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The Central New Jersey Home News from New Brunswick, New Jersey • 18

Location:
New Brunswick, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1ft DAILY HOME NEWS NEW BRUNSWICK, N. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 8. 1MI Living Spirit of Old St. Nick Now Needs an Understudy flew here from Leopoldville for a first hand survey of the situa Tshombe Continued from Page One hit by groundfire as it came in Good Therapy He says the girl's doctor gave him credit for her recovery, "Your work did more good than mine.

Keep it up." Warnhoff retired when he turned 66 and devoted his full time to his workshop. He turned out angels, cradles, benches, rocking horses, boats, dogs that wiggle their tails-all manner of toys. But, he says, he hasn't been able to find anyone to take over. "I don't know why I got sick-maybe it was all that sawdust in my workshop," he said. "I'm sorry about it.

There are going to be an awful lot of I gave him a toy. I feel more happy than if I had piled up a lot of money and 'been a big shot. "If I had my life over again I would still like to be Santa's helper." But Santa's helper is in an Ann' Arbor hospital with lung cancer. He made only 500 toys this year. They'll be delivered to children in hospitals in the area next week.

Warnhoff said he got started making toys for handicapped and under-privileged children when he was 14. A little girl down the street caught diphtheria and Warnhoff made a cradle for her doll, saying: ANN ARBOR, Mich. tAP) Albert Warnhoff spent most of his life playing Santa's helper and now he needs someone to follow in his footsteps. Warnhoff, 72, a carpenter and lumberman, spent his last 59 years building more than 43,000 toys and sending them to boys and girls in hospitals and orphanages all over the world. He received many formal thanks from lots of places.

Best Tribute But. Warnhoff said, "Of the many honors I have received, the one I liked best was to see the sparkle in a sick child's eyes when tion, U.N. officials acknowledged that the Katangans seemed to be holding their own against the smaller but better equipped U.N. force. Katangans seemed to be increasing their mortar and sniping fire on U.N.

positions on the outskirts, particularly the U.N. headquarters and its nearby Gurkha for a landing at Elisabethville. The first planes to take off from Leopoldville at dawn today, as the airlift resumed, carried 200 Irish troops. Malayan armored cars were being brought in on some of the nine flights planned children without toys this year. camp.

President Tshombe returned for the day. U.N. jot fighters destroyed two, airplane hangars at one of the two main Kalangan air bases, in sorties it was announced. Needy Cases Continued 'rom Page One SHIP MOVEMENTS NEW YORK (AP)-Transatlan-tL passenger and mail ships due today: Leonardo Da Vinci, Genoa. Sailing:" American Clipper Dub-, lin; American Planter, Rotter-! during the night from his private visit Paris to take up personal direction of the fight.

He flew from Paris to neighboring North 4M need ever other groups because the this year is greater than before. Meanwhile, these cases Natives Hold Their Own As Gen. Sean McKeown, the ern Rhodesia and drove from there to Elisabethville with a1 dam; American Producer, Havre; haVe Bergensfjord, Bergen; Concordia small escort of soldiers. I Irish commander of U.N. heen suhmitted for cnasideratinn-jSky, Las Palmas; Exford, Lis 30-GALLON i Automatic Gas GLASS-LINED Family Needs $7S iDon; Gloria, Tunis; Mattawunga, Mr.

and Mrs. and their eight Goteborg; Mormacfir, Goteborg; children moved to this area fromiMormaewave- Capetown: Queen the South recently. Mr. is Gibraltar; Mathilda stpaHiiu emninvprf hnt hie Jnrmmp 'Thorden, Copenhagen; Sekondi, Bathurst. Take this tape recorder with you is not sufficient to meet the family needs and because of their BRUSH FIRE PUT OUT WATER HEATER 5495 l-Yar Warrastr Bras Nipples, 1M Safety Shutoff.

Ann Rf. short residency, they are not eligible for assistance from any agency. Firemen of Engine 1 went to St. Peter's Cemetery at 8:52 this! morning to extinguisn a grass The County Probation Departs ment reports that $75 will provide and brush fire' PS many needed clothing items. anywhere! in mathematics, is 1 followed by 100 I A googol, the figure zeroes.

Choice of Color or wood finish. SamDle Kitchen -SB 3E A has undergone several serious operations recently, and his physician says he will probably require more before he is i If TSjJ on display. ComDlete 5 ft. Custom Wood Kitchen as low ii back to normalcy. He is, in the interim, helpless and a bed pa as tient at home, lne prognosis is Designed Esoecial 1 i fSrtKfA XT not bright, since he may be con for you.

fined to his home for another mmm i HftX'J aiSJM'lli ilJ IT year. SUMP PUMP Mrs. A manages to look after her husband, their two children and their home. But she is crushed 4 -A CHOICE OF COLOR NOW FOR THE PRICE OF WHITE by trying to meet mounting medi 95 cal expenses on a limited 1.11 95 119 The sum of $69 will help buy the family blankets, sheets, warm Complete with chrome brass fittings, shower included. First Quality 5' recessed tub.

19x17 basin, coupled toilet set, deluxe factory runs. G-E Vi H.P. JL, MOTOR Must Tame Future Giant Continued from Page One ings like those now rising in Newark and Elizabeth, Powell said. Twice as many jobs will have to provide incomes for the increased number of residents and pressure for this will have to be balanced against pressure from unacceptable industry wanting to come here. Industries and their locations will have to be selected carefully, it was noted, and Powell said New Brunswick will become a metropolitan center of financial and professional offices.

Every sub-division of lands to make way for new homes or industries will have to be treated as a crucial decision, Powell said during the afternoon session, noting the patterns laid down now will affect county living for the next 100 years. Norman Filenbaum, Edison Planning Board chairman, told how anticipation in 1952 of the need for a road to get around Metuchen led to setting aside lands in Edison for what has become the Stephenville Parkway that eventually will scoot Route 27 traffic around the borough. And Brendon N. Dowling, East Brunswick township engineer, told how work of engineers and planners from the county, the township and Spotswood relieved a township drainage condition that treatened Spotswood. Project Financed A large storm sewer will be built in sections and financed by $200 payments against each housing lot served as the lots are occupied.

In this way, the project was planned and right-of-ways detailed now, but the costs will be paid by those who will benefit from the improvement in future years. Attorney Morgan Seiffert suggested work start now on planning for highways in rural Middlesex County, where it can be seen more land will be needed for future major highways. Most property owners would donate the land if the locations were known, he said. Freeholder George L. Burton, chairman of county parks, talked of tire need for 10,000 more park acres 60 per cent for active recreation and 40 per cent for preserving the natural state by 1985.

The scenic values of the Raritan River and Bay and Farrington and Carnegie Lakes should be preserved, Burton said. While $60 million in state Green Acres funds voted Nov. 7 will help both county and town park expansion, "this is no panacea," Powell said. But planners should be ready with proposals because it was reported the first money for buying parklands should be distributed in March or April. Roland Smith of Piscataway Township said flood plains created by powerful natural forces should be preserved and Thomas Brennen of South Plainfield told of efforts under way to improve Spring Lake as a park area.

Brennan feared planning boards have become so busy approving land subdivisions that they haven't been able to plan their towns' futures. Chairmen Report In reports from chairmen of citizens committees named to advise the county Planning Board on county construction needs in the next 15 years: Arthur Willis recommended the county build an 11-floor administration building in Courthouse Square, where the County Record Building should be removed. Later, Bernard G. H. Thomas recommended the jail be housed in a new workhouse wing to hold 110 prisoners.

Thomas, North Brunswick planning consultant, also suggested a parole system for workhouse inmates to cut accommodation needs, and a placement home where ex-workhouse inmates without jobs could live while they work on public projects. They would leave the home once they got a job. He said a new Juvenile Detention Home is needed now. Gordon E. Linn, chairman of the county board's water supply advisory committee, recommended rehabilitation of Lake Marguerite in Outcalt, Monroe Township, to provide recreation and water.

He also said tidal dams on the South and Raritan Rivers are needed for water supply and to keep salt water out of waterbearing underground sands that supply wells. In addition, he recommended building a reservoir at Six Mile Run, North Brunswick. George Morse, former Edison Planning Board member, recommended the county purchase 9,600 acres for public use, 9,200 of them for parks. Yurii E. Lebcdeff recommended the Middlesex County Mosquito Control Commission be entrusted with water surface management.

Engineering Survey Samuel P. Owen, Metuchen Planning Board member, recommended an engineering survey next year to determine how municipalities will meet garbage disposal in the years to come as dump lands are filled up. And W. Harry Mann recommended construction of two new vocational schools and a community college by 1975, at a total cost of $12 million. Powell has recommended all this be done in a five-year plan after the freeholders determine the order of priority.

Family Weekly in the informative pages of the December 10th issue, reveals a new drug for the management of high blood pressure. Read this important science article in Family Weekly, the colorgravure section of The Sunday Home News. fully Automatic WATER SOFTENER SILAKOTE LINED TANK PORTABLE I II' II A Guaranteed All Brass Valves Automatic Bypass Weekly Grain Capacity 135,3110 clothing, and shoes for Mrs. A and the children, according to the Visiting Nurses' Association. Mrs.

became known to Red Cross when her husband was hospitalized at the Veterans Hospital in East Orange. He had been working for several years when a back injury suffered during the war became so severe, hospitalization was advised. At present, the family has no income, as all unemployment insurance has been exhausted and the Veterans Administration is awaiting the outcome of the various doctor's reports. A daughter, age 17, who is in high school, has a part-time job and earns enough for their food. The mother is not well, but even" if she could work, there is the problem of caring for the 7 year old boy.

The sum of $35.00 would buy clothing for this family, fixings for a Christmas which Model 730 1 TAPE RECORDER Only 22 lbs. Vi-Track Monaural Record and Play back 3-Speed Record and Play-back: JVz, inchesper-second Simple Push-Butfon Controls Cathopfic Toning Indicator High-Fidelity Speaker System Three-in-one Microphone Tape Index Counter helps locate any recording on the tope quickly Styled in rich Beige with Pale Gold Trim. I IMS I rr PLUMBING SUPPLIES APPLIANCES II ST. GEORGE RCSELLE, N. J.

OPEN Man. thru Frl. I A. M. 1:30 P.

M. Sst. 8 A. t. T.

U. CHBtiif 3-019 V-M STEREORECORD TAPE RECORDER- if not merry, would at least be MODEL 722 Make your own sirrrnphnnle iapr Inrlildra two mirrophonrs, and Dual C'ath- ft) optic Tuning lye for profs- -i- sional-qualitv recording re suits. V-M Modrl IKK (optional) Auxiliary Amplifier Speaker complete the stereo piayoacn system. adequate. Contributions to the Lions Needy cases Fund may be mailed or delivered to Miss Beverly Eicke, The Home News Publishing 123 How Lane, New Brunswick, or they may be taken to The Peoples National Bank at Church and George streets, New Brunswick, to Charles O'Rourke or to The Lions Club Needy Cases Fund window.

Checks should be made payable to the Lions Club Needy Fund. All funds go to the needy, with the Lions Club and Homo News assuming administration costs. I NpSjgSS555h NEW GENERAL ELECTRIC 12 lb. filter-flq -j 0gL 6.E. PRICES START AT fVi CfZZf WASHERS j0m i Come in Today for a Demonstration BOUND BR00K-P Furniture, Vosseler and Union Ave.

EAST BRUNSWICK-J. J. Newberry, Mid-State Mall NEW BRUNSWICK-E. J. Korvette, 539 Millfown Road NEW BRUNSWICK-Gabowitz Radio 204 Neilson St.

NEW BRUNSWICK J. Adam Frisch, 280 George St. NEW BRUNSWICK-Nelson Radio, 168 Commercial Ave. NEW BRUNSWICK Rivoli Music Shop, 407 George St. PERTH AMB0Y Mika Camera Shop, 464 Amboy Ave.

United Fund IMPROVED ACTIVATOR WASHING Wllit. xgjX FITS LIKE A KITCHEN BUILT-IN Model 404 White I IkViWMV.iy.'Uu.u.vAV.v.v.v. v.v.v.v.v.v.-.v.,w..v.v.v.v G.E. 23" DAYLIGHT BLUE TV us uiinstmas Continued from Page One $37,000 quota. Martin announced that North Brunswick had attained its goal and that South Brunswick would probably reach its goal by next week.

Reporting for the Professional Division, William Seidel announced that $15,591.95 h'ad been collected or 76.1 per cent of its $20,500 goal. Seidel stated that his division's percentage would go up considerably during the "clean-up campaign." Goldstein introduced Mrs. John Bradley who was known during the campaign as the "Mystery Voice." Mrs. Bradley, who had served as an assistant residential chairman in last year's campaign made spot announcements and Give the New POLAROID Electric Eye Land Camera NOW AT THE Choice of Credit Terms Here's your ensnee! This Christ mas you can afford to give the most exciting present going, a Polaroid Electric Eye Land Camera. The new J33 has everything in eluding a price to fit your budget.

Fully Automatic The electric eye chooses the per feet exposure. No Focusing There's nothing to set. Just pick up the camera and snap the picture. No Accessories Nothing extra to buyt You don't need an expensive light meter. Even the flashgun is built in.

10 Second Pictures The best feature of all: ten seconds after you snap it you have the finished picture right out of the back "of the camera. Why wait? This Christmas give the camera everyone wants te own, the Polaroid Electric Eye Camera. (Don't be shy. Ask for one your self, tool Easy Weekly or Monthly Payments Swivel base makes this PftlVn1 pM model a consolette, turns to tJill face you wherever you sit. 1 1 1 flh PD 10 CU.

FT. DIAL DEFROST I iSiO REFRIGERATOR reported the progress after each report luncheon on WCTC. Goldstein, serving as toastmas-ter, introduced the division chairmen, thanked them for their reports and presented each with a memento of the campaign. He also made a presentation to the assistant chairman, J. E.

Acker, who will be the 1963 campaign chairman. Marcus Collins, vice president of the United Fund, presented a plaque to Goldstein for distinguished service on behalf of the fund. Acker expressed appreciation to the thousands of workers who helped to make the campaign a success. 1- MONEY vi v.jA S-: ww.v.v.v.v,.wj.w.v.v.v.v.,wsv i NEW BRUNSWICK'S ONLY I AUTHORIZED G.E. DEALER I iJi Open Thurs.

and Friday Nights 'til 9 p.m. sj KILMER WEEK ENDS TOMORROW An open house from 1 to 5 p.m. tomorrow will be the final event of Joyce Kilmer Week, sponsored by Joyce Kilmer Post 25 of the American Legion, according to Nicholas V. DiStefano, commander. The birthplace of Joyce Kilmer at 17 Codwise will be open to visitors during those hours and all registrants at the home will receive a brochure issued in commemoration of the soldier-poet's birthday anniversary.

Post members will meet tomorrow night to close Joyce Kilmer Week. Plans will be discussed for displaying a group of photographs. NEW JERSEY'S LARGEST JEWELERS NEW BRUNSWICK 331 GEORGE ST. Other Stores in Newark, Irvington, Bloomfield, Orange, Peterson, Hackensack, Passaic, Hoboken, West New York, Union City, Paramus, Dover OPEN AN ACCOUNT NO MONEY DOWN EASY TERMS presented to the post Wednesday night of the Kenton Kilmer family and a photograph of the USS CH 9-0153 Joyce Kilmer, a warship launched Oct. 1, 1943, at Fairfield, Va..

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Pages Available:
2,136,858
Years Available:
1903-2024