This is a complete 1968-1969 membership card and bail bond certificate set issued to a member of the Automobile Club of Central New Jersey, an affiliate of the American Automobile Association. The primary card, valid from August 1968 to September 1969, documents the member's affiliation with the club headquartered at 321 West State Street in Trenton, Mercer County, New Jersey. It lists emergency contact telephone numbers for club offices in Trenton, Burlington, Asbury Park, and Edison, reflecting the organization's regional service area within the Garden State. The card's reverse side details the extensive suite of member benefits emblematic of mid-century motoring culture, including emergency road service access to a network of twenty thousand official stations, travel planning assistance, $5,000 in bail bond coverage, personal accident insurance, and even the authority to send collect telegrams. This comprehensive package functioned as a badge of motoring protection, offering both practical roadside aid and significant legal-financial safeguards for the automobile-centric lifestyle of the era. Accompanying the membership card are two executed certificates from the National Surety Corporation, physically attached and integral to the document. The first is a $5,000 Bail Bond Certificate, authorizing any agent of the surety company to execute a bond for motor vehicle law violations, excluding driving without a permit. The second is a $200 Guaranteed Arrest Bond Certificate, which guaranteed the member's court appearance for similar violations or guaranteed payment of fines, obligating the member to reimburse the club or surety for any losses. Both certificates bear the original signatures of the club president and executive director, alongside the member's signature, completing the contractual validation. This grouping represents a complete artifact of pre-digital automotive membership, showcasing the AAA's historical role not just as a travel service but as a primary provider of legal and financial security for drivers, with the bail bond feature being a particularly notable aspect of early to mid-20th century motor club benefits. The item serves as a direct record of consumer protection services, insurance underwriting practices, and the juridical landscape surrounding automobile use in the late 1960s.