Word: newarks
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...Reducing pills sold without prescription are not only useless and possibly dangerous but exorbitantly priced," Nutritionist S. William Kalb of Newark told a congressional committee investigating advertising for "dietless" reducing treatments. Dr. Kalb passed out samples of a brand made of skim milk and lemon juice, estimated that the manufacturers made "about a 400,000% profit" on the pills. Added Dr. Kalb relentlessly: Diet is the only way to reduce...
August vespers will start on the 4 with The Reverend Edgar C. Reckard, Chaplain at Brown University; and will be continued by The Reverend Chalmers Coe, Hartford Seminary Foundation Hartford, Connecticut, on August 11. The Right Reverend Theodore Ludlow, retired Suffragen Bishop of Newark, New Jersey, will end the season on August...
...keeping advertisers in their place between such long stretches of lush instrumentals, WPAT's President Dickens J. Wright, 44, has wooed so many listeners that he has drawn both advertisers and imitators. Newark's WAAT will start similar programming this week; New York's WOR shows the influence in a daily show, and last week Wright considered suing a California station for taking over WPAT's evening program title, Gaslight Revue, without permission. But he also encourages imitation. Says Wright: "We are in contact with 30 stations in the U.S. and Canada who are interested...
...garden of roses embraces a 2,300-acre home-base nursery at Newark. N.Y., 1,000-acre and 1, 900-acre rose fields in California and Arizona, plus smaller nurseries in New Jersey and Indiana. Sales this year are headed toward $9,700,000. mostly of roses (by far the most popular U.S. flower) but also including such other J. & P. specialties as delphiniums and mums. In the rose business, in which it annually grosses three times the combined sales of its three nearest rivals, J. & P. also leads its field in adapting to changing times. In 1940 it promoted...
...Hines never minded the charges that began to cascade upon his empire, mostly because nobody could prove them. He cautiously avoided bank accounts and investments, was always careful not to record such income as the $200,000 or so received from Schultz. Even when Dutch was bumped off in Newark by a rival mob, Jimmy's power was such that he continued to operate his special political services for Schultz's successors. Then, in 1937, a prosecutor named Thomas E. Dewey rounded up three talkative Schultz mobsters. With their testimony, Tom Dewey nailed Hines on 13 counts involving...