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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 76

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
76
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TEE SUNDAY RECORD CALL, OCTOBER 20, 20 X3 BC'JSTS'iL JLV3 CCMMLKCIAL EIAL ESTATE Xll KKSTKJLIX3 CCHIdEEClAL HEAL ESTATE Spanish-Speaking Media Gap Decried OK -f A EESEaTttllEmESIUTE Kl SALE Lr. Fir Sale ES Ai-P-Ne A'C 2 n-provc towifltna tct. Hi Cu 7sH'a7. sciOed resd -i sei I'? -C or bu, a IJMHtSa 7 PW. TiiSA COuKTY-ln West Vi-'j'd 5 wsoaed eces.

paved road f-orraae- Ae-cns arctia success fw' oe.eiCDment. Evarr-art Townsend. Realtor e74s4 ACREAGE RPXPURY 10' i a' rev AbluV o-im. locate. Zofl st s.lO for tn.

pacAaoe. Terms. Must b. seen' CSE LA ROY BROKER Si-W FINALIZED SUBDIVISION Sewerl 6e-gen Counv. PR OR ASSOCIATES, Broker So.

Kmderkaman Rd- AAontvai. yi-tcw More Land For Sa'e In New York State On Page 18 -D Shore. V.l. UHe-Sale 87 CA1SMLL VTS. MoSTtS 20 acres wood'and.

oo ft. road frontage, GOOD DEER HUNTING Sje65. terms arranged. Redrnond Agency. Arkville, N.Y.

Phone: 15141 586-4907 Forked river Ranch, mod. spac. 4 enci porch, beat. nice loc. nr.

beach $12,000 945-8860 Builder's close-out on the big, big houses with the low, low payments. A little ss $800 down! As little as $158 per Min. 15,000 sq. ft. heavily end partially-wooded landscaped lots.

Homes have deluxe appliances, paneled family rooms, as fireplaces, clean gas heat; many include dishwashers and partial brick fronts. Across from new 18-hole golf course and new town park with pool, etc. Just minutes from River, Bay end Ocean, shopping centers, nouses of worship, etc. Express buses to Newark and N.Y.C. stop at the property and Parkway entrance Is iust 300 ft away.

CITY WATER, SEWERS, GAS, curbs, sidewalks, etc. 7 Spacious models from $18,000 II legal fees and closing costs Incl. RIVERCREST f4; -r fi if and better programming. We hope. eventuaJy move into educational te.evi-sion and set up a head-start type program in Spanish.

"We will expand our programming, expand our new s. I happen to be particular kooky on news," Anselmo said. "Basically, I think television has been handled as an entertainment medium. "People are just beginning to wake up that it's a powerful, informative, moving force. It probably ought to be treated as you treat a newspaper in that its basic efforts should be given to everything e'se before you come to the comic page." It has scheduled a television debate, in English, between incumbent Rep.

Charles Joel-son. and challenger Richard DeMarco Nov. 3 at 3:30 p.m., with local newsmen as moderators. On Oct. 27, it will have I llhour telcthen from the Manhattan Center to monev for the Crippled Children's Hospital in Puerto Rico.

This year the station via have special breaks in programming to bring election results, and will give information on elections in Puerto Rico. None of the shows are live, Anselmo said. They are videotaped and come from Mexico and Puerto Rico. News takes up 15 per cent of ail programming, he said. Other shows include soccer and boxing matches, musicals and comedy shows.

Although the majority of programming on the new station always will be entertainment Anselmo said, he sees television as an all-encom passing unit which provides for all the needs of the communityleadership, entertainment, politics, and spiritual uplifting." By LOUSE ESTEVEX S'aff nter PATE RSOX The Spanish-speaking community in the metropolitan area soon will grow to two-million persons. And, said Rene Anselmo, executive vice president of Channel 41. WXTV, there are very few broadcasting media responding to its needs. There is no unifying force, as far as a source of news, information, a cultural tie, a language tie, to bring a sense of roots, or a sense of identification here," he said. His is the second Spanish-language television station transmitting in there is room for a third, he said.

"There is a desperate need here for the broadcast medium to occupy a place in the Latin culture that the newspaper occupies in the English, American, and French cultures." you have a multiplicity of (broadcasting) media, but very few of these media attend to the desires or informational needs of the Latin community," he added. Operating since Aug. 4, Channel 41 broadcasts from 6 p.m. until 11:30 p.m. from its studio here at 641 Main almost entirely in Spanish.

There is a five-minute-a-day English broadcast of the news of Paterson and North Jersey. One of the first things the station did when it began transmitting was to send out a camera crew and reporters to interview and film the Latin community leaders. "The other stations aren't doing this," he said. "This is a community which is ignored. Now we can bring information on what is going on in this community." As a matter of fact, Msgr.

Vincent Puma of the Multi-Lingual Center has used the station as a means of reaching the people. FILLING THE VOID Everything's working Lozawo at A-OK at WXTV, channel 41, with Alberto the area's "Problems you have with any normal launching," Anselmo said. "You're training new people. Running a television station is like learning to play the piano. You have to get the coordination.

In the beginning nity's viewers, Anselmo said, they would miss a spot now and then or the program wouldn't come on for a couple of seconds. You get very upset about it, but those are the normal bneaking-in problems of any new venture." The station, which employs about 45 persons, has 4S per cent of the Spanish comma- "We try to give jobs and keep jobs open for what the sociologists call the disadvan JAif Photo by Edwin Convery the helm. The station serves Spanish-speaking population. taged. We take a lot of kids who have had no technical experience and train them," Anselmo said.

He pointed out there were few Spanish speaking cameramen. So in training these young men, he added, the union now has good, well-trained technicians who are bilingual. All members of the staff speak Spanish, Aanselmo said and of course English. In its almost three months operation, the station has received a favorable response from both the public aid advertisers. The station, the 42-year-old Bostonian said, is going to get that a canvas bindery lasts from 30 to 40 years after it is returned to the vault shelves for public use.

Try to think of something else that takes two hoiirs to make and lasts up to 40 years with constant use. Work Continuous With 13,000 volumes to care for, the three men replace binderies on about 809 volumes a year, each of them having been in service from 30 to 40 years. Besides the constant job of repairs and making new covers, they also cut out paper for all county department use. They prepare and bind the yearly minutes for the Board of Freeholders, bind municipality tax maps for all 70 towns, and bind covers for the civil action reports of the District Court. Tucked Behind Vault County Has 3 Men In Eiinn I Factories S3 fcVv-cCiCO aaa iocai-3n.

tease t. -VJ so. va-i 1 sory, ciear saace. fv -J cooC't'C-ed. Ke s.fe a for prev te-rt.

Ekc.s.e RCT--VAi PEiLTY 41 Grand A.e. lAt Rt 45, LO Cpen oa ty K3 Suca.s. CLIFFS 1 0M rw- Amp MC KERNEY-TALJVO. BROES 5-063 FA LAAN'30t so. ft- tras-er bog.

3 drs. R. siOins. For tursner eettiis AP EALTY, Broker FAiRViE iaie or rent, frtodermzetf 1 scace. 4000 so.

ft. a.aL mnes. between AM-1 PVI GARFIELD iJXO so hi cel'o, street level, ma-n read 2 modern cf'ces. 2020 ea. Heat inci d.

Ideal lio-t mfg. Reas rent. Avail Jan 1. 7-8-1123. Aft 4 li-2764.

GLEN ROCK Leas 7 000 so. ft. Light rrto. or warenottse. and 1709 so.

If. office. Call itiuX SOUTH HACKEN5ACK-GOOD FOR VACHIKE SHOPMI 5200 SO. FT. IVVECiATE OCCUPANCY SAM kLCTZ, REALTOR 111 MAIN ST.

HACKENSACK 455-iGoy TETERBORO 9000 so. ft. warehouse scace, ''ea'ed. Call 9-4. weenoars O-ily.

288-1H54. WESTAOOD SALE 10.750". 1 story. 7 yrs. old 5000- leased for $600 per month 5.750- avail, occ.

Feb. 1. 1969 Lot 150x200. Assume 1st 6S mts. ARROW ASSOCIATES REALTY (Broker) Emerson.

N. J. 861-1109 BERGEN CNTY N.E. Sect. 9,300 SO ft.

Nov 1 occ; lOJy) so ft immed occ; 35.000 so ft, Dec 1 occ. aft. 5 BERGEN COUNTY Call SPACE FOR EVERY INDUSTRY C. Schwa'm. Broker Tenaftv Protes'nal I Business Loc.

93 A OAKLAND Corner Rt 202, 208 West Oakland Ave. House suitacie prcfessiona I use, etc. 288-0137. PEARL RIVER N. Y.

Approx 2500 sq. ft. Prime location. Will alter to suit. 201-HU 7-3093-9-5 PM RIDGEWOOD OFFICES ST.

SUITES PROFESSIONAL OR BUS'NESS AVAILABLE IWEDIATEtY We have iust acowed the Ridoe-wood Professional Building and have a number of rooms which we will divide according to vour needs. VANDER STERRE, Realtor 652-200 PROFESSIONAL OFFICE Soace avail Aporox 800 Sq Ft. Will alter to suit. Palisade Park'Leoma area. Wnp Pfy THg Rcrjnrd Otfices For Rent 94 Pnme loc.

djsi-est shopping center in County. 800 sa ft, entire 2nd floor. 4 rms. exc. for professional.

Phone 385-3000 ENGLE W'D on TENAFLY BORDER QUICK OCCUPANCY NEW OFFICE BUILDING CENTRALLY AIR CONDITIONED 2nd floor, 600 sa ft; 1st floor, 2500 sa ft. Will divide to suit. Lease negotiable. Call Jerry Growney 265-0689 ENGLE WOOD 4At Rt. 4).

Prestige building. Immediate possession. Approximately 240 to 1100 sq. ft. Spotless condition.

Heat and air conditioning supplied. Reasonable rent. On site parking. Only a few left! Exclusive Broker, ROTHMAN REALTY 411 Grand (At Rt. 4), Englewood.

LO 9-5300. Open daily and Sundays. ENGLEWOOD 1203-3500 Sq. Ft. Will divide.

On site parking. Near buses. Low rent. Neg- Rt. 4 Rt.

80. LO 8-8500 or LO 8-2543 aft. 5. ENGLEW'D CLIFFS 375 Svlvan Av Rt 9W. Exc.

loc. 1 ml. no. of GW Bridge. Approx, 46 sq.

ft. 3 rms. supply rm, util. incl. air cond.

2 picture windows, drapes, sub-lease approx 3' 2 yrs. (201) contact owner on orern. ENG CLIFFS priv furnished offices, and desk space wteleohone and secretarial services (plush) conf. rm. avail.

569-1105. FAIR LAWN-RT. 4 2nd floor. 1300 or more sq. ft.

AIR CONDI-TIQNED. Parking. Call 652-1286. FORT LEE OFFICE SPACE (2 400 ft. fully oanelled, Air all services furnished, exc.

loc. 300 ft. fully panelled. Ideal for oro- fessional, exc. loc.

944-0075 FORT LEE New bldg, 2700 so ft, On site parkg. Immed occur. Vj mi GW bridge, direct bus service NY. 947-3200. FORT LEE-OFFICE SPACE $3 SQ.

FT. CALL 944-3902 FORT LEE New rngo 25,000 sq ft, st ry bids at 2460 Lemoine Ave. 2.900 still avail, will divide. FT. LEE PALISADE PROFESSN'L CENTER.

2000 sq ft still avail. II divide. 944-7988 FORT LEE Small area office soace avail. Ample park'g. Conv.

loca-tion. Call 944-0128. GLEN sa. ft. office space.

Will to suit, air condi-tioned. 652-1959. HACKENSACK Move right in, excel cond modern 3 rm ofc, approx. 500 sq. ft, wooden paneled, carpeted.

$100 mo. Avail. Nov. 1 Call John Hassmann, 488-8999. HACKENSACK Avail.

2 suites In modern office complex. Approx. 1400 and 1000 sq. ft. Avail Nov.

1. Call 489-1666 on-FrL9-5 HACKENSACK Excel, loc. on main st. Suit, for 1 or 2 separate offices, ample parking. Reas.

HU 9-3453 or evenings. CO 2-4107. HACK New bldg approx 1100 sq. ft. All or part.

Central loc. BOUNDARY REALTY CO. Realtor 487-0800 Eyes and Sun 845-5340 HASBROUCK HGTS Centrally loc. corner bldqs. 350 to 1400 ft.

from $2 per t. 288-01 37. MIDLAND PARK 4 large rooms and bath, ideal for professional use or owner will divide. $250. Martha Peooer, Realtor, 444-1151 or 891-1101 MONTVALE PRESTIGE LOCATION 210 SUMMIT AVENUE 10,000 Sq.Ft.

Available-will divide minimum of 500 Sq.Ft. Occupancy Immediate. All utilities and services. Directly across from Lehn Fink. N.Y.

Buses, 500 Ft. west of Garden Slate Exit No. 172. Brokers Protec- on. A R5.

BRIDEAU 391-2800 MONT VALE center of town, dental office available, 600 so. ft. comprised of waiting rm, office, developing rm, operating rms, recovery rm. Occupied by dentist for 5 yrs. All utils included.

$185. Call 327-3446. PARAMUS-1233 sq. ft. in prestige building, already divided into 5 paneled office suites.

Ideally located on maior Hwy. All utilities incl. A and janitorial service. PARAMUS-2000 sq. ft.

BRAND NEW BLDG. Located lust 2 blks off Garden State Pkwy. All utils. including AC HOHOKUS-2700 Sq. Ft.

on ouiet, 2nd fir. of beautiful, modern bldg. Can be divided into 2 units of 1000 sq. fl. and 1700 sq.

ft. Larger unit has WW carpet, 3 private offices, and efficiency kitchenette. All utils including AC WESTWOOD 8000 sq. already divided into multiple private offices. All utils.

including AC ALL THESE BLDGS. HAVE ADEQUATE OFF ST PARKING, AND ARE AVAILABLE FOR IMMED. IT HIGGINS ASSOC. 200 Summit Ave Montvale 391-3000 RIDGEWOOD AREA 2200 Sq Ft, ample parking, air cond, Immedi- a'e occ. 327-2800.

SADDLE RfVER Modern, air conditioned office with reception area, secretarial services available. In- ouiri es confidentia I. 825-0220. TENAFLY Excel, loc, new mod air cond 420 sq.ft. Reasonable rent 568-925J WESTWOOD-1300 sq.

1st floor office or office and light assembly. Brand new building. Occupancy 11 68265300 BERGEN CO. New prestige bldg, 8000 sq ft. air cond.

$3 per so fL OFFICE SUITES available In Professional Building, Boulevard, Has- Heights. 288-KH9 OFFICES P'LAZA ROAD, FAIR LAWN, OFF STREET PARKING. 796-5070 Offices For Rent 94 Jersey City, N. J. NY 212-RE 2-7185 I i i i Stsrage Sgace far lid S4A Hk-iAitJ FN A.

5av n. e-ca A.e i' Ra.e 4. ce or t-T t-r-F sed Ca-i vr3 Maroj. AR 1-33C ti-Ci si seacc in 4 yr. e'd buiiaina.

A Bf mor-tt- Call MoA. EKDAHL REAL ESTATE fcstrial I Ccaa'ial Land S5 CASt.a"AOi "or sd stes. 4 acres. Or use. L.

RuSSO. Age-cv Bnxer 47-5657 EAST RJTHERFCRO 'l CtC lgnt indtis-ry, RR tc taes. No reouiren. nt Box 27EastRtr'iertord: HACKENSACK Snort or long term lease uo to aoout 4 acres. Bioonv ingca area.

447-18: 1 AC $24 500. er.tr. Rt. 10. 50x100.

dcn, assume 6. mortg. mo. Owner. 342-9153 LITTLE FERRY 10 mins to Bridge or tonnei.

Avail tor Me mcus'. Several tots to suit Nogs of 8000- 5C OuO so tt. $25JOO uo. terrrs. Prin only.

Write to Box 2742R Tha Rernrd PARAA'US '00 100 off Route 17. Sale. 000 or will build to lease. can -oi WALOWICK Industrial Park, approx 2 acres, iceat Plant sre. r'l f-33U ak Mr Hvcr Wanted To Buy Or Lease 9S PALIaADca PAR LfcONiA AREA wan ed to tease approx 1500 sq.

ft. pTfessiortal office space. Re- CP rd 6 0 L96 IND'L PROPERTY wanted to buv. 10 000 so.ft. or eou'v.

older home zoned ligfit mg, hack or So Mac, pref. North American Machinery CorvJtt. RATED COMPANY inrerested in purchasing small office b.og area wih or without tenants. State particulars of premises, present financial infcmafion terms of sale in 1st reply. Box 3376 Record.

WANTED 2-3 ac-es land zoned for inaustrial in Pateson-Passaic-C'-f-ton area. Capital available for immediate transaction. Write Box 23 75 The ec or d. V. ANTED INVESTVENT PROPERTY Aoorox -ma J20.000 oown payment.

Box 2041 The Record. some things work so well that nothing can take their place togetherness A design so efec tive that the challenge to build a better one still defies the skill of inventors. The old fashioned nut and bolt, in combination, still provide the most practical and economical way to hold complex mechanisms together. The combination is one of those inventions which progress can hardly improve. The newspaper Classified Want Ad is another.

Born of public demand in Colonial times, "Want Ads are used by more and more people every year. There is no other economical way to do most of the jobs assigned to Want Ads. High in effectiveness and low in cost, Want Ads are ready to work for you too. THE IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIII1III1II1I it. 7f OX I- Ck Room, A Bind Index binders for deeds reference information arc bound in leather and corduroy.

There are 139 books of 500 pages each containing honorable war discharges of veterans in Bergen County, all of them having been bound by the Neslons and Graef. Charles Nelson learned the business when he started in 1925 working in the Administration building for the late John Myers who had the business. A resident of Washington Township, he was mayor of Woodcliff Lake for three terms from 1946 to 1952. Is he ready for automation in book binding? "No, I think we will continue as we have since this requires exacting work and automation could not turn out a product that would last 40 years," Nelson observes. Bergen County Chamber of Commerce on the bond issue noon Friday at The Chalet, Rochclle Park.

It's In School Poll Bonds-Yes Leader Sees Voters Nodding Yes, Too Anselmo said Msgr. Puma told him there was a $2 million fund for New Jersey residents who had completed high school but didn't have enough money to go to college. "They had this fund to get underprivileged people into schools. Msgr. Puma told me he didn't have any way to reach possible applicants.

We put on a minute spot. In a couple of days, Msgr. Puma called and said. 'Stop. I have too many Channel 41 is part of a coast-to-coast chain operated by Spanish International Network.

And, in its first weeks, there were some problems. Staff Photo by Edward Hill them from New Brunswick to Paterson each day for the trial. The case is expected to last through the Christmas holidays. The jury was completed in New Brunswick Friday afternoon. Superior Court Judge Gordon H.

Brown and attor-nrs in the case will meet for legal discussions in Paterson Monday. Tuesday the jurors will be sworn and receive special instructions from the judge. Attorneys opening remarks to the jury will be Wednesday. Victim of the Oct. 6, 1966, slaying in Paterson was gambler Gabriel De Franco, 46.

Defendants are Clifton Detective John DcGroot, 43; Harold Matzner, 31, of Den-villc; and Vincent Kearney 27, of Paterson. Nun To Speak CLIFTON "Feminity In Today's Church" will be the topic of a talk to be made py Sister Barbara Conroy at Monday night's meeting of St. Paul's Christian s' Auxiliary at 8:30 in the church hall. Sister Barbara is from St. Joseph' Convent, Paterson.

"Vminrni-V 1 Toms River, New Jersey Seles agent on premises 7 davs a week Model Phone: 349-5784 DIRECTIONS: G.S. Parkway south to Exit 82; bear right (toward Seaside) to 1st light (Rt. 166); turn left V'7 miles to Rivercrest Manor on the right. More Shore, Lake For Sale In New York State On Page 18- Wanted To Buy 83 OUR OFFICE HAS A client inter-ested in purchasing a 4 or 5 bedroom ranch or split level, in En-glewood Cliffs or Tenafly. 525.000 cash available.

GEO. BROOKS REALTY, 212-AU 6-1111 1 BR Brick, AC. Tenafly, Leonta, Englwd. Cliffs-East Hill. Princ.

only. 567-8H2. INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE Brokers, Industr'l-Commerc'l 9D COMMERCIAL PROPERTY ROCKAWAY Excellent Rt. 46 location. Corner lot 100 138.

Finest business section. Existing house in top condition. Priced far below current value. GAGE 8, LA ROY BPQKER 335-1200 Investment Property 91 TtANECK S29.S00 Reasonable offers will be accepted on this investment property, consisting of: a Pizza Parlor, which rents for S150.0O a month and 4-room apartment, renting for $110.00 a month. Gross income of over $3,000.00 per year.

Alexander Summer Co. Teaneck, N.J. REALTORS TE 4-4500 Queen Anne corner Cedar Lane BERGEN COUNTY MR. SMALL INVESTOR 6 unit apt. consisting one four room, four 5 room, one 6 room.

Oil heat, in excellent condition and location. 1 block to all shopping and transportation. PRICE $58,000 CASH $12,000 Net 10 return on your cash Investment after all expenses including interest, and expense. TIDEWATER REAL ESTATE 1375 RIVER RD. EDGEWATER 224-8450 RbALTORS $3,000,000 AVAILABLE FOR INCOME PROPERTIES Shopping Centers, Commercial Properties, Net Leases to AAA tenants, Sale-Leasebacks, Apt Buildings.

All cash or terms deals Call or write WALTER GREEN 44 Briarcliff Drive, Monsev, NY 9'4 EL 2-3435 or 212 S94-65QQ Stores For Sale or Rent 92 BERGENFIELD Prime loc. in busi-est shopping center in county. 800 so. ft. Full bsmt can add 1800 ft.

Air cond. Exc. parking for drug store, ladies' wear, etc. Phone 385-3000. HASBROUCK HGTS Store-warehouse.

4500 ft wlrg parking lot. for retail or service business cor-ner BlvdWa Iter. 288-0137. NEW MILFORD For lease, store 12x60, off st parking, excell. loc.

for shoe, dress, barber. TV, drv-cleaning, etc. Call 262-0590. CRADEU--AIR COND'D, PARKING, CARPETED, BEST LOCA-TION. 265-0696, 262-1051 PALISADES PK excellent location in heart of town.

Approx 475 sq. ft. $200. per mo. Lease.

Avail Nov 1. Call 943-5166. PARAMUS Shopping Center across Lord Taylcr. Highland and E. Ridgewood.

J7x810wner 568-4044. RIDGEFIELD PK-MeinSt. stores appr. 14x60 ea. singleioined HHW.

Broker inv. (212) EN 9-0078. RIVER VALE-NOW RENTING. STORES AND OFFICES. 9000 SQ.

FT. ALL OR PART. WILL DIV-IDE TO SU 1X864-1027, WEST ENGLE WOOD Large Store for rent, business section. Ample parking. After 5 PM, 833-2)82 BERGEN COUNT Y-ORADELL-100-i location for rent, 1200 sq.

suitable for gift shoo, ieweler, ladies' wear or other high class shop. Call Owner 391-6466. Buildings factories 93 CLIFION 10,000 so. tt. Lt.

Ind. Sorinklered, Hy Elec. Lease $1.25 so. fl. Option to buy 593,500.

Exclusive Executive Realty Broker 567. 9242 EMERSON Wth 1,750" AC offices. Sorlnklered. 12' ceil, heavy power, ample parking. ARROW ASSOCIATES REALTY (Brrker) Emergen, N.

J. 261-1W) Offices For Rent 94 NEW JERSEY BINDING PROBLEM Take canvas, aluminum, add glue, and sprinkle some paper board what do you have? The materiel for binding the county's books and documents. Charles and Richard Nelson perform the vital chore. By WILLIAM WALSH Staff Writer Tucked away on the second floor of the Administration Building in behind the Deed and Mortgagae Vault Room, is a little known department that cover the length of ten foot cover the length of ten football fields and 100 pounds of aluminum. What do they do, build sailboats? If you add the 100 pounds of glue and 1,000 pounds of heavy paper board they also use annually, you might come to this conclusion.

Actually, the three-man shop is performing a vital service for county departments binding books and repairing thousands of other county bound documents used daily by lawyers, title searchers, veterans, and taxpayers. In what amounts to a lost art today, Charles Nelson and his son, Richard, along with Fred Graef, are responsible for the upkeep of 13,000 volumes. Until two years ago, Nelson and his son operated the bindery on a contractual basis with the county as a private business. In 1966, they and Graef became employes of the county, with the bindery under the direction of Alexander Allan, county clerk. "When I took the Civil Service examination," says Richard Nelson, "I was one of two who applied and the other fellow didn't know what it was all about." Hand Crafted The elder Nelson has been in the business for 40 years and his son for 14 years.

Graef has been with them for 16 years. In this day of modern technology and automation, a visitor to their shop is amazed to find that their principal tools of the trade are handmade machines they have created from scratch to do the job they need. Take for example the following: a forming tool to bend aluminum for the backing on a binder; a hand press to press bindery boards after gluing, and a letter press to imprint words and numbers on canvas bound binders. There are no existing machines made to do these operations, hence they built them. How are mortgages, deeds, veterans' discharges, and other documents bound? First, the canvas is cut to size from a large roll containing 100 yards.

Aluminum to form the backing is cut and formed to shape on the handmade machine. Next, two binding boards are cut to size, glued together, and put under the press to dry. They are then covered with the canvas and punched with three holes into which are inserted three aluminum rods with the documents. The cover is then lettered and numbered on the letter press. A cornering machine has been previously used to round the corners for longer wear.

How long docs it take to make one complete bound cover? "We can turn out a complete bindery in about two hours," the elder Nelson said. The craftsmanship of their work is reflected in the fact De Franco Jurors To Ride Special Bus To Paterson A top official of the state committee backing the $990-million bond rc.ercnuum predicts it will win voter approval this tail. John T. Connor, cochairman of the New Jersey Bonds-es Committee, says a growing number of New Jersey residents are willing to put themselves and their reputations on the line to work for passage of the bond issue. But Connor, a former U.

S. Secretary of Commerce, warned that backers of the bond proposal must work to overcome what he called the negative attitude prevalent today to guarantee approval of the bond proposal. Connor, a Democrat, said his committee has raised more than $300,000 of a projected to push the bond proposal which has bipartisan support. And with the competition for political donations, he said the fact that $300,000 has been collected so far is a good sign. Connor, who was interviewed on the Channel 9 television program "New Jersey Report" scheduled for showing at 9:30 this morning, said defeat of the bond proposal would mean the Legislature would probably have to consider a state income tax in the near future.

And even if the referendum is passed, said Connor, the state may need another bond issue in four or five years. The current proposal calls for $C40-miIlion for highways and mass transportation; $337.5 million for higher education, prisons, state hospi-tals, and other state institutions; and to spur private investment for low cost housing in the cities. Connor also denied intercut in running for governor in 1969 and said he was supporting former Gov. Robert B. Mcyner for the Democratic nomination.

Plans Bergen Speech Connor will speak to the Humphrey's the One or so a majority of girls at Para-mus Catholic High School think. The vice-president polled 307 of 570 votes cast there in a mock election Friday. Richard Nixon managed to tally only 249 votes and George Wallace came in a distant third with 21 votes. The balloting was the climax of a week of political activity at the school. In a seeming reverse of early American history, the boys at the school were disfranchised because of problems co-ordinating the balloting.

All week long the young coeds campaigned like 1968 suffragettes. Pre-election registration drew 95 per cent of the eligible voters and candidates' sessions (with stand-ins) were heavily attended. The man who ran the election, history chairman Frank Nugent, says that the contest seemed to be decided after David Schaffer, Rep. Henry Hclstoski's campaign manager, spoke on Humphrey's behalf. He carried the day for the Democrats, according to Nugent.

Nixon was represented by Bergen County Sheriff Joe Job and Wallace's fortunes were carried on the shoulders of Hannibal Candary. In addition to deciding the election on the basis of popular votes a system of electors was also used with each homeroom carrying 10 electoral votes and the faculty representing another 10 votes. The tally there was Humphrey 130, Nixon 60 and Wallace, 0. By ELIZABETH A.MING Staff Writer An experiment in trial procedure will be started Tuesday when the De Franco jury bus pulls into Paterson. The 16 jurors, selected from Middlesex County in closed session, will not be sequestered for the murder trial in the Passaic County Courthouse.

The novel plan is to keep their names secret and bus Divers Club Elects Officers PASSAIC Geoffrey Bar-clay of Fair Law has been elected president of the SCUBA Diver Club at Passaic Clifton YMCA, River Drive, Passaic. Betty Alesso of Saddle Brook was elected secretary-treasurer, and Jack Geary of Fair Lawn, program chairman. James Gcnack of New Milford, Lee Wittman, Rutherford; Peter Kellchcr, Dumont, and Gary Lausch, Fair Lawn, were named as instructors. The club, which meets every Thursday at the is planning dives to several wrecks off the New Jersey coast, Vf. MM 'i OFFICE BUILDING-1 0,000 SQ.FT.

JOURNAL SQ. AREA BUY OR LEASE PARK 37 CARS ON SITE Jene Cltr Nearlr new utorr centrally Ir-conflillnned hullitini with hfmililullv paneled executive Ideal Inturanre Company, rompulrr or hutineni trhool, retail or office furniture howroom. ol(ic building, institutional build-log, restaurant and caterer. GEO. SACKS, INC.

95 West Side Ave. NJ-20 1-432-2700 Ut-svLl ltif.iAAliiit a. a. A. m.

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Years Available:
1898-2024