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The Herald-News from Passaic, New Jersey • 38

Publication:
The Herald-Newsi
Location:
Passaic, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
38
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i JW 'f 1 vg3" vs r-s 12 THE HERALD-NEWS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1953 Pemic-Clifton. N. J. vj -T CARMICHAEL iTfc Area Jobs Down IMV TVter For Period SuesDriyer Trenton Bureau Steady Spending Keeps U. S.

Economy Humming i lli I Hal Boyle's Mailbag Study Shows an Apple a Day Helps Keep The Dentist as Well as Doctor Away By Hal Bofle I Heavyweight actor Walter Sle- NEW YORK (JP) Things a Irak, whose life is one long strug-eolumnist might never know ifjglewith fat, says he had a beau- VHeN i realize IM Mf sole MEa OF WORf TRENTON Employment in the Paterson labor market fell off 10,500 in December and January, the State Division of Employment Security reported today. Large scale curtailments in the construction and transportation equipment industries were blamed. Total unemployment of 36,500 at the end of the two-month period was 9,400 below that for the PATERSON A jtate motor vehicle inspector, Leno Cirinelli, 290 20th Avenue, Paterson, has filed a $20,000 suit against a motorist whose hit one he was testing in the old Paterson inspection station on May 9, 1958. Cirinelli is suing J. F.

Feese, alleging the car hit by tiful dream the other night he dreamed he was cast away on a -dessert island! Second worst pun-of-the-week: Singer Jean Martin asks if youve heard of the hobo who robbed a perfume factory and was arrested for fragrancy. Odd Marital Custom Cajuns in the bayou country Super Market 444 MARKET SADDLE BROOK ri -3 4622 DI. 3-4623 STORE HOURS MON. thru Thurs. 8 A.M.-9 P.Mi same period last year, the di.1 car, in turn, hit him.

vision added. i Robert C. Ferrar, of High- The Paterson labor market jJecL a 125,000 suit area includes all of Passaic Coun- of Louisiana have an odd marital ,7. mos Bergen County and custom the broomstick wed-'Parts of Northern Hudson and i kauri a Ifneeia Pm intiAe ding Two people grasp oo- Northeastern Morris Counties. in Superior Court against Jessie Jenkins over a crash on June 4, 1959, on the Garden State Parkway he didnt open his mail: An apple a day helps keep the dentist as Well as the doctor away a two-year study of children' who ate apples daily showed they had only half the tooth decay and a third as many gum disorders as nonapple eaters.

Boyle note: Slaves working on the ancient Egyptian pyramids were fed garlic in the belief it would make them stronger if not breathless. Americans spend half a billion dollars a year on dogs did you know they now make lounging robes for Rover also velvet opera cloaks studded with rhinestones? (The last pup we Bt Sam Dawson iP RalnrM Analyst NEW YORK American families are spending whatever additional money they may come by today. The rate of their savings is changing little. And it is this buy-and-buy attitude without either a rush to unusual spending as in some previous years or a tendency to hoard as in others that makes anme economists confident that the qualms of a month ago were overdone. These qualms were bom of the break "In stock prices and the ngns that the big boom that some had looked for was unlikely to get going.

Instead, the belief is growing that a calmer but steady advance in business activity will last for some time that the shakeout in the stork market has made it a more realistic affair. 7 Per Cent for Savings The extra income that many Rut it at CELLEVUE posite ends of a broom and hold it a few inches from the floor the bride and bridegroom i Ronald Sierens, seek leap over it and are then man Window Display Contestl000 in a Superior Court suit Holy Rosary Cub Pack 8, of against John Dorst, whose car Passaic, was adjudged a recent in Clifton. Five-year-old Ronald J. Sierens, 31 Bogue Drive, Blooming-dale, and his parents, Mr. and and wife This is called sau-ter le balai or jump the broom.

hit the boy on his bicycle near FRI. and SAT. 8 A.M.-10 P.M. SUN. 8 A.M.-7 P.M.

Time marches on: Forty years" ago it took only 100 horsepower to keep a combat airplane aloft saic Junlor Chamber of Com But today it takes 250 horsepower to carry a 120-pound housewife to the corner grocery. Our youth: If you had hated Wagne 1 medtar- lesaue and kept a picture of pampered lesque and kept a picture families are getting may come from a rise in wage scales or from longer work weeks. It may come from higher dividend or interest payments. It may come from higher fees received by those in the service trades and professions. Or it may come rom increased benefit payments either from the government or Isuch private institutions as insurance companies, But the families are putting 1 away in savings about 7 per cent of their incomes, just as they have been for some time.

Most of the new money after taxes slips right through theft fingers. It goes for highenpriced goods and services, for increased recreation, for longer vacation trips, for expensive hobbies. This steady spending is keeping most of the American economy humming. It offsets, such bobbles as occasional layoffs where earlier sales predictions proved over-optimistic and led to production beyond demand that djdnt soar as expected. The calmer pace may stretch the good times through the entire year, with only the normal summer letdown.

But the consumers are selective in their buying. They arent buying anything and everything as they tended to do in 1955, encouraged by unusually easy instalment payment terms then. More Goes for Service They are watching prices closely. And they are more quality conscious. Salesmen have to work harder to get their share of the consumer dollar.

Services are getting a larger percentage of individual incomes these days and manufactured goods less. And last year's status symbol may be this years old hat item. American manufacturers also are beset by increased consumer buying of foreign goods. Some of this may be because prices are lower. But some of it is due to a belief that quality is better or the item unique.

Along with the cash that is slipping through the American his home last July 11. A crash in Route 17, Hasbrouck Heights, last June 18, is the basis of a $22,000 suit filed by Herman J. Rapone, 277 Mill Street, Paterson, against Howard Schiff, trading as Howard Used Truck Sales, and Alexander H. Johnson. Fred Hand, 15 Northwestern Avenue, Butler, has filed a suit in Superior Court against Patricia A.

OMalley over a traffic accident December 20 at Hamburg Turnpike and Black Oak Ridge Road, Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Pellosie, 133 Union Avenue, Paterson, have filed a $55,000 suit, in Superior Court against Mr.

and Mrs. John Newberry over a traffic accident in Route 17, Pa-ramus, last October 23. Seven-vear-old Donna Polom-bo, 69 Watchung Drive, Hawthorne, and her father, Nicholas Polombo, seek damages totaling $120,000 in a Superior Court suit against Michael Kauker, whose car hit the child in Pasadena Place, Hawthorne, last October i '5. CLIFTON More than 1,500, -new exit and entrance ramps ini Alexander Picone, of Brook- the first year since their open- Vn, has filed a $37,500 suit in ing December 30, 1958. And toll Superior Court against Floyd traffic on the two ramps hasjHamill, 25 Lockwood Avenue, increased more than 50 per Plains, over a traffic cars used the Garden State 'Parkways new links with Route in the first year of service, New Jersey Highway RUPTURE-EASER MiCi IU- Oft A PINT Trots) EARLY WEEK SPECIAL MON, TUES.

only TROPICANA Orange Juice o)e qt. DOMINO SUGAR 5 lb. bag A ft rnnm form-ffUin tup 'port Back lacing adiustahle Snaps up in front Admstabla leg trap Soft flat iroin pad No steel or leather bands For men. women children Mail orders give measure around lowest part of abdomen tale rlcNI left side double consumers fingers so easily these days is a steady growth of consumer debt. This accounts as much, perhaps, as increased personal incomes for Jhe rise in retail sales.

But the debt growth is born as much of confidence as of necessity. Consumers apparently don't see any convincing signs that good times will get shaky soon. They expect to be able to meet the payments on schedule. So after a few weeks of worry and increased caution, industry seems to be returning to confidence again. It's in a lower key than were some of the predictions of boom last December.

But its not on a quavering note as a few weeks back. Gypsy Rose Lee pinned up in his doghouse.) Does Now In Fashion Incidentally, the most fashionable dogs today are (1) the poodle, (2) the chihuahua, (3) the beagle and (4) the dachshund. The Bourbon Institute claims George Washington was one of the founding fathers of the U. S. distilling industry it says he made a profit of 83 pounds in 1789 (about $2,000 in todays cur renev) from the sale of rve whisky and still retained 155 gallons in storage.

Roof thatching is still practiced by some 750 craftsmen in merrie England a roof thatched with wheat straw' may last for 60 years, one thatched with heather mav endure a century without being repaired. Were a young nation growingOOO older out of a population of nearly 180.000,000. we have6 16,000.000 over 65 and Au-over 45. (Almost 60 per cent of thority reported today, our senior citizens have an an- Authority Treasurer Sylvester nual income of less than $1,000.) C. Smith, said approximate-' M.

which are part of parkway Worst n-of-t e-w 1,500,000 cars drove over the interchanges 154 in Clifton, serve traffic going to or coming from the west of Route 46. The S. highway crosses the width of New Jersey between the Hudson and Delaware Rivers. Since the start of the current year, an estimated 260,000 vehicles have used the two ramps as compared to some 163,000 in the comparable tw'o-month period last year. The extra ramps at the Route 46 interchange, one affording a northbound entrance and the other a southbound exit, were built in 1958 following an en- BELLEVUE Surgical Supply Co.

52-54 Garden Passaic GRegory 3-16101611 accident last July 18 in Route 23, Wayne. A $350,000 suit against the Board of Freeholders and Clarence Rienstra, county road department truck driver, has been filed in Superior Court for a Paterson girls injury in a traffic accident last June 8. Diana Conklin, 273 Marshall Street, Paterson, was hit by a county truck at Main and Weiss Streets, Paterson. Suifwas filed on her behalf by her mother, Mrs. Mae Conklin.

A Hawthorne boy, hit by a car last September 18, and his mother seek $150,000 in a Superior Court suit against a motorist. Mrs. Angela Di Donna, 31 gineering survey of traffic needs i Minerva Avenue, and her son, in the parkways metropolitan Frank, are suing Robert E. Bur- Cut Rite WAX PAPER 125 Ft. roll area.

A 10 cent toll rate was set for the use of each ramp to cover ger. The boy was hit at Lafayette Avenue and Legion Place, Haw- Pride-of-the-Farm CATSUP 14 oz. bottle the cost of maintenance. The added facilities offer Route 46 motorists a directWoman 5U6S Hotel means of traveling to or from such northern sectors as JBerge? For Fall at Shore Come see the 1960 Ford Economy Twins! PATERSON Mr. and Mrs.

Stanley Golminiak, 67 Koster Street, Wallington, have filed a $35,000 suit in Superior Court against John McGettigan, who operates a hotel at 137 South Arkansas Avenue, Atlantic City. Mrs. Golminiak claims she was hurt last July 24 when she tripped over a protruding metal door saddle. County and its big shopping centers at Paramus, and via the parkways link with the N. Y.

Thruway Westchester County (N.Y.), New England or upper New York State. Didn't Request $750 Fee, Schector Says PATERSON Irwin B. Shec- Kellogg's Rice Krispies 5 Vi ox. box i Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Medici, tor, Paterson lawyer, said todsy i aha Primnn4 a that ho Hi nnt irom.OQf a 7Sfl 2', AVtTUe- Person, seek $65,000 in a Superior Court suit against 220 Van Houten that he did not request a $750 fee for investigatory services Corporation. Mrs. Medici claims she was hurt in a fall on a parking lot at 194-200 Straight Street, Paterson, on February 10. 1959. Grade A Chicken Legs a murder case.

Schector said the request was made by Charles Gorgas and Louis WasserStrum, court-appointed lawyers in the case. The request was denied by County Judge Stanley J. Polack, who awarded $2,000 fees each to Gorgas and Wasserstrum for defending T. J. Wilson, Paterson bartender, who was sent to prison for five to seven years tor manslaughter.

Schector said he did not know the request was to be made. When he found out, he said, he Lawbreakers Sans Bells SYRACUSE, N. Y. ITD Police report that most of the citys children become lawbreakers every day it snows. A city ordinance says No sleighs of any kind without bells attached thereto shall be used or drawn in or through the streets of the city." The law is generally notified the other lawyers he did ignored by sledders and police not want it.

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Pages Available:
1,793,501
Years Available:
1932-2024