VOL 58 NO. 34
Zoning Ordinance
Changes Due
Next Month
SO UTH
CITIZI
GREETING CARDS
PETERSON PHARMACY
PUBLIC SCHOOL
LISTS REGISTRATION
Improvement Group
Attend Premiere
t|AGLE TESTIMONIAL
SUNDAY.AUGUST 27
Plans have been finalized
for the testimonial honoring former superintendent
of the Board of Public
Works, Mike Nagle. The
affair will be held on Sunday, August 27, at the Jernee Mill Inn, Sayreville,
beginning at 7 p.m.
Following a dinner of
roast beef, with all the
trimmingB, there will be
dancing to the music of the
Johmty Wayne Orchestra.
Jerry Molloy of Hoboken
will be the principal
bers of the official city
family. '"
DUPONT GROUP
TRIP TO ICE SHOW
-2-
Optn Houtv
Planned Far
Pr-School*ri
LOCAL MAN TO
BE ORDAINED
An Ordination service for
W. Timothy Peterson into
the American Baptist Ministry will be held on Sunday evening, August 27,
at 8 p.m. in the First Baptist Church.
Mr. Peterson was graduated In June from the
Crozer Seminary, Chester,
Pa.
He will be associate
pastor of the First Baptist
Church, Fall River, Mass.
as of September 10.
The public is invited to
witness the ordination.
RARITAN
DINER
6s*n Daily S a.m. 10 .*..
FRIDAY SPECIAL
FISH PLATTER
SHftlMF PLATTER
SCALLOP PLATTER
(Two Vegetable - Potato**)
(Dinner* to qo out at all
Autumn Cotillion sponsored by tne*#ranch A u x iliaries of the South Amboy Memorial Hospital will
be held on Saturday, October 14, at the Hojnestead
Country Club, Spring Lake.
The South Amboy Woman's Club will hold a dinner-theatre bus trip to the
Papermill Playhouse on
Saturday, September 9.
Those Interested in attending may contact cochairmen Mrs. E d w a r d
Smith at 721-1234 or Mrs.
John Chlebicki at 721-0482.
PACK 88 TO HOLD
COMMITTEE MEETING.
A committee meeting of
Cub Pack 98 will be held on
Tuesday, August 29 at the
home of Cub Master George
Schnyderite, 118 George
St., at 8 p.m. All Den
Mothers and Committeemen are requested to be
present.
CALENDAR
OF EVENTS
The Board of Trustees curricula. Chemical TechThy word is a lamp to my of Middlesex County Col- nology, Electrical Techfet.(Psalms 119:105)
lege have set Satur- nology, Laboratory Techday, September 23, for its nology, Business, SecreThe Sacred Heart Pildedication ceremony which tarial, Science and Nurs- For Sandlot Ball Players
grimage
Club will hold a
DON $mb'i Inc.
will put special emphasis ing two-year programs
ANDLOT baseball players
bus
trip
to Washington,
provide
students
the
opporcan improve lheir throwing
upon the opening of the
D.
C.,
on
September
3 and
with
a
boll-ringing
target.
tunity
of
obtaining
an
assothree newly constructed
They'll
get
hours
of
fun
and
4.
The
bus
will
leave
buildings. Board chairman, ciate degree and trains practice from a rugged baseball Sacred Heart parking the
lot
Paige D. L'Hommedleu, them to take their place target which they and their dads
at
6
a.m.
on
Sunday,
Sepin
the
job
market.
The
appointed Mrs. John H.
can put together easily by foltember 3, and return on
Carman, Trustee mem- County College also pro- lowing a free plan.
Monday, September 4.1
vides
the
first
two
years
ber, as chairman for this
For information, one'may
activity which i s to be en- of a four-year engineercall Vincent Nebus at
titled "Middlesex County ing science or liberal arts
721-0226 or stop in at the
v
College Day." Mrs. Car- degree program.
CpMfUT! MfT0 tMWU
Nebus Market, Feltus St.
SUl
man, who resides at 93 Lo- The " Pathfinders," a sturetta Street, New Bruns- dent group, will assist the
721-163% * 72147U
The Sayrewoods Chapter
IT
wick, i s an active mem- committee in conducting
of
the South Amboy
ber of the Board and is tours for the visitors to
Memorial Hospital Womwell known throughout the the college campus on dedien's Auxiliary will hold Its
county area for her work in cation day.
annual card party on Wedlocal and caunty parentnesday, September 13, at
teachers associatin ac7:30 p.m. in Buddie's Hall,
tivities. She is a life memParlin.
ber of the New Jersey ConThe donation is $1.50 and
gress of Parents and
tickets may be obtained at
Teachers.
the
door,
from any
SEPTEMBER BIRTHDAYS
Mrs.
Carman has also
auxiliary member, or by
been active in church afcalling Mrs. SalvestrinI at
Complete instructions for makSeptember 3, 1H9H The
fairs, having served as
ing thr
base-ball
target
of
lumber
727-3437.
secretary of the Mt. Zion first municipal subway was and ! i " Weather-all, a rugged,
Methodist Church and i s built for street railway trans- exterior grade, dent-resistant
a member of the Education portation in Bostontho Tre- hardboard, are given in pictures
and drawings.
Club of the Ebenezer mont Street Subway.
Easy to finish because it has Athlete
The doctor waa'CBaptist
Church, New
September 7, 1813 The baked-on primer, Weatherall is husky
male patltnt
Brunswick.
available
from
lumber
and
nickname "Uncle Sam" stems
stuns were bndasd
building
materials
dealers.
The dedication committee from this day when a writer
colored. The doctor
a copy of free plan AE- ed, "I suppos*
will be responsible for con- for the Troy (New York) Post 704,Forsend
a postcard to Masonite
hockey or
ducting the ceremony to be used it as a symbolic reference Corporation, Box B, Chicago, of
> "Neither. Doc,'
held in the new Physical to the United States.
111. 60690.
ply, "All I play Is hridg.M \\
Education Building and the
open house on the County
September 10, 1919 GenCollege campus. The gen- eral John J. Pershing, AmeriVariations on a Mayonnaise Theme
eral public will be invited ca's World War I military
to participate in open house leader, and 26,000 soldiers of
activities designed to give the United States First Divithe residents of the general sion were welcomed home by
community an opportunity the City of New York in one
to see the site and the the greatest parades and rebuildings, and to obtain a of
ceptions ever tendered by that
better knowledge of the city.
study programs that have
been under way at the ColSeptember 13, 1909Oskar
lege since its Inception in
Straus' operetta. The ChocoSeptember of 1966.
PICTURE THIS!
THOMAS &
CHADWKK
INC,
Mobil
heating oils
BURMCR SALBSB. SERVICE
Cool-'ce
PHONE 257-2323
141 WHITEHEAD AVE.
SOUTH HIVER.N.J.
Start with a cup of mayon- offered by the makers of Hellnaise and take it from there. By rnann'a mayonnaise and if
following the recipes in a new packed with a variety of rcmayonnaise cookbook you canjpea, appetizing color picture*
make any of a dozen different and informative bits of copy
dressings. There's cucumber concerning things abont the
dressing. There's celery, hone- kitchen. A special feature at*
radian, mustard, tomato, avo- a group of recipes by the Chefs
cado, chive, parmesan, lemon of famous restaurant*.
and herbed dressings. Then
For a copy of the book, tend
there's that perennial favorite your name and address and S6
September 2 1 . 1938 A
that men like Blue Cheese
plus a label from a Jar of
reat hurricane swept the At- Salad Dressing, especially when cents
Hellmann'B mayonnaise (60
lantic Coast of New England
served with tomato and lettuce. cents without a label) to Maywant to be tnsplred, onnaise CookbooK,"Box 166-F,"
and NewToTlr.iwvfTTjfat-lrairt'j\~t
lake a look at this chic and ex-Brooklyn, New York 1120*.
450 persons dead in its wakv
Many lives were saved as a IT- 'ciUng new cookbook. It
sult of an early warning by the
Bla Cheese Salad Dressing
Yankee network weather ob1 cup Hellmann's real
1 teaspoon WoreestenUxsj
servatory.
mayonnaise
,
sauce
% cup commercial sour cream 1 tablespoon sugar
hi teaspoon salt
September 25, 1690 T h e is cup (1 3-otmce package)
crumbled blue cheese
H teaspoon pep
j
jrk
first American newspaper
1 dow i
2 tsMtf
"PuTflick Occurrences, Both
vinegar
Foreign and Domestic" was
Blend mayonnaise, sour cream and bin* d*ete> G n d u
published by Benjamin Harris in vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, sugar, salt, ptppur * # j
in Boston Mass.
ChilL Makas about 1% cups,
^
-3-
Couple United In
Candlelight Ceremfinji
Sayreville Schools
List Registration
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY
LOCAL GIRL TO
GRADUATE AS
LAB ASSISTANT PILGRIMAGE CLUB PLANS
At graduation exercises
TRIP TO CAPITOL
on August 29, diplomas will
be presented to 11 graduates of the one-year course
at the Certified Laboratory Assistants School at
Perth Amboy General Hospital.
Key speaker will be Mary
Wethington, M.T. (ASCP),
president of the N. J. Society of Medical Technologists. Diplomas will be
presented by Dr. Hugo C.
Pribor, director of the hospital's Institute of Laboratory Medicine.
Others taking part are
associate hospital director
Thomas Pugh, and from the
institute
of laboratory
medicine associate pathologists Drs. William R.
Kirkham and Stanley M.
Becker and Ronald A.
M o r t o n , medical technologist.
The graduates are p r e pared to take the examination of the Board of Certified Laboratory Assistants. Passing the national
qualifying examination enentitles candidates to add
"C.L.A." after
their
names.
Among the graduates is
Miss Carol Ann Selover,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George L. Selover, 349 Cedar St., South Amboy.
JURSKI
WL'
Or H\v
For
442-7110
HOSPITAL AUXILIARY
PLANS CARD PARTY
DRIVERS 17 lo 24
O*t
NiUMI, k W H u
trit*
milt
i. f. K>RTIER ft SONS
"tht rtmttj kfntj"
W ftnllfc Slrt
I MW P-rtk Aakay Ut MlM
iro peus
f V OTTS
62 YEARS OF
CONTINUOUS
PArkway 1-4781
SERVICE
HOSPITAL AUXILIARIES
PLAN ANNUAL COTILLION
Plans
a r e presently
underway for the Annual
Autumn Cotillion, sponsored by the Branch Auxiliaries of the South Amboy Memorial Hospital.
At a recent Committee
meeting* the Chairman,
Mrs. Edward H. Meirose,
announced that it will be
held a t the Homestead
Country Club in Spring
Lake, New Jersey, on Saturday evening October 14.
The presentation of debutantes will preceed dinner,
and there will be dancing to
the music of the Walter
Kross orchestra.
Mr. Edward KolodzieJ,
prominent local attorney,
formerly with the Middlesex County Prosecutor'B
Office, will act as Master
of Ceremonies.
Mrs. Edward Cholewaand
MiBB Norma Keegan will
handle the presentation of
the girls, accept registration information, and act
as advisors to the young
ladies being presented.
CLASSIFIED ADS
GET RESULTS
681
SOUTH AMBOY
PArkw*y 1-0340
DOOLING
ELECTRIC COMPANY
"FOR SERVICE CALL
721-5425
m 249-5422 JR
NEBUS MARKET
-5-
UNION JUNIOR TO
CHANGE NAME
A fourth Union College
will be added to the roster
of the nation's institutions
of higher learning when
Union
Junior
College
changes its name on September 1.
The others are Union College, Lincoln, Neb., Union
College, Barbourville, Ky.,
and Union College and UniA recent visit to the Rutgers College of Agriculture versity, Schenectady, N.Y.
and Environmental Science has opened my eyes to a The roster also includes
Union University, Jackson,
va.Bt change in the ways of mankind.
Ever since time began, man has more or less lived Tenn., Union Theological
in a capsule. Outer space virtually seals in the earth's Seminary, New York City,
Union Theological
population with all the elements necessary for life, as and
Seminary,
Richmond, Va.
we know it. Our welfare depends on how we manage
At least eight other instiland, air and water.
learning
Not too long ago, land was the main concern. Good tutions of higher
r
have
"Union*
in
their
title.
land meant good crops; barren land meant poverty.
They
are:
Cooper
Union,
As the land went, so went the country.
Recognizing the need for good land management, New York City; Hebrew Unthe State Legislature accepted the provisions of the ion College Jewish InLand-Grant Act and designated Rutgers Scientific School stitute of Religion, Los
Angeles, Cincinnati, and
as the state's land-grant college in 1864.
New
York; Pacific Union
The College of Agriculture did research on crops College,
Calif.;
and farm animals, taught farmers Improved methods Columbia Angwin,
Union
College,
of production and marketing, conducted degree courses Takoma Park, Md.; Atfor those who wished to become farmers or enter some lantic Union College, South
closely related field.
Lancaster, Mass.; Mount
During these first years, there were many problems Union
College, Alliance,
to solve, but, potable water and clean air were of minor Ohio; Southwestern
Union
concern, the supply seemed infinite.
College,
Kenne,
Texas,
and
Today, the picture has changed. The increase of Virginia Union University,
population in this area, which necessitates more cars Richmond, Va.
and factories, is taxing our resources of fresh air
and water to the point where conserving them has be- Dr. Kenneth C. MacKay,
come as irriportant as managing land wisely. As a UJC president, said ,the
result, the College of Agriculture has become the Col- name change signifies no
lege of Agriculture and Environmental Science, still change in Union Junior Colremaining as a land-grant institution with two basic lege's status as a twoyear institution or in its
functions, research and teaching.
Some of the accomplishments of the school are listed educational offerings.
"We will remain a 'twobelow:
year
college
of the
Scores of new varieties of fruits and vegetables.
The nation's first artificial dairy breeding cooperative. academic disciplines/ as
we have been for the past
Development of the wonder drug Streptomycin.
Control methods for laryngotracheitis and Newcastle three decades," Dr. MacKay said. "This name
disease in poultry.
Homes made more pleasant by extension home change simply is in line
with a nationwide trend,
economists.
Young people trained in the almost limitless facets which recognizes a twoyear college can be an
of the earth sciences.
institution
of higher learnImproved methods of making grass silage.
ing in every sense of that
New strains of field crops.
Better knowledge of plant and animal nutrition and phrase."
Dr. MacKay said the word
mosquito control techniques.
Reserach now going on deals with effects of air pollu- "junior" in the college's
tion on plants, methods of purifying industrial wastes, title is often considered
wildlife preservation, landscape appreciation, safe use by the public and especially
of pesticides, meterological studies and .scores of by high school students to
indicate inferiority " o r
other topics which affect mankind.
As the Rutgers scientists put it, "No one likes something less than colpollution, but it is a necessity of life. It ix a by-product lege" and in no way does
of human activities, and the more humans you have in it help to identify the institution.
one area, the more pollution they produce."
"The dropping of junior
They point out that New Jersey has one of the biggest
pollution problems because it is part of one of the from the title of two-year
largest metropolitan areas. Not only is it the most densely colleges is part of the napopulated state in the nation, but it is also in the top 10 tionwide effort to bring the
in terms of industrial production. New Jersey contains two-year college into full
more cars per square mile than any other state. membership in the family
Their studies also show that solid pollutants are rapidly of higher education," Dr.
becoming another pollution problem. Each person pro- MacKay said. "We believe
duces an averags of 4 to 5 pounds of refuse a day. this is especially imporBurial of refuse leads to problems of space, rodents, tant in an institution such
odors, fires, blowing debris and water pollution. Municipal as ours, which specializes
officials are rapidly finding out that it is better to burn in transferring its graduates with advanced standthan to bury.
A municipal incinerator to take care of a city's ing to more than 300 coland universities
wastes will appear In more and more cities in the near leges
future. Refuse disposed of in this way will also help throughout the nation, and
which offers only freshman
build your future golf course.
and
sophomore courses at
Ashes from burned refuse present a problem of
disposal, but disposal of ashes requires less burial the level of those in the
university."
land than disposal of refuse.
Dr, MacKay pointed out
Water pollution is also a growing problem. Every
individual uses an average of 1500 gallons of water a that the name change emthe college's
day. Municipalities supply about 125 gallons of drinkable phasizes
location
in
Union County
water to each person every day, and each person returns
tfiis water to the municipality in a not-too-desirable form. and its relationship with
Water pollution, as the school is proving, can be Union County in a new comade to work for us. A waste treatment plant can digest operative Tuition Aid Plan
undesirable solids in the water, producing land-fill with the Board of Freematerial, by-products that can be used in making pottery holders, which provides
grants of $480 annually to
and various soil conditioners.
Highly-treated polluted water can be re-used as all Union County residents
who are fulltimc students in
drinking water and for irrigation.
the
Day Session.
The school emphasizes the fact that the above pollution
treatment is possible, but it is not necessarily true today.
New Jersey must run to catch up with pollution control,
HHWHMWHHI!t
and we are racing against the population explosion.
Our problem is an affluent society which produces more
and more effluents every year!!!
AREA GIRLS
AT PRUDENTIAL
ADAM LOVELY:
South Amlxjy, N, J ,
251 Morgan Avenue
Free Estimates Cheerfully Given
INSURANCE
MRS. SARAH
C1TIW
Tfcc
OBITUARY
E, A. KIELKOWSKI
MARGARET P. ANTONIO
Mrs. Margaret P. AnMrs. Elizabeth A. Kielkowskl, 308 Walnut St., tonio, 502 Alpine St., South
South
Amboy,
passed Amboy, passed away on
away on August 19 at the Monday, August 21, at the
Perth Amboy General Hos- Perth Amboy General Hospital.
pital.
Born in South Amboy, ehe
Born In Sayreville, she
resided here for 45 years. was the daughter of the late
Mrs, Kielkowski was a Mr. and Mrs. John Ziencommunicant of sacred tek.
Mrs. Antonio was a comHeart Church where she
was a member of the Holy municant of St. Mary's
Rosary Society and the R. C. Church,
The wife of the late Alex
Catholic War Veterans
Auxilliary. She was one of Antonio, 6he is survived
South Amboy*s Gold Star by: three daughters, Miss
Claire and Miss Veronica,
MotherB.
Surviving are her hus- both at home, and Mrs.
band, LOUIB; three daugh- Marie Luckus of Fords;
ters, Mrs. Julia Novak, and one son, John, at home.
Funeral services w e r e
Mrs. Margaret Surman,
and Miss Elizabeth Kiel- held this morning at 9:30
kowskl, all ofSouthAmboy; a.m. from the Gundrum
one son, Joseph of South Service Home for Funerals
Amboy; three sisters, Mrs. to St. Mary's R. C. Church
Mary Olszak of Trenton, where a High Requiem
at
Mrs. Catherine Bilski of Mass was offered
Woodbridge, and Mrs- Julia 10 a.m.
Szeszko of South Amboy;
Interment was held in Sas e v e n grandchildren; and cred
Heart
Cemetery,
threqf&reat-grandchildren. Sayreville.
Funeral services were
held yesterday at 8:30a.m.
from the Kurzawa Funeral
WAYNE C. WILSON
Home to Sacred Heart R. C.
Church where a Solemn ReGraveside funeral servquiem Mass was offered at ices were held on Monday,
9 a.m.
August 21 at Christ Church
Interment was held in Sa- Cemetery ,for Wayne C.
cred
Heart
Cemetery, Wilson, infant son of Robert
W. Wilson Jr. and Linda
Sayreville.
Grant Wilson of 335George
St., South Amboy. The baby
was born in the Perth AmCHARLES W. SCHUMANN boy General Hospital on
August 14, and passed away
Mr. Charles W.Schumann on August 17.
of 913 Rellim Dr., MadiThe Rev. Paul ShaMock of
son Township, passed away St.
Peter's
Episcopal
on August 19 at St. Peter's
Church, Perth Amboy, offiHospital, New Brunswick.
ciated.
He was 65 years of age.
Arrangements were conBorn in New York City,
ducted by the Mason-Wilhe had resided in this area
son Funeral Home.
for the past 10 years.
A certified court r e porter, he had been associated with William C.
O'Brien
Associates of
Newark for over 30 years.
Mr. Schumann was a
member of the Certified
Shorthand Reporters Asso106 N. MOAOWAY
ciation of Newark, and a
South Amboy
FtUiy Tig r. M.
past secretary of the
Church Council.
Survivors include his
wife, Elsie Heyssig Schumann; one son, Chalres W.
Schumann Jr. of Columbus,
Ohio; two daughters, Mrs.
Elizabeth Johnson of Waldwick, N. J. and Mrs. Trudy
Kraetsch of Old Bridge; and
four granddaughters.
Funeral services were
held on Tuesday, August 22
at 10 a.m. from The Messiah Lutheran Church,
GRADING *
Sayreville. The Rev. DougCELLARS DUG
las E. Werner, pastor, officiated.
TOP SOIL MASON SAND
Interment
was
held
PILL DIRT
in
George Washington
S DAYTON STREET
Memorial Park, Paramus,
SOUTH AJIBO^, N. J.
under the direction of the
Mason-Wilson
Funeral
Home.
Phon PArkway M0&9
B.J.
Excavating
'
"~
JohnJ. Triggs
City Clerk
am.
JIII.IE ANDREWS
MAX VON SYPOW
RICHARD HARRIS
PETER SELLERS
Classified
APARTMENT FOR RENT
4 rooms and bath. All
utilities supplied. Adults.
346 2nd St., South Amboy.
APARTMENT FOR RENT
Civil Action
$754 million in Social Se- old-age, survivors, and
F1S.AI. JUDCMHNT
eurity benefits was paid to disability insurance go into
residents of New Jersey effect, will pay only about In the Sfatter of the Application
MICHAhlLS and TRACEY
last year, up 8.5 percent 80 to 85 percent of the ofANNJOAN
MICHAELS, an Infant by her
value of their potential mother and natural guardian, JOAN
from the year before.
At the end of 1966, 43,000 benefits. The matching MlCllAKl.b. for leave to assume the
men, women, and children contributions paid by their name of TRACEY ANN ROMMKt..
in Middlesex County were employers will account for
TRACF.Y ANN MICHAELS, an Inreceiving benefits at a the other 15 to 20 percent. fant by her mother and natural
JOAN MICHAELS, with
Over a working lifetime guardian,
monthly rate of $3.5 milconsent of Joseph Rommel,havlion. 33,000 were older of 45 years, ending with his the
ing on this 1 lth day of August,
people receiving benefits retirement at 65 in the year 1967, made application to thia court
duly verified complaint for a
as retired workers, the 2019, a young worker who by
authorizing Tracey <vnn
wives and husbands of r e - earned the top amount cov- judgment
Mlchaela to assume the name of
tired workers and as the ered by Social Security in Tracey Ann Rommel, and 1( apto the court that they have
surviving widows or aged every year would con- pearing
with all of the provisions
dependent parents of work- tribute a total of $10,318 compiled
of the New Jersey Statutes 2A:52-1,
toward his retirement pro- et seq., and Revised Rules relating
ers who have died.
and the court being s a t i s But Social Security is not tection. Adding interest, thereto,
fied that there are no reaaonable
compounded
at
3-3/4
perobjection thereto:
just for olderpeople - 6,400
It Is on this 11th day of August,
young widows and child- cent, the value of the work- 1967,
that Tracey Ann
ren in Middlesex County e r ' s contributions at age Mlchaelaadjudged
be and she hereby Is
65
would
be
$26,412.
The
authorized to assume the name of
were receiving benefits
Ann Rommel from and after
amounting to $464 thousand value of the benefits pay- Tracey
11, 1967, and that wlrhin
at the end of December. able to him and his wife September
ten days hereof the said Tracey
in
retirement,
assuming
Ann Michaels, an infant by her
3,500 disabled workers and
and natural guardian, Joan
dependentS/were receiving average life expectancy, mother
Michaels, shall cause a copy of
benefits at a monthly rate would be $32,853, 20 per- this
judgment to be published once
of $283 thousand. Prac- cent more than the value in the SOUTH AMBOY CITIZEN
within twenty days after entry
tically every young family of his total Social Security and
of judgment she file judgment and
in Middlesex County has contributions.
affidavit of publication of judgment
Middlesex County Clerk,
survivors protection under
These calculations are with a the
certified copy of the judgment
Social Security that can be based on an assumption that and
with the Secretary of State purworth $75,000 or more, and the law will not be changed suant
to the provisions of the Statute
equally valuable disability at all during the young and Revised Rules In such case
insurance protection.
worker's lifetime. It can made and provided.
(s) Herman L. OrsLtkopf
The average worker can be expected that there will
J.S.C.
expect to collect more than continue to be changes in
the value of his Social Se- the law to improve bene- Certified a true copy
& ROSENBERG
curity tax contributions fits as there have in DI.UMBERC
sty
BY William F. Mullen
just in the benefits payable the past.
8/24/67
14.40
to him and his wife in r e tirement. If he does not
Injustice
live to retirement, his famLiteral meaning: When you
horse radish.
ily stands to collect far expect
to find a horse in the
Linus Hutching.
more than the contributions
he has paid; and the same
will be true if he should
become totally disabled for
work before 65.
Monthly payments to the
family of a worker who
dies, leaving two or more
PHIAM!
children, can range from
ifME LON6E6T RECORDED
$66 to $368 a month, de&OLF DRIVE ON LEVEL
pending on the worker's
&ROUND WAS MADE
average earnings under SoBV CRAI& WOOD
cial Security.
HE PROVE A BALL AN
ESTIMATED 4 3 O YARPS
Social Security survivors
(ST. AMDREWS, SCOTLAND
benefits can be paid to the
IN 1933)
family of a young man who
has worked and paid Social
Security contributions for
as little as a year and a
AWMLCP
half during the three years
PL
before his death.
Benefits to the mother and
RB&ULA SAV/N&S
children continue until the
PROGRAM TO JCXN A
&OND-A-MONTH PtAti
youngest child reaches 18,
ANP VOU WILL BE
or Indefinitely, if the-child
E TO BLW NEW
has a disability which beMMEP
gan before his 18th birthday
ABCDEFCH1JKLMN
FRtfPOM BHARM8
and makes it impossible for
ONE-FOB-ONE WITH
him to work and become
OPQBSTUYWXYZI&
VOW? aONDfi.'
SeTf-BUpporting. Under a
* *
change in the law enacted
in 1965, a child's benefits
A OHCI THIIII WERI 21 i
can be continued up until
AT O N E TIME THE ALPHABET
age 22 if he or she conCONSISTED O F 2 7 LETTERS.
tinues in school.
TfcE 27TH WAS THE
Under the schedule of
AMPERSAND (A).
taxes in the present Social
Security law even the group
of young workers who will
THE PQLLAB& VQUJfiMgAT IN U.B. &AVJN66 BONOS
start work in 1974, after
ARE NEEDED TO HELP KEEP OUR ECONOMY STRONG*
ANP VOJ HELP VOMRMLP flV HELPING VOWSf COUNTRY.'
the maximum tax rates for
THUTS n FRIT
NOTICE
ffwmi N m f l
ONLY... nnmi#rpi C O M I
-7-
SERVICE SLANTS
Gomolka'sj
Buy U.S.
Savings Bonds
Specializing in
TINTING and 1 MINUTE
PERMANENT WAVING
(No Chemicals)
118 So. Stevens Ave.
South Amboy, New JerseyPhone PArkwy 1-0867
[Air Electric |
COMMERCIAL
5TAU LIC *a0
PArkway 1-0096
Clifford 4-0087
16 FERRY ST.
SOUTH RIVER
Rail Freight
Top Comeback
Story of 60V
For children
By Margery Todahl Blokhine
Illustrated by Cawilyn Bentley
FALL SPORTSMAN'S
CALENDER ISSUED
-8-
Garden Mews
Boat Club Plans Tribute ToThe Late Ferman Stratton FROG HOLLOW DIVERS
WIN 5 MEDALS
WILLOW WON'T
BOWLING
Sparky says:
JwlfMs
affr Wf^
CONFIDENCE
IN A
GROWING
AMERICA
ENGLISH CHEVRON
LITTLE LEAGUfcCHAMPS
English Chevron won the
National League pennant
and played the First A i d
team, the winner in the
American League.
The South Amboy Little
World Series was a three
game series, between the
two pennant winners. English Chevron won the championship with two straight
victories.
Scatters
(Eugene A. Morrh
PalnU, Oils and Varnishes
Brushes. Glass. Bronzes
GoM Leaf, SUins. Etc.
EXTERIOR
CAR
WASH
*1 -25
SOUTH AMBOY CARWASH.
Parochial School
BLOUSES
Socks,Ties.Etc
PERMA PRESS
In Stock
KOZY LANES
WGHWAY 35
SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS
SET FOR AUGUST 26
$1.98 VALUK
WALL PAPER
FIREBUG
MORGAN
106 So Broadway, So
721-0283
Amboy, N.J,