a special section on overseas construction pro- jects, executive positions and teaching opportunities. •How, Where and Whom to apply for the job of your choice OVERSEAS! -•••,- , - - •FIRMS and ORGANIZATIONS employing all types of Personnel in nearly every part of the Free World. •Firms andorganizations engaged In OVERSEAS' CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS, MANUFACTURING, MINING. OIL REFINING, ENGINEERING, SALES, .SERVICES; TEACHING, SECRETARIAL, AIR- CRAFIvETC! •COMPANIES and GOVERNMENT AGENCIES em- ploying personnel in nearly every occupation/from the unskilled laborer to the college trained professional! •How and Where to apply for OVERSEAS GOVERN- MENT JOBS! •Employment on U.S. Government ships "MER- CHANT MARINES"! •Directory ot U.S. Businesses operating in AUSTRALIA that employ Americans. •List of U.S. DEFENSE CONTRACTORS with oper- ations OVERSEAS THAT EMPLOY Americans! •Information about TEMPORARY and SUMMER JOBS OVERSEAS! •Plus several EMPLOYMENT APPLICATION FORMS that you may send directly to the COMPANIES or ORGANIZATIONS that interest you the most! MAIL OUR ORDER FORM TODAY!! The Job You Want May tie Waiting For You Right Now!! ORDER FORM " MAIL TO: Overseas Employment Guides 1727 SCOTT ROAD, SUITE C y BURBANK.CA. 91504 I am enclosing $10.00 cash, check or money order. Please send me your complete set of OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT GUIDES immediately. NAME ADDRESS (or base skills in language arts, reading, math for September 1, 1977. $8 00 per hour Send resume . to Mr Bruce £, Buckley, P 0 Box 98. Gamood, N J 07027 CHAMBER MAIDS M/F • Full or Part Time Apply in person 1 p m til 3 pm Holiday Inn, 31st Street, •Kenilworth, M. J ~ T INSURANCECLERMSSISTANT Assist in miscellaneous insurance related tasks Typing required Excellent benefits - C«B 276-300^6. FRIENDLY TOY PARTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR MANAGERS AND DEMONSTRATORS DEMONSTRATE GUARANTEED TOYS & GIFTS 'NO CASH INVESTMENT - NO COLLECTING OR DELIVERING NO SERVICE CHARGE;; CAR & TELEPHONE NECESSARY, CALL COLLECT TO CAROL DAY '518-489- 8395 OR WRITE, FRIENDLY TOY PARTIES. 20 RAILROAD AVE. ALBANY, N Y. 12205 NUMERIC CONTROL DRILL OPERATORS needed SHIFT WORK. . Experience preferred but will train qualified applicant Call tor appointment 233-4255 ASSISTANT Cujtodjan, part time, excellent working conditions, good pay, care of church, references, Short Hills .area, car necessary, ideal for retired person, call 379- 2531 after 6 p m , TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs~person M/F over 40 for exclusive industrial sales territory No relocation We are an expanding AAA-L firm established since 1933 We offer lull (nnge benefits Liberal commissions yyith opportunity- for -advancement For personal interview, write a letter and tell me "about yourself W.S Fail, Sales Manager, Southwestern Petroleum Box 789, Ft. Worth,.Texas 76101 E.O.E. CITY . _ . . : _ „ STATE , ZIP 30 DAY MMifc* BACK GUARANTEE It you are dissatisfied with bur Overssas £mploym«nt Guides, lor any reason, simply return our Guides to- u j within 30 days and your $10.00 will be rslunded to you immediately, NO QUESTIONS ASKED. CLERK TYPIST Excellent opportunity for M.S. gradasa clerk typjst in a sales dept Duties ' wilt"Include typing, filing, sales dept. correspondence & related duties as assigned." CALL OR APPLY 789-1121 ext. 222 ACCURATE BUSHING CO. 443 NorthAve. Garwood, N.J. An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F POSITION SECRETARY. RECEPTIONIST Agressive, tough minded indlv. to handle busy front desk, answer, phones, visitors, filing and typing Knowledge of tellex, shorthand and typing 50 Wp/yy essential. Salary 0Mn».«lJ »>ehe}its p§Jd. Call T. FH-ijerald a t ' y VALUES VI.P HONDAHAS OVER 160 USED BIKES. CUSTOM BIKES & CHOPPERS THAT MUST BE SOLO. REGARDLESS OF PRICEII. FOR EXAMPLE:, 7 6 Maico WR400 S1050 1 cyl 5 spd miles N A 75 Honda CB550 $1175 4 cyl. 5spd. 6,435 miles 7 5 Honda CL360 $669' 2cyl. 6spd 4,572 miles 74 Honda CT9Q . $379 lcyl. 6spd. Hi-Lo 3.737 miles 74 Honda XL250 $559 1 cyl. Sspd. 4,976 miles 7 3 Kawasaki 25OS1 $549 3cyl. Sspd. 4,052 miles 7 3 Yamaha TX500 $749 2cyl. 5spd, 6.527 miles. 73 Honda CB450 '$678 2cyl^5spd. 5,278 miles 7 2 Honda CB350 $459 ' 2cyl Sspd 6,764 miles '66 Honda 305 Chopper $395 2cyl. '4spd. miles N A OVER 900 NEW BIKES&MOPEDS IN STOCK 100% FINANCING If Qualified V--.,.. ,/-,.. : . - ' , . ' ' " / FOR SALE AUTOMOBILES SERVICES SERVICES • PODGE DART • 1970. air, PS. 6 HOrWF IMPROVEMENTS THE TARniSHED SWAN Antiques &Collectibles 521 Elizabeth Aye E . Linden Mem &Wed eves 6-8 p m Tues SSat 2-6<> m a or by aooointment, 527-1709 FLEA MARKETS FLEA MARKET- Every Wednesday, Friday Saturday and Sunday Dealers call 574-8599 or 541-9328 after 6 p m also ANTIQUE SHOPS 1490 RAHWAY AWE. AVENEL (across from Rahnay Prison)" "GARAGE SALES . ~ . Complimentary 1 * dARAGE SALE SIGHS 'are available at the Boyle Com party PAINTING ' DECORATING 95.200 miles, floor standard shift S4/5 Altai. 5 276-0722 " CHEVY CUSTOM"iMPALA, 1974.AA. radio, 23,000 mileS, excellent condition, PB, PS, vgarage 'kept, \ owner. S2,8Q0 353;^395. / MUSTANG II • 1975, Automatic, power steering, power brakes, air conditioning * cylinder, excellent condition. Altar 5 233-3582" and 232-7748, Home litiproyeitiBnti No Job Too Small FREE ESTIMATES^ 1974 FORD~MUSTANG GHIA, -V-6, AM/fM stereo, 8 track, A/C, B*Sr, P/B, 30,000 mites, mint condition. Call Fran 381-5300, 9-5 or 486- SMrilJS MOVING -, GARAGE SALE Thursday and Friday, June 30 • July 1 at 408 vi HIGH ST., CRANFORD from 10 a m -5pm Whirlpool washer S35, Hamilton Gas 'Dryer ,$35, dresser S10, vanity tabje S5, golf clubs $65, old IBM typewriter $15, portable Singer sewing machine $10, rugs and pads, household items, bric-a- brac and clothes MISCELLANEOUS - - PLASTIC3LieC0¥ERS Custom made, pin fitted, expertly cut in your home Any sofa & 2 chairs or 3 pc section $120 H««»IIM»CT»H 865-6300 GRACELAND (Kenilworth) 4 double graves (8 burials) S/'ib Private Party Sacnlice Non-sectan(n Will divide 352-3967 (355 9222 evenings or weekends) 1972 FORD, custom wagon, excellent c6ndition, low mileage, PS, auto, front disc brakes, AC Best offer 7 6 3 - 2 0 2 6 v yo SERVICES CARPENTRY MAnSON GENERAL CONTRACTING Home improvements. Exterio; and Interior. 232-2759. DRIVEWAYS "' "• tlRKH REMODELING 272-6334 LANDSCAPE GARDENING Goingon vacation? TtyCHtit will cut k grass, tepd garden, etc. during July and August 754-OffQ. MASONRY "MASON WORK WATERPROOF ING and REPAIRS Steps, walks'pat|os, draips ; Call 276-35?0 MISCELLANEOUS CLEANED RUBBISHft^MOVAL call# Johrv Borden •> ! THOMAS ROTATIS txpfertenced i'Oyears painting and decorating Interior and exterior using Dutch Boy paints Free Estimates Fully Insured CALti*NYTIME / 399-2873 ^ J 1 ^ Interior and exterior. U,i ROORNG AND SIDING , CHIMNEYS t Leads roofs leaders and gutters n 2 wori< sump punVps 0 Aulera 276 4410 WATERPROOFING , Nome basements - GeneralMalrilgnancaCo. JiS years-experience, 5 year warranty »9->219 381-7885 Are you wondering where to find It? Check -the Area Service Guide In this issue OUGHERTY m l N C - D r i v e w a y s , block or ties Free estimates 561 6452 after 5pm ORAPERilT Exper.ty.pist w/secretarial skills,l.ght steno, 35-hr, wk., 9-5. New otfjpe bldg in Cfanford.' . ; 276-3399 FOR SAU - MOTORCYCLES 1975 KAWASAKI 400, 5,000 miles, excellent condition. $900. Call 276-" 8323. - ' .' ...-;•• Custom made and installed Your material or mine. Also draperies rehung, repaired, remodeled Compare our low prices Call lor • N e atttmati. 232-4551. WITH THIS COUPON 15*0FF any of your jieeds for summer projects. NORDSTRQM'S KNIT-PIC 3 North Ave., E. 276-7181 ~- ENTERTAINMITiT' MAGIC WITH THE FEMININE TOUCH Children's and 'adult shows Reasonable rates 388-5276 or 382 4837 FENCING WANTED TO BUY STAMPS US PLATE BLOCKS, Singles Ac cumulations, Collections Canada Top prices paid S27 8011 CARS WANTED HIGHEST PRICES PAID lor |unk cars Loral distance Jowmg Call 232^50 - rtE BUY used cars, cars needing repair and junk cars. 382-8434 ask for Eddy. LOST ~ LOST - Young grey and white male cat Vicinity Springfield Ave and Nomahegan Park, Cranford Has red collar and ID tag Small child's pet REWARD, 272-3493. CHAINLINK FENCE. 9 guage vinyl wire - 4 , 5 , 6 -75 cents sq ft installed C«tlafter6pm 381- 1044 HOME IMPROVEMENTS"^ ALUMINUM SHOWROOM ' Porch and patio Enclosures Jalousies Awning Windows Nuprine Replacement Windows Storm ancL. Screen Combinations Combination Doors • 25 Styles LIFETIME ALUMINUM PRODUCTS INC. LONG WEEKEND AHEAD1 Stock Up Now For All Your Holiday Neodil r Open July *, 9 AM - 2 PM (Sony. No Star-Spangled Weekend Features! £•••#••••••••*••*•••* Tonfc or Bitter Lemon 6-packse Reg. $1.75 Low Price Ca»e of U. *5.»3 Flavors n oi cans 6 «or ' f Serving Cranf6rd, Kenilworth and Garwood 7,1977' Second Class Postage Paid Cranford, N. J.-15 CENTS -Horn OF me WINE gMtmniooir* 10 Eastman Street n p * i Cranford MM 276-1044 /'YOUR WINE LINE" Family-operated since 1*40 The Crlariford senior citizens'housirlg project is one of.213 in NetyrAersey for which- -the -N;*.-HrT9iising Finance Agency is .^waiting subsidy approval from the U.S.. Department .of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). According to a spokesman 4pr4he state agency, the list of projects was submitted to the federal agency two weeks ago. The waiting time for approval or disapproval is usually from three to four weeks. The spokesman../said the state has a" current HUD allocation to cover 16 seniors' housing developments, but that it is in a position to proceed with 2J5 and has asked for approval,of that number. The state.financing agency is optimistic about the for 16 projects includes 12 in the northern section of the state and five in Ihe southern and provides for 3,100 dwelling units. In seeking approval of 26, projects—21 in North Jersey and five in South Jersey—it is, the state agen- cy's contention that it is ready to. go ahead with all projects whereas others in its federal region, which includes New York, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, are not. HUD funds are allocated by federal regions, : • ••* The July bond issue will finance projects under Section 8 of-the federal statute authorizing U.S. subsidies for senior citizen housing. The statfe issued bonds totaling $72 million under this section in January." A May bond issue was Under ah earlier section. 236, by which the state still had some carryover financial credits' from HUD. Program Revised Under Section 8, HUD pays the difference between 25 per cent of. a tenant's income which must be paid in rent and what the monthly rental would be on an actual cost basis. Under the old .program, the federal government'paid the difference between 1 per cent of the mortgage loan on Ihe project and the actual going interest rate in themortgage market. ' - The Cranford development .is scheduled to rise on a 4 3- acre tract of tovvhship-owned land in Meeker Ave. Title will revert to the towrtship, when all financing obligations are paid off. Sister, Cop Save Drowriing Garwood Boy, 3, From Pool GARWOOD- A three-year- Cranfdrd project, believing old boy pulled fjroni. the bottom that if only 16 projects get of a backyard swimming pool •••-•- - •• by his 13-year-old- sister BROTHERLY .CONQUEST—Three members of the Hogan family, who won canoe marathon race at Cranford's Fourth of, July observance are congratulated by Township Recreation Committeeman Raymond Molnar (second from right) outside Canoe Club. From left are Bob, wearing cap, Chip and Bruce- Lower photo shows couples' race as viewed from bridge on Springfield Ave. 102 South Ave. W. 274-32051 y\<\ - \. LOCAI DI : SAVE 29.11 HUD approval, Cranford's will be one of them. . Largest Bond Issue If HUD okays the 26, which involve approximately 5,000 dwelling units, the Housing Finance Agency plans a July bond issue of ^150 million to finance construction of the projects-^-the largest issue in its history. The Cranford project calls for-^131 one and two-bedroom apartments. The current HUD allocation Tuesday evening was revived by m o Ut h"^ to- mouth resuscitation administered by Patrolman Robert J; Ryan. The youth, Mark Patterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Patterson of 500 Center St., was released yesterday from Rahway Hospital where ,. he had been held for observation.. The child's father ac- companied him in the First Aid Squad ambulance. One of the family children." observed Mark lying at the bottom of the pool from an upstairs window of the house at 7:53 p.m. His 13-year-old sister, Kathleen, dragged Mark from the'pool. ' When Ryan arrived, the boy was face down on the grass at the corner of Center SL aTrid Locust Ave. Ryan turned him over and discovered the boy. was not breathing; The patrolman administered resuscitation, and was joiried by Patrolman Louis KleejRan who administered, cardio- pulminary respiration. Towiiwide Fund Launched For Semi-Conscious Girl July4th Active Without Scott Vatti hy: race ^was N(K>TV by Judy and Mike Pender, with Elise and Arthur Yanowitz second. All received trophies from- Recreation Com- missioner. Raymond Molnar. The Fourth of July car rally with contestants asked such questions such as "what is the quote on Roosevelt school?" ,artd "I Believe in Hard Work Continued on Page * Reg. 179.10 NUTONE RADIO INTERCOM KIT Finish Ht includes ^^^ M-203tp Master Station. . S R 1PHH!| three IS-25 Inside; S?EAiam : E jl! Speakers and one IS-60 is-6o BUILT-IN Door Speaker. DOORSPEAkER . ^ . 10% OFF OPTIONAL ACCESSORIES IS-77 SURFACE MOUNT SPEAKER B" INSIDE METAL SPEAKER MODEL 2603 FOLD-AWAY RECORD CHANGER CH ANNEX'S UNIQOTP ^SMTpitiaBS[TEir r IS ALSO FEATURING: Prowler at Hotel Gets Bar Receipts basement door, police believe. The ~ baproom- theft-was, invesUgai&Ly>y Lt, Myron Cymbaiuk, Detective J p Washbourne and Patrolmen William Corinell and John Stanier. PORTABLE TRI CLASS FIRE EXTINGUISHERS These multi-purpose fire extinguishers contain a dry chemical powder and are effective on all three classes of fires: , The theft _of _$780_in cash from the basement bar area of -the Granford HoteLat I South >UnipqAye. Was reported, at 5 a.m. last Thursday by the owneri Robert DiTulio. v ': Police said a porter who had arrived to clean the establish- . ment discovered that a door leading from the first-floor bar to the basement bar had; r *Z0 Riverside . been jimmied. The porter reported entered summoned DiTulio, who found ground floor all the bills had been removed from two cash boxes in the lower bar area. Change had been placed in rolls but was not taken. No liquor was missing. . - Crane Home Ransacked On Friday the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Cranp of Dr., was through a window. The rooms were ransacked, anda color television stolen. A determination is being'made as to whether other articles were removed. . The 18th from the Coachman Inn Realistic model CB radio frqm parking lot late last Thursday. _ihe car^Lhis.wife.lwhich was It wa§..recovered.'..in Newark parked in the garage at that wheels removedr^^-addreas. r .. ; : ^ . , . , Yard Thefts Bicycles Takeiv On Monday Richard Sundel Several bicycle (hefts were of Carolina St, reported that re p O rted last week. On during the night a - u: *~ - r hammock white Century Crane home is an , J .u *ui * historical landmark of the Police theorized the thief township, may have secreted himself in the upstairs bar area or Police reported that a 1975 lavatory before 2 a.m. Cougar owned by Charles closing, and later forced open Schrieber.of 1625 Lenape Rd., the door leading downstairs. Linden, cemetery owner in The thief left through a rear that, community, was stolen canvas hammock was removed from his rear yard. Lawrence Grant of 11 Pitts- field St. told police on Saturday that a green tent had been stolen the night before from his yard. The thefts of two citizens* • band radios were reported last week. Thomas Hanlon of 30 University Ave., Chatham, stated that a Regency CB radio was taken from his car Thursday while in the parking lot of Technical Wire Products in Derrnody St. The" previous Irslinger, 105 Qrange reported the theft of Saturday Frank Smith of, 39 Iroquols Rd. * told police a white Schwinn was taken from his*backyard. , Last Thursday Joseph Lee of 2 McClellan St. reported the theft of a white boy s Iverson Supersonic bike at Centennial Ave. pool. The same day Billy Young of 24 Doering Way reported the theft of a blue boy's Kaleigfrbike. The previous day Bob Cauble of 90 Kenilworth Blvd. told police his white boy's 10- speed Cornado bike was stolen In providing a perfect Beth Hogan arid Bob, Kelly., holiday -weekend, the Weather The couples' canoe race went Man helped compensate for to Patty Hogan and Larry Cranford slacKi^f a fireworks Urban, and second to Jane displaytoritftejirst tirhe p.itwje, Hogan and ; : Scpit <r - x """ ii - Wbrld War fF*^*-* .>r'<•'•- Thp'TWa-Pa l-aif ^ While "a nurHber-j of local families took advantage of the long weekend by taking off for shore and lake resorts, crowds at the community pools on the three warm, sunny days belied any sizable exodus.; According to the number of complaints about the shooting off of fireworks, from cap pistols to skyrockets,- a number- of young residents made up on their own for lack . of a town display. Police were busy virtually around the clock over the weekend in- vestigating complaints about firecrackers. ,. ; » Before a 1 large crowd' of cheering spectators, the sixth annual Rahway River canoe marathon:was_ won by; three brothers. Chip, Bruce and Bob Hogan in the record ..timeotM. minutes, 58 ftconds. The pas.t record of 17,32 was set in 1974 by the. Farrington family. Second place went to Larry Urban, Scott Van Why and Casey Burd. Winners in the youth canoe ' race were Jim Molnar and Greg Wicklem, with second place to Chris and Jack Erbeck and third to Mary Priscilla Gracey was 13 years old Tuesday. But for the first time in her young life; there could be no celebration. Priscilla is in a semi-coma at St. Barnabas Medical Center, Livingston, where she had a sizeable brain tumor removed June 4.. Instead of birthday greetings on Tuesday, prayers were extended for Priscilla as her condition failed to im- prove at the' Essex year-old son, Tommy, has gone all through Cranford schools with Priscilla, and by Mrs: Judy Krugh of South Union Ave. whose son, Jef-, frey, also 13, has been in the same schools. • . What the fund sponsors describe as "overwhelming" medical costs far exceeding insurance coverage have been mounting as Pnscilla, who has two- sisters and two brothers in Cranford public sx; County .schools, lies in her darkness at s^\ operations on Priscilla. ,', Priscilla fainted in the car • .driven by her mother, andlost her sight in the emergency room of the hospital soon thereafter; .Tests and X-rays revealed a Jemon-sized tumor on the girl's brain which was removed two days after her . admission. Priscilla has never fully regained' consciousness, since.- ••:•-.< .." Priscilla completed the seventh grade at the Middle extended to her parents, Mr. 2 while enroute to the office of trlbuting to the trust fund \n and Mrs. Stephen Gracey of an orthodontist in Northfield 711 High St. by the parents of Ave., Livingston, only two Priscilla's classmates at blocks from St. Barnabas, to Hillside Avenue Middle have her teeth capped in a School. ' " •' ' series of treatments that had ~rjegUn~for~~a~palate~im- A township-wide Priscilla pairment. The orthodontist Gracey Trust Fund has been had been recommended by a established by Mrs. Al Goertz Livingston plastic surgeoa of Retford Ave., whose 13- who had performed a series of the girl's name is available from Mrs. Goertz at 276-7316, and from Mrs. Krugh, 276- 6318. The fund is to be established at United Counties -Trust-Co- Priscilla's father is a former member of the Cranford Board of Education. He did not seek reelection this year. Resi^rfacing Set for 21 Local Roads The Cranford Public Works Dept. has scheduled sections of 21 streets for resurfacing this summer and early next fall. ' A list of the streets and the estimated, lineal feet of "coverage o~ri each Is contained- In . specifications .„ intt.de. available today for' con- tractors who will bicLon the job. Township Engineer Gregory Sgroi said the streets were selected on the.-basis-.of their condition; .• . • " Only deteriorated sections of the streets selected will be covered. " • The streets and estimated lineal feet to be resurfaced on each follow: Windsor PI., 640; Belmont Ave., 219; Roselle Ave., 869; Lambert St., 531; Bloomingdale Ave.,,1,406; Cherry wood Ave., 540; Oak upon the bids. He said less may be done if the unit cost of the bidding does not permit the resurfacing that -is outlined. Bids for the $60,000 project are called for in a legal ad- are asked on 3,000 tons of bituminous concrete. - This material is for the so-called "asphalt ov.erlay_'V.system of resurfacing with material from l'-i to 1'L> inches thick. The Township Committee Lane,;-239;-Orchard St', 315;- vertisement whicluappears bnL_ chose^ the overlay resurfacing r , ; Sunuiiit Rd,, 280;. Tulip, St., 427. ' _' _.,_ Also Eastman St., '541; Gallows flill ltd"., 820; Roosevelt Ave., 753; Lincoln Ave., 447; Chestnut St., 474; Collins-St., 593; MendellAve., 1,937; Omaha. Dr., 937; Carolina St., 189; Virginia St., .195, and Faiffield AVe., 657. Sgroi said carrying out the program as proposed depends p page..4^ of today's_ iTii .-Citizen... 1 >and Chronicle. .Jiids method y over the c6»ru.iuJd less ex- Stardust & Brass Contests July 17 Ex-Resident Tells of Work In Swaziland Mission SAVE 15.88 Reg. 54.88 MANUALLAUNDRY TRAYPUMP Continuous-duty 1/3 hp, motor with overload protection. § ft. 3 wire cord with grounded plug. Manual welded base. AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY ._^ TRAY PUMP..R«g. 9988 .969 FRANTZWOOD GARAGE DOORS Complete with hardware. One'section complete with glass. All holes pre- bored. Kiln dried old growth lumber. SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 30 to JULY 10 C H A N Nl JEEM- OPENSUNDAY MDEVKMTEVSMIMO FOB TOUB CONVENIIMCC Ujtt&L^ M :^ SPRINGFIELD Royto 22 *t South Spongucla A t South Avenue PARAMUS Route 17', between Linwood & FUdqewood Aves. (Glosed TOTOWA/WAYNE RARITAN . lnc . 1977 W. Sundayi) ih« light lu limit q Route 46 'A mile East of Wlllowbrook Route* 202/206, SomervtUe Circle 26-220N Meat Market Is Closed On Order of Sanitarian Durrell's.Meat Market at 11 Walnut Ave.. which operated for a half-century as the Cranford Meat Market, has been closed by order of Cranford Sanitarian Thomas ' Karvelas. Karvelas ordered Frederick Carrell, who ran the butcher shop for two months under the name Durrell's, tq surrender the local retail license of the establishment June 20. The sanitarian charged that Durrell's was in violation of. the local sanitary code in not having a triple-partition sink, for the cleaning of butcher utensils. Karvales said Carrell declined to have the sink in- stalled because of the expense involved. The cost is estimated at several hundred dollars. Carrell had rented the .:_ butcher' shop, -which dates back to 1914, on a month-to- month basis from Otto Sch- maltz, the previous operator who has a two-year sub-lease from Frank Vrodaska Jr. Violations Cited VrodasKa, whose family established the CranforcT Meat Market, operates a meat distributorship in the rear of the premises. He has his own separate facilities approved by the sanitarian. Vrodaska, who holds a local retail license, is registered with the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture as a distributor and operates "Frank's Provisions." He sells to restaurants meats that have already been processed. Karvelas had charged that the sink Carrell used to clean utensils was located in the bathroom of the market, which the sanitarian said was a violation. Karvelas also condemned the commode, which has been repaired. Accprding to Karvelas, Sch- maltz had used the approved utensil-cleaning sink of Vrodaska in the rear of the premises before that facility was shut off from the front shop when Carrell took over. Schmaltz has another butcher shop in Woodbridge. Second Closing After operating con- tinuously for 50 years,* first under Frank Vrodaska Sr. and later under his - son, the Cranford Meat Market closed briefly before Schmaltz took it over in early in 1976. on Claremont PI. reported lar- ceny of a brown boy's Sher- man bike from 218 North Ave. E, '. .'Three bikes were reported stolen June 28. Joseph Thomas of 179 Garden St. reported the theft of a locked gray boy's 10- speed Columbia bicycle from a rack at Cranford High School. The same afternoon John Hak, 4 LaSalle Ave, told police his silver boy's 10-speed Schwinn was stolen from the rack at Orange Ave. pool. -.' That evening Charles Keller of 28 Lenhome Dr. reported his yellow boy's Ross bicycle Was removed from in front of his home, Chronicle Contents SURVEY.OF SENIORS will cover services. Page 3. HONOR ROLL of term at Cranford High. Page 3. Al Your Leisure 7 Classified ••••10 Editorial 4 Garwood , . . .9, Kenilworth 9 Obituaries 4,8 Police Blotter Squibs, 4 Religious News 8 Social .... 5 Sports" t 6 . A little more thanjwo years ago,—Jay—Sulzmann-of Cran-. ford left his job of teaching mathematics at Arthur L. Johnson Regional High School in Clark and joined a missionary group in Swaziland, Africa. He returned on May 1 and on June ',26 described his experiences at Osceola Presbyterian Church. "The simplest answer," Sulzmann said describing the reason for his venture,"is thai God called me." "I wanted to do full time Christian -work but still teach,V he continued, "and I felt a call to, go overseas." Sulzmann,'a Cranford High School graduate who lived at 511 High St., joined the AgatM> movement, a ministry of the. Campus Crusade for Christ.. According' to Sulzmann, the movement tries to care for both the physical and spiritual needy of Hie people it helps. After four months of training, Sulzmuiin went to Swaziland.' The. majority of the people of'Swaziland arc black, and a substantial number are of European descent. The culture is a mixture of traditional African and western cultures. The national language is siSwati, a Zulu dialect which Sulzmann learned. He worked • mainly with natives and said Jay Sulxmann some some he encountered Christianity and tribalism among them. According to Sulzmann, there are no interracial problem's in Swaziland as in South Africa. The people like Americans and American aid, and are interested in the problems of black Americans.' Sulzmann was not always as religious as he is now. In 1%9, one year after receiving his bachelors degree in math from Newark State College was the power of God." He said that he felt a lack of -a^complishm.entrand-realized his own limited power in guiding others. He was a guidance counselor at ( the time. "That is when I let Christ come into my life," he remarked. Sulzmann has not lost his faith since then although, he admits he felt unsure at times during his military service in Vietnam from November of 1969 to December of 1970. "I try to avoid the word Christianity," Sulzmann said. "It implies church and some people who g<> to church haven't realized Christ in the biblical sense. Going to church should be the result of a personal relationship with Christ, not a means of gaining salvation" It is the personal relationship with Christ that Sulzmann emphasized most in his teaching and which he described as important in his own increased religious fervor. Sulzmann has-' left the crusade staff of the Agape movement but will continue to his Christian work at Warner (now Kean College), he under- ^Christian Academy in South went a dramatic change. Daytona, Florida. His sister. "Why siicli a. dramatic turn- Sally Hartnett, lives on Krazer about';'" Sulzmann mused, "II 1*1., Cranford. The eleventh annual "Star- dust and Brass" competition sponsored- by the Patriots Drum and Bugle Corps will be held Sunday, July 17, at Memorial Field. A dual show has again been scheduled with the Garden State Circuit contest starting at 4:30 p.m. and the Class A Open show at 7:30 ,p.m. , The Long Island Kitigsmen from Kings Park, N.V., will perform the popul arized r 'Flight 76" from the original composition of "The Flight of the Bumble Bee",by Rimsky Korsakoff in the afternoon contest. Their numbers in- clude a percussion solo of Beethoven's famed "Fifth Symphony,", "Bcllavia,' 1 "Land of Make Believe," and "Next to Lov'n, I like Fi^ht'n Best" from the award winning show "Shenendoah." Competing with the Kingsmen will be the Bengal Lancers, Connecticut; Holy Child, Staten Island; Royales, Eatontown; Crimson Buccaneers, formerly-Falcon- Ridgemen; Livingston's Imperial Guardsmen, and the Milford, Conn., Shoretinerk. The Patriots wilTpresent an exhibition. ' ' '.Competing for trophies in* the Class A Open show- will h<>' the Grossmen from Delaware County, Pennsylvania, win- ners of the 1976 VFW Region States and '76 .Legion States contests in Pennsylvania. TlT-Mi 1 — offering; Include "MarcheSlav," "Let's hear it for Me, "Bless the Beast and the Children," and "Russian Christmas-Mv-i< v " The Gaifield, IV-., Cadets; will again be vying for top honors. Also participating in the open-show will be (he Saints Drum and Bugle corps of Woodbridge, fielding 110 marching members including 52 .brass, 27 percussion, 20 flags and lO.rjJ'les, Its num- bers will include "Poritieo," "Invitation to a River," "Two Minds Meet," '"Stay" and "Living in Heat." The Saints' concert is entitled "Open Up Wide," followed by the theme ~from~Rocky-;—"Gonna- Fly Now," and "Send in the Clowns." Others-'in the open are the Hawthorne Muchachoes and Royal Brigade from Secaucus. Corps will be judged on timing, drumming, bugle playing, m a r c h i n g , m a n.e.u v-cTTn v. a n d showmanship. A corps must rematfn on the field from 11 to 13 minutes with eight minutes or more of this time spent in motion. Tickets will tfo on sale at 1 |) m. July 17 atcthe field box office at $4. for adults, $2 for children under 12. Senior -eUizens can get tickets at the box office for.$2 with proper identification. Committee Plans CHS 10th Reunion A planning committee is being formed to plan a class reunion o£_Cranford High School Clasi^PHMVi.^—- Anyone interested in being on the committee is asked to call Pat Messinger ClfibtilW) ."orSharon Porter C272-7424). A •minimuni of 10 committee memhelti is required if plans are to proofed.- V - -y

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Page 1: JEEM-...... • »••. • I -. • '-I. • . .„ -,-• •.»•*•.-.. CITIZEN AND CHRONIC! £ Thursday. Juno SO. 1977

. . . . . . • » • • .

• I - . • ' - I . • . . „ - , - •

• . » • * • . - . . < • ?-••:

Page l4|CRAr«!t)RD I N.J. > CITIZEN AND CHRONIC! £ Thursday. Juno SO. 1977

CHRONICLE CLASSIFIEDCall 276-6000

Open Weekdays: 9 5Deadline: Tuesday 3 p.m.

REAL ESTATE RENTALS HELP WANTED

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

th Btit§ Pttpk Homtl'' Sellers! WeTcan help you get top price foryour house. -.; We have buyers! The Boyle Company has developedeffective selling methods including our unique BoyleMar*e»-Value Analysis. We tell you how we can

^effectively merchandise your house and realize thehighest price possible. Then, through advertising.Corporate contracts, multiple listings and ourexclusive membership In this area In "The"Gallery of

^H^J8«'lwe_cwnjHnd a buyer at the least amount ofinconvenience to you. '" " "" •^-.••••- • -— : -

For your next move, call for the' BoyleMarket-Value Analysis of your house.

lii'dl 1 stair . S i n c e .

530 South Ave . E , C ran ford772 9-14-J

in E l i zabe th , M o r r i s t o w n , E Hanover

MAKE AN OFFER on this 4BEDROOM COLONIAL with eat inkitchen and BEAMED CEILING in the -cDining Room. A PERFECT STARTERHOME- Asking $43,900. READY FORYOUR INSPECTION!

New Art Exhibit,. Paintings by

DARLASTEPHENSMEMBERS OF CftftNFORD BOARD. WESTFIELD BOAND UNION COUNTY MULTIPLE LISTING SYSTI

ELEGANT FRENCH NORMAN$110,000

Elegance plus liability abound in this gracious (our bedroom, ?;V>bath beautifully situated home with tower entrance hall, all largelyproportioned rooms including a first floor family room and olfice.Fully air-conditioned. 2 car attached garage. Also included: burglaralarm, tire detector, all modern kitchen appliances including built-inrefrigerator treejer, built-in vacuum system. A ONE OF A KINDBEAUTY.

R A N D O L P H W I E G M A N CO.

153 Mountain »»•„ WestlMdRealtors

232-6609

PAUSE

And Think of the LastingEnjoyment you Can Give YourFamily With This Home!

AND AT AREASONABLEPRICE... \Nicely situated on a Tree shadedResidential Street...6 roomColonial with an extra Den and Surfroom on the first floorrrMod*(nkitchen and Bath, Wood-BurningFireplace, finished BasementRoom, 2 car Garage. We ShallEnjoy Showing You Through ThisSparkling Home at your pleasure.

G. G. NUNN, Realtors276-9110

181 North Ave. E.jCranford

SHAHIEM AGENCY"KKALTOtt

li^NOKTII AVK.. K.VRANKOKO

SV'YEARS OF SERVICE

S276-1900

NEWLY LISTEDDelightful Cape situated in SunnyAcres area. 1st floor have, livingloom, 2 bedrooms, new sciencekitchen and bath, 2nd floor has^tractive bedroom and storage,possible 4th bedroom. Attachedgarage. Home Is. in A t condition.Must to see to- appreciate.W8.900.

McPHERSONREAITY CO.

' 1VALOEN STREETfRANFORO

276-0400Of EN OMIT 9 5: SUNDAY 1 J

TMURSDOYS 7 9

COOP APARTMENT - for sale.CiestwooU Village, Whiting. N. i ;front apartment. 4 rooms. Heated,panelled porch »nd small patio.I74,!)OO. ( M l ) 350-9481

S38.900 - 3 bedrooms, Colonialjust listed. Modern kitchen and.bath, formal dining room,enclosed porch, sitting room, w/wo*rpet, 1 car garage.All inexcellent condition: SILVER KEYREALTORS. 233 8500.

OWNERS ARERETIRING

and wont us to sell this

CLEAN & COZYBUNGALOW

featuring living room withfireplace, dining room, eat-In kitchen,? bedroom andbath

ALL ONI FLOORlarge expansion attic, allhot water. heat> 2 cargarage, lovely property 66X '46. in a convenientlocation.

Why not call for anappointment this weekend?

VICTOR DENNISWALH>H

KENILWORTH

TWO FAMILY. 12 room, house, Gobdcondition, 6 garages, taxes SI.100,repainted. Principles Only.S60.000's: 245-2816. , ,

RENTALSA P A R T M E N T S

CRANFORD - 5 targe rooms facingpark, near Garden State Parkway.276-2114. . *

5 ROOM MODERN APT in 2 familyhome. Business£ouple. Convenientlocation'.! $350 per month includingheat, hot water- Available Aug. 1.276-79U.

R U ) L D I N G

BUILDING FOR RENT -'2200 sq. feet,new building, ground floor. Will

•. renovate to suit tenant. Located inKenilworth. Ideal location.Sufficient parking. ReasonableRent. Contact Sisto Realty Co.' tt276-4444. - • :

MOBILE HOMESLOVELY ADULT PARK - We will pay'. firsryears'fent for you. Good place

to live. .(201) 364.2235 evt».

V A C A T I O N R E N T A L S ~ ~ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS,- 3 or 4

bedroom .Chalets. ^Swimming,Jennis, boating and trout fishing.

> Weekly, reasonable rates. Call 464-2222 or. 4641515. . ,

HELP WANTED

. • f

/ "/

'•-.—Hi-,1. -•

^ •• •• ••• C O Z Y a n d N E A T '•••"'*"

•This lovely 2 bedroom bungalow'features a large living room andtormal dining room, entrance porch and partially finished basement. .The back yard and nice trees offer shade from summer's heat. Apeeled buy lor the new bride or young elderly. . :

mn HIM* « « A

OPEN:'9-9Daily. • ' ' . .' ' -A;.. 9-5Sat. '

1 2 - 5 S u n . - . . .

Gentiiry 21D.S. Kuzsma Realty

115 Miln'Street""REALTOR 272-8337

' All ojflces independently6wried'tiiid'6fieraied!

O.iv,d tu.-jrl.'y i/f

M Old

\' J

RENTAtS'WANTEd "SOUTH CRANFORD OR CLARK AREA '

Quiet young (nan.,desires 3 or 4rooms in 2 • family house(preferred). .Eat-in' kitchen,reasonable' rate. Cad 399-9439,7:30 p.m.-9 JO p.m. week nights or

. Sat. and;Sun. a.m..

APPRAISAL^- WIIifflC.KIumas,S.RASENIOR RESIDENTIflL APPRAISER

Society of Real EstateAppraisers

KLUMASSGAIS' 663 RariUn Rd.

Cnmford, N J.272*100

BUSINESS OPPS.-OWN A HIGHLY PROFITABLE AND

BEAUTIFUL JEAN SHOP OF YOUROWN. Featuring the latest in JEANS,SPORTSWEAR, and HIGH FASHIONS.$14,500.00 Includes BeginningMerchandise, Store Fixtures, Training,Grand Opening Promotion. We are a D& B Rated Corporation We have over100 Stores. Call Mr. Hltliird (501)945-9661.

HEIR WAITED":HOMEWORKERS: S85 00 weekly

addressing, stuffing envelopesStart Immediately. Details, rush 25cents and self addressed stampedenvelope: Bestco, 3209 N.W. 75thTerrace, Hollywood; Fla, 33024Dept. YW6.

~ PRODUCT IOJ^ CONTROL

P6TStJMjajited with 1-2 years experience in productiqrrplannlng andcontrol. Full time days". IdeaHiosition'for night school student Jobduties varied and will include inventory control, scheduling, loading,

• planning, shipping and/exeivingjiend reply in confidence, indicatingpresent or last saia^ to, P.O. Box 227, c-o Cranford Citizen andChronicle, 21 Aldw St., Cranford.NJ. 07016

C R A N F O R D . N E W J E R S E Y O 7 O 1 6

2W-4020

•-._.-• W O M E N

WORK OVERSEAS!!Australia — Europe — JapanThe South Pacific — Farjast

South America — Centra! AmericaOVER 100 COUNTRO^

ALL OCCUPATIONS - s k i l l e d - unskilled — U.S.Government — Private Corporations and Organi-zations'; .- ; '-.•'-• • •'./:. '•'• . ''-:;-'v. :''-.

Construction — Engineering — Sales — Transpor-tation — Teaching — Oil Refining—- Medical —Accounting —Manufacturing — Secretarial r -A i r -craft, etc., etc., $800.00 to $5,000,00 per month.

In most jobs overseas you win receive FREETRANSPORTATION, HIGHER SALARIES andWAGES, TRAVEL PAY, GENEROUS VACATION andBONUS, FREE MEDICAL CARE, FREE MEALS andHOUSING, more AtWANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES,N O U S . INCOME TAX under the Government For-eign Resident Rule (civil service excluded).To allow anyone the opportunity to explore overseasemployment we have publisheda complete set ofOVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT GUIDES, Our OVERSEASEMPLOYMENT GUIDES contain the following infor-mation.;: ' • : . / ; • •'.-, ,:'. .-,• ../ .'••.•" '. • •'-.•List ot CURRENT OVERSEAS JOB OPPORTUNITIES

with a special section on overseas construction pro-jects, executive positions and teaching opportunities.

•How, Where and Whom to apply for the job of yourchoice OVERSEAS! -•••,- , - -

•FIRMS and ORGANIZATIONS employing all types ofPersonnel in nearly every part of the Free World.

•Firms and organizations engaged In OVERSEAS'CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS, MANUFACTURING,MINING. OIL REFINING, ENGINEERING, SALES,

.SERVICES; TEACHING, SECRETARIAL, AIR-CRAFIvETC!

•COMPANIES and GOVERNMENT AGENCIES em-ploying personnel in nearly every occupation/fromthe unskilled laborer to the college trainedprofessional!

•How and Where to apply for OVERSEAS GOVERN-MENT JOBS!

•Employment on U.S. Government ships "MER-CHANT MARINES"!

•Directory ot U.S. Businesses operating inAUSTRALIA that employ Americans.

•List of U.S. DEFENSE CONTRACTORS with oper-ations OVERSEAS THAT EMPLOY Americans!

•Information about TEMPORARY and SUMMERJOBS OVERSEAS!

•Plus several EMPLOYMENT APPLICATION FORMSthat you may send directly to the COMPANIESor ORGANIZATIONS that interest you the most!

MAIL OUR ORDER FORM TODAY!!The Job You Want May tie Waiting For You Right Now!!

ORDER FORM "MAIL TO:Overseas Employment Guides1727 SCOTT ROAD, SUITE C yBURBANK.CA. 91504

I am enclosing $10.00 cash, check or money order.Please send me your complete set of OVERSEASEMPLOYMENT GUIDES immediately.

NAME

ADDRESS

(or base skills in language arts,reading, math for September 1,1977. $8 00 per hour Send resume

. to Mr Bruce £, Buckley, P 0 Box98. Gamood, N J 07027

CHAMBER MAIDS M/F • Full or PartTime Apply in person 1 p m til 3pm Holiday Inn, 31st Street,•Kenilworth, M. J

~ T INSURANCE •CLERMSSISTANT

Assist in miscellaneous insurancerelated tasks Typing requiredExcellent benefits - C«B 276-300^6.

FRIENDLY TOY PARTIES HASOPENINGS FOR MANAGERS ANDDEMONSTRATORS DEMONSTRATEGUARANTEED TOYS & GIFTS 'NOCASH INVESTMENT - NOCOLLECTING OR DELIVERING NOSERVICE CHARGE;; CAR &TELEPHONE NECESSARY, CALLCOLLECT TO CAROL DAY '518-489-8395 OR WRITE, FRIENDLY TOYPARTIES. 20 RAILROAD AVE.ALBANY, N Y. 12205

NUMERIC CONTROL DRILLOPERATORS needed SHIFT WORK.

. Experience preferred but will trainqualified applicant Call torappointment 233-4255

ASSISTANT Cujtodjan, part time,excellent working conditions, goodpay, care of church, references,Short Hills .area, car necessary,ideal for retired person, call 379-2531 after 6 p m ,

TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs~personM/F over 40 for exclusive industrialsales territory No relocation Weare an expanding AAA-L firmestablished since 1933 We offerlull (nnge benefits Liberalcommissions yyith opportunity- for-advancement For personalinterview, write a letter and tell me

"about yourself W.S Fail, SalesManager, Southwestern PetroleumBox 789, Ft. Worth,.Texas 76101E.O.E.

CITY . _ . . : _ „ STATE , ZIP

30 DAY MMifc* BACK GUARANTEEIt you are dissatisfied with bur Overssas £mploym«nt Guides, lorany reason, simply return our Guides to- u j within 30 days andyour $10.00 will be rslunded to you immediately, NO QUESTIONSASKED.

CLERKTYPIST

Excellent opportunity for M.S. gradasaclerk typjst in a sales dept Duties

' wilt"Include typing, filing, salesdept. correspondence & relatedduties as assigned."

CALL OR APPLY789-1121 ext. 222

ACCURATEBUSHING CO.

443 NorthAve. Garwood, N.J.An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F

POSITIONSECRETARY.

RECEPTIONISTAgressive, tough mindedindlv. to handle busy frontdesk, answer, phones, visitors,filing and typing Knowledgeof tellex, shorthand and typing50 Wp/yy essential. Salary0Mn».«lJ »>ehe}its p§Jd. Call T.F H - i j e r a l d a t ' y

VALUESVI .P HONDAHAS

OVER 160 USED BIKES.CUSTOM BIKES &

CHOPPERS THAT MUSTBE SOLO. REGARDLESS

OF PRICEII.

FOR EXAMPLE:,

76 Maico WR400 S10501 cyl 5 spd miles N A75 Honda CB550 $11754 cyl. 5spd. 6,435 miles75 Honda CL360 $669'2cyl. 6spd 4,572 miles74 Honda CT9Q . $379lcyl. 6spd. Hi-Lo 3.737 miles74 Honda XL250 $5591 cyl. Sspd. 4,976 miles73 Kawasaki 25OS1 $5493cyl. Sspd. 4,052 miles73 Yamaha TX500 $7492cyl. 5spd, 6.527 miles.73 Honda CB450 '$6782cyl^5spd. 5,278 miles72 Honda CB350 $459 '2cyl Sspd 6,764 miles'66 Honda 305 Chopper $3952cyl. '4spd. miles N A

OVER 900 NEWBIKES&MOPEDS

IN STOCK100% FINANCING

If Qualified

V--.,.. ,/-,..

: . - ' • , . ' ' " • / •

FOR SALE AUTOMOBILES SERVICES SERVICES• PODGE DART • 1970. air, PS. 6 HOrWF I M P R O V E M E N T S

THE TARniSHED SWANAntiques & Collectibles

521 Elizabeth Aye E . LindenMem & Wed eves 6-8 p m

Tues SSat 2-6<> ma or by aooointment, 527-1709

F L E A M A R K E T SFLEA MARKET-

Every Wednesday, Friday Saturdayand Sunday Dealers call 574-8599or 541-9328 after 6 p m

also ANTIQUE SHOPS1490 RAHWAY AWE. AVENEL(across from Rahnay Prison)"

" G A R A G E SALES . ~. Complimentary1 *

• dAR AGE SALE SIGHS'are available at the Boyle Com party

P A I N T I N G ' D E C O R A T I N G

95.200 miles, floor standard shiftS4/5 Altai. 5 276-0722 "

CHEVY CUSTOM"iMPALA, 1974.AA.radio, 23,000 mileS, excellentcondition, PB, PS, vgarage 'kept, \owner. S2,8Q0 353;^395. /

MUSTANG II • 1975, Automatic,power steering, power brakes, airconditioning * cylinder, excellentcondition. Altar 5 233-3582" and232-7748,

Home litiproyeitiBntiNo Job Too Small

FREE ESTIMATES^

1974 FORD~MUSTANG GHIA, -V-6,AM/fM stereo, 8 track, A/C, B*Sr,P/B, 30,000 mites, mint condition.Call Fran 381-5300, 9-5 or 486-SMrilJS

MOVING -, GAR AGE SALE Thursdayand Friday, June 30 • July 1 at 408

vi HIGH ST., CRANFORD from 10 a m- 5 p m Whirlpool washer S35,Hamilton Gas 'Dryer ,$35, dresserS10, vanity tabje S5, golf clubs $65,old IBM typewriter $15, portableSinger sewing machine $10, rugsand pads, household items, bric-a-brac and clothes

M I S C E L L A N E O U S

- - PLASTIC3LieC0¥ERSCustom made, pin fitted, expertlycut in your home Any sofa & 2chairs or 3 pc section $120H««»IIM»CT»H 865-6300

GRACELAND (Kenilworth) 4 doublegraves (8 burials) S/'ib PrivateParty Sacnlice Non-sectan(n Willdivide 352-3967 (355 9222evenings or weekends)

1972 FORD, custom wagon, excellentc6ndition, low mileage, PS, auto,front disc brakes, AC Best offer7 6 3 - 2 0 2 6 v yo

SERVICESCARPENTRY

MAnSON GENERAL CONTRACTINGHome improvements. Exterio; andInterior. 232-2759.

D R I V E W A Y S "' "•

t l R K H REMODELING272-6334

LANDSCAPE GARDENING

Going on vacation? TtyCHtit will cutk grass, tepd garden, etc. during July

and August 754-OffQ.

MASONRY —

"MASON WORKWATERPROOF ING and

REPAIRSSteps, walks'pat|os, d r a i p s ;

Call 276-35?0

MISCELLANEOUS

CLEANED

RUBBISHft^MOVAL

call#

Johrv Borden

•> ! THOMAS ROTATIStxpfertenced i'O years painting anddecorating Interior and exteriorusing Dutch Boy paints FreeEstimates Fully Insured

CALti*NYTIME/399-2873

^ J 1 ^ Interior and exterior. U,i

R O O R N G A N D S I D I N G, CHIMNEYS tLeads roofs leaders and gutters

n 2 w o r i < sump punVps0 Aulera 276 4410

WATERPROOFING ,Nome basements

- GeneralMalrilgnancaCo.JiS years-experience,

5 year warranty»9->219 381-7885

Are you wondering where to find It?Check -the Area Service Guide In thisissue

OUGHERTY m l N C - D r i v e w a y s ,block or ties Free estimates 561 •6452 after 5 p m

ORAPERilT

Exper.ty.pist w/secretarial skills,l.ghtsteno, 35-hr, wk., 9-5. New otfjpebldg in Cfanford.' •

. ; 276-3399

FOR SAU -M O T O R C Y C L E S

1975 KAWASAKI 400, 5,000 miles,excellent condition. $900. Call 276-"8 3 2 3 . - ' .' . . . - ; • •

Custom made and installed Yourmaterial or mine. Also draperiesrehung, repaired, remodeledCompare our low prices Call lor •N e atttmati. 232-4551.

WITH THIS COUPON15*0FF

any of your jieeds for summerprojects.

NORDSTRQM'S KNIT-PIC3 North Ave., E. 276-7181

~- ENTERTAINMITiT'MAGIC WITH THE FEMININE TOUCH

Children's and 'adult showsReasonable rates 388-5276 or382 4837

FENCING

WANTED TO BUYSTAMPS

US PLATE BLOCKS, Singles Accumulations, Collections CanadaTop prices paid S27 8011

CARS W A N T E D

HIGHEST PRICES PAIDlor |unk cars Loral distance

Jowmg Call 2 3 2 ^ 5 0 -

rtE BUY used cars, cars needingrepair and junk cars. 382-8434 ask forEddy.

LOST ~LOST - Young grey and white male cat

Vicinity Springfield Ave andNomahegan Park, Cranford Has redcollar and ID tag Small child's petREWARD, 272-3493.

CHAIN LINK FENCE.9 guage vinyl wire - 4 , 5 , 6 -75 cents

sq ft installed C«tlafter6pm 381-1044

H O M E I M P R O V E M E N T S " ^

ALUMINUM SHOWROOM '

Porch and patio Enclosures

Jalousies Awning Windows

Nuprine ReplacementWindows

Storm ancL.Screen Combinations

Combination Doors • 25 Styles

LIFETIME ALUMINUMPRODUCTS INC.

LONG WEEKENDAHEAD1

Stock Up NowFor All

Your HolidayNeodil r

Open July * , 9 AM - 2 PM (Sony. No

Star-Spangled Weekend Features!£•••#••••••••*••*•••*

Tonfc or Bitter Lemon6-packse Reg. $1.75

Low Price

Ca»e of U.*5.»3

Flavorsn oi cans

6 «or

' f

Serving Cranf6rd, Kenilworth and Garwood7,1977'

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

-Horn OF me WINE gMtmniooir*10 Eastman Street n p * i

Cranford M M276-1044 /'YOUR WINE LINE"

Family-operated since 1*40

The Crlariford seniorcitizens'housirlg project is oneof.213 in NetyrAersey for which-

-the -N;*.-HrT9iising FinanceAgency is .^waiting subsidyapproval from the U.S..Department .of Housing andUrban Development (HUD).

According to a spokesman4pr4he state agency, the list ofprojects was submitted to thefederal agency two weeks ago.The waiting time for approvalor disapproval is usually fromthree to four weeks.

The spokesman../said thestate has a" current HUDallocation to cover 16 seniors'housing developments, butthat it is in a position toproceed with 2J5 and has askedfor approval,of that number.

The state.financing agencyis optimistic about the

for 16 projects includes 12 inthe northern section of thestate and five in Ihe southernand provides for 3,100 dwellingunits. In seeking approval of26, projects—21 in NorthJersey and five in SouthJersey—it is, the state agen-cy's contention that it is readyto. go ahead with all projectswhereas others in its federalregion, which includes NewYork, Puerto Rico and the

Virgin Islands, are not. HUDfunds are allocated by federalr e g i o n s , : • ••*

The July bond issue willfinance projects under Section8 of-the federal statuteauthorizing U.S. subsidies forsenior citizen housing. Thestatfe issued bonds totaling $72million under this section inJanuary." A May bond issuewas Under ah earlier section.

236, by which the state stillhad some carryover financialcredits' from HUD.

Program RevisedUnder Section 8, HUD pays

the difference between 25 percent of. a tenant's incomewhich must be paid in rent andwhat the monthly rental wouldbe on an actual cost basis.Under the old .program, thefederal government'paid the

difference between 1 per centof the mortgage loan on Iheproject and the actual goinginterest rate in themortgagemarket. ' -

The Cranford development.is scheduled to rise on a 4 3-acre tract of tovvhship-ownedland in Meeker Ave. Title willrevert to the towrtship, whenall financing obligations arepaid off.

Sister, Cop Save DrowriingGarwood Boy, 3, From Pool

GARWOOD- A three-year-Cranfdrd project, believing old boy pulled fjroni. the bottomthat if only 16 projects get of a backyard swimming pool

• • • - • - - •• by his 13-year-old- s i s ter

BROTHERLY .CONQUEST—Three members of theHogan family, who won canoe marathon race atCranford's Fourth of, July observance arecongratulated by Township Recreation Committeeman

Raymond Molnar (second from right) outside CanoeClub. From left are Bob, wearing cap, Chip and Bruce-Lower photo shows couples' race as viewed frombridge on Springfield Ave.

102 South Ave. W. 274-32051 y\<\ - \. LOCAI DI :

SAVE 29.11

HUD approval, Cranford'swill be one of them. .

Largest Bond IssueIf HUD okays the 26, which

involve approximately 5,000dwelling units, the HousingFinance Agency plans a Julybond issue of ^150 million tofinance construction of theprojects-^-the largest issue inits history. The Cranfordproject calls for- 131 one andtwo-bedroom apartments.

The current HUD allocation

Tuesday evening was revivedby m o U t h" t o - m o u t hresuscitation administered byPatrolman Robert J; Ryan.

The youth, Mark Patterson,son of Mr. and Mrs. JohnPatterson of 500 Center St.,was released yesterday fromRahway Hospital where ,. hehad been held for observation..The child's father ac-companied him in the FirstAid Squad ambulance.

One of the family children."observed Mark lying at thebottom of the pool from anupstairs window of the houseat 7:53 p.m. His 13-year-oldsister, Kathleen, dragged

Mark from the'pool. 'When Ryan arrived, the boy

was face down on the grass atthe corner of Center SL aTridLocust Ave. Ryan turned himover and discovered the boy.

was not breathing; Thepatrolman administeredresuscitation, and was joiriedby Patrolman Louis KleejRanwho administered, cardio-pulminary respiration.

Towiiwide Fund LaunchedFor Semi-Conscious Girl

July4th ActiveWithout

Scott Vatti hy:race ^was N(K>TV by

Judy and Mike Pender, withElise and Arthur Yanowitzsecond. All received trophiesf rom- Recreation Com-missioner. Raymond Molnar.

The Fourth of July car rallywith contestants asked suchquestions such as "what is thequote on Roosevelt school?",artd "I Believe in Hard Work

Continued on Page *

Reg. 179.10

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MODEL 2603 FOLD-AWAYRECORD CHANGER

CH ANNEX'S UNIQOTP^SMTpitiaBS[TEirr

IS ALSO FEATURING:

Prowler at Hotel Gets Bar Receiptsbasement door, police believe.

The ~ baproom- theft-was,invesUgai&Ly>y Lt, MyronCymbaiuk, Detective J pWashbourne and PatrolmenWilliam Corinell and JohnStanier.

PORTABLE TRI CLASSFIRE EXTINGUISHERSThese multi-purpose fire extinguisherscontain a dry chemical powder and areeffective on all three classes of fires: ,

The theft _of _$780_in cashfrom the basement bar area of

-the Granford HoteLat I South> UnipqAye. Was reported, at 5a.m. last Thursday by theowneri Robert DiTulio.v

': Police said a porter who hadarrived to clean the establish-

. ment discovered that a doorleading from the first-floorbar to the basement bar had;r*Z0 Riverside

. been jimmied. The porter reported enteredsummoned DiTulio, who found ground floorall the bills had been removedfrom two cash boxes in thelower bar area. Change hadbeen placed in rolls but wasnot taken. No liquor wasmissing. .

- Crane Home RansackedOn Friday the home of Mr.

and Mrs. Robert M. Cranp ofDr., wasthrough a

window. Therooms were ransacked, and acolor television stolen. Adetermination is being'madeas to whether other articleswere removed. . The 18th

from the Coachman Inn Realistic model CB radio frqmparking lot late last Thursday. _ihe car^Lhis.wife.lwhich wasIt wa§..recovered.'..in Newark parked in the garage at that

wheels removedr^^-addreas. r . . ; : ^ . ,. , Yard Thefts Bicycles Takeiv

On Monday Richard Sundel Several bicycle (hefts wereof Carolina St, reported that r epOrted last week. Onduring the night a -u:*~ - r •

hammockwhite

Century Crane home is an, J .u *ui * historical landmark of the

Police theorized the thief township,may have secreted himself inthe upstairs bar area or Police reported that a 1975lavatory before 2 a.m. Cougar owned by Charlesclosing, and later forced open Schrieber.of 1625 Lenape Rd.,the door leading downstairs. Linden, cemetery owner inThe thief left through a rear that, community, was stolen

canvas hammock wasremoved from his rear yard.

Lawrence Grant of 11 Pitts-field St. told police onSaturday that a green tent hadbeen stolen the night beforefrom his yard.

The thefts of two citizens*• band radios were reported lastweek. Thomas Hanlon of 30University Ave., Chatham,stated that a Regency CBradio was taken from his carThursday while in the parkinglot of Technical Wire Productsin Derrnody St.

The" previousIrslinger, 105 Qrangereported the theft of

Saturday Frank Smith of, 39Iroquols Rd. * told police awhite Schwinn was taken fromhis* backyard. ,

Last Thursday Joseph Leeof 2 McClellan St. reported thetheft of a white boy s IversonSupersonic bike at CentennialAve. pool. The same day BillyYoung of 24 Doering Wayreported the theft of a blueboy's Kaleigfrbike.

The previous day BobCauble of 90 Kenilworth Blvd.told police his white boy's 10-speed Cornado bike was stolen

In providing a perfect Beth Hogan arid Bob, Kelly.,holiday -weekend, the Weather The couples' canoe race wentMan helped compensate for to Patty Hogan and LarryCranford slacKi^f a fireworks Urban, and second to Janedisplaytoritftejirst tirhe p.itwje, Hogan and ;:Scpit < r-x """ii-Wbrld W a r fF*^*-* . > r ' < • ' • - Thp'TWa-Pa l - a i f ^

While "a nurHber-j of localfamilies took advantage of thelong weekend by taking off forshore and lake resorts, crowdsat the community pools on thethree warm, sunny daysbelied any sizable exodus.;

According to the number ofcomplaints about the shootingoff of fireworks, from cappistols to skyrockets,- anumber- of young residentsmade up on their own for lack

. of a town display. Police werebusy virtually around theclock over the weekend in-vestigating complaints aboutfirecrackers. ,. ;»

Before a1 large crowd' ofcheering spectators, the sixthannual Rahway River canoemarathon:was_ won by; threebrothers. Chip, Bruce and BobHogan in the record ..timeotM.minutes, 58 ftconds. The pas.trecord of 17,32 was set in 1974by the. Farrington family.Second place went to LarryUrban, Scott Van Why andCasey Burd.

Winners in the youth canoe 'race were Jim Molnar andGreg Wicklem, with secondplace to Chris and JackErbeck and third to Mary

Priscilla Gracey was 13years old Tuesday.

But for the first time in heryoung life; there could be nocelebration.

Priscilla is in a semi-comaat St. Barnabas MedicalCenter, Livingston, where shehad a sizeable brain tumorremoved June 4..

Instead of birthdaygreetings on Tuesday, prayerswere extended for Priscilla asher condition failed to im-prove at the' Essex

year-old son, Tommy, hasgone all through Cranfordschools with Priscilla, and byMrs: Judy Krugh of SouthUnion Ave. whose son, Jef-,frey, also 13, has been in thesame schools. • .

What the fund sponsorsdescribe as "overwhelming"medical costs far exceedinginsurance coverage have beenmounting as Pnscilla, whohas two- sisters and twobrothers in Cranford public

sx; County .schools, lies in her darkness at s^\

operations on Priscilla.,', Priscilla fainted in the car •.driven by her mother, and losther sight in the emergencyroom of the hospital soonthereafter;

.Tests and X-rays revealeda Jemon-sized tumor on thegirl's brain which wasremoved two days after her. admission. Priscilla has neverfully regained' consciousness,s i n c e . - ••:•-.< .."

Priscilla completed theseventh grade at the Middle

extended to her parents, Mr. 2 while enroute to the office of trlbuting to the trust fund \nand Mrs. Stephen Gracey of an orthodontist in Northfield711 High St. by the parents of Ave., Livingston, only twoPriscilla's • classmates at blocks from St. Barnabas, toHillside Avenue Middle have her teeth capped in aSchool. ' " •' ' series of treatments that had

~rjegUn~for~~a~palate~im-A township-wide Priscilla pairment. The orthodontist

Gracey Trust Fund has been had been recommended by aestablished by Mrs. Al Goertz Livingston plastic surgeoaof Retford Ave., whose 13- who had performed a series of

the girl's name is availablefrom Mrs. Goertz at 276-7316,and from Mrs. Krugh, 276-6318. The fund is to beestablished at United Counties-Trust-Co-

Priscilla's father is a formermember of the CranfordBoard of Education. He didnot seek reelection this year.

Resi^rfacing Set for 21 Local RoadsThe Cranford Public Works

Dept. has scheduled sectionsof 21 streets for resurfacingthis summer and early nextfall.' A list of the streets and the

estimated, lineal feet of"coverage o~ri each Is contained-In . specifications .„ intt.de.available today for' con-tractors who will bicLon thejob.

Township Engineer GregorySgroi said the streets wereselected on the.-basis-.of theircondition; • .• . • "

Only deteriorated sectionsof the streets selected will becovered. " •

The streets and estimated

lineal feet to be resurfaced oneach follow:

Windsor PI., 640; BelmontAve., 219; Roselle Ave., 869;Lambert St., 531;Bloomingdale Ave.,,1,406;Cherry wood Ave., 540; Oak

upon the bids. He said lessmay be done if the unit cost ofthe bidding does not permitthe resurfacing that -isoutlined.

Bids for the $60,000 projectare called for in a legal ad-

are asked on 3,000 tons ofbituminous concrete. - Thismaterial is for the so-called"asphalt ov.erlay_'V.system ofresurfacing with materialfrom l'-i to 1'L> inches thick.

The Township Committee

Lane,;-239;-Orchard St', 315;- vertisement whicluappears bnL_ chose the overlay resurfacingr , ;Sunuiiit Rd,, 280;. Tulip, St.,427. ' _ ' _ . ,_

Also Eas tman St., '541;Gallows flill ltd"., 820;Roosevelt Ave., 753; LincolnAve., 447; Chestnut St., 474;Collins-St., 593; MendellAve.,1,937; Omaha. Dr., 937;Carolina St., 189; Virginia St.,.195, and Faiffield AVe., 657.

Sgroi said carrying out theprogram as proposed depends

ppage..4^ of today's_ iTii

.-Citizen...1>and Chronicle. .Jiids

methody

over thec6»ru.iuJd

less ex-

Stardust & BrassContests July 17

Ex-Resident Tells of WorkIn Swaziland Mission

SAVE 15.88

Reg. 54.88

MANUALLAUNDRYTRAYPUMPContinuous-duty 1/3 hp, motorwith overload protection. § ft.3 wire cord with groundedplug. Manual welded base.AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY ._^TRAY PUMP..R«g. 9988 .969

FRANTZWOODGARAGE DOORSComplete with hardware. One'sectioncomplete with glass. All holes pre-bored. Kiln dried old growth lumber.

SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 30 to JULY 10

C H A N Nl JEEM-OPENSUNDAYMDEVKMTEVSMIMO

FOB TOUB CONVENIIMCC

Ujtt&L^M:^SPRINGFIELDRoyto 22 *t SouthSpongucla A

t SouthAvenue

PARAMUSRoute 17', between Linwood& FUdqewood Aves. (Glosed

TOTOWA/WAYNE RARITAN

. lnc . 1977 W.Sundayi)

ih« light lu limit q

Route 46 'A mileEast of Wlllowbrook

Route* 202/206,SomervtUe Circle

26-220N

Meat Market Is ClosedOn Order of Sanitarian

Durrell's.Meat Market at 11Walnut Ave.. which operatedfor a half-century as theCranford Meat Market, hasbeen closed by order ofCranford Sanitarian Thomas

' Karvelas.Karvelas ordered Frederick

Carrell, who ran the butchershop for two months under thename Durrell's, tq surrenderthe local retail license of theestablishment June 20.

The sanitarian charged thatDurrell's was in violation of.the local sanitary code in nothaving a triple-partition sink,for the cleaning of butcherutensils. Karvales said Carrelldeclined to have the sink in-stalled because of the expenseinvolved. The cost isestimated at several hundreddollars.

Carrell had rented the.:_ butcher' shop, -which dates

back to 1914, on a month-to-month basis from Otto Sch-maltz, the previous operatorwho has a two-year sub-lease

from Frank Vrodaska Jr.Violations Cited

VrodasKa, whose familyestablished the CranforcT MeatMarket, operates a meatdistributorship in the rear ofthe premises. He has his ownseparate facilities approvedby the sanitarian. Vrodaska,who holds a local retail license,is registered with the U.S.Dept. of Agriculture as adistributor and operates"Frank's Provisions." Hesells to restaurants meats thathave already been processed.

Karvelas had charged thatthe sink Carrell used to cleanutensils was located in thebathroom of the market,which the sanitarian said wasa violation. Karvelas alsocondemned the commode,which has been repaired.

Accprding to Karvelas, Sch-maltz had used the approvedutensil-cleaning sink ofVrodaska in the rear of thepremises before that facilitywas shut off from the front

shop when Carrell took over.Schmaltz has another butchershop in Woodbridge.

Second ClosingAfter operating con-

tinuously for 50 years,* firstunder Frank Vrodaska Sr. andlater under his - son, theCranford Meat Market closedbriefly before Schmaltz took itover in early in 1976.

onClaremont PI. reported lar-ceny of a brown boy's Sher-man bike from 218 North Ave.E , • '.

.'Three bikes were reportedstolen June 28. Joseph Thomasof 179 Garden St. reported thetheft of a locked gray boy's 10-speed Columbia bicycle froma rack at Cranford HighSchool. The same afternoonJohn Hak, 4 LaSalle Ave, toldpolice his silver boy's 10-speedSchwinn was stolen from therack at Orange Ave. pool. -.'

That evening Charles Kellerof 28 Lenhome Dr. reportedhis yellow boy's Ross bicycleWas removed from in front ofhis home,

Chronicle ContentsSURVEY.OF SENIORS will cover services. Page 3.

HONOR ROLL of term at Cranford High.Page 3.

Al Your Leisure 7Classified ••••10Editorial 4Garwood , . . .9,Kenilworth 9

Obituaries 4,8Police Blotter Squibs, 4Religious News 8Soc i a l . . . . 5Sports" t 6

. A little more thanjwo yearsago,—Jay—Sulzmann-of Cran-.ford left his job of teachingmathematics at Arthur L.Johnson Regional High Schoolin Clark and joined amissionary group inSwaziland, Africa. Hereturned on May 1 and on June',26 described his experiencesat Osceola PresbyterianChurch.

"The simplest answer,"Sulzmann said describing thereason for his venture,"is thaiGod called me."

"I wanted to do full timeChristian -work but stillteach,V he continued, "and Ifelt a call to, go overseas."

Sulzmann,'a Cranford HighSchool graduate who lived at511 High St., joined the AgatM>movement, a ministry of the.Campus Crusade for Christ..According' to Sulzmann, themovement tries to care forboth the physical and spiritualneedy of Hie people it helps.

After four months oftraining, Sulzmuiin went toSwaziland.' The. majority ofthe people of'Swaziland arcblack, and a substantialnumber are of Europeandescent. The culture is amixture of traditional Africanand western cultures.

The national language issiSwati, a Zulu dialect whichSulzmann learned. He worked

• mainly with natives and said

Jay Sulxmannsomesome

he encounteredChristianity andtribalism among them.

According to Sulzmann,there are no interracialproblem's in Swaziland as inSouth Africa. The people likeAmericans and American aid,and are interested in theproblems of black Americans.'

Sulzmann was not always asreligious as he is now. In 1%9,one year after receiving hisbachelors degree in mathfrom Newark State College

was the power of God." Hesaid that he felt a lack of

-a^complishm.entrand-realizedhis own limited power inguiding others. He was aguidance counselor at ( thetime.

"That is when I let Christcome into my life," heremarked. Sulzmann has notlost his faith since thenalthough, he admits he feltunsure at times during hismilitary service in Vietnamfrom November of 1969 toDecember of 1970.

"I try to avoid the wordChristianity," Sulzmann said."It implies church and somepeople who g<> to churchhaven't realized Christ in thebiblical sense. Going to churchshould be the result of apersonal relationship withChrist, not a means of gainingsalvation"

It is the personalrelationship with Christ thatSulzmann emphasized most inhis teaching and which hedescribed as important in hisown increased religiousfervor.

Sulzmann has-' left thecrusade staff of the Agapemovement but will continue tohis Christian work at Warner

(now Kean College), he under- ^Christian Academy in Southwent a dramatic change. Daytona, Florida. His sister.

"Why siicli a. dramatic turn- Sally Hartnett, lives on Krazerabout';'" Sulzmann mused, "II 1*1., Cranford.

The eleventh annual "Star-dust and Brass" competitionsponsored- by the PatriotsDrum and Bugle Corps will beheld Sunday, July 17, atMemorial Field.

A dual show has again beenscheduled with the GardenState Circuit contest startingat 4:30 p.m. and the Class AOpen show at 7:30 ,p.m. ,

The Long Island Kitigsmenfrom Kings Park, N.V., willperform the popul arizedr'Flight 76" from the originalcomposition of "The Flight ofthe Bumble Bee",by RimskyKorsakoff in the afternooncontest. Their numbers in-clude a percussion solo ofBeethoven's famed "FifthSymphony,", "Bcllavia,'1"Land of Make Believe," and"Next to Lov'n, I like Fi^ht'nBest" from the award winningshow "Shenendoah."

Competing with theKingsmen will be the BengalLancers, Connecticut; HolyChild, Staten Island; Royales,E a t o n t o w n ; Cr imsonBuccaneers, formerly-Falcon-Ridgemen; Livingston'sImperial Guardsmen, and theMilford, Conn., Shoretinerk.

The Patriots wilTpresent anexhibition. ' '

'.Competing for trophies in*the Class A Open show- will h<>'the Grossmen from DelawareCounty, Pennsylvania, win-ners of the 1976 VFW RegionStates and '76 .Legion Statescontests in Pennsylvania.TlT-Mi1— offering; Include"MarcheSlav," "Let's hear itfor Me, "Bless the Beast andthe Children," and "RussianChristmas-Mv-i<v "

The Gaifield, IV-., Cadets;will again be vying for tophonors.

Also participating in theopen-show will be (he SaintsDrum and Bugle corps ofWoodbridge, fielding 110marching members including52 .brass, 27 percussion, 20flags and lO.rjJ'les, Its num-bers will include "Poritieo,""Invitation to a River," "TwoMinds Meet," '"Stay" and"Living in Heat." The Saints'concert is entitled "Open UpWide," followed by the theme

~from~Rocky-;—"Gonna- FlyNow," and "Send in theClowns." Others-'in the openare the HawthorneMuchachoes and RoyalBrigade from Secaucus.

Corps will be judged ontiming, drumming, buglep l a y i n g , ma r c h i n g ,m a n.e.u v-cTTn v. a n dshowmanship. A corps mustrematfn on the field from 11 to13 minutes with eight minutesor more of this time spent inmotion.

Tickets will tfo on sale at 1|) m. July 17 atcthe field boxoffice at $4. for adults, $2 forchildren under 12. Senior

-eUizens can get tickets at thebox office for.$2 with properidentification.

Committee Plans

CHS 10th ReunionA planning committee is

being formed to plan a classreunion o£_Cranford HighSchool Clasi^PHMVi.^—-

Anyone interested in beingon the committee is asked tocall Pat Messinger ClfibtilW)

."orSharon Porter C272-7424). A•minimuni of 10 committeememhelti is required if plansare to proofed.-

V - -y

Page 2: JEEM-...... • »••. • I -. • '-I. • . .„ -,-• •.»•*•.-.. CITIZEN AND CHRONIC! £ Thursday. Juno SO. 1977

Kim Clark?rd. Christie

Cymbaluk,a». Adrlenneilly, Josephsan Fischer,Gallszewskl,nt. Gorgol,i Cross, Paulid, Douglasne Jarkson,son, Edwardyjs Korngut.,,Lee, Jamesithla Levine,Lips, Robert

college s huuiiutM iwhich ' ppenH July 11 andcontinues through-August 18.

Courses parallel.freshmanand sophomore offerings atfour-year colleges' anduniversities, i Credits . earnedmay be transferred to, otherinstitutions or may be applied

.• toward an associate, degree atUnion College, according toProf. John Wtaefiler, directorof the broeram.. .,- ~:

AgiiCradurisecicorrwhcpubgivethepro|

Page 3: JEEM-...... • »••. • I -. • '-I. • . .„ -,-• •.»•*•.-.. CITIZEN AND CHRONIC! £ Thursday. Juno SO. 1977

. - ' . . • - . , . - , . „ - . ' , - * , , • • « . . . , •

\

ir-

i. ^ 4 CRANFORD (N.J.) CiTESEN^ANDtaiRONICLEThursday, July 7,1977

A'.nb l"J<'l15<a'h'drbutM conceptunder which Detective Sgt. MichaelDeane would receive medical carefor himself and his family atHtowSexpense although his retirement isnot effective unBl 13 years from nowwould be a costly precedent for thetaxpayers of Cranford.

well, would mean ever-escalating''fixed costs" which would have tobe met annually by Cranford

ayers

Princeton Road• / • • • • > . • . • • • • . . . ' • • • • : • ' - • • ) , . . ' ; , • ;

To the (editor: ' , *'. •''.Under: protest, I sent a $5

check to the Municipal Courttorcover parking violation infront of my-home: 30 Prince-ton Road, Cranford, at 7:12p.m., June 22,1977.

B J J i i

As We Were

le Cranford concept comes at atime when the Legislature isconfronted with the so-called "20-

. . and-out'- pension bill under which-Deane, who is 42, is leaving the police and firemen w6uld be able to

department (his month under a retire after 20 years' service insteaddeferred pension plan which, under of the present 25. This is estimated toterms of the state pension law, Xvill cost' taxpayers^ in .the state $14.5permit him to. collect a- partial million annually if approved. Whilepension atafee 55. The pension rights police and firemen are entitled toof police and firemen become vested special consideration because of theafter 15 years of service. hazards- inherent in their

According to the concept occupations, there is a limit to theadvanced bj^JDeane_and supported burden which the taxpayers can beby the local Police nBehevoIeiir ipadetpiwar: r - _-,i_d..........Association, a policeman who leaves Sgt. Deane is an outstandingthe department after 15 years would police officer with an excellentbe regarded as retired and receive record of performance as a member

of the force. However, if it is hischoice to earn his livelihood upon thesunny sands of Florida, where he isscheduled to take over a motel as of

retirement benefits such as hospitaland medical care for himself andhis wife and children.

SUCH AN INCENTIVE for earlydeparture, which could be applied toth i i l l d

Cleveland TransferTtoHnterestof the community-is,

well served by the Board ofEducation'^ vote to convey theCleveland School property' to thetownship. Vv The reasoning of the majority ofthe board that decision&on propertynot being used for school purposesbe made by those charged withdesignating the use of public landswas fundamentally sound.. The Township Committee, which

will receive the property inexchange for $1, is the body to whichthe Planning Board, which iscommissioned by law to study land

refuses to close off the threeparking entrances on Prin-ceton Road, after many yearsof faithful promises to theJocal residents, we havecompletely'lost our residentialbundle of benefits most home-owners in Cranford -lookforward to.

The Cranford Police andFire « Departments havenotified the College that theycan close off the PrincetonRoad parking lot and gainentry by their current.Springfield and Gallows HillRoad, main arfery entries.The College would . requireemergency crash-gates!

The College Board ofDirectors, and-or Trusteeshave apparently disregardedall their promises to theirneighbors and they haveeliminated the raised bum-pers in the driveways;' stopsigns, etc. It is a veritableraceway. .

The Princeton Roadresidents have to competeagainst College traffic duringcertain peak hours and duringice and snow periods.Springfield Avenue andPrinceton Road are .accident-prone hazard corners. ':.,• Because the College wouldnot police their students andprevent parking along

oad homes, apwas passed

preventing parking 9, a.m. - 9p.m., Monday - Friday onPrinceton and RutgersRoads..

For the, past 19 years,*Rutgers and Princeton Roads'80 homeowners have- beenamong the highest 5 per centassessed homes in Cranford.

Now, with our childrenhome from college, the}r

fnrrhrnminff rnu/nchin m o o t p r n lnn .Wends and our guests cannotrorincoming xownsnip master plan. u t i l i z e o u r $ 2 0 0 0

p+ annual tax

S*|le Of the property to enhance cost homes by parking in fronttemporarily the finances of theBoard of Education would have beenboth short-sighted arid impractical.

in the sky. To say this is theend of a tradition is totallyunacceptable. ,

It is sad the taxes levied onus don't-justify, the allocationfor this very special day. Isympathize with the PoliceDepartment for the trafficjams caused-_by adjoinihg_towns but this, fact of life isnegligible.

Prior to cancellation of thisprogram, ' couldn't ar e p r e s e n t a t i v e havenegotiated a fair allocationfrom • each town normally-represented there, to not onlyraise the funds, but sub-sequently improve the entireaffair? Naturally, we have tolive this year with an un-fortunate situation, however^there is no reason why wecould not start ear]y in 1978 forthe resumption of fireworksdisplays in 1978, through fair.negotiations with the townsi l d T hsolution to this and it is up toour Mayor and representtatives to find it.

Tim Fitzgerald• 122 Bloomingdale Aye.,

tomorrow he should do so withoutleaving behind unnecessary

other municipal employees"under^encumbrances on the taxpayers oflabor contracts with' Chei town as Cranford.

use, reports. The planning body is ofcourse available for consultation t>y Princetonthe school board, and it is significant ordinancethe planners recommended theTownship Committee be givencustody of the school tract. r

The property is a key site in thedevelopment of the central businessarea, and no commitment affectingits future should be made withoutfirst considering its place in the

Police BlotterJune 22 (1:37 a.m.)—Female

-resident reports strangenoises in rear of home.Officer locates raccoondining in area of garbagecans.—Resident reports'.'autrof-

,,.,, state.:• truckina company$mm -stereo system in

ver payment ofJune 23—CUizen reports that

he purchased white CorvetteStingRay but was notified

- by State Police vehicle hadbeen stolen. :(11:59 p.m.)—Residentreports operator of vehiclein front of his house isdisposing of beer bottles in

roadway. Officer requiressubject to pick up emptybottles.

June 24 (1:18 a.m.)—Residentreports wife is violating acivil contract that existsbetween them. Officerreports problem aetUed on

unknown Little League fieldIn the front of her property.

June 26—Female residentstates pizza was delivered toher home that she did notorder. Reports several

. hours later unknown female

pried off manhole! cover andwere ahont tn climb. iiuO f f i c e r o v e r s e e sreplacement of cover- byyouths. ,.—Resident reports unknownsubject drops a smoke bombthrough mail slot of- frontdoor.

June 25—Female reports,locating home base from.

of our homes.When will the Township of

Cranford start doingsomething about the annoyingattitude of the Union CollegeTrustees"and take-definitives-steps to protect the Cranfordtaxpayers and homeowners?

When any part of the bundleof benefits of a homeowner istaken away, especially fromlarge homes with activefamilies, values must be ef-fected by lack of properparking facilities or con-tinuously streaming college

. v e h i c l e s . < ; ".••:••••.. •• • •'.'.' >'•%):••;.'•• • -''. :.•• '• • '..'• •. G h a i r l e s K p & m f e r

SOjPrincetonRd.

To the editor.;The International Women's

year Conference says womenof New Jersey, want abortiqn-on-deman'di i legal izedprostitution,'.lesbianism as alegalized jiife style,1 • andpassage of the equal" rights

' amendment.. •.- •This Conference, held in

Princeton June 18, wascompletely dominated byNOW ladies, -* PlannedParenthood, Right to, Choose,and other pro-abortioji groups,all appointed; to key positionsby the national leaders, (BellaAbzug headsjIWY.)

Anti ERA opinion and pro-life groupl^were arrogantlydenied any participation. Onlyafter repeated. demands*~andonly at the last possiblemoment, did the Conferencemanagers allow the. mosttokeik/epresentation fromthese groups.

I was at the Conference andthe entire affair was a sham.' . . . . . . . „.. , .But its results will now go Municipal Judge Charles J.directly to the national Stevens last week revoked formeeting as what New Jersey 60 days the licenses of threewomen think and want. drunk /drivers and another

ByAHlpirandpa'telBurdttt "'_,

Dr. Edward M. Coe inducted president of Cranford^Rotary

Boardof trustees of Historical Society elects Homer J. Ballchairman of the board:'

•' 10 years13,000 gallon reservoir being installed in Riverside Dr. near

Kensington Ave. to curtail flooding in Riverside Dr. area by-accumulatingjand pumping off excess water.

Summer playground program draws r;2007oungsters-l 660enrolled in Cranford High summer school.

20 years ~Rlans made, for - Johnson, Ave. playground.Mrs. Thomas J. Butler, 428tJasino Ave.; past president of

the V.F/W. Ladies Auxiliary, was elected president of theState Auxiliary. - > •> . , , . ,

Rev, Joseph L. Donnelly, assistant pastor of St., MichaelChurchtbe past 20 years, named pastor of St. Mary Church,

'Jersey City. ' *30 years

Residents protest suspension of Green Flyer bus service.AnbolHoldVgCo. of Linden buys the building on the north-

east corner of Soutband Walnut Aves. from Harold HerzogofPlainfield. Some of the stores involved, are ProgressCleaners, Manzano Shoe Repair Shop, Wolfe Confectionary,Hahn's Bakery, PeterMn'8^Da1ryr^o>«iaLlarber, EliteBeauhr^Salonii Barnett's Liquors, CfoarlierT~Market,Cranford MeatTMarl^and/Peter Pan Qeanerer-- ~ r ~

Les Powell, 39, promoted to sergeant. He has been:with4hepolice deptartment for 6,% years.

4 0 y e a r s '.,.•• ~- ••,

Shaheen sells five homes on Columbia Ave. and Is startingf i v e • m d r £ k . > • • ! • ' > ' • • ' • ' . . ' . • • • • " ' ' "•'. . '-. '

Cranford Trust Co. asks for a permit for a maker of wovenplush to take over the old Mooney Mill west of the Thermannproperty on South Ave. (Approved on July 27, despite petitionAgainst it). • . ,' - • • . - . . " ' " • '

New macadam being put on Orchard St from North Ave.to Brookside PI. .

Dinner at Berlew's at Lawrence Harbor honors PoliceChief Massa qn his 52nd birthday. •• \ '

. - . • > ' . • • • • • ; • : : • • - • • • • : • . • • • > • . • . « o y e a r s ' ' • • .•

Presbyterian Church does not want to sell as much of itscorner property as the town wants. .• •• • , .-•• . • . 7 0 y e a r s ,, ' ' • ' . • • • ,

Richard E. Clement,- formerly supervising principal ofCranford schools, elected Elizabeth's sijpmntendent ofschools at a salary of $2,750.

Township wants a 12-foot strip of Ferguson property onClaremont to widen the street He wants $2,29$ for it,although the assessment on the full property is only $2,700,about $30 per front foot . . . .

t, 80 yearsWill of William D. Bigelow includes Alden Bigelow. and his

children, as well as his own, as benefactors.

Community Calendarof Adjustment meeting at the

Municipal Building.

Wednesday, July IS u^m7:30 p.m. - Bingo at Temple Beth-El.8 p.m. - Swim Pod Utility advisory board meeting at

Community Center.

Thursday. July 147:30 p.m. - Bingo at St. M>chael.

Courtesy Recreation and Parks Department. ,Office hours for pool payments and^card vaUdaUoo .Monday through Friday, 8:30 - 4 p.m. Plctare-Uklng, poolpayments, card vaUdaUon from 7-» p.m. Monday throughFriday,. Tennis reservations may also be made.

Youth Employment Service at the Community Center,276-2233, Monday. Wednesday. Friday, 9:30 a.m. - Ur30a.m".

Poem'Spring

10-year-old Mary AnnCanzano of 23 Wall St. haswon recognition for a poemin the liCricket League"international competitionsponsored by CricketMagazine. Names of thosecited and several of theirstories; poems,, anddrawings are featured In

the •durjri977-issue-of themagazine. Mary Ann is adaughter of Mr. and Mrs.Fred Canzano.

The; monthly writing anddrawing contest is open toyoungsters in age bracketsfrom 5 to 8 and 9 to 12. MaryAnn was 1n the latterbracket.

Her poem follows: -SPRING FEVER

By Mary Ann Caiuano

In Spring the flowers seem to know,It's "Hello Sunshine"''Goodbye Snow."

It's Springtime now, it'jS here at last,Our long, cold winter 'Has finally past. ",.

• • . • • • ( — • . . . - , . ' . . . . . , . • . . • '

When winter once again is here,I will not worryFret or fear.

For now I know It's not to stay,. Just means the coming of

Spring Fever Day!

•V./ • •

Alcohol, Drags BringLicense Revocation

rSdhymous c i t i zenreports large orange ball, ,p o &sib4y~- s m oJtin g. F i i f t w o r K Sdescended in area of ««- X U ^ W U l i v o

WomeirorNew~Jersey-who-disagree that the aboveresolutions represent theirfeelings should denounce thisconference loud and clear andwrite or telephone Senatorsand Congressmen to demandthis Conference be declarednull and void. They shouldthen get active.and.iav.oWed ina group that truly representstheir beliefs.

- '• :\ Mrs. Eileen Masterson408 Locust Ave.

Garwood

3 Arrests FollowParking Squabble

Detoxication Center Planned for AreaUnion County's first "Social "Our center will be a home.

Setting Detoxication Center" literally a place to feel(SSDC) is scheduled to open in c o m f o r t a b l e ' w h i l eElizabeth soon. detoxifying.^ said Mrs.

Mrs. -Teresa McGeary, McGeary. She said presentdirector of the Union County plans call for a center which

charged with driving under Division of the National will accommodate 20 persons.- " - • " " C o u n c i i on Alcholism,-SBid, She said back-up medical

the basic difference between services wilT be availableSSDC and a hospital or through area hospitals and axfihabilitatioju_center for trained staff of men and

if uTnof arwonreirwiB be on duty at alltimes. The center is expectedto help, 1,700 people annually.

_ . _the influence of drugs.,

The four were also fined $200and $15 costs. Pleading guiltytodk drii Edward^driinkjirJyj^wereB „ ,,,,,r,.,^.H^_F. Modrzecki, 22, of 400 Elms alcoholics is thaiSt., Cranford, _who__was medical facility.

MreCattsJune 13,6:04 p.m., North Union Ave., oven fire.June M, ll:54 a.m., Cranford High School, false alarm.

ii:00i-p.m.,LenhbmeDr,, autoi fire. < >: JuneI$T2T2B •ftm^Balmlere-Parfcwayrfootbridge fire.

m., Orange Ave., smoke in house,lune 17, 4:48 p.m., Birchwood Ave., leaf fire. . '• •

June 18,"2:15 p.m., North Ave. E., railroad ties fire.. 5:55 p.m., North Ave., railroad ties fire. —"'•.• 9*7 p.m., Mansion Ter., chemical odor.' " ^.—10; 1.1,p.m.. Manor Ave., house fire.June 19, 1:23 a.m.. Riverside Dr., footbridge fire. r "

1:49 a.m., Riverside 'Dr.,, smoke scare.. 6:07 p.m., South Ave. E., railroad ties.

8:25 p.m., ParkTer., railroad ties.June 20,3:10 p.m .North Ave. E., truck fire. „•

4:00 p.m.,Railroad AVe., railroad ties fire,6:32 p.m., Munsee Dr., brush fire.

June 21, 1:49 p.m., Oneida PL, bomb scare.. 3i?8 p.m., Horth Ave. E., railroad ties fire.

5:02>.rn., North Ave., E., grass fire.10:35 p.m., Myrtle St., false alarm.

June 22, 12:30 a.m., Eastmap St., garbage fire.3:20 p.m., Garden State Pkwy., brush fire.

June 23, U:36 a.m., Franklin Ave., smoking toaster.2:47 p.m.. Park St., railroad ties. ..5:22 p.m., North Ave. E., railroad ties,

June 24, U: 15.aim"., Raritan Rd., gasoline spill.5:16 p.m.. High St., brush fire.

June 26.i2-.071 aTm., Maple PI., gas leak.2:45 p.m., Stoughton Ave., wires burning.5:35 p.m.. South Ave., railroad ties fire.

. June 27, 9:15 a.m., Elmora Ave. dryer problem;2:14 p.m., North Ave. E^_debris fire.

, 4:40 p.m.. Park Dr., paper fire.June 29 3:08 p.m., Hillside Ave., grass fire.

4:25 p.m., North Union Ave., garage fire..June 30 12:34 a.m., Springfield Ave., electrical short.

5:11. p.m., Lexington Ave., auto fire.6:27 p.m., Union College, system malfunction.

July 1. U: 33 p.m.. Riverside Dr., odor of smoke.July 2, 3:25 p.m., Bloomingdale Ave., shed fire.

7:12 p.m., Jackson Dr., grass fire. •

(Die (flrnnfbrb (Citiscn uniUOiromclcDiane S. TuckerJoseph G. RushHoualle GrossHudson F. MeyerBruce Baltln : -Debra BentleyEloise V. WailJoan P. Ma loney

Executive EditorManaging EditorNews EditorDirector of AdvertisingHrtall Advertising(lassided AdvertisingBusiness ManagerProduction Manager

The Crantord Citizen and Chronicle is published everyThursday by Straus Communications in New Jersey Inc.,a corporation at 21-23 Alden Street, Cranford, N.J. 07016'

Member Audit Bureau ol Circulation. New Jersey ^ressAssociation. Cranford Chamber of Commerce.

Subscription rates by mail postpaid one year, withinUnion County, $7.50; in N.J.. $8.00; elsewhere in U.S.,'$11.50; overseas, $16.00. >,

All material Copyrighted 1976 by Straus Com-rotinications in New Jersey, lnc Official newspaper forCranlord Kenilworth and Garwo<xi. Second ClassPostage: Paid at Cranford, New Jersey. 07U16. Tel. (201)276-6000. . ' ^

rail-road overpass.'

June 27—Female residentreports a very sweet odorin the air. Officer statessource may be flowers in thehouse. ' *\—Male Resident reportsphone call from unknownmale caller stating' callerwants to be resident's"slave fora day.1'

:June 28—Resident repbrtslarceny of rabbit from cagein backyard. Officer locatesrabbit' in driveway^ofneighbor.

June 29—Female residentsreports youths. setting uptennis court in street near.home. Officer advisedyouths to take game else-where.

June 30 (3:43 a.m..)—Residentreports he parked vehicle onlocal street but cannotlocate it after visit. Officefinds car a distance downthe street.

July 1—Newspaper reports,employes, slipping^ andsliding into office due to aspill at rear door. Officerstates employe of nearbyrestaurant missed dumpster

, with pot of grease.July 2 {\l p.m.)—Resident

reports group of unknownpersons banging on- doorsand windows of residence.Officer states group iscomposed of friendsattempting to make socialcall.

July 4—Resident statesunknown person threw afirecracker inside a beer

j« bottle on, front seat of,vehicl&r causing explosionthat scorched front seat andcracked windshield. v

July 5—Female office workerreports receiving stuttering

' obscene phone call.

(Reports of more seriouspolice Investigationsappear in general newscolumns.)

VOl.l'NTF.ERS SOl'GHTThe Monday Night Teenage

and YounK Adult Club isseeking volunteer counselorsnnd aides. A recreation andsocialization program forhandicapped teenagers andyoung adults, the club issponsored by the UnionCounty I'nit of the New JerseyAssociation For RetardedCitizens. Meetings are atNe lhorwood Refo rmedChurch, IMainfielrt

Yolunloers should be atIt-asl 1H and. have a car. TovohlnUvr call Kloise Haj.jar;

•To the editor:Whatever happened to

traditions of Cranford?Rather than viewing

To the editor.:the Thank you for your story

about the 1WY .Conference atthe.-OPHnceton. In these times

Cranford fireworks, which 1,have thoroughly enjoyed withmy friends and ^fellowCranfordians for many years,I ani writing this letter ofextreme dismay.

Why is it that this traditionenjoyed by so many at such aminimal cost (I understand itcosts less-than $2,500 lastyear) has~tt> be discontinuedfor the sake of'''economy."

There are so few events thatbring so jnany citizenstogether at one time for a goodwholesome recrea t iona loutlet. It is a shame that thistype of activity has to beeliminated. I am certain that,our town fathers (and mother)can come up with a more ;

reasonable solution to solveour "financial woes" nextyear.

Jeffrey Anclien100 Herning Avenue"

when the reactionaries aregetting so much news spaceand TV time it was a thrill forme to see so many informedwomen from all walks of lifeso together on these vitalwomen's issues. ;

As one of several thousandWomen attending I washeartened thatso many sharethe deep' concerns affecting

o u r lives. We. voted over-whelmingly r ! i to "••"• passresolutions urging immediateratification of tho- ERA;reaffirming our- right tochoose, andrecognition of life styles otherthan that of the'tfaditiona)nuclear fumily. '

' Susan Powell2&Craig Place

A man and two lyoungwomen were arrested on thefront lawn of iHeathermeadePI. Monday night after whatpolice described as analtercation over the parking ofa car partially on the lawn atthat address. There issidewalk.

John Colello, 24, of 28"Munsee Dr., was charged, bySgt. George Kane with hin-dering an officer in the per-formance of his duty- andcreating a disturbance whileunder the influence of liquor.

Linda Dorn, 20, of 7Cherokee Dr., was charged byMrs. Joan Schlapak of 1Heathermeade PI. withassault and battery, and bySgt. Kane with hindering him

J in performing his duty andcreating a disturbance while

arrested In North Ave. March11 at 2:10 a.m: by PatrolmanLinn Lock wood; HectorGonzales, 29, of 759 JacksonAve., Elizabeth, arrested inCentennial Ave. June 4 at 2:24a.m. by Patrolman DavidCochrane, and. Robert

_. Maeguaard; 49, 45 HuBsa St.,no Linden, arrested at Centennial

and Raritan Aves. March 17 at1:55 a.m. by PatrolmanJerome Andrews.

Franklin Kelly Jr., 22,of 601Harrison Ave., Harrison, whowas arrested June 10 at 7; 15p.m. by Trooper McGranahanfollowing an accident on theGarden Statepleaded guiltyunder the influence of drugs"

Mrs. Ellen Layfield, 25, of308 North Ave., Garwood,pleaded guilty to charges ofdriving while on the revokedlist, driving an Unregistered

d f h i l d d i i

A funeral mass for KenjiethC. Paprocki, 24, of Trenton,formerly of Cranford, istomorrow at St. John theApostle Church, Clark-Linden,at 10 a.m.,1 with interment inSt. Gertrude's Cemetery,Colonia.

Mr. Paprocki died Mondayin Mercer. Medical Centerafter apparent food poisoning.' Born in Bayonne, he livedmost of his life in Cranfordbefore moving to Trenton in1970. A 1970 graduate of

Parkway, Cranford High School and ato driving 1976 graduate of Trenton State

College, haouas .an industrialarts teacher at Delhas HighSchool, Bristol Township, Pa.He was a communicant of St.John the Apostle Church.-

Surviving are his parents,

TOWNSHl fOF CRANFORDNEW JERSEY

ADVeRTISEMENTNOTICETO

B l ° RESURFACING OF VARIOUSSTREETSWITHINTHE

TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORDwn

StnlMt blcte will b« r««ly«d by «>»Township Cltrk on Wly M, W77 In th.CommlttM Room In Iht MunicipalBuilding, 8 Sprlnglluld Avenue,Cranford, N.J. at - \0:M A.M.

Bid Iprmt and SpwHIcallom may b«obtained »• t t » office of th« TowmhlpEngineer durlrjgr' «ny business *»ibetween llw hours of 8:30 AM. and 4:00P AA

The pue(&»o of receiving bids Is tocontract for the resurfacing of variousstreets within the Township of Cranfordas more particularly described withinthe Specifications. ,

The ma|or ltem« Involved are «i

No.I

under the influence of liquor, and unsafe-vehicleanddiiving -.Charles W, Eaprockj and Mrs. nDamn-Ann Cranley, 18, of 23Adams Ave. was charged byKane ..wjth. hindering an of-ficer in the performance of MS

without her license in herpossession. She was fined atotal- of $245. Mrs. Layfield^as frrwtedJune^ll at2:80

y a.m. in South Ave. E. by Lock-Mrs. Schlapak is the wife o f *«>«*• .„*=,-;-• ••'. ^ ,-. -,

"callinT for^Detective Sgt. Stephen b,Joh,n G. Rime, 22, of_64lyycalling .lor S c h ] k The • charges are St.. Clark^who was> arrested

scheduled for hearing July 19 e c : , 2 ° . lg»'1«.t "i,1.5 P m - in

before Municipal Judge ftt M h ThCharles J. Stevens.

Thanks, Squad Holiday

Raritan Rd. by Thermann,was found guilty of drivingwhile his license wassuspended and fined $200 and$15.

Mary Fabian Paprocki ofCranford: a brother, Gary, athome; 'his paternal" grand-mother, Mrs. JosephineGrzczak of Bayonne, and hismaternal grandparents, Johnand Anna Fabian of Colonia.

P.

3,000 Ton*

JpO.Tons ,

*JE«.

To the editor:The article regarding the

discontinuation of the Fourthof July fireworks displaybecause of lack of funding leftme shocked.

As the father of a youngdaughter who hps beenpatiently waiting for this.special day, it disturbs me notto be able to share in her

. enthusiam and see the ah onher face as fireworks explode

To the editor:This is the lime of yearthe

Cra.nford: First Aid Squadmakes its bid lor donations. Tothose of you who have neededthem and thoae of you whohaven't (but never know whenyou might) dig deep into yourpockets and give: I have had tocall them four times this pastmonth and they came at anyhour uncomplainingly. 1 cannever thank ththn enough norpraise them enough,

Carol M'. Halligan:il6Manor Ave.

\x

Continued from Page 1

and Honest Sport" and "What*is the closest hospital todowntown Cranford?" (The >Good-Fairy Doll Hospital)was Won by Bruce Hogan andHarry Coe with a low pointscore of 51. Second were DickStafford and his daughter with69. Third place went toJeannine and Joe' Rowe, 73.points. ' ,'. •

Other major weekendevents included foot and bikeraces for both men and womenat. Memorial Fjeld onSaturday. Details appear onSports Page.

Roadswhich isproxitnately

doneone-quarter

A funeral mass for ProkopSodomora, 85, of 232 NorthAve. W. is tomorrow at 9:30a.m. at St. Vladimir's Church,

. Elizabeth. Interment is in St.• Ger t rude ' s Cemetery,

Colonia.- Mr. Sodomora diedTuesday in Memorial General

• . i „ Hospital, Union, after a

Description. 6u»ntltVflllumlnooiConcrete, turfacecourse (Mix No. 5, . •FA B O In place Atdirected.Bituminous.Concrete. levelingcourse (Mix No. 5ABC) in place as

. • directed.. Ill R e i e t Mannole

Heads IruClau "O"• . Concrete.All bids shall be written on the forms

furnished'and shall be submitted In asealed envelope clearly' marked"Proposal For The Resurfacing ofVarious Streets Within the Township ol—Cranlord • 1977." All bids shall beaccompanied by a certified check In theamount of 10 per cent of the total bid or. abid bond In the full amount of the totalbid.' Bidders shall be prepared to enter Intoan agreement or contract with theTownship Immediately upon award bythe Township'Committee.

-Bidders are required to comply with,the requirements of P.L.t?75, c. 137.

The Township of Cranlord herebyreserves the eight to relect $ny or oilbids and to award the contract to any

Marks AnniversGARWOOD-- Mr. and Mrs.

Bertram J. Berfolamy of 415Union St:, celebrated theirgulden wedding anniversaryat a garden party at theirhom«i.ott July 2. One hundredanoVte/i guests-attended thesit-down dinner.

of Born in the Ukraine, Mr.best serves Its Interest.

65 years ago, living inDatod: July 7, 1977Foo: $)5.4O

Wesley N.PhlloTownship Clark

stone which eventuallv works c o m l n 8 l o Cranford 21 yearsitself C o the tar and S aB°- H e W0!* a P«I»fitter.at theThe lattM- svstem ?s used in B a v w a y ^finery for 32. years^ m m u S i e ' s 7eSiriUn8gd;io before retiring in 1957. He wasresurface within their budgets a member of 4he company s.a broader area of streets Q u a r t e r Century Club dnd was

V A HOSPITAL '

There were no local streetsresurfaced in 1976 because thetown went $40,000 in debt theprevious year by coveringwith asphalt overlay streetswhich had been sealcoated butwhich were the object' ofcomplaints by residentsbecause of the tar and crushedstone.

a -communicant of St.Vladimir's Church and was afounding member of its HolyName Society•„• _',_ •

Surviving are his widow,Mrs. Barbara Sodomora; twosons/ Walter of Westfield andJohn M. of Cranford, and,sixgrandchildren.

Other, obituaries P. 8

NOTICE OF HEARING.PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that on

Wednesday, July }0, 1977, at 8 o'clockp.m. at . the Municipal Building- «Springfield Avenue. Township olCranford, the undersigned will apply <°the Planning Board of th* Township ofCranford for variance approval andsubdivision approval with respect lo theproperty known as Lots 1 and -A.-. Block344, also known as JO PltisfleW Street.Into one non-conforming lot (les» thanrequired minimum lot area and less thanrequired frontage) and one conformlnolot. . .

Dr. and Mrs. Frank W.Krawe30 Plttstleld Street

Cranlord, New JerseyDated: July 7, 1977Fee: 14.BO -

A BIG LIFT — Albert Bartocci of Cranford, left, state commander of Veterans ofForeign Wars, stands on self-storing hydraulic lift which "will put crippled patients atLyons Veterans' Hospital, Morris Plains, aboard new bus for trips they could not-otherwise take. At right is John Koplk of Rahway, chairman of the state VFW projectthat acquired the vehicle, which was presented as a gift tq-hqspltal at rece+it VFWconvention in. Atlantic City. Cranford Post335contributed $),000 to$23,000 vehicle.

You can't know what's up in Cranford, Kenilworth pr Garwood without

Wt\t (ftrattfarfc fflifem nnh (Ebromde ••276-600021 Alden Street, Cranford

Please bill me

Name

Address

Please start .mailing.The Cranford Citizen and Chronicleto my home each week

Enclosed is a check for $7.50 per year\*6.50 for college students and senior citizens! CDADTC

i J f e ? SOCIAL. ^ J v r * KOUNDOP

ENTERTAINMENTV

{:<"-•

were active members of theGarwood Republican Club formany years. -; •'"••

Beside Mrs. Marshall, Mr.and Mrs. Bertolamy have fourother grandchildren and twogreat grandchildren.

Patricia Rose Manning,daughter of Mrs. MartinManning of 1Q Fiske Ten., andRobert William Klempa. son -of Mr. and Mrs. RudolphKlempa of .500 .Riverside Dr.,announced their engagementrecently. • . .

The bride-to-be is agraduate of Mother Sefon

son-in-law Regional High Schools andthe Ber- attended- Newark State

College.- Her fiance is agraduate >o( St. John'sUniversity and hasa masters'degree in rehabilitationcounseling from Sefon HallgUniversity. The weddingplanned for June^ 1978.

f^?vbsftPhf,n -^br?u pautorr M a n i i i n g - K l e m p a

of St. Pauls United Church of ° r

' Christ, renewed their wedding T n \ ^ e d i nvows and officiated at the -. wedding of their grand-

daughter, Miss Loni-AnneWaniak, daughter of Mr. and<Mrsr William Waniak of

i Edison to William.Marshall,son of Mr. and Mrs: JohnMarshall of Edjson.

The event was hosted by theWaniaks and Mr. and Mrs.Frank Festa Sr. of PacificPalisades, Calif.,and daughter oftojamys'

.__-JMr» and Mrs, Bertolamy,,the former Miss Elaine Boydof Brooklyn, N.Y., weremarried July 2, 1927 in tneLittle Church Around theCorner, New York City; Theymoved to Garwood from

. Selden, L.I., N.Y; irt 1939, after\\e became affiliated with theengineering department of theGarwood Branch of theAluminuim • Co. of America.

In 1944, Mr. Bertolamy. started the B-Y Inc., of

Cranford and later of Gar-. wood, and was president of the

-firm until he sold it last year.Mr. Berlolamy i s also

president of Byco Designers,Inc. and Byco Realty Co.tworking from. his home. Hecurrently is with Signal-SlatCo., Union. . ' . •

A graduate of Cooper Union,N.Y., where he majored inarchitecture, Mr. Bertolamyis a past president of theGarwood Board of Educationand the . Regional Schools,District 1, Board of Education.. Mr. Bertolamy is a memberand past president of theGarwood Lions Club, and hashad a perfect attendancerecord for 35 years.. He wasDistrtict Governor for 16E andis now an internationalcounsellor and public

- relations chairman forDistrict 16E. He is a 32 degreeMason and is ,a member ofSalaani-Iemple._Newark.

Mrs. Bertolamy is a formerpresident of- the. GarwoodPTA.

Mr. and Mrs. Bertolamy

TowiieJVfohus Wedding Heldreception

Mr. and Mrs. RicHard William Browne

Richard Browne Weds. The wedding of Richard ' HS^nKTl.!r!.i'

l"!?!f>n«?^!!Jl5'William. Browne, son of Mr. "* " ~~ "

is

Manning, Klempa

Moore of Berkeley Heightshas been performed alWestminster PresbyterianChurch, Berkeley Heights.The ceremony, at which Rev.Robert B. Sheldon officiated;was fpllowed by a reception atthe Mountainside Inn.

Debbie Moore was hersister 's maid of honor'.Bridesmaids were Sue Reichof Bethlehem, Pa. , JoanTaggart of Philadelphia, arjdPat Morawsky of SeasideHeights.

The'groom's best man washis brother. John Browne.Ushers were Frank Amodeo ofNorth Brunswick, Alan Bloomof. Teaneck, and WilliamHuneke of White Plains, N.Y.

The groom graduated fromCranford High School,Rutgers University, andRutgers Graduate School ofBusiness. He is . a__jenip_r.financial analyst at Warner-Lambert, Morris Plains. Hiswife graduated from

Dickinson University.The couple is living in

Chatham Township after atrip to

Jeffrey Glenn Towne.. son of""K and RlrsrnohdldToune of ~

Cranford. ' married JeanMobus at -th«> 'C9mmunityI'nited Methodist Church ofRoselle Park on June 25.

The Rev. Albert Beemerofficiated at the'.ceremony,which wafe followed by a

Senior CitizensAttend Concert

The Cranford Senior CitizenClub attended the JoeFranklin Concert at theGarden State Art Center onJune 30. .. ,

Hal Leroy; Dolly Dawn, andJimmy Roma seemed,to bethe most popular of the manyperformers who performed awide range of acts from tapdancing to playing thetrombone, Patrick Joyceclosed the show" by playing"Senior Citizens We Are SoProud Of You."

The club's next trip will beto Seaside Heights on July 21at"10:30: a.m: —

luncheon reception inFollow. shipIlaUatLhsrhiirch^

Mr. George Mobus of .SanDiego and formerly ofPlainfield. escorted hisdaughter to the altar. Honorattendants were Mrs. Ka'thyMobus of- Mahwah. sister-in-law of the bridf. and RogerTowne of Havre, Mont.',brother of the groom.

Mrs. Towne is a graduate, ofMiddlesex County College andis a registered nurse at LyonsV.A. Hospital. Mr. Towne is agraduate of Cranford HighSchool and Union CountyTechnical School. He is alicensed practicing nurse, alsoat Lyons.'. The fouple will live • inRoselle Park. " '

July 7,1977 CRANFORD (N. J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Page 5

Miss Foeltler Sets May Wedding Dateand Mr. and Mrs.Janice Klizabeth Poeltler of Tanzer

engagement to WilliamStephen Hini|H>le. also ofClark. The wedding is plannedlor May.

Each attended Arthur L.Johnson Hei'ioh.'il Hich Schoolin Clark. The bride graduatedfrom Montclair State Collegeand the groom is attendingKean College. Miss Poeltler isIIK-piece of Mr. and Mrs. John

Cranford.SON TO PAI.MIERI8

A son. Jon Edw»rdPalmieri. was bom to Mr. andMrs. Frank Palmieri of 15Tuxedo PI. on June 19 atElizabeth General Hospital.Jon weighed veight pounds,nine ounces at. birth and hasthree siblings, Marc, 6, andScott and Sharinorirboth 3 -

Janice Paeltler

CORRECTIONLast week the Chronicle ' Kaplan's

mistakenly-referred toRobert Marc Kaplan by thename of Barnett in aheadline on the social page.The article reported Mr.

marriage toHeather Gay Sowald ofOhio. He is the son of Mr!Leonard S. Kaplan ofAtlanta and Mrs. PhilipBarnett of Cranford.

Phot'oggiphy Remembers...The days you can't forget

Fine PortraitPhotogr/aphy by

BERGEN STUDIO24 Eastman Sireet -174-lOM

across Irom the Cranford M6vie Theater

Crissey PartyHonors Deanes

Detective Sergeant andMrs. -Michael Deane werehonored by 60 guests at areception held at the residenceof Mr. arid Mrs. WilliainCrissey dn July 4. SergeantDeane has filed for deferredretirement after 16 yearsservice wjtn theCranfordPolice Department. , TheDeane family departedyesterday for Ormond Beach,Florida, where they willoperate the Oceanic Motel.

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Page 4: JEEM-...... • »••. • I -. • '-I. • . .„ -,-• •.»•*•.-.. CITIZEN AND CHRONIC! £ Thursday. Juno SO. 1977

" •- , y • .•'•• " I

~Pagefi eRANPORD^tha^eiTIZEN ANDieHRONICLE Thursday, July-7.l972_i_

Cobras % in 2nd PlaceAfter Splitting PairThe Cranford Cobras beat

Clark June 27 and moved intoSummit on Saturday. The,Cobras record is hbw'B-5.

Cranford 2 --Clark 0. • ,.._.__.The victory featured a

s t r o n g a 11 - a r o u riTdperformance by Joe Gachko.By. shutting-out Clark 2 - 0Gachko picked-up his secondstraight shutout He has stillnot yielded an earned run this.season. He employed anextremely effective slider andspotless control in hurling this

'gem. He scattered six singlesand struck out eight.

Gachko also accounted forboth of the Cobra run?' bydoubling in Greg Hartnett,

R M ECranford . 030 000 0 - 2 5 3Clark 000 000 0 - 0 6 1

• Gochkojnd Khourl; Jasmarx and f.artta• WGachko (2 1); L J « m m <33) 2B:"Cran • Gachko / > •

TownWomen'sSoftball Loop

IRK"X-NeufeldB• R.K. Investigators defeated

Neufeld Trucking 7-6 in extrainnings. Leading hitters forR.K. were Joan Schlapak.home run; Rosemary Conti, 4hits; and Linda Mack, 3 hits.

: Rosemary.Contj drove in AliceHenrick with the winning runwith two outs in-the bottom ofthe 8th, Cookie Kane and PatlyicGrath shared pitchinghonors for R.K.

Leading hitters for NeufeldTrucking were Pam Baldwin,De Drozdowski, and Ann Hart.Some fine* fielding play's were

'NTanhardt division of thelntracounty Baseball League.However, they dropped backinto second place when theylost to divisional co-leader

Ponies Halt *Westfield9In Twin Bill

The Cranford "C" Pony All-Stars defeated WestfieldNational in a double header 16-l and 2-0.

Iti the first contest, Cranfordbroke open a scoreless game.scoring eight runs in thefourth inning on five Hits then'scored three more in the fifth

'"inning .and five .in' the sixth• inning. Hitting for Cranfordwere Larry Watson, two hits.live KBI: torn Lies, Iwo hits;and otic,; each by Bob Matyas..Kd Scott, Mike Prussack, JimMcNamara and PhilMcfJwern.-Gary Lenhoff gotI he. win. allowing only fivfhits.

In the second game DaveOldham allowed only two hits:

in pitching the shutout. Hittingfor Cranford were Tom Lies

' and Steve Lissner, two each:Dave Daniels, two and twoRBI; and Jim McNamara.the Cranford infield playedoutstanding ball behindOldham. Cranford's record is5 - 1 . . • . ' ' . • • . • ' •

Cranford meets trvington ina-double header' Sunday alhome at 1 p.m.

Cancillieri to Enter Rhode Island Univ.KENILAYORTH - Steve

Cancillieri who just completeda brilliant high school careerat David Brearley Regional'will enter the University ofRhode Island in the fall.

then scoring on BrianBradford's RBI single. GregHartnett had his third straightgame with twoTuls.

Summit 5 - Cranford 2Cranford met .Summit

Saturday to determine which^would sit at the top of theManhardt Division. Summitwon 5-2, and the Cobras wereback1 in second .place. BobColterell held,the Cobras tothree hitS/as he defeatedCfanford for the second limethis season.-Jim Carsey took the lo£s,but it was a well-pitched gameby both hurlers. Only one ofthe seven runs scored wasearned as the teams combinedfor live errors. • •-. .

The Cobras will visit ScotchPlains Saturday at 10 a.m. atScotch Plains High School. OnMonday, Cranford will hostNew Providence at MemorialField' at 6 p.m. and onWednesday, July 13 will visitClark, at Johnson RegionalHigh at 6 p.m.Cranford . 000 000 2 - 2 3 4Summit' / 22) 000 0 • 5 7 1Carsey and McNamara; B. Colterell andSerenoW- B.-Corterell (4-0)J L- Carsey (4-3) 3B:C-"Khourl; S' Lelsher. . ' , „ • ,

mgim^.r~

"T"* ; ' , " " .* ' / ; ~" " ; ' ; • ' - 1 ; . -^^-

Collegians' News

W7Z ":":v""NationalThe National iteague1,: All-Stars

defeated the American League All Stars87 I bttl t od itching and home

Mike Prusmk, who also tp<*;tli» l«» on -W e . r n o t f n d . -. •:•••.'••••• ' , , " • . r - : ' . ; .*•'

: ; , .• ' . ' S i a l i i - B l u t M .-•'• .•• - - ';V The Seal.rwtliiMecl tho Blvei <r4'ln anivinnlno oa»P?:decked by" M«r*,

"Attanatl's baiel-lodtiect single., The ., Blues had a.4-2 lead going Into the, top ofthe 7th Inning, when the Sealt scored 2run« ,to tie the game, ;The U»rrte8-7 In a battle of good pitching andhotoe . . . . . . . . .

-HVhlttinB. :: . »" . ' hremalhedvtlediOntllthe top ol »he Uth"The Americans lumped on top In.the Inning when n»e§e»l» scored 2fun«. Phil

lstlnnlnoonaslnglebyChrlsObreanda McGovern got the win In f ellel ti r v f home run by Sieve Dlbello. ',.",

Jhe Nationals tletf It In the bottom'ofth»iJn(i ?n a double' by Ray Grau and ahome run by Drew Scott; They addefl.2•mbftin the 3rd on a home run by (AWeCollnerl and a double by Dorrln Owens.• In a Seesaw battle,,the Americans

Swent ahead 5 -4* i a-3run home run by• Gregg Wlieatley In the top i t the 5th, a nd>Hhe Nationals took the lead |n the bottom

of the jth on a single by John Gasper, and .Mitchell, and Bob Loguldlce. "a home'run by John Pawowlti. They ",.• Ramtovtr tntBeaver iadded 2 more In the 7th on singles by ' '<>;<• •_ . Sealst-B«m»C

_. ,.... . rtT^cGovern got the win In f diet of GlenhSkoog for the Seals-. Bob Uoguldlce tookthe loss In rellef.'bf Augle Setnple,; '. Hitting for th,e Seals, wore Walt

Pawowltz; Glenn ' Skoog, and "John .Colendenskl, 2 each, and l each by BobMatyas, Phil McGovern, Roy Buntingarid Mark Attanasl. Hitting for the Blueswere Tony' Walker, Aujjle Somple andTodd Marcus, 2 each. andM each byTerry Bradford, Steve Grleco. Mark-

SEEIN&STAR^Winnersof the first annual SuperStars competition are, standing;, from left, Bridget Broderick, Torn Walsh, Rich Orsini, Mike Agostlho, Bruce:

Hogan, Joyce Van Brunt; kneeling, -Mary "Beth"i Hbgan; Rofler .Helwig; and SueRutmayer.

Town Has 5*Super

Steveathletethree Mountain

is the school's firstto- participate on

Valley

ECHO LAKE GOLFWinners of the Alibi

Tournament held by the EchoLake Wednesday ladies golfgroup June 29 were:

Nine holes, Class A and B -Mrs. John Starr, first, 25;Mrs. William C. Conoyer,

turne&anLh^. Nancy: Trouts._^second. 26; _MrAnn Hart took the loss for Kepping, third,Neufeld Trucking. Donald Shepherd,

17; ClassHaddock,

Conference championshipteams; in baseball as asophomore, in basketball, asa junior; and this past fall infootball. Steve also wascaptain of all three sports thisyear, and made first team all-M.V.C. selection in football

27; Mrs.lovy putts,

C - Mrs; Harold20; Mrs. H.F.

Tbmfohrole III, 22; Mrs.

The first annual SuperStarscompetition ended Saturdayafternoon with the completionof the 440-yard dash. Winningthe men's 18-and-under agegroup was Roger Helwig witha.Jotal point score of 115.Winning the.19.to 35 age groupwas Mike Agostino with 94points. Second place, went toBruce Hogan With 93 points.

Agostino won by one pointwith a strong first, place finishin the 440-yard run. Thirdplace.went to Joe Rowe with 77points. Placing first in themen's 36"and over, group wasThomas Walsh with a totalpoint score of 1Q2. RichardOrsini placed second with 100total points and Bob Knissplaced third with 89 points.

Mary Beth Hogan placedfirst with 110 in the women's18-and-under age group.' Sue

ulmayer was' a" close" secondwith 195 points. Joyce VanBrunt, with U5 points, won thewomen's 19 and over agegroup, and Bridgit Broderick

Rutmayer,"" 33.2; 2nd,- MaryBeth Hdgan, $7.4; men 19 to 35,1st, Tom Cermak, 26.9; 2nd,Brian' Jenkins, 30.8; 3rd,Bruce Hogan, 31 !5; women 19and over, 1st, Joyce VanBrunt,. 40.7; 2nd, BridgetBroderick, 44.6; men 36 andover, 1st, Tom Walsh, 31.5;2nd, Rich Orsini, 35.3; and 3rd,Bob Kniss,"52j2.

Foul Shooting: 18 and under,men, 1st, Jim White, 6 out of10; 18 and under womejf, 1st,Mary Beth Hogan, 4,out of 10;

1st, Rich Orsini, 32.3; 2nd;

Kniss, 47.5.Golf: 19:to 35 men, 1st, Tom

Cermak, 30'9"; 2nd, BruceHo'gan, 34'4'2"; 3rd, JoeRoWe, 69'8"; , 19 and overwomen. 1st, Joyce Van Brunt35J8"; 36 and over men, 1st,Toni Walsh, 71*-.".

Bike race of half mile: 18and under men,. 1st, RogerHelwig, 1:26.8; 18 and underwomeiv 1st, Mary BethHogan, 1:33.2; 2nd SueRutmayer, 1:43.0; 19r35-men,

1.9 to 35 men, 1st, Joe Rowe, 6 1st. Bruce Hogan; 1:21.0; 2nd,out of 10;. 2nd, Brian Jenkins, 3~ Mike Agostino, 1:22.8; 3rd,

• - • • • • • Joe R9W.C 1:26.0; 19 and overwomen, 1st' Joyce Van Brunt,- " ^ 2nd, BridgetBroderick, 1:55.9; 36 and overmen, lst, Tom Walsh, 1:29.6;2nd, Rich Orsini, 1:38.6; 3rd,Bob Kniss, 1:46.8. . .

under men,-lst,Roger-Helwigr_. 440-yard run: 18 and under62.9; 18 and under women, lst, men. 1st, Roger Helwig, 18Mary Beth Hogan, 72.; 2nd, » n d under women, 1st, MarySue Rutmayer, 95.7; 19 to 35 Beth-Hogan; 19 to 35 men, 1st,

u o 0;2hd, Bri is,out of 10; 19 and over women,1st, Joyce Van Brunt, 3 out of ,10; 36 and over, men; 1st, Bob U48.8",.Kniss, 6 out of 10;' 2nd,Richard Orsini, 5 out of 10-3rd, Tom Walsh, 4 out of 10.

Obstacle Course: 18 and

Kevin Sorger and Matt Oie'mko.; The Americans closed out the scoring

In the top ot the 9th on Gregg Wheat ley's"2nd home run of the.game. a 2-run shot..After-a single by Bobby Brunv put thetying run on base.Mike Collnerl got thef i n a l o u t . ' ' :••".•• ' ' . . " . • • • .

Pitching for the American' Leaguewere Chris Oble, Steve Olbella and OaveMcGean; lor the National Leagye^ndyActon, Bob Vetter, Darrlh Owens andMike Collnerl. .

Also hitting tor t^e,Americans wereGlenn Breuer, John Poultney, Jack-Er.beckr an4">'*"-Manhardt; ..for_the'__Nationals; Chris Espoilto and MarcoLalaguna. • ' " .

Pony LeaguePlayoffs

Bears*-Oriels 2Mike Elmlger of the Bears pitched a 4-

hitter to hold the Chiefs to J runs. Hitting •for the Bears were.Tom Lies, home run,,1 singles; Jim Styczynskl. double. 3singles; Dan. Miller; Joe Scottl; Mike .Elmlger; Ray Stlne; Jony DelleDonne,triple; and Mike NestoK, double.Collecting the 4 hits for the Chiefs wereRich Wallace, double, Len Korn, J and

Ball TournamentsKeep Stars Busy.

The American Leagtfe all-stars are playing in theRoselle Park tournament July5 through 28.

A team of American Leagueand National League stars will

, the 'Seals .defeated' the Rams 10behlhd the 3 hit ' pitching of PhilMcGovern. JInrMcGean was the lour,also allowing 3 hits. The Seals scored theonly run In the top of the 5th Inning on adouble by John Colendenskl. a single by

. Mark Attanasl, and an Infield grounderby Sean Smith. Also hitting for the Sealswas Bob Matyas. Hitting for the Ramswere Jeff Ancleln, Greg Kalescky, andJim McGean. Both teams playedexcellent defensive ball behind theirpitchers. ':. , . . • • •

. . Chltl»»Se»Ul-<The.Chlefs, .with -Uoss iD.ttjejUa.Yolls,trimmed the Seals 9-3 to go to the finalsagainst undefeated Bears. Len Korn gotthe win for the' Cfllefs In relief of Jon

' Banks, Mark Attanasl took the loss forthe. Seals with relief from WaltPawowltz. Hitting for the Chiefs wereMike Prussak, A; Jon Banks, 2; Todd'Stltt,2; Rich Wallace, Pete Alvarez, andJohn wornelsdorf.' Hitting for the Seals

.'were Bob Matyas, Glenn Skoog:,.MarkAttanasl, Roy Bunting, Sean Smith, andJim Marclno. The outstanding defensiveplayers for the Chiefs were Todd Stltt at3rd base and BUI Accardl In left field.Defensively for' the Seal*, PhDMcGoerrn flayed a great game In centerfield and threw home to catch a runnerat the plate. , ,

.,:; SHEEHAN SHINESJim Sheehan ' of Cranford

recently compiled an out-standing year'as the startingsecond baseman -for theBiscayne College Bobcats inMiami, Fla, Sheehan led theteam in batting with a~.321ayerage, hitting three triplesand five doubles.. '

He made only six errors irid

... ves, ,vChampionship

In. a brilliant pitching duel, the'National' League Robbing and'Alllson.Phillies beat the'American League. Perrottl Bros: Exxon Athletics 40 to winthe town championship.

1 "MikeCollnerl (12 Ks) and Oave Brown(ID Ks) matified one hitters In o well-

. played game, .• ' , . ; ,' ThePhlllle5SCored2runslnthe2ndonva couple of, walks and abunt single by.

Jell Sontoj Jhd added Insurance runsIn the bottom ol the 5th on a walk, errorand sacrifice by Mike Collnerl.'. Tht'Athletlcs only hit was a single to

.right by Louis Lelll in the 1st.Inning.' Ra/. grau pitched' the 6th inning,striking out 2 lor the Phl|ile5 10 protectthe victory.

W7ZCharles J . Stevens HI, who

completed h l 8 h

named to the dean's list for thespring semester. He left June2?, , t o study at ^ItonsfieldCollege, OxfordI University,E ! sAn E n8»8 h ,an.d

Kramer of 30 Princeton Rd,has'receiyed honors for the

term, at -Skidmore

Cougaraidgeri 14 - Bearcats 0.

The. T. & J, Lawnmower Badgersdefeated the Bearcats' in the\ CougarLeague World Series,* Dave Papp went

•all the way. for the Badgers as he struck.out 13. rjeam Hitters were Dave Papp,Dave Sontaol homer, double. Dean

. Manuel, and Mark Ambroiy..Kenneth Lepers and Richard Stafford

pitched for the Bearcats with hittersSteve-Nagle, - Chrls-Stycihsfcl^anfl...Kenneth Labor*, • . .

Fine defensive plays were made byBadgeri jlmFaraone and Dave Sontag,and Bearcats Chris Styczynskl and'Richard Stafford.

Badgers coaches were John Faraone,manager; Al Papp, coach, John FaraoneJr., assistant! Bearcats, Peter terlno,manager; and Dick Stafford, coach. •

Bob Cormier was Cougar League vice ,president ind Bull Delano, the leagued

' chief umpire. . . •Flnal'Standlngi •

' oold Division

P a u , B e e i i t e bit 11 ForestA v e . w n o recently graduatedc i m iaUde from MonfclairStoteCollege, has been named

S?i?SiiO«WiiIS?*?1 8 winner for ^demonstratedbfWpods Hole Rd. and Ovaries exceUence in anthropology.J. Steyens^Jr. of Short Hills. Beelitz received the^hondr^ JaneE.Farrell.dautfitfer of.from his service as editor ofMr, a n d ^ r s . Walter FarreU, the Anthropology Newsletter,615Brookside PI, was recenOy and his work as an apprenticegraduated on dean's list with a in anthropology at thebachelw of Science degree Museum of Natural History infrom the Villanova University New. York 'Schoolof Nursing. She I s a Marianne Poplel of 17medical^urglcal-stoff nurse Cornell Rd., graduated magnaat Muhlenber^ Hospital, cum laude from Bryn MawrPlalnfleld. College with honors in

Jane 8usan Wllner. ^political science. She is a 1973

Thursday Ju

At Your Leisure. v . • : . • • • .. ..•:.• A R T . . • '

Ntwrtk Museum,- Newark, "BeeperMadness • Thought Dreams and visual

MOVIESCrantord Theatre,.2S North Ave., W.,

"The Rescuers," weekdays at 1, 3. 7;<5,

. 05,

KIM TONG COUPLE—Mr. and Mrs. David• together in their Keriifworth restaurant.

Summit Art C*"'". Summit, AnnualMembers ShowMfltil August 7. Hours arenoon until 4 p.rn.^n weekdays, 2* p.m.on weekends.

Jummlt Art Center, Summit,'workshops and: courses in painting,stained olass. fibre sculpture,photography, sculpture, watercolor, andprlntmaklng. Call 273 9121.

Whltnay MBSeum of AmericanArt.Madlson AVe. at 75th St., Mew York,"Richard. Dlebenkorn: Paintings andDrawings, 1943:1976," through July 17,"Turn- pf'" m« ,tC-entruy--Amerlc«;:Paintings, Gfaphlcs, photographs, 1840-1910," through October 2. Museum Is

C h a n >Pen Tuesday'through Friday, 3-9 p.m.,. Saturday. 11 ."'•.in. through 6 p.m.," Sunday, noon!•4p'm.

• • p . m ; •

Elmora Theatre, Elizabeth,"Swashbuckler," weekdays at 7: is o.m.Saturday, 1:30, 6:05 p.m. Sunday, 4. 7:50p.m.; "Airport '77," weekdays at 9 p.m.;Saturday, 3:15, 6, 9:50 p.m.. Sunday. 1.S:4S, 9:3S p . m . - " — w -

Newark Museum, Newark, BlackFilm Festival features films about black'leaders, on'July 13 at 7:30 txm. "AdamClayton s> Powell, • Jr.; AnAutobiographical Documentary,""Malctlm X Speaks," and "Legacy of ADream." " . ~" ' ••

New Plata Theater, Linden, ''AnnieHal l ," . weekdays at 7, 10:10 p.m.,Saturday and Sunday, 3:35, 7:05, 10:10p.m.; "Harold and. Maude," weekdays

Offers

BadgersLynxLionsWolverinesWildcatsBobcats •, •• »--•

Blue DlvUloriBearcatsPumasPanthers • .Leopards . .JaguarsTigers

167

- 76•4 '

. * ' . . . .

111110

' 8 ;ts

' 5

099

,10-12,-M

556J

' g

William J. Pawelec, low putts, with 100 points placed second:15 The events were sponsored by

' the Recreation and ParksDept

Results

and baseball and second teamin basketball.

Eighteen holes - Mrs. A.T.Savage, 54; Mrs. ClaudeSaunders, second on match ofcards, 54; Mrs. HarryOsterman, 55; Mrs. R.J.Bauer, low putts, 31'; chip-ins,Mrs. Haddock, Mi's. Pawelec.

of the three-dayfollows:

_ 50 yards: 18 andunder men, 1st, Roger Helwig,28.5; 2nd, Jim White, 34.5; 18and under women, lst, Sue.

men, lst, Mike Agostino, 71.4;2nd, Bruce Hogan, 72.; 3rd,Tom Cermak, 74.5; 19 andoverworrien, lst, Joyce VanBrunt, 46.6; 2nd, BridgetBroderick, .46.8; 36 and over;

Mike Agostino, 58.5; 2nd,Bruce Hogan, 5912; 36 andover men, 1st Richard Orsini;2nd, Bob Kniss; i9 and overwomen, ls'f*^ BridgetBroderick. C •• '

be playing in the 10-years-old 89 chances fielding. Jim is theClara Barton Tournament in son of Mr. and Mrs. James W.Fords in the early part of Sheehan.August.

The playerscoachesLeague

PINGRY AWARDSPingry School, Hillside

presented athletic awards forthe spring season to DavidHall of 26Pittsfield St., track,and Megyn John of 40 ManorAve., cheerleading.

Some may have doubted the Tong is family operated. In contest. Winners at Orarigein wisdom of opening a Chinese addition to Chan S wife Avenue Middle School in the 5-

J „. M restaurant in a predominantly Christirte, Theresa, his sister, 9 year-old age grodp were:daughter of Mr. and Mrs. graduate of Cranford High* Italian-American town like works in the restaurant; l s t Carolyn Alvarez- 2ndIrving Wilner of 429 South School and the daughter of Mr. Kenilworth, but David and "There are alot of Italian Kenny Weiinstock-3rd, RobertUnion Ave., was awarded a and Mrs. Roman Popiel. ChriBtine Chan have done it. and Jewish people in the area Harris- io-12-year olds- lst,masters degree in,education Thomfts Marino, son of Mr. *The Chansppened the Kim wh0 like Chinese food," Chan Anthony DiGiovanni; 2nd Loriby Harvard University. Her and Mrs. Praift Marino ."of Tong restaurant on February; gaja Dobbins-3Kfc Jenny Dunigan.specialties were reading Matawan, was awarded a 17. Like many other Chan came to America from Winners at Hillside in the 5-9disabilities and linguistics.She holds national cer-tification as a teacher of the

bachelor of arts degree byMontclair State College. Agraduate of Cranford High

deaf and hard of hearing, and School, Marino majored in . . . ,. • , ..plans to continue working in economics. deans list for the

'Isaac BakoB Anthony, l6lSeverin Ct, received, -a.masters in business ad-

semester.

in p yCollege. ABeta Kappa and Psi Chi, Ms,

that field. Miss Wilner was a1971 graduate of CranfordHigh^&bool.

i™ELP™fc of Mr. and Mrs'. Thomas" " Leahey of 503 Central Ave.,

graduated from Seton HallUniversity with a B.S. degree

administration at Cornell i f f i ^ Sshe minored in speech andhearing. She was a member ofthe Speech Disorders

Chan came to America fromrestaurants in the nrea, Kim n ^ g Ko ng 12 years ago. He year-old age group were: lst,

learned about the restaurant Linda Osotsky, 2nd, John_ • _ _ _ • • • _ « • _ business while working at the Boryszewski; 3rd, Rene

Chu Dynasty. However, he is a Faynor.trained engineer and wants to Last week's ' projectscontinue to do engineering. He followed a Fourth of July

. . ^ . . «, .,»^.K».ni- fl"'1 a n engineering ..job theme, including patrioticI ' J c ^ f r f T i ™ ^ recently to spend more time at wooden sculptures and stencilof 832 Springfield Ave. has t h e K i m Tong but will accept a art. Bicentennial lariats,

ip in Uncle Sam puppets, July 4th~.~~~ri"* Mf ctoflnir C"K'»«:cl"1B"'<-"rc««>"-By that

1, in Convent Station ^ h e p l a p s t o t u r n t h e

for the past semester. •_ _ "restaurant over to his wife.Nell F. Loeser ofCranforo!, T n e j^jm- Tong caters to a

a junior in forestry^ and w i d e v a r iety of customers.

al 8:30 p.m., S j5:20, 8:40 p.m.

Old Rahway Theater, Rahway,J'PeoWsThat Tlme-Eoroot.I.'-weck.days.-at 9:10 p.m., Friday, 7. 10:10 p.m.,Saturday/3:35, 6:50, 10; 10 p.m., Sunday,3:35, 6:^0, 10 p.m.; "At the Earth'sCore," weekdays, 7:30 p.m.,..Friday, .8:30 p.m., Saturday and Sunday at 7,5:10, 8:30 p.m.

Strand Theater, Summit, ~ "For. theLove ol Benil," today at 1, 7, 8:50 p.m.

MUSICBeggar's Banquet, .Union, light

entertainment nightly,..Garden State Arts Center, Hblmdel.

Gordon.,XlghtfOot, tonight; StuttgartBallet July 8 through 10.

. The Grotto, 572 Boulevard.Kenllworth, entertainment every Prldayand "Saturday night with tho FabulousWanderers.

Newark Museum. Newark, SummerNoonhour Concert Series- The AnthonyScelba String Quintet today at 12:30p m .The Vlnnle Burke Quintet. July H.

New Jersey Shakespeare Festival,Madison, Jerry Ames Tap Dance Co.,July 11. 8 p.m. . /

New Jersey State Opera, "Madame. . , Butterfly" with Anna MoHo at Wai

ahd • crafts Richards, Second. In the four- Memorial, Trenton on September y, 8.- , . . ,. - , the Season squares C ° m P ^ i 0 " ; J ^ f * "S.rdu.t and Bras, C.mpetm.n, band

With a fireworks ipaintlftg place Went tO Billy Wjlicneil^,contest sponsored by Patriots Drum andseeonoV to John Cranley.and Bugle Corps at Memorial Field, July 17.l i i« R i W third Richie Garden State Circuit Contest at 4:30Jim Kiiey. inira. nitiue sh 7:30 p mGribble; 4th. Andrew More. p m ' " ' " ^ ' .

Scavenger hunt wjnners "M' lew08d The,1er, Mapiewo<«i.June 30 were Lenny Mackie "Annie HBII.- weekdays at 7.is. v.isand Anthony Veneri; 2nd, Lori P;m.^s;!^d%0

4; J ; * ^ " 1 " S u n d a v 'MiacWe and Susanne LongO; ' park Theater. Roselle Park,."Longest3rd • Michael Ciuba and YaiV weekdays at 7 p.m., Saturday.Mi/.iinlac r i n h n ""—-"" 3:15, 7:45 p.m.. Sunday, 3:10,7:70 p.m.;Nicnoias L.iuoa. "Slapshot." weekdays at 9 p.m.,

Livingston Saturday, 1:15,5:30, 9:45 p.m., Sunday,A coloring contest took

place June 2ft,{Winners were:8-14 division. Donna Goldstein,1st; Paula Goldstein, 2nd: 5:7.Adrian Mercado, 1st; AaronMercado, 2nd; Brad Bearison.3rd; 12 and above, Judy Zani,

Tong Team Playground Activities

i977 CRANjLQRPJNjJ) CITIZEN ANPCIj

For Your Barbecueor Pienig •—Brand Name Wines, Liquors,Beers and Mixers.-When you want to make '•'•

. ah occasion out of .'what otherwise couldbe a routine affair-choose a delectable . .•drink, from our largestock. . ~, 7 —•••••-•••. ~—

/ / in doubt our cheerful staffwill help you with your selection.:(.onwnirnt location inthe Garwood Mall

.. ^ DAVE GILDERSLEKVES

Colotiial LiquorsGarwood Moll. South Avo. Garwood ." 784-1244

t Jhv I've5twoocl

5.10,9:20 p.m.

1)8 South" through

rockets, ana red, white andblue Spin art.

Memorial •

THEATRECelebration Playhouse,

Ave., Cranford, "GypsyAugust 28.

Edison Valley Playhouse, Edison,"The Sunshine Boys," Friday andSaturday, 8:30 p.m.; Sunday, 7:30 p.m.

1<j». 4 vpar-nlri division Lvnn N e l l > l N e w Yorker; Dinner Theatre,V? , j . - : = _ . ' u l v ! b l T J Mountain Lakes. "South>aclllc," June

10 • Aug. 24.New Jersey Shakespeare Festival,

"Much Ado About Nothing," June 38 •Aug.'U, "Titus Adronlcus," July 5 • Aug.

Goldstein, 1stWinners of the rlature

collage contest June 30 wereJudy Zani, 1st; JenniferSmith, 2nd; Donna and Paula

g ,27, Drew University. Madison.

Smith, 2nd; Donna and aMemorial opened up June 27 Goldstein tied for 3rd; Lynn

wildlife at Virgunia l e e n s jhe dining room seats 50 to 60 with a treasure hunt^a trip for Goldstein 1st in the youngerCollege of Agriculture, maae p ^ i e compactly yet com-, ice cream and to the Heritage division. Winnersm the bike

dean's list for the spring for&bly in a room"designed by Corridor. In a skateboard decorating contest were Jill

selected

Kenilworth Softball Loop

Your "Family's FinancialSecurity and

KENILWORTH-- FYenchie'sBar & Grill remained insecond place in the "A"Division with an 11-7 win over •Hafner's Paint Store. SpankyPrutzman had a 3 for 3 nightincluding a homer; HerbWilkenson, 2 for 3' with ahomer to place the winners.Terry Cosgrove picked up thewin; Pat Burns the loss.r ForihaUri4-Schering4 •

Formals.by Charles made iteight straight : victoriesWttiouta,^/tt)ackonhitting- by

team effort, .won its thirdgame of the season. Dennis•McNamara had a two-runhomer out of the park in thesixth inning, and JohnMontuori a solo shot for thewinners., Tony Montuoriturned in another good moundperformance for the win; JoeMagliocco took the loss.

by. of - the. American

g teams are:' ScottKokie, Walt Serafin;. DickieParkhurst, Orioles; KennyNolan, Bobby Clausen, NormWolfrom, Red Sox; JimWozniak, Robert Mulcahy,Senators; Bill Gable,Yankees; David Winokur,Gregg Peters, Scott Cap1-prello. Indians: MarkRichards, Mike Garrastaszu;Tigers; Mark Manfre, WhiteSox; and Harry Yanowitz,Athletics. -. '

Coaches will be Stan Kokie,Hank Wozniak. and EdLyons. ' • •

It's a Beautiful World!Green lawns .'.. flowers and trees... picnic tables

beside the raceirack.'.. clublike lounges. ..restaurantsand cafeteria ...'. spacious seating. CtlKrti wrfir « 4 « Uuilul

9 RACES DAILY • FIRST RACE 2 PM)coanpo i t . N.J. GaichMi State Pkwy. Exit 10

Neil Makatenas. eon pf Mr.and Mrs. Albert Makatenas of608 Willow SLv was graduatedfrom Union County TechnicalInstitute with high honors inElectromechanical ' Tech-nology. He was president ofthe Student GovernmentAssociation this past schoolyear.

Thomas MacNish, son ofMr. and Mrs.. James D,MacNish of 50 Winans Ave.,earned a bachelor of sciencedegree in microbiology fromKansas State University.MacNish, who minored inchemistry and animalscience, was a member of Phi

semester.Two local students were

yChan himself.

T h e m e n ual stude T h e features-contest June 28 Dawn Gricewas first, Lee Williams,second. Memorial played a

Can-

Association and was named to ' Miihlenberg • College for the P o i y n e s i a n dishes including basketbaU game with Lincoln Zani, Patti{ S d t n K e v e r ^ s ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ l ^ l ^ ^ l Z special selections for children, School last W s d a y . Lincoln Huntley, A.

Stephen Neupauer, of 720

gEska, Al Canal, John Kresko.Scott Engle, Kim Sturtf, VitoTesta, Frank Ventura, Judv

Michael, JackCarvalho and

LukalHs. daughter o t M r . ^ n a w e i g h t W a t c n e r s a n d f a m i H e s w o n gn-45. PJaying wellfor Lynn Goldstein.Mrs. Leon R.Lukaitisot^tt7iN. a s w e u a s complete dinners Memorial were Todd Tarver, Lincoln Park

Institute. •

Five Cranford residentscompleted their studies atVillanova University: David

r, r The1 food is1 good .andi ..-,. , A i ' ' the service is excellent. We44 Hillcrest Ave. , i started "With the wonton soup

Katherine Clark, daughter which was tasty. Our. main, of Mr. and Mrs. L. Clark of course was lemon chicken,

. 1020 Orange Ave., a junior at deep fried and served withWayne Araeaon. 13j3eech St. \ Kean college, has been named shredded lettuce and lemori

tr\ 41in J n n n ' p liof f«v» tVin imn*> nnnA^k 'T'l ^vr'Ai ISrfVif anri tont\f^V

Tony

Mitchell Scott Bross. 35Wadsworth Ter., Jane EllenFarrell, 615 Brookside PI.;Linda Ann Swetman. 817

coeg, h srto the dean's list for the year! sauce. These light and tenderShe is majoring in psychology, filets were excellent. The rice

• • ' . ' and tea were pleasant and forPaul Andrus of Cranford, is dessert we had almond

Howard spending the 1977-78 school cookies.

Winners in the scavenger,hunt June 28 were; 1st place,Vanessa Walker, Ro Trotter,Mary Beth Heesters, CindyNordstrom; second, JimmyTrotter, Kevin Duffy, BrianNewmsyk. In a debatingcontest, "How Others Look atYou," first place went to Tim •Duffy and Jim Hynes, secondto Deb Galluzzi and GlenBarry. ^

In the basketball game withb L i l

This is the end forW j t A t a g yRich Vitale^ i'for 3 and his 10thhomer, and George Brokaw, 3f 6 F " T n t

-

REGULAR SAVINGS ACCOUNT

Highest Interest Rate Daily

YEAR 5.47 00

YEAR

•Withdrawal* Anytime Without Losing Interest Provided You Maintain a Balance of$5.00 or More. Effective Annual Yield When Principal and Interest Remain-'oivt>»poiitfor a Year.. Interest Is Computed From Day of Deposit to Day of Withdrawal and isCompounded Daily and Credited Monthly.

gexcellent team play. Thewinning pitcher was MikeMascaro; the loser Bill Defoe.

Heyco 1 - Firemen 6 &>Heyco won its third game of

the season with RustyCorcione, a 3 for 3 night, andBill'Haug, 3 for 4, supplyingthe power. Vinny Fevolapicked up the win, TonyPeters the loss.

Ross 10-Kennedy 9— Ross Bros.; won-its-seventhgame without a setback, withMike Diroma a 3 for 4 nightand pete Caruso, 3 for 4including-a homer for,, Ross.Steve Krupinski had a homerfor Kennedy, The winningpitcher was Greg Pilot; theloser Woody Wills.

Collex8-Tlanut7Collex. with another cood

DWll|on"A"

and faminamed tospring quarter

to the dean's list for the spnng M a n w a n r " jninutes after leaving the

. semester at Boston Univer- g j x cranford residents restaurant.Michael Agostino. son of Mr. stty's College of Basic Studies, attained dean's list status for , . _ ~ a *

and Mrs. Dominick Agostino She is a 1975 graduate of t n e seCond semester at I OUth G r o u p S e t sof32T«UpSu«t^iBdWt^_,Craj)fort Bucknell University: _ >with distinction from South- Paul Anthbny~Worteyr a~;;o^nard—;It.Baines.—6 O p e n i n g U a a c e«ast%cn. . r MasaachufetU senior atrWCrajpiford mm, Claremont Place; Nicholas Jh %£%r£ZnrA V n n t ^ : i m .,Univereitylwlth a BJL in School, has been admitted to P e l o s , m Retford Avenue, •• ™ C r ^ " f " [ l A ^ X 1 1 "biology. He will pursue his Davis & Elkiris College forthe Virginia M. Porter, 103 ftft^KK^' SPhlXin biology at Roswell fall term. He is the son of Mr. Ed/ewood Rpad, Laurel R. a ' * e n e w l v opened youth

^ark^emorffimtitute^^^ndJIta^Michael A7"«cliut«r,--36-^ iVingston ^ ^ ^ g u

p.m. The- band will include

Paula Ferdinand, daughterof Mr. and Mrs. ArthurFerdinand of 440 Manor Ave.,graduated from OhioUniversity in Athens, Ohio,with a bachelor of science

T7~8c l iu t«rr -36-Road, Christopherbusiness education.

, Salustro. son of Mr. ivai8h. i n Pawnee Road. Miss - _ , , , _ , o . , ,and Mrs. J. Saluslro of 26 P r i n g l e maintained a perfect Aten Webb Bob Stewart andMendell Ave., has received his 4 0 ^erage. Jof, ^alian, who recentlybachelor of architecture ; Fairfield University named Played their^ Blueg_r_ass_degree from the University of three local youths to its spring music ai

She was Miami. He is a. graduate of • semester dean's list. They aredeanTs list for the Cranford High School. Robert J. Fleming. 20 Prince-e r Teri Susan Cohn, daughter t t m Rd., Kevin F. Jost. 438

Ferdinand, son of of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Cohn orchard St., and Susan J.and Mrs Arthur Fer- of 21 Princeton Road, has been Thill. 18 Oak La.ana mrs. «»«' . . . . mmed to the dean's list at Cranford's Arthur Playle.

Muldrow, TyroneLee Williams, and

Aubrey Washington.Adams

On June 28 Adams Ave; helda nok hockey tournament with*Jim Riley, first. Mark

New TheatreOpens in Fall

Union County CommunityServices of 1149 St. George Memorial won by Lincoln 60-Ave. in Roselle, will start a 45 an excellent game wasnew playhouse called the played for Lincoln by TonyPhoenix Community Theatre. Walker, Ed Scott, Lance

"Inner City" a musical, will Tillman, Rob Hynes, Vanessa-be the first production and will Walker and Drew Scoty.open in September.

Funds for the, project havebeen obtained from thefederal governjment throughCETA Title ^"appropriations. '

Inner City requires a cast ofeleven people. Auditions willbeheld on the evenings of July18 through 22. Aspiring castmembers-shouid-prepare athree minute excerpt from aplay, prepare a song, and

• Weddings • Showers .Testimonials • Dinner Dances

• Christmas Parties etci Singles Dances Every Tuesday

Excellent Food & Service urReu/istk Prices

Call about upcoming schedule of Playsin our Jiftmer Theater

789-0808borwui •(',

1

H0ME COOKING?specialty cooked the way you like it-

2 0 % OFF ON ALL MEALS •SI ' 111.1. SKUTS. SI ;r 5:30

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THIS WEEK'S SPECIALSBROILED STUFEED RLET *$*BRQILEBSGALUQRS—^JgL.i_....'.

PARK

AManor Ave.,

IAPECE WINS CONTESTNancy Capecej age 9, of 7

leca Rd. has won third:in the fifth, annual

We close our doors forever on Saturday July 9.Formal* by CharlesFrenchie'sScherlnoCollexUllrlch CopperHafner's Paint Store

Division'Ross Bros.Kennedy OpticiansHoVco

for DEPOSITORS.

FREEPERSONALCHECKING

O M anceum BolanceNO Servrce Charge• • • and Your Checks AreAbsolutely FREE

armonia

The Family Savings Bank

In ELIZABETH: I UNION SQUARE & 540 MORRIS /WE - 289-0800In SCOTCH PLAINS: NORTH AVE,. & CRESTWOOD RD. - 654-4622

In MIODLETOWN: 1 HARMONY ROAD 671-2500

M,.. . i l , f , f ' U I ( . ' bAv/ lKlCb I M i U H E D TO S4O.0OO

Firemen .Monday * Halner's v&. ScherlngTuesday • Heyco vs. KennedyWednesday - Formats vs. Frenchie'sThursday : Firemen vs. R»ss Bros.Friday • Halner's vs. Collvx.-

SWIM SUITS

CRANFORDSPORTSCENTER

38 North Avenue E.Opp. Firehouse

276-1569

Hundreds & Hundreds of Men's (Famous Maker

2 PC. and 3 PC. VESTED SUITS$jiriB $Originally

$105-$110-$125$145-$165 and

StudentSLACKSaJEANS

$4 $I and

Small si/psLimit 2 to a cusiomor

— —- — Arthur"the"'Univer' Emerson. College in Biston. an"architecture and fine arts

i graduate She is a freshman majoring in student at Auburn University piact•«3o jonroo mass communications. made the dean's list for the Haul _

1 William Arthur Bohm, son spring-term. -^rfi^r "

„„.... "BtthnToH6^falfi:Terracer has Melgord.-.-. Svedman of :J;1Q2 contest,^.r,.t,o». „. Cranford was been accepted as a student at Balmiere Rd, and Kristen R. U-HaWnamed to the dean's list for the Wesley College, Del. Bohm HUdebtant of 121 County and

s»mp<itf>r at Wilkes will major in^re-engineering pa rk Dr. and Paul R. Stern of l 0 ?! .. .smestcr . . . ^ . ^ ^ t r a ^ r ^ ^ fl^- 5 ? i Q u . n t o n A v e_ Kenilworth write their ^

begin July 25. For furtherinformation call Union CountyCommunity Services at 289-3777. •

. Good Food (or Good Health

7 NORTH AVE.. EastCRANFORD

OPEN 24 hours 7 DAYS

THE NEW 272-8538

CRANFORD DINER

The

Pienciak

springColli ir.Kramer. daughter graduate of Cranford High i v e d ^ ^bachelors » ™ «of Mr. and Mrs. - Charles School.

SPORTCOATS .£%•^33545SLACKS-SLACKS-SLACKS

Pre-cutted-Taltored Dress-Custom Tmlored$7-$11-$17

Ocean GroveH.J.

Neptune Township'sOceanfrontIn The Heart of •

The N.J. Fun Belt

. Wr«« lor Free Color BrochureBo«2T7QOca«n Grove

Jack G. Leppler, son of Mr.and Mrs. John H.- Leppler of ,=Cranford, has been accepted =by Bowling Green State -University, Ohio, as a doctoral =candidate in thev areas of =physiological and psycho- =acoustics. He has just =received an M.A. from Kean =College, in the field of =audiology and communication =science and is a graduate of =Cranford High School. =

Lehigh University named =Michael J.'Sternlck, of 104? ECoolidge St. Cranford, to the. =

degrees from West VirginiaUniversity

could be used now or in the

83 WESTFIELO AVENUECLARK, N. J. 07066 ;

Opposite American Legion HallParking In Rear ,

OUTFOOD SHOPPE

Open 11:30 A.M. to 10 P.M.

(OPPOSITE THE RR STATION)

a Free ->..:•

CHINESE - rOLYNEM AN USTAUKANTCOCKTA1IS

Complete Luncheons and DinnersTAJCf OUT M O U l •ANQUtTKOOW

Open Dally t l :30 AM - 11:00 PMFrl. and Sat. 11:30 AM - 1 :OO PM

242-244 North Ave., West

ATTENTION RACING FANSBus Service to

MEADOWLANDS RACE TRACKLeaves Elizabeth, Broad & Jersey Sts.

6:30 P.M., Mon. - Sot.Call: Beviano Chartered Service

486-2505

in the Burger King"TWO MOPEDS TO GO!

Sweepstakes

OriginallyS16-S20-$28-S38-$40-S45

1IWI•A

( A R I I K ^ ,NOT JUST A JOB!

LEARNELECTROLYSIS

Choice of the House -Short Sleeve Sport & Dress Shirts

Orlg. $ £ % 6 6 I f% $ •$12 to $16 \ J | Sm Ipr

What's Left! Superior QualityLong Sleeve Dress Shirts ,

Orlg.S16toS25

Every remaining T I E Orig. sdld to*15 3.or 1 0

All remaining casual HATS, Men's Swank JEWELRY

75% OFFMUFFLERS, GLOVES, SWIM WEAR,SILK HANDKERCHIEFS, BELTS, etc.

OriginalPrices!

...at the World-^.moua Kr«o •• Inatltuta and «n|oy a lifetime •• career. The demand tor parma- aj0 nent hair removal traatmants ^^ aro graater than nv%r batora.

Ago la. no barrier. Man and V• woman. Day or evenlno clastaa. •• Coma, write or phona (J12) «j_ 7M-97OO (or I m booklet "R". m

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• IN8TITUTE_ 1500 Broadway (cor. 43rd St.)

. Naw York. NY. 10038

Antique Hunter Specials!

Narrow Ties- 2 5 *Arrow Collars -

Established 1911

NO LAYAWAYS! NO COO'S1

ALL SALES FINAL! No Alterations

GOLDBERGS18 North Ave. West, Crantonl

Directions: Take Garden State Parkway to Cranford Exit 137 proceed West onernite on North Avenue (Rt 28) to Store.: Opan: Mon. thru Frl. 12 to 9PM

Sat. 9:30AM to 5:30PM 276-1698 Ample lie* packingin rear o) store

A^IDT RestaurantMONDAY THRU FRIDAY

Businessmen's!Luncheon *Z-95

Try our special three combination

Sandwich and Soup served in owr LoungeDaily Enjoy Dinner in qn atmosphere

of Flaming Swords and Flaming DessertsTry our Sunday Buffet 10IA.M.-3/P.M.

Pinners Ala Carte from $550 up.In our Lounge,

P Dance and Listen to . j .,'\ the Sound of

Court off AppealsINNof Clark

Garden State ParkwayExit 135 5740100

All Major Credit Cards Honored.

Aak for one of our

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INTERNATIONAL HOUSE OF PANCAKESC T U . . . . t •• r»t - 1 * 7 W n l

Rt 22, Center Isle, UnionSun, -Thins. 7 a.m. - 12p~m.

VXIHL Sat. 7 a.m. -2 a.m.

I X

at selected Burger King*restaurants. (Now toAugust 13.)14 lucky people willwin these excitingMotobecane 40 TL

MOTOBECANE MODEL 40 TL. Tho doluxu modul 40 TL hus Mvscopl<;(roni(ork.''ti)(edi'uar»uspi)niion and drum brukiisilrbnlundtvat Othor l«atur»)S includo. stuinluus stoeVlohdorsi, soalud boanihoudlioM.uloorino column lock. uloclnchorn.un(jii*nj slop switch,tuul tunk top with roiutrvtjcupiicitv, loot kit. lita pump, und hapoodoniotor

Rules:1. tnluf a* oltuti u i you liku, no

purchusu noCuaaarya! Supurutu druwmya will b*s

hold' ut uach pjrticlpulinu

3. All unlrtua bticonio thu pfop-urly ol Syalums Control. Inc

4. EmployueS O* ttyaioms Co»»-lifol, Inc /Uutnor KirtQ Cor*pOfution/HHIabu^V Chrpo/w-tion of thbir tuinihus a>« no)pocintltud lo unluf

8. All tinUiv» must bo rucotviidno later than nudnight, AUIJ-Uat 13, 1077

(J.Oaltjof drawings is August 11077 Winnors luiud no^ b.i

t. Your chjncu of winntno (1

pondti on thu iminbtfr ol v

I). If you doairu u liulol wmiujipluUjU Wfltt* iinit mcliuKrtiull-uddfubao(l..5tjinp(H) iivulopu to

IQoO Amboy AvtMUlulitiKon. N J OtlHi/Altn Luncu tJowttri,

9. Musi be 15 yuufN ol .iud

You could be one!No purchase necessary.Enter as often as you like.

Two Motobecane40 TL's will be givenaway at each ofthese Burger King"restaurants!Come in for entry blankand complete rules.Clark118 Central Avo.Roselle Park568 W. Westfiold AvoUnion2310 Route 2?

Drawing on August 15,1977*• Hilt SV^>"'"» Control. Inc

BURGERAmerica loves KING

t -

Page 5: JEEM-...... • »••. • I -. • '-I. • . .„ -,-• •.»•*•.-.. CITIZEN AND CHRONIC! £ Thursday. Juno SO. 1977

I ••

' T

\

Pages CRANFORD(N .J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Thursday; July 7.1977

Scouts Offer Summer ProgramsWashington Rock Girl Scout Other Washington Rock ' Plainfifeld: Particjiparits in;

Council is offering "Jersey summer programs are Saddle "Wonder of the Wild" willJaunts" from July 11 - 15.a Camp, Day Camp, and two spend five days in the Greatseries of bicycle* day trips special programs. - Swamp Wildlife Refuge on ah

.. to-co,, "Parties on Parade" and <«SSiSjnniental project from"Wonder of the Wild" are^ •'»'.* 2 s " 29." The fee is-S25.tr;;;.open to boys and girls in sixth ,through 12th grades. "Parties Saddle Camp offers - eighton Parade." from Julv 18 - 21. days of instruction: :to:focuses on how to make party youngsters in the sixthfoods at Public Service Gas through 12th grades. It is heldand Electric Company, at Hunt Cap Farms. Three

"~-\ ' S Bridges, from Aug. 8'- 11 and• • , ' \ y is -18 from ]«.n.m. to 2 p.m.

Sermon Topic Is *A Hebrew War'' The Sinawik Day Camp

l t d f i t th

throughout•"'.. New jersey,visiting Clinton and SpruceRun /

The-first meeting will be at~tyclfes by- George in Cranford.

Apply by calling WashingtonRock Girl Scout Council. 232-

. 3 2 3 6 . • • • • ' . •

K E N H . W O R T H - "AIk-brew,War - Casualty" willbe the sermon-topic Sunday at

-Community United MethodistChurch.

Barbara Wheaton, organist. and musical director, will be

Ohituarie

Fi*met WidoW ' of Stephen M. Kokulak, two brothers. JohnKowalski who died in l9Q,..she; and .Daniel> both a.thojne andis survived by three sons.;7 a sister, Mrs. Dorothy Winters

rin R,,, with whom she of Avpnoi;Bernard S. Wlloughby;: j ^ j |*Yiee. , ^ W J%

of 4441 Northwest 6th Cpurt. Squad, .UnwrPlantation/ Fla,.,a formerV.PfifRW-.^J .realtor here,'-died Saturday, in :-;Or.1't:,vonim^rcj!.. tseigium, mm »«I,I..«.™ -,. -.. ^ w m w j M H ^ j . w , . . ^ . . , . , , ; ,Plantation - GeneraUHplpital• , | g ^ t ^ ^ & - g j j ^ 5 ! f 3 r Grove;- - ^after a short i l lh^^^

Cranford, ana was active m Lien|ngpa();: Russia t and Mrs. • » — « - - • — C - « K « -*»»«-«r

nvea, Li. IVUOICH »* Brussels,Belgium, and RaimicmdS. of

f Avc ;( , .;Funer^ services are being

conducted today atli :,3Q a.nvi t4h^blEu^alJ i t t tne

in charge ol special music. Or.Marv<n Green invites_ all Kcolnpleted'flr^r'ihrough CELEBRATES M A S S ^ Blishbp Domt'olcic A.iAarconi,visitors and church members fifth grades. It includes nature vicar of UniQjr County, celebrates massJune 27 forwho have visited otner <.(nHv s w i m m i n e a t F o r e s t residents, staff and friends of Cranford^ Hall Nursing

Home. The,Bishop visited Wjth.residents unable tochurches on vacation lopresent literature collected atthis service. .

study, swimming at RorestLodge, crafts, cookouts. and a

ftera short illness, 5Born in, New York C^y, he

lived in Cranford 47: year?until moving to Florida threeyears ago., He owned andoperated the B. S. WilloughbyRealty Co. in Cranford for 20years. Mr. Willoughby was amember of the^CraihfordBoard of. Realtors, UnionCounty > Multiple Listing

lpcai civic affairs.,.> Surviving are HisMrs. -AntWilloughby;home; ttoo daughters,

Hanson

widow.

Home. The.Bishop visited tojth.residents uattend. He joined staff and residents fbr; lunch.

ALUMINUM PRODUa

LIFETIME ALUMINUMPRODUCTS, INC.Home Improvement

Products'§torm Windows &.Doors "

276-3205101 SOUTH AVENUE

CRANFORD

AUTO DEALERS

TIVINBORO U T I I I O R P .Autorizied FORDDealer Since )9?0 ..'

Sales-Service-Rental^Open.Eves. ti l 9 :30 -

Sat, t i l6:00

245-6100[ 158 JVesllield Ave Rosette P.rk

BODY & FENDER

LNJ Body & FenderFree Estimates•24.hr. Towing

Special Discounts to all. j Senior Citizens ,

Free Courtesy Cars

636 N. MICHIGAN AVE.1 KEN ILWORTH—276-7226

S64-3386—Whr.Towin

AUTO DEALERS

mixOLDSMOBILE. INC" AUTHORIZED

OLDSMOBILESALES& SERVICE

2327651560 NORTH AVE. E.

WESTFIELD

AUTO D E A L E R T

R0SCHFORDE.

AUTO DEALERS

LINCOLN

MERCURYQuality Used Cars

.' * Superb ServiceRed Carpet Lease

AUTO DEALERS

J33 North Ave,Wesltield. N.J.

Sales-Leasing.237-3700

Rarts _ .

FRONT WHEEL ORIVE

BUILDERS

A. BUONTEMPOGenera l Bu i lder , Since 1950

CUSTOM HOMES.AUDITIONS. ALTERATIONS.

COMMERCIAL ANO RESIDENTIALCONCRETE WORK.

NEW FIREPLACES AND

GENERAL REPAIRS OF ALL KINDS

FREE ESTIMATE; -'-• Call after 6 p.m.- ...

CAMERAS | CAMERAS

KODAK 3 5 M / M FILMSALE

' , ( D t a t c r Cot» ;

BANKSFor Convenient~\.".'

"Full Service" BankingCRANFORD OFFICE

931-6831. 100 South Awe. E.

CRANFORD AUTOBANKChntnul St. & Walnut Ave.-.-

931-6833

united courrtiesjt trust company

' where good things ''start to happen '

Mtmbar F«l«ril Reserve SysMtnFxKral CXpoilt Iniuranc* Corp.

uivioiv m mBUCK CO.

Authorized. Buick

Sales & Service

GOODUSEDCARS,339 N. Broad Street

Elizabeth

354-3300

BANKS

BUILDING MATERIAL

KEN1LW0RTH

STATE BANKMember

I- vdcral Reserve SystemFederal DepositInsurance Corp,

272-4500477 BOULEVARDKENILWORTH

Secvices for -Walter fl..-...| Collins, 79. of Cranford are at

10 a.m. today at the .GrayMemorial Funera) Home; 12Springfield Ave;. with Rev.Canon Vincent K. Pettit.rector of Trinity EpiscopalChurch, officiating. Intermentis in Fairv.iew Cemetery.Westfield..Mr; Collins died Saturday inCranford Health andExtended Care Center.

Bornjn Railway, he lived inCranford most of his life. Mr.Collms . Was "a signalmaintained for CentralRailroad of New Jersey untilretiring in 1962 after 45 years.• Surviving lire his daughter,Mrs. Charlotte Bell ofCranford; a son, Raymond E.,Middletown; a sjster. Mrs.Cornelius Schindler of AsburyPark, seven grandchildren,and one great-grandson.

Martin Hess Jr., 80, of 59Atlantic, St., Metuchen, anative of Cranford, died June29 at JohnF; KennedjyJ^dlcalCenter; Metuchen. •

He had lived in Newark andIrvington before moving toMetuchen 10 years ago. Mr.Hess retired from Fisher,Baking Co., Newark, in 1962after 30 yeart. He was amember of the Senior Citizensof Iselin.

Husband of the later Mrs.Elizabeth Hess who died in1964 he is survived by a son,Martin Hess of Metuchen; asister, Mrs. Gertrude Volkerof Elizabeth, and three grand-

• children. •Funeral services were

Saturday at the GrayMemorial Funeral Home, 12Springfield Ave., with Rev.Robert Pqyne, pfegtor of theCranford United MethodistChurch, officiating. Intermentwas in Evergreen Cemetery^Hillside, • "' •'.

Bridgewater and Mrs. JohnFarley of Hillside: a brother,Sydney of Cranford; arid twograndchildren. | '.

Rev. Frank' Goodjake.pastor\ of the First^Presvyterian Church; con-ducted services yesterday atthe Gray Memorial FuneralH 12 Srinofield Ave

Sonia'°"Robinson of; Whittler;Cdlif:; 15 grandchildren and a

... «. great-grandson.1

Rev, Stephen Szabo, pastor ofSt., Paurs; United, Church'ofChrist.;. ..Interment:; is inFairview Cemeteryi yfestr;

field, and Pastor. Szabo willread, the comniittaj,, prayers.

:, Services for Charles HiMuldrow, 79, of 22 BuchananSt. were Tuesday at St. Mark'sA.M.E. CJiUrch, 88 High St.Interment was in GracelandMemorial' Park» Kenilworth.Mr. Muldrow died June-29 inRahway Hospital.

* Born in Sumter, S.Cir,-hei Cranfprd52 years. Mr.

Memorial Park, Woodbridge,• In. lieu of flowers, con-tributions may be made to theCranford First Aid Squad. '

Mrs. KowalskiThe funeral for Mrs. Julia

Kowalski, 79, of 312 N. UnionAve. is at 9:15 a.m. today from

Phelps Dodge, Co., Elizabeth,after 25 years. He was amember 'and steward of St.Mark's Church.

Surviving are his widow,Mrs. Cassie Muldrow; . sixdaughters, the Misses Iona

Ave.isat9:l5a.m.ioaayjrom and Carolee and Mrs. Isobell „ » PntheDooley Funeral Home, 218 Wyatt, all of Cranford, Miss''* M r s Winifred E EllisNorth Ave. W. A mass is-being vfsie. a n d M r s . A n n a H e a r n 8 (

M r «- Winitrea v e . e m soffered at^lO a.m. at St. b o t n o f p.]ainfield, and Mrs.Michael Church by Msgr. B e t t y Robinson Of Newark;Jdhn F. Davis.^ pastor^ eight sons, Cleveland of SanInterment is at Hollywood Antonio, Jesse," Irvjng, LarryMemorial Park, Union. and William, all of Roselle,

%Mrs. Kowalski died Mondav Thomas of Cranford, Earl ofin Community General Scotch Plains, and Norrfian ofHospital. Liberty, N.Y., after Piainfield; two sisters, Mrs.she was taken ill on vacation. Lottie Shaw and Mrs. Carole

Born in Russia, she came to Gary, both of Sumter; sixthis country 53 years ago and brothers, Hazel of Ybrk, Pa.,lived in Newark and Belleville Joseph and Richard, both of

"—' •'••• • t Sumter, James and Thomas,I both of Elizabeth', and David

of Union, 23 grandchildren,and eight greatgrandchildren.

I9S6 Photo

Mrs. EllisServices for Mrs.- Winifred

E, Ellis, 59, of 504 CentennialAve. were., conductedyesterday at the-First BaptistChurch, 100 High St. Inter-

iriauineiiu iwu oiaiua, i«.o. -ment was iri' RosehillLottie Shaw and Mrs. Carole Cemetery, Linden. , - -

- • • - • • • ' Mrs. Ellis died Friday at

.S.IRVING CO.LumberS. AAillwork :'

ot Every DescriptionFueiOil—Oil Burners

Hardware—Paints

233-1492

GARWOOD CARPET

:ONTRACTORS

FILMKBI3b-2O(ASA25)KM 135-36 (ASA .25)KR 13570 (ASA 64)KR 13b-35(ASA64)

FILMVPS 135-2<f(ASA 100) . . . $1.74'VPS 1 3 5 - 3 6 ( A S A 1 0 0 ) . . . 2 .41CG 1 3 5 - 2 0 (ASA 4 0 0 ) . . 1.85

, CG 1 3 5 - 3 6 (ASA 400) -.-. . 2 . 5 9

MINIMUM OWD«m WOLM

J1.962.811.962.81

Send Check or Money Order to:

Xprwtiiaa, I»_F. • ••».Other film price* tent on reqimt.

New Jersey RetldenttaddSper cent uleplax.

)tCORATORS

>anf ord Knitting!& Fabric Center'

Custom- MadeDraperies and

Slip Covers

20%OFfwith thmcouDon

J5-I7 North Ave. W.276-5505

MILL END STORES, Inc.

FUEL OIL

DECORATORS

Cuitom MidffDHAPERIfS

96?

D ' a o . r v H . d A r

I nterior Decorating •-Sp 'rialJsti

Call 688-9416Sluyvenal ' Avenue Union

Juri Co

• f.OMPl I 1[ HI AUNG

INSIAUAI ION

• Rlt'AIRS AND SI KVICI

« AIR (.ONllHIONim,

730 Cenlennuil AvoCr.mtord

Call 276-9200

PAINTING

GMS and ALEXSKODRAS

• Painting• Decorating• Paperhanging

52/ Central Ave.Weitfield

Alex-732-95(3

FUEL OIL

REEL-STRONGFUEL CO,Dependable, Friendly Service

Since 1925HEATING Oll,S

INSTALLATIONSSERVICE

549 Lexington Ave.CRANFORD

2764)900

PLUMBERS

789-2477

DAVIS BROS.

Jock Davis• Alterations- -

Additions -Remodeling

Free Estimates

CALLCRANFORD

276-1474

•0

FOODYixiitlf

I?.—Gqurmat Ne«Js

FOOD

TillFicsh.Coflte.Bcan?' Importtd Teas

Whole SpicesCaviar -Goose Liver

HOIKS: 9-6 ThuisMl 921 tlm Street Wertlield "'

INSURANCE

CHARUE'S JTALI ANDELI

Italian Spjfcialties

Delicious SubmarinesImported & DomesticProsciutto, SalamiSalciccie & Capicolli

, Home Made SausageHot & Sweet

Ital ian Kitchenwares344.South AVe., Westfield

232-4524 John Lattera, Prop

LUMBER

Fred H. Gray J r . . . David B. Crabiel. • W n . A.

Mrs, DorothyVanderbeck

GARWOOD- The funeralfor Mrs. Dorothy E. Van-derbeck of 248 Second Aye.was held from the DooleyFuneral Home, 218 NorthAve W., Cranford, onTuesday. The funeral masswas offered in St. AnneChurch by Rev, Robert. J.Reischmann, assistant pastor.Interment took place in HolyCross Cemetery. NorthArlington, where .FatherReischmann read the com-mittal prayers. , Ai A

Mrs Vanderbeck diedFriday at Overlook Hospital,Summit, after a short illness.She was 52 years old. • • •. She was born in Fanwoodand lived in Jersey City many

of Garwood 10 years.Mrs. Vanderbeck is sur-

vived by her husband, Henry. F, Vanderbeck; a son,Mark; and a daughter, MissDehise, both at home; twobrothers, James Black of

Rahway Hospital after a briefillness. -

Born in New York City, shemoved to Cranford six years,,ago. She was employed as acle,rk with the Office ofEconomic Opportunity in NewYork City before retiring sixyears ago. She was a memberof the First Baptist Churchand served as its secretary, onits activity committee, and inits choir. Mrs. Ellis was amember of the NationalCouncil of Negro Women.

Surviving are her mother,Mrs. Juliette Mason ofCranford and three brothers,Weldon and Stanley Mason,both of New York City, andCranford police detectiveMilton Mason.

P. DeNizoKENILWORTH- A funeral

mass for Philip DeNizo, 66, of739 Clinton Ave. was offeredTuesday at St. TheresaChurch. Interment was in ,Graceland Memorial Park.

Mr. DeNizo died June 29 inAlexian Brothers Hospital,ElizaheUk___.__l

He was born in Cranford andlived in Garwood beforemoving to Kenilworth 30 yearsago. Mr. DeNizo retired eightyears ago as a chemicaloperator for General Aniline,

brothers, James maun v, Linden, after 28 years. He wasLittle Ferry and Robert Black employed by the Gourmetof Garwood; two sisters, Mrs. Bakery, Edison, the past,five.Mildred Conroy of Westfield years. He served as a military^'and Mrs. Virginia-Rinaldi of policeman with the ArmyPt. Pleasant Borough. during World War II. 7 '

Surviving are his widow,sfc-T—~--Mi«^4CathfiiineJKxainlick_* * • DeNizo; a son, James, and a

GARWOOD- Nicholas daughter, Miss Joan Nemeth,-IMickey) Kokulak, 42, of 354-bothat homeland two sisters,

Myrtle Ave. died Tuesday at Mrs. Marie Schultz in ArizonaRahway Hospital shortly after "flnd M r e- Frances Petroz-being admitted. . •'./.'

A life long resident of

\and Mrs. Francesziello of Garwood, ; 7 ;Other obituaries on Page 4.

GRAY MEMORIAL FUNERAL HOME12 Springfield Avenue Cranford, New Jersey 07016

(201)276-0092 '

IT MAKESA DIFFERENCE

WHERE YOU SAVE!

MacStANAOiUU

REPAIR

REYNOLDSPLUMBING t HEATING. INC

lieo Cuo/10 Tony Ott.JbiCUvn Jti Ws EipencncV

SAME DAY SERVICEBathroom jndKilchtn

Modernizations• StKWICt. SAltS Rfl'AIUS

Wf DoI he Complele loD

REASONABLE RATES

276-5367JS8 NORTH AVENUE E.

CRANFORD

ROOFING

Iniunntt t iclmivcly Since I IW

PLUMBERS

BUILDERS/ GENERAL1

SUPPLY (JO.LUMBER

BUILDING MATERIALSMILLWORK

27605051M CENTENNIAL AVE.

CRANFORD

PRINTERS

printing '•

TlfTi fitCHAPMAN BROS.• Plumbing .• Healing—Cooling• Alterations—Repairs9 Air Conditioning

276-1320

36 NORTH AVE E.CRANFORD

TELEVISION REPAIR I TYPESETTING

SAME DAY SERVICEIO« Moil J«l>t'

NO JO? TOO BIO OR TOO SMALL

I Qu,t»au fo'nM m fly.ftt Ki»lit>«.'V • Hfcl'"n-1

. [n. . l . l». • OiJut 6h««i«rutl HCK UfiOILIVfHV-• HU IMIMArtSANY.TIMt'

272-3340IHASTMANSI .CHAMfOHO

COLLEX

COLLISION EXPERTS

-vAuto Body RepairsLifetime Warranty

241-2730720 BOULEVARD

KENILWORTH

T ARTHUR JOHNSEIilformerly Thorlkl Joftnwn

Conitrucllon

ROOHM, CONTRACTORCARPENTER

j» tht Utmtnti GCRANFORO.N)

filly lisircd 3S249S1

AIDO TVSERVICE COMPANY

Television RepairCOLOR

BLACK & WHITEService

Within 74 HoursAll Makes

Admiral to ZenithANTENNA INSTALLATION

276-VI60218 Centennial Ave

. Crantord

DOOLEYFUNERAL HOME

NORTH AVE., W. 276-0255

hron-Omp

Cold TypeProductionCamera Work(Tin- lTr;ntfin^

(Litizru ;iiiL> iLlinuiirll1

J) Alden SI Cranlord. N J

A Funeral Hfhne.. of homelike atmosphere, completelymodern, uir conditioned, offstreet parking facilities.

also

DOOLEY COLONIAL HOME

556 Westfield Ave., Westfield

233-0255

1 TO 2V2-YEARSAVINGS CERTIFICATES

6.816.50

7oellectlveannualyield on

perannum

COMPOUNDED CONTINUOUSLY/ CREDITED QUARTEHLYMinimum MS00—Umltad luu*

A aubstantlal interest penalty Is required for early withdrawal.

PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS PAYFROM DAY OF DEPOSIT TO DAY OF WITHDRAWAL

5.47 5.25COMPOUNDED CONTINUOUSLY / CREDITED FOUR TIMES A YEAR

I (MARCH Si; JIJNE 30; SEPT. 30; DEC. 31)providing • balinc* of $ 50 ramalni IK Ih .•ccounl lo Ih* «nd ol lh« quartor.

Ttfe above yields apply when earnings and principal ere lofton deposit lor the entlie year.

SAVINGS INSURED UP TO 140,000 BY U.S. QOV'T AQENCY.

•KEN Hi'WORTH-.- t h eborough has lost' its court'bailie > to ensure- en-vironmental and drainagesafeguards in the widening ofihe Garden State Parkway

Irpeight0nT~5"l'-ianet>-M>-CIJ;II» IILI viA' three-Judge7 panel ruled

yesterday in favor of thi-Department of Transportation(DOT* by reversing SuperiorCourt Judge Harold Acker-man's order to refer the Park-way praject' lo Ihe Ocparl-

MAIN OFFICE: 40 Commotce Street, Nowark, N.J. 07102 • 043-0260Op»n O«lly:8 3O « m. lo 4:30 p.m. .

KENILWOHTH OFFICE: Boulevard at South ZOIh Street,Ka.nllwor1h, N.J. 07033 • 272-9580Op*A Dally: 0:30 a.m. lo 4:30 p.m.Prl4*y*a:M a.m. lo 0 p.m.tatur4aiaB a.m. lo 1 p m.

FREE PARKINQ AT BOTH OFFICES

ESEE

ment- (if. KnyironmentarProtection iDEP). anddismissing Kenilworth'scomplaint. .• , -

The panel ruled Kenilworthcannot maintain its actionunder - the EnvironmentalHights Act of 1974. slating the

• ; • • - • • •: ? - •

air and noisei ? .Miuii . . i , a n d . , d r a i n a g e.cornplaints do' riot' furnish a; ,soundbasis lo pursue ils legalaction. . • . i

- the decision was renderedbjF'iJildges HerinaiFMichels. -Kugene l ora,- and .John Cranesitting in tho AppellateI)ivision of the Superior Courtof Newark. They were actingon (he DOT'S appeal of JudgeAckerman's May 4 decision

Jiim porariiv halting con-,struciinn work on lhc» 13-miloproject and. ordering thenialtcr t() the DKP-to considerWhat flooding' and en-vironmental impact the workwould have on nearby homos.Argumenls on the appeal wen1

heard June 14. with Borough

Attorney Aldan f>'., Marksoitrepresenting Kpiiilworlh.

The panel May It! liftedAckernians restraining orderand allowed the DOT (<>

..continue construction workexcept—in \\y\i. _ areii/ olKeriilwoHhs; si ream, \vliicn isexpecU'd to be moved 10 feetcloser .to homes. .N ;•The judges yestnday im-'

plied Kenilworlb should havetaken steps sooner. They cited'a letter from staie' Iran-

~sporiauonSagneir dated Aug. 12.. ,which' promised lo study•drainage' problems -in theborough and make recom-mendations to relieveflooding. Cuiu'ediiiLi mi furl herinfdiniation vtiis forthcoming.

Ihe judges said Kenilworlh didnot institute action nntil April2R this year when it sought sin.injunction to prev<»ni furtherwork011 the Parkway.

C o 11 nc i 1 m a 11 \ 1 n'c e 11 i«Scorese. who IISIK speiirheaded:rci»izens cumniittee on Park-way expansion, said yester-day he was "very disap-pointed'with the decision. Ifeel Justice hasnM been donefor the little man."'" He ex-pressed concern for the

-faniilies__neatJIie..: Parkwaywho already suffer from"excessive- noise andHooding."

He said watei\seeped into\ards during a rece.nt rain-storm. "Justice went thewrong way." he comriiented.

SoMh, Willow Ave. lsi> 2nd Graders*AttendFranklinSclmolinF^U,

Marianne Pinkin

Student Wins

Nursing Grant

Mayor Vows to Prod School BoardUntil Brearley Conditions Remedied

•,niL<ii I V / I D T U . . Mnunr iw,. «n«r.«,i »u»n^ .*,„„„ . M:ili siiid lockers are being ,,,-,,mnicrl hi bring theseK I L Mayor the alleged" thefts, beerLivio Mancino yesterday drinking, smoking. andannounced his intention to dangerous conditions in thkeep bringing what he feels hare problems at DavidBrearlev Regional HighSchool to the attention of theBoard of Educatihn until it

k

uniif^vn^u.1 LI.IIUIIIWII.1 1,1 111,

bathrooms at a meeting .June22 of the Union CountyMunicipal Advisory Council inCranford. '

Malt said school authorities

• .. :•:,. , . r . Mancino said be wasMalt saidlockers are being . , r ( ( m | ) U , d ,„ .|)ring • those

repaired and replaced where ;, ) :U(tTS „,. \\w boards alnecessary during the summer.

The mayor also .said bothboys and nirls are afraid lo gointo the bathrooms. He saidi rurinals are ripped off I hiwalls, and some studenls anl h t d r

Board of Educatihn until it Malt said school authorities walls, and s m e"takes affirmative action to received from 25 to 50 com-:.lhreatened c.r abusM bysee lockers are safe and plaints' of thefts a year, minority. ,

b t h s d i t i M i ' fi f He said he recommended

es affirmative ac i received from 25 to 50 csee lockers are safe and plaints' of thefts a year,students can go to bathrooms disputing Mancino's figure ofahd not be abused by some 200 The principal said manyhoodlums"

The mayorft

reiterated hisDonald A.

minority. , ' •pting Manin fgu He said he recommended to

200. The principal said many regional school rjoarostudents leave their lockers president Charles V Male, six

ft h

jontion a ft or some residentscomplained in him. thai they•Hot ift> acl.inn'from the board.

"My.:, ooncorlr. is to helpyoung people."-, the mayorsaid. "Their .money andclothes are not sale. Youth is

CAlUVObl) AfiirinnnePinkin. daughter of Mr. and'

M r s . Wallace Pinkin ol :!15Myrtle Ave. was (lie recipient<>f Ihe Marion Ksposito' Nur-•sing- Scholarship- . : - --

The scholarship is givenannually b v ' l h e (iarwoodWoman's club to a DavidBrearlev Hegioiuil' HighSchool senior who plans <icareer in the medical field.

Marianne. • a recentgraduate Was active in KeyClub. German -Club. HilleSquad, school newspaper;track' team and worked ontown elections. She*, plans to'major' HI nursing aj WestVirginia I'niversily injhc fall:

. GA1UVOOD ..Vrezoningofthe Franklin and WashingtonSchool 'districts was veiled bythe Biiard. of,. Kduca.tion lastTh'ursdsiy'night. Theshifl is toequalize the first and secondgrade population of the twoschools'. which wasdisproportionately high atWashington.

;~~As. the result :•- of the-redrawing of Ihe boundarylines of Franklin School on thenorth sio^e of town andWashington School on thesouth, first and secondgraders residing on Soul li

—Ave..Willow St.. and New St.will go to Franklin School .011-Ihe north side instead ofWashington School oiv "thesouth starting in the fall.. •

The Franklin Schoolsouthern boundary. foiijH'rlyNorth Ave.'/ was moved twoblocks farther south to include•Willow Ave.. and all of NowSt.. iVoin-South A,veJo MyrtleAve.. is now included in theFranklin School district.

School super intendentHruce K. Buckley said no

decision has boon nuidoyot onwhether lo IranslVr kin.'clergsu'leri students, loo.,1

." Salary HikesThe board voted to increase

thcvsalary of .Joseph TroiamOschool principal, by S75O lo.$2U)(HI for the ljmi-77 schoolyear retroactive to .July 1,197G. and to raise it another

-$750 to-S21T75()-Ior-lhf 1977-7Hschool year, which startedFriday. '

Miss Barbara - Sachsel,secretary to Buckley, was(liven an increase of $510'toSICJIO retroactive \o .July I.

-1976. and ajiolher increase of$59(1 as of Friday.

prograii1 was eliminatediiecause attendance in the pastWas so poor it could nut bejustified for the few involved.

•'We arc loo small acommunity for .summerremediation; programs and tooffer them lor nine studentswould not be practicable."said Buckley. . '

Black dcnuiuilejL_s<»meassistance for .his child, butBuckley said other neigh-boring school districts . withsummer programs will\not.take students from outsidetheir districts.

The board granted, a con-,'. tract of S1O.27K lo Fay and

Fischelti of I'nion to provide "three I6vfool sections offolding bleachers' lo be ; in-,.stalled in the renovated multi-piirpos.e. room..at' LincolnSchool1.1; .

II1KK. HIKKK1DKA ramble sind a bike ride are

scheduled f<i'r members of thelinion County Hiking Club and.their' guests. On Saturday

iNsi.t.PiCjujiunings' will lead theSouth lvTmTntaiTi TUTmblerHikers will meet at Locust

. Crove at 10:00 a.m.A Great Swanipbike ride-is

scheduled for Saturday also.Bikers will meetral the WilsonScjhool, Westfield. at 9:30 p.m.

• and bring lunch. " ' - . <

1 Sinn mIT School DroppedHubert Black of f>29 Ensl

St. called upon Ihe board toprovide summer educational-help lor pupils who need it. Meidentified his child, whom hesaid icstcd as exceptionally•bright Init- who has a learning..disability, as one of nine whoDunked and vvill be held back a

" y e a r . . " w "' . • • ' • 'Buckley said the summer:

$476 in WatchesStolen from Mart

students leave their lockers pres Cunlocked and sotfte do not months ago that , more

k d i l l d d toThe mayor reiieraieu m» umncKea ana »imc un nm ..„concern after Dr. Donald A. report thefts of sneakers and custodial people sire needed to

.,_Merachnik. superintendent of other articles of clothing'to monitor corridors, bathroomsUnion County Kegional High authorities. and grounds. He'said laxSchool District 1. and Joseph Mancino yesterday said if dollars are spent for repairingH. Malt, principal of Brearley. Merachnik arid Malt "admit to damages, and some should belast week labeled Mancino s 50 (hefts, double that amount used..for prevention, lie also

or moro must be, occurring, recommended non-breakablebe ' • • "

.hargesof200 theft

Blvd. Collision Injures 3

Garwood CalendarFriday',- Ju ly 8 ' • ' '• • r.

.8 p.m. - Bible Study Group. Smolley home, 421 ThirdA v e . • • • . . ' •' . , * , , . • ; ' ' ' . . . . - .

Saturday, July 9 ' ;• 7:'aop.rn. - Parish bingo games, St. Anne,School.

^ T u e s d a y , J u l y 12 - ' "" ~ ". • ' ••-•••••lOa.tn; - Tuesday morning group, St- Paul's Church.7:30R.m. - Parish bingo games, St. AnneSchool.8 p.m. - Borough Council meeting.

Wednesday, July 13••' ir30 p.m. - Bible Study Group, Deremer'home, 34GWillow Ave. '

, .„ Oct. WarrenOpie is'-invcstigatlng the theftof 22 Timex wrist watchesvalued at_ S47(i from ashowcase at Medi-Marf in the

-Carwood Mall. The watcheswere discovered missing June27. . . ' ' ; - . . ,

According to. police, Ihewatches were removed • fromthe underneath storage areaof the showcase and replacedwith empty, boxes.. •• • .

Medi-Msirl security officerWilliam . Ijt'owan is assistingDel. Opie in the investigation.

- , V<*r KounilA 1974 Dalsun reported

stolen June 22 from' Circco:Auto Shop. s7-U South Avo...was founci inNCranford July .3parked iri froni of 41 JohnsonAve. The car is owned by Mrs.Uoloros Suarez of Brooklynwho had left the car at Oircco

1 for repairs. .:,. .

Philip Testa of 55 WillowAve. reported, the thefl-of aT/Uro lawn riiower valued at '$150 from his rear yard June27:

Kenilworth YouthVisits West Point

K-ENILWORTH-'-'' ScottWalyuS of 342 Lincoln Dr.. as a .junior at David BrearlevItegional High School, was oneof 300 students selected ^romthe-50 states to attend a week-long invitational academicworkshop at the II.S. MilitaryAcademy at West Point. N.Y.

Brig. Gen. Frederick A.Smith Jr. . dean of' theacaderr\ic board, sajd theselection 6f students wasbased on their scores on. the

—Preliminary ScholasticApljtude Test'. .

KENILWORTH - Threepeople were treated atnospitals for injuriessustained in a two-carcollision June 28 at Boulevardand Epping Dr. All werereleased later.

According to police, AlyceTerjek, 31, oT 723 Stirling St.,Plainfield, was traveling east

on the Boulevard at 9:45 p.m.when she swerved to avoid aparked car. As she applied herbrakes on the wet roadway,the; car spun into the west-bound lane where it wasstruck broadside by a cardriven by AnthonyBongiovanni, 49, . of 60 ParkDr.

Kenilworth CalendarFriday. July 8

6-9 p.m. - Weight training, Brearley gym.

Monday, July 11 .6-9 p.m. - Weight training, Brearley gym.7 p.m. - Municipal Court.7 - 9 p.m. - Tax office open.7- 9 p.m.-Consumer director's office open.

B g h d e r f c ^ o f f i e e o p e i v ^rapg^m^^Bonraghderfc^offieep8 p.m. Work Session, Governing Body.

Tuesday, July 12 ' ' - „ . '•" •"7-9 p.m. - Building inspector's off ice open7 - 9 p m. - Zoning enforcement officer's office.open.8 p.m. - Public Borough Council meeting.

Club meeting, Galloping HillWednesday. July 13

12:15 p.m. - RotaryCaterers.

6 - 9 p.m, - Weight training, Brearley gym.

huraday,July-14 :_ :_ "•'-...1 - 4 p.m. - Welfare director's office open.4 - 5 p.m. - Building inspector's office open.

Ms. Terjek was treated atMemorial General Hospital.Union, for arm injuries!Bongiovanni and his wife.Penny, were treated for headinjuries at Overlook Hospital.Summit. '

f errjjnce J. Driscoll Jr., 29. *of 365 Lincoln W. was issued a Isummons for careless driving Iafter his car knocked down I ,five traffic signs ,and a street Ilight at the.Parkway over-1pass. I

According to police. Driscoll jwas traveling west on |Galloping Hill Rd. at 1:55 a.m. |

. July 4 when his car struck a j,stop sign at the entrance to the jgolf course. The car went |across the center divider and |

- t°5l* down five signs at the 1"Parkway southbound™en=- r—trance and an aluminum light •stanchion.. .. .' The driver was not hurt, and !the car sustained front end !damage." > !

Cash Stolen 'Ruth Reynolds of. 600

Cranford Ave. Monday jevening, reported $275 in cash jstolen from her home. Del. I'Sgt.' Charles David reported I,entry was gained by breaking r

--aceilaxjundow^ ICharlotteleilis oTWNn7th~f

HEREWILL BE KENILWORTHWHILE SHOP

HERE

y, 1 -.a! 8»5t' U8T

Offer ends July 31st Clip this Coupon Offer ends July 31st.

ON ALL CAKES.Tonis, Mini Sundaes, Clairs. |Spumoni, Nutty Royale, N.C.D.l

WHERE GOOD

FRIENDS

NAEET

C O W I K G ™ . 8.SM.

YOUNG

_

CRIAMI S I T P E RIMAWOT

276-6188

24 Earn Kean Degreeseen Kenilworth and physical eduealibn; Gerard L. Route 22., Police

Garwood residents Fjorellino, B.A., industrial had no license peddearees June 11 from education; John J. Horvath. whe.» stolen, bi

™,*,«t cciprw-e with New York

Sixteeneight GJreceived degrees June n .. . . . . ^""managementKean College, Un on . B f , s O

m c h S e J. Jadelis.Kenilworth recipients a>*: AIW. ^'r i . , e d u c a t i O n ;

Ann M.Fico,.M.A., fine arts; B.A., pnysica_.Deborah M. Flamlni, M.A.,early childhood education;'Cleo Andrews, B.A., fine arts;Lynn R. Butler, B.A., speechand hearing; Frank J. Cor-cione 111, B.S., managementscience; Raymond C.DeMaio.B A physical education;

St, reported a 1970 Toyotastolen from alongside herhome Saturday night. The carwas recovered Monday inUnion at the Hy-Way Bowl.Route 22.j Police said the car

)lates attachedm,v,, ., , jut was foundwith New York plates.

Mrs. Albert Adams of 26 S.Michigan Ave. June 28

I 505B Boulevard

^Country CooWn f"'They're Finger Snapping Good/ . y

Last Weekend The WanderersThis Fri. & Sat. July 8th and 9th.

' ENJOY OUR DELICIOUS ;

HOT & £OLD LUNCHES (tues-fn)Package goods available

276-4723Parkway)

B.A., physical education; Michigan Ave. JuneEileen Kelly, B.S.W., social reported the theft of a 10-speed

k E l i C Mokes B.A., boys' Schwinn bicycle from inMihi

Jeffrey V. Ferguson, B.. A.,

Zoners Graiit3 Variances^—

b i S A A B a j e r p e d 6 t a : Im'alo^gside ,He home ofBS maniment science, Mrs. Joseph Zagorskas. 606and' S R-" SabOlchick, Cranford Ave, -B?hefiGaarrwSKtd graduates G a T W O o d J a y c e e S

M • ' ' W.nitieS;-George nany-poople- J»i_Gi»meM_

KKNILWOHTH-. residents wanting

WI Casabona. B.A., computer pledged money In haw thefij-^e- Joseph R. Fuentes, [,ouse numbers painted o

residents wan,.,* l «n ,ake d e a r t h scfence; Diane M. t h e | r curbs, the ;arwmu^rovemenls to their homes niein. B.A « I » ^ » W J " "naMo '°were granted variances from education; Danielfront aim MI»- ,v<"" — . .requiretnenls " al a specialmeeting of the Hoard ofAdjustment June 2<).

- - AngeloCatlo/ziol 41 N. ilslSt. was given- permission U>enclose an existing hack porchand convert it into a bedroomand extend the kitchen.

Michael Barritta oi « N."' 19th -Kt. was granted a

variance to demolish a garageand erect an 'addition., t o t he-house for use as a liedrwiiuhnd family room. -

The request. to enclose a. front porch by Stanley

Orztxhowski <>f 152 Boulevardwas okayed.

Malcolm looks glurrr. He forgot to buy

some beer and it's hot. It's 9 p.m.,

and he thinks it's too late.

CHEER UPMal.-Kenilworth-Liquor

John J.DiFobioRoofing-Siding

Guttersrjleaders

their curuh. im -.•«. ........Jay'cees were Unable to

Kokulak. complete the job June.ll^.. science: The project, called Paint the

John W. Miller, • B.*>... C u r b > is'.designed lo raisemechanical contracting, and f u l u l s fon ( n e ,|ayCfees.Joseph Higano, B.A., physical, ( ) n J u | y 9>. t n c ' jaycees "Willeducation. a.ttempl to finish Ihe south side.

/ - i |« . and also do the north side, The\ j l l f l lCJaycoes provide services td

the commnfiity'in return fordonations, which are taxdeductible. The Paint the Curb

KKN1LWOKTU-- The rain dale is July Hi.Kenilworth Recreation A 1 1 . ¥ ^ _ _ _ ; _ r vCommittee begins its summer A d u l t L e a r n i n g

Center Stays Open"KKNUAVOirrn- The Union

Regional Adult l.oar>iin|jCenter al David lliearleyItcgiouul in^h School, willcontinue tree adult basiceduction <md hij*li schoolequivalency preparationprograms through. .Inly.Effective immediately, thecenter will be open Mondaythrough Thursday from !>::tua.m. lo ri:lU) p.m and Mon-day. Wednesday, and 'Thur-sday evenings from ~i:'M) .in\):'M\ p . m

l-'nr in formal ion. c a l ll l a r i i c i l i i i i i i 'nml. learnim.1

cenler -dirwinr . JVJ-l-lllH. \ rHarry l.inkiiTptlirectoi'Ol' adulland cniiiinning Vducalion.':i7(i-(i'.iiio I -AI «MI. ' " • • •

is open till 10 P.M. MONDAY THRU

SATURDAY with a selection of OVER

50 BEERS AND ALES TO CHOOSE FROM!

Open Nightly till 10 P ^ ^, '

512 Boulevard-Kenilworthfree delivery 272"3333 _Open 6 Days

H>i:ni|i:i

BOULEVARDBICYCLE CENTER

The Latest In _S~cWii-n__ & Ross Bicycles

MOTORBIKES

Free Assembly On All New.BJke

Repairs On All Makes & Models

second vi'iin.Saturday'at Ward KieM-t'rom10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.i

The Breurley football stall'will coordinate Hie on-fieldclinic, which will .'feature l">college players • from schoolsthroughout the nation. Thecollege players will teach acircuit of skills followed by aninformal lunch' tor a-llKenilworlh youngsters. Jiges

^ 1 _I'FO 1»IS( I SSIttN

The next tneeting of theCranford Parapsychologyclub will be at the CranfordCommunity Center mi Mon-day. July il al 7:.-lf> p in: Thesubject will IH>'"1'KO'S - Tin

believe thi'v exist'''.'WeAnyonelend.

ieinterested may

. UNTOM COUNTYGOAAMEMORATIVE PLATE

What a perfect gift idea, forthe summer wedding orother occasion, where onlythe truly unique gift will do.

THE GIFT SHOP506 Boulevard

Kenilworth, N. J.Tel 276-2198

* • * • • • * • * • • * * • * • * * * * * * • • * - • - *Enjoy our summer closeout sale on now, fodturing savings of 50* on PartyGoods and many j ; l t items.

J

Your HostessChristine( antoiit'seK/ecluiau

J'olynesian

TONOCaptain

Fat David

RESTAURANT550 Blvd. Kenilworth 272-8420

HOMEof the

LEMON CHICKEN

_ MOO SHU PORK

HOME MADE CRISPY NOODLES

AND MOST OF ALL

WARM -HOSPITALITY.Open 1 Days. Serving Dinner Kri. and Sat. Night till Midnight.

BYOB

I

Page 6: JEEM-...... • »••. • I -. • '-I. • . .„ -,-• •.»•*•.-.. CITIZEN AND CHRONIC! £ Thursday. Juno SO. 1977

". -.--i

-.V.- r>;Vu

Page MCRANFORD (N.J.) CITIZEN AND CHRONICLE Thursday, July 7,1977

CHRONICLE CLASSIFIED^llJ76«)00^ollJ76«)00Open Weekdays: 9 5

Deodline: Tuesday 3 p.m.

RENTALS APPRABALS

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

BOVL£ smerep usmesFIRST OFFERING

3 Bedroom Cape in excellent condition"- new."modern. eat-in.kitchen• lot 53 x 114 - carpeting throughout - aluminum sided "for lowexterior* maintenance, v • •

5 BEDROOM COLONIALLovely home (on cul-de-sac) in move-in condition—Features include,large living room, formal dining room,'huge eat-in Kitchen, family .room with fireplace plus much more. CalUor appointment 272*9444.

^ . i i Duplex located on dead end street. 2 bedrooms, living room,dining room and as an extra added attraction, a family room to take 'wear and tear ollrestol home. Must see to appreciate. . ,'

Rral Ksfufv .Si

NEW LISTINGFORTHE^OUNG

AT HEART 1.A Colonial Cape with aninviting living room whichradiates hospitality andcharm, • •AWOODBURNING

FIREPLACEto add to that " S P E C T A T T 7 "look,, gracious dining roomthat begs for candlelight,cozy kitchen.so' tastefullydecorated, den : '- •'••.'

3 BEDROOMS,TILE BATH

a flagstone porch for warmsummer even ings ,meticulous housekeeping!

IT'S TOO GOODTO MISS!CALL FORAN. EARLY

APPOINTMENTVICTOR DENNIS

'Jib /b18REAUOR ,•

2Alden SI Cfld

BUILDINGBUILDING FOR RENT - 7200 sq. feet,

., new.,builfjinfc.grpund, floor. Willrenovate to suit tenant.- tocated.:in

J(enilwqrth,,. Ideal location.Sufficient "parking. ReasonableRent. ContaM Slito Realty Co ;tf276-4444." !

V A C A T I O N R E N T A L S vADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS - 3 "or 4 ,

'bedroom Chalets, ^ Swimming,tennis, boating and trout fishing.

V b l * t £ £ U 4 6 4 i

SENIOR RESIDENTIAL APPRAISER;

'<<&&>•'

AT OWNERS

HELP WANTEDfekyV2222 or 4641515. .

y"be n e ^

• these:.nurrtlJer;!i

R E N T A L S W A N T E D , :

SOUTH CRANFORD OR CLARK AREA -Quiet' young man desires 3 or 4rooms in 2- family ' hpuse(preferred)! Eat-in kitchen,reasonable rate. Call 399-9439,7:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m. week nights qrSat. and Sun. a.m.

M/F over 40 for exclusive industtialsales terrifory^No-'relopation. Weare ,'ari Expanding AAA-1, firme5tabllsheiii-S!nljj»|933.-Wi|! offerfull (ring^: 'lietjefits; Liberal,commissions •with, opportunity foradvancemjBnlif,': jKor ^ personal •interview, write a .letter and tell meabout y o u r s e l f " ^ Fail, Sales

• Manager,' Southwestern • Petroleum'r Box 789, ft1. Worth/Texas 76101,

(I Crisis,situation.^ xT~" ":f

.;•;•: Art s - - •

FOR SALEM i S C E L L A W E O U S

AIR CONDITIONER r window, type',.• 15,000 BTU. Excellent condition.

DiiTcheap: Call -376-4778.' •;•!•:•

WANTED TO BUY

» SENIOR, CITIZENS:-!N* where to go tor SeK>?,Call the X . . . ..V.! N.J.Ptpt.-rt'CotnnwhVtAWalrvKpt line

' 8 W 7 W - 8 W 9 . i v ' ' .. . • : • , • • • • • : . • , - ; • . • • - & •;'•

SERVICESU DECORATING

RENTALS

OF /HOMESA P A R T M E N T S

'CRANFORD

530 South Avp , E . Cr.mlord272 9-U-)

Galleries in fc" lu.ibetti, Morristown, E Hanover

pH276-2114.

- 5 large rooms facingGarden State Parkway.

WHEN Mil HUNK W BUYINfi OR W M ,% WR1R NATieM 11T MICHIMLY. FOR

mm sttVMJB, § o t m m STAIV

Arlene CasaleMary Lou GrayBill BostwickEd JankowskiLee Rajowski

Dora KuzsmaJerry MarinoLynne WagnerYolanda BavaSsoKathy Buontempo

. Jerry Ellis. O P E N : 9 - 9 D a i l y

9 - 5 S a t . . • . , . . - .; ' , • • 1 2 ' 5 S u n . [ - ~ i ^ ••• .

Century 21D.S. Kuzsma Realty

115 Miln StreetREALTOR 272-8337

All oj/ices independently owned and operated.'

MALE-FEMALE FOR SHORT ORDERCOOK, part time. Experienced

-preferred but will train. Call 276-•'• 4 7 2 3 : , , - , . ; ' . . . . • / - . . /

HELP WANTED

MEGHAN, . • • > • - . • • • • -

Roofin;Blown

ICS/Hforh SidihInsulai

Coll

ELPERS

Union County Insulation^ Co.

cumulations; Collections;.Canada.•-J'top; prices paid.; 527-80.11.. y -; Eifper1ericed;20 year s painting arid

decorating. Interior aniF'exte'riorusing. Dutch Boy pafflls,'; free.Estimates. FUHV.Insured. ~. .' "•. aW'aa<_at5 t U U V I M d > n/iA, MV

"FAINTING -Interiorand exterior. £311

; CARS WANTED^ . :

H.6HBSWlC^MIflor junk cars. - Local distancetowing. Call: 2 3 j . ) 3 5 ( > . '•

WE Byy used cars, cars neeuirifc . - •• • • •!•••»—j—;——-repair and junk cars, 382-8434 ask for R O O E I N G A N D S I D I N G • •E d d y . . ' . • " . ' • • ' • • • " : • > . • / • . ; - ' • . . ' • • • • . ' • ^ H I J M N E » S - ; ' . • ' - • • - ' • •

- • • • ' . • • ' • ' . . • . ! . . •' X •. ' . LeaJss. roots , l eaders a n d g u t t e r s ,

SERVICES om^:««*---*™^*****.

MEN WOMEN

NO LOHG HOT SUNNIER HERE......siii^ifei;

days~ln tne 16^x 32 In-groundpdol vyhich Is'situated ori,,'a 125* x 1\5' lot.

Owner Is retiring and anxious to sell ICall now to see this home in the $50,000's

New Art ExhibitPaintings by

DARLA STEPHENSMEMBERS OF CRANFORO BOARD. WES1FIELD BOARD '-AND UNION COUNTY MULTIPLE LISTING SYSTEM.

1O6 NORTH UNION AVENUE

C RAN FORD. NEW JERSEY 07016272-4020

WORK OVERSEAS!!Australia — Europe — JapanThe South Pacific - -Fa r East

South America — Central AmericaOVER 100 COUNTRIES

ALL OCCUPATIONS - skilled - unskilled - U . S .Government — Private Corporations and Organi-zations. . ; , .' ;•. ; . '- :-". ' .:.' ',. • • ' "••" . ' , ' •' J

Construction — Engineering — Saias — Transpor-tation — Teaching — Oil Refining — Medical —Accounting — Manufacturing — Secretarial —Ai r ;crpft, etc.,etcy# $800.00 to $5,000.00 per month.

In most lobs overseas you wil l receive FREETRANSPORTATION, HIGHER SALARIES andWAGES, TRAVEL PAY, GENEROUS VACATION andBONUS, FREE MEDICAL CARE, FREE MEALS andHOUSING, more ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES.

eign Resident Rule (civil service excluded).To allow anyone the opportunity to explore overseasemployment we have published a complete set olOVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT GUIDES, Our OVERSEASEMPLOYMENT GUIDES contain the following infor-mation... /• •," ".. '. .• .• ' " • '"•"• .;.'• .'.•/•'••List Of CURRENT OVERSEAS JOB OPPORTUNITIES

with a special section on overseas construction pro-jects, executive positions and-teaching opportunities.•How, Where and Whom to apply for the job of your

LOOKING FOR A NEW HOME?CHECK THE HOME OF THE

WEEK ON PAGE 3, AVAILABLEFROM-

1 J

23 NORTH AVENUE EAST. CRANFORO. N I 07016Members of-Cranfdrd and Westfield Boards

and Multiple Listing276 1053

ELEGANT FRENCH NORMAN$110,000

tlegance plus livabiltty abound in this gracious lour bedioom, 2V>bath beauhlully situated home with tower entrance hall, all largelyproportioned rooms including a lirst lloor lamily room and otlice.fully air conditioned. 1 car attached garage Also included: burglar>

alarm, lire, detector, a(l modern Vjchen appliances including built-in"relrigerator Ueejer. built-in vacflum system A ONE OF A KINDBEAUTY. • . . ' • .

RANDOLPH WIEGMAN CO.

Realtors .153 Mountain A»«.. WasUicId 232:6609

•FIRMS and ORGANIZATIONS employing all types ofPersonnei in nearly .every partof the Free World.

•Firms and organizations engaged in OVERSEASCONSTRUCTION PROJECTS, MANUFACTURING,MIHING. OIL- REftNiNG, ENGINEERING, SALES,SERVICES, TEACHING, SECRETARIAL AIR-CRAFT, ETC.!

•COMPANIES and GOVERNMENT AGENCIES em-ploying personnel in nearly every occupation, fromthe unskilled laborer, to the college trainedprofessional! Vs

•How and Where to apply for OVERSEAS GOVERN-MENT JOBS!

•Employment on U.S. Government ships "MER-CHANT MARINES"!

•Directory of U.S. Businesses operating inAUSTRALIA that employ Americans.

•List of U.S. DEFENSE CONTRACTORS with oper-ations OVERSEAS THAT EMPLOY Americans!

HOMEWORKERS: $85.00 weeklyaddressing; stuffing envelopes.Start immediately. Details, rush 25

• cents and self addressed stampedenvelope: Bestcp, 3205 N.Wv 75thTerrace,. Hollywood, FJa. 33024,

. D e p t . . ^ 1 9 6 . ' i > • • . • • • ' . • ' • • •

ASSISTANT Custwltan, part time,excellent working conditions, goodpay, care of church, references,Short Hills area, car necessary,ideal for retired person, call 379-2531 after. 6rR,;rrv -•••

FRIENDLY i p £ PARTIES" HASOPENINGS FOR .MANAGERS ANDDEMONSTRATORS. DEMONSTRATEGUARANTEED TOYS & GIFTS. NO.CASH INVESTMENT - NOCOLLECTING.OR DELIVERING NOSERVICE CHARGE. CAR &TELEPHONE' NECESSARY. CALLCOLLECT TO CAROL DAY 51&V489-8395 OR WRITE FRIENDLY TOY.PARTIES, tO RAILROAD AVE.ALBANY, NY. 122^5.

MATTSON GENERAL CONTRACTINGHome improvements. Exterior andInterior; 232-2759.; . ;

C A R P E T I N S T A L L A T I O N "

CARPET AND LINOLEUM, newinstallation- or pull old ~and re-install. Very reasonable. CaU for'completely free esUnute 925-2665,

.'• 5 p.m.-9:30 p.m.

D R I V E W A Y S ~

DOUGHERTY PAVING. Driveways,block or ties: Free estimates. 561-6452 alter.'5' p.m. - •, v -

D R A P E R I E S

Custom made and installed. Yourmaterial or mine. Also draperiesrehung; repaired, remodeled.Compare our low prices: CaiMor a*- 232-4551.

W A T E R P R O O F I N G.,;:•..- WATER?ROOFING . ' i

. ' H6me basements..' ;General Maintqrtahcs Co;

.-•, ^Syears experlerriK', • ;•.:>•• " ' • ' • • ' • 5 ' y e a r . w a r r a i i t y : ' . , ' . • ' ' • . ' •

7g9T12l9^ ^ 3817885Are; you wondering whbte to find It?.

Check the Area. Service'Guide In this

WINE of the MONTH' ••• ,: • . . t ' l « » i B £ » ' " ' M a U H b ^ B a i a ^ a L K : - - , " ' , •„ ,•••,•' - i • • • • ' • • • V - j

1 •

i^.L1

•Mm\

'•'.• •••.• V ; ^ ^ ^ ^ . , 2 3 o z . , ' : •• M/fk Bottle ;

. - / • • • ' - - . *-;..-,-• r , ' '.

A most ..delicious estatebottled AAosel wine of a

• great vintage year.T-Excellervt^:iforL:.::.W4»rin___.

Vyeather rneniis or lostplain delicious drinking.'This is a wine certain to been|oyed by al l . , s( j :.,

"Ca^e'.oif'. 12,'$32^29;' ">i';;'.-"->v:':'-;••••"

"HOMe OF THE WINS 8A*H£L KQOM"30 Eastman $tr««t . Q Q '

'" 276-1044 ' YOUR WINE LINE"F»mtlyfP«rat<K!»inc»mo

F R E E G I F T W R A P - F R E E LOCAL DE'.l IV 1' RY

,',-!.-," '-1-:?

POSITION ...SECRETARY-

RECEPTIONISTAgresslye/ . tough mindedindiv. to,, Handle busy", frontdesk, answer phones, visitors,.filing and typing. KnowledgeOf tollex, shorthonrfind typing

:'50'-''WJ»«A-v-«s^grttfal.' Salaryopen, all benefit plaid. Call T.Fitzgerald at 272.6700.

FOR SALEBOATS

SUNFISH WITH TRAILER, canvascover for sail, paddle and 2 seatpreservers. Good condition. Bestoffer: 276-7568. :.,

F L E A M A R K E T S • • 'FLEA MARKET

:Every Wednesdayr:'Fi'iday," Saturday'and Sunday. Dealers call 574-8599or S41-9328 ' Rafter 6 p.m

ENTERTAINMENT ~MAGIC WITH THE FEMININE TOUQH

Children's -and adult shows.Reasonable rates. 388-5276 or382-4837..

F E N C I N GCHAIN LINK FENCE !

9 guage vinyl wire T 4 ' , 51, 6'-75;centssq-ft installed. Call alter 6 p.mi 381-

, 1 0 4 4 . . , • ' ' • • • 'v- ' •

HOME IMPROVEMENTS _

ALUMINUM SHOWROOM"

Porch and Patio Enclosures '

Jalousies Awning Windows

Nuprine Replacement•• •".'••• ;. w i n d o w . ! ' ••:'.. • H :

Storm andScreen Combinations

Combination Doors - 25 Styles

LIFETIME ALUMINUMPRODUCTS INC.

102 iouth Ave. W. 276-3205

Home Improvements.\o Job Too Small

i FREE ESTIMATESNIGHT APPOINTMENTS

FULLY INSURED '

HAROLD F.BENNER, INC.

BODY & FENDER' STRAIGHTENING

AND TOWINGEstimates Furnished

276-11116M SOUTH A V E , E.

CRANFORD, N.J.

. y f . ; ;"Building Headquarters"• LUMBER* MILLWORK•MASON'S MATERIALS•HARDWARE •PAINT

FUELS ;

233-14W

OO1490 RAHWAY AVE., AVBNEL(across from Railway Prison)

G A R A G E SALES1

. ComplimentaryGARAGE SALE SIGNS

are available' at the Boyle Com pany.Realtors.- 2 7'

OPEN SUNDAY 2-53 MOHAWK OR.

UelighKul Cape situated in SunnyAcres area. 1st tloor have living100m. '2 bedrooms, new sciencekitchen and bath. 2nd tloor hasair active bedroom and storage,possible 4th bedroom Attachedgarage. Home is in A ) , conditionMusi to • set to appreciateJ48.900.

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IV ALDEN STREETCRANFORD

276-0400OPEN DAILY 9 V SUNDAY

THURSDAYS 7 915

$HAHEEN AGENCYKK.U.TOK - ,

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tr YEAHS OF i t H U I f l

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OPEN SUN. 2-4 PM

314 HIGH STREETDUTCH COLONIAL

S54.000Charming Home with 6 rooms'.Den, Sun Room, (inished room inBasement, Modern Kitchen andBath, 2 car garage

MOVf.lN CONDITIONOwners moving out ol Town

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G.G. NUNN, Realtors2768110

•Information about TEMPORARYJOBS OVERSEAS!

and SUMMER

us several EMPLOYMENT APPLICATION FORMSthat you may send directly to the COMPANIESor ORGANIZATIONS that interest you the most!

MAIL OUR ORDHR FORM TODAY!!The Job You Want May Be Waiting For You Right Now!!

ORDER FORM > . ,MAIL TO:Overseas Employment Guides1727 SCOTT ROAD, SUITE CBURBANK. CA. 91504

I am enclosing $10.00 cash, check or money order.Please send me your complete set of OVERSEASEMPLOYMENT GUIDES immediately.

NAME ._._

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APARTMENT-YARD SALEHUNDRED'S OF ITEMS 415 E.Westfield Ave., Roselle Park, (rearof Pine Hill Apartments) Sat. July 9:9 a.m. - ?, Raindate Sunday, Julyl

10. : • • • • '

fofSCELLANEOUS - ~ ". "PLASTIC SLIPCQVERS

Custom-made, pin lifTed, expertlycut in your home. Any sofa & 'Ichairs or 3 PC. section S120.NMdkcr i l t B6S-630Q. >

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LOVELY ADULT PARK We will paytirsl y«'jrs rent lot you G o d placelo live. (201) 364-2235 «*e i

tITY _ : - , . _ _ - * _ - STATE ZIP r

. ~ 30"OAY^0NEY BACK GUARANTEEIt you ire dis««W«(d wltrtour Ovarssas Employment Guides, lormy reason, atmply retu'n our Ouldes to us within 30 days andyour S10.Q0 will bo refunded to you immediately. NO QUESTIONSASKED.

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m i n i : . ; • ' • " • > - • • ' - . •: •

GARAGE272-6090

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OVER 5OO CYCLES IN STOCKFOR EXAMPLE:' • . ' •'•75 MR 50 . J379 -J6CRU5 *7951 cyl, 3 spd Lls(J358, 5 in stock I cyl. 5 >pd list-5905. 1 in stock

•J5ST9O M29 « X H 0 0 « 7 91 cyl, 3 spd listJ395,5 in stock 1 cyl. 5 spd Iisl-J539, 5 in stockPrices ComplrUj, Bxajpt for MV (itm» (4 tax. V.I.P. PricusInclude, Hat r'ttces Excludn FrtMsht A Pmp.

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VOLKSWAGEN900 E. Elizabeth Ave.Linden 486-6200

This is th©. season forBLACKCARPENTER ANTSIn addition to beingunsightly and unsanitary,Black Ants excavateextensive galleries In woodto serve as nesting placesand may cause extensivedamage to your home. ,

*omcut »T*TI HwtncTKm «T*TKW {

SO.ELMORAEKPN \; tERVICENTER *tl3-V?44 . {

h Own Im. to. lim. M. K —rv • uiwr»" ~*

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; Ontvof th» Oldest & Largest ;

feme•>

Serving Cranford, Kenilworth and Garwood'-T —Thursday,-July-14,-1977 •.._.___ .

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

^^Ijy.m*

* , . J(fj'*fl^

» • . * •

* * .

BLAZE OF GLOftl-ES— Recent weather, without prolonged midLday sunshine, hasbeen ideal for daily display'of morning glories by MrsyMary Tappen of 134 HillsideAve. alongside backyard garage. Mrs. Tappen, in her fjrst attempt at the flower withthe a.m. personality that blooms for only one day, has vines on 65 strings running ninefeet from garden toeaves of garage and will see a total of 3,000-blooms. , •

David's Verbal ShotFells Town Goliaths

David overcame Goliath ata Township Committeemeeting Tuesday night.

The town's, No. 1 fiscal; critic, the lshort-statured.

Kenneth A. McGrath, lost askirmish with the august.Township Committee, butwound up, like the Biblicalhero, winning the battle.

All the odds- were againstMcGrath in the setting of aspecial meeting, held around,the committee conferencetable in the presence of onlyone citizen — Mr.^McGrath.,The meeting.Was called toadopt two' bond-issue or-dinances for funding a numberof local improvements.

But McGrath arose to let flyfrom his verbal slingshot ablast at the first ordinance,zeroing in on an itemproviding $15,650 for a fencearound the town Conservation

-Genter-iRatable Favored

The center shpuld beabolished, McGrath con-tende&and the site used for aratable-producing "high-

• quality" office building forwhich the area is zoned.

The McGrath missile*bounced off the com-

mitteemen without causingthe blink of an eye. The four(Mayor Barbara Brande wasabsent on the occasion of her 'birthday) adopted the or-dinance without comment onMcGrath's criticism.

But McGrath arose again tov

let fly a'mightier verbal blow—this one fatal to the com-mittee's action. •

The critic pointed out thatthe legal notice in the Cran-ford Citizen & Chroniclecontained a typographicalerror irt one section of thereprint, causing the amount ofthe bond issue to read "6,000"instead of $186,000.&So the committee, on advice

of Township Attorney DonaldCreighton, pad ty> rescind1 jts ;adoption of the ordinance,order a . reprinting of • thereprint, and schedule anotherpublic hearing for its meetinglulxJfi,. _' •

McGrath's upsetting of thecommittee's action was thesecond setback for the or-,dinance, which was in-troduced originally on May 24and advertised. However, thetownship failed to file arequired town debt statementwith the state in time; and the

Priscilla Faces 3d

ordinance had to be rein-Iroduced.June 28 and read-yertised June 30. The error•uncovered by -McGrath ap-peared then.. ' • • • , • ! • . •

Besides the fencing, "theordinance also < financesfrrehouse renovat ions ,$50,000; purchase of a streetsweeper, $45,000;- an ac-counting computer, $20,000,mobile radios and hand radiosfor the. Public Safety Dept..$18,000; a dump truck, $15,000;Public, Library parking ex-pansion, $7,000, a copier forthe Health Dept., $2,200, andvideo camera for the PoliceDept., $2,300.

Pool Measure.Passes ' 'Another ordinance, whicti

KSd ~\.o -b>. tnpved separatelybecause it involve^ the self-budgeting pool utility,managed to survive adoptionTuesday over McGrath'sobjection. This measure funds

nffiprovern"ents~e05ttri^ $27^00at the Centennial Ave. pool.; McGrath maintained ad-ditional'improvements shouldnot be financed untijThe poolbecomes self-sustaining. Thecritic maintained thatrevenues from the otherpublic pool. Orange Avenue,support the Centennialfacility. - -

The critic also called uponthe committee trPfifeview the

.cpntract..lQr.J.hfi-.co.nstruction

A study is being made by theplanning and research sectionof the N.J. Department ofTransportation to determinewhether the Tall Oaks restarea on the Garden StateParkway in Cranford can beeliminated. " ' . , . .

Word of the study wasreceived Monday by MayorBarbara Brande in a letter.from Joseph R. Cunningham,regional manager of the DOT. :

•-. Cunnihgham advised themayor that the planning •section has been asked toinvestigate the possibility .ofdesignating the existingGlenside rest area located inWoodbridge five miles south',of Tall Oaks,, as the stoppingarea for parkway motoristspassing through this section.

Cunningham's letter was inreply to a sharp note from theCranford mayor demanding .action on the complaints oflocal residents- about theconduct of'"motorists stoppingat Tall Oaks.

In a letter" to CunninghamJune 29, Brande wrote:

"It^has been almost a monthsince you and other Depart-ment of Transportationrepresentatives met with theTownship Committee and we.have not yet received any ofthe information concerningthe Parkway widening and theclosing of the Tall Oaks restarea. - •

''Your failure to provide the'information promised only,affirms, our view'that TallOaks is not .serving a usefulpurpose,. cannot' be justifiedand, therefore, as a publicnuisance should be closedpermanently. ; .,; ; >

"As this is an- importantissue to the governing bodyand the residents involved, we

would urge a prompt,determination of the status ofthe Tall Oaks Rest Area.

Cunningham's reply, datedJuly 8, promised a decision onTall Oaks in two weeks.

Earlier Protest •Brande previously protested

to DOT Commissioner SagnerI hat there was no toilet orphone facility at Tall Oaks,and that motorists use • thearea "to answer the call ofnature and for other improper

Board

purposes.''"She said parkwayusers came to local homes in(he vicinity "at all hours of theday .and night" seekingassistance or the use ofphones.

The mayor called Sagner'sattention to the fact that lawenforcement in the area was aproblem • because ofoverlapping jurisdictionbetween state and local police.

. The matter was referred toCunningham.

CourtsThe Zoning Board ol

Adjustment Monday nightrejected an application byRacquet Forum Inc. to build a16-court squash and racket-ball complex at 206-212 NorthAve. E.

The applicant had soughtvariances from existing'usage, lot coverage; buildingheight . and - parkingregulations to permit the court

across the street had opposedI he .variance... In rejecting the application,-the board held "that theparking provided.in site planscould be inadequate for the•type of facility planned andwould definitely be inadequateshould the building eventuallybe u$edfor office purposes. It.is located,inan pffice-buUdjnB/one.

The board noted that theproposed building would cover

Raritan RoadStore Gets Nod

~ Thirteen-year'oia PriscillaGracey, who ; has been semi;conscious in St. BarnabasMedical Center, Livingston,because of a brain lumor since

^JuneSa , has undergone asecond operation, with a thirdstill to be scheduled,

Prisci l la underwent asurgical procedure lastFriday at the medical centerfor the removal'of fluid fromher brain. It was necessary torelocate a tube which was

• inserted .after her firstoperation. June 4 and whichhad moved. )•

It was revealed thiit'anotneroperation will be necessary toremove a portion of the tumorthat was not detectable at thetime of the June 4 surgery.Priscilla's condition has notimproved, according tosources close to the family!

Mrs. Al Goertz of Retford

Ave., who with Mrs,—JudyKrugh of South Union'Ave. has.organized . a fund to helpdefray "overwhelming"medical expenses related toPriscilla's illness, announced(hat contributions Should beforwarded to the PriscillaGracey Fund, United CountiesTrust Co. in South Ave. Thefund is intended to help defrayexpenses which far exceedmedical and hospitalizationinsurance benefits.

R<lth. Mrs. Goertz and Mrs.Krugh have .children whoattend^ school. with Priscilla.This spring Priscilla com-.pleted the seventh grade atHillside Avenue MiddleSchool. She is one of fivechildren of Mr. and Mrs.Stephen Gracey of 711 High St.Her father is a former vicepresident of the CranfordBoard of Education.

and determine if the con-tractor should not be heldresponsible ,for conditionssucn as inadequate poolsidedrainage which is to becorrected in the'improvementprogram funded by- the or-dinance. „

McGrath said "taxpayers ofCranford cannot afford suchan expensive luxury," andpointed out that pool member?ships now -"must be solicitedamong non-resident's.<*^

The pool ordinance wasadopted unanimously withoutcomment.

After this rebuff, McGrathsaid there was some questionas to whether the committeecould take any legally-bindingaction at the meeting at all.

The agenda for t% session,required by law, carried thedate of June 12 instead of July12, he pointed out.

The committee let that onego by.

Preliminary approval" of asite plan for a.riew food storeat the corner of Raritan Rd.and Colin Kelly-St. was givento Grandway InvestmentCorp. at the Planning Boardmeeting Wednesday, July 6.

Final approval is contingentUpotrTninor site-^revisions,-including tree , plantingstraffic .isles anr1 signs. Siteplans are also subject to ap-proval by the Union CountyPlanning Board inasmuch asRaritan Rd. is a countythoroughfare. .J .." v

Grandway, which plans tobuild and lease ^he store, hada previous applicationrejected in April which in-volved a variance to permit 39parking spaces instead of therequired 47.

The corporation explainedto the board, in a'review. of theparking requirement whichwere based" on the 'squarefootage of the building, thatexempt footage had not beenconsidered originally.

The first application wasalso opposed by residents whoconsidered the expected in-crease in traffic a hazard forchildren and pedestrians.^ Noone spoke at the July <>

meeting, however, when theboard called for publiccomment.

The board also ^granted.preliminary approval to a site. plan for an addition to Ralph's

Beauty Salon at 25 North Ave.E ; • ' . . ' . • •

Parking Variance Grunted"~ Federal "Plastics"Corp. of•Elizabeth, contract purchaserof the former BBD Applianceswarehouse qt 715 South Aye,E. was permitted a reductionin thev number of requiredparking spaces from 134 to115. " ^v .

A variance j«^ 1970 reducedthe required fjumber from 162to 146. This was reduced to 134spaces in 1972. ,

The corporation, stated thatthe widening of the GardenStale Parkway- was causing afurther decrease in parkingspace available.

A site plan to increaseparking-space-at _the Path-mark Supermarket at 20 SouthAve. was given-preliminaryapproval. SupermarketsGeneral Corp., which operatesPathmark, plans to add ,45parking spaces on' the westside of the store on the lotwhore the former CranfordDairy Co. was located.

50 per cent more land than theordinance allows, with nojustification other thaneconomic reasons. It notedthat use variances may begranted only for reasonspredicated upon the generalwelfare, and that . no suchreason was shovyn by thesquash court applicants.. •„

. Professional Use DeniedThe b'oard also denied an

application by John J. Lipari.an attorney, to convert thebasement and first floor of ahome at 301 North Ave. E. tolaw offices. Lipari wasdescribed as contract pur-chaser -. of the house fromF.dward and Sophie Baranski.

The board held that whilelegal services would beprovided^ they would not comeunder the "general welfare"!requirement for' a' usagevariance. The home is In atownhouse residential zonewhich was set up for thenearby North.; Ave. con-dominium development.

The board decision said "the~varianwrwouldconstitute-sp«<-

7,oing if approved.Two Variances Granted

A variance from zoningregulations restricting theheight of fences was grantedby (he board to the township.lo

"permit construction of aneight foot high chain-linkfence around the ConservationCenter at Birchwood.andCranford Aves.• The town plans to erect 1,150

linear feet .of fencing arouncl

OVERFLOW— Residents' contributions to Salvation Army are inside, outside and ontop of depositories in rear of Community Center at Miln arid Alden Sts.

Driver Lack Hits PickupsA shortage of drivers is

causing periodic backups inthe collection of second-handrlothingand furniture donatedto-the Salvation Army.

Both/ SA clothingdepositories here, one of

,;-which is at the Communityrenter and the other in SouthUnion Ave, near South Ave..were overflowing Mondaymorning. A sizable pile of

clothing in plastic and paperbags was stacked in front of(he Community Center boxes,which were crammed last

An SA spokesman saidspring . and summerhousecjeariing coupled - withthe driven; shortage havebacked up collections in anumber of areas. It was ex-

plained that many drivers,who are paid a commission ontheir collections, balk at goinginto Newark.

. The collections support theSA's program forrehabilitation of adult males,•mostly alcoholics, at the"organization's center inPennington St., Newark.There are 80 in residence atthe center now. -. ..

Engineers, Towns DifferOn Resur£acing of Roads

r;Sharp 4 K e » c s : f a ! B o r g : j ^ Q ^ nmumcipal engineers ort, the ga t ing programquestion of how residential successful."streets should" be paved havebeen revealed in a surveyconducted by The CranfordCitizen and Chronicle.

Not only do the

1 5"highly

Anthony Isaac, a resident ofCranford, is townshipengineer in Millburn. Hereports that 15 miles ofM illburn-Shpr-LJflills^strects_are seal-coated annually withvery few complaints unlessthere is a prolonged heal spoil,

"If wo get a complaint thatthe oil is exposed, it's easily

professionals, differ, butmunicipal governing bodiesare.. pursuing contradictory-policies in deciding whafmaterials should be used in i i i t U1| u, CA|^.^>J, „ „ ....resurfacing projects. ) corrected by spreading sand'Cranford,. which is about to a n (j m ore stones over il," saysundertake the repaving . of j s a a c .sections-of 21 streets with themore costly of two commonmethods, has1*' a history ofcontroversy oVer the selectionof road- improyement

Isaac said Millburn has itsown crews to handle the seal:coating, and has equipment tobrush stone back, over }hc oilwhen it is displaced by

•The'cenier'in order "to keep out- materials similar -to..those.ia_v'ehicit)s.-Westf.ield^lso.has.its." neighboring communities i l ^ f lillegal dumpers, vandals 'and

motorized mini-bike riders.Conditions at thcV center havobeen the target of complaintsof residents, in the area inrecent months.

Also granted,by the boardwas a variance fromminimum open spacesideyard requirements topermit Wesley F. CarrajatJr.lo put an addition on his houseat 325 South Union Ave. Therewere no objectors.

Paper DriveOn Saturday

Boy Scout Troop 178 willconduct a paper driveSaturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.in the parking lot of St.Michael " Church. It isrequested that newspapers betied or in bags.

v e h i c i t s . e i ^neighboring communities. • o w n cquiprnpnl^for

The two methods employed coatinR.scal-

Agricultural Agent KnowsRoots of Garden Problems

' By Steveii-MufsoiiNew jersey's image as the'

Garden State has b«en,somewhat tarnished in recentyears by the increasingamount of heavy industry inthe area. Yet every county inthe state has an agriculturalagent to advise its residents,and Union County's agent EricH. Peterson says that there isnever a dull moment.

Peterson has been servingUnion County residents forover 30 years.

"It's the best job in theworld," Peterson saidrecently as he--watched thetelephone (lines light up withinquiries at his office,at 300North Ave. E., Westfield.- The agricultural agent's job

has changed since its creation.In 1914 the Smith-Lever Actauthorized the establishmentof the Extension Service, ofwhich the agricultural agent isa part "to aid in diffusingamong the people of \thi>United States useful a

onlo

homo

"practical informationsubjects relatingagricultureeconomics."

Union County's 52 com-mercial farms now iainsumeonly a small part of Peterson'stime. The rest is filled an-swering non-commercialagricultural questions aboutlawns, - shrubs, .homevegetable gardens, pruningand ornamental plants.

Cranford Out-ries-"We get lots of calls from

Cranford," Peterson said.'Must this week we were askedabout carpenter ants, a birchtree, and about methods ofkilling insects. One personthought he had poison sumacgrowing in his yard but it waswild.cherry.

"I was in Cranford Just theother day. There, was a-problem with a tomato patchgrowing near a black walnultree," .l'eterson said.

Petoson tries to answermentions over the phone or

have people bring in samplesof the plant or' insect in-question, His office is litteredwith patches of grass broughtin sboeboxes, •branches fromtrees and shrubs, and slides ofinsects that he examinesunder a microscope he keepsnearby.

"We will go out if necessary;but very selectively," he said.

Kducutiouul Arm"We are an educational arm

of t(ult>ers. University,"Peterson said referring tohimself, . I he junioragricultural agent, and hisstaff which includes sixsecretaries. Peterson is a fullprofessor at Rutgers, whichcooperates with the extensionservice programs.

Lectures, demonstrations.and newspaper articles, are

'Peterson's principle means ofeducating; not classroomteaching. H*' frequentlylectures to service groups. OnAugust 17 he will <('iiducl ,:i

1 lawn' clinic in • Noinal\<i|';i11

CunlinU'iti on *\i t.

for virtually allsuburbtm 'resurfacing are the so«tealledseal-coating apd asphaltoverlay systems. :

Seal-coating consists of alayer of thick, highly viscousoil topped by crushed, stone,^which creates a temporaryannoyance for pedestriansand drivers.

Asphalt overlay consists ofblack, bituminous concretewhich hardens and driesrapidly, creates little if anyinconvenience, and lasts muchlonger. .

Ongoing ProgramsBecause' of the cost dif-

ferential, three or four timesmore streets can be repairedwith seal-coating than withasphalt overlay for the sameamount of money.- In several towns which havoa continuing road main-tenance program, such ' asWestfield, Summit andMillburn, seal-coating is usedon a regular basis to preventmajor . deterioration ofstreets.

In these communities, seal-

The Millburn engineer neteclthat the . thin-layered 'seal-coating has the, advantage ofnot covering upidrairifcJcadingfrom private property into thestreet. Two layers of l : li inchasphalt overlay would :clost>off the average curbside drainwhich . conducts water fromsump pumps or otherhousehold sources into thestreet.

Overlay 'Lasts Longer'oJames Josephs, Westlield's

engineer, reported the townhas a well-defined annualprogram in which both seal-coatinfi and asphalt overlaymethods are used. .Westfielduses -kk seal-coat-ing equip-ment on residential streets.The $20,000 allocated this yearfor seal-co;>tin<J! will covermore Westfield street areathah will.$50,000 in overlay.

But Josephs is an exponentof overlay, stating that "itlasts longer and pays off in thelong run."

Summit seal-coats most ofits residential and light-trafficstreets. The city engineer's

covered every sovon or eightyears. Overlay is used onstreets where there is heavytruck'.traffic.

Sonic smaller communities,such as Kenilworth andGarwoooV which have com-paratively low mileage o)residential streets, useasphalt overlay exclusively.Chatham, which border*

coaling is applied in late-., office reports each street isspring or early summer ol ' 'each year on, a. rotating basisso that eacli'stretet receives anapplication every seven years.

However, neighboringSpringfield, like Cranford, has*,abandoned the seal-coatingmethod because of complaintsby residents about loosestones and oil clinging loshoes, sneakers and vehiclesof dll kinds.

Walter Ko/.ub, townengineer in Springfield, said oftho overlay: "It gives uscleaner roads, and it holds upfor a longer time." To cutdown the cost, Ko/.ub has theoverlay spread in some placesat a depth of only '-j inch.

, compared with the normal 1' ••t().l:l i inches.1"!

Springfield -hasn't used seal-coating in eight years and hasdisposed of the spreaderformerly used for thematerial.

Milllnun ViewpointIn contrast lo Springfield,

the next lownlolhe northwest.

Summit, expouBes the seal-coating method.

The City of Linden, Cran-ford's neighbor to thesoutheast, has been cuttingback on its ..seal-coatingprogram Without 'abandoningit entirely, According to CityEngineer John Ziemian, a thin:li-inch overlay is being usedinstead of seal-coating onstreets that arc in "fairly good'condition." "This way wehave gotten away fiJomcomplaints about tracking oiland flying s tones ," saidZiemian'.

C r a n f o r d I T o w n s h i pEngineer Gregory.Sgroi, whowill supervise the town'soverlay program, sees ad-vantages and '. disadvantagesin both the overlay and seal-coating methods of. resur--•••-facing. r

About the overlay, Sfiroistated: " F o r streets ofmarginal structural integrity, -tho I11 to I1 •.-inch bituminousoverlayment will accomplishboth structural integrity andimporvious surface."

The engineer pointed out,however, that in addition tothe high cost of overlay, it hasthe disadvantage of buildingup'the crown of the road andalmost' completely blockingroof drains (from houses tothe curb) alter two ap-plications.

Regarding seal-coalmg,Sgroi said: "For streets whichare structurally sound, thethin and relatively inoxpensive seal-coating is allthat is required to make ormaintain the street- surface inan impervious condition."

While noting that soul-coating has the advantage oflow cost, Sgroi said.it has "thodisadvantage of loose stonesand the possibility of pickingup the asphalt material forseveral days after its ap-plication."

Political IssueThe 1977 asphalt overlay

program planned byCranfordwill be tho only resurfacingwork done hero, in the last twoyears. This is tho result of adeficit incurred by the 1075Township Committee whon ilordered tho resurfacing, withoverlay of nine streots which

Chfohicle ContentsF A M I L Y SEES themselves iii movie. Page 3.

E X - B A R B ^ R takos recreation post. Page 2.

At Your Leisure 3Classified UEditorial 4Gdrwood '3Kenilworth 13

Nature Notes -lObituaries 8Religious News 8Social..; 5Sports •• • 12

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