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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 21
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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 21

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Asbury Park Pressi
Location:
Asbury Park, New Jersey
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Page:
21
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WW srn1 fir' B3 Asbury Park Pre. Tum. Aug. 28. 197.

Weddings Clubhpuse Benefit Scheduled American Society for Psycho-prophylaxis in Obstetrics. Riley-Chambers ASBURY PARK Merri Beth Chambers and Lawrence Patrick Riley were married Aug. 5 in Trinity Episcopal Church. The Rev. Dudley Rapp, rector, officiated.

Mr. and Mrs. James R. Chambers, Bridlemere Avenue, Interlaken, are parents of the bride. The bridegroom' is the son of Mrs.

Kathleen M. Riley, Smith Lane, Neptune, and the late Alvin Riley. Frances Qulnn and Steven Oranafo were honor attendants. The bride is a graduate of Asbury Park High School and International Fine Arts College In Florida. She is a self-employed de- signer.

The bridegroom attended Neptune High School. He is employed by Aerial Sign Monmouth Airport, Wall Township. The couple live in Ocean Grove. 1-4 Portrait of Saks Fifth (EDITOR'S NOTE: Items far The Clrt-boate nasi he teal to Tie Press two weeks. Before ne oate ot me meetiag or tae even.) Sapper Dance Greenbriar Chapter of Hadassah will hold its annual Youth Alivah hmefit.

a sunner nartv Sunday in the Hreen. twar PIiiMiaiioa Rftolr Tnumahiffc Mas rtlat- tert with tasty trimmings will be nerved, and guests will select desserts from a table Riled with Viennese goodies. Prances. Scheer and Rttv MnM. hnth Brick Tnwnshln.

will nrvont reservations subscriptions at (9.75 a person. Seniors to Meet Township of Ocean Senior Citizens will meet 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at Ocean Township Recreation Center. Bowl- ing group will meet 12:30 Thursday at Shore Lanes, Neptune. Square Dance Jersey Shore Promenad-ers will bold a square and round dance for club level dancers at 8 p.m.

tomorrow at 5th Avenue Pavilion, Belmar. Glenn Cooke will call the square dances, and Frank and Shir- ley Bellotti will cue round dancing. Polish Association Jersey Shore Polish American Association will meet 8 p.m. tomorrow at Toms River Knights of Columbus Hall, i Regional Seminar The Eastern Regional Seminar on Community Improvement Programs, cosponsored by the General Federation of Women's Clubs and Sears Roebuck and will be held Thursday and Friday in Philadelphia. Mrs.

Ralph P. Hunt, Neptune, a member of Ocean Grove Woman's Club and community improvement chairman for the 5th District of the State Federation of Women's Clubs, will represent the district at the event. The seminar, to be conducted with the cooperation of the National University Extension Association, marks the beginning of a two-year program of community improvement. Council Meeting Shore Regional High School Parents Advisory Council of the Class of 1979 will meet Thursday night at the high school cafeteria. Plans will be formulated for a fall card party and fashion show set for Nov.

2. Nan's Class A new Lamaze childbirth film, "Nan's Class," will be shown 8 p.m. Friday at Monmouth Mall Civic Auditorium. The film is sponsored by Monmouth-Ocean SOPHIE GIMBEL in living room of her New York town house. Fashion Designer Buys Only the Best 1 4 1 CHE ATIE-GA LLOWA Beck-Gump HADDON HEIGHTS Janet Lynn Gump, Lakewood, and LeRoy Carl Beck, Coopersburg, were married Aug.

12 in First Presbyterian Church. The Rev. Arthur E. Sundstrom officiated. Mr.

and Mrs. Gerald L. Gump, Haddon-field, and Mr, and Mrs. LeRoy J. Beck, Coopersburg, are parents of the couple.

Mr. and Mrs. Greg R. Fegley, the bride's brother-in-law and sister, were honor attendants. Mr.

and Mrs. Beck are graduates of Susquehanna University, Selinsgrove, Pa. The bride is a graduate of Haddon Heights High School. She teaches music in Veterans Memorial Elementary School, Brick Township. The bridegroom is a graduate of Lehigh Regional High School in Pennsylvania.

He is an instrumental music teacher with Selmer Music Corp. in schools in Ocean and Monmouth counties. The couple live in Lakewnod. lj JSr til O'CALLAGHAN-PELUGER as. mrr .4 Nursing Mother's Vegetarian Diet Can Adversely Affect Newborn 1 ff A 4' Sophie the year she married Avenue President Adam Gimbel, is seen green silk, sparkling crystal and fresh flowers which she arranges herself, and the upstairs guest room featuring a toile-covered Louis XV bed, are seen as microcosms of the best in art and accessories.

Sophie knows you cannot make the best better only different. This became evident when her late husband's bedroom began to look a little worn: "I re-did it exactly the way it was," she said. And why not? How can you make something that's already timeless more so? In her work as head of Saks Fifth Avenue's Salon Moderne and during her frequent intercontinental trips, Sophie sought out the best. The dresses she sold had simple lines and were constructed from the finest fabric available. When traveling, she had an ability to detect the best, the most classic examples of art and furniture.

SOPHIE SAYS it's not enough to own fine clothing and exquisite furnishings. She stated that all these, things must be cared for and shown the respect they deserve. Her own fine linen and lace is never permanent press, and sterling silver will never stay bright on its own. Once fearful of a tendency among the young to shun the old and beautiful in favor of the quick and easy, she is now confident that our society's appreciation for excellence will never die. "The best is always worth the trouble," she said.

BushrTracy PINE "BEACH Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bush, 631 Springfield have announced the engagement of their daughter, Deborah Ann, to Douglas John Tracy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Tracy, 1310 S.

Bayview Seaside Park. Miss Bush is a graduate of Toms River High School South and Ocean County College. She attends Trenton State College. She is employed by Chicago Title Insurance Toms River. Her fiance is a graduate of Central Regional High School, Bayville, Berkeley Township, and Ocean County Vocational School.

He is employed by Hovsons Toms River. Furiato-Schroeder HOLMDEL TOWNSHIP Mr. and Mrs. Dominic Furiato, 37 Main have announced the engagement of their daughter, Susan, to Russell A. Schrseder, Rumson, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Alfons Srhroeder, Leonard-ville Road, Leonardo, Middletown Township. Miss Furiato and her fiance are graduates of Mater Dei Wgh School, New Monmouth, Middletown Township. She is a graduate of William Paterson College where she received her bachelors degree in nursing. She is employed by Cornell Medical Center, New York.

Her husband is a field engineer with N.C.R. Cranbury Township. Proto-Caron MOUNT HOLLY TOWNSHIP Mr. and Mrs. Ludonico T.

Proto, here, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Carol Ann, to Robert E. Caron, son of Mr. and Mrs. Conrad S. Caron, Yellowbrook Drive, Colts Neck Township.

Miss Proto is a graduate of Douglass College. Her fiance is a graduate of Cook Col-lege. He is employed by Cobe Laboratories, Cranbury Township. Use Cleaner on Grill If messes do happen, you won't dread KP with an all-purpose cleaner, on hand. Its spe-.

cial grease-dissolvers make light work of the heaviest Johs, like clleaning the stove. Add a cup of cleaner to a pan of hot water and soal burners, grill anything that isn't plastic. After half an hour, wipe with a sponge, rinse. SAVE MONEY! Clip the grocery coupons from the Wednesday Food pages in The Press. It's cents-able! Fair Friends of the Bradley Beach Free Public Library will hold its annual book fair and arts and crafts festival from 10 a.m.

to 10 p.m. Saturday and Sunday on Ocean Avenue, Bradley Beach, between 3rd and 4th Avenues. rP Clam Bake Joseph 3. Clifton American Legion Post of Point Pleasant Beach will hold its annual clam bake from 5 to 11 p.m. Saturday at the post home.

Walk-A-Tkoa NOW (National Organization for Women) will hold a walk-a-thon tor the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment starting 9 a.m. Saturday at Eastside Park, Red Bank. Rep. James How- ard, will speak to walkers before they start their 10-mile walk in the Red Bank area. PBA Dance Sandy Hook Local 48, Policemen's Benevolent Association, will hold its annual dance at 8 p.m.

Saturday at the Peninsula House, Sea Bright. Music will be by The Third Person. Summer Swlzile Molly Pitcher Woman's Club of Freehold will hold its 1978 Summer Swizzle cocktail party from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. Saturday on the lawn of the home of Mr. and Mrs.

George Gardner, Freehold. Polka Party Shore Area Polish Falcons of America, Nest 962, will hold a polka party, 8:30 p.m. Saturday at Brick Township Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall, Adamston. The Happy Times Polka Band will play for dancing. A polka contest will be held, and the winners will be named Shore Area Polka King and Queen.

Dolly Szydlowski will Judge the contest, open to persons 18 to 25 years of age. The party is a benefit for the organization's building and athletic program fund. Fashion Show Frederick Dempsey American Legion Post and Auxiliary will hold a cocktail sip and fashion show at 4 p.m. Sunday at the post home in Neptune. Julia Izzard, Neptune, in information chair- Match Show The Dachshund Club of New Jersey will hold an American Kennel Club Plan Match Show Sunday at Clark American Legion Post, Clark Township.

John H. Allen, Hampton, is chairman. 12 in his blood was only about 5 percent of normal. The child recovered when given injections of the vitamin and later stayed in good health when his mother fed him oral doses of the nutrient, which is necessary for normal growth. Nyhan said adult vegetarians rarely suffer the symptoms of vitamin B-12 deficiency because their bodies are not growing rapidly.

However, he said they should also take vitamin supplements. An editorial accompanying the study recommended that nursing vegetarians give their infants extra iron and vitamins and because their milk may not contain enough of the nutrients. "Most of us in pediatrics believe that the natural system is probably the best," Nyhan said. "I wouldn't Want to discourage breast feeding on the basis of this experience. But it is not always a complete diet." Bridal Sho wer To Be Staged POINT PLEASANT Welcome Wagon of Ocean County will give a bridal shower for all engaged couples of Ocean County at 7 p.m.

Monday at Kings Grant Inn. Admission is free. There will be gifts for everyone, and prizes will be awarded. Highlights of the evening Include a bridal fashion show by Helene Lawrence Shop, Toms River, coordinated with men's fashions by Do Rite Tuxedos, Toms River. Alans Flowers and Gifts, Toms River, will do the flowers.

Other firms sponsoring the everlt are Claire's Wedding Service, Point Pleasant; Renee Photo Studio, Bayville, Berkeley Township; Ethan Allen Furniture Gallery, Howell Township, and Natural Look Beauty Shop, Toms River. TO HAVE a successful garden, you need more than a green thumb. It takes work and a lot of The Gardening pages of Friday's and Sunday's Press give tips on planting, soil conditions, light, care and cultivation. Plus, Saturday's Indoor Gardening helps you maintain healthy houseplants. Guv Pharmacy Department Invites Comparison Check our prices on your nut prescription.

You'll be amued at the savings on our every day low prices. We till private, state and union prescriptions. Every Prescription dispenses1 at Two Guys Pharmacy ernes arlth a receipt. REMEMBER: AT TWO OUVS PHARMACY VOUR QOOO HEALTH IS OUR GREATEST CONCERN Pharmacy Locations BORDE NTOWN BRICK TOWN MANALAPAN UNION WOODBRIDOC CHAMBERS-RILEY Galloway-Cheatle FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP The marriage of Mary Frances Cheatle and Andrew Joseph Galloway Jr. took place Aug.

5 in St. Robert Bellarmine Roman Catholic Church. The Rev. Francis J. Kasper officiated.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Cheatle, Partridge Avenue, and Mr. and Mrs.

Andrew Galloway, Montville Township, are parents of the couple. Honor attendants were Mary Beth Cheatle and Scott Homan. The bride is a graduate of Freehold High School and Georgian Court College. She is employed by Freehold Learning Center. The bridegroom is a graduate of Montville High School and Niagara (N.Y.) University.

MRS. IE ROY BECK Peluger-O'Callaghan MARLBORO TOWNSHIP The mar-riage of WUma Eileen O'Callaghan and Robert Victor Peluger took place Aug. 12 in Old Brick Reformed Church. The Rev. John Hart, pastor, officiated.

Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. George J. O'Callaghan, Tinton Avenue, and Mr. and Mrs.

Victor E. Peluger, Shafto Road, all Tinton Falls. Karen Peluger, sister of the bridegroom, and Robert Hayes were honor attendants. Mr. and Peluger are graduates of Monmouth Regional High School.

The bride is the head teller with City Federal Savings and Loan, Eatontown. The bridegroom attended Brookdale Community College. He is vice president of V.E.P. Manufacturing here. After a trip to Aruba, the couple will live in Wall Township.

Quake Predictions Important strides in cracking open the mysteries of earthquakes and predicting them in order to save thousands of lives have recently been made by geologists. In Japan geologists have found that the ground tilts slightly a few days before an earthquake. A Soviet Union study indicated that a change in the pattern of microearthv quakes (detected only by sensitive Instruments) precedes a quake. SEIY Laurence Factory BeeHOnly ROUTE 9 THttE MlltS NCWTM Of LAKfWOOO 10 tkM. P.M.

Sm SUIT SALE Reduced 20 to 53 Pie Ticketed tie to 13 osmctiom reoM assupv mix fty. lnli tzt ft, ft fftVosBjlSt sfefn fifjhj onto to. 32 S. Cnniesf. turn nek) t.

nil, Unra. Factory lrice STOCK WPliNISHfD DAIIY UnimMMd Poriung li 'i "4 I JoouiUHxiW WANAUAtSA at IT. 35, NEW YORK Her friends saw her as unaffected and hard-working, the possessor of Impeccable taste. Her rivals belittled her by saying, "After all, she's the boss's wife." To everyone, she was fashion designer Sophie Gimbel, respected innovator of the post-war "New Look." Unimpressed by the outrageous, severe looks created by her competitors, Sophie believed that the well-dressed woman should always be aware of trends, but never be enslaved by them. TODAY, AT 80, Sophie has lost none of her distaste for the pretentious.

"Taste is an innate talent, one that has nothing whatsoever to do with money," she observes in the September issue of House Beautiful. "I try to make a woman look as sexy as possible and yet look like a perfect lady." A respect for the unique, the enduring indeed, the timeless is reflected in her present surroundings, the same elegant Man-hattan townhouse shared with her late husband and ex-Saks Fifth Avenue president, Adam Gimbel. An inveterate collector of fine art, Sophie notes, that no object in the house is under 30 years old. Everything from Chinese porcelain dogs to impressionistic paintings has withstood the test of time. BOTH THE downstairs parlor of soothing Engagements ULIERY Ullery-Kerwin DOVER TOWNSHIP Mr.

and Mrs. Donald E. Ullery, Swan Boulevard, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Thelma Irene, Whitty Road, to Ernest John Kerwin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kerwin, 3 Catalina Drive, Dover Township.

Miss Ullery and her fiance are graduates of Toms River High School South. She is a computer technician at Naval Air Engineering Center, Lakehurst. Her fiance attended Ocean County College. He is employed by Sambol Construction here. Ford-Kane COLTS NECK TOWNSHIP Mr.

and Mrs. Andrew E. Ford, Galloping Hill Road, have announced the engagement of their daughter, Leigh Allison, to Michael Allen Kane, son of Mrs. Francis Kane, Orchard' Street, Marlboro Township. Miss Ford and her fiance are graduates of Marlboro High School and both attend Pennsylvania State University.

Coin Toss Scheduled BRICK TOWNSHIP Jersey React and Rescue team will hold a Highway Safety Break and Coin Toss Labor Day weekend at the comers of Route 70 and Herbertsville Road. here. The program is a benefit for Muscular Dystrophy. The organization also will provide hot and cold drinks to weary motorists traveling in the area during the holiday weekend. BUSH Saving Many Lives BOSTON (AP) Vegetarian mothers who breast feed their Infants and don't take a vitamin supplement may be increasing the chance their babies will suffer -a severe, sometimes fatal nutritional deficiency, doctors warn.

A study says because of their mothers' diets, these infants do not get enough vitamin B-12 and may fall into a coma and die. The doctors emphasized that breast feed-1 tag is safe, as long as vegetarian mothers realize their milk does not always provide their child with a complete diet. The problem is that vitamin B-12 is contained only in protein sources like meat, eggs and milk. Children of mothers who avoid these foods lack the vitamin. The study, conducted at the University of California Medical Center in San Diego, was published in a current edition of the New England Journal of Medicine.

The doctors studied the case of a 6-. month-old boy who was brought to the hospi-' tal by his 26-year-old vegetarian mother. "He first became drowsy and then went into a coma and was totally unarousable," said Dr. William L. Nyhan, one of the researchers.

"His body temperature decreased, and I would predict that the next step would have been that he would stop breathing. He was in danger of dying." The boy's body was covered with dark blotches, and he was severely anemic. The doctors found that the amount of vitamin B- 5 $Jj UM7 It Asbary Part Prets WED 50 YEARS Mr. and Mrs. Harold C.

Trotman, Mount Hope Lane and Ocean Beach, both Dover Township, are observing their golden wedding anniversary today. Trotman and the former Ruthe Anne Ogden of Elizabeth and Roselle Park were married Aug. 22, 1928. Former residents of Westf ield, they moved to Dover Township in 1969. Trotman was a N.J.

State professional engineer and was an engineer for the Bell System for 39 years. The couple's children are Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hansard, Tal-lahasse, Mr. and Mrs.

Donald White, Great River, N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hair, Fiorham Part, and Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Trotman, Toms River.

There are 13 grandchildren. Fir" Another study suggests that controlled pumping of water into deep wells may be used to produce many small artificial tremors, releasing strain and possibly preventing major earthquakes. The American Geological Institute says progress is being made in predicting earthquakes, the greatest of all natural disasters. In 1978 upward to a million people died In an earthquake in China. EXCIO 1317 New Fall Fabric Arriving Oslly is IS90LITOWN LAURSITON (mi nTsiaa.

mm sin at S71-S771 IBB-BMO PEDDLERS VILLAGE MANASQUAN QXCLI, WAU R3. 10 P.M. SAT. NUJ to 10 P.M. u.

ii pVku 7 r.M. rar Yaw 0.

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Pages Available:
2,393,888
Years Available:
1887-2024