24 - Millburn Public Library
24 - Millburn Public Library
24 - Millburn Public Library
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Page S<br />
Ormerod-Counihan<br />
Troth Announced<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Ormerod<br />
of 5 Martindale road 1 have announced<br />
the engagement of their<br />
daughter, Barbara Ann, to Kiohara<br />
G. Counihan, son of Mrs.<br />
George E. Counihan and the late<br />
Mr. Counihan of Lincoln avenue,<br />
Orange, formerly of Chicago and<br />
Short Hills.<br />
Miss Ormerod is a graduate of<br />
Stephens College, Columbia, Missouri<br />
and New York University.<br />
She is teaching in the East Orange<br />
school system. Mr. Counihan, who<br />
has been studying at Massachusetts<br />
Institute of Technology since<br />
his discharge from the United<br />
States Navy, will return there in<br />
the fall to do graduate work in<br />
electrical engineering:.<br />
' *<br />
Army Band to<br />
Give Concert<br />
The Department of the Army<br />
announced today that its famous<br />
United States Army Field Band<br />
(formerly the Army Ground<br />
Forces Band) of Washington.<br />
D. C, will present a concert Ln<br />
Newark on Thursday, Auguet 31,<br />
at 8:30 p. m. in the Mosque Theatre.<br />
The band's appearance is<br />
sponsored by U.S. Army and U.S.<br />
Air Force Recruiting Service of<br />
Newark and admission is free.<br />
FACING<br />
CAPITOL PLAZA<br />
• large fireproof hotel lurrounded<br />
by parks—neor a<br />
sightseeing and Union S f aiior.<br />
Garage on premises.<br />
Coffee Shop-CocktaH Lounge<br />
— convention facilities. From<br />
Spend your weekend* with ui.<br />
WILLIAM H. JOYNER<br />
MANAGER<br />
MISS BARBARA ANN ORlllE-<br />
ROD, whose engagement to Rich-<br />
ard Counihan has been announced.j<br />
Photo by Pat Liveright<br />
*<br />
Noted for its musical versatility<br />
and perfection, the band has been<br />
attracting audiences of thousands<br />
in parades and concerts all over<br />
the country. Its brilliant reputation<br />
recently won a full scale performance<br />
in New York City where<br />
the band opened the music season<br />
at Carnegie HaU last September.<br />
Tile bandsmen are all accomplished<br />
id the field of music. Many<br />
have been bandmasters and the<br />
total comprised a true, representation<br />
of the symphonic and concert<br />
orchestras of this country<br />
and foreign lands.<br />
Investments<br />
Settlements<br />
TajC Returns<br />
Title Transfers<br />
Real Estate<br />
Collections<br />
Bequests<br />
Expenses<br />
Accounting<br />
Etc<br />
MISS PAMELA LEVTTT, whose<br />
engagement to DonaM Tyriver has<br />
been announced.<br />
Tyriver-Levift<br />
Engagement Told<br />
The engagement of Miss Pamela<br />
Grace Levitt to Donald J. Tyriver<br />
has been announced T>y her parents,<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Percy B.<br />
Levitt of 46 Linden street. Mr.<br />
Tyriver is the son of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
R. E. Tyriver of Hinsdale, Illinois,<br />
foremrly of Short Hills.<br />
Miss Levitt attended Elmira College,<br />
Elmira, New York, end is<br />
a graduate of Berkeley Secretarial<br />
School. She is employed by Deering,<br />
Milliken and Co., Inc., 1 New-<br />
York, Her fiance, a veteran of the<br />
Navy, is an elumnus of Packard<br />
Junior College, New York, and is<br />
with Lambert Co., Jersey City.<br />
Both were <strong>Millburn</strong> High School<br />
student?.<br />
No date has been, set for the<br />
wedding.<br />
LEGAL NOTICE<br />
AN ORDINANCE FOR THE CON-<br />
STRUCTION OF A SUPPLEMEN-<br />
TARY STORM WATER DRAINAGE<br />
LINE IN A PORTION OF LAKE<br />
ROAD IN THE TOWNSHIP OP MILL-<br />
BURN IN THE COUNTY OF ESSEX,<br />
AND PROVIDING FOR THE FINAN-<br />
CING OF THE COST THEREOF.<br />
The Ordinance, of wnich the foregoing<br />
Is the title, was passed on final<br />
reading at a regular meeting of the<br />
Township Co^nmittee of the Township<br />
of <strong>Millburn</strong> in the County of Esses,<br />
New Jen=ov, held on the 21st day of<br />
August 1950.<br />
CLARENCE A. HILL,<br />
Vice-Chairman,<br />
TownshlD Committee.<br />
THEODORE L. WTDMAYER.<br />
Township Clerk.<br />
Aug. <strong>24</strong>, 1950. " Fees: $2.76<br />
Dr. Wm. F. Decter<br />
OPTOMETRIST<br />
344 <strong>Millburn</strong> Ave.<br />
Mi. 6-0912<br />
Proper Lighting<br />
Banishes Glare<br />
YOU WOULD BE SURPRISED-<br />
to learn what disposition might legally be made of your<br />
property if you leave no will. Of course, a lawyer should<br />
draw up your will. He will put your ideas in legal, practical<br />
form.<br />
When choosing an Executor, we invi+e you to name<br />
our Bank, giving your heirs the benefit of our long experience<br />
in administering Estates and Trusts. Our services<br />
are available at the same rate that is allowed an inexperienced<br />
individual.<br />
We shall be glad to discuss any estate plans confidentially<br />
wth you and your lawyer, wi+h no obligation on<br />
your part.<br />
SUMMIT TRUST COMPANY<br />
Member Federal<br />
Deposit Insurance<br />
Corporation<br />
ESTABLISHED 1891<br />
Your living room, the center<br />
of so many family activities, deserves<br />
carefully planned lighting,<br />
declares Mrs. Doris Anderson, extension<br />
home management speialist,<br />
Rutgers University.<br />
Proper lighting must be arranged<br />
for television, for a study<br />
desk, the easy chair where father<br />
reads his newspaper, the rocker<br />
where mother does the mending—<br />
in fact, wherever the family epende<br />
evenings and entertains friends.<br />
The right lighting improves the<br />
appearance of the room and gives<br />
greater comfort with less eye<br />
strain. *<br />
Are you getting full benefit<br />
from your present living room<br />
lighting?, asks Mrs. Anderts<br />
Often you can get more light where<br />
needed simply by rearranging<br />
grouping of lights and furniture.<br />
Often the amount of light can<br />
be tripled by moving a lamp, or<br />
so nearer the furniture.<br />
Shades lined with white or off<br />
white gove two or three times as<br />
much light as a dark-lined shade.<br />
A white paper lining, a coat of<br />
white paint or even white shoe<br />
polish on the inside of a shade<br />
Increases the amount of light<br />
given by a dark shade.<br />
A shade with wide flaring sides<br />
gives off more light than a narrow<br />
shade with straight sides. The gize<br />
of the bulb counts considerably in<br />
arranging for proper light. Use<br />
as high wittage as is recommended<br />
for your lamp.<br />
The popular pin-to-wall type<br />
of lamp gives good light if<br />
equip-ped with proper bowls and<br />
ehades. Abolite globe or a diffusing<br />
bowl and shade spreads' the<br />
light over a hard-to-light areaeuch<br />
as the end of a davenport.<br />
Use at least a 100-watt bulb in<br />
this fixture, hanging it low enough<br />
on the wall so that light shines<br />
on a book or sewing instead of the<br />
person's head. Place wall lamps<br />
so the bottom of the ehade is not<br />
more than 55 inches from the<br />
floor, r if the chair or davenport<br />
is low, you may want the lights<br />
as low as 48 inches from the floor.<br />
Portable table lamps have two<br />
usea; decoration and light. If for<br />
light the bottom of the lamp shad'<br />
should be about 40 inches from<br />
the floor. Sometimes this means<br />
raising the baee f the lamp. If<br />
there is a handy man in the house,<br />
the "riser" can be made of a wooden<br />
block finished to hormonize<br />
with the lamp furnishings.<br />
A shade 14" to lfi" across the<br />
lower edge for a small end table<br />
lamp, or 16" or 19" for a, large<br />
table lamp, will throw out the<br />
light instead of hugging it to the<br />
lamp itself. You might like one<br />
of the new bulbs called "bolite"<br />
bulbs, which give a soft light<br />
without a diffusing bowl. With<br />
those lights you will need a new<br />
"harp"—the fitandard on which<br />
Member<br />
Federal Reserve)<br />
System<br />
The <strong>Millburn</strong> & Short Rills ITEM<br />
the shade rests. These new bulb*<br />
give generous amounts of light<br />
downward plus indirect light" reflected<br />
to the walls and ceiling.<br />
Not all light has to be obtained<br />
from portable fixtures. Ceiling<br />
lights end wall fixtures are important<br />
for good general distribution<br />
of light throughout the room,<br />
even though they are not suitable<br />
for close worgk. Open top shades<br />
on lamps help spread light. Shade<br />
all bare bare lamp bulbs, including<br />
fluerescent, the full length of the*<br />
tube. Unshaded bulbs can produce<br />
harmful glare.<br />
You may be interested in architectural<br />
lighting—the type featuring<br />
receseed direct lights, window<br />
Valence or cornice lighting. No<br />
general direction can be given for<br />
r'<br />
the- location, treatment and installation<br />
of this type of illumination,<br />
as it is controlled by the<br />
room itself and the furniture in<br />
it<br />
Good lighting does not come<br />
wrapped up in a neat ready-touse<br />
package. It is a result of<br />
studying your own living room<br />
and improving or changing light<br />
where needed. It is worth study<br />
and some expense to add the<br />
magic touch of good lighting to<br />
your living room.<br />
•<br />
Helium at ordinary temperatures<br />
is a colorless, odorless tasteless,<br />
and pratically weightless gas. It<br />
is produced in nature by the<br />
radioactive decay heavy elements<br />
such as radium and uranium.<br />
Visit Our New<br />
PINE ROOM<br />
PROVIDING ADDITIONAL 1ABLE<br />
SERVICE FOR YOUR DINING<br />
PLEASURE AND RELAXATION<br />
Little House -- ALDERNEY<br />
EAT AT HOME?<br />
We will prepare in Jig<br />
Time, any item on our<br />
menu including a ten<br />
piece Chicken With<br />
French-fried Potatoes to<br />
serve four, for you to<br />
take out.<br />
545 <strong>Millburn</strong> Avc. Short Hills 7-2201<br />
Store Hours — 11:45 a. m. to 8 p. m.<br />
Cl os rH M o nda ?»<br />
ICE CREAM<br />
By bulk, in a delicious<br />
soda and sundae, or In<br />
half gallon, one gallon,<br />
and two-and-a-half gallon<br />
containers. Also<br />
sliced party bricks are<br />
always in stock.<br />
LEGAL NOTICE<br />
AN ORDINANCE ^EXTENDING THB<br />
BOUNDARIES OF A DISTRICT OK<br />
ORDINANCE OP THE TOWN-<br />
SHIP OF KELLBDBN."<br />
The Ordinance, of which the foregoing<br />
Is the title, was passed on final<br />
Siding -.at a regular meeting of the<br />
Township Committee of the TownsMB<br />
otKSlrn m the County of Essex<br />
New Jersey, held- on the 21st day of<br />
August 1950. CLAfiENCE A HM,, •<br />
Vice-Chalrman,<br />
COSTS ARE UP!<br />
tAUGUSTH, 19501<br />
Township Committee,<br />
THEODORE L. WIDMAYX"R,<br />
Township Clerk.<br />
Aug. <strong>24</strong>. 1950. Fees: *2.53<br />
REMEMBER<br />
No Lower Prices Anywhere<br />
DAVE'S LIQUOR MART<br />
will reflect your good<br />
taste when selected<br />
from our catalogues.<br />
Copper plate or<br />
plateless engraved.<br />
item press<br />
391 <strong>Millburn</strong> Avenue <strong>Millburn</strong>, N. J<br />
FARES STAY DOWN!<br />
The costs for operating a bus are way np — just like all other costs have<br />
gone up during the last ten years. But the <strong>Public</strong> Service bus fare is<br />
. only a nickel—the same fare we charged in 1940!<br />
You know how prices have skyrocketed—for food ... for clothing<br />
for fuel—since 1940. The costs of operating a bus have risen, too —for<br />
bus parts ... for oil and tires ... for everything that goes into a bus ride.<br />
But the <strong>Public</strong> Service bus fare is only 5 cents!<br />
It costs more to give you adequate and comfortable transportation. For<br />
example, wages have been on a steady increase. Since July 1, 1948,<br />
they have risen by about $4,750,000 on an annual basis —and over<br />
$13,500,000 on an annual basis since 1940.<br />
It just isn't possible to charge a nickel fare-and still pay our bills!<br />
<strong>Public</strong> Service filed a petition on July 12, 1950, with the<br />
Board of <strong>Public</strong> Utility Commissioners for relief from the<br />
five cent fare until such time as permanent rates shall have<br />
been established by the Board.<br />
The company feels that you can readily understand that<br />
efficient and adequate transportation service is in jeopardy<br />
when we face the loss of nearly $4,000,000 a year.<br />
A-351-S0