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The Newark Post ==:aLUM N XXIV NEWARK, DELAWARE, THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1933 NUMBER 9 Town Election Next Tuesday, April 11th

HERMAN WOLLASTON "STORY OF KENNETT" AT LONGWOOD j BEER LEGAL IN 18 STATES Sincere expressions of appr~ by John T. HaU, recaUed as di- AFfER 14 .. YEAR LAPSE OPPOSESHENRY MOTE IN MIDDLE have greeted the announcement that rector of the 1931-32 Legion produc- "The Story of Kennett" has been tions. DISTRICT FOR COUNCILMAN selected as the 1933 pageant at Long- The cast of 300 will feature such Delaware Still Struggling With Control --- wood by the Kennett Square Ameri- familiar characters as Gilbert Potter, not be delivered much before break­ r Collins, Daniel Stoll and George Ferguson Auto- can Legion Post. Hundreds had re- Martha Deane, Sandy Flash, Betsy A large part of the country goes off Mayo · . quested this Chester County story Lavender, Deb Smith, the Fair- the near beer standard at 12.01 a. m., fast time. matically Elected as They H ave No Oppos.l1on production after enjoying the three thornes, Carsons, Falconers, Hal- local time, tomorrow. The 18 states in which beer becomes . " previous Longwood entertainments. 10weUs, Bartons, etc. In 18 states and the District of legal at 12.01 a. m., are Arizona, NewRrk town .Icctlon for ~ouncIl- trlct. H.e rm~n .WoUaston . has filed This historical story of Kennett June 22, 23, 24, are the announced Columbia sale of beer containing 3.2 California, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, men will be Iwl el 111 the Council rooms from this district and WIU oppose Square, written by Bayard Taylor, a dates at Longwood Gardens, the per cent alcohol by weight (4 per cent Kentucky, Maryland, Minnesota, Mis­ Tu esday, April 1.1, from 1.30 to . 5, to Henry Mo~e: , native of that town and Chester world-famed estate of Mr. and Mrs. by volume) becomes legal at that souri, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, elect three COllncIlmen a n~ Mayor f.or To be eligible to vote aU taxes must County's most famous author, is now P. S. du Pont. The fountain display time. New York, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsyl­ 1" 0 ),e3rs. J\layor CollIns, Daniel be paid to date by the freeholders of being prepared for pageant presenta· will again foUow the stage pageant. Brewers in some of those states vania, Washington and Wisconsin. Sloll, If nry Mote and. George F?r- the town, non-property owners may plan to deliver beer as soon as it be­ Delaware is still struggling with the n ======-===== comes legal. Others, ruling out jubi­ control situation, but Wilmington ex­ gu so r el fi~fl(!r/~~ II ~eC\:nl:e:::c:~ri~ vote, if the usual custom prevails, lee parties at midnight, say beer will pects to make sales. ~:~~~I'l~~~h wi ll b in the middle dis- by paying $1.10. Ki.pling and Hemingway­ Out of Fashion and In Fashion REV W E GUNBY REAPPOINTED Students of the University, Facu-lty,-story writers, Monday evening, April 10 NAVY PLANES SEARCH . . . TO NEWARK M. E. CHURCH andinvited others to wholisten may to bereadings intere stedby areDr. J.O. , at 7'0 c 1 oc k'sharp, In the Lounge, DELAWARE COAST FOR TRACE ·Sypherd from the foregoing short- Old College.

Fewer changes in ministerial-a-s---W-ilmington pastorates. St. Paul's OF AKRON SURVIVORS signments in Wi lmington Methodist Church, which had requested that the Boy Scouts of Newark Win Silver Plaque in Meet --- Epi sco pal Conference were made Mon- Rev. O. J. Collins, a .young n,tinister --- Ten Navy planes soared away from Iof sea and coastline yesterday, planes day by Bi shop Adna W. Leonard than of Marshallton, be aSSigned to Its pas- The first-aid troop of Newark Boy I The silver plaque was given by the the coast guard base at Ca~e May at from the Philadelphia Navy Yard and have been mad at any Conference torate, had its plea denied by Bishop sco.uts was awarded second place in Delaware Safety Council and was pre- 9 a. m. today to renew ~hel~ dogged the coast guard air station at Cape session in many decades, according to Leonard, after many protests had the First Central ~hurch, Wilmi.ng- ~ented by Wa.lter Dent Smith. T~e sear~h for traces of the 8lrShlp Akron May met with complete failure. They vetera n membe rs of Conference. been made against 1Il0ving Mr. Collins ton for the first-aid demonstration, Judges were picked from the first-aid and ItS crew. .. Altogether on ly sixty-two changes up so rapidly after a short member- competing with 36 troops. The 36 squad of the Bell Telephone Company. They headed southeast bent on con- criss-crossed ~ Wide expanse oft' the were mad e, one of which was t he ap- ship in Conference. troops were eliminated until the eight Members of the team are Kent Pres- centrating their eft'orts. in .t~e area of! New Jersey and Delaware coasts! be­ poin tment of the Rev. E . C. Hallman, Rev. W. E. Gunby, was ordered to teams remained, the Newark team . . . the Delaware and Virginia shores. tween Barnegat, N. J., and Winter formerl y of Denlon, Md ., to be super- return by the members of his congre- being one of the eight, and in the tOI~, captain, Donald Wilson, JUnior Coast guard officials said naval and Quarter Lightship, oft' the Maryland­ inlendent of Midd letown di strict to gation and was reappointed by the final meet Newark scored 293 points Wl'd'does, Robert Hancock and Neal coast guard vessels are cruising in Virginia boundary line but without succeed lhe Rev . Dr. John L. Johnson Bishop and is being congratulated by out of a possible 300. Smythe. strategic positions in this area to co- success. :~i:~E::~::!;;~;~~~:Jl~~:~ ~;i:::;'::'Pl~:n~l:'~::':: ~:: IAPRIL CONFERENCE OF NEWARK :~~;:~~~~~ggg~~; i:~~~s~i~~1~~:!.:~E:E to fly at a moment's notice in case of with brass and fabric were found by MRS. HASTINGS ADDRESSES LARGE I SCHOOL STAFF AND PARENTS em;~fl~~fi~'g hundreds of square miles ~:v~n~~~1/b~~~i!fs ~!l~~ oft' Beach Monday, April Tenth, at 3.15 P. M., School Auditorium; A . L· A ·1· H ld M . AUDIENCE.. AT MUSIC CLUB MEETING Mr. Burton Fowler, Headmaster Tower Hill, ' merlcan eglOn uXllary 0 s eetmg Guest Speaker At Home of Mrs. A. E. Tomhave Th e pu rpose of the Newark Junior Istanding of music will help to calm Mu sic Club was explained in g~et- your .judgment in t~lOse .things .which At the April meeting of the par- lattention to the parents meeting with The regular meeting of the Ameri- Week, to which all the organizations ings from Mrs. F lorence Hastings, pertain to the ~ractlCal Side of life. . ents and the Newark School Staff, Mr. the staft' on the tenth to ?ear Mr. can Legion Auxiliary met at the home in Newark \vill be invited to partici­ State JUlllor ou nsellor of the Dela- As the JUnior Club movement IS Fowler but also called speCial atten­ of Mrs. Arthur Tomhave on Monday, pate. ware Federation of Mu sic Clubs, be- new in our State, I wTtl make some Burton Fo_wler, Headmaster of ~e tion to a cordial invitation for every April 3, with a large attendance. fore a large audience in the Audi- explanations. The age Hihit of the Tower Hill School, Wilmington, will parent to visit the teacher of their Following the regular business, re- torium of the Newark High School Junior department is 25 years, for bt the guest speaker. In addition to child and confer on such problems as April has been designated as Child ports of committees, etc., the social last Thursday. when th.at age has. been reached, the Mr. Fowler's leadership in the Tower are of mutual interest and concern. Welfare month, Mrs. Paul D. Lovett committee for the month Mrs. Fran­ "Wh en you r Superintendent of Fede~at~o~ of MU SIC Clubs feels that Hill School, which is national in char- These cards carried the personal i3 chairman of the committee. Mrs. cis Lindell, Mrs. Paul Lovett and Schools informed us," Mrs. Hastings the . Ind~vldual c.ould be of greater acter, Mr. Fowler is also president of signatures of the superintendent of George Jones and the music chairman, Mrs. Arthur Tomhave, had entertain­ said "that he wa s wi lling to lend his service ~n. ~ Senior Cl~b. There are the Progressive Education Association schools and the home room teacher. Mrs. Leonard Rhodes, are working on ment and refreshments for the mern­ efforts in fo stering the Junior Club three . dlvlslo~s of thiS department, of the United States. Mr. Fowler's The letter to patrons of the school a program of singing, for Music bel'S. idea in Newark, my joy knew no Juv~n~le, JUnior and Young. Student saneness and soundness in education, follows: I ======- bound s. It scems to me to be a I MUSICians gr~ups . All that IS neces- and the great demands from all parts "Aprjl 6, 1933. great stride forwa rd in the develoP-j sary for ~ child to .become a member of the nation on his time, make his "To the Patrons of the School. ment of the mu sical life of your com- of a JUnior .Club I~ that he or s.he coming to the Newark School a "My dear friends : HUMORIST AND CARTOONIST ON muni ty, for wc know that thc musical be able to either s ~ng, .dance, recite splendid opportunity to all those "The Newark School cordially in­ fu ture of Am ri ca depends upon our or pla,Y upon a mUSICal Instl'llm~nt. vitally interested in the education of vites you to a ttend the Regular Meet­ young peo pl . Exhibitions of this w!e~l!esst~l~bi~ ma~~v:t~l of i~~~ldroe~ children. .. ing ?f the Staft' of the Sc~ool, Monday, FINAL UNIVERSITY HOUR PROGRAM Iype of coo peration assures Ine that . J y. g dh 1 y'GI cl b The splendid Interest of parents April 10, at 3:15 p. m., In the School the cu llural fate of our State is in Sible for a unlor ora or ee u, whose children attend the Newark ~uditorium. The concluding number on the Unl: teas. Then · suddenly "up came this good hands." an Orch~stra or a Band to federate School ought to find help in tHe "We would also greatly appreciate versity Hour program at the Univer- war," to use Captain Bairnsfather's as a JUnlo.r Club. message he has to bring. Past meet- you'r visiting the School, and especi- sity of Delaware will be an illustrated own expression. It gave him his real For sometim e I have been hearing May ~hls fine ~ork that has been ings of the Newark Staft' and parents, ally conferring with the teacher of lecture by the famous humorist and opportunity to do those comic strips of the fin e work being done by the started In .your midst prove to be .a mothers especially, have proven to be your child on any problem of mutual orchest ra of th · Newark High School cartoonist. Captain Bruce Bairns- of "Old Bill" for which he Is 80 fam­ real asset In the development of thiS not only very interesting, but very interest. Such visits help all concerned. father. His lecture will be given in ous. and I am happy in the .thought that it ~o st wonderful of all the arts-Mu- definitely helpful to see more clearly "The guest speaker at this meeting Mitchell Hall at the University of In his lecture "Laugh Through In­ Is taking part in your program today. SIC, th.e Flower of C~lture-so that and simply problems which otherwise will be Mr. Burton Fowler, Head­ Delaware on t he evening of Thursday, dia," to be delivered in Mitchell Hall, Juni orsl-Schoo ls and colleges arc your lives m~y be ennched an.d y~ur suggested an infinite maze of com- master of the Tower Hill School, who April 13, at 8 o'clock. Captain Bairnsfather exercises his in- aJlording you greater opportunities in scope of service extended. It IS ~th plexity. will have a message of challenge, in- Captain Bairnsfather was born in imitable art on the land of his birth. your mu sica l life than ever before. regret that I am unable to be With A special invitation was sent to terest, and inspiration. India. He went to the same school The lecture will be illustrated by a Teachers of ex peri ence are even plan­ you today and greet your personally, every parent with the pupil's March May we have the pleasure and honor Kipling attended and drew pictures series of slides, and at the end he ning for your Ici: ure time. Every­ ut I ~hall hope to see each a~d every report. This invitation not only called of your presence and help." all of the time. After a period in the will make, before his audience, a thing,points Lo a trucr world because one or you at our State JUnior Fed- army he began his career as cartoon- large-sized cartoon. you are to lead the way. May you eration Day to be held in· Wilming- ======c======­ ist by drawing pictures advertising Captain Bairnsfather's famous learn that lh kno wl edge and under- ton in May. Oratorical and Declamation Contest at Beecham's Pills. Later he did draw- play, "The Bitter Ole," has been wide­ ings for Sir Thomas Lipton and his ly presented both on stage and screen. Newark School Friday Afternoon and~vening Musical Comedy INJURED WHILE AT WORK Friday afternoon at 2.30 in the for this contest is not the pupils' own at Wesley Church Lewis Fell, of East Park Place, was Newark School auditorium the New -composition. The declamation contest Reappointed to Newark Church The Cornhuskcl's Orchestra, quite painfully injured Monday night by be­ Castle County High Schools will have is set for 7.30 p. m. in the Newark POP~lar over WDEL, will present a ing caught in machinery at the plant their selected pupils in oratory com- School auditorium. The evening ad­ IIlU slcal com edy at Wesley Church of the Delaware Wood Preserving Co., pete. The material for the contest in mission is fifteen and twenty-five McClellandsvi llc, De laware, Thursday, at Newport, where he is employed. the afternoon is orginial with the cents. The proceeds are used to pay Api'll 13th, slarling at 8 o'clock. The He exp.ec~s to . be able to return to pupils-the oration of his own com- the transportation of contestants and pubhc is cordially invited to attend work Within a few days. position. Each of the following schools the money for prizes. will be represented by two students: Superintendent Henry Snavely, of I?d all those who enjoy a clean eve-, ======Alexis I. du Pont; Claymont; New New Castle, is president of the Assa­ ntorng 's e.ntcrtainm, cnt should ~ot fa.il UNIVERSITY HOUR Castle; Delaware City; Middletown, ciation t his year and will preside at heal th orn hu skers In thiS conredl'. They have hundreds of radio LECTURER and Newark. both the afternoon and the evening hsU!ners and on thi s evening they will In the evening other represctatives contests. A very cordial invitation ill from the same schools wil compete in extended to all who are interested in i~~e nl special features in music and a Declamation Contest. The material this form of public education.

G. LEON row-ELL DIES WED ER n Y, APRIL 11 New Century Club Community Stores lI G. L on P O \~II, so n of MI'. and Dance, April 10th Now Members of Itls.. John Powell, ag d 38 years, died Better Stores, Inc. f O llhl~. home on W d neRday, April 5, The last dance of the series of I O"rng a lonK ilincRs. He had lived dances given by the New Century Club will be given April 10, in the C. B. Dean, manager of the Com­ a~and near l'WIll'l1 all of hi s life, Club HOllse. An orchestra from At­ munity Stores, Inc., announced today D ' all ndrd thr Ne wark schoo ls. that they are now affiliated with o:e'de his wife hr is surviv d by lantic City, which is on a short tour, and ;Iaughter, norothv, hi s mother will play. It is hoped that everybody Better Stores, Inc., which will give Geo ather, two hrothcrR, Harry and will make a special effort to attend. them a better opportunity to buy their Bet~.' and onl' ,i.t~ r , Mrs. Ernest "HAPPY WORKERS" MEET merchandise at lower prices and en­ The "Huppy Workers' " class of the able them to pass these on to the S;unerlll wi 11 be held on ~e l 'vi('(·s Methodist Episcopal Sunday School, general public for their benefit. P: ~ I day aft rlln"n from th funeral Mrs. Hermun W. Stradley, teacher, I n l e~r ! of H: T ..J ones, at 2 o'clock. will meet at the home of one of its Ever s ince the Community Stores E Cnren t WIll Iw in the N wal'k M. members, Miss Ruth Sinclair, 227 Or­ have been opened they have given . ernelery. chard Road, tomorrow evening, Fri­ outstanding values to their patrons. day, April 7, at 8 o'clock. Every mem­ ~i1e ~t;tatc;;-about to ber of the class is urged to be present. What a lot of people want to ~ize hor e racing, why not ze Clean.Up Day know is what medicine liquor 'l'htte the umber Racket. I======wiD replace on doctor's prescrip­ ...... , seem to be plenty of Wednesday, April 19 tions? REV. W. E. GUNBY ~"I' e writing them. Captain Bruce Brainsfather ~ Ii __ .___ _

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2 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE Thur. day, April 6, 1933 ' ] rooms, somewhat smaller corner chimney fire-places. There is a , _ ~ Thursday, 'S RRIES semi-enclosed stairway with walnut rail and newel posts, a great QUA' kitchen, with a large old tilting table, great wide batten and panel EASTBURN doors with old hardware and what I have never seen elsewhere, a [ By Francis A. Cooch Grandfather's clock in a built-in case bearing the name of "J. H. ======;1)" Jackson, Mill Creek Hundred, Delaware." Judge Conrad in "Old At the North Star Schoolhouse the Valley Road, which for a Delaware Clockmakers," a publication of the Historical Society of Delaware, tells of his knowledge of but two other clocks bearing distance of about two miles has followed a westerly direction from this name. Joseph H. Jackson lived at one time on a part of the Hockessin, makes a curve toward the South and passing Henry Mermaid Tavern farm about a mile away across country. He Mitchell's place descends long hill to the valley of Pike Creek. a bought a tract 'of fifteen acres on the Limestone Road April 1, which it follows all the way to Cochran's store on the Capitol 1817, which indicates the period. Trail, crossing and re-crossing the Creek a number of times on the way. On the walled terrace fronting the house are six or eight ~:--::-::~~:::~~~~::~------;;;--;;;;;;:~J Eastburn's Quarries are picturesquely located along the west large boxwood bushes and from one of the trees hangs an iron disk- - side of this road a few hundred yards south of where it crosses about twenty inches in diameter used in place of a farm bell. A FEA1'HER PICKING IN CHICKS mak er in poul try rai sin the concrete road that leads from Harmony School on the Lime­ piece of the wall of another building formerly a woQdshed nearby, Most hen flocks that do a lot of the cocker Is to other qu;;teR emOving stone Road to Milford Cross Roads and Newark. destroyed by fire some years ago, gives one some idea of the sub­ feather picking learn this bad habit as they ca ~ be distinguish:d n~ SOon stantial character of its construction. while they are chicks in the brooder most practi ca l answer t s the Horace Eastburn is one of those persons who are forever tell· house. Feather and toe picking in brooder hOllses. 0 crow~ ing you something that you should do. He should have been a The development of the great quarries in Pennsylvania, west· chicks is undoubtedly due to the ex­ During warm Spring d school master. Said he to me some months ago, "You ought to ern Maryland, the Shenandoah Valley and elsewhere, by modern treme artificial methods used in c h~ cks are o.ver-heated. O~'~~' hmany write a story about Eastburn's Quarries." Usually I prefer to methods, brought about the discontinuance·of operations of East. raising chicks. chicks, especiall y on sunny d eat~ follow my own leads, but the idea intrigued me until one day re­ burn's Quarries about thirty years ago, but the richness of the The main causes of picking in chick start picking. During wa aI's, "111 cently, following his repeated admonitions and my own urge, I farm land persists unto this day. flocks are crowding, large broods, the brood er should not b:m o :~eerathe; called on Joseph Eastburn, the last of his name to operate the over-heating, lack of roughage and t~e first week and ~ h o uld be lowe90 quarries, now nearly 86 years old, contemporary of Richard G. Of Joseph Eastburn, Sr., there are some interesting stories wire floors. 6 each wee k un til It gets to 70. red Buckingham, a relative who lives not far away. told. One of these is that on a certain occasion he heard of some Crowded conditions in the brooder other word s, harden off th '. In miseonduct on the part of a young man living in an adjoining farm house and very large flocks are prob­ gradually. . Aft I' they are fi:e ~:~k l Through Joseph Eastburn and his cousin, Horace Eastburn, ably the most common causes of pick­ old very li ttle heat is required 0 ks I have the following story. down the creek and inviting him into the office one evening, locked the door, took down a pair of dueling pistols and pointing to a ing. These conditions undoubtedly are heatin~ ~f ~hi c ~ s that are ~ro"~~' It must have been over one hundred and thirty years ago that the cause of coccidiosis. In fact, feathel s I apl dly IS a com lnon g David Eastburn, grandfather of Joseph Eastburn, emigrated from Bible on the table ordered him, obscenely, to read it. He kept his crowded conditions is the most trouble feather pi cking. cause of unwilling visitor there all night alternately threatening him and Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and settled in Delaware. For a time f drinking spirits between times. At daybreak he opened the door he lived near. Milltown and it was there that Joseph Eastburn, Sr., and bade the frightened guest to, "Get to h- out of here." I father of the present Joseph, was born. I~ may be that David assume that he did. New Jersey Milk Law Eastburn was attracted to Delaware by Elizabeth, sister of Abel Jeanes, the then owner of the farm where Joseph Eastburn lives I wonder what portion of scripture it was that Joseph East­ Declared Unconstitutional now. He married Elizabeth on December 3, 1801. burn, Sr., set before him. Was it the story of the fate of the sinful sons of Eli; of the sad end of the handsome Absolom or perhaps By declaring the New Jersey milk markets in New Jersey are open to David must have lived at Milltown for a number of years, for law unconstitutional, the attorney in 1812, his son Joseph, then a lad of ten years, took butter and of that tragedy which befel the "young man void of understand­ the world and anyone ca n sell milk general of that state has helped to t~ e r e. ~h e regular sanita ry regula. eggs from Milltown to Brandywine Springs for sale to the troops ing" as told by a worldly wise king in the seventh chapter of save for Delaware dairymen many Proverbs. tlOn s ~V111 ~ i~ force and the encamped there, despite the fact that the Eastburns were mem­ thousands of dollars which would CounCIl " which IS compo ed of dealers bers of the Society of Friends. On another occasion Oliver Eastburn, Horace's father, was have been needed to install the equip­ a~d dalr ~m e n Of. the Philadelphia Later David bought the farm, now Gn the concrete road near­ sent over by his grandmother with some cream and honey for his ment demanded to meet the sanitary mIlk terl'lto.ry, \\:111 expect just as by, adjoining that of his brother-in-law, probably drawn to it by Uncle Joseph, who thus addressed him: "So! she feeds you cream regulations of that law, declared C. I. gOOd. a qualI ty mIlk product as it is the limestone deposits of that section of the Hundred, which al­ Cohee of the Philadelphia Dairy pOSS ible to produce. and honey. I had to live on mush and milk. Have you had your Council, at a meeting held in Middle­ ready were being operated profitably by Abel Jeanes on his farm. breakfast?" "No," replied the boy. "Well sit down here and eat:" town last Friday evening at which . "T~e Supplee· Will s-Jones Company I S .gorng to need the te mpe rature f!. David Eastburn did not survive many years after he acquired The boy did as directed, but the moment he had finished, his Uncle over 226 dairymen of New Castle this property, dying in 1824 at the age of fifty-one years, leaving Joseph opened the door with, "Now get the h- out of here," which County attended. At this meeting, qUirement of 60 degrees milk at tbe a widow and fourteen children (the Eastburns have been a prolific which had been arranged by County M~. , Pl easan~ and Townse nd milk r ~ he did promptly. Cel vrng s.tatlons on April 1st," said family and given to twins), the eldest of whom was Joseph, Sr., Agricultural Agent Ed Willim, Jr., Mr. DaV IS of that company in his father of our Joseph and the fourth Isaac, grandfather of Horace Joseph Eastburn told me a pathetic story of the death of a and J. T. Plummer of the Inter-State small son, Morris, only three years old, who was crossing the foot tal.k. "To meet the competitive II. Eastburn. Samuel Eastburn, the eleventh child acquired the farm Milk Producers' Association of Phila­ qUirements and to help hold the mal. later and lived there until his death in 1906, at the advanced age bridge after his mother on March 8, 1871, fell into the creek and delphia, the temperature require­ ket for you dai rymen, our company was carried away by a spring freshet. After more than sixty-two ments of milk to be sold to the Sup­ of eighty-eight years. It is now owned by Thomas Dwyer. plee-Wills-Jones Company was ex­ must meet th e situation and ask for Elizabeth Jeanes Eastburn must have been a woman of years, there was a touching quaver in the father's voice as he told this requirement. " me. "I was at market," and "We found his body down stream, plained by H. D. Davis, production strength, courage and ability. Undaunted and against the advice manager of that company, and meth­ How to coo.1 mi lk economically 10 of family and friends; the youngest of her fourteen children but caught in the bushes." meet any requirements as to tempera. ods of cooling milk to meet the tem­ ture, was explained by Ray W, Car. six days old on the day of her husband's death; with the aid of Joseph Eastburn has attained nearly six years more than did perature requirements by Ray W. penter of the Uni ve r it I' of Maryland her eldest son Joseph', then' aged twenty-two (Isaac, the next son, his father; of his ten children only Elnora (Mrs. Nellie Wollaston) Carpenter of the University of Mary­ Mr. Ca rpenter has been testing min was b1:lt seventeen), she undertook the management of the mort­ and Jethro D. remain with him. Mrs. Eastburn died some years land, College Park, Maryland. cooling cabin ts at hi s offices in Cili. gaged farm and of the quarries opened by her husband, whom ago. Still he carries on. The quarries are over-grown with bushes Mr. Cohee, in his talk, stated that lege Park. Hi ~ talk wa s based onth! she survived forty years, dying in 1864, leaving a comfortable and large trees; the kilns are out of repair, but like the great barn, on account of th l'! ruling made by the results of th ese tests, which covelld estate free of debt. the Mansion and other buildings, they still stand as monuments New Jersey attorney general yester­ milk coo ling co nditions as found 01 day, there would be no enforcement the Eastern Shore of Maryland am From now on our interest is in the farm on which Joseph to the soundness of their orginial construction. Largely, nature of the New Jersey regulations as far Eastburn lives. He does not know who were the earlier owners of Delaware. He stated that the sum. has restored the beauty of the surroundings and Pike Creek as the inspections made by the Dairy mary of these expe riments would Ii! the farm, but thinks the family name was Black and that it was gently murmurs over the rifts as it has done for untold years past. Council were concerned. Apparently sent to an y dai ryman who wrote to this family who first opened the quarries. ======1 now, concluded his statement, the him for them. Abel Jeanes, the granduncle of Joseph Eastburn, was the first owner of whom Joseph has definite knowledge. Undoubtedly Abel Jeanes was possessed of force and ability. _Fifty Per Cent Reduction in The great barn built by him in 1832, for years said. to be the largest in Delaware, attests this and the successful development Delaware Automobile Fatalities of the quarries by him confirms the evidence, but unless he has ..-- ...... At the close of the fir st quarter of Ih e cannot see an auto mobile coming been slandered, he was a hard, a ruthless man. Tradition has it thi s year, the Delaware Saiety Coun- that he is pel'fec t.Iy safe in traffit that he was given to kidnapping free negroes and selling them into slavery down South. In any event, that was his reputation-in the cil' statistics indicate that a 60 per Many of these "tranic ostriches" an community and the colored people feared him because of it. cent production in Delaware's autO- I struck down ach year and, of cou r ~ , Exactly when Joseph Eastburn, Sr., left the maternal home Make sure mobile fatalities over the correspond- they have no one but themselves to I have not heard. It may have been after the death of his Uncle ing period of last year has been ac- blame. No moto rist wants to hit them Abel or at the time of his first marriage on New Year's Day 1835, comp li shed. Only 11 people have been but th e ave rage moto ri st does n~ for on that date he married Mary A. Whiteman, who died very killed on Delaware's highways and think the pedestrian will walk directly young leaving him one son and on May 6, 1837, he married Susan • byways as compared with 22 for the in front of hi s machi ne and by the co rresponding period of last year. time he rea li ze that that is e xact~ Pennock, by whom he had six children, of whom Joseph, the your fertilizer IS Six fatals were pedestrians and five what the "ostrich" is goi ng to do itu fourth child, is the present owner of this farm and who says that were passengers. Six were adults and too late fOl' him to sto p or turn asida his father bought the plecn eighty-five or ninety years ago. five were children. The automobile Spring howers wi ll bring the~_ negUlat: jon Whatever were the qualities of his father, Joseph Eastburn, fatalities by counties are as follows: "traffic os trichcs" ou t in droves. !I~ Sr., must have inherited much of the strength, force and ability New Castle County, six; Kent County, tori sts will do well to '''atch out for of the Jeanes. The quarries on both farms were brought to a high three; Sussex County, two. them. Don't give them credit for hal· state of development for that period. In addition to those opened well-balanced with Motori sts are asked to watch out ing mu ch nsc and yo u will be by Abel Jeanes and by his father David, he opened more. On the for the traffic ostri ch" during April ing them ve ry accu rate ly. By showers. The "traffic ostrich" is a their heads thc\' arc invit ing an David·Eastburn farm there were seven kilns; on the Jeanes farm pedestrian who buries hi s head under dent, bu t th e c~ l' ef ul motori t declin~ ten or twelve and here and there other members of the numerous his umbrella and then thinKS becau se the in vitation. family had one or more in operation, in order that all orders for burned limestone should be met promptly. The Eastburns acquired either the title in fee or the wood leave to large tracts of timber, from which they cut the wood used in the lime burning. The use of coal was unknown, certainly in the earlier days. Oxen were We Beat the Deutsch! used extensively for hauling the firewood and limestone both be­ fore and after burning, which was delivered as far south as Middletown and Chesapeake City and as far north as Lancaster, despite the fact that the latter place is in the heart of a limestone 10% territory. No wonder that the Eastburn farms became so rich and productive. • Of course in the earlier days the work of quarrying was done largely by hand labor. Dynamite was not invented until 1863 and both steam and compressed air power drills were unknown; they were troubled by water from the strong springs which they un­ covered and which at times flowed into the quarries faster than they could pump it out, but they persisted and despite every obstacle, quarried, burned and hauled their lime. POTASH The mansion is of brick and stone and the wagon shed of wood with a stone foundation, but all of the other buildings on this farm are of the native limestone and from a distance resemble a small village. To the east of Pike Creek stands the great barn erected by Abel Jeanes, one hundred and one years ago. Barring accident it should stand therc two hundred years more. Why Abel Jeanes It's Best for Delmarval built it across the creek and so far away from the othcr buildings is unexplained, but I conclude that it is so placed to be out of danger from the sparks from the many kilns. All of the other o. this headline doesn't reter buildings and the quarries are West of the Creek and according to the World War, or even to Joseph Eastburn were built by Abel Jeanes, except the wheel· N to an actual accomplishment, . wright shop, the office and storeroom and the wagon shed. That but to an event whlc" Is about to Two Good Rec ipe. take place. In a rew more yea rs is to say, the Mansion, the large double tenant house, once occu­ we will have caught up with Ger· Cream ru Haucr kraut : ~u~ pied by the help, now very much out of repair, the spring house many In our consnmptlon ot three lab I spoons sliced o nd~ed and the warehouse into which he re-built the grist mill burned by sauerkraut. Her lead over us now nn rl four lahl ~8 po o n9 8b r~OD I the British or Hessians on their way from Cooch's Bridge to Is only about 16 ,0(X1 tons a year, gre D pep p l' In th ree tabl~S three fat until pal e yelloW. Ad ' Chadds Ford. This mill burning seems to have been a merry little and at the prp.sent rate ot tn· sDlOOtb creaso tn our co nsumption w.) tahtespco!IS fl our, ~nd sltl r Iy stI ~ habit of theirs. They had burned Thomas Cooch's mi11 earlier. All N. V. POTASH EXPORT MY., Inc. will beat th e Deutsch In anoth pr Add two cups mi lk 8 ow ' Sel' traces of the dam, mill race and forebay have long since disap­ coupl e or years! ring un til th ick and cream y, per peared, although the stone afterbay speaks plainly of the original BaItiaIore Trust Building, Baltimore III 193 1 w,' consumed 144 .001) ,0 00 se n to t.aslp wilh salt a n~e~~au4 use of the building. pounds ct ' tb ls delicacy, and last add two cups canned ~e r ve8 six. yca r ·tlr co nsum.tlon tncreased and h ~at t.horough ly Rauerk'l'owt: Although Joseph Eastburn thinks that Abel Jeanes built the to 154.COO.OOO pounds. Not. only ('crtled Rrrf anlt [ uerkllut house, I am inclined to the belief that his granduncle may have a.. r,. II. Cobb, R.pr••• ftt.t,v. are W I'! eatl ng sll1l crkraut now. l sc tw o 1'0 2 ra ns 0 saf corned built the north end and that the south end re-built in part and Md. lJut we are drinking sauerkraut and one 12·.Hlncr caD 0 II or raised a story by Joseph in 1884 or 1885 is much older. ,., D.' •• rv., S.".bury, Juice because of Its hp. allhful . Put alte rnate ~~~~ rok e D It is substantially constructed, its heavy stone and brick walls Qualttles. The commercial can· sau erk raut anrt rc. rned baking dlsb. nlng Inrlustry has made this easy 111 large pi ces tn a 375'-OfeD stuccoed over. There is a huge fireplace in the l,iving room, a noble by supplying tiS with the best Oak In a m j d e rat e~ TblI mantel with double fluted columns at either side, each pair sur­ sauerkraut and sauerkraut juice tor about fir e e~ ~IDutes. mounted by a carved vase below the shelf and in the two north tn 8.lIIled form . se rves six persoDS. Thursday, April 6, 1933 THE NEWAU POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE ',3

A Special Demonstration 01 • .}~h Oh eA T HAT DEL I C IOU S 'p 'O'(;Q V -1~+ ~p{Q:~00~~ e ~ R obert F ulton ~~:~~!~ CO.ffee . ~~. .~~;: .. ~ WILL BE HELD IN EACH 0 F THE FOLLOWING STORES ' ~~~& ~ ~ SATURDAY, APRIL 8th ~ R. B. DAVIS S. L. CORNOG WM. P. WOLLASTON FREE COFFEE WILL BE SERVED From 9 A. M. to 9 P.M. A Pound 01 Rob~rt ,Fulton Collee Be Given A W'ay Absolutely EVERY HOUR IN EACH OF THESE STORES SURE TO COME IN AND REGISTER, NO OBLIGATIONS AND, AS AN EXTRA SPECIAL FEATURE A Large, Beautilul, Cut Plate Glass Mirror WILL BE AWARDED TO SOME LUCKY CUSTOMER IN EACH OF THESE STORES ATTHE CLOSE OF DEMONSTRATION

BE SURE TO ASK THE DEMONSTRATOR HOW YOUR Church, Sunday School or Organization CAN SECURE

ABSOLUTELY FREE

active military or naval service, and The payment of pensions to widows I Mor t' 0 M'lk R I' that the person be honorably dis- and children of deceased veterans of a orlum n 1 egu atIons HOUSE ISSUES SUMMARY charged, the Spanish-American War, including Adopted By the Industry New Rates Provided the Boxer rebellion or the Philippine insurrection, is authorized at approxi­ After several days of conference nrd and that all of t he conditions ON SLASHES IN VETERANS' RATES A rebuttable presumption of sound- mately 50 per cent of the rates now held in Philadelphia with the distrib­ must be kept on the same high stand­ provided for such persons, that is, $15 utors of milk in the Philadelphia Milk ard as heretofore. Comparison on Rates ~~~~ol~~~~Pio:~h~~e d!~~t:e~~~ddu!.~ This program by no means prohib­ Of Veterans' Benefits ing peacetime for a period of six ~~~e ~~~t~hi~~~e~. widow, with allow- Shed, the Inter-State Milk Producers' its the necessary r eplacement of bad Wartime servIce - connected months or more. Must Show Evidence Association was able to obtain from or worn-out equipment, such as milk disability payments under Presi­ The rates of pension payable are Regulation No.2 contains the pro- t he distributors an agreement for a cans and minor equipment. The same dent Roosevelt's executive order 10 per cent-$6; 25 per cent-$12; visions relative to the filing of claims, moratorium on all milk regulations in conditions may also apply in connec­ cutting veteran benefits com­ 50 per cent-$18; 75 pel' cent-$24; the making of awards, the discon- the Philadelphia Milk Shed that in­ tion with some of the equipment in pared with former monthly rates 100 per cent-$30. If the disabled tinuance of payments and the review volved the expenditure of additional use by distributors. . are as follows: person has suffered an anatomical loss of claims. money at this time. This program is There is no disposition to lay down Disability New Old or the lo ss of the use of one foot or The provisions of this regulation to be extended until January 1st, on the matter of producing a quality Per!!entage Rates Rates one hand 01' one eye, the rate pro- are substantially in accord with the 1934, providing we cal! get the Boards product. The same high grade must 10 $ 8.00 $ 10.00 vided is increased by 10. Special rates exisiting practices, except that it is of Health in the different states to be maintained as has been the case 25 20.00 25.00 are provided for the most seriously specifically provided that if after call­ agree to the same and that they apply heretofore. 50 40.00 50.00 disabled at 50 per cent of the rate ing for evidence in any claim such the same moratorium on the milk The Inter-State Milk Producers' 75 60.00 75.00 plants, that is, as far as expenditure Association is now arranging to get 100 80.00 100.00 :~fl~~ee: ~~rc:h~e::~~cJ~ee; i~f :;: evidence is not received within six of money is concerned, but with the in touch with the various Boards of time service. months 01' excuse offered for non­ There were four rates under compliance with the call that the distinct understanding that the qual­ Health in its territory and to en­ the forme I' system for allow­ Payment of pensions to the widow, claim shall thereafter be b~rred;' also, ity of t he milk produced must be deavor to have them agree to this pro­ ances for non service-connected child or children or dependent mother that where a claim is appealed and maintained at its present high stand- gram of procedure. disabilities. The rates and 01' father, or any deceased person who decision rendered on the appeal dis­ monthly payments were 25 per died as a result of injury or disease in- allowing the claim, the claim cannot ======cent disabled, $12; 50 per cent, curred or aggravated in active mili- thereafter be reopened or allowed ex- Vegetable Patch BARBARA STANWYCK'S $18; 75 per cent, $24; and 100 per cent $40. ~~~~, °fs n:::~o:i~:~i.ce Tt~ri~.~t!ea~:; :~;er;:sonevi~e~c~a~~s ta:e ~~~m a:~ Found Economic FIRST Jb~MAJ~R~:g: LIFE Under the new regulations, t hese dependents are approximately official reports from the War 01' Navy I t his type of disability is limited ~~eP;;p~~dte~!st~~ :~!:: :~~h~~~~e~r!~ Department. Thousands at Pennsylvania State There have been prison pictures be- to t ho se permanently and totally wartime disabilities. (To Be Continued Next Week.) Farm Show Impressed by fore, but the Warner Bros. pict'ure, disabled, who would receive $20 a month. Part three authorizes payment of Garden's Values "Ladies They Talk About," starring pensions for nonservice connected MARCH, COLBERT TOGETHER Thousands of visitors at the recent Barbara Stanwyck, which comes to , 1 1 f disabilities and deaths of veterans of AGAIN IN FILM ROMANCE ~tate Farm Show in Harrisburg were the State Theatre on April 10 and 11, has suffedred th~ :n~tofmlca o~s 0 the Spanish-American War, including Impressed by the economic value of is the first to reveal life in the wom- both han s or 0 ot: eet or 0 one I the Boxer rebellion and the Philippine . "Tonight Is Ours," screen adapta- the family vegetable garden as pre- hand and one foot, or IS so ~elpless as insurrection, and-or the World War. tlOn of a play by Noel Coward who sented in the educational exhibit of en's section in all i'ts interesting to be in need of regular aId and at-.. authored "Private Lives," will b~ pre- the Pennsylvan'la St t Coli E phases. tendance, the total rate is $100. Cer- FIve ReqUIrements Are Set Forth sented at the State Theatre Friday tension Service. a e ege x- The priso n depicted in Barbara tain additional specific rates for thde The following requirements are set and Saturday, April 7 and 8. Fredric Penn State Ball Head cabbage Stanwyck's picture is t he San Quen- more seriously disabled are provide. forth: (1) Ninety days or more serv- March, winner of the award of the grown and stored on the college farm, Pensions to Widows, Children and ice; (2) Entry into t he service prior Academy of Motion Picture Arts and was an example of how well it pays tin penitentiary of Cali fornia. The Parents to the cessation of hostilities; (3) Sciences for t he best screen perform- to select the best varieties and to story presents the actual prison ex- Honorable discharge; (4) the exist- ance of 1932, and Claudette Colbert, store the surplus for winter use. periences of the co-author, Dorothy Payment of pension on the basis of ence of permanent and total disability, dark-eyed film beauty, have starring Actual harvesting and storing per- Mackaye, the actress who was sen- wartime rates is authorized for those and (5) that the disability not be the roles. iods for each vegetable were shown tenced to San Quentin after the mys- men who applied for enlistment or result of misconduct. "Toni ght Is Ours" is the second graphically on a large colored chart. terious death of her husband a few were drafted or called into the Na- As to veterans who served in the successive film in which March and With proper selection of varieties and years ago. tional Guard during the World War Boxer rebellion or t he Philippine in- Miss Colbert co-star. They played to- successive plantings, vegetables may The-technical advisor employed who and before being finally accepted for surrection, it is required that they gether in Cecil B. DeMille's spectacle be harvested fresh from the garden had also served time, was a woman service were injured in line of duty. must have actively participated there- of pagan Rome, "The Sign oj. the from early May to November. Raw of unusual intelligence, now married Pensions to widows, children and in to be entitled. In determining en- Cross," which is currently being vegetables then may be stored In a into a prominent family who under­ dependent parents of veterans who titlement under this part of the regu- shown at legitimate-show prices in barrel pit or other suitable place until took the task only on condition that died from disease or injuries incurred lation, it is not required that the large cities throughout the cou ntry. the following May. The surplus may her name could not be revealed. or aggravated in the line of duty. in ninety days period of service shall It is March's first role however since be canned for use during the entire In addition to its revelation of the active military or naval servICe have been completed before the cess a- he won the Academy ~ward t h ~ most year. priso n life, there is a stirring romance during the before specified war tion of hostilities. di stinguished honor which the movie Better provision of vegetable foods involving the infatuation of an evan­ periods, are authorized. The rates The l'ate of pension for those per- industry can pay one of its members. for the family may be had this year gelist for an attractive t hough hard adopted are those now provided under manently and totally disabled is $20 His work in "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. by following a well-prepared plan. boiled inmate, who had been sentenced existing law for the same class of de- per month. A pension of $6 per month Hyde" brought him the honor. Select a site on fertile Boil con- for a bank robbery. Miss Stanwyck p ndents of deceased World War to those Spanish-American veterans "Tonight Is Ours" tells the romance veniently located, but not infected appears in the bandit role with Pres- veterans. over th~ age of 62 yea~s is granted. between Mi ss Colbert cast as a young with disease. Manure applied liberallly ton S. Foster, as t he evangelist. Part two of this regulation author- Pensl.ons under thIs . part of the woman who has tos~ed aside the r e- this winter will become well rotted by Others in the cast include Lyle Tal- izes the payment of pensions to regul.atton cannot be paId to a~y un- sponsibilities of a kingdom for a fling planting time and will greatly Im- bot, Dorothy Burgess, Lillian Roth, former members of the military or marrIed person whose annual. Income at Pari, and March, a wealthy young prove the soil. , Maude Eburne, Harold Huber and naval service who incurred disability exceeds $1000 or to. . any !"arrte~ per- Parisian who insists on haring the One-quarter to one-half acre will Ruth Donnelly. in line of duty in the active mili~ry son or any pers?n WIth minor chIldren flin g. be sufficient for the average farm Carlton Miles is the co-author with or naval service other than during whose annual Income exceeds $2500. Alison Skipworth, of "Madame family. Planting in long rows will Mi ss Mackaye on the play which was wartime enlistments. In this class of This income provision, however, will Racketeer" and "Night !,fter Night" not only save much labor by allowing adapted for the screen by Sydney 't is required that t he disability not bar the payment of the $6 monthly fame, heads the supporting cast. Ar- horse or wheel-hoe CUltivation, but Sutherland and Brown Holmes. It ~:s~~nltracted or aggravated in line of pension to Spanish-American War thll~ Byron and Paul Cavanaugh have will make it easier to provide a suc- was directed by Howard Bretherton duty and without misconduct in the veterans over the age of 62 years. lcaellng roles. cession of crops. and William Keighley. - .

I ...... 1 or

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mE NEWAU POS1'. rlEWAU. DELA WAKE Th ur cl ay, April 6, 1933

.... < .. • - - ·-M------u-u-u--r ...~~X~~··· ...... --- .... ~.. x.~ ~' O;:~~:~~ .. 'O '-- ... ;~ PE The Newark Post (I Founded January 211 , 1910, by the late Enrett C. JolI_ Newark New Century Club News I ____.. _ .. _ .. _ .. ___.. _ ..___ .--. _____.. ____ .. _ .. _.-..i. Issued Every Thursday, at the Shop Called Kells ~ Newark, Delaware i By The Post Publlshinc Company. r f Miss Grace T. Brewer, Director Service Full line of i -- -~tered as second-daas matter at Newark, Delaware, Bureau for Foreign Born Speaks under Act of March 3, 1897. Make a'i-~~~:~n~,~~ea~d";3rk Poat. Mis Grace T. Brewer, Director of Mrs. James Hastings and Mrs. W. H. The Subscription price of this paper is $1.60 per year in advance. Service Bureau for Foreign Born, Evan expired thi year. Election to Sinlrl. copiea , cents. spoke before the Newark New Cen- fill these vacancies will occu r at 4 ______::.::.:::=..:..:~.::..:..::.:._:.....:...:..::... _____:-__:_-:_:__::_ tury Club on Monday afternoon. A p. m. at the Club House April 17. Kodaks W. wGnt Gnd invite commun1cGtiom, bul tlt.." mud b. "P" !Iv ~ number of important announcements A large number of r e ervations mt"", nGme--not for publ1cGtion, but fo,' our information 11M prohotiotl. were made. The next program will be have already been made for the Club in charge of the Library Committee Luncheon, April 20. Twenty-six with Professor W. O. Sypherd as guest have accepted so far and only H ,([oob Itoabs, 3JlOUJtrtt, 'arks. iltUtr &t~~lJl •• mrtt~: speaker. six have sent regrets. A number of Developing, Printing, Films W JrrtsJ. Air. t;U11sJ.tnt. anb .nrk for £utrUblJ~Y. Miss Brewer said that interest in cl ub members have reserved places for '/ '/ - ] the F or eign Born of Delaware was guests. Since only 140 places are -OUR MOTTO started by the Defense Council but available it will not be possible for all Q .J1 for the past six years the State of club members to be present. APRIL 6, 1933 Delaware has made an appropriation At t he .request o~ the Civics ~nd ======::::0:==,,=,,==:00:::==== for this work. The main purpose of ConservatIOn ~ommlt~ee a resolutIOn Rhodes Drug Store t he Bureau is to prevent injustice was passed mstructmg. the corre- LESS TAXES-NOT DIFFERENT TAXES and to help foreigners to become good spondl.ng secretary to ~Ite the To~vn I citizens. Problems of immigration CounCIl of Newark calling attention Newark, Delaware In addressing a group of citizens recently, Speaker O'Malley, naturalization and adjustment are to the inexpert trimming of trees of the Nebraska Legislature, e~pressed opposition to either a handled by the Bureau. There has which has occurred on College avenue sales tax or income tax, and said that new taxes cannot solve the been a decrease from 18000 to 16000 this past week and requesting that in foreign born in Delawa;e. ' the f1;1ture proper supervision be given problem-which is simply that of finding means to make neces- Miss Brewer said that her Bureau to thl~ work. . . sary, less taxes. r. . treats all information sought by the No.tlce of ~he natIonal antl-tuber- Tax shifting is by \Vay of' becoming the most popular legis- foreign born as confidential. If they culosls campaIgn ~as r~ad. T?,e slo­ President of Rebekah lative sport. Levies are taken off real estate-and put on Invest- did not, the foreign born would not gan of ~he campa.lgn WIll be, Fro~ M. E. :r a~tor Changes ments. Personal property taxes are reduced-and an additional u se the Bureau. Many problems re- ~hOJ? d ~~ ,~e get It and .to whom dId Assembly Visits In Wllmmgton District tax is placed against incomes or securities. The assessor sends lated to naturalization come up. "Any e gIve I.' Orpah Lodge a new and different blank-but the check that goes back is as person who is unwilling to bear arms Atten ~\O n was c!llled to the pro­ . The li s~ o~ ministerial assignmenl! large or larger than before. in defense of United States and any posed trIp to Washington, D. C. , du~- Mrs. Mabel Lewis, pre!lident of the In the Wllmmgton District is as 101. l ow~, changes being marked (.): blo o Rebekah Assembly of Delaware, and The principal difference between government and business person who has been under arrest ~n~ ~e c ~erry d r $5 ~~aso~.. ~IS Dlsston W. J acobs, Sup~rint.endent is this: Business estimates how much it may reasonably expect du.rin~ the five years previous to ap- c~~~es a~airr:~ e fa°:' t~ 'a~d lcfr~~ her staff of offic ers visited Orpah Re­ Wilmington . to take in during a given period, and governs what it spends plicatIOn fO.r. pape,~s can not ~e ac- Washington, bus fare for a trip bekah Lodge No. 12, I. O. O. F., Tues­ Asbury-Ivanhoe Willis. day evening and installed the follow­ accordingly Government estimateS' how much it wants to spend- cepted as cItIzens. Some applicants d W h' t d t M t Bell efont~-J. C. Steen, supply. • . .. are not sure whether they are in the aroun as mg on. an 0 Ou!! ing officers: Past Noble Grand, Mrs. and .t~en goe~ out ~o get the revenue .. As. a resul~, In a tIme of U. s. A. legally. Up until a few ears Vernon, lunch and dmner: The tt:aln Melissa Eisener; Noble Grand, Mrs. Brandywme-E. M. Shockle)'. ·Cookman- V, . R. Revelle. decllnmg natIonal Income, when bUSIness receSSlOn, unemploy- ago Port records were not ca:fully leaves at 9 o'clock. The t Ime has not Clara Potts; Vice-Grand, Mrs. Mary Eastlake-C. C. Harris. .ment and agricultural and, industrial distress, are at unprece- kept. Names were mi sspelled. All been announced. The p~blic is invi.ted Gibson; Secretary, Mrs. Evelyn ·Epworth- W. S. Grant. t his makes it difficult for foreigners to of thIS opportunJ:Y. dented levels, the budget ,is unbalanced, national and state in- ~~ke ~d~antage Stickley; Assistant Recording Secre­ Grace-B. M. Johns. debtedness continues to rise-and new avenues of taxation are to fill out their papers. The absurdity th ~ ':.tex~ec~s ~o c?op~r~~e ~th tary, Mrs. Mary Major; Warden, Mi ss Lydia Carter; Conductor, Mrs. Nor­ Harrison Street-J. W. Colona. being explored. .., . of th.e. long I~ s t of questions, many er:1 aC;:t D~~:a~ e F~~~~aOtion ~vh~~~ · Hillcrest-John Kelso. ma Thoma31 Chaplain, Mrs. Hilda We choose between tax reduction and natlOnal finanCial rum. repetitIOn, t!,~I!!g almo ~t a day to fill motto is "Ever CI b W S'- Kingswood-P. W. Spence. Reed; Musician, Mi ss Delena Leak; "The strikes" in many parts of the:country are indicative of the was crItICIsed. BIrth and mar- ing Club MadeJey-V. E. Rills. o~t Wo~an.~ T~~a~ofl o~n:g Right Suppor ter of the Noble Grand, I' age r ecords are often not songs will probably be sung at the McCabe-Alvin C. Goddard. way the wind is blowing. Unless office holders voluntarily find ~lear. Mrs. Edith Krapf; Left Supporter of Mt. SaJem-J. W. Jones. ways to reduce the burden of government, the people will take . Mrs. F . A. Whe~less, pr es l~ ent, pre- State Federation meeting at Wilming­ the Noble Grand, Mrs. Marion Dur­ Scott-J . W. Wootten. matters in their own hands' -and , force tax reduction down SIded at the bUSiness m eeting. The ton in May and at the General Fed- nail; Right Supporter of t he Vice­ Silverbrook-R. L. fink eI'. political t hroats club hostesses were Mr s. Wm. E. eration meeting at Richmond, Va.: Grand, Mrs. Anna Slack; Left Sup­ . Hayes, Mr s. F. Allyn Cooch and Mr s. "The State Song," "An Old Fashion · St. Paul' -To be supplied. porter of the Vice-Grand, Mrs. Grace G. D. Plummer. Garden," "The Bells of St. Mary's," Trinity-C. H. Hudson. Singles; Inside Guard, Mrs. Edith ·Union-T. J. Sardo An announcement was read fro 'Till We Meet Again," "Star Span- Mares; Outside Guard, Edward Stick- Legionnaires and Auxiliary Members Mrs. Anna L. Neale, president of the gled Banner ," "America the Beauti­ Corporation Board, that the term of ful," " Into t he Light" and "Hallelujah Mars; Outside Guard, Edward Stick- Bethel and Town Point-J. a Attend Banquet Given at Dover In . office on the Corporation Board of Chorus." ley. Very pleasing remarks were had Vaughn. Honor of National Auxiliary President from the President; Past Presidents, Brack-EX-R. H. Adam s, suppl,. Mrs. Marjorie Tucker,- Mrs. Julia ·Charlestown, Md . - (S up.) J. Douty and Mrs. Naomie Dawson; also Thornton. The dinner-dance given at t he Hotel due to the economic depression and All Y V g t bl PI t C t F '1 F d B'll Richardson in honor of Mrs. S. Alford that in her visits to auxiliaries all • ear e e a e 0 u s amI y 00 I S W. W. Douty, Grand Secretar y of t he Cherry Hill, Md.-J. R. Diehl. Blackburn, of Kentucky, National over the country she had found mem- Grand Lodge of Delaware, and P ast ·Chesapeake ity, Md.-O. P. President of the American Legion bel'S of the Legion Auxiliary as le!¥i- A 50xl00 foot all-year garden, "A plot of the garden must be Grand Master , J oseph Croes. The son. Auxiliary, was a most successful af- er s in the welfare work of their com- properly planned, planted and cared drawn before anything is planted, if President, Past Noble Grand and No- Chester-Beth I-S. B. Bradley. fail' a nd was attended by nearly 150 munities si nce they had been organ- for, will provide an ample supply of success is to be assured," warns Mr. ble Grand were presented with beau- Christiana-R. M. Green. member s of the American Legion and ized and had t rained t hemselves in vegetables for a famil y of five Willim. "Such a diagram should show tiful gifts by the chairman of the Claymont-E. W. McDowell. women of the auxiliary. this welfare work. t hroughout t he year at a cost covering the crops that are to be grown, t heir social committee. Following the in- Delaware City-H. M. Parki: Following the dinner meeting a The splendid record of the Ameri- fertilizer, seed and tools of from $10 exact location in the garden, the dis­ stallation a play was given called, Ebenezer-T. O. M. Wills. dance was given at the Maple Dale can Legion Auxiliary in its service to $14, according to County Agent Ed tance between r ows of different crops, "Henry Hires the Cook," with the Edge Moor-W. E. Fosnocht, Country Club. .. ~. \vork among the hospitalized men, In- Willim, Jr., of Newark. The value of and t he di stance . t he various 'plants following characters: Henry, Edward ply. After the dinner, Mrs. J . A. Erlich, jured in the World War, their de- the products f rom a garden of thilO are to be thinned out after they have Stickley; Della, his \vife, Evelyn Elk Neck Md.-G. V. Turner. of Dover , department president of pendent families and orphans of the size have been estimated to range developed. Stickley; Betty Bounce, the cook, De- Elkton, Md.-L. B. Morgan. Delaware, after extending greetings World War veterans was praised by from $50 to $60. A half-acr e farm lena Leak. Refreshments brought the Hocke sin and Cedars-C. E. on the part of Delaware to the na, her. garden will produce from $250 to $300 "In planning an all-year garden, re­ evening to a close. Holly Oak-J. E. Layton. tional president, introduced Mrs. W. Mrs. Blackburn arrived in WiI- worth of food. member that early maturing crops Hopewell, nld.-H. N. Bailey. N. Cann, of Wilmington, as toaetmis- mington Tuesday morning, coming ======such as spinach, radishes, lettuce, and PEOPLE'S COLUMN IvIIi !'~ ha llt o n-O. J. Collins. tress, who r esponded to Mrs. Erlich f rom Roanoke, Va. She was met by early cabbage will be harvested be- Mt. Lebanon·- P. W. Spence. tween July 1 and 15, and that t he Newark-W. E. Gunby. in her words of greeting, after which Mrs. J. C. Ehrlich, of Dover presi­ Potato Growers area they have occupied may then be Newark, Delaware, April 6, 1933. the Walter L. Fox Unit Glee Club dent of t he Department of D~laware, ew Castle-O. A. Bartley. sang. Mrs. William N. Cann, national com- Should Plant Certified planted \vi t h seeds of beets, carrots, Editor Newark Post. Newport-H. R. McDade. Mrs. Cann int roduced the follow- mi tteewoman from the Delaware De­ beans and other vegetable crops. Dear Sir: · North East, Md.-P. E. ing who gave greetings: Dr. R. F. partment, and a committee including Northern Seed When these crops have matured suffi- I want to thank you for the un- Perryville, rd.-Howard Corley, Lieutenant-Governor of Dela- Mrs. C. M. Dillon, Mrs. Kendall Port Depo it and Colora, If t he potato grower in New Castle ~~~~~I,y oi; :~:n!~ lla~~eYs t:~~ ~~r u ~~~ deserved complimentary note in your Tilghman Smilh. war e on behalf of Governor Buck; Davis, Mrs. Leslie M. Roe and Mrs. County expects to grow the greatest winter months. The late fall garden recent issue re to the part taken Col. John P. LeFevre, on behalf of L. B. Stayton. Red Li on-A. W. Strickland. number of bushels of potatoes per is just as impor tant as the early or by the undersigned in the show, Mayor Woodford, of Dover; George Those who attended the affair from Ri chardson Park-W. A. Ream acre, and in this way be able to reduce mid-summer planting, for much of its "Henry's Wedding," recently staged at D: Hill, on behalf of Col. Thomas W. Newark were: Mrs. Leonard Rhodes, Rising Sun, Md.- A. B. Frye. the acreage planted, it is advisable surplus can be put away for the cold the State Theatre under the auspices MIller, Department Commander of the Mrs. Paul Rhodes, Mrs. Paul Lovett, .St. George and Summit....J. that they plant certified northern weather days. of t he Veterans' of Foreign Wars. Sparklin. Delaware American Legion; Mrs. 'J : Mrs. Francis Lindell, Mrs. H . S. Ga­ grown seed instead of home grown E. Wheatley, president of the Depart- briel, Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Lewis, Mr. · St. J ohn ' - J. W. Prettyman. seed, state County Agent Ed Willim, . "The D ~l aware gardener w.ho d~- "Lawyer Brown" was only a part of ·Stanton-J. B. Dickerson. ment of Maryland Auxiliary; Miss and Mrs. Le~ Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Jr., in an announcement made today SIred help In the task of pla nning hIS "M It' I Sta" d f R bt ·Zion Circuit, Md.-C. R. Atkin!. Minnie Ivins, president of the Depart- H. N. Herbener, Mr. and Mrs. Orville to all potato growers in the upper plot to the best advantage will find a u Ip e I' compo s~ 0 O. I ahorn ment of New J ersey Auxiliary; Mrs. Little, Mr. and Mrs. J. Harvey Dickey. county. Demonstrations conducted on many practical suggestions in " Gar- St: , Guy ~ancock , MISS Werner, IN MEMO RIAM E. R. Beadle, president of the Depart­ farms in this county have shown that dens," a circular prepared by Mr. , MISS Leary, MI SS Mercer and every ment of P ennsylvania Auxiliary and OBITUARY certified seed has increased the yield Willim which may be obtained free of .member of that fine home talent In sad, IO\-1 ng memory of our : Mrs. Thomas Meany, national com­ as much as 22 to 68 bushels per acre charge from the Cou nty Agricultural galaxy. Ma ttie E. Porter, who departed mitteewoman from the Department of ALICE M. KENNELLY with an average of 41 bushels over a Agent. It con~ai~s recommendations I Thank!ng you for the ~ndl y inter­ life two year ago, April 3, 1931. P ennsylvania Auxiliary. Alice M. Kennelly, aged 87 years, three year period, stated the Agent. on the be.st va~letJes of vegetables for est man.lfested by ~our se,~ and your Oh how hard it wa s to part ,11th Musical selections wer e given by died at her home on S. Chapel street These demonstrations which were t gardens In thIS State, the amount. o.f newsy. little paper In. helping the V. But God always knows best. Mrs. Frank Hall Davis and the Wal­ on Saturday, April 1. carried on in cooperation with Lewis seed t~at should be planted,. fertlli- F. W. In the undertaking, I am, Som e day I hope to see her ter L. F ox Glee Club. She had been ill about two months. Clark, J. Howard Mitchell and Sons, ze rs, I~ se ct con.trol, compaTllon and Very truly yours, . Where we never part again. Mrs. Black burn was introduced by Besides her husband she is survived Wil on T. Pier son, J oseph Pierson, success.lOn cropplTl g ~ys tems and other Samuel J. SmIth, Sadly mi ssed by Mrs. Cann, who poi nted out that t he by a son, John, and a daughter, Mrs. F. Ed Hitchens, Horace Dennison, gardening problems. Department Commander, V. F . W. . lother, Dad, and Auxiliary wa indeed what its name Anna Battersby. Frank Dennison, and others, all of the implied, an Auxiliary to the Legion, Funeral services were held from Hockessin ar ea showed that the po- f oll owing out the Legion program and her residence on Tuesday morning tato grower could not afford to plant servi ng as the service organization of with Low Mass at St. J ohn's Church. other than certified seed. QUALITY + SERVICE =SATISFACTI ON I ...... ~~. the Legion. She aid the service and Interment was made at St. J ohn's ~~~~~~~il relief work had been greatly enlarged, Cemetery. "Cer tified seed this year," co nt.inues • t he Agent, "is almost as low in price WE DELIVER as ordinary table stock potatoes. With the cost of cer t ified seed and TRI·STATE STORE S non-certified seed about the same, the YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD MARKET grower would expect to dig at least WIARD PLOWS 25 to 40 bushels per acre more from the certified seed. This would mean The and Accessories that much extra profit per acre since Store it costs as much to plant and car e for To Buy L ~ials for~ 8, ~~=I an acre planted with non-certified seed as it does one planted with the Kellogg's Corn Flakes .. .. . 2 for 13c For General Cleaning Use Kan a certi fied ones. The most popular c ~ The Largest and Best Cl eanser on th mark t for the "All certified seed stock should car­ Pink Salmon ...... 2 tall cans 15c 28-ounce package. Use the same a any olhel' d L1e""'<': .' ,_ _ ry t he certified label or tag on the Happy Vale Cleans, Scours and Scrubs all Kitchen t: ten511~. original bag. The certification certifi­ Try this Lenten Special. Refrigerators, -Bathtubs and Wood Work. top in cate is issued by the college of agri­ Spinach ...... large can 15c package for only 5c. --- -.. ,- culture of the state in which the po­ Pop Eye says "eat spinach and get TRY OUR DELICIOUS HOME- tatoes are grown, after the potatoes strong." MADE POTATO ROLLS. have been fi eld inspected by r epresen­ Sauer Kraut ...... Iarge can 9c Lt>nten Special tat ives of the college and have passen Don't forget the frankfurters. Grated Cheese ...... 2 pkgs 9c the rigid r equirements set up for this New Contestl $2000 cash to acquaint Chipso. s mall size ...... 2 for llc certification. Certified potatoes f r om you with new coupons in Use hipso in your washer. New York, Maine, and the other Gold Medal F lour ...... 12-m bag 37c For a Clean Sweep -se--- A Complete Line of Wiard Plows New States, Prince Edward Island, Canada, Mi chigan, and other Tri-State Cigars ...... 2 for 5c Economy Brooms ...... 23c and accessories on hand for states are on sale in the county, and A good smoke at a low price. Remove All Grease in previous years have all yielded well Fancy California Prunes ... 2 Ibs. 17c Ammonia ...... Quart Bottle 10c immediate delivery here," concluded Mr. Willim. Tri-State Coffee ...... 27c Clean the windows and auto wind­ The new Tri-State coffee. shield. Let in all the unlight possible CARD OF THANKS An improved blend. Red Top Wlnd-O-Wa h ...... can 25c I wish to thank my neighbors, r e­ Blue Diamond Colfee ...... 21c - - Scrub every nook and corner Look over your implements and get replacement latives and friends for their many A good drink. Octagon Powder ...... pkg. 5c parts now. Don't wait-do it now! kindnes es for the use of their cars, Astor Colfee ...... 29c Scrub Brushes ...... 10c and for the fl oral offerings during my An old time favorite known by aU. Plee-Zing Complexion Soap .. bii'r5c r ecent bereavement. Happy Vale Sour Pickles . . qt. jar 15c Mrs. Alonza Lindell. Can be served any time. THOMAS A. POTTS Clean·Up Day Libby's A orted Fruits .. 8-oz un WM. MOORE THB HARtJWARB MAN OF NEWARK 2 for 13c Wednesday, April 19 Tri-State Flour ...... 12-", bag 25c s. Colle,e Ave., epp. P., NEWARK, DELAWARE I Thursday, April 6, 1933 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE 5 Mrs. T . . Enos, of Philadelphia, """""'PER ONA LS is spending sometime with her sister, Mr s. L onard Rhodes. , Gl'rht'r, (If Poll·town, P~ ., £. G. h hi furc well sermon m Mrs. Ma ry Chamber s and li ttle son .ill prfi~lcfS'; hrJ linn hurch (F r~­ and Mrs. J oseph Kelley and three It Takes A Smart TheY,oHall l. . '(·wn rk, Del., on AprIl children, Marie, J oseph and Paul, of ~t~:ti.3 0 p. 111. 1:;\,Nybod y welcome. Corner Ketch, spent Tuesday in New­ ark. ". Fnll]l'I'S lI ullihcn, of Vassar, )IJ ~:er of Or. nnt! lr: . W a lt~r Hul­ Miss E lsie Springer, of Wilming­ Spring Shoe daUg I . relurnrd to Va Sat after ton, spent the past week -end with her en Ie Bh ,. JIl ~ h e IISCD Orchestra in two interesting Ot her Selected Short Subjects Under better plants the Agent lists Thu,",la)' and Sa turday. Evening. 7 to 9 Programs at 9 :45 A. M. and 6 P. M. over WCA U. Owi ng to the Crowd Expected. there will be Three Shows Daily, nine practices as follows: (1) P roper Neurocalomet... H.a1th Service 5.00, 7.00 and 9.00 P. M., Wednesday and Thursday selection of eed bed site with good 4t W . Main Street Newark, 0 . 1. , Nnn:r;scoe ..____ ~ ______. ' so il and southern exposure: (2) Phone 421 t.Ij~~l'i~~~ _r~..!!!!!. ::=."-_ . .!!!!:!!!! I" '1!IiIIilIliI!'~ -- - . ,

THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE ThUI'Rday, April 6, 1933 • • , ~ ------•------Nrwnrk------§t4nn-l • Editor-in-Chief-Marylee Sl!huster Assistant Editor-Marjorie Jones Associate Editors-Members of the Journali m-=---:-- , Otnnllllee HOW SCHOOL LIFE TENDS ployment situation. During good the same time. Easter has been cele- hundred thousand was approved. THE BATTLE OF Deny, "don't YOU t~ TO DEVELOP CHARACTER times, when money was plentiful, brated since the early days oI the Burbank is one of a very few men LEXINGTON AND CONCORD fi shing trips lJefol'c? S I I'.e betn 0 AND PERSONALITY prices were hi gh, etc., many youths Christian Church. It is called the who have devoted their lives to the . ay, l1s, " ,. bl f t be ' f " d f The Concord marched 800 r ed coat- A fl ash of lightnin th .. ' h left schoo l to go to work. P oSltlOns mova e eas cause It is set on no work 0 creating new specIes an 0 ed British soldiers. The Americans Boom! Ban.,! '. Tru" I'tg , en, Boo " The school life oI any mo d ern hIg were plentiful. Then older men who certain date. It is determined by the improving the familiar ones. dB "'"' \\as da k blll school of today tends to create cer- needed their income to support their first Sunday after the first full moon Doris Smith. foun out the l'itish plan (on April no one would ha ve Illissed r ut tain elements in your character an,g families were fired because the alter the Vernal equinox, March 21st. 18) and sent two daring riders to less faces When the lhu~ dr ~~ color. per so nality. dash toward Concord and warn the out the end of Deny's se e rOWlied The most important element of the ~~~;;l~r a~~nmCoOr~I~~~k~~~ ;~:~ :~: Th~aCs~~~u::t:~~ ~~i~~r; o~o:~~~:~c~le_ THE My,sTERIOUS INTRUDER citizens along the way. The citizens got the lines the fish echo We for. school contributing to your character, t he crash, and since t he retail men brated days. Lent is the fast of 40 On the great desert stood a small hid along the way and overcame the catch, the sea-~ic lm ess tha~~l'a~'e~e to I think" is self-d?pendence. Through and the producers could get no sale days which ends in Easter. The first but roomy house. In here, n.ext a fi.re British troops. Before this happened creeping upon 1I~ and frant' \I S Owly the varlOu.s meetl1lgs of h?me roo~s for their products, they had to get day of Lent is Ash Wednesday, on place on an old broken rockmg chair, t~e British soldiers ~arched over the ed in the anchol:, Durin :~R l' P~I\. and committees .You a;e. gIVen privI- rid of many of their employees, due which day the custom of strewing sat Dena R~ed . On her lap wa~ a VIllage green of Lexmgton and warn- ment we di d not. see the g e eXcJt~ lell'es of expressmg opmlOns, .and the to no fault on the worker's art. Any ashes over the head is fan owed by small bab~ SIX months ol~. Gurglmg ed the Americans of a ~attIe. ing high r very seco nd,w~:e~i~row. rIght to vote ~n matters whIch con- person, in the present timePor in the so me people. Palm Sunday is the and laughmg was the ChIld, .but the Barbara BenedIct, Grade 8. see the oar that. Rli pped out. of ~ot cern you. In brIef, you a~e a m e mb~r future will have to be above the week before Easter and the churches y.o~mg mother was sad, worrIed, and -- b o~t and fl oater! away, but the h he of a student self-govermng body In 'I fl ' d t are decorated with palm leaves in f~lghte~ed. JU6t one year ag~ to- THE LABOR SITUATION wh Ich about a fo ul'th of a mil Sf ore which pupils are given control of dif- average c as~.o peop e In or er 0 celebration of the entry into J eru- nIght JIm, her husband, had va.mshe~. OF RAISING SUGAR CANE us. ~ e~ and Deny se ized two CO frtohlll ferent activities. secure a posItion... because there are salem. He had gone fO.r a stro.ll, leaVIn. g hIS I The Louisiana planter is confronted remammg oal's (fOI' Bob and I were N t t th d 1 t f If many people waltmg for everyone h f d hi t I e ex 0 e eve opmen a se - position, and it IS only reasonable to Edward Coach. I appy young ';"1 e rea mg! saymg e with an emergency in the farm labor a mos. para )lzed ), and pulled towa dependence come s the dc:-relopment ~f b lieve that the erson with the best -- would return m fifteen mmutes. Af- situation today. Sugar cane is a crop s~ore In a confUS Ion, We al\ gas ~ a sense of loyalty. ThIS loyalty IS e l'fi ' S bTt 'll APRIL ter one hour had gon~ by Della start- that requires a vast amount of hand SImultaneously when the angry \I' a~.ed first created through school spirit. i~at I cat~~.ns an h ~el~: i~1 m:;c~e . . ed out to look for him. In the past labor. The sugar plantation of the drQve us backward from Ou r goal s School spirit i ~ created by interesting Thaere~~:~ li~nis:; a~vice and belief Ap~II, IS the. 4th month of the year, forty-five minutes it had started to South were originally worked by shore! ,the sports foun~1 In . all schools. ~n? al~o th t '1 h Id make the most of contaml1lg thIrty days. It was the thunder along with lightning and slaves. Since the Civil War the labor How relieved and through prIde In the actiVItIes In a a pUPI s au second month of the Roman cn-lendar. heavy rain bl h" h D secure We felt which you take part. his or her school term, thus enabling The Latin word for April comes from I t th' t . ht h t pro em as, m successIVe stages, be- w en enny, oal' in hand, shouted The daily social contact with your themselves to face life squarely after one meaning "to open" The weather ' t~ 0 h e IS ormyd ~Ig IS e . we~, come more acute until at present it above the fury, "Let's not get afraidl" classmates also has the tendency to they leave their school days behind. all during April has ~iven an added WI ~ ~ ~w ar~unt t er. h n vamt~ e may be truthfully. characterized as Then, "We'll get through if we try create an element in your character. R. M. Brown. meaning and is sometimes a synonym ~:~l:~ ~he ~~er~f o~ a ~~wn o~~:' mil~~ the problem for whlc.h m~re than for hard enough," he added evenly. for fickleness .. any other, a solutIOn IS urgenj ly Bob sprang up and That is, the ease with which you can COMMITTEES ARE ACTIVE '. away. Searchmg partIes brought no needed that is to find a place for peo- third and last grasped the become better acquainted with the The .first day Of. April, as we all r esponse. At ~a.s t , after a mont~'s pIe to work. The labor conditions of seizin a bal'I' alar, I fo llowed h ~m by people of the world. - An observation of the accomplish- know, IS caned AprIl Fool. In France work the deCISion was made Jim t d It f th t" b g e stave that was In the ' Leo J. Laskaris, '10. ments of the committees of the New- the called it "April Fish." s 'f ' Wh ? W' n 0 ay resu rom e compe Itlon e- boat. I sprang to Denny's side the ark High School proves that they Yea, '35. ::e k~~':! orever. ere . e no tween the northern manufacturer and stronger one, and began to P;ddl have been very active. Here is a brief . , . the southern planter, and the planter Three oars and a ba rrel stav ' e. SCHOOL CHILDREN report: EASTER Tomght. Della s y?,ung mmd. related is unable frequently to attract and the wild and angry ocean I~ agaJnst HEAR MUSICALE 1. Journalism _ The journalism Easter is called "The Sunday of these"horrld facts. .If only JuI.1 were hold labor in the face of inducements as if we were movi ng fo~wardsee~ed On March 30, in the School Audi- 'tt 'd t' f th here, she kept saymg. He did not offered by the manufacturer Migra- we were mov ' t war d ' 1es, torl'um, a musI'c recI'tal was gl'ven by comml ee provl es OplCS or e ~o,!." Church~s are s~eet with white know of their child, born six months tion from the southern far~ to the crazil \V l lIlg °d shore! How Newark Post. The cooperation of in- hhes and echomg musIc. after his di sappearance It was th f t h th f b . Y e aug ll e and shouted for the Newark Junior Mu sic Club. The dividuals has improved and the com- The ~ame Easter comes from that named Jenny, but alw~y s called ;~rngerO~ :~ ~r;' in~: easi~; ~:~e ~~~ JO~ a: the watvesAsrPlashed against us program was as folIows: mittee recently received Superinten- of ~nclent Anglo-Saxon G~ddess ?f "Jim.': several years. No labor-savin ma- ~n h e boa, ter what see~ed March-School Orchestra, Mr. Brin- dent Brinser's compliments on its Sprmg, Estre, w~ose honor IS held m Tomght was the same kind of night chinery of sufficient practicabili~y has I o~rs I I~o ~~d t up , and to m~ surptlse ser, conducting work. the month of April. as it was jl}st one year ago. As the come into use to compensate for this l'ttlearne a " e had gamed very Greetings-State Junior Counselor, 2. Gymnasium and Auditorium- One of the oldest Easter customs wind whistled around the house and loss The solution m r . h d' I" e. . Mrs. Florence Hastings This committee is making arrange- are exch~nging eggs, as symbols of the thunder rattled, DeIla thought of rection of breaking uapy t~: pl~a!t=tio~ KeeIPl 'fotndPaddhng!" ye lled Ted to Reading of Pledge--Jane Roberts, 8 ments for an Easter Dance to be held resurrectIOn. These eggs are to rep- his income. Out of $500 ~ OO only one into small . tId f me as I .e up my rude paddle frolll Piano Solo-"Clown Dance" (Bibbie), on April 8 from 8 to 11.30 o'clock. It resent the new birth of springtide. dollar and fifteen cents remained. in th b t prl~~ e y owne arms as the water m ~I sgu s t. Again I sprang Vivian McMuIlen, 6 is to be open to both Junior and Easter has been celebrated as a As DeIla sat there thinking a loud e ee sec ~~l~' to the task WIth, mo re dete rmination Piano Duet-"Military March in D" Senior High School. The admission church festival since early days of the crash was heard. Then the lights I red WIlson, 8C. than ever and dId not look up until (Schubert), Helen Cronhardt, 9, and will be 15 cents. (These plans have Christian Church. It is known as a went out. Oh! What could she do? THE TAR BABY we were about fifty, feet away from Ann Hamilton, 8 not as yet been passed by the House movable feast because it is not al- Putting the baby in nearest chair she ~hore. It may be saId. that fifty feet DolI Dance-Patsy Gabriel, Mildred and Senate.) ways held on the same date. ran to the closet. Pulling out a shawl, One day during a summer vacation IS. a small space, bu t It seemed much Myers and Vera Gould 3. Traffic-The traffic committee Olive Fulton. slipping it on, she went to her desk of mine, three other boys and I de- WIder to us." , Vocal Solo-"Out of the Dusk," Mary has. made two announcements: (1) drawer. Pulling out Jim's revolver cided to go deep-sea fishing the fol- You can Imagme our surpI'Ise when ~oo;,e, 8, ... Pupils :'?O go .home for lunch ~r~ ~ot MRS. MARGARET OLIPHANT (she thought it might be necessary) lowing morning. The next morning we looked up on th e sho re and saw a Tr.lO- When It,~ Lampl~ghtlng; T.II~e to partlclpat.e In noon-hour. actiVIties. Mrs. Margaret Oliphant, an Eng- she got the baby and found her way found us with our lines, bait, lunches, ma~ cast o~t a small buoy to us m the ~alley, Accordlan, VlrgIma (2) No pupIls from the High School lish novelist and miscellaneous writer, in the dark to the door. and oars trudging our way excitedly whIch was tIed to. the end of a rope Hur~ock,. Trumpet, Edward Hur- are allowed on the ~rst floor., was born in Wallyford, Scotland, in Close behind her she heard foot- toward the river to a diminutive dory that he was holdlllg, The buoy lay lock, GUlta,~ , Holton Hurlo~k 4: Assembly-ThIs c?mmlttee has 1828. Her mother and father died and steps. Quietly she slipped through called the Tar Baby. It was so there, about ten fe et ~ efo re, us, Madly Solo. Da~ce-. Garden Dance, Ernes- deCIde? that the follOWIng should be Ishe was forced to support herself and the door out into the awful night. The named because of its small size and we s~ruggled toward It untIl Ted who " tme GillespIe .".. the. _alms of the !1ss~~bly : .(1) To three children. She earned her living door in back of her opened, then because of the great amount of tar was m the ~ron t grasped It. He for. If We Only Had . Time -WIIlIl!,m tram f?r democra.tlC CI~IZel1iihIp . . (2) by writing and produced novels char- closed with a crash. Two large hands we used in filling up the cracks when got ~ver:(thl~ g except the rope hf Hancock, a~ the plano; Mary AlIce To tram loyal, hlgh-mmded, cap~b.le acterized by insight and tender hu- were stretched out. Quickly she we were repairing it. held In ~I~ tIred hands. T~e three of H!1ncock, WIth ~ats; Mary Roberts, leaders. (3) To develo~ ~chool SPJrlt. mor, critical and historical studies of dodged them and with the baby took After the oar-locks were fitted on us femaJrung ran to ~el p h l~ hoM i~ ~Ith bas.s clef, Rachel Jane ~as- (4) To develop true spirit. (5) F1;1r- great variety. She wrote on biogra- a wilderness path to the nearest farm the sides of the boat, we slid the dory Although we were III anxIety It did tmgs, WIth sharl?s; Rog~r Attlck, nish reasonable-amount .of e~t~rtaIn- phy, history and criticism. Some of house two and a half miles away. from the mud into the water. How ~ot seem long befo re we we re pulled w~o make~ the dl~erence, Howard ment. (6) To form pubhc opInIOn. her writings were: Adam Graeme By now the baby was usually in bed happy we were when the oars were m by the man. We were too weak to WJl ~on, ~vIth the .tlme mark; Jean .5. The B?ilding a~d Grounds Com- Magdalen Hepburn, The Makers of and so became very fussy. fitte.d in plac? and we started to row rejoice when we set our feet on solid .Lewls, ~Ith,: es t sIgn . " n:l1ttee-Thls . commIttee has as~ed Florence, Makers of VenIce, Makers Through the blinding rain she agamst the tJ?e toward the sea! How ground. Plano TrlO- Under the MI Sltletoe that all pupils .take turns washmg of Modern Rome, and The Literary trudged until at last she came to our. four pal~s Of. arms struggled When the ~l an had anchored our (Englemen), Adelta Dawson, 9, boards and helping remake and re- History of England from 1790 to shelter and safety. When she had agamst the tide WIth an eight-foot boat and took III the oa rs we fo llowed Margaret Dawson, 8, Jane Rob- pair books. . 1825. She died in 1897. rapped on the door for a few minutes, oar in every pair of hands! Mere him into his home whi ch was only a erts, ~ . . On the wh?le, t he commltte.es have Clarence Smith, '35. the owner came and let her in. Re- words could not express our feelings. fe~ l'ods away. "ef elt very much Rhy~hmlcs m the Newar~ School.- Improved theIr work greatly since the lating her story she received lodging After about two miles of rowing reheved when we had eaten a meal MI SS Valence,. conductmg; MISS beginning of the year. , LUTHER BURBANK from the friendly family. Iwe began to lose some of our en- prepared by the man's wife. Cloud, at the plano Marylee Schuster, 36. Luther Burbank was one of the The child was well fed and put to thusiasm, but still our spirits were "How," I asked our rescuer afCer March-.Newark. School O;chestra . GIRL RESERVES most famous of scientific conjurers. bed. Della, tired and weary, went to high for we kept on joking about who we had thanked him for the meal and CommIttee : MISS Nell WIlson, cha!r- A HIKE FOR THE He turned weeds into flowers and poi- bed and did not rise tilJ late the next of use were going to become sea-sick were seated by the stove, "did you man; Mr. Charles. Edwards, MISS On March 17 Mrs. Harris, our Girl sonous plants into fruits. By taking day. From the farmhouse she made Ifirst and about the fishes we were go- happen to be along wi th a rope at the Margaret Cann; l':IlSS Helen Gregg; Reserve leader, took us on a hike. We two different plants, he could produce her second call to the sheriff teIJing ing to catch, but none of us would right time?" Mrs: Florence HastIngs,. Mrs. Geneva started out towards the creek. from them a new vegetable or fruit. him of the mysterious person' or per- have joked had we known what was "At the right time? Do you realize Sprmger, Mr. Ira S. B~ms er. When we got to a narrow piece of Some of his productions were : a plum sons. in store for us. • that you have been out in the storm The program was enJoye.d by all. I~nd on ~he edge of the wate; some without pits, a plum with the flavor In mid-afternoon, in the sheriff's A. rest, then. about a mile more of for abo,ut two hours, W h ~ n I saw you Ann HamIlton, !lB. gIrls deCided to go on the pIece of of the Bartlett pear, a white black- car, Della arrived where her old home rOWIng and still ,we w:ere not in the Istrugghng I ran out WIth the rope SCHOOL AND ITS BENEFITS land. ". . berry, a plumcot, which was the cross used to be to gather her valued be- sea where there would be only water ~nd "shouted for you to keep on row· We dldn t thmk tha~ the piece of ~tween the plum and the apricot, and longings. arou~d us,. m~; . " ., " , I am writing this article not to land was as n~rrow as It was. . tne wonderberry made by crossing the To her dismay the home was in WIthout :-var!llng the oldest boy, ,~orry, SIl', sa Id Ted , bu~ \I, e preach, as some may' believe, but to To get to thl~ land. we had to chmb raspberry and the dewberry. In the ruins. Who was this disturber? Te,~, pu!!ed 111 hIS oa~ and stood up. dldn t see you o ~·, hea l' you until \Ie show the facts about school life as I down a steep hIlI whIch was not very field of flowers he did things that had Many months later proof was Say, he remarked, "how long are were near shore. see them. This is a broad topic, and ~leasant . From there we . walked a previously beep thought impossible by found. The person who had killed we going to row. I'd rather fish right :'That's all right, but sa y, don't you many pages could be written about it httle way and then came to some making crimson poppies from yellow Jim, burned down their home and here than go all the way to the Point thmk we ought to call up your without it even then being ended. huge rocks. ones, improving the rose and the lily caused other disturbances, was the where all the big fishermen will cut mothers and tell them where you School, it seems, is only a place of After we got across these rocks we and producing the lovely Shast~ feared "Texas Tim." 'Soon he was us out." . are?" torment and hardships to some pupils. were where we wanted to be. When daisy. One of the most notable of his captured and imprisoned and Della "Sure," agred Deny, another mem- "What? Wait, let me use the 'phone These are the people who go to school we got on the narrowest piece of land works was the creating of a producer and Jenny lived comfortably in the ber of the crew, "I had the same idea." first!" merely because they are forced to go Doris Joll's foot slipped in the water, of food for man out of the desert cae- small town among many friends. A laboring breath because of his "Naw, my mother will be more by their parents or because they de- and M~dalyn Li~hty p~lIed .a rock tus. He also worked with the potato, Kathryn Striko!. fati~ue then. hopefully looking at worried than yours, let me use the sire to have a good time at the school's loose WIth some dIrt on It whICh fel1 evolving after a few years' work, a Bob, the thIrd member and me, 'phone first." and state's expense. These pupils gain on everybody. . potato that was larger and more reg- P'AUL REVERE "What'a you guys think about it." . "My mother ,wlil be the most little from their studies. They learn After everybody had some aCCident ular in shape t han the ordinary po- Paul Revere aided the cause or'the . "~umph, all the same to us, isn't worried of all ,",Plpeci up Bob" something, of course, but this is only we felt we could go no farther and tatoo He also fixed his attention on colonies during the entire war of In- It, BIb?" I answered and asked hope- "One at a tIme, boys, we II settle a part of what they really should were compelled to turn back. timber and forest cultures. dependence. But most people associ- fully. this in a jiffy." know in order to be able to qualify Slowly ~e made our way. back to In order to get such wonderful re- ate his name with his famous ride "Sure," was the very, very weak After calling up our m ot~e: s, we for positions in the working field. Mrs. HarrIS and the other gIrls. All suIts Burbank used two methods- from Boston to Lexington to warn reply of the exhausted Bob. found that all of them were SIck from Then, there is the group of people of u.s walked to the dam and rested crossing and selection. The crossing the militia of the approach of the Af~r anchoring, .al1 of us wit~ the worry. We assur d them of our safety who go to school with a purpose awhile then started back. I can as- process is the uniting of two plants British so ldiers. Paul was a Boston exception of Bob, pulled out our lines and told them that the mn n wou!d studying hard for what they lear~ sure you that we all .had a good time. to form a third plant. He brought goldsmith. He had been a member of b!1ited them, and cast them into th~ take us home as soo n as he got h:; and yet having a pleasant time. They Ruth Wilson, Grade 7. about this union by placing the ponen the party that had destroyed the tea rIver. To cover up my fatigue I smiled Icar out. It was no t more th~~ a ha d use their time wel1, using their study A BOYS' IDEAL GIRL of one plant upon the stigma of in the Boston harbor, and in 1775 he at the others and they smiled back at an hour before our rescuer drop~ed hours for work, thus getting the ma- another. After fertilization the pollen was the head of the army to watch me, but none of us spoke a word for us off " at our homes aftcr we a jority of their home work done in The characteristics whi!!h the ideal was collected just before it w~s ready the movements of the British troops. fear of giving himself away. thanked him. To make a I?ng story school, and then having the hours out boy expects of the ideal girl are: to fall and put it on the blossom of On April 18, the British came. He "Heyl" shouted Bob after a few short, each of OUI' mothers dId not en· of school for work or play, as the She must be modest. another species. Selection means rode through Lexingtori, but was cap- minutes of silence, "don't the sky joy the id ea of OUI' .taking a, fi shlOg student desires. It is this class of She mu st not put on airs. choosing toe best plants. Thousands tured. A companion got through. In seem dark? Don't you think we'd bet- trip again. Thi s is Just a mIld wa~ people who su~cee.d in school, and, as a take part in outdo.or games ,;"ithout of plants are ge.nerally grown. in order the war he was made Lieutenant- ter row in a !ittle toward shore?" of expressing my mother's t ~ ou~~n rule, succeed m hfe. Even these peo- She should be Interested In and to produce one Improved specIe. Some- Colonel. Bob was rIght. The sky was black when I planned to take anothel fi s g pIe may not remember French, Latin, being a "tomboy." times but one specimen out of several Oscar Anderson, Grade 7. and what's more, it was getting trip. Id 't cube root, and the like after they She should be happy, a good mixer, blacker every minute. ' The Tal' Baby? Oh yes, we so I have left school for a few years but r eady for fun without being silly or "Say, we're staying right here" said and the equipmen t for the o u~rage~u5 t hrough the time and work s pe~t i~ thinking that boys are in love with ' sum of six doll ars, but that IS bet er mastering the subjects, t hey broad- her. SUCCESSFU L STOCKMEN than keeping it and e xpe~ic nclI~g ~nd ened their minds and learned the art She mu-st be clean, neat and tidy in say: other adventure of the kmd \\ e a of perseverance. Many may even con- appearance without using more than , Low Fare Excur81on8 gone through, sider this of little value, yet it has five po~nds of r01Jge, lipstick, powder, .. Telephone t"e city markets before you 'tun ley Trzcinski. been said by good authorities that etc., dally. . lell choice stock locally. Often a one- $2.75 to Washington EC;:PT as a person conducts himself during She must be kind and courteous. cent difference In the prices quoted $2 50 8 I f't his school career, so is he likely to She must have a delicate sense of • to a timore As I think of I~g)'pt I l~ink ~u ~. cll.ofned. uct himself throughout his later hOhnl.etes.ty and never tell lies, black or amandkeloISlt.~,e difference between profit April 9th as one of the 1110 ~ t inte r cs~ lI1g , c the w tries of t.he universe. It. h eso :l~vha t Another point should be stressed She ought to have a few of thoae \,.\..~ Lv. Wilmington nort heastern pal·t of t\fl'lcn , Val. the fact that a boy or girl should se~ "endearing young charms" without ~C\~ . 8:36 or 10 :52 A. M. is mor e common ly known as the is cure a high school education. Many knowing it. . ~SPIio Lv. Newark ley of t he Nile. lls total are\re boys or girls have to leave school, due Sh~ mu st be a sincere Christian and &.10"" Iio 8:52 or 11:08 A. M. about fOU l' hundred thous~ nd s~uhad to the lack of support in the family, practice the golden rule. .. l' "'. S Returning Same Day. miles, bll the l ~gYJ1t of hI tor) uare but there are also those who leave She must be worthy of the courtesy f ~1t~. teO an area of twt'hi! thousand sq the because they consider that they have and respect she expects of the ideal .t te .... fI!! $2.50 to New York, miles. The GI' ek ~ ('a iled EgYP\e is mastered enough to aid tMm in car- boy. " .... ~ d &.I 0 "Iio Plaiafield and EI: •• beth, N. J. "gift of the ' ilp," and, th~I S ~~ei\'ed rying on their careers. These people A Junior. Iio W- l' ... extremely !I Pt. Mo"t. of Its ' fall i are usually mistaken, because they THE ORIGIN OF EASTER .. 1"\. April 9th from Abysinia wht'.l't' the r8111ummer find that they do not have the re- .. the c:reatest. dUring, he ri se in ~~!r~~n i~:~ifihc:~~n:hef~~si:eS.c e~~~; of Tt~: na~~~n~a~~;I~~~~~~r~r::d~~:! YOU CAN HAVE ONE FOR 8:~7-0~~h~J~grnM. ~~~:: h: ;ld Tdhoecsril~~r fllJ:,~II~~cr i ~~~e~: realize that they have placed them- of Spring, Eastre, in whose honor a LESS THAN A DIME A DAY I Returning Same Day channel lIntii the l11?nlh O'er of silt selves in such a position that they festival was held every spring in ber 0): November. ~ he lal , he! the will have to work for the rest of their April. The Passover feast of the BALTI MORE & whi ch cov rs the phlln f u~nl~o r (he able lives at some menial task. Jews, observed in memory of the com- OH 10 RAI LROAD moistness of the groun 7) Next, and last, comes the unem- ing out of Egypt, is celebrated about ( onlinueu on Page . v A l' il 6, 1933 THE NEW ARK POST, NEW Al