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The Herald-News from Passaic, New Jersey • 20

Publication:
The Herald-Newsi
Location:
Passaic, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Fassalc-Cliftou, N. 3. CO THE HEB ALD-NETY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1951 now are housing cattle. Implements, grain and forage separate- ly The unita are easily accessible to each other and plenty of room ia provided for labor-saving machinery, Raynor aaid. It be June to you he but what someone else wants I Profit mutually through a Mrchndi lor Sal la Th Ad pifri.

Barn Losing Place On American Farms CHICAGO, BL (UP) The bam, monument to the is losing its place on American farms, according to a report to the American Society of Agricultural Engineer. A. L- Raynor told the organizations winter meeting that fanners 1 1 i i ridge and hills in central New Jersey, but it included also a considerable tonnage of limestone and granite-gneiss. Sand and gravel operators were also busy, but the 5,551,121 tons, worth $6,981,862, which were produced, were respectively 12 per cent and 7 per cent less than the comparable tigures for 1948. Fourth In value of the atatea mineral raw materials ia tha iron or produced by three operating mines in the Dover diatrict, and a fourth at Oxford, Warren County.

In 1949 these mine shipped 448,489 gross ton of iron ore containing about 62 per cent iron, a compared with 436,372 gross tona in 1948 Value of the production increased 19 per cent to $4,468,575. In general, changes In the production of greensand marl, peat lime and other mineral products were small, although the output of manganiferous residuum, a byproduct from the amelUng of New Jerseys zinc ores, was adversely affected by the strike of smelter employes. jF SAVE YCJP.SIIH SfiVI HC33S1 vrn Jr -If It i Jersey Yields More Iron Ore And Trap Rock 1950 Production Up-Less Zinc, Due To Shutdown at Mines TRENTON New Jerseys production of iron ore increased approximately 23 per cent In 1950, as compared with 1949, according to Meredith X. Johnson, state geologist But if the pattern of mineral production followed that of the rest of the country, the value of 11 New Jersey's mineral product was not more than 11 per cent greater than the $38,584,000 achieved in 1949. Complete figures for 1949 show a decline of 13 per cent, accounted for by a decline in tha production of tha two large sine mine In Sussex County, which were forced to close and remain idle for several months by a prolonged atrike at the operating companys smelter in nearby Pennsylvania.

Crushed stone operators were very busy in 1949 and produced more rock than ever before ton for use primarily In roads and construction. Most of this was trap rock, the hard, tough atone that forma most of the higher thru 29 damp mopping! I UP TO 5 FULL ttTIXS I Personal ragedy Swallowed General Horrors of War "Never Had It So Well" Doesn't Apply To Servant Who Lost Family and Fortune By William C. Barnard IN KOREA (AP) The face of Lee In Dok will haunt Americans who have known him for years after this war is done. a sleeping bag and he ia asleep A Usual Face now. His clothing hangs carefully There Is nothing unusual about from nails he drove tn the wall.

Lee In Dok's face. It is broad end His few personal effects are stored Oriental, with high cheek bones, neatly under the cot. Outside, and dark slanting eyes. It i- Just, sentries -with rifles are in cold that his face sometimes refleets1 foxholes, guarding his sleep, the great personal tragedy that A casual visitor might walk in war has brought to Lee In Dok. land say: Til bet that guy never A short, husky South Korean of, had it so good." 2S, he is the houseboy of three! Be Uad It Better soldiers who treat him well.

He is I Lee In Dok -had it better than very iucky indeed to be in a room A well educated and intelli-Of this old schoolhouse which the genj man before the Communist army has taken over. I crossed the 38th Parallel last June, Lea In Dok ven Ja? ct he was a prosperous sugar broker in Taejon. Ha lived in a big house, a fine house by Korean standards. With him lived his wife and two little children, hi father and mother. How, in the push end confusion of war, Lee In Dok became separated from hi family is not known to him or even by the three soldiers he serve so faithfully.

Capt. Bernard Bailey of Waterloo, Lt. Perry Davis of Salt Lake City, and Master Sgt Crawford G. Coyner of Parkland, refrain from bringing up the subject. Found In Poverty In August, Bailey and Coyner found Lee In Dok working as a common laborer inside the Allied Pusan -Taegu perimeter.

He was reduced to canvas shoes, worn cotton pants and shirt and a rice straw hat Ha looked Uka a peasant They lured him and soon found he was not a peasant at all but a man of education and rara intelligence greatly stricken by the loss of his family. Lee In Dok was frantically eager when the Allies broke out of their A 1 i Save yourself from needles world Enjoy lovelier floors! Naw Self-Polishing Simonia require no rubbing needs no rewaxing for up to 5 weeks. In laboratory panel tests for water-resistance, Simonia gleamed beautifully thru 29 damp The water-repellent shine savee your floors. Get new Simonia Floor Wax today. IrnMIMbf.

V.l. IM.OC. StraMZB EASIEST! simnztsEESr! St fAeetee i STEEL TO REINFORCE TURNPIKE PIERS With the main structures of the New Jersey Turnpike taking shape, these workmen are putting into place reinforcing steel for concrete pier to support the bridge which will carry the Swedesboro Mullica Hill Road over the turnpike near the Swedesboro-Chestef interchange in Gloucester County. BUYING A HOME? perimeter in September and headed northward. Ha trembled with expectation.

Bailey and Coyner drove him into Taejon and to the site of bis former home. Geta Whispered News The home was wrecked. A neighbor came up and whispered a few words to the horrified Lee In Dok. His face tight with gloom, Lee In Dok walked into the ashes of the house and stood a silent moment Then," Coyner aaya, he came back to our jeep and laid just two words, go," War is auch a big aized tragedy that it dwarfs the personal tragedies, the tern of thousands of personal tragedies. But sometimes personal tragedies are the hardest to forget.

And the sudden pitiful misery in the face of Lee In Dok ai ha crawled into hit sleeping bag an hour ago was a haunting thing, to ba Ex-Sergeant Judge Orders Vet a Break CHICAGO (UP) The man appearing before Police Judge Matthew Hartigan on a minor charge said his name was Gerald Gamty and that ha was due at a hospital to have shrapnel removed from hi face. You served In which Hartigan asked, Gamty said a private In World War II. A-ten-hut!" barked the judge. Canity snapped to attention. About face!" the judge commanded.

Garrity spun around. For-r-r-ward, mar-r-rch," said the judge. Ganity started walking forward. He reached the door to the court room and a bailiff swung it open. Ganity kept walking, Next case," said ex-First Sgt.

Hartigan. Save Time Labor Money Complete Assembled FRONT END. UNITS For all cart from 1936 to 1949 1 -t i Following Farts Ready To Be Installed SLewer Centre! Ana Serial lull Sferfc beorbfTi StitrlRf JLeucklee Cnlrel FIm A Bushing Lenref Centre! Inner ihefU Steering Anuchin snpgerii King rinr Bushian Stabiliser Link OrSR DAILY TIL SATURDAY TIL A a public service, North Jersey Savings Loan publishes herewith the latest Federal Government loan information for those who plan to buy or build now or in the immediate future, "We cordially jnvite you to visit us. One of our officers will be happy to furnish you with any further information yon desire. AMPLI PA1KINO PBmmM f-KN GENERATOR CO, rsssAic, n.

j. CBNTSAI ITS. suim Ft tn Jt REGULAT EFFECTIVE OCT. 12, 1950 i The following is a schedule of minimum down payments required under governmental housing credit regulations which apply to homes, construction of which was started on or after August 3, 1930. (V.A.

and F.II.A. controls apply to existing as well as new homes and major alterations and improvements.) i 1 4 A 4 -km. i. i FACE to face with this 1951 headliner you know that it has fresh and sparkling beauty such as you've never seen before. There, sure enough, is a bumper massive, strong.

There are 25 sturdy, stamped-steel grille bars mounted to give and come back unharmed. There, boldly standing guard, are two stout and stunning bumper bombs and for good measure, two more husky uprights flank the license plate. There, in shortris beauty with a to give the finest front-end protection yet devised. But that, friends, is only the beginning. Proudly wearing this push-bar forefront, you find a stellar line-up of Specials, Supers and Roadmasters which set new standards of all-rouhd satisfaction.

New white-glow" instrument markings give greater clarity at night New glare-and-heat-reduc-ing glasst tames the sunbeams in daytime driving. New power gives the Special record thrift and performance. New double-depth Foamtex cushions give the Roadmaster restful new luxury. New fabrics smarten ell interiors and new ports embellish the fenders of all Series. Yes, theres plenty new to thrill you in these spanking new Buicks but dont overlook the tried-and-true thrill of Fireball power and Dynaflow Drive and the unsurpassed smoothness of riding on coil springs on every wheel.

There is still no other car in tfle world with these standout features. Any way you size it up, the smart buy for 51 is Buick, Go see your Buick dealer now, and find out what gospel truth that is. i per mim CURRENT RATE OF EARNINGS i 1 I i 4 tto eof tsrsss- by fISHE 0Stmm4ar4 ROA DMkSTfM, tpfwui mini mm Strut, OrtUmtl mi mmtrm mmmt-tmMlm mm mmtmtm. I tl wlatl, CWVbnMxer Uammackumtu) PP 4 4 bA 3 tout nr ro QKATtt mue Bmmitri rnmipmumt, tmmmmrimmtmi trim Clmfrafi trm mutjmrl Im tlumtm uukmut mmOern. 3 WHIN SITU AUtOMQIIlfS AH IUIIT IUICK Will BUIIO THIM BERGEN AUTO COMPANY i AND LOAN 625 MAIN AVENUE OPEN EVERY FRIDAY EVENING, 6 p.m.

to 0 p.m. PASSAIC, NEW JERSEY 728 MAIN STREET HACKENSACK HUbbord 7-6100 19 FRANKLIN PLACE RUTHERFORD RUtherford 2-6800 33-23 HOOVER PASSA13 GRegory 3-4900 Opes Monday, Wednesday and Friday Eventnfs Until P.M. Saturday Until 1 i.

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About The Herald-News Archive

Pages Available:
1,793,310
Years Available:
1932-2024