PATRONIZE NEW ARK MERCHANTS THENE KPOST FIRST

Invited Guest "DRYS NOT MJTCHELLS' One-Day Session Of General ASSEMBLY Assembly Marked By Recesses DEAD," SAYS JERSEYS ------® ----- TO GATI-IER REV. WILLIS TOP HERDS Flower SholV Clwirllwn. Speaker "Heckled" AGAIN ON By DeIllOcrat ~ t AUGUST 24 Temperance Is Cleaver's Cows luforl1lal "Party" Topic At 54th Second On List The one-day session of the Gen­ Road M eaS1U'e "Harvest Honle" For County Test eral Assembly Monday that record­ ed the passage of another version Introduced In Temperance and the "Beer Barrel The pure bred Jersey herd of ~ig~~aym~~l~-~:!e'!;;:.~~~-d~~e~~~ Surprise 1\'1ove; ~~k~~t;ie~mf~~~ ~~~;~ ~s/a~;m:'~ MItchell Bros., Hockessin, again lengthy recesses. celebration staged last Thursday at gllin?d ~he lead in butter fat pro- While the Senate held an ex- Memhers Clash Little's Grove by the Ebenezer M. duct;on or herds on test in the New ecutive session to deal with Gov- E. Church. Nearly 1,500 persons, Cas\eA C o u~ty . Dairy Herd Improve- ernor McMullen's appointments, ~~:r~f at~:n~;~e:~ecr~e~e~r~;~o~cent ~Vee~ageS~t;~~~np~~n:a~~n~a:. h;~~ ~~~~iC~O~IOc\:~~u;v~~era t~~'~~:h \~:; ar:i~h ~~~~l~I~~nOfta~~~e~~~r g~!~,~~ the Hardly had the Rev. Ivanhoe Wil- Mitchell herd was also second in measure, the House was recessed ed. following the pas.age of anothel' lis, superintendent of the Anti- milk production with 771 pounds "until the call of the Chair" for a bill to reorganize the State High- Sen. John G. Townsend, Jr. Saloon League of Delaware, ceased per cow. The mixed Guernsey-Hol- mere three hours and ten minutes. way Commission, }Jlacing the body championing the cause of temper- stedin herd of G. Lester Cleaver, Later, both houses were recessed in Republican control, the Legislat- Mi dl etown, placed second in but- for five hours while the Highway ure decided at the one-day session Rev L Virgil Pratt Bill whas being carried to WilmMi'"lgtodn 2,4 to ~~~~ 1~ ~~~pa~~~~,n~~~~n:~~~" ~ ~e:d f~~~:~d ~~~ 0~ss:~~~ti!~6 i~o~~~ f :~~dt';;., ~iUm~~~ra7~;; v~~~gust PIONEERS' Greene, Pa., than a large evening Pastor, Ebenezer. . M. E. Church pro d uc tl on WI't h an average produc- Toromli t nse osignatn, billur ecl erofk Mrs.who wasI dre ill The bill, intending to correct. the ~~~~~n~ear~~r~~lkcala. ,:noring for the lion per cow of 854 pounds for at her home. And it was past mid- defective title of the previous re- the testing period. night, daylight t Ime, when a halt organization measure, which was REUNION Both programs received generous OFFICERS Rl> port y EbUng was ordered for the day . and held mvaltd by the SuperIOr Court applause. This report was made today by night. o'f New Castle County, was passed Far From Dead LE Associ~tion Supervisor Roland Eb- Monday by the General Assembly. 59th Regiment The temperance problem, far E CTED ling to County Agricultural Agent Arthur B. Eastman During the 5-hour pause, an in- This action will. place the affairs from being a dead issue, rem'ains a G 'Tr:~ ~~~~~~l~ ::o:,u:;:;rd of J er- formal and entertaining "session" of the commIssion m much the sa~e To Celebrate ~ita l question, stated Rev. Willis in was staged in the House with two posItion as beforethe the SuperIOr mtroducmg. Mr. McSparran. BY 4_ HERS ~~~s a~s:'odt~~i~~d ~~:r a~~:~i~!~nt~~ BLOOMS TO hardy Democrats "heckling" Speak- COU~\d~.clar~d b prev;~U\b l~ un~ At Fort Dix VIce-president of the Men's Dry of milk and 50 pounds of butter er Zebley. When Democratic Floor c~ns ~ . ~I lona . ecause . e 0 y 0 ----- League of Pennsylvania and past BE SH 0 WN Leader J ames Carl McGuigan ad- tel I c o nt8J~ed. prOVIsIons other 59~hh~f~~~~~ I~~~~~;y~e~~~ .n F~,f ~~l~ ~;:,~e:e , o~h:h~at~~nnl~:~~:~i: ;:;~~ County Cluh l~~~~~~;~;i:~:r~J~pE~~~~;k 4~ ~:~~t~d i::ley~pe:h~er la~:er A~~~~~ than se~;::~ ~o:~s ;~~~Ing t~a n~~~,g C O ~'i7.'~~~~~ : ~~.~~~~~ a~h':~ ldm~~~:r:'~a~e~e l :~ ~~~7~ oi~ i~ n;:o;t~r:~n:r~~~r~~~.k pro- Leaders N arne ~~~~:~ f;:;u;O~~~~ :o~~~ ~~~Yl~I~~ A I FI bl~~t a1:V~~~, Highway Secretary pe~~il~~e b~~~~t~r;::' S~~~e S~spr~~: ~~~~:~~'~i~~;~~~:~;~~nta l ~~~~d;;::~=:~: " J o:a:u:da;o :O:se:hd~ ~~~n~~~'~:'~i;s:~h~~~;E~:~ ~i:~: New Directors S~~~~!~~f~~te~a~~~gP~~.~u~~~~~ S:::aAnn~:::'ed f~:~~:~~~:~C:~bni;:e:!~!i~:F~~~:. ~~~a:.·~nf~~~:f~~:~i:~t~~.:~~~~ loll ow: . M mbership J~ . , I?el aware's war governor, Gov- d~ught e r of Mr. and Mrs. Harold At a recent meeting of the New Price's Top Cow F S t h house?" the Speaker roared his Speakman of the Superi or Court. membership chairman, e, nOI McMullen, and other state LlttlC, owners of the grove, was the C tI C t 4 H CI b L d H. Wilson Price, of Glasgow, had or ep elTI er indignation, much as Ferdinand Rep, Henry M. Canby, one of the commill e chairman, leaders have been invited to attend "queen." The crown was placed as e oun y - u ea ers, h . . .. might have done when he sat upon attorneys represen ting the three new committee, employ- the affair, according to Howard D. upon her head by her sister, Miss held at the home of Laura B. Rulh- t e top cow 111 mdlvldual butter ---- li b I (Ed N t M S e k Republican members of the commis (twice), Old Swedes Jester, regimental hi storian and Kathleen Little, the 1937 "queen," erford, county club agent, the rol-fat production for the third straight The executive committee for the is, ea b~~he l or.)· 0 e- r. p a er sian und~r the reor ani zation, said vIce com- chmrman of the celebrah on. h 10wll1g offIcers were elected: Mrs month, a pure bred J ersey pro: 4-H Club fair with all of butter fat for the testing perIod. date WI ll be announced wlthll1 two Many leglsl,ators, attaches, and spec- the Revised Code of Delaware, 1935, . '. t A . to A1 t tel' 111 the absence of Miss Betty members brll1gll1g at least one ex- Fred B. Martems of Newark plac- weeks. tators dldn t get any lunch. When rovid'n for reorg anization of the McW, llldms has also ~ . . nm ~ h n, . . t a., or d oversea~ Staats, the r etiring "queen," who hi bit. Everything will be judged by ed Jour of his Holsteins in the ten The classificatirT, list will include: the downpour finally subsided, ~t ',. ~~h 'a De tment b in­ n:e rO~t~ p~st ~nd ~ e- o~a ~~:~lue ea~~' G;:;as d7'v~ si~ n~ ~e was vacationing in Flonua. classes with prizes and ~ibbons to hi ghest co.ws. in milk produc~i~n , as Aste~ s, c o le o ~ s" , ~",~ , coxcomb, ne ~ ~' I Y JOO a4tomobiles were "flood- Ct~:~~l, ;gl til: ~ Ei1n~:;shiP tbe;eof." mml ees. e as tfit 1 t . t ~ d t C All the partIcIpants were present- be awarded for outstandll1 g work. well as mllkll1g the hIgh II1d,vldual, dahlias, gladIOl us, mal'lgolds, nas- ed. The Superior Court held this b' lI of the Dover post ~~ w.as. ~ e1 .~ ~ ns ~rr.e F 0 amp ed with gifts, awarded by Newark Calf Show Feature a Holstein making 1,655 pounds of turtiums, petunias, roses, zinnas, - while it increased the membership' 1~ ~ ~~~tli Z~ti~~' ~tg (h~1 en~a nO~e 'the and Wil~in gto n merchants. The Efforts ar e being made to have milk for the month. St. Josep.h's and artistic a r~angements of mixed Dr. George W. Rh ~ des , local HO l~se also removed the Governor as ~ . . . presentnllons were made by the every 4-H Club member complete School, Clayton, had the second hI gh flowers, berned shrubs, house member bedecked 111 a new whIte membe '-3 feature not set out in adjutant was born m war saw the me.mbers of the reg 1- Rev. L. Virgil Pratt, pastor of the projects in time to exhibit it at the cow in milk production, a Holstein plants, 'and special entries. suit, refused to venture into the the titl~ He enlisted ~o : se~ - ment spread to l ~mote parts of t~e church, who was program chair- fair. In addition to the exhibits, making 1,550 pounds. New Century Club Site rain for his noon-day repast. You . . World War at hl stonc globe, w h~l e nallve members l e- man. the annual 4-H cal! show will be Other Herd Averages Following the same procedures as guess his reason. TItle Of Ncw B\1l In 1917 and was ove~- Slimed theIr places 111 the state. Entire Pro ram Broadcast featured, with the New Castle Other herds with all cows ave rag- last year, the show will be held at The title of the bill passed yes- April 14, WIS, to A~l'Il It was th:ough t~e efforts of ~r . go County Links sponsoring prizes and ing over 26 pbunds of butter fat or the New Century Club. Entries Rep. Frank H. Thawley, tile hymn- terday reads: took part In SIX major J ester, a fOlm~r ~e s ldentof Newa1k, The D e l a~ar~ State Colored awards. 600 pounds of milk for the testing will be made on Friday evening si nging member of the House from "An act to amend chapter 166 of and was severely that the assoclallon. of hVlng mem- Quartet Of. Wllmll1gton sang under According to rules laid down for period follow. Pusey Passmore, preceding the exhibit. Perishable Laurel, who tops both branches of the Revised Code of Delaware, 1935, Montlacon, France, on bel'S of the ?ld r egiment was form- ~he d.,rechon of J ohn E;, Harrl,s. the fair, all exhibits must be in Centerville, 24 G u er n s e ys- 33.4 exhifiits can be delivered up to ten the Assembly for his "no" votes, providing for reorganization of the • 191.8. • ed. FollOWing sever~ 1 years of COUSin Lee and hI S Boys, a radIO place by 10 a. m ., E. S. T., and while pounds of butter fat and 748 pounds o'clock of the morning of the show. surprised everyone by "yessing" a State Highway Department. hi S dl s~ hn r ge from the planning, the ass 0 c I a tI 0 n was team, also sang. The entire program the judges are awarding ribbons, a of milk; Wilson Price, Glasgow, 19 The exhibit will be open to the resolution offered by Rep. McGuigan The new bill, as in the previous McWIlliams settled in launched . In 1936, when members was broadcast over a public address 4-H parade, including all club J erseys- 29,8 pounds of butter fat; public from four o'clock Saturday, at the outset of the session. But measure, names Donald P. Ross, New later and en li sted 111 were IIlvlted to attend tbe encamp- system. members and leaders, will take Mrs. J. H. Hughes, Port P enn, 14 and from 12 o'clcok noon to six on two later chances, he pulled his Castle County; Ralph W. Emerson, . He was com- ment of the 198th, C. A. C., Dela- More than 250 persons atten?ed place. Guernsey-Holsteins-29.1 pounds of o'clock Sunday. Any resident of "no" average for the day to .667 Kent County, and Charles D. Ab- lieutenant of Battery ware Natl?nal Guard, at Bethany the noon-day luncheo:" w h lie The parade will be led by a band butter fat, 686 pounds of milk; Fred Newark or vicinity is privileged to with re-sounding fervor. bott, Sussex County, Republicans, as first lieu ten- Beach. Bl'Ig.-Gen. Welier E. Stover s ll g h~IY less than 500 dmed 111 the and the Junior Council bearing a B. Martenis, Newark, 20 Holsteins- enter flowers in the exhibit. - additional members of the State of the Headquart- wns host to the assemblage. evenll1g. Ml:. and Mrs. Leonard banner. Five fl oats will have as a 28.5 pounds of butter fat, 750 pounds The members of the executive P aul Bruno, master politician Hi ghway Commission. Still later he was LeFevre First Head Nels.o n were '~ charge of the meals. unified theme the 4-Hs of the of- of milk; J. J. B. Cooper, Kirkwood, committee for the show are: A. B. while a student at the University The new bill also would eliminate and placed ill charge of . Col. .J ohn P. LeFevre, now a MI SS Jean LIttle, d~ughter.of .Mr. fici al emblem: Head, Heart, Hands, 10 Jerseys-27.7 pounds of butter Eastman, chairman; Mrs. Edward L. of Delaware, was observing how the Governor as a member of the G as a captain. Judge 111 Kent County, was .the and Mrs. Harry G. LIttle, WlImll1g- and Health, and a ruth "H" for the fat; Marvin W. Kiair, Marshallton, Ginther, secretary; Mrs. David R. it's done professionally from a press commission. But a feature in the first president of the assocJatlon. ton, sang a solo as a feature of the Home. 7 Guernseys-27.4 pounds of butter Eastman, Mrs. Robert O. Bausman, table seat. new bill would give him the right Captain Fred Manion was vice evening program. The Rev. John Parade On Street (Please Turn To Page 8) Prof. L. R. Detjen, Miss Freda Ritz, to appoint a member from Kent president; Captain Horace Wilkin- Kelso, pastor of the Marshallton M. Lunch hour will follow the pa- Mrs. A. B. Eastman, Mrs. Middleton Rep. Samuel J. Stein is being re- County to replace J. Henry Hazel, FO!, N lIl'sC Po t son treasurer, Captain John J. Du- E: ~hurc h , pronounced the bene- rade, which will be conducted from W. Hanson, and Mrs. E. L. Richards. ferred to as "Sad Sa!l1my" because Republican, whose term has ex- Service gan secretary, and the Rev. Joseph dIctIOn. East Main Street at Chapel, west he can't drag his favorite bill, that pired. . (Please Turn To Page 8) on Main to College Avenue, and CHARITIES Loca1 Rotarians Discuss would re-charter the Town of Sea- Even If Governor McMullen does ! ______Nationa1 Youth Offices south on College Avenue to the F . P I' Of U S ford and permit it to enter the city appoint a Democrat to replace Hazel, Pub lic ~e~~ I;h e ~o- Six Real Estate Renta1s Moved To New Quarters University of Delaware Experi- 'orClgn 0 ICy ... cl~ss, before the ~ouse for a v?te. the m7m.bership of the new highwa.y Field . ' NUI S: A ' d B A . .. ment FaI'm, where the calf show BOARD IN Dr. Thomas F ..Manns preSIded WIth the Democratic bloc wobbling, commI SSIon would be four Repubh- th I t . Selvlce, ~ epa rt nnoullce y gency The Nahonal youth bdmll1lstra- will take place. at the weekly sesSIOn of the New- there's a good chance for passage, cans and three Democrats. The anenl n ,er~~r. Ap plicati ons The Williams Real Estate Agency, tion yesterday moved into its new The following county clubs will ASSEMBLY ark Rotary Club Monday evening too. present members of the commission Wash~ '~ e Commission's 24 Center St., has announced the quarters, the old Trade Sc~ool have charge of arranging floats: at the Deer Park Hotel. William are Charles W. Cullen, Georgetown, ng l ~n, D. C., not later following rentals during the week: building, French St., between Filth Stronghold and Stump Corner clubs Hamilton led the singing, assisted Mrs. J oseph S. Newnam, wife of Democrat; A. Frank Fader, Newark, $1800 ~he salary for Mr. and Mrs. William F. Carroll, and Sixth Sts., Wilmington. In ad- will arrange the "Head" fioat· Mar- ____ by his daughter, Miss Ann Hamilton, the representative from Smyrna, Democrat, and F. V. duPont, Wil- e' <~ year. Philadelphia, Hadley Apts.; Mrs. C. di'ion to the administrative offices, shallton, Stanton, and Oak Grove, M thl S ° at the plano. Visitt'rs included W. can't wait to learn what takes mington, Republican. cer- B. Allen, Newark, and Mr. and Mrs. an NYA shop will be located in the the "Heart" float; Bear, Christiana, H. Pippin, Elkton, and H. Wallace place at each session, attends daily. The move of the Republicans in train~~c allon a~ d on Y eSSlon y the e g I.S reqUired for J ohn M. Lytie, Elkton, Center Apts.; building. . ' and Kirkwood, the "Hand" float; H ld M d ° 449 Cook, Middletown.. . - . the .General AssE'm~IY. Mon?a in to b xan:unalJon. ~ o m - Mr. and Mrs. J . O. Talbott, Long- Plans are under conSIderation for Middletown, Blackbird, and Oak e on ay, ' A round-table dIscussion was led WhIle Rep. McGUIgan was berat- passmg the reorgal11zatlon hIghway e g~ven a wr~ tlen view, Texas, house, 51 E. Park the conversion of a large part of Hill, the "Health" fioat, and New- Chold Aid d by Samuel Handloff on "What ing "ripper legislation" and Repub- bill came as a surprise in view of prac tical qlleslJons. P lace' Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur W. Phil- the building into a youth recreation ark, Milford Cross Roads, and Cor- I ren e should the foreign policy of the Licans who introduce it, after the statements last week that no at- b' not have passed lips Wilmington house, Benny St., center, which will serve tbe gen- ner Ketch will show the unity of United States be in view of the latest Highway Act had been pre- tempt wo~ld be made to introduce not ~rthd ay . The age and' Pl'of. and' Ml's. William A. eral area in the vicinity of the the "4-Hs" in a fifth "H"-the The State Board of Charities held present European and Asiatic con- sented, Rep. Fred Pepper, Selby- another bill. e Waived In any Wilkinson, house, Center Street. building. "Home." its August meeting on Monday at ditions." (Please Turn To Page 8) In Session Until Midnight First Of Kind the New Castle County office, 905 The passage of the bill kept the . E II According to Miss Rutherford, West St., Wilmington. Mrs. William 1 T •• E' d u General Assembly in session until C'v,l S . rlrO this is believed to be the first at- S. Bergland, president, officiated. nearly midnight, .standard time. It Ne kervlce Board of Presb1vterlanJ '" ., ment tempt ever made in New Castle Mrs. Harry Mayer and the Rev. R. yacatlonlsts xpen nUge was passed early m the evening but war post offce. Of 4 361 County to produce a 4-H show of Y. Barber, members, and C. Rollin S ' D l L ' V to get it in shape to send to the 'ncrease 2 this nat~re. She is requesting the Zane, executive director, were pres- um.ln e aware ast.l ear Gove~nor. it was necess~ry to have l Bill' . .Il , cooperallon and support of all 4-H ent. the bill SIgned by the bIll clerks of e dit Shows ____ Club members, leaders, and par- Mr. Zane reported that 449 de------~e two houses. Mrs. Mildred Tom- To 60,497 . h t earchurch Includes 9631 ordained ents to make the day a banner oc- pendent chlldren received help of Delaware benefited largely In some of their growth to this source. 1mson, bill clerk of the House, is ill Unemployment An Increase during t ~ pa: Ym ' clergymen The Sundav School casion. some klnd from the board in July. 1938 by expenditures of visitors and "A breakdown of the 1938 expen- ¥t a Wilmington hospital. After the Com m is s ion has of 24 , ~61 in the commul11can :e ch membership is 1 495038. This is an During the fiscal year, which ended vacationists who spent the sum of dltures Indicates that of every dol- bill went through the two houses a Checks for $480 825,61 ~ers hlp of the preSbyter~ C iC': is Increase of 11 ,847 o~er last year. Head Of Safety Council Ju:,e 30, a total. of 1,1~4 dependent $12,750,900 in t?e state, according lar spend in recreational trav71, 5 r~cess was. taken shortly before 7 of paym~ t f III the U~lted States of , .er f Contributions of the 8794 Presby- • chIldren were mded. SIXty of these to a statement Issued this week by cents is spent for accommodations, o. clock until 10 o'clock, standard benefits in' the ~at~ . reported m the annual statlst!C~a~_ tcrlan churches totaled' $39,902,280. Addresses Llons Club children were in adoption ho~es W. Purves Taylor,. of the Associated 22 cents is spent for recreation, 10 lime. In the meantim~ a messenger 1,506 checks for the church to be m ade publk iam This fi ure re resents a decrease of W. Floyd J ackson, newly-elected and final adoption decrees were IS- Petroleum In~ustrles. cents Is spent for food, 5 c~nts for was sent. to the hospItal where he iSsued dming the lIJ'day by the Rev. Dr. k ~T the $648,82: from fhe year 1937-38, near- president of the Delaware Safety sued In 37 cases during the year. "The reliabllit~ of ,~hese figures refreshments and 58 cents IS spent got the ~Igna tur e of Mrs. Tomllnson last Satlll'd Barrow Pugh, stated cler I 11 of hi h ' In "special re- Council, addressed local Lions at Other Reports Made cannot be queslloned, Mr. Taylor for transportation. to the bIll. 287 CI ;ims ;~~ In _ Presbyterian General AsSemblYber_ :ei;ts" a c~ass~fic~~on that includes the Newark Country Club Tuesday . Out of 318 applications by faml- sta~c?, "as the~ are taken from the "Originally estimated at $4,000,- . When the bill was first caUed up _~, 'Olllnno. "_,, _ . l em The total communicant me.m t t". Ii I f churches evening. Mr. Jackson was intro- lies to care for chlJdren during the OffICIal Bulletm, U. S: Travel Bu- 000,000, well over $5,000,000,000 was 111 the Senate, Lieut.-Gov. Edward durin re~ ,v d ,by ship is now 1,978,095, ac:cordl.ng h~ ~~~~d'i~n s a~nd r~~~:;.s e~traordinar; duced by Dr. P. K . Musselman, pro- year, Mr. Zane reported that 94 reau, which In turn is compiled expended in national recreational W. Cooch called attention to the 12 01 W~I h e week Dr. pugh. The figures gIven m t g ' c t .'b ti t benevo- gram chairman. President George were accepted. from a numbe ,~ of governmental travel in 1938. More people own fact that there were a number of . 'and 53c n umbe~ annual statistical report cover the f;:cc:s~~ject~n ~~du t~nscu~rent ex- M. Haney officiated. In addition to its child welfare sources of a most ci;:pe~dab l e char- cars than e.ver before in ~e hi story erasures on the bill. He ruled it was repo t d wer? .'n year endcd March 31, 1939. . f th h I hawed no work, the board handled 49 appH- acter. The total expendItures which of the nation and low-prlced cars would not be acceptable In that Ie: th r e. OCTICI "ls All Presbyterian membershIP sta- pen s~s 0 e c ur~ les t~ cal'. CI' t" L " S k callons for sterilization operations, may be credHed to recreational are within the reach of a great form. as th ~ week were tistics are based solcly on t~e. num- definIte change du.r ng si~u~ t ed in IriS I?ua llyntan pea s 26 of which were approved, 19 travel are impressiv.e and have majority of families. Millions of Genator Burton S. Heal, majority . average sum- bel' of communicants remalllll1g in With ll~c a: c~Ut~e~ th Pres- At WIllte ClllY SUltdllY otherwise disposed of, and four left been so spread out that they have miles of travel over highways large- /loor leader, appealed from the de- full standing, according to th~ strict cver~.. s a e n .t e l~lO~he CUnited In the absence of the pastor, Rev. pending. been shared by almost every line Iy financed by gasoline taxes have cislon of the chair and the chair M' I'ul s of the church relutlllg . to bytOllsn! ChUi ~ h ti d dudng Clyde E. Rickabaugh, the 11 o'clock One hundred and twenty-eight of business. made recI'eational travel popular was overruled After which the bill Inneapolls, Omaha, MiI - membership. They arc based nClth- States 0 AmreTica COI~S ~~\as been service of worship at the White Investigations were made regard- A1mo8t $50 Per Capita and have helped to create a wave was presented for consideration and or Ore., and Salt I' on tho numb l' of b (lpti~ed mem: t~~C~Jaist~ ~~~'m!~ ~~' ani zation early CI. y Creek .Presbyterian Church ing the legal r.esldence of persons, "The value of the exp~nditures of b~Ylng that bas been ben~ficlal passed. e among the larger bel'S nor on the PresbyterJUn popu s , g th tional Sunday morning will be in charge and 137 inguines from other wel- equals almost $50 per cap,ta. The to thIS and other states. The popu- Democrats Attaok Bill had no deaths f"om lotion This broader constituency of 111 the l~th cent~ry, ;h no 8794 of Lewis Armstrong, a worker In fare agencies we,re handled. Var!- state itself has shared in this spend- larity ot Delaware as a tourist state The measure was attacked by during ID38. Bl'idge- the church is estimated at 5,000,000. pre~byter an b oy. Ide b '42 the Brack-Ex M. E. Church and a ous Institutions and agencies r e- Ing os a substantial portion of tbe appears to be steadily increasing to both Senator Earl Sylveater and With appro.xlmatcl 9631 Ordained Clergymen chlJlches arc supervbs~ I Yond student ot the Wilmington Bible ceivlng tax funds were vislted dur- expenditures were for gasollne and, the specIOe benefit of busi ness, in- Rep. J . Carl McGuigan, minority In hns hnd 11 ~ t:' III t;ddlUon to the net communhl~ SynOd~P l:~:e i~r nP~~s ta~~ c;; College. Ing the year. as a result, stote tax revenues owe dustry, and agriculture." (Please Turn To Pare 7) fi vc y ars. cant membership of 1,978,095, t Two The Newark Post, Newark, Delaware, Thursday, August 17, 1989

I, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ;::;;;;:;;:; Residence Construction ,~~!if::,J II SUNDAY W eekly _1l.,... ___ {3~ ~---" F 00 D B~::~i7c~l!nC::t~~~tli~n oC pri. I lnternati01lttl SCHOOL Sermon @~I}S for vate residences to be completed in -:- L E S SON -:- the late fall at 0 cost ot about $500,- 000 and major improvements in Bo.~r~Pi~e ~10~~:g~y.I~~slP.UI~ · -ni"e Forgotten Walcrpot prepared by THOUGHT public building are in progl'ess in (nolo.sed by W~~ I~~~IC~~''!.;spopcr "Ion I m~~t~ e~oo~~I'S~~~'I C ~~~:ftut~,el~~~: Vour Newspaper-BeUy Crocker Home ServIce Department By CHARLOtTE SPENCER Nassau as mol' visitors to the Ba- cago. MORE THAN A CAKE Nutritionist, Slate Board of Health hamos plan to make Nassau a year· Lesson for August 20 Text-Jesus sailh unto her, I U1at An Angel Food is more than a coke. With a few deft touches ond round residence. speak unto thee am he . The garnishes, it can be turned into a complete dessert. Whether this Angel With the introduction of a n all- woman then left her watcrpot, and Food dessert is a simple family din ner affair-or 0 gorgeous-looking Fresh peac~s are now amO I g the year, weekly steamship service went her way into the cily, and creation with which to awe your guests-is a matter of personal choicc. foods starred by Secretary of Ag- from New York, Nassau, fa I' the s:l ith to the men, Come, sec a man, be g~r;i ~~n~:~~rath;a~~?tuOs~s ~:,~~i~,~ r:\a~~r~c\7~~g~ Y~~v,:r;; f~~~ ri cullure Wallace liS being among first time establishcd a summer BEVERAGE ALCOHOL i\~D which told me [t 1J things thut ever such dessert Id eas "up YOUI' sleeve" or "under yOU I' hat" 01' whel'ever the surplus agl'icultural commodities seas>:, n, which h. ning woman by the side of a well. tsp. salt. Boil without stirring until it thickens-about 15 minutes. brown. "Criminals are lor the return 01 And you will remember, the flrst Serve eit ler hot or cold. Pickled Peaches CHRISTIANA HUNDRED liquor, wet propaganda to the can· soul to be. redeemed after He was Angel Food Parisienne Wash well 8 pounds of firm cling- trary notwithstanding, and with the nailed to the cross was a thief who Wash and hull 1 pint of strawberries or raspberries. Sprinkle with stone peaches. Remove the thin Aug. 21 Morgan's Store, Marshallton-lO A. M. to 3 p, M. coming of repeal wi\] come the was on another CI'OSS at His side. ~ to % cup sugar, and crush slightly. Whip 1 cup whipping cream skin with a sharp knife and stkk 24 Sowden's Store, Colonial Park- IO A. M. to 3 P . M. greatest era of ,"holesale crime this One day, praise GOd. He also show- until stiff, add 8 tbsp. confectioners' sugar and chill. ,lust before 2 cloves into each peach. Cook ;2 Sept. 5 Smith's Store, Centrevilll!-l0 A. M. ~ 3 P. M. country has ever known. The crim· ered His grace upon me, unworthy serving, fold the swee~~~'~~h~~:,~i~: ~~~ ~:~,,~~:pped cream. quarts fresh cider vinegar, 8 two- 8 Richardson Park Fire House, Richardson Park- to A. M. to 3 P. M. inal world is tensely expectant and 13 Newport Fire House, Newport- -lO A. M . to 3 P . M. Is prepared to launch immediate· :i~~ l~f7~~ea~~ ~~~ ;:~~~ ;;:~re f~~~ If you have any Ipeclflo cooking probleml, lend a letter requesting ~:~~d~i~~~a rst:~~e t~i;:'~:O~e na~i n= 18 Poore's Store, Elsmcre-lO A. M. to 3 P . M. ,ly into its millennium at crime. The set my feet on the solid rock. Oh, ~n~~~~~il,O~e~~o~~~t~e~r;.Ck~re~~::~eCI~f.!h~lc~~~:~:~e;'t~~~v,:~l\p~:~:~:~ utes or until the syrup is f airly 21 Morgan's Store, Marshallton- to A. M. to 3 P . M. return of the saloon inevitably will He is a wonderful Sa viour! thick. Then add the peaches. 26 Sowden's Store, Colonial Park- IO A. M. to 3 P . M . . bring open prostitution and gam· So the fountain of life sprang up Cook the peaches gently until bUng" (Statement by a criminal in in the woman's soul. And immedi-II ~ they are tender, but not broken, prison before repeal became effec· I\ULL CREEK HUNDRED tlve>' ~~~ I~h:h~i ~~~r~e~a~~~~\:~ l s~h: c;~~~ Playground Log ~~~r;i~ht~he~ ~~;dmi;rn~~~ ~:a~~ "America Is on the worst gam· news. She forgot her shame. She " the syrup from the peaches. Pack Aug. 21 . Weinstock's Store. Cedars-IO A. M. to 3 P . M. bling spree in its history. A gross 24 Allison's Store, Marshalilon- to A. M. to 3 P . M. population, not including all rural ~~:ror~~ ~~ds~;; bO:c~~:e poet ~~r ';;~~ ~~ : !~~~p I~!~i~:;ri~~~~ /:~~. t~~\! Sept. 5 Brannon's Store, Milford Cross Roads-lO A. M. to 3 P. M. districts, at 80,000,000 persons is ful life, She even forgot her water- The grand fin ale of the Playground All-Stars were: D. K elley and J and pour over the peaches Seal dallying with $6,000,000,000 in win· 8 Cochran's S~re, Choate-to A. M. to :; P . M. pol. Her soul sang with joy. The Center ,"'1 11 take place tOlllght at Kelley. Vogel. Huston, N Thomas and store In a cool place It takes ' nings and losings. of which all but 13 Yearsley's Garage, Hockessin-l0 A. M. ~ 3 P . M. outcast was transformed. She knew seven a clock under the approprl- and C Thomas, Da nby, Taluccl, several weeks l or the peaches to 18 Gregg's Store, Yorklyn-lO A. M. to 3 P . M. about $1,000,000,000 passes through she had needed to be saved, and ate Lille of. "Achievement Night." Simons, and D tllespie. develop a good pickle flavor. the hands of the underworld, where 21 Weinstock's Store, Cedars- 10 A. M, to 3 P. M. the Saviour had met her need. Finals of variOus contests and tourn- Last Friday. 85 children made 26 Allison's Slore, Marshallton- lO A. M. to 3 P . M. much of it remains" (Courtney R. True Of Every Sinner aments. exhibits, awarding of prizes, preparations for the cit·cus, tourna- ' Cooper>. And what was true of her that and a band concert WI ll feature the ment competition was held. and The American Business Men's WHITE CLAY CREEK HUNDRED ,foundation, Chicago, reports that day is true of every sinner. We two·hour program. . . badge tests staged. FROM A JELLY ' liquor was responsible for the rejec- must be conscious of our need of George M. Ha ney, v lce-chalrm? n Circus Attracts Christ as Saviour before He can of the executive committee, will pre- On Monday-"Circus Day"- the Aug. 18 Washington House. Newa rk- l0 A. M. to 3 P. M. , ;~~ ;:;s~nr~r:c~h~~ s~3 , ~~~:,pp~~~at~~! save us. And we are saved when sent the awarllls,l whUe Louis T. greatest turnout of youngsters was CHAMPION'S 23 Elliott's Store, Ch.ristiana- lO A. M. to 3 P . M." , as a result widows and orphans will we believe on Him as did the Staats, chairman, will report on the reported for the summer, w hen 322 Sept. 1 Deer Park Hotel, Newark- l0 A. M, to 3 P. M. ultimately be deprived of over woman by the well. ' Center's first season of activity. . checked in, 250 of which were be- NOTEBOOK 7 Washington House, Newark-l0 A. M. to 3 P . M. 9 ~200 , OOO,OOO of insurance, making Notice particul arly what the Holy , The pr~gr am, ar.ranged by Wd- tween the ages of 7 and years. By Mrs. Kenneth Harris 12 Elliott's Store, Christiana- l0 A. M. to 3 P . M , . some of them public charges. Spirit has recorded in verse 28' ham K. GillespIe, director, and MISS The circus, w hich started a t seven 15 Deer P ark Hotel, Newark- 10 A. M. to 3 P. M . Three words which a re altogether "The woman then left her water~ J ane J ernec, assistant, follows: o'clock, was featured by 16 attract- ",ALL of my neighbors were so 20 Washington House, Newark- 10 A. M. to 3 P . M. appropriate for the Ilquor problem pot, and went her way into the 7. p. m.- Girls' croquet .fin?ls, ions, .. . ". exhlblr~~~r;r::noJ"t:c bj~~~t~~: 25 Elliott's Store, Christiana- lO A. M. to 3 P . M, will serve to summarize our lesson. city," Why did she leave the water- nOI th end of field. Girls plllg The Midget Colony conSisted of I (;:8 for our town of Douglos at lost ! I. Devastallou (Joel 1:5·7). p t? There were probably several pong finals playcoUl·.t. . Virginia Wells, Barbara Cornog. year's Wyoming State Fall'. But my , Drunkards are called on to awake reasons. Likely she forgot it, even 7:15 p, m.- Boys plllg pong Edna Smith, with Margaret Dean 1 8uccess story Is due to recipes NEW CASTLE HUNDRED , from their stupor and weep and the though to her. as to all the dwellers fina ls, playcourt. . . directing, rather tban luck. Those prtze·wtn· drinkers of wine (note that!) to wail in Sychar, water was most precious. 7 :~ O p. m.-Horse shoe P!tchlllg J ean Lewis directed the "tight nlng jellies were the first I ~v e r Aug. 21 Fire Engine House, Holloway Tel'l'3ce-10 A. M, to 3 P . M. , over the loss of their drink beca use If she did forget her waterpot, it is exhibitIon-Nolan Bredemeler and rope walkers" who were Mary and I m~,de, with short.boll.dlrectlons . , 24 Wm. Doberstein's Stor e, Hamilton Park- l0 A. M. to 3 P. M. ' of the devastation wrought by the strong evidence of the awakening of chaHenger, north end of (je l ~. Helen Tierney. jellf:s~ ~::r;~n~~:n'~~~~tl~i~~~h~~, 3t Stoops' Store, Masonic Temple, New Caslle-IO A. M. to 3 P. M. locusts. This plague had come be­ her soul and of the transforming in- 7.45 p. m.-Band. selecllons, Dorothy Marrs portrayed a span-I - - Sept. Harrington's Store, Bear- IO A. M. to 3 P . M. eau.e of the sins at the people, and nuence of J esus, It may be that s h ~ fleld bleachers. , . . ish dancer, while Ernestine Gillesp- 8 Wiley's Store, Red Lion-IO A. M. to 3 P . M. may well serve to exemplify the purposely left it. She would want 8 p, m,-Handlcraft ex hlbl ~ and ie was a Scotch lassie dancer. Ly- 13 St.oops' Store, Masonic Temple, New Caslle-IO A. M. to 3 P. M. devastation which will follow the to carry the good news with fl ying awards for best handicraft plcces. nette Steinauer was a w itch, while 18 Kllvington's Store, Minquadale-IO A. M. to 3 P. M. use 01 alcohol as a beverage. The feet and outstretched hands, un- Presentahon by the doner of the Ann Richards directed an "Indian 2t Fire Engine House, Holloway Terrace- IO A. M. to 3 P. M. na tions of our day need not th ink hindered. pnzes, the Rev, Eugene Kraemer, tr ibe" made up of Ella Jane Sheaf- 26 Wm. Doberstein's Store, Hamilton Park- IO A. M. to 3 p, M. that they will escape if they can· It is possible that the woman may as follow: 1st prize, J !ln e Blake, fer, dancer; Billie Hamilton and tinue on their present road of reck· have len ilie waterpot that J esus a bell; 2nd, LUCi lle Moore, pocket- Jimmy Taylor, braves. less indulgence. might drink from it. He had said book; 3rd, Dorothy Ma.rrs, coaster Lucille Moo re was a snake charm- PENCADER HUNDRED n. Debauchery (Dan. 5:1-4). to her, "Gi ve me to drink," and she set: 4th, Jeanette Steinauer, tOYer, while Tommy Silk and Mike GiI- The famil iar story of Belshazzar's Aug. 22 Summi,t Bridge Garage, Summit Bridge-lO A. M. to 3 P . M. feast should be made to live again docs not seem to have complied elephant. . . lespie were "wild men." J ack Fos- 25 Dayetts Mi ll , Cooch's Bridge-lO A. M. to 3 P. M. wi th His request. F or she had said , Boys- 1st prtze. Edmund LeWIS, set gave a good enactment of a as we point out that we here "have Sept. 6 "How is it that thou, being a Jew, beader. belt; 2nd, Danny McVey, thin man, While Ralph Barrow Jr., Summl,t Br!dge Garage, Summit Bridgc-l0 A. M, to 3 P . M. vividly manifested Ull'ee of the 11 Dayett s ,MIll, Coach's Bridge-IO A. M. to 3 P . M. great characteristics oC the day in askest drink of me, which am a toy . train; 3rd, Herbert. Sto~ e, drew rounds of applause as a 14 woman of Samaria?" pmnted nower pot; 4th, MIke Gil · "strong man." McElwee s Garage, Glasgow-l0 A. M. to 3 P . M. which we live-a coming together of 19 Lel s ur ~'s Garage. Glasgow-l0 A. M. to 3 P . M. , great multitudes for a riotous night Left Her Waterpot lespie. pot holder. . The Gypsy fortune teller was 21 But afterward she saw herself as 8:15 p. m,-Band selectIons. Edith Platt, w ith J ack David, and Summl,t Br!dge Garage, Summit Bridge-JO A. M. to 3 P. M. ; of drinking, which .must . of course 27 Dayell s Mill, Cooch's Bridge-l0 A. M. to 3 P . M. end for many in dlsgustmg drunk· a sinner and Jesus as the Saviour, 8:30 p. m.-Athle tic badge a- Dori s Dear portraying "talking enness; provision for acts of dark· and she left her waterpot at His wards by MI'. Haney with re- deer." est sensuality in the fact that all feet tha t He might drink all that marks by MI'. Staats. J ane Blake directed the clowns RED LION HUNDRED the wives and concubines were He would, She gave Him what she 8:50 p. m.-Band. select!ons. who were J oey McVey, Ruth Freet, , invited to this feast ... and a can· had, to do with it just what He 9:00 p. m.-Speclal senIOr ping and Theresa Tierney. Aug. 22 Cl'Ompton's Store, St. Georges-lO A. M to 3 P M temptuous, deliberate insulting of chose. pong match. . South Side team "Dopey, the Dwarf" was played 25 Harry Rose's Store, Delaware City- lO A. M t ~ 3 'P M the name of God" (Dr. Wilbur M. In any case, she left her water- versus Central District t eam,- by J ay Steinauer, with Donald Fos- Sept. 6 Harry Webb's Stol'e, Delaware City-l0 A. Nt: to 3 P M Smith). pot because she had seen Jesus. Playcourl. set filling the role of Donald Duck. 11 Crompton's Store, St. Georges-l0 A. M to 3 'P M . . III. Death (vv. 5, 17, 25·28), Then, too, she caught a vision of The followi ng boys and girls l'e- The lemonade concession was in Mr.a. Kenneth Harris 14 Harry Rose's Stol'e, Delaware City- 10 A. M t~ 3'P M Dramatically swift was God's 19 the need of her friends and neigh- charge 'in talrs, at course, but lhe judgment upon Belshazzar's pre· ~~~~;d h a ~~~0:;~~lepr07eec~~i:o nM a;~~ ;!tI;~:: e ~~eWl?r~:~~n. la~l\ly's 22 ~~~:JPt!~ ~b~sto~!~r§t. Dci~ ~~~r;:"'fdt~~~ 'ti W,ptoJ P. M. 27 sumptuous sin. Magnificently bold ~~: ~. s ~:~v~:~ t~~I~: ~~it~ea W;!:; i ~~ aret Dean, coaster set; Nancy Seventy-seven children were pre- ~njoyment of perlect, short·boll Harry Rose's Store, Delaware CilY- l0 A. M. t ~ 3 ·P . M. and direct was the condemnation by to bring others to the Saviour. If J ernee, .painted. nower pot set.; sent at the Center Tuesday, with ~~~e:r~sl~s rt~~i7."klnd of a 'badge 01 Daniel, the prophet of God. Re· the Sam aritan woman had known J oan Shltz, pamted fi ower pot; the day's schedule bei ng wound up This cbamplon sbort.boH rec tpe fentless was the immediate judg· some of our grand hymns she would Jimmy Scotton, toy train, and by a softball game that saw the makes 0 strowberry jelly that aJ. ST. GEORGES HUNDRED ment of physical death (see v. 30), doubtless have sung as she hurried Bobby Thompson, book ends. "Fathers" defeat their "Sons" 9-6 ways takes first pineo In popularity: Aug. 22 and equally sure is the ultima te on her way : Badge Tests Awards to even the series at two vi~torie~ Ripe Strawberry Jelly 25 ~~z~ worth ' s Garage, Mt. Pleasant- l0 A. M. to 3 P . M. judgment when the drunken king "Y came to J esus, and I drank Badge tests awards will be made each. . (Makes abolt! 1! mecth,,,, glaucl) 30 Fire ~o ss. Bros. Store, Middietown- IO A. M. to 3 P . M. stands betore his Maker to answer Ouse, Odessa-10 A. M. to 3 P M or that life-giving stream; to 37 girls as follow: Bronze-Ella T~; battm,~ orders: 4 cups berry juice Sept. 6 tor the deeds done in the flesh. My thirst was quenched, my soul J ane Sheaffer, Helen Mae Lewis, Fathers "Sons" il toblespOODs lemon JUI.co 11 ~1~Pl e'~ St9re, Port Penn- 10 A. M.' to ' 3 P M The fact that God does not write 14 Shallc;;;'llson s Store, Odessa-lO A. M to 3 P IVi in our day in flamtng lellers on the revived, Ernestine Gillespie Ruth Freet, McCl~IIY D. KeUey 8 cups sugar 19 Fire En~fn BrfIS. Store,. Middletown- Hi A. M. 'to :i p , M. saloon wall before the bleary eyes And now I live in Him." J a ne Blake, Doris D ~a r . Edith Platt, RItchIe p J . KeUey 1 bottle fruit pectin 22 Regardless of wha t life has gi ven, Dorothy Marrs, Nancy Baylis, Helen P?rsons lb Vogel To prepare Juice, crush thorougb. 27 Buckworth~ G~~~~e,MMl~I~~~:S~-;rt~IA. M. to 3 P . M. ot tile drinker docs not mean that Shallcross Bros. Store, Mldd l etown_~o Ai\ .lIi.!. Ito 33 pI'.~ . His judgment Is any less certain, or holds in the future, one can never Smith, Mary Tierney, J oy Lee Wol- Elssner 2b Huston I Iy or grind about 8 quarts lully ripe nor does it make it less dreadful. know the joy of nil joys. he con laston, Eleanor Mumford. Theresa Man's 3b Truet strawberries. Ploeo fruit In jell), never have his soul-thirst quenched, Ford, and Theresa Tterney. Silk ss Tryens ~I~~~e~! ~~d ~~rn~~U Cj~leceouftr~;;:cei APPOQUINIMINK. HUNDRED Cost of lJapplness until he receivcs Christ as his Silver- J eanette Morris, Lucille Fossett If Danby medIum lemon Aug. God has ordained that happiness, Saviour- until he drinks of the Moore, Helen Tierney, Florence Talbert cf Simons Measure sugar and fruit Julcu ;~ ~rti G a ~age, Ginn's Corner-1 P . M. to 3 P M woter of life. Then the wuterpots Cranston, Ruth Fulton, and Audrey . rf McKay Into saucepan and mix. like every other good thing, should F ~s te r Sept. 1 R O b er~t~~o~etor;i' Townsend- 1 P. M. to 3 P . M.. cost us something; He has willed of fame, of gold, of pleasure, these Battersby, Gillespie sC Barnes Bring to a boll over hottest lire 7 Hart's ,.eldsboro- l0 A. M. to 12 Noon . that It should be a moral achieve· waterpots of the world, will faU Gold- Doris Lee, Margaret Deur, :~~J!:~~~:~~~~ttl~h~~UI~rr~~t1~ 12 Ed. Lu~ a:age, Gllln's Comel'- 10 A. M. to 12 Noon. ment, and not an accident.-Dr. from his hands u~wantcd . and f~r- Jean Lewis, ond Mildred Baylis. Royal Relics SOllght _. ',d' roll/fill bol1 nnd boll hard 'At 15 Robert's YS~o~~o r;: ~0~u sen d -10 A. M. to 12 Noon. Gasparin. got.ten. ? nd he wl.1I flnd III Chrrst Boys 9- Bronzc-William Vogel, Near Luxor Egypt minute. 20 Hart's G ,~e ,s oro-lO A. M. to 12 Noon. satisfaction and JOy unspeakable, Thomas Silk, Alfred WlIson, Wil- ..' Remove from fire. skim r 25 Ed L a~age, Gll1n s Corner- l0 A. M. to 12 Noon Walk In tbe Light and peace beyond understanding. \lam Gregg, and Donald Griffin. Dlggmg has been resumed after ,ulckl),. Parallln hot je\1)' at :~!. . urty s Store, Townsend- 10 A. M. to 12 Noon . . Walk in the light and thou shall Silver- Kenneth Barnes. J ames ~~~~: ~: r.,eea~I~~:hoef ~~!~s~~!~~ see thy path, iliough thorny, bright; Arthur Wagner, charged with Kelly. George Danby, and Wally Luxor. Egypt, Following the dis- . ,for God, by grace, shall dwell in killing another Negro, escaped from Dunsmore. covery of Tut-ankh-Amen's tomb When DaVId Hanson of Connecti- BLACKBIRD JlUNDRED ' thee, and God himself Is IIght.­ jail a t Macon, Ga., and fled to At- Gold- None. and lts treasures by the late How- cut marrIed Bertha Furlong of Aug. 18 Steller's Star T ' . ' Barton. lanta. Then he hopped a freight tor Dally Reports ard Carter the Cairo Government Rochester, N. H.. the ceremony was 23 Goldsboro u ghe'Ga~Ylor s Brldge-10 A. M. to 12 Noo n. ======IBirmingham, he thought, but wound Thursday August lQ-80 children stopped granting permits for ex- pert~mcd by one brother, another Sept. 1 Carpenter's Stor a~~, ~~~ont Highway, ncar Smyrna-lO A. M to 12 Noon. ~,,",,"(>(>(>(>""""~Ho<>O>O:>O>O:~ up back in Macon. Pollce were 50 of who~ were boys. attended: cavallons In the valley. was est man, a thIrd sang. a tourth 7 Steller's S e, ac Ird- 1 P . M. to 3 P M waiting for him and returned h1m and badge tests were Now the Government has lifted ~"a~~n usher, and II fifth merely 12 GOldsborout~~e 'G;raYlOr's Bridge-1 P . M. to '3 F, M, f to lall. . held. the ban In laval' of MonsIeur :Ba- 00 eon. 15 Carpenter's Sto ":le, D~Pont Highway, ncar Smyrna 1 p, M. to 3 p, ~ . A softball game between the Band ralze, director ot excavations a~ the ------20 Steller's S re, aekblrd- 1 P. M. to 3 P M READ 25 Taylor's Brldge-I P . M. to 3- P_ 'M, Alter Lho death of Ed D. Donahue and Lhe Playground AU-Stars re- Baharl Te.mple, The Department Judgmen~ of $10,000 was awarded GOldSboro~ore, 1', Somersworth, N . H~ packAges suited In a 13-to-9 victory lor the of AntiqUIlles has arranged the to Samuel Wenk in ChIcago who gil Garage, DuPont HighWay, ncar Smycnn-1 M. to 3 P. b! old blIls to the amount Stars, The Band team Was mnde necessary credit and Baraize 18 dIg- testiRed thAt he went Into a health CLAUDE B VOSH THE POST of $18,755, wrapped In newspapen of AIken, Robertson, Douglass, glng 8S ngent of the department In. club teeling "fine" but came out 8-22 8-29 7 ' ELL, Receiver of Taxes lor Ncw Cusdc Coun~ publl8hed In 1915, were fbund In Correll, Moore, Blan.lleld, Lewla, the vicinity of Tut-ankh-Amen'a after a massa,e wIth a broken ver- , " 20, 7-27, 8-31, 9-7. ..""++++++ ...... I+C~ I his cellar, GIbbs, Detjen, and Barnes. On the tomb. tebra. 'nle Newark Post, Newark, Delaware, 'nlursday, August 17, 1989

Severn I South Carolina farmers J . Paul Anderson, a 62-year-old were victimized by a man who said one-armcd retired steel worker. NEW CREDIT he was a government "lightning rod swnm eight miles in the Susque­ Budget of $100 Rejuvenates Home inspector" and charged lees of from hanna River In eIght and a halt $6 up lor looking at their lightning hours. just to show that he cou d SYSTEM IS rods. 1l appears that th('re is no di- do it. He showed 110 ill e ll ~ ct s rom mlnution in the crop of suckers. his dilliclllt tent.

CREATED :i:·:··:··:":··:-:··:":":··:··:··:":-:-:··:··:·~:··:":.. : •• : .. : .• : •• : .. : • •:•• : .. : • •:•• : • •:•• : ... : .. : •• : • •:.. :-:-:~:··:··!-:-:··:· ·:~i! :l: FAlnf BUREAU INSURANCE SERVICES :l: Elnetogency Plan Inttooduced By BII ABNER GORDON WO~~c:~~~~n~:~;~~;·fln~S~ ~~~: Universal Co. be Shellac, varnish, or lacquer. Scrape and sand sur/ace to remove A ncw and exclusive "emergency aUF11~/e~!~i holes, dents. etc., with credit cer tificatc" plan to meet the crack fill er such as plastic wood or problcms of emel'gency credit 1'e- sUck shellac. Sand to assure an eveD quirements of motor car travelers surface. t ,:,:,:~~~:::,~" .. x4~~::1~::::,J ~~v~rs f:;'::c ~~';~e~~s c~ ~~~'m ~ ~se r~ ~ re~~~\~:t:~~;~~h ~~::'~' =:~~r!ir~Ie;~ •••••••••••••••••••••••• I Universal Credi t Company. it was utes with dry rag, rubbing with • • announccd this week by Erncst grain. Allow at least six hours to • GEORGE M. WILSON • Kanzler, president. dr~~1I0W with grain filler colored to • • The plan is avail able only through match stain-paste on open grained • • ~~~~~r~~~~~~; na:;:r ~~7~~~n;; ~~~ ~~ ;:ro~~~,~~~u~r~~c~v ~~f~ ~:~:-;f ~".:~~ • General Hauling tended to benefit particularly thou- to pack pores. Then wipe with rag • • sands of their customers who travel ~~~~:~ eg ~~~'c~;~:r~~ n1f~~P i~s ~~~~ • Ashes and Rubbish Removed from Yards and Cellars at • by automobile extensively or who to dry. • • Reasonable Rates ~~~o~ t~ ~~~'; . vacation periods in slr~~P~~ls~t ~~~ ~~ i !tr::n~?:;SthO; s~~ : • • "Emergency Credit Certificate" face between coats with 6-0 paper, • DIAL NEWARK 3613 78 W. CLEVELAND AVE .•• Undcr the new Universal plan, Rub following final coat with 'The photograph above shows the whic h has just been released to the pumice stone and oil before appllca- • • room before redecorating, with the company's 168 branches through the tlOD of wax. I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • badly proportioned, unattractive mantel. The small inset is of the .:.. : •• : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : •• : •• : .. : .. : .. : •• : •• : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : • •: •• : •• : •• : • •: • •: •• : •• : •• : •• : .. : .. : •• : •• : .. : .. : .. : •• : •• : •• : •• : .. : .. : .. : .. : . homemaker, Mrs. Roy Shugart. The ~;~t ~~e~.t :~~sfl' S~ n~ ;~wF.:~:~ e~ :::~:; ou~~~~u~i;~fl%~il~~~:~~I~~ .graph at right shows the rejuvenated credit certificate" is to be issued to tlOD loan to cover installation of new :l: BOOKS OF THE :\: glorified with a panel of mirrored plate READING, P a . (Special)-The Shugart felt justified in s'pending the amateur decorator secured a decorative rE'Sult.s that can be ac- tillS amount on the mantel since good mirror 'in a simple frame.

compl1s?ed . by Il~agmatlon co.u- the m irror gave gaiety and charm Her husband 'removed the &reen "':.1::,1:: :::1::1:: pled With mgenulty and a wise to the entire room and made the paint ftom the old chest and rub­ ~~!~~~:,:~~~,;~:~~~~~ ~~~1~i:~~hE~:g M~tual !~~~!~t~~~; p~~~o~~~ciation invest.ment i~ p~a t'~ glass mirrors fo~merly ugly fireplace a fO'cal bed it down with oil, Above the cessories, or other emergency needs Q.-Whatmaterial will provide safe ThO 0 h S 0 were mterestmglY I~lu strale d here pomt of interest by r eflecting from any Ford, Mercury, or Lin- and durable sink lining and drainage lrty-nlnt erleS by a homemaker WIth but $100 to other furniture groupings and ~~~~th~i~:C!I;"'~ft~~~~' ~~~h~~~; coIn-Zephyr dealer in the United system for chemicals used In develop- spend on three rooms. two excellently proportioned win­ $1.25 and stained at home, usiny States. lng and printing photographs In home :',: Beginning with the month of August :}, l',1rs. Roy Shugart, of Wyomis- dows at the opposite end of the bright bits of pottery and vase Mr. Kanzler said it was anticipat- dark room? I sing, a suburb of Reading, was room. of field flowers to brighten il the homemaker who glorified Next a little-used and anti­ Thus two dral) corners were de ed that the new credit certificate Ic~·ili~~~el~~~ .Si~~ rW;~~t~!~Sp~~~: ::: SHARES $100 per month ::: three rooms on a decorating bud- qua ted piano was removed and lightfully redeemed at a cost c get of $100, accumulated by care- in its place were put a gateleg $7.55, ~~~in~o~~e~ef~~n!eC:ec~ti~:ar pl~~~ ~~b~h/~~~~~S~Yl;~n:~o~~:fr ~~rJ Mirror in Nursery sures. But the results in a re- a maple arm chair brought down The nursery received a "fac juvenated home more than justi- from a bedroom. In order to lifting," with a total investmer fied the sacrifices to save the nec- catch the vistas from two more of $13.68. Paint and gay but i1 essary funds. windows opposite this grouping, expensive chintz revivified tI . Fireplace Redeemed Mrs. Shugart spent $9 .85 'on an- :!,o:~e~ir~'h~ ~~~~~u~;ntJbeteJ I .. Faced with the problem of a other m Irror. home-made but attractive boo' t+: .. badly proportioned fireplace, and Slip Covers for $1% case for $1.90. A mirror remov' ~itificale~f;lf}~;!~~ plan is simple in operation, ~~;~;!~~Two students at B~~iaylor Uni~~versity :~,< :.;~~~~~~;~~i~~ ,: w~J eager to achieve something out The divan and two upholstered from a chest and framed· for $1.', ..: .. M,'. Kanzler explained. are named Woodrow Wilson Wood. =;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:~ of the ordinary in the way of chairs were treated to new slip served to emphasize a charmir "Thousands of tour ists and others Both are sons of farmers, both arc I decoration, Mrs. Shugart decided covers at a cost of $12.00 for ma- view of a park and to remind a o n mirrors as offer ing the most terials, the work being done at untidy little daughter of her ar who travel extensively by au .omo- juniors, 20 years old, and both are in charm at the least expense, She home . . Other expenditures in the pearance. Chintz and bedspre< bil have experienced the need for studying for the ministry. first attacked the fi r eplace. living' r oom were for pictures, materials costs $4.97 and ache Announcement The mantel was-nigh and nar- ornaments, lampshades, a lamp, and a child's chair required ar ~i~ee r ~: ~~:c:~~~ i;"~ rO;o rt~:'e ~O:r~'h ;~~ ======row; Therefore, if it was to be- rug, a radiator cover and an end other $5.06. of necessary necessories," he con­ on Thursday eve- come an asset instead of a lia- table, amounting t o $14.48 . The decoration budget addE ~ i n ucd. "Oftentimes, when such WILLIAMS emergencies arise travelers fi nd REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE University of Delaware will ~'~ t e~ ~~~n 1I~~~ ~~~~ge~~e l~o~i~~fnjnchU~oa~~ WI~~hn~~ddbe~~ asi~~~~in~a~~~: ~~oa~g;~~l~~~s~h~s t~~r':~~l ~ themsclves lacking sufficient cash. "".\-. ',: and card across the top was removed and the dining room's particular prob- room transformation, the resu' "A Universa l emergency credit Properties of all kinds Delaware College for Men: 'I.' home 'on the River a panel of mirrored plate glass lem was a pair of necessary out in uplifting the spirits of t Cas llc. reaching to the ceiling was in- unattractive chests. Again a mir- family are out of all proportion ccrtificate will solve such financial SALE RENT Thc School of Agricullure problems. All that the traveler . A. ~it,~U ~~~~ N~~ : I __st_ a_ll_ed_ a_t _a_ co_s_t _o_f _$_42_._07_, _ M_r_s._ ro_r_s_e_em_ Ed_ in_d_ic_a_te_d_a_n_d_f_Or_ $_5_.8_5_ th_e_a_m_o_u_n_t _sh_e_ s_p_e_nt_. ___ nced do is to present his certificate A Complete Real Estate Service The School of Arts and Science The School of Engineering to a Ford dealer, and arrange for Property Management LOSS OF LIFE IS ONLY. necessary repairs or for purchase of Mortgage Money Mr: s~~~ t ~~.u~~r- necessary replacements or acces­ Thc Women's College for Women: PEDESTRIAN ICEBERG Architectural Servlcc Wllmmgton, who are sories. The dealel' Vl iII immediately A PART OF AUTO TOLL The School of Arts and Science obtain a u t h oriz~tiOi-, from the near- 24 Center SI. Newark, Del. 1{~;e l:h ~ ~~~:~;~: - FAT ALITIES HE serious effects of motor est Universal offi ce, and secur.: pay- The School of Home Economics I~ r a ll o n for appendl- accidents cannot be gauged by LETTUCE The School of Education T ;a~~:. i ;h: e ~~:~~l~ e l~r:,:y t';: e : o;;;~ t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;D;;;ia;;;;1 ;;;;82;;;;4;;;;1;;;;;;;;;~ Milition is much im- casualties alone, horrifying as these TOO HIGH are, J. C. Furnas reports in an pay us over a normal period." Send your appli cation and credentials in early for enrollment w. Peterman of New- IS GROWN Meets Growing Need article entitled, "Daily Occur­ THE this fall. Applicants fa I' admission whose applications and cre­ Mr. Kanzler said the new plan rence," in the August issue of dcntials are received after September 5th will be subject to an was developed to meet a growing BUS I N E SSM A PI additi onal payment of ten dollars. Applications and credentials Good Housekeeping Magazine. Fur­ - Being Adapted need of motor car travelers. Dangers Typical nas traces the disastrous after­ which fail to reach the Univers>ty before September 10th carmot effects of a collision between two ''Motor car travel is increasing To Four Ages automobiles in the lives of partici­ To Atlantic each year, bringing with it the n eed FARMER bc considered . pating persons who escaped with for this additional service for the Are Reported their lives. These include mental Seaboard Soil benefi t of car owners," he added. Freshman Week Begins September 14 disorder, shock, poverty, increased .___ "Our new Universal credit service dflman riJ 1 Analysis of the 12,500 pedestrian tax burdens due to the dependency That iceberg lettuce can be grown meets a demand which goes hand- For Catalogue and Information Call or Write: Safety Council re- fatalities and 275,000 pedestrian in- ~~~~re~s'1~~ilie:ff~i~:.e n ~~~k~d along the eastern seaboard bas been in-hand wi th long-di stance travel, MORE EFFICIENT and injuries on juries caused by automobiles in homes, fatherless families and all well established, according to L. whi ch this year is enjoying the Dean G. E. Dutton Dean Marjorie S. Golder and hi ghways are 1938 brings out a counterpart of the depression and mental anguish R. Detjen, horticulturist of the Uni- stimulus created by the two great FARM BUILDINGS Delaware College (for men) Women's College (for women) versity of Delaware School of Agri- fairs and the added attraction of Shakespeare's "Seven Ages of Man," ~~~;:n~a~~eof;:!~\~;\f~~~maa1: NEWARK, DELAWARE has come to stop th is according to a report issued r ecent- healthy individuals. culture. There remains the pro- the National Parks and other of the ECONOMY-As a buslncsaman the of life. Thc state and Iy by the Lumbermens Mutual "The cold statistics of motoring blcm of adapting varieties of let- nation's scenic wonders." ~~dnC~:~;~:~:,:~r:;~nnh~ . steps to do their Casualty Company of Chicago. death rates have shown marked im- ~~ ~~ i~ ~ ~~.C Ul arl Y suited to eastern Alvin Fl etc h~uil1 a yu teJ w~r;t~il~Ikf~~~~ ; ~:~ ~' -'New mus t do their part. There are "four ages of pedes- provement in the last eighteen One of the most promising is a Wash., traveled 52 miles a day, 180 GOOD PLANS ore a part of this good reason why we trians." Each has its typical dang- ~e~n~~'s ~:J ~n~n~~:;:rt~ d~!,C SF~~~~ new vari ety introduced last year days a year, to get to hjgh school n ew service. p Jans that have been is childhood, intent on play, states. "Human individuals, eaeh by plant breeders of the Federal and wi n his di ploma. tl::I~~~'a~~ob'lg~UN~es~nt8::~~1: l ~on~; n~ 1 t ~ ~CT:,~ ::c:~ e r~i r st tura! Experts 0 America. uwd Bureau of Plant Industry. It is our good, common inattentIve to passing vehicles ~ ~~n sh~f ~:h: ~~~~i~~~ ~il~~~hri~ t ~ GOOD MATERIALS ore also essen­ ~e drove or when we ChIldren accounted for 2,250 of the victims," the Imperia l 44. The strain origi- lizer on less fertile so ils or it will tial. EspeeiaUy such materials 88 pedestrian fatali ties. One of the most unfortun::1e natcd on the Pacific COIlSt where it not make heads of marketa'ble size. ~~~~~r~:::,.:: ~~~hris"~e~r;f:,; legendary mo nster de- Second, youth, inclined to "show Ithing s abo'!t accidents, Furnas goes usually makes heads too small to Two other vari eties that do well cut and sq u ared to exact lengths to meet market standards. in the east are Imperial 847, which tribute of 40000 lives orr" and take chances. More than on to s ~y, IS that they occur ""here ::'~t:'uUdina: cost. and material I' Makes Solid Head has many of the char acteristics of and a m i ll i o ~ perso ns 750 young perso~s between . lhe ::~m~~ ~ I;t~~ s ~~ti~ n~"a~: ~~r~~ GOOD WORKMANSHIP I. lnt­ year, we would fight agcs of 15 and 24 dIed on the streets Stop s igns al'e plainly set up at Under eastern conditions the Im- Imperial 44, and New York 12, thc portnnt ond good workmanship is perial 44 makes a slow growt h. As variety that has been grown in the eosy to get with these fme ACCU­ lives. Let us fi ght this last ycar. crossroads. Roadways are divided lo7 r ate pions and precision Weyer- because that is just what Middle Age Concentrates . g}aring white lines .. But driv.ers c o ~ a result it makes a solid head and East for several year s. Only year s is not pronc to "bolt" or go to seed- of growing iceberg lettuce in Dela­ t~~lJe~~uthcbW~nn~: ~h: e~~re~~ every year. Third, middle agc, concentrating t1l1ue to aJ,l? roach intersectIOns ~oo I and economical way. Come in and help In this fi ght by on affairs, sometimes forgetful of fast and rtv ~rs on crossroads, lDo a fault of many iettuce varieti es ware w il.l permit plant breeders to , let u s show you. • and consideration for hazards: B ~ca u se there. are m ~~~ :~eafnt~; s ;~ti~~~ !~er~l:u~r~~o~n: grown in Delaware. The n ew va- perfect varieti es that are particul­ road. pcoplc In th,s age group It accou S second gear. People will cross the riety, Mr. Dctjen points out, r e- arly adopted to our growing con­ highways re- fo r the largest number of those on glaring white line, swing ou t from quires a fertile soil or ample ferti- ditions, Mr. Detjen declares. E. Hollingsworth Coot who were killed by automo- behind other cars on hills and make J. Ihe Delawarc Safety bilcs-5,950. the curve too wide when they tur n. Ih al lraCT ic deaths in Fourth, old age, with diminished Drivers themselves ~u s t make the Company increaS ing. And sight and hearing, with slower mo- ~~~~p~~h';;d before It can be reali, STUDEBAKER Ihis at a rate that tions and reactions. In the group • Lumber, Coal, Fuel death toll, dc- over 64 years of age . there w~ r e ------Oil, Millwork, in cities and towns. 3,550 pedestrian fatalltu:s during J oe Wicni ewski of Detroit saved Real Estate of thc causes of 1938. . , $30 by yelling loudly when three Building Materials, CHAMPION Pcr 100.000 of our populatIOn 111 bandits attempted to hold him up. HOUSES-FARMS-LOTS Hardware, Paints, cross or enter each age group, 7 children, 4 youths. Glass, Fencing, Etc. without waili ng 9 middie-aged persons, and 21 eld- been developed by Lumbermens' FOR SALE-RENT Others pass crly peopJe were killed. A~to m ~ bil e Safety Co:n:nittee. ~ nd NEWARK, DE~AWARE curves, or without Must Remind Pedestrians dIs t rIb u te d to CIVIC offICi als LEASES DRAWN-RENTS COLLECTED they have time "The pedestr ian of every age must throughout the country. . Phone 507 line safe ly. Pedes- be reminded of its particular perilS:" . Crossing. the st;eet a.galnst ..th e Walk along the road- concludes J ames S. Kemper, presl- \tght at. Intersecttons, 1I1 a t te ntt~n , W. HARRY . . especia lly at night, dent of Lumbermens, "and tbe and cr?sslng the .street between m­ hard to see them . . . motorist must remember not to t~rs e cu o n s , partIcularly from ~ e - DAWSON I • • ' for a good sharc of take any pedestrian's actions for hmd parked ~a r s, are the great mlS­ 156 WEST MAIN STREET PHONE-20441 granted." P osters dealing with the takes for w h~ c h th o ~ sa ?d s of pedes­ ... N . of the most import- dangers faced by pedestrians have trl8ns pay WIth their Itves. A In Ih ese accid ents. ~hlCh could be hand- GILDA GAY By BERNARD BAILY o or 50 miles an hour UT your money on a winner. Become the proud al 60 or 70 miles pcr Gil~ ~s __ P owner of a beautiful, dollar-saving Studebaker Cham­ pion-the newest, finest, lowest price car that traveled coast-to-coast and back for 27~ miles per gallon average -the roomy, safe, easy-handling car that ran 15,000 • WI4£N AGIRl. &GlNS continuous miles in 14,5 11 minutes at Indianapolis TO TI-lINI{ TI-lAl Speedway. Buy this one and only Champion. Low down t;OM£ FELLOW Ie:. payment-easy C.I,T. terms. ALL TI-II:. WOR.LD TO Noon. HER., SHE. SOOVLD iAKE ATRlPA~D SE.£ MORE OF 111£ p. td. WORLD! J

P. M. DENNISON MOTOR COMPANY MAIN AND HAINES STREETS DIAL 4241 ~ur 'nle Newark Post. New&1'k. Delaware. 'nlunda,.. August 17, 1989 BROADWAY NOTABLES Farm Compulsion Threat "Tovarich" Play NAME PULLMAN CARS INNAT~ONTEST THE NE,*K POST • By EUOT JONES From New York ProJeuor oj Tramportat;on and Public VtlUtie" Next At Arden AUSING for a moment in Founded January 26, 1910, by the late Everett O. Johnaou StanJord Vniver.ity Ptheir feverish activities along An Independent Newspaper O~r present agricultural policy has price talls to eight cents, he can keep Production Translated Broadway, several well-known per- Published Every Thursday by the Newnrk Post, Inc. three principal teatures: (I) enor- the nine cents a pound he has bor- .onalities, all indispensa?l~ to. the Locally and IndependenUy Owned and Opel"atecl :::~~: ~~b:~d~~: ~~rf~~n;~;!i ;~~d~~rS~ ~ft~~' a(~o~~ g~~f;~I~~\ k~~~~ sth: FI'Olll French Is Story "Tllere's mOllY a sood 'Ime played on all, sporting world and the CIty s ntght and (3) tar _ pound). Of Exiled Russialls olelliddle." life, have joined in the latest game :f~b?:~AT'E ' 'EDiTOR ' ':::: ::::::::::::::::::::::.. C!!.AR~~I~l ~~~~~ reaching can - Th" inevitable result 01 this system, --- AUGUST of naming new Pullmlln Cllrs. It's all t r a lot I arm It the loan rate I et t I ' h . th t "Tova rich," the great comedy suc- part of a contest sp~n s or e d by the Telephone: Newark 4941 L ~I ~:i~ga tlno ~~~ th e gove rnment 51: let~O"~~d'I ~~ t~e cess of the New York stage and the 2B-]'ai ~~~:~e ~~~~7~ ' pullman Companr, with fr~~ roun~- Member of The Consolidated Drive tor County sack": and at the present time the moti on picture screen, will be the trip accommodations to elt ler t e Nowspaper National Advertising ~~ :~t~~ not e~ f~i ~e ~~~~~tt~r":1 ~:g3u ~;~,c~eo~r~~~; next production a t the Robin Hood Oak New York!lr San Francisco World's National Advertising Representative agriculture. of which lell below the loan rate. To Theatre, Arden. r ~ ~& 21-~: ~~~~d~~~8ss.· Fair as prizes. Walter Win- American Press Association With respect cut down its losses the government The brilliont and sophisticated ~ chell, famou s 225 West 39th St., New York City tosubsld ies.the is then tempted to take measures to comedy, translated from the French /1 22-Unlted States won the In· columnis t, who by Robert A. Sherwood, is the amus- Cup Race,. never overlooks Entered as second-class matter at Newark. Delawar' ~~~ a~: at~; ~~ ~~ ~~ e~hs~ ~~~~:' ~'¥~~sC~~I~'d~~~ ~~~~ ~ i8S1~lona l under Act of March 3. 1097. I e Ii era I gov- sumel·s. restricts exports, and encour- ing story ot two of the Russian a bet to rib his ern m e n t to ages the use of substi tutes. when nobility who are exiled from the l 23-Commodore Oliver Haz. . old pal, would f~c~ :a:e~s e~~~: a V;~:b~~'ird, and worst, leature 01 ~no ~~e.: ~~ ~ a!~j:c~dp;'~~t;~~ ~~~7: ~ 'ardPerrydled, 1819. ::a~e c~~s ~~~I~ mously. In the our agricultural policy is Its tendency Opening next Tuesday to tiif-Th e new United Stale. Bernie", because ~o~:;ng ~e:;s l ~~~ ~~g::~~~Yt~a~~ge~I~ ~d ~~~ ~~~~ ~~d ; ~~ through Saturday, August 26, the ~~~\8~8.lldlnq was he (Winche ll) We want and Invite communications, hut lhey must be signed by the writ­ proprlated $500,000,000 as a revolving show will present Prince Mikial and ~ "likes to ride er's name-not tor publication, bul for our Information and protection. fund lor the Federal Farm Board: =t';aei~~. :~13t';;,;~~s~ti~~0 ~~~t;~~ ar~d the Grand Duchess Ta tiana, youth- '. 2&-The city of New Orleans WALTER them both."(The and though the Beard eventually lost thus to burea ucratic re/timentation. iul, married, and preserving their was founded, 1718. .'fs~~~!~T.~ Pullman Compa- this money, la rgely as the res ult of Said Secretary Wallace in 1934: "It court manners in spite of their eco- ny hastens to as- Newark, Delaware, August 11, 1939 unsound loans, it made it last four we finally go all the way toward na- . . ~.() 26-Severe earthquake th de thei C IS tr cl years. During the early yea rs or th e tionallsm. It may be necessary to have nomiC clr~~~~~~a;~:sGarret ~ ia83~' damaqe tn.I,:,,~ f~~~el" t~a~etllC 1~lug ~f a a;aceh~~sc DEAR MR. ROOSEVELT - - - - . ~~~~~:d aa~m~~~~~~~~ a ;~e I:~~m;;:-: ~~:~~S~?PI~o;!~o : a~~,~~~k~~~ega~id The beginning of the play finds which was named for the Old Agricultural Adjustment Admlnistra- surplus quotas for every farmer lor the two in a garret and down to Maestro.) . I'm a little gid, just six year s old, hee, h ee I I like snow SCREEN ~eOc~I!~g ~~':,'; s~~;ce#e~!r~~ e YF:r~ every product for each month in th " their last hundred francs. From I th~~?m~f~ ' k;rt ~~~~r~~c~l~t~~'n ,hra~ ~ for C hristmas. I just KNOW thou sands of other little girls Board in lour years. And during the year." another boarder in the same fourth- himself wide open for a libel s uit like snow for Christmas, and boys, too. Wont you order t h e present fi scal year. though farm in· In making these remarks the Sec- rate hotel, they learn how to hunt SNAPS with hi s suggestion - "Insomnia." c..,me Is much above depression lev- retary was warning the country for work, and promptly do so, ap- Dan says he has nothing against date changed to just any day that s now happe ns to fall ? els, our agricul tural policy will cost ~~~ i ~S:s ~~t~ d:l~ g~[e~: ~:~~~:m~~io~i plying as maid and butler in the the Pullman people, but he remcm- Really Mr. Roos evelt, it" awfully important t hat you do this ~~iJ,r~=S:::-~r:b~~~ athb~I~~t~1 d;!~a~~ the danger, his poliCies since that household of Fernande and Charles By Snapper bel'S so well those nights wh ~ n he and s ince you have started changing anniversaries, why expenditures 01 the fed " al govern- date have carried the cour.try a long duPont, head of a bourgeoise French was covering the New York base- ment fo r all purposes In the prewar way in that direction. Moreover, un- f a mi~y . STATE THEATRE BRIEFS ball teams. Dan swears he traveled can't you do t his for ittie, bittsie me? pef~~ ' relation hetween Ul ese huge ~e:~I;~=k~':,';::'~~~ g~ea~~ ~e ~Ireea~~~~ They ·go under aliases with ref- • :~~~,~e~h,:d tll~~~efinn;.ill~~~ o~,i,~~ d!~ Sadie Zilch expenditures and the problem of to move even tarther In that direc- ernences signed by themselves as Friday and Saturday tions thut kept him awake - it was balancing the budget Is obvious. tlon. Though Secretary Wallace char- ;~: ~r;;~.e ~7.~mG~~~~ ~u~~:~~s ~~~ Readers, Spring may not be in the ri~a~rl~k~:. with a penchant for 'pm c­ Deal' Sir: As a bathing s uit manufacturer, representing ag~i~~ ISt~Cr~ngl~ ~~c\~ a~~e~t~~~~:t~;::' ~~t~~~~e~h~~~e ~9:: e~~~~~J~~~~e~c~,,::,: mad, merry adventure that ends air for you, but it is for the people Hizzonner, James J. Walker, for- an industry t h at employs thousands, I urge you to change The loans on staple agri cultural prod- for farmers. Wall ace's Farmer, ot with the spoiled children of the of Carvel. Andy Hardy has Spring mer mayor of New York, suggests the date of C hristmas from December 25 to July 4 . Think uc~ are Intended to promote storage ~~~ce~" ~~ \~"1~i;~r2~~S~~~v:al~I t~~! duPonts, Helene and Georges, tall- Fever! Again the delighttul Hardy the name "St. Timothy." When what it will do for m y business and the thousands of people : ~~ b:~:ul'a~~~t s~~~'!."; ·o~U~g~~~~lt~;a~ it the present voluntary AAA pro- ing in love with the maid and the Family with Lewis Stone as the queried for a reason, Jimmy just products Into the hands of the gov- gram does not work with respect to butler, and the parents begging to be judge, Mickey Rooney as Andy, fingered his green tie. employed in this great industry. ernment. These loans. it should be corn, larmers will get something that excused from making their high- Cecilia Parker as Marian, Fay Hold- J 0 v i a I Bill "'., .. Bathing s uits for C hristmas ! There's something origi­ realized, are not ordinary loan<. but will. "And that something-judging nesses work after discovering who en as Ma Hardy and Sara Haden as Corum. sports nal, except fot· r esidents of Miami, but you needn't worry I essentially sale contracts with per- ~:s~h:n~x~~[ti~~cl~~~~~:rr"mt~~ I~o~~h they are. Aunt Milly, is coming into our f~I~~~n~hho~he~ lr~~~~~~ ~h!hTo:~ll~~t:O o~e~~r~~:s~~ - will be ironclad compulsion Im- Important to the plot is the rep- midst these two days at this theatre. n a me' , B abe about votes in the s imple South, t h ey brag about voting nine cents a pound. It the price rises posed by the majority upon the ml- resentativ.e of Soviet Russia, Gor- This wlll be the lucky seventh Ruth" as a trib­ Democratic down there. to ten cents, the larmer can pay the norlty." otchenko, who torces the couple to Hardy hit. "Andy Hardy Gets ute to the Bam-

Far be it f rom me to s uggest som ething without giving I :~lle~~~~~t~~n~tcet~~ ~e~~~n~ ~~~ bU~b~r:';~~~ a lticl;~~~~~t~~i~I:?ulslo n ~~~~cs~h~~ici:>~~u~e l~! :~:~Chb~;~~ ~rti;: !:~~:~'t ;~!S ~:i~i!~tb;ieoc:~ ~~neo.~~~~es;~~~ ; you an idea to take the place of Chl'istmas on December 25. rr"'======:::;11 in trust to the Tsar, over to his of entp.rtainment in years. Bill says, and Since it's a birthday anniversary, why not ask them to ad- ] government. Mickey fell in love wjth his pret- riding in a car vance YOUI' own natal day celebration from January.30? Fairleigh As Duchess ty dramatics teacher in High school, Baanhe~ ~rgt~~ ]AlY!:'~ti':ihLy.I,

~~~~~av~Ospltal, Wilmington, on C 1 d People In , a en ar Weddings ot M:.re:~~ tr~~':!~"E . d;~:~~~ "Mind" Is Lesson.Sermon Newark Mr. and Mrs. ~H . Skinner, Jr., son, Newark, and Mr. Leonard B. For Chrislian Scientisls . ~~:~~~!;~::~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~GO~~~~~»!!~ W. Main Street, h ave returned after 4 Aucuri 15 Throuch 19 DAVIS-CORRELL Thompson , son of the late Mr and "Mi d" ill b h ~ T M spending several weeks with r ela.. 8: 5 p.m.-Ro?,ln Hood Th eatre, Miss Dorothy Correll, daugh ter of Mrs. William Thompson ot Henry n w . 0 t e lesson·sermon o arrY.. At. Fo. ur O'Clock Saturday tives in Lafayette, Indian a. :rrd~~l, Ge?rge and Marg. MI', a nd Mrs. J . A. Correll, South Clay. were married by the Very tO~ic at the FIrst Church of Christ. ~ set, E ngh sh Comedy on College Avenue, and Charles Davis, Rev. Hiram R. Bennett, dean ot the SCIentist, Park P lace and Van e I . , '''<. Mr. and Mrs. O. K . Strahorn, E. iit . Glasgow, were married Saturday Cathedral Church. Buren St., Wilmington, next Sun- Main Street, returned on Sunday ]'30 p m ur~dalr' ~uguri 171 !I fternoon at the M. E. Church in Mr. and Mrs. J ohn Simon, Wil- day morning. T he service starts at from a motor trip through New . Ii .- 0 onservat on Of. North East, Maryland. mington, attended the couple. II ')'clock D lfIemb~ of the ~ewa rk York. Tce, 55 W. MaIn St., F arm The brIde was given in marriagr After August 18, Mr. and Mrs., . ,. S. T. An evening ser- Scouts of Amenca, ac­ Mrs. Harold ~h. W. Delaware Hour. by her lather. The Reverend Rob- Thompson will be al home al 211 \ Ice IS scheduled lor Wednesday at bv Scout Master C. F:rvest Home celebration at ert Hodgson performed the cere- North DuPont Road Richardson ight O'clock. . spent the wpek end LOdge. Camp Rodnc:y. ~~~n::~ni~~~. 1 entertain at bridge a ~~~vl1~.1l Church, McClel!. m~nY;ecep ll on at the New Centl'al P'!;~~ bride is a grad~ate nmse of ======"'- (.£V Miss Mary Thomas and Fo a urday, August 19 Hotel In Elkton followed the wed- the Homeopa thic Hospital. MI'. Guo of l.ane Sara E. L~e rd Mr. Rich ard Thomas. S. College P' urth annual reunion ot 59th ding. and was a ttended by eighteen Thompso n is associated with the PUBLIC SALE ~~d De~~;;~wn~~:t ~r~/;ce~t Avenue, a ttended the New York a:oneer Infnntry Association friends and r elatives. DuP nt Company. World's Fair on Saturday. Fort Dlx, N. J. Following II short honeymoon in 10 confer degrees on g ~ 8'4" Au ust 22 Through 26 Wildwood, New Jersey, the couple At the gypsies' annua l bride mar- of furniture Mond ay night, Mrs. R bi Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Tomhave and . 0 Hood.. Theatre, movcd to their h ome in Glasgow. ket in Kraljevo, Yugoslavia, prices Shawmut Croft ~r:;-;;- O,,~l daughter, Lois Mae, South College Co ' ovarlch, French were exceedingly low this year whic h was accepted Avenue, r eturned h ome Tuesday TImedy on Stage. TIlOmpson·Thompson Parents of the prize 01 the lot at my house . Maid Etta Lum. ~ from Fergus Falls, Minnesota. "H lursday, AU!ust 24 In the Cathedral Church of St. slriking brunette, received 0~ 1 ~ /SDri'., ,lalll'" were served by the Miss Helen }If;;Ck. 26 Haines arvest Home a t.SI. John's John's the Divine. Wilmington, at , $6.40, while less attractive girls 147 Cleveland Avellue (Il mtnitt e~ SII'eet. spent last week end in Wash - ~in~r~hureh LeWIsville, Pa. 4:30 o'c1ock last Sunday afternoon, brought as little as $3.60. William L. Trycns Il nd Mrs. ington, D. C. Monday, August 28 al 1 o'clock P. M. , Grcenpl ate were guests at picniC of the Da ughters Miss Evelyn t<%'rell. 340 South 8:00 ~ii:'~-!:~f~~~ nL~:r~ ~n R~~~~ BUDGET ITEMS i . Chesapeake City. held College Avenue, is spending this September 8-9 SATURDAY, AUG. 19 with the Degree of Poca­ wee~ in Chevy ~ se, Md. Annual American Legion smd VINEGAR (loose) ...... gal. 20c HARRY GROSE, owner at port Herman last Thurs- MISS Thelma MoseYI Blenheim Legion Auxillary convention Bring your i ug Ontario, is visiting Miss Mar; at Rehoboth. LARGE SOUR PICKLES ... loose each 4e Terms Cash M. G, PINK SALMON ...... ,2 tall cans 25e India­ Hayes, 34 West Delaware Ave. Fall' John 1'. Kennelly J)o r otl l y~un u han. c e c~ep~~~:t~ ~~~~d ers HORMEL SPAM ... "...... ". 12 oz. elln 27e Ind .. rcturned to Newark Auotloneer MI'. Lawrence ~ son. W est Dela- at Fall' Hill, Md. AEROWAX FLOOR WAX . "...... , . . . .. , . . ... " .20c for n vi sit oC three weeks ware Ave .. has left Newark for his Saturday, September 30 CLICO (waterless cleaner) fO I' windows and paints . . .. 25e 0~------______~ parent s. 1111'. and Mrs. J. home in New Hampshire. Mr. wili- 10 a.m.-County 4-H Achieve. Kells Ave. The family son has r etired from the University ment Program-Wolf Hall this week in the P ocono of Delaware faculty. and Experimental F arm, Unl. RAUGHLEY'S MARKET PHONE 4371 MI'. Sam Arn~ West Delaware verslty ot Delaware. 132 E. MAIN PERRY'S Ave., is on a ca ~g trip to Maine. Masons Here Install New Atlantic Service Mr. a nd Mrs. Edward Pi rson Officers ; Cashel1 Master and son, Edward, Elkton Road are . Cor. Main & Chapel Sts. on a motor trip through Te~ne s - Oll'lcers of HIram Lodge. A. F. & see and Georgia. A. ~ .. we~e Installed Monday night PUBLIC SALE Call for and delivery ~ by ImmedIate P ast Master Jacob A. service Miss E lsie Wright. Orchard Road. Correll. D. Irving Cashell is the is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Benja- new master. Antiques and Furniture Phone 2942 ~ min F. P roud, New Bedford, Mass. O.t h e r officers installed are: Kim ble is vacationing <:"'l>-' Semor warden, Norbert J. Cashell' LUBRICATION and _===~~,h Have n, N. J. Dr. and Mrs. Walter Hullihen, 110 junior warden. E. Victor Arm~ Saturday, August 26 WASHING ~ South College Ave., are vacationing ~ trong ; secretary, Robert S. Gal- Edilh Counahr.n and Mr. III Eur ope. It.her; treasurer, J. Earl Daugherty; 1 O'CLOCK D. S. T. !l e nd~f~;e~.e r~~~I~sn ,o ~p~~~ The wedding of MISS Stone, d aughter of Mr. and Mrs R. E. Stone, Miss Lydia S~~, Kells Avenue. ;~ ~: ~~ ~::~~~ ' ::;'~~l P Ha~dl.Otf: ON EARL DICKEY PROPERTY with Mr. and Mrs. EllIott H eIghts. a nd Mr. E Wilson Worrall, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. ':ittuhrnhed .last. week ~rom a visit senior steward, Charles L. ~~~~; STANTON, DELAWARE --.,-'".. _-,,-" Kells Ave. Worrall, Ebenezer, will take place at four o'clock Saturday afternoon . er slstel , Mrs. WIlham Holton, j unior steward William G S. K~l e. Jr. . a recent m t~~eNev.:ark Ivl E Church,. w Ith . the Re~ . O. A. Bartley otficiatlllg. PIttsburgh, Pa. ~ and tyler. Joh~ Frazer. . mger. Bedroom suite, 3 beds complete, bureaus, dining chairs, bu/­ his aunts. the Misses Ida h ' brIde, who WIll b e gIven III m arrIage by her fa ther, will have Mr. and Mrs. William Clancy 18 Following the installation, there fet. rockers. linoleum, li ving-room suites. I·adios. gas stove, iron .R. T. Jones Kimble. is visiting his as. el maId of honor MISS Helen F . McCarns. The bridesmaids will be Ha ines Street, spent last Sund a~ at was a short entertainment. Refresh- kettles. electric lamps. Messl's. Wm. Lippincott MISS Margare t V. Hogan, Mrs. Ferris L eon Wharton, Mrs. J . Harry Gal- Radio Park, Pennsylvania. ments were served. Six Victorian chairs with arms, Wooltex rug, 6 mahogany ~uneral ~rector A, Engle Conrow, Jr., lagher. and Mrs. Hugh F . Gallagher. ~ dining chairs. white enamel breakfast set, Victorian love-seat, ...n oo "~ t o\\rn. N. J. Mr. J . Harry Gallagher, Wilmington, w ill be best m an. Ushers Miss Margaret Kn a ~er , Main St., Aush'aJian Farmers Hold set of al! wood chairs. antique Welsh cupboard, bar r oom chair, Upholstering ~ wiH be Mr. G. Donald Munger, Hol.1 y Oak, a nd Mr. Donald Gallagher, ~~~ta last week end m Boyertown. Soil Erosion Show Victorian chest of drawers. gl'ape h andles, twin m ahogany beds Roberts. Cooch 's Mr. Vernon Comley, and Mr. William Daniel Hol.I oway. Jr., all of Newark. . ~ , complete . and Repair Work oj All Kind...... I rork wo~~~ 's w;~ ~ . end at the A reception a t the Newark Country Club will follow the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Delp, K ells Ave., tr~~;m:~~n~:: all parts o~ Aus· Quantity of old glassware and china. Articles too numer ous by Experienced MechaniCl. • ~ Alter .a weddi n ~ trip. Mr . Worrall and his bride will be a t home here. are entertaining Mr. Delp's father soil erosion eXh jt~i~ o~~u:t~rc~ e:-:: to list. .~~:I~~~ Mr s . C. E. Rickabaugh M ISS Stone IS a grad.uate of the Women's College, University of Dela- trom Philadelphia. held in Sydney. Arranged by the FRANK C. DETWILER All Work Guaranteed are spending several ware, and ~r . Worrall IS a former fo~tball star at Newark High School Mrs. James D~and h er daught- new Soil Conservation Service, Terms Cash fri ends at P ottstown, and the Umversity of Delaware. He IS connected with lhe Union Park er. Mildred, West Main Street, re- whose slogan is "Farm the soil- R. A. O'NEAL, Auctioneer. ~to . P a, Motor Company. WIlmlllgton. turned home from Maine last Sun- I don't mine it," the exhibit included 122 West Main Street Cl ay Creek Crusaders' day. photographs illustrating that the Newark its rcgula r meeting naments at Cordova, Md., on Wed - Street, entertained at dessert-bridge Mr. a nd Mrs~. C Bl k I? est farming and grazing districts ,~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Phone 6221 of Ih/~:~~;to~,v~~~n~e~~ ne:r~y~nd Mrs. ~m J ohnson and onM::le:da: :I:~ ' and daughters, ~:~~esin S~~~~y a~eha:~:en~~~ l 'a~~: ~n~~~~~:o:~: e ::I:~~r~::sb::::si:: w~:C~ : h;~"~~~t"!;-'\\'o ll"'" , ... n , A! thUI . 185 S Chapel St, spent Ann and Margaret, of Orchard Road, Mi ss J a C'lUeli~rn es t 45 W t erosion was portrayed. Remedies ~ the week end at the World's :Fair, spent last week 10 New York Park P lace. returned h~me fr~:n suggested were checkerboard plow- dauihla wa s born to Mr. and New York. ~ . Baltimore last Sa turda ~n g. contour. plowtng and the plant- V4,£ATION £OSTS IlInicl Du HammelI on August . ~ Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Kalser and ~ y. 109 of the rI ght trees and grasses. should ineludc Ihe sma ll charge of 75e for each Sl00 MI SS H elen L . Carter. daugh ter of famlly, of E lsmere, visited Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. P . F . Pie and family, worth of AM ERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS t 9V Mr. an.d Mrs. Carl A. Carter. of Harvey HofTecker, E . Main Street, 313 West Main Street Jelt last Mon- Mr Dani lB . " ClIEQ~ ES, which yo u secure at Ihis Bank for the • Vaulhn Heavellow returned Lnceyvtlle, Po., has returned to het; on Sunday d ay for a two week ' ··t · 0 R d" e d ' oone, Nottmgham proteellon of your travel fund s. from the Wilmington home after a visit of two weeks . ~ c ity Maryland s VI SI 111 cean IC oa • IS spen mg a few weeks at It is a wise IlrCcn nlion to consider Hospita l. whe re he has with Mr. and Mrs. George D. Plum- Mr. W. H. Cunningham. E. Main ". amp Rodney. these ChCtftlcs nn iru.lis pcnsnlJlc patient for near ly three mer. Street, spent several d ays in New part of n lVcll·ordcrcd vacation. Estate of Henry Warner McNeal De . ceased. Notice is he reby given that t~ York this week. "f------BeCore you leava 11Ome, come into tlte Bank and Lcllel's Testamentary upon the Estate change tbe cash you planned to carry wilh vou iulo of Henry Warner McNeal late of While St~~~·, !~~~~ain~~w:~ ~'Ltn~eo ~ a~ ~ Dr. and Mrs. ~hur Dunlap. W. PRIVATE NUR ERY SCHOOL saie, spendahle Travelers Cheques. They cost 75e Clay C I'cck lIundred. deceased, were Wednesday. Main Street, are on a m otor trip to duly g r anted unto D aniel Raymond Re·Opening Wedne day, September for . eaeb $100. I'u.reltased nnd nrc issued in con. McNeal on the Third d ay of August ~ Canada. yewent denommallOns of SIO, $20, $50 and $100. A . D. 1939 and nil persons Indebted to Miss S ar ah E . Potts, E. Ma in ~ Under the personal direction and supervision of a thoroughly They nrc spendablo everywbere, nnd if the said deceased are requested to Street, and h er niece, Virginia MiI- Mrs J. P Cann, Orchard Road, make payments to the Executor with­ trained and competent graduate of Millersville (Pa.) Sta le Joet or 8tolen Q prompt r efund is mnde. out delay, and all pe rsons having de ... ler. of Marlborough Village, Pa .• entertained at bridge on Wednes­ l' nchers Collcge, with practical teaching experience. ma nds against the deceased are re­ have returned from a ten days' visit d ay evening. quired to eKhlblt. a nd present the same For Children from 2~ to 5 years old duly probated to Ul e saId Executor on with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kre- Mrs. Cyrus ~D ay, W. Main 01" before the Third day of August A . Mo nday through Friday-O to 11 :45 A. M. D. J940 or abide by the law tn this Street, is visiting rela tives in Frnnk- behalf. ;~:~chin D~l~aro ~th ~~~, s~~~\~~r~~t- Address ~ town, Va. ~ DIAL NEWARK 4644 John P . Canll, Attorney-at-law, Mr. Julian Price, W .. Ma in. Street, Rev. J . L. Nichols, Orchard Road, For details and information Newark Trust Company Citizens Bank B ldg., ~ has accepted a poslbon WIth the is visiting friends in Salisbury, Wilmington, Delaware l\ffiS. LEONARD FOSSETT Daniel Ra yr::.o nd McNea l Mrs. T. II:. Swan, E. Main Proctor and. Gamble Company m Md. 8-10-3t. Fnday for Daven- New York Clly. I ~ Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Executor. D~~~c~~n :'ni~l :~ ~ Mr. a nd Mr s.~ a r l es Lu.m and re~~e~o~~~;t~~t~~' ~t ~~inH~~:~: ======CLASSIFIED They will return to grandchIldren, Vernon. Dons, and I

Vice-President Garner- Fibremen Win bel' of the French Academy nnd portance. -r;:; Page 6) . therefore probably cannot do wrong, And the Intellectual springboard Park. Y u nsk? • BOOK there Is gravo dangel' that books tor such nn essay would be some- Will He Respond to Call (ConUnued From P age 6) SHELF will decline in importance until they thing like this: If the book Is not chuckle in replYll1g havc been getting walked. Cochran made a neat play become ordinary merchandise like th" only instrument at culture we had some of the . As Presidential Candidate? on Halkerd's dl'iv~ ofT the wall, It yOU arc interested in publishing all it's cracked up to be. For when wl.ne. or tobacco. The reason tor have today. certainly is is the most bccn perrnrmi llg at hold1l1g Tella at thIrd al1d Halkard or poetry or, better, both, by aU you get to be as famous as George thIS IS that there arc too many ImJjortnnt one. at Ih·st. Magglicone was sate at means examine EDWARD MOXON, Duhnmel. people come up and sny, book-sto!'es in France. So mnny in ______is SO (ill' down tho first and !ella scored when SheafTer PUBLISHER OF POETS. which has your-Les Civiliscs." Then, be- tact that they ar.en't any F innis h Gil.ls ki el'en listed. bookst o~es pegged WIde of the plate. Wolkovits just been released by Columbia Unl- cause Les Clvilises is tile book that longer. Why. 111 one ecllon o( 0 . R • B I the bu~illl'sS of bet- drove a between GrifTin versity Press. mode Claude Farrere famous, and Pm'is, it is estimated thut there is vel II SSlall 01'1 er 10h owl'vcr. !\1(.'adc, of and Cochran. Wilson replaced Mr. Moxon nourished in lhe 19th is obviously being confused with a bookstore or sorts for every two Two schoolgirls (rom lhe ham 1 t had th~ best per­ Taylor on the mound tor Newark, century. Himselt a poet of more YOUI' own "Civilisation" you just hundl'ed and forty inhabitants. at Tcrijoki, Finland, arc still leel­ , ot \I hieh was only ~~:~rs: lhe laUer supplanting Griffin in than passing ability. he had the good laugh it ofl' and go write an essay Obviously books arc not going to do ing the stinging reprimand I' ccived center. Wilson fanned Zak. Sch- fortune and judgment to publish about lhe "Weakness of Fame." any good if they arc distributed tor illegally crossing the Russian _rwr- erba was hit by a pitched ball. Tennyson, Browning. Elizabeth Bar- And the metaphysical axiom with like louves of brcad by unfeeling border. 'Ira), Down Janeczek slammed a long drive to rett, Harriet Martineau, Coventry which you begin the essay is this and unappI'eclOte handlers. Bock! While skiing ncat. the rl'Onti 1', n nnd Jnm(' ~ . ~eft centc!> but Cochnln ended lhe Plltmore, Shelley, Keats. Lamb, "Butchers arc ull rheumatic because Bock. to tile day when there were the girls decided to cross into thc II1n1l1g WIth a sensational catch. WOI'dsworth, Landor, K now Ie s, they eat too much meat-they have only two bookstores III Emope, , "rorbidden and mysterious land." per c~:ltih~,VI~~ i' ~d ~~,:~ Seven runs, four hits. one . Campbell, Leigh Hunt, and Southey. to fini sh up whut their customers when only one. haU o( one pe.r cent Arter skiing for some time on (01'- of th ei r mounts, Newark: Taylor strolled and tool< He read his own manuscripts. He have not bought." of lhe populalton could get mto a I . . ."". inl( tOO I·aces. second on Griffin's sacrifice. Shen!- was I'espected by the trade. He was And, it you will ,you may con- bookstore, but when booksellel's Ign SOI l, the gIrls 'Yl'ote thOll' Groh s. Charles Mc- fe r singled and took second when successful. And. when he died, he clude that the chief weakness of were booksellers and a levant bind- I names in Itll'gC letters on the snow. KIr k. and Ralph Ma~gl~Cone . tumbled a l'~lay as lert an estate of si.xte~n thousan.d literary fame is the necessity that ing with hand-tooled, vari-colorcd, Later a Russian plltrol found the tll'O being "bull ring" T ~ y 01 SCOI ed. Brooks filed out. pounds. Mr. Moxon s bIographer lS authors cat all thell' unsold books. calf insets was not treated as though names ,md notified the }'innish au­ hoir.mill' circuit. thJl'd, and Hubis' si ngle in the Harold G. Merriam, and we recom- In this country, the great weak- the insid s were o( very much im - thol'ities in Helsi nki 20 PCI' cent win­ lourth being the only hits garnered mend especially his chapter entitled ness of the book business, far so we . some "stnr" names, off his delivery. Conditions of Publishing Before are told by authors, is the lack or re- ,,-.-,-,'M -,o~,,~-,~,'{//,O~'~~-'-'-'~',-'~~O''-Y'~'''' O'~rAO~ Adams. 1rving An­ Scoreless until the nfth, the visi- 1830. tail outlets or, as they are quaintly," " ~ ~" " Arcaro. CHrroll Bier­ tors got to Mullin tor four hits and BOOK SHELF called. bookstores. When books are 'S Have Your Car Bel.-n.-shed ~~ Carbl·tt. Ruperta Do­ three runs to avert a shutout. Pat Just a short time ago the press as easy to buy as cigarettes, or maga- ;~ ~~ • .I-'7eOf'!.tlb llph ·Ecrard. Cha ri y Kurt­ Ryan opened with a single, Tibbitt of the country announced that zines 01' newspapers, then '\Ie may I' ~~ McCombs. Bobby Mer- stroBccl. and Willie Ryan doubled some men of science had succeeded expect the great untouched, Am eri- ~'. DENTS R EMOVED ~~ Nash, Sam Renick, them both home, but was cut down, in making tough meat tender by can public to pick up a book now 24-UOUR WRECKING SERVIOE ~~ , pm·ter Roberts. Ai- Pet I'son to Chalmers, when he at- simply bom barding it with one o( and then and become infected with ,~ , ' Gcorl(t' Seabo. Al tempted to reach third. those elusive rays which arc used some of the great id eas of western ~ BODIES AND FENDERS STRAIGHTENED A SPECIALTY ~~ F 'A, Smith. Charley DaVI S followed with a single. and to vitalize bread, cure colds, 01' civilization-then culture will be- S~ All Work Given Special Attention ,; after Gunthel' had been retired, open world lairs. This is n pleas- come rampant-and humanity will ' W ~rrcn Vnn THSSCI. R . ~! ~~ ick Wall, Jack Wes­ Conway to Hubis, lhe runnel' was ing enough prospect, especially, for become so happy. Distl'ibution" McELWEE'S PAINT SHOP '; WOD ir. Sonny Work­ chased a~ross by Gleasner's double. dentists. and butchers who can now that's what the book business needs. ! \~ Wl'l /!ht. NewpOl t topped Elmhurst, 3-1, In charge the best prIces for the worst Butm France? Well, accord1l1g to " ~~ Pl')" cent victories l ~~~ ~~~%s Pl~~~~h~n;er~~~o~~tw:~~ m~~other announcement and one a gentleman named Georges Du- ~ Dial 4351 New London Ave. Residence 2-0191 ~ whi le Kurtsing­ winners is lo w. Contmental topped the pack at the catch eIther the eyes or fanCIes of 111 ilie "Dcmon of Dela­ endfu~h o f the legulre~~ar sch edule,dMd1l1p WIth l 1~0 lllnallstlcm~e In~red edItors ~ It~'fuilcd had to do~1 ~h~a~m~cl~, ~w~h~O~b~y~ili~e~,~"~y~g~a~m~e~m~_ ~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~V~~~-.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'-~_~'~~~~~~~: even included. H~~on71~:en~;ra~~d fln~~~m~~~:~~el' s ' 7~~ll;;';I~~li~ac~n~~~t ~~~erfO~~~~nt~s~~ WI ll meet at Holloway Telrace how to make tough books easy to Thursday night. while Newport and r end. The scientists were headed Elmhurst will battle on Friday in by Lyman Bryson, and the work Garner Organization Claims the second games of the series. was done in his readabiUty labora­ tory. A Good S tart BOOK SHELF . ' ..-- ~.,;"' ,"" From Page 6) 461 Delegates on 1st Ballot to Zak who trapped Hollowny abTt~~c= 1 co n tlnaeb~a:, 0 a Sh~f/~~~0~7l1c~~:f~1I~oi~pi~~ ~~~~ second ror the final g;~~;:e;~ ~ g~ ~ ~ W~~~~s~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ jackete? books: one is ca.lIed Let run. one hit, one error. DALLAS, Texas. - John Nance and border states will !urnish Mr. Crlss'n.ss 3 0 1 t 3 Morgan. cOO 0 loMe Thmk, the other, WhIch Way Fourth Inning Garner, vice-president of the United Garner with 286, the chIef block of Cro s '< . ~ b 300101 Chal'rs.3b 3 I 1 I 3 America? They were written by , Baker si ngled and raced States, will go into the next Demo- which is represented by the 46 voter cralic nalional convention with over from Texas. The southwest and west- W.~~!r:;.~~ 3~ ~ ~ ~ ~~"t,~~~' f~ 3~ ~ I: g H. A. Overstreet and Lyman Bryson. when Kozelski's double Tlbbltl.rf 2 t 1 0 0 George, cf 3 1 t 2 t To us they are significant because roll ed through Sheaffer. 461 votes pledged to him. according ern states. without counting Califor­ )ja~;~, ~~ir ~ ~ ~ ~ ~O~~~Y.fb g t : O : they are the most effective (and HalkOI'd strolled to to E. B. Germany. cha irman of the nia. and taking but two of the farm 3 2 Sta te Democratic Executive commit- states. Nebraska and Wisconsin, will Wright. rf 3 1 1 0 0 readable) attempts yet made to gIve Magglicone whiffed. Hs'gton,rf 0 0 0 0 0 the average man the benefit of the tee and co-chairman of the Texas , scoring Baker Yi~~o~r 'I Gaar:;n~ro~ ;~~~~~[n~6\nVOt~f~ Totals 27J7lii!i Totats 289 102113 most scholarly opinion. True tol­ Zak fanned. Two Garner-for-President committee. forecast of 46t the 210 additional "We are convinced, from the del- votes indicated trom the states of El'rOl'S~cg'ri~m;~, ~t;:i~6s ' erance cannot be generated by dog- uge of pledges we have received at New York, Pennsylvania and Cali­ Holloway Terrace ..... 0 0 0 0 3 0 0-3 matlc and myoplc studies of critical the Dallas headquarters, that there fornia." declared Mr. Germany. The Continental ...... 2 7 0 0 0 0 x-9 events. Here~fo re ,the man in the is a genuine popular demand for the Gallup poll in the last three weeks e,r;~SnsolT~o~~ I';{: n~alV;: ~~~~\;ayE~~~: street, so-called, has been th~ victim nomination of Mr. Garner on the has printed definite forecasts ot pub­ race 3. Two-base hils : Gleasner. W. of the sweetest or loudest vOIce. Democratic ticket. This comes, 110t lic opinion from these three states. ~~~"e r~~tch(:'~org~.. teJ~''.'~k ~~~w~:; Mr. Bryson, for ex~ple,. in his from one section or group of states, which together have 19 percent of Mullin 3. W. Ryan 2. Davis 1. Double study about the confilct tn thIS but from the entire nation. From the total convention strength. These ptays: George to Hubls; Melvin to country between Communist, Fasc- Oregon and Vermont, and from polls show, assuming that the Presi­ ;:~~:rr~.veH01~~~~Y o~er~~~e s ~ . ~t~~!~· ist. and Democratic propagandas, THE NEWARK POST Georgia to the Southwest. we are dent wili not be a canqidate which bases: Peterso n. Hubis. Sheals. Sac- does not teU the reader that one is getting the most enthusiastic protes- is the only way that Democrats be­ tations of friendshi p and admiration lieving in the continuance of its tra­ ~W~e M~:\;ln Pf. tcB'~~is ~a s~. 'Rya~al\~ good and the others bad. .His ef­ for our stalwart Texas statesman. ditional party policies can think, that Wlid pitch: Davis. Innings pitched : fort has been to show what IS going "Mr. Garner's way ot thinking has Mr. Garner is the choice of over 50% Davis 2. W . Ryan 4 .. Time of game : on, why it is going on, and what The r e's a "4 S tar" s how going on every week in The captured the public imagination of at the Democrats in New York and 1.10. UmpIre : Sheaffer. the implications are. The reader the middle ground of America's Cal ifornia and of over 60 % of the Newark Pos t. Interesting news of p e ople you know ••• straight-thinking citizenry. U the Democrats of Pennsylvania. South S ides, Local Champtl, ~~ l p~~~~~~!O;n~i~~~~-;;-ft~~~ i~e~~~ politicians do not listen to the voice Out of these three states. two will In S tate S oftball Series cratic citizen. of vital local events · •• of the fine values offe r e d by of the people in 1940, 1 predict that give Mr. Garner a clear majority at The South Sides, undefeated win- Mr. Bryson . believes with Mr. the Democratic party as an organiza- the convention, the Texas leader advertisers in the Pos t! Every week y on can h e lp your. tion won't be worth shooting. 1 have pointed out. ners of both halves of the Newark John Stuart MIll that IS m ? r ~ Im­ heard many comments that the poli- "There is no question in my mind," Softball League. will engage a team portant that a man fo ll o~v hI S. tntel­ licians are going to pick the next declared MI'. Germany, "that the peo­ (rom Wilmington for the state lect to whatever conclUSIO ns It may self to e l1te rtuinme nt b y following this puper. Well. candidates ro r both the Democratic pIe of the United States have very crown Monday night at 6:30 o'clock, le ~ d . ,then that he chng to a t~ ue s tudie d e ditorials ••• c Olllme nts b y nutionully known and Republican par lies. My advice definite convictions on the coming D. S. T .. at Con tinental Field. _ opllllon to whIch he dId not t.htnk to them in both parties is to li sten presidential campaign. The principles A series is now under way in hl ~ ow~ way. So . if a man IS to to what the people are thinking. U involved weigh deeply on citizens writer • - • e ducational s tol'ies and f eatures · •• they'r e they don' t heed the deep longings of everywhere. They embrace Mr. Gar­ Wilmington to select the team to th1l1k hIS own way, It behooves some the mass of America's citizenry. they ner because he stands for a principle battle the South Sides for the o~e to see. t~ at . he gets lhe best all at y our finge r-tips in the Pos t! will be politically dead after the nexi that finds welcome reaction in every Championship. ~~:e:.or I~h~~~l~!u~~a~f c~~~~cr~~~~ election. 1 repeat: If the Democratic human being who worries and some- No runs, one ~Ii~~i;~~p~~t~:i~et~!~~~~~~~~t~~i~ ~ ~~:~~r;onders on the future of his Chicago firemen drained 15,000 ~:~:ria~~~i:~:dbe:I~~re~~~~~~u~~:~ the party of Jefferson and Jackson "Mr. Garner's nom ination by the gallons of water from a tank into that they be used! won't be worth the effort to put it Democrats of this country is inevita- which Thomas Salles was thought BOOK S HEL~ ' Q UALITY JOB PRINTING out of its mi se ry." ble. It is ordained in the hearts of the to have 'fallen while at work. Then To write an essay one hlUSt In outlining the strength that he I American people. and 1 view his Salles returned from lunch. needs have an axiom- a metaphysic- i grounded out. claims for the Texan. Mr. Germa~y nominat.ion and subsequent election al axiom-as a starting point or in- Over second caromed pointed out that out ot 1,100 votes m as certnm. with the present trend of tellectual sprmgboard. Georges Du- I curblllg and the Democratic convention, the south events." ~~=~Io~~~~h f~~e ~;e~s h~~Sr~~g w:~: hamel lS the author ?f a book-In crossed Cochran to.o k G . I A mhl the need of pass1l1g appropriatIons winter and sprmg. He charged that ?efense of Letters- lust published Printing Publishing Advertising n ___ ,._~.-.. iong fly for the thIrd ellel a sse y to retain the CCC camps and to the Republicans had been mconsls- m thIS coun~ry It l~ about books, 'V1'I"mwl. ·· runs. th" ee hItS, no errors ___ take care of the needed buildIng pro- tent 111 some malters and espectally theIr auth01 s. seilels, publishers, Sldlowskl now pltchmg . F P e 1) gram at the Edgewood Sanatonum S cakeI' Frank R Zebley as to a ClltlCS, and rea.ders. To say .the TeUa nabbed Weldm's (Continued rom ~g" .. and the F erns Industnal School p least. we were mterested In fact, the left field wall Burke fl oor leaders, as anothel npper. The need of mak1l1g the Dela- bl~ht o ~d Edge:o~d d sanator\u7' In Defense of Leiters IS a collection THE NE,,*K POST out Coch f d N McGUIgan saId that after p assage < e ouse a op e a reso Ulan of essays And each of these essays ~is n .ran an ne a at the other hlghway bIll some ma- ware unemployment compensahon allowing aUaches pay for Aug. I , seems to begin WIth a metaphysical ' 0 enol's: lority members of both branches laws conform WIth th~ l e ce~t a- anel the session Monday The aXIo m which puts to shame the Seve nth 11l11ln g . h ad told hIm they would not sup- me~dments to the fedela.1 soclal se- Senate dId not pay Its aUaches The s I'ln boards we used 111 the Tweed I'eplaced CataldI port any more "rippers" and de- curlty act and. of provldlllg lor ad- lIst of attaches were cut down for": M ~. A back home m New Eng­ Hendnckson went to elared he would like to know what dlhonal notarIes publtc )Vas also the sessIon Monday and under a land so many years ago Dial 4941 14-16 Thompson Lane Taylor returned to the h d h d theIr mmds He plead- stressed. resolution will be further cut down PaSSaic, DubIS replac- ~ c t~ng:h e Republican members "The Governor, m hi s character- tor the sessIOn later this month Take for example, his little four

Bhnd lek rep l ac:~ o~p~s~n dtheO~lll. fit to point out the short com~ ,ngs of taches totaled $905 Fame." It seems that fame is not n~h~_-~, K ~~kw~t~urgon took Bakelkft: s REImer~ ili~rE Benson ~n ~ctmalority Mdg~~lh~lmMnHh the 107lh General AsseMqrumbly. n~~Ben- ~~T~~~a~m~o~~~t:s~a~llto:w:~~H:o:u:se~a:~lpEa~g;e~e:ff~~~lO~n~0;n~th;e~"1w~e~~~n~e~~~~Of~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!~~~~!!!~ Taylor ranned Mag- fl oo~ P ' Ieader , replied he' and the son retorted to the Governor's mes- 81 RTH OF A SONG From ASCAP Files b~lo i~~I~'~~el:~i(~~e;O other Republican ';lembers i~. their sage. • I "Liebesfreud" By Joseph R. Fliesl.r and Paul Carruth one hit, no errors ~Clt~~ were "standmg on thell own "We ~~~:~e ~~":O ~I~o':::~ ole fit- ;:B:....y..:.;F..:.;ri.;.:tz:.....:..:K.;.:re:..:.:is:..:..I.:..:..r ______-, C t ldsl,ngled nnd went e~h te on the bIll was 10 to t1l1g and proper for him to clean hIS mnrlsRer..." un a a IS sacl'lfice Day- e va 11 i own doorstep" Mr Benson con- ~~enthl~d on Taylor's s~x l~ot~S: se~~~at~7.d ~;o!On . Re~ t1l1ued "Arter' attempt1l1g to barter, h,t, ~~C: ~~~lI'S fanned ~l~ltCan , was absent 111 the Senate trade and c o mpr ~ mlse , he and hIS Eig1Jth Inning and one Republican and two ~emo- ~~~o~~cr~a~~ a i~/~~~.~~/~~:.:I~~~~ 'K Dub is .o ut, Weldin to cralic members were absent m the which the Republican members have S i d~rgon . slllgied. Kozelski House. . endeavored to pass in order that the owskl was sa fe on Day- During the leisure hours ln the various institutions of this state Halkal'd si ngled and two Houses-and there were plenty could receive their necessary appro­ scored . when Newark's of them <.luring the Atternoon and priations. What made this same leg­ slow III returning the evening-the Democratic .Ieaners islation important now was as im­ wolked. Wolko- too k the opportunity to vO Ice op- portent then, when we first con­ Sco rlllg Halkard. position to the statements ~hat vened and the minority with the h' to Dayett. Four were submitted by Republican help of the executive, tormed a bloc · ~t~, one errol'. leaders. . reeking at partisan retaliation at the ~lc~ o ~C~ replaced Sheaf- In lhe House Representative Ben- expense of the people of this state. 1'w mlck went 111 fa I' son submitted a statement attack- "We are sorry for the Governor February 2nd, 1875~ and lived fr~m his BrC~ w~s ou t on an in- ing the state highway police as in- because we feel that his remarks earliest m.mories in a world of musIc. As a 00 S fil ed out to center . efTicient. arc ill advised and in decidedly poor boy h. played in a quartet made up ~f the out. No runs, no hItS, McGuig.n and Sylvester, in the taste, especially when h.e is .com- leading chemist of Vi.nna, the chIef of and his Ni Senate the minority floor leaders, pelled by those surroundmg hIm to · 'D nt~1 Inning held' the state police a!l an effl- make political capitol of needy and · ub, s ranned. Kurgon ~i~nt body of men. worthwhile legislation." flied out. Knapek 1 b 'tted a stale- Rctort From McGuigan Taylor fOI' the final Benson a .so ~u ;;~u se and criti- This dl'ew 0 flery retort from Mc- C o~r hits. n? en·01·S. ;::~i~tg, g~~e:~o; ~cM ulie n for state- Guigan. grou d an whIffed. Mc- . t he made in his message sent "I can·t understand why the ma- . No ru~s ed ~ 11t. Tweed :e~h: two Houses during the after- jority party s ~ ould harass the Gov- , no hIts, no errors. ernor." he sald. "You're having a order: noon. A ks Fdr Fund~ fine time passing ripper bills, why c\\'ark Go~e~~:' °Mc~ull e n asked the sling mud? Griffin. cf Ie islators to target partisan poli- "But I demand to know why :when Hendrickson. cf t ' g d to pass urgent legIslation. the other wolIare and appropl'latlon Sheaffer, 55 IC~ an ecinlly called nttention to bills were passed you did not Include Schnen, ss e esp the appropriations tor the FerrIs Brooks, rf Wolkovits. p Tweed, 2b ~~~~~:i~~~hoOI and th" Edgewood Asa compo•• r. Kr.isl.r made Int.nslv. No matt.r wh.r. may b •• performillSJ Weldin, 2b Sidlowskl, p Taylor, p, cI, P McGuigan chnrged that such at- .tudy and r.s.arch Io,to the works of old or vacatlonllllll. DI a memb.r of the Am.rican Burke, c Socl.ty of Compo•• rs Author. and Publi.h. Knnpck, p Wilson, P tacks on the Governor were un war- mast.r. In the librarl•• of France and Italy. Cochran, l! and mod•• tlv Introduced many of. his own era Kr.I.I.r'. copyrlllht.d compositions art Dnyett., Ib Score by Innings: R H E ranted. He denied the Governor or pr';tocted and made available to IIcellNcI o 4 0 24 22 2 any member of the House had been original compo.ltlona uncIer anclont'lOuncl- MCCormick, lb 1II1II pMudonym•. UIOfS of mu.lc. , Cataldi, 2b ::::~~ ~ ~ ~ ! ~ ! 0 0 0 =1 G 3 browbeaten lnto voUn, tor the bUll . Tbe Newark Post, Newark. Delaware. Thunda1. August 17, 1989 nevolence agencies as follOWS : National Missions (maintain­ Recesses ing work throughout the United PUPILS States and its territorial pos­ (Contlnu;-;;­ (continued From Page 1) 15 BABB AGO sessions), $2,200,127. M. Kelly chaplain 11l p~ U $1,000,000 Audit~rium for Indiana Univenity ville, was making faces at him from Foreign Missions (maintain­ In 1937 Ihe I' . held at Bethnn;u ~on .... l: ATTENDING the Republican side of the ohamber. ing missions in 16 foreign coun­ IN REVIEW tries) , $2,041,819. . tur.noul was nOliceab~ach Aurust 19, 191. Benton Murals to Nineteen House attaches had their Chl'istian Educatt,pn (promot­ OrT lC I'S were: Majo e SESSION official heads lopped off when the ing e d u cat ion a 1 work in p~'esid ent; MaioI' p' ~~ . Hang in Lobby payroll was reduced from 42 to 23 churches, schools, colleges and vIce pr sident, while l\ cum bents were OBITUARY in an economy move. theological seminaries), $473,- Officers were aU BLOOMINGTON, Ind ..•.A million 058. Jlannah Jane Rankin Bible Students Pen!ions (relief and pensions Bethany Beach lasl dollar audlt'lrium building complete· Attorneys' Messenger Walter Mur­ Died, Miss Hannah Jane Rankin phy, when he learned that payroll to ministers, missionaries and exceplton of Father near Kemblesville, Pa., on Monday, Iy equipped with every facility for Hear Talks By orders were 10 be issued to attach­ thcir dependentS), $152,400. succ~ecl ed by the August 17th. Funeral services will dramatics and the dance, concerts es, lelephoned the treasurer's office American Bible Society, $21 ,- DaVIS. be held from the residence of her Father And Son and radiO, an experimental tbeatre lo "I'emain open after hours so the 990. According 10 Mr sister, Louisa R. Nlvin on Thursday, and sceniC and costume desIgn, is Federal Council of Churches, than 1,000 members ' August 20, at 1 o'clock. Interment By Miss Emma. S. Maolar y state can meet some important obli· soon to be added to tbe campus of In­ $7,015. aU nd Ihe galherin in White Clay Cl'cck Cemetery. uiana University bere. Made possible Stanton, Aug. 16.-The Rev. David gotions." It did. The per capita giving of the predicls Ihe comill~ Crawford Rankin, a brother of by a state grant, tbe bulldiug was W. Baker, pastor of the Stanton Chul'ch during the year was the . l a r g~S l r union the deceased, is well-known in this designed by the New York arcbltec, M. E. Church, spoke at the morn- Senator Earl Sylvester, minority clatl on was formed. locality. tural firm of Eggers and Hlggills in ing service on Sunday, while in floor leader in the Upper Hous.e, lhe evening, his father, the Rev. endeavors to put on a good act tn Frank Howard assoolatlou with A. M. Strauss, ar­ chitect of Fort Wayne, Indiana. F rank Baker of Dagsboro, was the opposing Republican measures, but Frank H o w a l' d, Past Great Work on tbe building has already speaker. Rev. Frank Bakel' re- he's as far short of Rep. McGuigan ,., FRESH KILLED Sachem, I. O. R. M., aged 64 years, been started and It Is expected that mained over until Monday and ad- as a Singer's midget beside a giant. an inmate of the Red Men's Home ST EWI NG tbe structure will be completed by DesIg n of theatre building to be ready next spring on campus of Indiana dressed the group at the Daily Va- at Newark, died suddenly last the early spring of 1940. University at Bloomington, Ind. cation Bible School being eon- The Highway Art. almost came to Thursday morning. Tbe facilities provided are pri­ dueled at the church. There are grief in the Senate when a technic- Mr. Howard had bathed, shaved marily to encourage and stimulate I.heatres, by attracting first rate roa d laced by the architects was that of 10 pupils enrolled in the school, al slip-uP, concerning the third and and dressed early in the morning; student activities In the theatre and shows. wi ll make it possible tor un· designing tile main auditorium for a which will be continued all this fin al reading, almost took place. .Ch ickens _lIfj.... A latcr had walked to the postofficc, to provide the means for a sound dergruduates ",ho mlght. otberwlse variety of purposes. In its final de· week, closing on Friday. The Rev. But Senator Paul R. Rinard, WiI­ l'emarlling to friends with whom he technical training, SO that students be unable to see tbe best that the sign, the auditorium was pl\ll1ned so David Baker, is dean of the school. mington, wos on his toes, straight­ np 1.0 It, lb , has to offer, to enjoy the that It may be "fitted" to the size of conversed along the way that he who shOW a particular tbeatrlcal ap· theatr~ Other teachers assisting are: Mrs. ening out the situation before the was feeling badly. He had planned finest of legitimate plays right in the audience. For plays all an intl­ tltude can qualify for tbe profes· tbelr own backyard. mate scale, or for performances at- Jeannette Newcomb, Mrs. Anna unconstitutional cry was raised by Buy Your Meale to spend a vacation with his daugh­ sional tbeatre upon completion of tracting audiences up to 18'00 per- Leasure, Mrs. Ruth Robinson, Mrs. the Democrats. With Confidence ter in Wilmington, and was on his their coll ege courses. Thoma. Benton Murals In Lobby SOliS, a buge electrically operated Alma Lynam, and Mrs. Alma Ma- Ib 21c way 10 the Pennsylvania station at According to Lee Simonson, eml· curtaIn Is drawn across the audita· han. Dover's Capitol Theatre probably At A. & P. Over 4 1bs. Newark for Ihe 9.28 train when he nent tbeatre consultant who contrlb· Located on tbe termInus of Sev· rlum shutting off the rear nectlons. Judge Speakman has appointed didn't object to Monday's events. dropped dead in the walk from the uted many technical Ideas to the enth Street, tbe dominating axis at In Its entirety the main auditorium Ernest Lacey as a member of the Numerous members of both houses F ame to Dp. pot Road. IndIana UniversIty building, there the campus, the new auditorium will has a capacity of 4000 persons for Stanton School Board to fill the un- attended the movies during the 5- John Barr was waiting for Mr. has been no real theatre construc· form an Integral part of the group general assemblies, symphony can· expired term of Harold Boulden, hour evening recess, while the pat­ MILD CURED SMOKED Howard at the stile and ran to his tlon In thIs cour.try In the last ten 01 buildings planned tor the Imme­ certs, lectures, etc. deceased. C. E. McVey was also re- ronage was swelled further when assistance but found him dead. Mr. years except what has been done, diate future, including tho School of In addition to the maIn audIta· appOinted as of July 1. Present the rain forced the postponement of Howard's nose was broken by the and Is being done. by the unlversl· Fine Arts, the Open All' Theatre and rium, the building includes an "ex· members of the board include C. E. the Eastern Shore League ball game ties. With elaborate facilities being perlmental" theatre with a seating Ib lSc l aU. the new Business AdminIstration PICNICS McVey, W. Paul Wier, Clarence S. at Oriole Park. mado; available at colleges through· capacity of 350; this smalier theatre Funeral services were held from School building, now under can· Reed, and Ernest Lacey. Miss Lora 4· to 6 lb. average out the countrY, It Is his opinion that Is located directly adjacent to the the home of his sun-in-law, Wm. M. struction. Little, principal of the school. is Despite political differences and Ritchie, Wilmington, on Sunday. directors of the legitImate theater In the main lobby, at either end larger hall and permits the moving clerk. heated combats that take place in will continue to make greater use of of ali stage equipment wIthout dlf· Interment, Brandywine Cemetery, of whIch are two grea,t stalrcas~s Members of Diamond S tat e both houses, there's an air of good New Cellophane Package-Impl'Ovcrl with rites of the Red Men's Lodge. thesll theatres by booking tbelr road leading to the balcony of the audi­ ficulty from one stage to the other. Grange visited the World's Fair in fellowship in the present Legislat­ companIes as often as possible In A delegation from Newark attended torIum, the famous Indiana murals Tbere Is also a radio room with an New York on Saturday, leaving by ure. Rivals argue, then shake college audItoriums. This does not created several years ago by Thom· adjoining observation room, draft· Sunnyfield Ib the services. mean U,at a "Campus Circuit" Is to Ing rooms, scenIc paint shops, quar· special train which carried t he hands, laugh it off. Pleasant Auto Trip as Benton, wlll find a permanent Grangers from Delaware to the become a haven fo r road sbows. Col· bome. Painted originally by the MIs· ters for costume design Instruction, BACON Sliced pkg "Grange Day" at the Fair. Messrs. Morris Ewing, Delbert lege theatres are being built, and sourl muralist, as tbe State's only etc. In th e basement are located the H d T t ONE I>RICE-NONE HICHER! Smith and Walter Pennock have wtll exIst, he believes. because of rehearsal roO m s, band practice Miss Lor~ L ittle, prinCipal of the er es exhibit at the Chicago Century at Stanton School, has returned home returned home after a four hun­ the student activities they encour­ Progress Fair, the murals depict rooms. the music library for the dred mile molar trip which includ­ age and because they help to create school orchestras and the locker from a visit to the West Coast, hav- (Continued From Page 1) indiana's state history and progress. ing been away for two months. .' SPICED HAM Sliced ed the Eastern Shore of Maryland. new cultural opportunities on the One of the principal problems rooms. campus. Secondly, these campus While away, Mis Little visited her fat,. 613 pounds .of mIlk; W. L~vIS A. & P. POTATO SALAD pI. The trip was made in Mr. Emery brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and PhIPPS, TalleYVIlle, 29 Holstetns, EWUlg's machine, and the distance Mrs. Herman D. Little of Los An- 26.8 ~ound s of but~er fat, 638 poun.ds ONE PRICE-NONE HIGHER! was covered in one week. On their Washable House Lends HOME EDUCATION geles. Miss Little visited both the of mIlk; H. C. MItchell, Hockesstn, COD FILLETS Skinless Ib, return the party stopped at Better­ Itself to Decoration California and New York Fairs, and 24 Jerseys- ·26,6 pounds of butter BUTfERFISH Fresh 2 Ib s, ton, where they spent several days reported both .:~ •• >.>:..:.: J,.