UNCI L TRIPLES FIRE COMPANY APPROPRIATION" LOW TAX RATE RETAINED T I THE NE KPOST
146 Seniors Receive Diplomas SUMMER Vets Ask Legislative Action CONTRACT At University Commencement SAFETY To Govern Sale Of "Poppies" FOR CURBS Exercises Held I ADDRESSES CLASS U niforms· Arllls ENCAMPMENT SI>EAKER Mondav In SESSION AWARDED To Propaganda MitchelI Hall Again A vailahle Groups Barred TO JONES L. H.- Dennis With the sudden dea th of Wi!. To Students Urging legislative action to limit lIam H. Heald, reelected chairman At University the sale of "poppies" on a bout Me. Inlpl'oVCluents To Deli ver of the board of trustees, casting morlal Day by veterans' organl. g loom over the ceremonies, de- zations only was one of the prlnclp- Stt'eets Planned; JlJl CII ('('IlIl'1I t grees were confe rred upon 146 Unl- FOl' lhe fifth consecutive year the '11 resolutions adopted by the Vet- v rsl ty of Delaware seniors at com- Delaware Safety Council will make erans of Foreign Wars at the con- Special Rate To re s Friclay mencement exercises held Monday a vailable a t the University of Dela- cluding session of the ninth an- r A-'; ,.,: ::~U U''-I· morning in Mitchell Hall. ware Summcr School a course of nunl cncampment of the Depart- Community Pool -- M,'. Heald had a part in the pro- instruction in Safety Educa ti on. ment of Delaware, V. F. W., in Red members uf thc gram a nd was to have made the This year the training course will Men's Ha ll Saturday. It was claim- l ncrcasing th Annual apPI'o prin- II r C C ~ IV C diplomas ann uneemcnts. He was a n alum- be given by Miss Violet L. Findlay, ed that other groups may take lion to the Actna Hosc, Hook and annllal com- nus of Delaware College a nd had supervisor of elementary science advantage of the occasion and com- Lnddel' Company from $500 to exercises (I f the New- becn on the board for 24 year s. and health instruction for the Wi!- mercialize the sale of "poppies." ~!~~o~ [ ~;t ~!'~~'~~ apt~, .ovi~;s~'~tr;:~ Schoo l. to b~ h Id h tO j The well -known civic leader suc- m.ington Public School . Sys~e m . Miss Isabelle de la Rigaudiere Tunis A reso l~ti on opposing the wcar- paving and improvement project. ~R~~)!l.:"i'JON '.r.. :8 :30 o'clock in the sc 00 ~~' mh~~d ~ft;;n~~~~s ~l~~e r e~,~~in~ ~~ ~~; a~u ~a;erb~~n y:~,~~v~ n~n i :a\~~iI :)~ ~YS Kt::n:~~l e L:~~nin ~~~~~~~ 1I ~'~ ~~g ~,~y"n~:~:~: e~r :~~~~:g CO/rt~;'~: : ~:'t;~~i l;:or~, ~~~~r~~ ~ S !~';iI~~\~ ~~~ Guest Speaker meeting of the trustecs on Saturday. equipped w ith an abundance of Longwood Gardens, w ith fountain on propaganda activities 111 the nish power and watcr to the New- H. Denn is. cxccutivc. sec· Tribute Paid safety knowledge which could bc di splay June 14 to 17 She is a United States was also adopted. Otis N. Brown ark Playground and Recreation --- ...-~.,, - , the Am erican VocatJon~ 1 Students a nd faculty members used to advantage by all planning gl'3duate of Bald win S'chool, Bryn Copies of the resolution were sent ______Cent I' on a cost basis were high- wiIh headqmlrlers III paid tribute to h im as they stood 1.0 entc r the summeI' school, espe- M d th U · ity of G"en to the Attorney-General of the . f I D. C.. will deliver the f I S cially those interested in the teach- b~wr. ~n ~ n;versd · t den~ United States and the prosecuting G M HANEY li ghts of the June meeting 0 t le Fn;j'.~·::' "I_ton. before the mem- ~~'r~'n;,;~uet e b~cc~\ :~,~:at~n se l¥v~ ~~:' ing fie ld. . . 0 1'0~U;;i~e~'~ s ;h~ a~'~e o ~~ns u role officer in D e l ~wa r e. . . Council of Ncwar k Monday night. largst gradua ting cl ass and Dr. 'Valtel' Hullihen, univers· Thc Safety Edl~c a,t lO n Course WIU ~f "Pierrot" will be p~~yed ;y Leo The res lutlOn, In keeplllg with • • co;;;m~lte~a ~~n~:~n~~~~,k~~;~;n!~r t ~ of thc school. lheir ity president, termed him " a loyal carry th rce credit hours and may L renee Kennett Square Conso li thc Ameri c8l11sm progr am of the PRESIDENT Council that the Aetna company, friend s. alumnus, a true friend of the uni- Dean G. E. Dutton be used as an elective cOSursc ~~d- d:~~d School instructor, and pr es i~ department, cited thc da ngel's of ~ due to the growth of the town orchestra, undcr vers it.y, a nd a n outstand ing board ~~7iot~. t~t i:e::~~ n~fd ~ri";'~ '~~IY f~~ dcn t of the K en nett Little Thcatre. ~~~ I ~f;~~~ ~ ..::n~n; a~;~~~~~~~ . m e n- . which nccessitated increascd faci ll- of Fred rick B. Kutz, prcsident." . ___ ti cs and equipment, was expending chorus, instructed by Included in t.h e la rgest joi n C A MCCUE the purpose of giving in struction 111 LITARY Health Bill Opposed L" Cl 'I about $600 a ycar over inc01ne. Rlltcnhouse, will graduating class in Lhe history of • . ' materials and . methods of teaching MI History was made when the en- IOnS -' 11 1 . Other mcmbcrs of thc committee .'h_ :: ~~~:~tY~_ I>O U"riWl'lh(·rInCmu s i c fil l' the cere- Lh e unive rsity were 83 stUdents Safety Educalion. campment adopted what is bell ev· HOI(IS E'("'Ctl'Oll were: J . E. Doughcrty, treasurer, fl om Dela e C II g d 63 f Safety Program In Schools cd to be the first resolution opposing 'L and Assistant Chi f Charles Tasker. . war 0 e e an rom RESIGNS Each year a la rge numb ~r of MASS ON the Wagner health bill, pending be- A Bartley. pastor .of th Women's bra nch . teachers either acquire 0 1' fore Congress. The department be- Of Officet's !1. E. Church, wIll give ~he111- Dea n George E. Dutton, repre- reviewDc l ~ \Vare the fundamentals o.f a good Ii eves the bill, in its present form, stl~'~~l gi:~~ ,~e9a3sge aI~~ t! \~Oeool)ai~ :c~ r~ and benediction. In con- sen ling thc f aculty, gave a short h 1 ft Th bl annuall y, was unanimously approv- the program. Carleton E. talk to the graduates, following a sc 00 sa e y progra m. IS ena cs SUNDAY .. to be unAme ri can and agninst thc George M H aney 102 Old Oak cd. ,-, ., -.~" ..- .,",,- G. L. SChIIStCJ' the tcacher to develop a wortbwhile best interests of the people of the . , , . superintendcnt of New- custom esta blished several years safety program in their local United States." Road, was elected preSident of the Mayor Collins P.resides . ;: ...·· "_· I_D ~ . \\'i11 prcsent the mem- ago that no formal address would Takes Over Ne,v schools. The Council beli eves that Other resolutions carried were: A Lions Club of Newark at a bU Sll1 ss Mayor Frank Col lI ns preSided Hu"'-;J-;:;;r.~. I.he 2r'aduating cl ass to Rob- be g iven. H e also presented thc the school is one of thc most fl'u it- T o Be Hel{I At reCluest that the Statc Depa rtment session held Tuesday night at the t hr o u ~ h o ut t.h e lengthy seSS ion, . president of the Delaware Collcgc class in arts and P t At D I f I fl I h f . m'lrklllg the first lime he has at •• ,- - '"".. ··.. ·who will award the scie nce for degrecs. OS . e a\Va re u e?s were sa 'ety consclous- institute a drive t ~wa rd the "pur- Newark Country Club. Elevated te~d e d a (ull mecting since F e bl:u~ Dean Ma rjory S. Golder, of the ne~~l C';'~'Yw ~f :ee~~~~P~~'ri o d s of in. Ola Bohelnia, c h as~ and p r e~e ntat l on ~.f. a~ Iron (rom the offic e of first vlce-presl- ary. St.ricken by a heart attack _ . .. ,.' . ... ;n. Slutienls Womcn's College, presented the Fo ll o~vi ng 32 years sC I:vicc w:th struction per day-one in the mol'll- W ' k M I ~~o~~ ot? ~os~~t~~~:~t h ~ ~~::~ , .~ r e~,; ~c n~u~~~t ':':~~ri~ea~eusduec,~ecd s Pa ul ~a r l Y in March, he has been work- and Robert c l as~ from that college for degrecs. the Universi ty of DelawaIe, ChaI les ing; the other in the earl.Y Mter· . arWIC , ( . Delawarc; hospitalization for vet. 'Head of the Jewark branch of ll1g himself back to health on a wh om havc com- Agricultural studen,ts were pre- A ..MCCu:, dea n .~ f th,e schoOl . of n oOl~-SO that as ma ny students as erans, endorsing the plan of the thc Wilmington Auto Sales CGm- gradual schedul:. schoiaslic records sen ted by Dean Geol ~c S. Schu.ter, agr~cu ltUl e a nd .dll ectol of the Ex- pOSSi ble may bc accommodated. Preparations have been complet- Pennsylvania State Department for pany Mr. Haney has compiled an Othel membel s of the ~Ody pr~s - yea rs of study, elected Saturday to succeed Dean pel'll~enta l St a lI~n and ExtenSIOn Rcgistra tions in the course will be d tor the mi litary fi eld mass at a new vetcrans' hospital neal' Phila- o u t s t ~ nding record with 1I .'" local Clrt Mo nday night were. Co.uncl l salutatory a nd Charles A. McCue, r ~s l g n ed, as head ~ervI~e , has. ~ 'e ~,g .ned .bccausc of made on Monday, June 19, bctween Old Boh mia, near Warwick, Md., delphia; compilation of World War scr vice group. ma~ Charles ~ . Hl:bert, GeOlge ~ . . . of the school of agriculture. ~I~ ~;~I~. t~~ S ~O~sl~~n~~' Ot~u~~~! s a~ t the hours of 7:30 a. m ., .to 4:00 p. m., to bc held Sunday ~ o rnin g at eleven songs by Carl Sandburg; grave dec- Othel' offi cers elected weI'''' A. ~~;U:;~ll'l a:t~~; g:' n~ ' J~~~ s 'i ' R~:~~ exerCises Will Local Gra,luates . P Y.' astern standard time, 111 the Chem- o'clock standard time, 111 commem· orations and a request that action E . Tomhave first vice-presia nt . . ' , : graduation pI:ogram Local st ~~ e n ts w ho. received dc- ~t~d a;I:~~~SO~e~~~~ e o~ . ~~~~:t:~', try ~uil~ing. Class wor k w ill begin ora ti o"; of th~ 235th anniversar~ of bc' t ake~ at ;he national e ncamp- J ~ hn K. S pe i ~ h e r , second vice·. pr.!Si: ~;~~S l~.:~":;~rV~~~~~le ~i e~ : ~ce\::~.~ last Sunday With the grees wei e. the Mi sses Barbara g at 7.30 a. m., Tuesd ay, June 20. the foundat.lO n of thiS a ncient ment to be held in Boston in Au- dent. Louis T Staats th ird V h~e- ~rmon, delivered by Bonhvm, J anet Marie Grubb, :\1arg- who has bcen ac11l1g dcan, was Each ycar during the course all ed ifice. The historic church, whose gust to rescind the sections of the pre.iden!' G e~ r ge' M. Worrilow pI'esent also. . . and whi:h ,inclu.d,ed a re~ Veronica Hogan, ;;-r~:~ R~ e e l ~~~~~ d ~o succeed him, It was an- the latest safety visual aids a r: real till.e is St. Francis X avier, .is amended constitution provid ing for tre;surer; Dr. E. E~r1 Weggen: an~a~ra;~ ~~'i~~n~~,~g~:~es~' ~~::e ~! hop,lo be 1.l')it.; toni ,ht ,:m.'th. MI.ldred .Hope \ .Il Dean Sillce 1920 by the CounCi l out_ n.a med 111 . honor of the. great mls- distl'icts in Delaware. The depart- m'lnn, lion tamer, a nd Leonad collection o( rubbish. A survey of ~ . tU _~ , proj ~~ tedg .a ~d and class I11ght, staged ::;al a LOUise WilliS. and M e~sers Dean McCue has been laced on stan.dm ~'ty and state offiCi als ap slons ry samt to the I~dl es, and has ment delegates expressed the d e- Fossett, tail twister .. A. W. Pe lTY lots needing weeds cut was ordered Robe rt HotTma n, Osborne S e~t m a n the rctired li st a nd it is undcr- p e~ I .. befOl e the class to .~esc rl~e th ~ the dl ~ tmctI o n of bemg the oldest sire to continue unde l' the prevI ous and Edwa rd A. CurtIs were elected w ith instructions that Secretary 10 be awarded are as fol- Mackie, ~ a mes Cregg Robmson, stood he will c~n t i nu e to make his offiCi al (un.c~ l o n s of ~he.ll particulaI CatholIc church on the Eastern council form as it would provide directors for two years to serve Steele check on the enforcement of . Jr., F erns ~eon Wharton, Leo home in Newark He is a raduate safety diVISions, pomtmg out .for Shore of Maryland .. It IS the si~e better representati on for the posts. with Daniel Stoll and Carleton E. a n ordinance adopted last year rela- LegIOn award of $2.50 J a mes LaskaJ IS , Arthur Cleveland " . g the benefit of the teachers the Im- of one of the earlIest schools m Because of the vari ous degrees of Douglass, carry-ovcrs. . . the eighth grade ex- Huston, Jr., J ohn Ross Hutchison, of Mlchlga~ State .College, an? has portant part !bat the three E's of the fi eld of Catholic educa tion in classification contained in the pen- . .. t,ve to vacant lots. . study o( social science and Orvill e Leigh ton Richardson. ?een associated With the Ulllvers- Safety-Engineering, Education a nd the United States. sion plan for veterans the delegates RelIrmg Officers . Tax . ~ate .R:etamed _ also a medal to a Of thc 146 seniors who graduate, Ity of Delaw?re SInce 1907 w hen he Enforcement- play 111 the statc pro- The mass w ill be celebrated by defcated a resolution on this Retiring officers are: Mr. Lovell, . F OI the thlld SlI Ulght yt~o cou~ in the graduating class more than 80 percent were resi- became horticulturIst. In 1920, he gram. the Rev. J ames Willard Lutz, a question. president; MI'. Haney, first vice- cIl adopted a tax ~'a te I 0 l' c;~ s in honor, courage, dent.s of Delaware. There were succeeded the. la te Harry Hayward newly-ordained priest from the Wi!- Moderacki New Commander president; C. Emerson J ohnson, O~l ~h C $100 asst~set . vabu ~ Ion. I ~ leadership and service. only 24 in th e group from outside as dean and director. AUXILIARY mington diocese, assisted by the Frank F . Moderacki of 729 Har- second vice-president; Gcorge M. 1 3 R ~s~ess m~n '~t ' ~ ; ~n~ p ~c~ John R. Fader, chair- the state, 16 in the Women's Col- Dcan Schuster has bee n head of Rev. J ohn M. Walsh, of St. Denis' rison Street Wilmington a member Worrilow, third vice-president; A. ~~ t 0d es r~g o ~ e, ' 11 . m::~ committee. lege and 8 in Delaware College. lh~ d~pa rtme .nt of agronomy a t the Church, Galena, Md., as deacon of P o l i s h -A ~ e ri ca n P ost, No. 3257, E. Tomhave, secre t a r y- tr eas ur e ~'; u~lil ~'l a;~atd:r~, ~et ~~'r rvgnday Auxiliary award Sixty-eight of the graduates, near- u~'vel s't y . S1l1C~ 1920. H ~ I,S. a SELECTS and the Rev. Francis A. Lynch, V.F.W., was elected commander of Leonard Fossett, li on tamer ; LoUI S J ne ;,/! ,y, , gi rl in thc eighth Iy 50 pcrce nt, were from Wi!ming- gl aduate of OhiO State Ulllvels lty. director of the Catholi c Welfare the department while Mrs Gertrude T. Staats, tail twister, and J . K. u . h G B th Wil in the study of ton. but rural New Castle, K ent Especially we ll -fitt~ d for the office, Guild and the Society of the Pro- Rhind of Gen. W. w. Atterbury P ost, Speicher and Weld in C. Waple3, di- .A ltht oug Dorman 1'0 t _ ~rs , two- and citizcnship. Pre- a nd Sussex Counties were also well he has a host of fnends throughout DELEGATES pagnti on of the Faith of the Wi!- No 3420 AuxilJiary, was elected rectors. mmg on, tR . t "f wa~hgr~~ I ~ect~on of . Lee Lewis, president. repr scnted. There were 28 from ~ e l a.wareY . ;:e h ~S se rv e~ as ~ec~ mington diocese, a.s, subdeacon. p r ~s id e n t' of the Ladies Auxiliary A report on the playgrou.nd and y:~~a~~ ni~ a ~938 ,o ~ O U ~C il acted on a D. Cobb, vice regent, rural New Castle County, 10 from l e.taI of tAe De ~.ware dr? P t::' Other ParticIpants. Other officers elected are: sWlmmmg pool fund was given by ~n e - eat. contract for 1939-40 Mon- th e Daughters of the Kent, and 16 from Sussex. plovement ssocla Ion an 111 .at Rev. Anthony DiMichele Wi ll act J ohn A. Bagg of J . F erdinand Mr. Staats, chairman of the com- d y. ht Th oncern will receive Revolution awards of The deans also announced the w~y h as become a cqU a mt~d . With --. - as muster of ceremonies of the mass Speer P ost, No. 615, senior vice- mitlee conducting the dri v~ . ;to n;; r the !o~'k . the boy and to the girl li st of scholarships, prizes and pl actlcall y every c ~rn ra~sel III ~he COnventIon At proper, while t. he Re v. J oseP.h commander; Maxwell A. Loose, of Delegates. were also .a pPolllted to $ A contract with the Interstate in the study of United other ~ o n o ~'s won. by students of state. PI;;he ;~~ T~a ~a,se ~ ~pu ar R h h h 0 Horgan, St. ~ary's Semlllary, BallI- Diamond State P ost, No. 2863, Rich- the 22nd Dlstl'lct of LIOns In.terna- Amiesite Company for the de- _=====.istory in the senior high the university durlllg the year. ase g e 0 ot n more, Md., Will be master of cere- ardson P ark, junior vice-command- tlO nal ConventIon whi ch Will be r ' f 1000 tons of downward I ..---- ..I :'~ the good citizenship Invocation a nd benediction were S h monics to the soldiers. Sermons er ; Richard P. Altvater, Gen W. W. held at Ocean City, Md., on June .' vce~y 0 hal't after July 1 was ap- girl and to the boy select- given by the Rev. Frank A. Baker Vi siting Nur e Reports eptem er 8-9 will be delivered by the Rev. Wi!- Atterbury P ost, No. 3420, depart- 25. 26, 27. ~~ ove~ s p The material will be used most representative good and music was by. the universi.ty 229 Visits For ]\IIay ___ lI am J. McElwaine, assistant rector ment quartermaster ; Victor Ohman, T. K . Uhler, of Baltimore, Md., for p a ~ing Haines Street from Dela- orchcstra. One senIOr, Robert Hlal 0 Itt th C 't F d t' of St. Peter's Church, New Castle. Speer P ost. judge advocate; J ames supervls1l1g agent of the P ennsyl-. ware Avenue to Lovett Avcnue M. Haney, president of P e pp~ r , received a d e~ee in ~ o tb . Miss Al ice Leak, visiting nurse of ~~~e~~s ~ Iu b~ s~s~i o n e i~ra~~I~ S e mi n aria~s from the. Oblates' Novi- H. Bishop, Clarence Vinson P ost, ~ o. vania ~ailr oad , w ill be the guest m;d for resurfacing Delaware Ave: Club of ~ewark, will e l ~ ctl'lca I and mechamcaI engtne- for thiS sectI on of New Ca s Ue Co~n- mington were a ointed at a meet- tate at C~llds, ~d., Will have charge 3258, Camden.-Wyomtng, chaplalll, speakel at the ,meetlllg next, Tues- nue from Academy Strect to Elk- organizatI on's awards erlllg b e 1l1 ~ onc of few students to ty, l'.eported a total of 229 V I ~ lts ,. m - ing of the J . ~f'son O'Daniel Unit of the mtnor office of the. mass. a nd Dr. Meredith r. Samuel of S peer day. The progl am IS s~o n s~ , ed . by ton Road ; Academy Street from boy and to the girl receive thiS h onor at the same eluding 138 nursing and 91 1I1SttUC- No. 10. American L egion Auxiliary ! he Fort duPont milItary band P ost was elected surgeon .for hiS the committee. on publIc l elatI ons Main to Lovett Avenue; New Lon- a hi gh general achieve- commencement. t,ve calls, for the month om May. h Id M d th h f Mr Wi ll play and a detachment of SIxth term. J oseph P owalskl of P o- of Eastern Railroads. don Avenue from Cleveland Ave- work and citizen- Awarded Prize . Typcs Of . cases and num.b~r 0: G:orge ~~n~~ ~~ric:e rs~~l~. 0 s. soldiers from the First E~gineers , Hs~-Am e ric a n P ost was selected . as . nue to the town limit; Elkton Road Newark Hi gh School Only one local graduate, Arthur VISitS were. Prena t.als 5, VISitS 5, M d L L L . H Id under the command of Lleut, A. adjutan t. The officers were 111- Two Registered GueI'Jlsey from Amstel Avenue to the town four years. C. H usto.n, Jr., was a warded a prize. maternity . 3, visits 26; ga n gr.e~e 0: S h e:~e~~;~ A~;n Coo~;"~~nd a;~u l H. Bagnalo,. U. S . A., will participate stalled by Lewis W: Zebley, past Bulls Sold By Local Men limit, and South College Avenue Awards He received the Delaware Section leg 1, VISitS 13; ca ncel' 1, VISitS 9, 0 L tt·U t th I ,I m the milItary ceremom es. statc commander, With Harvey Y. from Main to Delaware Avenuc. Women's Club of of tllC Am rican Chemical Society aI·thl:itis 2, visits 13; heart .di seas~ o l:ga n~~:tiO: 'Wit~eP~:Ss~~mes e H~;::n A musical program has been ar- Wood, Clarence O. Bradley, Delbert Two r egistered Guernsey bulls, Jones Awarded Contract of $10 to the girl prize of one yea!' membership m 4, VISitS 21; ~ poplexy 1: VI SitS .2, Irwin, Leon Case Frank Balling, r ~ n ged and Wi ll be sung by a co~- A. Gal.lagher, and Williard Derrlck- D~I ,,:,yn. DoriS 270628 and F ern JuHan T. J ones, Wilmington con- .ch ievl~ ment and citizenship the so ci ~ ty . awa rd e ~ to a n outstand- fracturcs ~'. VIS itS 17; kid~ ey. d,s- a nd H. S. Gabriel ~s alternates. ?llled. ch.o rus of the C a th o li~ , ch~lrs son, d lstl'lct commanders. Girl s Jimmy .261534, were SO ld . re- tractor, was awarded the job of lay- High School show ing sem or in chemistry. ease 5, VISits 23; a ppendiCitiS 1, M' 0 '11 L·ttI . t d 111 WIIm111 gton, under the dllectlon Otber Auxiliary Officers cently, accordlllg to the American ing concrete curbing and gutte rs on of succcss in further Four Newark boys, Ro? ert Hoff- visits I; misecll aneous 29, visit~ 49. as a'cSli n gr~~c~ e t.:r \oW~~p~~~eO I~ ~s. of George Fin.nan, choir d irector of Other auxiHary officers .e l e~ te d Guernsey C a t tl e ,Club,. Peter- Orchard Road below Park Place, bUsiness coll ege will be man, J ohn Ross Hutchison, Leo A total of 33 treatments were given. J ohn R Fader r:si ned ChrIst Our K111 g Church. are: Mrs. ElSie Del Collo, Wllm1l1g- borough, N. H. Th ~ fil St ammal was Townsend and Winslow Roads, and Mrs. Anna J ustis. J ames Laskaris, and Huston were Three cases of sca rlet fever and C ' g . t A new note Will be added to the ton Memorial P ost No. 2084, senior sold by C. M. A. Stme, of neal' New- Dallam Road. The J oncs bid of $1 ,- Lockerman will pre- elected to the Phi K appa I\hi Hon- two of chicken pox were . quaran- M ' ;: n v~ntl~n ~elega esd M ' field mass this year by the attend- vice-president; Mrs. Cla ra Bradley, ar k, to R. R. M. Car pentcI', of 598.46 was low. School Alumni orury Soci ety, w hile threc, Huston, tined. Two birth certificates were H ' :d Sh . er e~l er fnd I S. allce of various Catholic Boy Scou t Clarence Vinson P ost, No. 3238, Montchanin, while the second was A water Jjn e was approved for who made Hutchison, and Reid Foster Stcarn~ delivered and a b ~ by clinic ~ C ld a l ~~~nates t~a~~; s~~~eoo ~: :~~~o n :~ organi zati ons ?f Wilmington,. a- junior vice-president; Mrs. Mar- sold b: E. J . J armon, of Newark, to Wilson Street. average for the wel'e elected to the Tau Beta P I each Wednesday With an average Rehoboth on Septe mber 8 and 9, m o n ~ whom Wi ll be the St. E,II za- (Please Turn To Page 8) TaskcI T. Cl ark, of New Castle. Water and power will be furni ~ h- years ancl is considered (Please Turn To P age 2) attcndance of 22. while Mrs. Leon Case a nd Mrs. bcth s Troop No.5, George DUllley, cd for the community swimnllng o[ the award of $100 to Fmnk Bailing will serve as alter- sco u~ma s ter ; Troop No. 30, St~ Tl..eatre A tAr J 0'Pens pool at the Univcrsity. of Dela- the c o llcg ,~ of his 01' her A d H' natcs. Paul s, J oseph Desmond, s~o utm ?st I n Uj ware's Taylor Gymnasium from Homemakers n 4- ers Delegatcs-at-Iarge to the con- er; Troo!,. No. 32: Pul?skl LegIOn, en June 19 to August 19 on a cost basis. v nlion are: Mrs. Paul D. Lovett, Fra~k .. F*~o~O W s~~ a~g,s~~t ':~~:.- '~Tl·th Locals T. Compan'v Thc action was taken following .an T. Sh C U chairman of national defense; Mrs. mas el, I p . ,. ' YY l I l J appcal by a committee rcpresentlllg In ort ourses nere F. Ally n Cooch, depa rtment treas- Cha rles Dcsmond, scoutmaster, and n the Newark Playground a~ d Re- urer; Mrs. J ohn R. F ader, chairman other ~ roups of C.athollc and non- creation Center c o n sis tin g of distinguished guests; Mrs. H. S. CatholIc orgam zatlOn s. A season of unusual interest for "Fumed Oak: : as well as fo~' small- Ch a~' l es H. Rutledge, spokesman; New student bodies WIU enroll held ~,n Resid?,nce . Hall, when the Gabriel, vice chairman, child wcl- Newark due to the prcsence of se\'- er par ts. ThiS year .she WIU have LO~ls T. ~taa ts, and George ~ a nby . at the University of Delaware ncxt ncw studcnts Wi ll be welcomed fare, a nd Mrs. J . Harvey Dickey, Rehoboth To Be Scene Of eral local youngster s in the comp- even more opportumty of demon- It IS estImated that $125 Will be of $10 Will be prcsented wcek when h omemakers and 4-H to the ca m~u s by Mrs A. D. Warn- publicity. Ladies' Aid Group Picnic a ny is scheduled to open at 8:45 0'- stra ting her ability. saved by the center under the ap- on behlll1 of the Club member s assemble for thell' er, SI'., WIlm1l1gton, a of Mrs. Ha rold Sheaffer is chairman . . . ,clock on the eveni ng of July <\ at A newcomer to Arden, but well pI'oved agl'eemc:lt. tr~steerl to thc member of a nnual short courses. the unverslty; Dean Marlo e S. of the nomina ting committee for The a ~nu al p,cmc of the Ladles the Robirl Hood Playhouse, Arden. and enthusiastically known to New~ The treasuI'er s report showed a class having the On Sunday afternoon at one 0'- Golder of the Wome n's College, and offic ers to be installed in Octobcr. Aid Society of the Newark M. E. Edwin Ross, founder and manager ark, is Mina Press, the brilliant cash balance on May 1 of $6,037.11, in English for the clock more tha n 100 Delaware Dean Geol'ge L. Schuster of th.e She is' being assisted by Mrs. 01'- Church w ill be held a t Rehoboth of the Robin Hood, has becn as- Hedda Gabler of Ibsen's classic, receipts of $13,203.74 for the month, homemakers will register for their SchoO.1 of Agric~ ltur e an.d the Agn- ville Little lind Mrs. Clarence Hop- nex.t Th~r S d ay . . All members who sociated with the Univ~r s i ty Dr ~ m a and the caust.ic B eat~ice in the last disbursemen ts of $12,510.94, and a Rutledge will present fo urth 8nnual course of threc days, cullUl al ExtenSion S ~rv lce . . kins. Mrs. J . R. Fader heads the deslrc. l eser~atI o n s are requested Department as techmcal adVIser E 52 producl1on of Much Ado A- cash bala nce on June 1 of $6,729.91. of $1 0 on b,'h :1 lf of while the 4-H groups are scheduled Following supper . III K ent Hall, auditing committee which consists to n?tlfy thell' group leade:, or the for the past winter, duri~lg which b ~ u t Nothing." Mr. R o~s, along . Ind e bt edne~ Reduced Lodge NO. 5, Knights of to r egister on Wednesday. the homema kers Will .hear. Dr. W. of MI's. Fred Strickland, and Mrs. preSident, Mrs. F . A. J amison, not timc he has become so Improo~'tg~ y~';:'~~i ~,~, m;:,cath."t~ ~~t 14, R.V.) Ti mid and uncertain in. hGath ," who wrote "Entailed H a t," Academy were signers o( the Dec- trip to New York where he inter- ~!l~~g/:rg=~~~l~~~O ctg~I~~c:urear~~c;::;: SOUPS Ca mpbell's E ~CE~~T S ~ ::~~~: N d ividuals limit and hinder God's and other novels o( the Eastern laration of Independence- Thomas viewed a n unusually large num- thin, who.e bencOlll have been better proved CORNED BEEF Armour's work. Shore; Andrew C. Gray. able lawyer McKean. G orge a nd Col. J ames ber of a pplicants. Several of last ~~~~t:~~1~~.,E>:tyhd~:boE~n:I:::m~: without fait from you r druul.t.OveramU- WET SHRIMP 2 caUS 5. The Weak (l Thess. 5:14). They and (alher o( the la te George Gray, Smith. 878 Ii year's favorites wi ll be back, and Pinkham'. Co mpound help Nature calm lion women havo wrlt.ten ln lett.era reporllnll are feeble in spiritua l insight and U. S. Senator und judge; and .John St.arled in October, I , a sma some new players will be introduc- your ohrloking nervca, tone up your syotem, wOF~: ~\'u~ pb:~lc~6·Y •• ra Lydia E. P l n kh~m ' .\ CORNFLAKES SUllnyfi eld pkg. power. W. Houston. Congressman a nci Dela- library formed by a group o( citi- cd. A complete roster of the comp- ~I~~a~~r.ot=.: dJatT ... (rom fomalo (une- Vegetable Co mp-ound has helped , rateful HUSKIES One package for 2c wi th Cllch RI. The Cure. ware State Judge. zens in the store of Wilbur Wilson. any will be announced shortly. Make a note NOW to . et a bo ttl e of thl. women go ".mlling thru" trylnK ord .... chase of one III "eglar price D ~Mili ud ~~tioo ~ ~ v eT,.s7t Y~0~ D~e~~~~d~~s-:e~~~n~y~~~y~~~~: I ======~=;h~~~P~ro~v~~~P~~~k~bo~m~~~C~=~p~~~n~d~T~M~A~Y~=W~h~y~n~H=I=n=R=b=e1~P=Y=O=U=1===~ cause of a disease Is practically use· less unless a course of treatment is sown by the P resby tery of Lewes removed to the Academy Building. A, & P. GRAPE carried out. Consider the steps in in 1738 when it sent a memori al Prior to its being ta ken there, it the treatment of the si ckness of the to the Synod at Philadelphia, not- had been conducted in the former Church and then apply the remedy. ing the lack of on adequate school office of the Di a mond State Tele- Juice 1. Remember that it is a " cf1urch for the educa ti on of youths (or the phone Company and before tha t, in of God" (I Cor. 1:2). "sacred work of the ministry." the Elliott Building which is now COFFEE Red Circle lb. bag 17(' 2. Recall and follow the true As a result of this plea, the Pres- the Delaware Health Center. Nottingham Manor LARD Pure Refined teaching of God's Word (l Cor. 4: bytery of New Castl e, Philadelphia. At the time of the removal of the 17> . and Dover. in 1743, agreed to open library to the Academy Building, CHEESE Fresh White 3. ReceIve grace a nd peace from (I school at New London to in- high school classes were being con Newark's Westover Hills EV AP, MICK Whilehou e 3 the Father and the Son (I Cor. 1:3). struct in languag s, philOSOp hy lind ducted th I'e, and it occupied the CRISCO or SPRY 3 Ib, can 5h 4. Recognize those appointed by divinity, under the supervision o( liSt wing. Wh n the new school the Lord to be over the church as the Rev. Francis Alison. building was rected, it was moved leaders and teachers ' the school to become mast r o( the has remai ned ever since. 5. Be ashamed of ungodly mis· academy in Philadelphia which This histori c building is also the Unsweetened behavior (I Cor. 4: 14 ), Benjamin Franklin had established home of the J . Allison O'Daniel Juice 4 6. Deal plainly wi th sin and dis· in 1749. Dr. Alison was succeeded P ost No. 10, American Legi n, a nd PEACHES Del Monle order (I Cor. 4: 21) . The knife of by Rev. Alexandel' McDowell , who the local troop of Boy Scouts o{ the surgeon m ay ca use pai n but it moved the school to Elkton. Md., America. HERSHEY Chocolale Syrup is often the way to healing. where he conducted it until 1767. ------IVORY SOAP 2 Ige, cake 17(' 7. Warn those who are unruly (l when he moved it to New(lrk. Thess. 5: 14) . The word of spiritual SO lllhcl'lI Slalcs To Holll RlN 0, CHIPSO or OXYDOL admonition is too oHen lacking in A c h a rtC ~, a;vt.;~· g~;~~ t: d the New- Meeling Weflnc, tI ay Nighl CLOROX p I, bottle 121' the church. ark Academy in 1769 by Thomas A group of leading (armel's o( B. Comfort a nd encourage the and Richard P enn and in 1775, a the Newark trading area wi ll meet TAN DARD- Ville ripened fainthearted (I Thess. 5: 14), Un· substa ntial building was erected in at a conference to be held a t the regenerate m an has no patience ·,·ith such folk, but God docs. A which '" school was conducted Deer P a rk Hotel, next Wednesday L1nUl 1777. note of encouragement needs to be Tomatoes 3 stressed In U1 ese trying days. WiLh th vi ll age of N wark the This session is bei ng sponsored by scene of muny R volutionary War Southern Sta t s Cooperative in 9. tie patient toward nli men (I Thess. 5: 15), lf you {eel that you skil'mishes, the march of the Brit- order that farmers in the Newar k must be impatient, be impatient ish army through this vicinity to or (I may have the oppor tunity of wi th your own (aults. Patience is a the ballle of the Brnndywin m ad revi wing the pri nciplcs of the co • Christian virtue which bas almost il necessary to close the schoo l. The opel'ative f rti lizer program, accord been lost in lhe d izzy, high·pressure co lonials used the building (or th ing to Max F . Borden, Baltimor , GOLDE RI PE age in which we live. Let us m(l nufucture of shoes for the a rmy, Md ., (lssistnn t manager, Southem Opposite the Newark Countre Club, trees, all conven- CUltivate it both in the church and and tradition has it th(lt the Red - States fertilizer service. BANANAS in the hea rts or believers. coats were shot a t from th Acad- Under the coopera tive plan, iences and utilities, including a modern sewer system, my, which in turn was made a fm'mers obtai n th ir fertilizer re 4 Ibs s,c Gr Ilt Fortulle target for th king's cannon balis. quir ments a t cost. This servic To be reconcl1 d unto God, to pos· According to a letter w ritten by hus grown fllst r in populari ty than If you are interested in building a horn now or in the LIMA BEANS Full Pod sess God's favor and friendship, to Governor Thomas McK an to G n- any plan ever offered by any comp OHA GE FIOI'i tl a Valf'III'ili. I ~ (', do!. be at pcace with God. is the great, ern I Washington, ciot d Newark, any 0 1' farm organizati on, it is said future, you will never find a better location. Select cst Cortune, bliss a nd happlncss a Del. October 8, 1777, the (unci be- by Southern Stut s olTici uls. Farm CHAPEFRUIT ,ccllte;; ;; 3 (or human being can nnr! on earth. longing to the trust es of Newark rs of more than 150 communities the lot you want now before it is sold at these extreme- ASPARAGUS I' y I!-(I" urig, bil' Academy had be n captur d al Wil- In Virg ini a, West Virginia, Mory- Jet· ~":-.:-.~ C ~ ~ COO 0.00.00 •• 0 ••• mi.nglon. The ACa?emy ~ e c o rd ~ 1 (I ~ci, and D loware hove adopt d Iy low prices! TOMATOE ~~()6' ~!i:g ~ : ; ;,l lh!, , 1.; prI or to the RevolutIon wei lost , thiS plan. M. D. Crowl, manager RADISHE Cl'i p, Hed :~ f READ Ithe n w minute book d ales f rom of th local coopcrative s rvice ~: J anuary 5, 17B3. stor , will b In a ttendance at the SEE CANTALOUPES Ca li f. According to th Academy m inu- conferenc . . '{ t 5, 1763· 17B9, lhe school wus re- :1: opened in 1783 wilh William Thomp- G orge Bruyette of Swanton, Vt., I\'[ 'al ami Produce PI'ict's THE POST ~. son as prinCipal. He was rector un- sell s 50,000 frogs a year to hotels Any Agent or Broker ~ ti l August 29, 1794, when the Acad- and restaurants to help supply the ulurday- NcwlI"k ~~~~~~~~~~~~' I e mywM clo~dfur~oyoo~ ~m~d~h~~ l ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Newark Post, Newark, Delaware, Thursday, June 8, 1939 ewat"k High chool Graduate ~fat"k 25th Anniversary HondllrllS Kccp ~ 0111 be to keep oul of other countries' STANTON or Inlcrllilliollul Affuir troubles nt nil limes. Although it has a G rm:!ny colony A superior court judg at Se lIll'. and J apanese are a tiv ther, Il n· Wash .. grnnled :l divorc to L L. EXERCISE duras Is keeping out or anything Wm,el\ nft r he testified hi s wit' that may suggest intercst ill in· wouldn't pennit him to drink 0 1' t malionnl poltticnl ,,!Tail'S just smok(' in his house. OJllTUi\JtY MONDAY now. Tegucigalpa, the cnpi tul, has "II i.t /lot fl, c goy cool 11,01 lII akcl IIle many Germans, but I' sidents say Bessi e yenrs gcrll!Clllan ." I r \~~~le l\v(J that the activities o [ [ol'eign coun· JUNE IrB MotcdOUghl,'r IIf Mt's. ]4 Gids, 8 Boy tries arc contln d enllrely to ctriv· N E URI TIS rn o nth~;cd last Thursdny 1--. ll-Tho first lak" stoomer mil a comm I'cwl rather than a ~ cross<>dth"ocean, 1891. .:r
Calendar. Wtones, t Nmth Street, Wllming- L oenl 1\1 e rehants Wurllc d not 1st, nrc bemg pass d, havc been found In lhls " It Events Around Newark J--;- September 8-9 Agains t Spuriou ChcIIUCS Some Uclltlous names and the local bu sl ne ~s m n (l I'e wal' n~c:~ :~ Newn k u~e -10 Annual American Legion and Roberl J Bo d t " denominations which have becn de- on gUll I'd , bOy~ ~c DOOII campaign tor Legion Auxllial'y conventIOn Newulk Trust YC~mleasuler . of lhe tccted arc. Exchange National Bank ------n e aware College a t Rehoboth pany, Issued 11 of N Y $20 Mid W t (' I Married At New L .( a nd campmgn tor girls a t wa.l'Illng thiS \V e k to all m rchunls, B nnk- Ch;~ugo ' $20 - T~~ N u t~ o n ll l . 11 88 Gt'l s D('~r e ('; LO(,lIl OUt 011 Yesterday Women's ,?ollege in twenti eth. ~Iltn g stallon . ~ nd hOI I managers and omme;'cial' Asso In ~ n tl o nt\ll Rloll 1\1('11 "le l'CIISI' Trib(' a nnual sWimming and lite rav- 24, AIlllllucd A MClIlbe l' l ~ be n gual d against spurious Wushmglon $20 ' A .' Ion of 1\1 ' I ' . mg program sponso d b Of E 5 lavelers cheques 111" " mCllcan and .11lI 00 11'1be No. 23, 10.R.M. Delaware Red Cross re y 2 Playe r s G.·oup " In many cases " the locl1 1 bank l~nOls Bunk and Tnl t o, hicago, of Wil mington. visited M i nnehuh ~ Th At the close of the nmth season ofTlclal pOin ted ~ut , " the p C I~so n h ~q TI'a v~6ers Amcncan B n n k Tribe No. 23, of Newark, Tucsdny · ursday, June 8 the E 52 . " " cnshlllg lhe chequc is not aWl' l~e. ; Paclfi~ Bunkel'S As- "veiling and exemphfled the all- 2.30 p m.-~egu l ar me e tin g of .. PI UYP I S, dl amatlc orgnl1l- of lhe fact that many fI'8Udul ~ : e ~ocin h o n , $20 ; Contlncntal NUtil n- Amerlc.m dcgree on a duss of cnn- Wo,?en s H ome MiSS ionary zatlon a t the Ul1Ivel'slty of Dela- cheques, beunng the names of b a n~ ! ~ \ t~~,:~' $20, and Dextel' lIorton dl~l,n\(os Society of Newark M. E . wm'e, a nnounce the admiSS ion of 01' other ol'ganlzahons which d ' Bank, $10. I he loc.1 1 llraglllznhon. dunng the Church at home of Mrs. C. R. 24 stUdents, including one graduat- 0 Although no counlel'feit cheques !)ust YOIll·. showed th lurg st gain 7:45 I~U~k..:...:;~~~~~d ~~adwomen's ing ,/Jeni o ~" to membership. f:":":":":":":":~:":":":":":":~:":":":":":":":":":.. : .. : •. : .. : .. : .. : • •: .. : .. : .. : .. :_.: .. : .. : .. : •. : .. : ~:...... , ..... ~ ~~~n~~'~e~;~~~ ii~I~OI~~ ;~U~O~~1CI;~gt , Ho,:",e and F oreign Mi ssionary Accordmg to Dr. C. R. K ase, di- :s: Week-End 5 I I .... :i: The picnic, schedul'd for Sund~y Society of First Presbyteria n reclor of drama hcs ut the unlvers- ::: pee as .;. at Chltrles DeRose's plnec at I1lu'm- i h ~I'C h a t home of Mrs. C. B. ity, membership in th" playel'S is ::: MAXW ELL HOUSE OFFE i' . • ::: ony. has been postponed until vans, College Ave nue. the most coveted dramatic honor ';' MAT HES ...... , ~ L ...... Lb. can 2fic :1: June 18. · Friday, June 9 a student can allain. No student :1: IVORY SOAP ...... 2 i ..~ .. h; .. :~ .... ;.,.. : .. .. ~ ...... ·3 p~ gs . ]~ c ::: :~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=.-~~.-~=. 8.30 p '. m.-Commencem"nt ex e 1' - can be admitted u ntil the j unior ';' P. &. G. SOAP g il lS ] IC ;) m cd. c M I' . and Mrs, Wederick Wheeless Mr, ~ nd Mrs. )~r e de rick Bark- '1' To COIII C .'. G- I 2tc and Mi ss E s te ~ l e Wheeless, Orcha rd ~? , ~~ .Im~~~t o ~r:.e r~~~~~~e r~~ ~~.~ S un hillC GI'Hhum C .·ue ket·, full lb. IJkg. 17e ~.!:!:., . - ~l"n . ~. :..!:.I.:_: A ~~~~NR";; a d4 ;.~)~~ s I ~~r~,a':,a tlw d :~ Road' r wMere dldl1lM,er gAuesl:s Ron JSunk- Amstel Avenue, on Monday. ' S unshine Kris IJY CI'Hekel's full lb. pkg. 18e .' ", " I.slon. phone 842 1. ay 0 I'. ~ n rs. rle . ac _ ~ ______.:...:.. ______-=---=- __ . ~,-.l ! ~ 1 " . ~t,!·;rlil 1 5- II -trc. sod n, Magnol ia, Del. Mi ss Virgi ni a E. Thomas, d aught- Co.·n Flake 2 pkg. 13c \ smull 5 c ::: . ~ ",'- . :!: =====F==S=I======Mrs. ~y W. Ewing, W. 0JV. T L W t . er of MI'. and Mrs, C. Richard Thom- CI'" c o \IvOl'y Soup 1 9 :s: ... ~ .• , 'j' or a e , Avenue, ,n'C spending the C t d M I Ih. can arge . c Give Him 01' H e l' A Hamilton Wrist ...... -·'c, ....' I Columbus. Ohio. K e~'r w :~', .ent~~tain~d ~ t . d ~n~I:~ ~~~ ~~\~~I:i~y ~~ a~a:y l : ~~d~l~t~93~~ 18f~ t ~Iodel'n ~l~ B~!~a :J~RK~~~~ r'bav~~b~. ~,~c~:: <:.~ on S~tu~ay III honor of thell' h~~l se was aWal'ded her Mastel' of Science 3 lb. c an 4 ,9 c 0 1 I s mull g e •• Walch. • 6_-8_-_IIC_, ______Whilll1<'1', Lafuyette gues s, ap ~. a n,d Mrs. N. B . 110- degr e at the Coll ege P a rk institut- P c l Milk La ll 4 for 25c xyl 0 1m-ge ] 9c .;. :;: PO INTER PU I)S. registered , See Len several days Ihis week mons, of Fl s h e l~l a nd , N. Y. ion Sa tlll'day. She has becn con- , _____'______:!: :1: 6':'~r~~lt. 45 E. Ma,n Sl. Ololhrl·. i\1I'0. William S Dr. and Mrs. R. O. Bausnlan, W. nected with the entomology depar t- Fl'lIilS & Vcgel,ublcs- F l'e It & R c a s onable ':' 'i' TIIR EE-PfECE MISSION SU ITE. cheap. Middletown, Dcl. Mrs l Will b c n'mrmbcred a~ • • • • • • • • • • •• Kccp in Milld-A FlIlI Lillc-Govl. Ins p ecLe d MealS ::: ::: 6 : 3 fc,ospect Ave. MISS 1I1ary Brimijoin Nrwill'k, ' ~ ANNOUNCEMEN1' I:; Towll'ellti , 1/[, and 1 have succe ded my brother l owll'''llcl Hoad, and as a r epresenta tive of the R Wl'll es and ~o n , lb. P::: * lb. :11:::" Stock Of Elgin, AmI::': :1:. Farm Bureau I nsurance COln 8,,10," . 1\l"lmdiri. al'~ vis A:I[m:;~;~:;,:, '~ ~[~'~~~tmg~~i: ::: : ::~::'~~~werl ~*:! · W, . , t,~;.~ W~~e~~u: ~:::::~~;:~;;:~~~~~~~:, pany. m ~ bOlh th is week, Phone 8221 for service on WILLIAMS • ~~~'~C~Y ' llnJl~~e s!~i:AC~~f.S ' ~i~~eV~i. V. lJ nw~o n who spent your presenl poli cy or addi R a l E s tate Ins Llrance . :i: 73 1 w. 9th St .. tional information on your IIIII IIIII ::: Mervin S. Dale ~~~~~'n:~~:~:"h~'t~c nt . Suulh )·t·,,1' . ( l'u~h ill f( in ] fOLlses And Farms • .:. ,I. G-B- Ife . vUCali America. IS spend inslll'Onee problems. L;,;,:~~f:::l~d ~[r , \~ \ With her parents, Han;; DalVdo n, W . REE. E • J ARMON DI al 8221 S. College Ave. ~;~ ::~:' ~a~e~ t : :.= IIIII 11m L~:::~!.~2L.,.:~.<<_:,,:,,:.:.:~::::<<~,,:,,:_~.:,,:,,:,,:,,:,,:.<~:~~~j ::~:~f~~f~~~E!"~~ Wilmington, JACKSON'S HARDWARE Dial 4391 Prices On Seeds For Canning Tomatoes--Grass and Garden Seed--Lawn SuppUes Roamin' Blood Root Mountain To Be Scene Of "Grudge Climb" with Rutledge The Newark Post The N e wark Pos t, Newark, D e la w a r e , Thurs d ay, J un ,1939 Football Material W ith commenc m n t cer emon ies ju,'t compl Lcd and the f' u mm r r ec ss at Lh e n iv n;ily of D lawaI' in its fi r s L w eek, we'll agr t h at a n y lall( abou t fooLba ll aL this lime of t.he y at' is a b it o u t of place. Thc greut dcsirc to win and th c~ '------ N. H. S Diamond Record Best In rcsulting pressur of thc modern to indicate that Hancock migh t fail game, however, has mad it an to live up to the standard. Newark High Tossers Won II GaInes In 13 Stads aU-year sport. Coaches, for in- It is generally agreed that Dela- JACKET TOSSERS WIN .11, stance, (Ind It necessary to plan wore's grid t !l m in 193 1 was the HILL and sc ~ cme, flg~ l re p l a~s, study the best in the school's history . That OPPOS ItI on, rcvlcw mlstakcs, and was the team which lost to Navy, 2· concentrate on n. hun?red und one 12-7, on an "Annapolis decision." LOSE , TEAM HITS HARD DRAWS 11 other detaIls dur JJ1 g nl~ e months of Nine starling members of that the year JJ1 .a ~pec ul a lr ve effort to tcam were from Delawar . Winnie produce a WJJ1nJJ1 g t am JJ1 Sept m- Mayer, Newark, and Sam Sloan, O'Connell's Charges Defeated By P. S. ENTRIES ber, Oc~ b e r , an ~ November. Dover, handled the ends; the elder ~t thIS partlcul.ar s ~ aso n . the Monk Dillon of Wilmington filled duPont And William Penn In Return dTive for m aten al IS at ItS heIght. one tackle post· Aub and Herm FOR TEST Schoolboy star s, who haven't been Walker both of Wilmington but grabbed off already . by college not r e l ~ te d , were the guards; Bud Games After Riding Roughshod Over scouts, find th e m selve ~ JJ1 the mIdst Haggerty, Wilmington, played cent of a nock of persuasIve genUemen er; Hank Haney and Allen Kemski , Foes In First Meeting; Brooks Stal" who are not above talkJJ1g ~ b o ut Wilmington, were the halfbacks, <0>------.------~ I the ndvantages of dear Ol? Slwash and J ohn Branner, Middletown, did as an educatIOnal lJ1 stltutlon. ~h e a man's job at the fullback post. N e wul·k High S dlool BU_lling Avcrugcs number Of. men around the h Igh No all -Americans in the lot, but PCT. SCh ~o l star IS g a ~ged u s u a ll ~ by s81d those Delaware gr idders m ade Player AB R H 2B 3B HR TB RBI star s football ablltty and. hIS chance history. And when the statc uni- P. Cochran .. ... 2 1.000 0 0 of ma k1l1g . the scholasltc grade. versity starts handing out scholar- Cataldi ...... 750 I -rwr- ships, it is to be hoped that native N. Broo ks ...... 42 24 19 .452 32 23 Seventeen I'iders from Hancock Has Everyth ing sons with class and ability wont Wells 19 6 .368 12 vania, New Jersey, Which brings to m ind husky Bill be overloo ked. Bob Hancock de- Stewart ...... 30 15 11 .367 12 Canada will takc part in Hancock, who will graduate at finitely possesses every requisite of Ewing 38 10 9 .321 13 hill climb to be staged Newark High School tomorrow a student, athlete, and gentleman. Dayetl . 35 13 11 .314 16 clock Sunday night with a goodly share of ath- It seems ridiculous for Delaware to Root Mountain, under letic and scholasti c honors. Yet lose him to Drexel. .. 01' is the habit H. Brooks ...... 42 9 13 .310 28 17 Boasting a winning streak of six games and capturing I I co ntests out of 13 starts, the Newark High of the Newark .. ov',vl'YC~ • • " eoralng scouts buzzing around Bill are of losing to Drexel ingrained too Hancock . 31 9 .290 11 8 School baseball team of 1939 compiled one of the best schoolboy marks in the state and one of the out- 5150 Cash noticeable by their absence. Can deeply? Dougherty 1 I 4 .273 3 standing records in the history of the institution. Members of the squad are: Standing, I to I.. - Frank More than $150 in caSh ~lftdlmlalU Y it be that they haven't heard of the Aiken . ... 38 18 10 .263 13 Balling, Jr., mgr.; Dick Robinson, J oe Moore, Angelo Cataldi, George Dougherty, Bill Hancock, Bob Ewing, be awarded to winners lad? Connell's Pat Wins Again Weldin .. 44 II II .250 1 I Ceci l Cochran, Howard Wilson, Leslie McCormick, Robert Sheaffer, and Coach Ralph O'Connell. Seated, I. events, scheduled to Praclically an "AU student for Like they laughed at Officer Kane Wilson 4 .250 to r.-Albert Thorpe, Arnold Wells, Franklin Dunn, Mike Dayett, Ace Aiken, Norman Brooks, Charles Wel- one of the most four years, Hancock, nevertheless of the music-Iessons-by-mail ad- Moore 9 .222 din, Henry Broo ks, Robert Stewart, and P aul Cochran. On ground-Octavio Cataldi and William Balling, ~~,d;:w :~S \VitY,\wo had time to play a lot .o f too tba!1 verti semenls, that's how they laugh- Dunn .. 14 .214 assl. mgrs.-Photo by Rumer. for children under 14 and baseball 111 Yellowjacket ral- cd at Raymond Vansant Bucking- C. Cochran 8 .125 m~nl. As co-captall: of the hlghlet ham some weeks ago when he paid Sheaffer 10 .100 and the other open to g~ ldd e r s la.s t fall hIS work at .the $25 for a beagle hound registered D f d· L· k Ch . To MYERS IN ors. PIvot poslhon was of such caltber as Connell 's Pal. And the one who ~;~~I~m ick : ~~~ e en Ing In s amplon m;:~ m~~d ~ ~t~~ r~~~i!S ~~ :t ~~-~~:~e n:c~ ~ ~as~~a:II:~~I Y ~~ laughed the I,o udest was none other d which will be the only DiMaggio on the dia mond, still he ~~~~~ ~ ~ dog 5 breeder, Robert Roy Team Totals ' 385 132 116 .302 16 10 164 98 Meet Stiff Test In First Roon CUE LEAD ored this year by the IS dependable as an o ~tfl e ld er a.n d But Buckingham, barely three Figures compiled by Frank Balling, Jr., Manager. attracts hundreds of p ossess~s the r?re. ablltty of deltv- days after purchasing h is "ugly ® the scene. Crack-ups e r~r~::~ ~~~~~:l~~e ln o~h e T~~~~,~·I O gy d uckli ng," saw Pat fi nish third in By " The Roamer" George Anderson Slated To Face G ;~o:~o~ tri~ ~I~ s \~;,\~~P\ thinks enough of Hancock's schol- lhe ~as t e rn F e d e~'a ll o n Of . Beagle Alt houg h losing t o two teams they had pre vious ly mire d B F (S k) R· I I I 0 Fossett, eorge degree angle and astic abili ty to award him a schol-Clubs champIonshIp lest fOI. d e r~l - unde r one-s ided 'cor e, the N e wark High School baseb a IJ •• an y IC 1ar( S n pener Idle,. Fifth Win local organi zation have arship. And the Dragons might es at Gladstone, ~. J ., whIch l e- fi t d t h 1939 'th t h b t d afternoon of dangerous even permit him to cavort on the turned a good porllon of the on g1l1- !)el' orme l'S comp e e e sea s on W I ~ e s recor By Tee Spoon First Sixteen F M I I Six motorcyclc events athletic fi eld. They do things li ke al purchase prrce. In t h e sta t e. E le ve n gam es w e r e won a a gall1 st the two One of last year's fi nalists w ill B. F. Richards (72) vs. George or ary an{ er sented : 45 cu. inch thaI. B e~; ~e l a~~u~,~nd~~n :~ t ~~o ! ~st~~~ losses. One co n test w it h t h e ~I et~h e r Brown chool was can- be eliminated in the fi rst round Anderson (79 ) inch novice; 45 cu. inrh - r w r - fu rther justified his existence by ceIJ e d la t w eek due to examinat IOns . of the championship tournament C. W. Davis (83) vs. H. B. Wil- By "Cue Keeley" 80 cu. inch amateur; 45 Why Not D e laware? copping the third ribbon in the Ewing's Loss Felt 0 ~~h ~ ~~ ~oetw~~~ e~~~~lrl:S ~I:~,e~:~~ li a~~;r t ( 7~ ~p Pi nc o t t (78) vs. A. E. With only three m atches being expert a ng p~O S~~i 'O~nch Since some scholarships are to special member class for 13-inch Off to a fl yini! start, the J ackets STAR TO GRADUATE the defending champion, George F. Benton (83) played during the week, J ackie In the 80 cu .. be handed out by the University of dogs and bitches. Meanwhile, Con- copped thei r fi rst seven games be- Anderson, slated to oppose the 1938 Don Tammany (81) vs. Ben Davis, Myers, Havre de Grace, took a half- Julian (Wild Willie) Delaware this year to prospective neU's only entry in the show, fo re bei ng stopped by P . S. d uPont, S k) R' h d J (74) game edge o ~ e r J ack Fossett, local fend ing champion, will male students showi ng combined Tonyette, failed to place in the 5- 2-0: then won four straight only to ~I~"~~:r~u:~n~"g F~ a~c~~s.y IC ar s rT. W. Shenk (75) vs. D. H. seeded star, 111 the c1 a~s A pocket of opposition from i athletic and scholastic ability, we dog fie ld that comprised the class lose the fina le at New Castle, 6-2. Anderson, who made local links Stearns (82) bl~li a rd tournament at JImmy Mart- West Chester. Pa., wonder why Drexel, an arch rival, fo r American bred bitches not ex- Opening with West Nottingham on history last year by copping his W.C. Brewer (84) vs. R. Stewart, 111 s State parlor. Wolfe, of Bethlehem, has been permitted to nab the in- ceeding 13 inches. April 12, Coach Ralph (Irish) 0 '- second consecutive crown, played Sr. (78) Myers regi stered his fifth win in ers who have been side track for Hancock. "Stuck!" remarked Connell when Connell 's charges waded into the for the fi rst ti me this year on the G. E. Dutton, Jr. (77) vs. H. B. succession by tumbling George in cl imbs a ll over Boys Jrom Newark High School Buckingham bought P at, but the P resbyterians for a 17-to-1 v ~ r d ic t local links in the quali fying round McCa ulley (83) Laskaris, 100-82, in a slow lilt Wed- the coun try. and the state generally have con- new combination is t ooli ng him. at Colora. The contest was l imited and carded a poor 79, whi le Rich- R. Y. Thoroughgood (81) vs. R. nesday night. Fossell, with four have separated th se tributed their share towards Dela- "J'1l make Pat a champion next to five innings d ue to cold weather. ards racked up the low medal tot- Stewart, Jr. (73) wi ns, and Ren George, with a trio then the other succeeded ware's athleti c success. . limited year," predicts Buckingham, "then Bob Ewing, now hurling for al of 72. Second Sixteen of triumphs, as against no defeats, ing top honors. though it be .. . and there is nothing we'll see who's stuck." Cambridge in the Eastern Shore FoUowing a definite set of rules Ray Burnett (84) vs. R. Y. Tag- respectively, were idle. El'I1ie J ordan. another League, turned in a mound master - for toul'l1ament pairings, the match gart (87) Laskaris In Comeback is expected to figure piece in the second game on April committee could do nothing else J . A. Giamateo (91) vs, J . A. J ul- Charlie Owi ngs, erstwhile Wil- in th final count 18 when P . S. duPont was trounced, but pit the two 1938 fi nali sts a- ian (86) mington star, failed to crash the mount. Both Stern ;'~-!it~~~e · w~~~~~ ~to ~ it d i~ h ~e~:~ gainst each other. G. M. Braybill (87 ) vs. Dr. G. W. winners' circle on his fourth suc- be up on Indian ' ' Flashes innings. Richards, one of the best golfers Rhodes (94 ) cessive attempt when he was down- Wooley han will have With Ewing continuing to stop at the Newark cl ub and holder of L. A. Stearns (90) vs. T. S. ed by Tony Sanborn, 100-68, Tues- Davidson under him. the course record of 66, is making Beck (85) day night. It was Sanborn's fourth The six vents are By ~ ~P~~i;rg ~~~~:::~,n'5 _t~; e ~~~:ee~~ r~-~; a bid for his fourth crown. He P . Di Sabatino (85) vs. M. D. Dar- victory in fi ve starts. three classes as University of Delaware J ayvees, emerged victor ious in 1932, 1934, rell (90) Alter losing to Myers on Wed- riders ~ h o. have never 14-4 , and William Penn 0.1 New and 1936, but never has been able D. DiSabatino (98) vs. G. T. nesday, Laskaris made a comeback tn a hlllcilmb b fore; Castle, 12-6. to win on consecutive years as did Boli (87) the fo llowing night to stop 'fom those who have been Bill Fletcher Following the complaint of Vic Anderson. J . D. Counahan (86) vs. J . F. DeVage, 100-75. The colorful Phil- w?n less than thrcc evenlu;•• urE~a t e. Lichtenstein, P. S. duPont coach, t h ~tl t ~~~l g~~ uil~n!~~~ ~ie~~I~ ~~d ~:i~~ A~der!On P~~~d iS i (89) vs. J . H. adelphia n was never in the running wtnners of thrchei) nOdri cap~Ifd .lein. Ewing was declared ineli gi ble early No I Russell Robinson D' k (8 as the stoic Greek star, roll ing up abKseennceBuotflelo"11C leg, y AN ODD T U RN OF THE CARDS, GEOR GE ANDEH- in May by the Wilmin lon-Suburb- rva the completion of th i~ fi rst-round IC ey 5) . . . ., . g . All-State guard in 1936-37-38 and batU e, several local Itnksmen are ------a good lead at the hal.fway m ark, Sunday's aITair and ' B son, c hampIOn o n t h e N e w a rk Count r y C lub In 1937 a nd ?n Prlllclpals ASSOCIatIon for h a~- co-captain of the Newark High showing improved form and are ex- A I CI coasted to an easy win. post performances, 1938, wi11 be force d to s t a r t a seriolls d e f e n se of hi ti t le in lIlg ~ayed ~oo I much baseball tn School grid array last fall "Robbie" pected to place determined bids for nnlla 1arter Sta nding 01 the Players to wind up in the the opening round of t h e t o urna m e n t n ow being staged at secon a r YD~~~~ 'l son Aid \~i ll receiv: his. d iploma 'tom?rrow top honors. Boat Procession M:~~;er . w~ n L~st P et. of New York City, he D 't t h 't 't h' b I Illght He IS Said to be planlllng to Stewart Has Chance Fossett 4 0 ):ggg prom inently in hillclimbs t h e local course. d espI e wo- I. pI C lllg Y s en- nter' Fishburne Military School in Robert Stewart, Jr., turned back At 0 C· t George .... 3 0 1.000 out the east. .MAKER. OF. LOCAL LINKS", s ~~er~~\~~~~r ~1~~O~~ss t ~~ ;;:c:el~ the fall. in the fin al round two years .ago by cean I y ~~:;,~or~ ...... ~ ~ .BOO Entries Rece ived hl .s to~y WIth hI S two consecullve was runner-up to Anderso n in 1937, when the Dynam iters made off with ~ nd e r so n, . ~a tn e d a strategIc spot Laskaris . .. 2 3 :~08 Entries thus for received ~~n s ~~I~~~ a~::h~ i~ a t~~ , t~~ !e~ut~~ ~:rr:~ ~ts ~h~ es~~:~ e~ o~a~a~ ea !~~ : n :-t~~ I S~~ rd~ ~;re dF r~ ~~li~ it~h~~ ; ATHLETES ~p ~~ : .s~~ ~~~ ~lsO ~V ~ ~~li ~y~ n ~ h:~~:: Whil e Murlin Season To g~~I!~r g : :ggg ~~~~~~in ,a~~ .. , ~il~:~o;~~; , gatnst the m ost dangerous and best fl'om Richards and Anderson as it h f 11 . E" . ]' . 73, whIle Ben DaV IS, Jr., covered Open Sunduy At Populur Hea lh .... 0 4 .000 Davidso n; H. J. Gilleland, match player a.t the .c lu~ , a c oo ~ : is possible to gel. He should be ~il~ ;;sa n : t~;:;;J in :~ ~ ~o~~ e ;:I~ ~ the distancs in 74 s tJ' ~ k es an? T .. W. Marylund Scasidc R esort (Please Turn To calculattng pel former S a n k y heard from along w ith Ben Davis f . GRADUATE Shenk, 75. ShOWlll g tncreastng Im - Richards \~ h O is at his best when J r., T. W. Shenk, George Dutton: o ~~~~~~s; ed l Y Ewing's loss was provement, Harry B. Williamso n . . , the gOtng IS toughest. . Jr., and Harry WilJ ia mson. fe lt by the team but it was a let- knocked off one of the best scores G OV~ I nor Herbert R. 0 Can or, Ru;nn-;r-up to Anderson tn. last WE'RE GOING '.[0 TAJ{E A down in hitting that cost the Jack- of hI S c ~ r ee r , a 76, to show that of ~a l Y l an d : aboard a U . S. Coast ye a ~s tlUe battle, th ~ o?ds WIll all flyer and see what we can call on ets a perfect season. II To Receive he IS gomg to be .an outstandmg Guald c u t~et, I ~ command of Capt. be tn favor of the W l l mlll~ton golf- the ntire tournament. Here goes: Rebounding after the P. S. du- contender for tl1C ti lle. T. ~ . ~OO I e, wI.ll lead a parade of er who has been on the l mks smce Rirst Round- R ichards to d feat P ont game, the Black and Gold toss- D·plo At Sixteen linksmen wi ll vie for the chmtel boat clulsers through the the. first autum n leaf -:vas swept off, Anderson; Wi ll iamson to defeat C. ers skimmed past Wilmington High, I mas ' trophy, while the second sixteen new llllet and along the coast at while the local champIon played on W. Davis; Lippincott to defeat 5-4; outclassed Beacom, 7-5, (in Ew- Newark School will play for consolati on prizes. Ocean C Ity, next Sunday. The t~e Ne-:v ark course for the .. first Benton; Ben Davis, J r. to d feat ing's fi naJ appearance); walloped Pairings are as 101.1 0ws: event WI ll . ':fl ark the open ll1g of the tIme this year in the qualt fYlllg Don Tammany; Shenk to defeat D. Middletown, 21-4, pnd took Wil- whIte I ~a lll .n seas?n off the Mary- r O~; d ~!ts W~k~~M PARATIV ELY H. Stearns; Robert Stewart, Sr. to mington into camp a second time Eleven Yellowjacket athletes w ill ate are: George Nor ris, football and ~~,nndun~ O:~~a d::~n :~~ ~e the "second easy vi ctory for Anderson last year def at W. C. Brewer ; George Dut- by a 9-10-7 count. William Penn receive their diplomas at the forty- basketball star ; Gus Smith, P aul ~eld at the ~eso r t, spo n~~~~~ b to be for a sizzling 67 gave him the im- ton, ~r . to defeat McCaulley, and was '/Ictonous in the I1na l batlle SIxth annual commencement e~- Roblllson, Delbert Thompson, and Game F ishermen' A . t' y the etus that carried him throu h to Rob:lt Stewart, J r. to defeat at New Castl e, 6-2 . erClses, sc h ed~ ll ed to be hId. 1Il D o n ~ ld Gallagher, members of the . " s . ssoel8 Ion. p 6 d 5 . t Th' g . ' Tholoughgood. Altogether the Jackets counted the Newark HIgh School audltonum varSIty football squad' Andrew TI'y- OVCl nO boa ts al e expected to a an VIC O~y . IS year ~ Second Round- Richards to de- 132 runs to their opponents' 44 . • Friday nigh t. ens, a member of t h ~ Iootball and be. in the ~ r ocess i ~ n . A number of ~ to ry Im ~ ~ e dl .er:nt, ho.wever, feat Wil li amson; Lippincott to de- 'orman Brooks Leads Coach William K. Gillespie's foot- track squads, nnd Robert Bausman, p~ ' lvate Crlll Se rs WIll fall in li ne be- or a ac 0 practIce may I emove feat Ben Davis, Jr.; Shenk to de- . . . bnll squad wi ll be hardest hit by also a member of the track team hllld th Coast Guard boat, fo llowed the defender before he has a chance fea t. Robert Stewart, Sr.; and Dut- Dlmmutlve. Norman Brooks led graduation with seven varsity grid- ". . by charted cruisers. The parnde to get warmed up. Last yea:, t~e Ion to defeat R. Stewart, J r. the hIllers WIth ~ fin: mark.of .452. deI'S slated to mak their departure. CdT\~~~r~e~~~. r o~ :: ~~a~~ ::, bewO\:ard- wi ll start promolly at 4 O'clock in two ~o lI e ~ s met on J uly 10, thIS Third round- Richards to defeat He had I~ saf tIes In 42 tImes at Ralph (Irish) O'Connell baseball '.. . g . 01k .In th waters of the inland b A nti T h f'y're Jlls t A s Eage l' To Ta ke year, It WI ll be a month sooner. . Lippincott, and Dullon to defeat bat. includIng five doubles, a t ~ip l e , mentor. will los onl three mem- Intramural phYSIcal educ.atron, MIss . . . ay and The Hook In All I r earm. \lIti R Ichards has weeks Of. prac~lce Shenk. and two home runs. In addItion, bel'S of hi s crack dr.lmond outfit Ethel Johnson, Ins t ru~t~ l : an.nounc- wIll. pI oceed, s lJ1 gle fil e, . thl'ough on the local course behmd h Im; Final d- R' h d he scored 24 runs and drove 23 mates Bob Sl wart an infleldel" Bi ll H a n ~ cd tlt lS \~eek . They .'lIe. MISS Ev- the II1 let mto the Allanttc Ocean Lakes Arollnd H ('I"(' Anderson has a couple of days. S HOU~~un AN~~: r'~N OVER across Lhe rubber to set the pace in cock a c'ltche' . I G 'g D h elyn SmIth, d al ~ g ht e l of Mr. and and along the coast to the north F i h With T h e Fines t Alld Mos t It's a sad si tuati on, indeed, with . ' - every offensive department but one. ' , I ,. nne cor e aug - Mrs. T. D. SmI th ; Miss Virginia end of lhe resort h ' the two outstanding golfe l's forced ~ome the handIcap of lack of pracl- Hi s brother, Henry, had four hom- ~rty, ::t o ':fl mbel of the mound statl' Stickley, daughtel' of Mr. and Mrs. . '. w el e th boats Economical Equipme nt Y O II Call Bu )' to face each other in the opening ICC and manage to wenther the first- ers to top the team in rounel-trip- ,";d utrlrty man. Edward Stickley, and Miss Hel n WI ll Cll cl a buoy and r eturn in A F ull Line Of Fi hing toek loll' r ound, but the pairing was dictated round match, we t~ink h 'II make pel's. , Two t h ~'~ e- l tt.el· men, Hancock Dean, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. special fo rmati on to their home On by lnw and was made becnuse of !urther local golt hIstory by turn- ,Ind Slew,llt, wI ll . top the group Will ium H. Dean. docks. H~U1d the qualiCying scores. mg In his th ird cham pionship per- J' T h' L k' AL' I Of. athlete:. The fo rmer, besld s RICHARDS' LOW ME DAL 72 formance. Inl 0 Ill, 00 lug l enl , p~ l fOrmll1g as backstop fo r the local .:.. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : •• : .. : .. : ...... O UTH B END placed him at the top of the heap: Above conclusions w re drawn D"ive ll To Los ing \ V e igllt ~h ~e, ~e l d down tho pivot post on ;i; F LT .... "':i: h '1 79 fA d mai nl y from conversations ove'- gIld team, and a guard berth .1. .. Rods-Reel-Flies- ;"J..·e r .~ - II (/o ~·$ w I.e a poo: . or n erson re- I AIler pitching 87 innings for the lor the cage q uint t. S tewart, a -:- .:- s ultm~ j ~ hI S being match d with heard ; past performances a nd Pittsburgh Pirates in 1937 , Jim Tob- shortstop on the Jacket baseball :s: An y Evening lind Sunday ;( Lines-P1II gs-8 oo l.~ - !"f' I .~ lhMe nWIlmth"engbtoenstgmOlafenr . w 'ln "Ild b _ scores tabulated during the current ir~ w?rked 241 . innings .last year. team, played end o.n the football '.:'. ;:: y . .. . ~ easo n . Not being a golfer and not FIgurIng that th IS year h IS program leven and forward m basketbaU. .1. Sec What Newark, Elkton and T he .1. cause It 5 taktng place thIS early . . . . might continue the upward curv AII- tate Guard .1. Surrounding Countryside .1. in. the season, we think it'll be too r mllrar ~\llt h .the game of whIch Jim t.acked on a lot of x~ru s tored~ Another outstandi ng athlete who ::: Look Like From The Air ::: SINGLES' RIchards. nch competItor IS capable, we re- up power over' the winter. Manager wi ll grab his sheepskin is Norv -:- Fli I $1 00 .:- But while these two will be fl ght- sign oursel1 to the lact that there Traynor quickl y weighed him at Robinson who cent I' ed most of :s: g ItS • • ;.: ing it out at the top of the heap, will be many errors in our judge- San B rnardino, however, so Tobin his atlentlon on football during hIs -:- From The Weimer Farm, Elkton Road .:. Ilnother young goiter who fl ashed mont However if any of you links- won the trai ning camp mil age Cour-year career. Co-captai n of the :1: (1 'h Miles From Newark) ;.: Sporting Goods into the limeli ght two years ago, " . priz for running around th bal l 1938 cleven, he was selected aU- -:- ~. has nppnrenUy r eturn d to form. men or golf fa ns care to moke YO lll pa rk as well as most-stem-baths- state guard during the seasons :1: WALDO LOVETI .r. The second-low qualifYlllg count, predictions, we shall be unly too tak n at the t amous Arrowheud of 1936-37-38. -:- 'l' DIAL 40501 73, placed Bob Stewart, Jr., who glad to publish your opinions. Cove. Other athletes scheduled to gradu- :fM:..:.. )o:..:..: .. ;..: ..... -:.. >-. ... : .. : .. : .. :M: .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : •• : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. : .. ;.. :.. :M: ...... :M: .. ;..>-: ...... :-.;..o,.:..:...J ..______-~ The Newark Post, Newark, Delaware, Thursday, June 8, 1989 Seven "Pop" Connors And Four Of Char'O'es On S)llith Fat'IIl Puppy, Novice Bll guson. a8 such President. duly execut- BEING the same Jands and !cremlses J300 Lin. Ft. ~~ In . ork Slip Dowel Sheriff's Sale Transverse EXllonston Joint Respect-For Flag Urged By Leaders ~~1O~~I~~~;;ri~~at:al~e~~~tiH'c~t~nto a~~ I~~~l~r :~dl ' ~~~e;e~' u~,\~e~l,i\~~1g'1b?~~ 2600 .Lln. Ft. Tranverse ContrAction his act and deed and the act and deed SHERIFF'S SALE-By vlrt.ue of a writ ham Caney. by Indenture bearing Joint of said corporation: Ihat the slgna- of Levari ~' acla . No. 54 to me dl- date the Thlrleenth day of August, A. 355 1I . Yds. Cem nl Concrete ture of Ihe said President and of the I'ected will be exposed to PubliC Sale D. 1926. and I'"corded in the ofTice for ~1n so nry Secretary of said orporation to sold at the Court House. Southeast Corner the recording of D eds & e .. at WII 360 S~n:d S. Sup rOcl81 Watcr;>roor- fore\l'olng C e rtlflc~ t e arc In Ihe hand- or Eleventh and KIng Stl·eets. City mlnllton. In and for New astle Coun- 14.200 Ibs. ReinforCing Sl ce l ~~~~~~g ril ;'~rd sa~~m~l~eri~d{'~;s ~~~~ , ~c~~: t1e 'a~~~~'n~\~nsa~~d'oyC~f1l~ e 24t~UI~ltfy ~nA~" D ed ,R&CO~·.d, , Vol. 8500 Ibs. Slructul·.1 Steel and that the seal affi xed to said Cer- of June 1939 at 9 o'clock A. M., Stand- Seized and taken In execution as 420 Lin. Ft. 12 In . T & G n . . P ipe 210 Lin. Ft. 15 In. R. C. P ipe ~~11a~cf !~l clthgor~~I~~ng~ , ~!~d c~:~~~ri,\~ k~~1 '~isTa~'e ~~:. following described ~~~tl'f;O~fl ' l~b~~h~~~ g:~~~: ~~~~~~~d 300 Lin. Ft. 18 In . R. . P ipe act of s c a lin ~, executing, acknowl· ALL 1' hnt cert.ain Jot piece or par- mortgagor and Eva Caney, sUl'v ivlng 90 Lin. PI. 24 In . R. . Pipe 800 Li n. Ft. Cement Concrete urb edging and delivering the said Certl· eel of land with the buildings there- morlgagor. and to be so ld by 4 Catch Basins and Drop Inlets g~fJ:r; n:f ds~lfcl ai~~~~~ ~ f l~~y the stock- ~~deSCt~\':,d ·a~~;.~; ~Td~na l~~ e m~;~' p~~rl~~ SherlfT ·sSAo~Yc~;. MW~I~~~to~I.,eriJ.l. . 2 Manholes 3000 Ibs. astings FUltol],,~la;~Opdl;~'lle :~~~~ rOo_~~I~ ~ d and described as fol- ~~~~3t.5. 1939 . 125 Lin . Ft. Wire Rope Guard Fence 2 End Post Attachments 730 Sq. Yd.. Removal of Present ~~~~9t~ Cf.;u'ri[!/~F~ N er~yECsl~I~G rf~ I~~~~1t p'\~c~~e af et~:~ ======Concrete P avemen t NEW YORK OU. N . ~Y distance of seventy-six feet and nine ADVERTISEMENT .'OR mDS 885 Sq. Yds. Patching of Present s No. 257, Sealed proposals will be received by one l' etc P avement Base ~egY · Nc;,~ · I~~b~ ~73~,e~f ~oh~~~e~rl ' e~~OI~nJh~, ~1':,~tI'!m~ Course Fife~m~1IS~~~e;.~p~I;~~e Mg{C ~ e~~'w ~~~~ \\~~ ~con~~.; gl~ W,~ S P~~ y al~dal\h~et~~~es~ ~;~c~tab"o:~t'D:r.. ~~~~rtrgrt O~~lo~t~ 3000 Ibs. Wrought Iron Blast P lates ~~~5e ~o ~~~~ . ~['.~e ~~c¥J~~~a~n . .fue~~ f~e n~~e ir°~s t:I~~olnl~~~al;:'~ ~~Wh N~~~l~J ih a ~lh~e Sa n~ " pf~~ee ~~'bl~~~~' ~~~n:J CONTltACT 676 ~~8~~~~ ' ~:res"ijd anpC~rr:ss~,',:Vh~g~I:~'t yt~fv.;e~~~~ ;~'~r~~7~~:t"ets q~~~~I~I~~~ Ihe following ce~J;~n~lI~r~~:: ~I '~' ~'I~~ln:; MI. 10 a corner; thence Southerly. and CONTRACT 644 25500 II. Yds. Unclassified Excavation J.J egaJ Notice parallel wi th Delamore Place. twelve KENNE'l"r PIKE '460 u. Yds. Excavation for Struc- The following applications for Ii- ~ ~et~n~~;e~!l ca~~'~e l~hri~e -w~~rl~~it:~lC~ll~: Bt!~~~n~tg~n~~:i'e t~i:~~llr;.~ ~~~~5 L~~l.e 9325 Cl!: I:~S . Cement Concrcte Pnve- cenbes to sell alcoholic liquors have centcr of the party wall between the Federal Aid Project 180A (1) ment beon flied with the De laware L iquor house on this lot and the hOllse on t.he 2300 Cu. Yds. Unclassified Excava· 4500 Lin. Ft. q~ in. COl'k Slip Dowel Commission. This publication is made lot adjoining on the South: thence lion Transverse Expansion Joint I)Ur. uant to statute. Easterly. pat'allel with Third Street and 300 Cu. Yds. Excavation for Struc- 8000 Lin. Ft. '!'ranverse Contraction Mary J . Willis passing through the centre of the said tures 245 C l~ .Oil~dS. Cement Con c ret e ~gw~i' k Main Stl'ccL H ote l ha.;! r ~~n t~~O rl~~ aro~ ~ilnldW~~ st:~I~e~~a; {~g ~~~sy~~~'Cer~c~toC;n~~(I~dC~l.II · C~ Masonry Imp. Order of Elks of Wo rld. Inc. of Delamore Place. and thence thereby Base Course 370 Sq. Yds. Superficial Watel'proof- Pride of Del. Lodge No . 349 Northerly twelve feet. eleven and 1900 Tons Bituminous Concrete Sur- ing 57 Cleveland Av . three-quarter Inches to the pillce of face Course 2J,500 Ibs. Reinforcing Steel Newark Club Begi nni ng. Be the content s thereof 2810 CII. Yds. Cement Concrete Pave- 760 Lin. Ft. 12 In. T & G R. C. Pipe Dr. P. K. l\'lusselman F. Allyn Co~ch, Jr. 6-8-2l. what Ihey may. ment 550 Lin. Ft. 15 In. n. C. P ipe Dr. Musselman, commander of the J . Al~i so n O'Danlel P ost ~ o . I?, American Legion, and Mr. Cooch. immed iate past comn~ a ndel, ate urging a display of American flags by all homes a ~d bl~ s tn ess pl a~es here next Wednesday, set aside as Flag D ay. A natlon~wld e c~~ p a~gn is being conducted for the display of the Sta rs and Stripes as an an swer" to cl'itics of democracy------. ------Rutledge, editor of the Newark Encanlpluent P ost, a lso spoke. On behal1 of the auxiliary, an American nag was (Continued From Pug I) presented to Mayor Frank Collins garet Waters, Wilmington Memorial byT~rs · p;~s~~~~ti o n of the state to Display the Flag of the United States P ost, treasurel', Mrs. Mabel Bryan, aword and the national headquar DESORlPTION OF THE FLAG s. When displayed with another flag 6. \\'hen flags of two or more nations 9. When displnyed over the middle of J . F erdjna nd Speer Post, No. 615, ters' award to Rober t Carso') of agaInst a wall from crossed stlllTS, the are dlsJllllye,lthey should be flow n from the street, the Flag should be suspended chaplain; Mrs. Elsa H art, Speer Archmere Acad emy Lor his e~say The Flag of the United States of Amer Flag of the United States of America separate slaffs of the same height and verticall y with the union to the north Post, conductress; Mrs. Rachel on "T rue Americani sm and H ow lica has 13 horizontal stripes-7 red and Murphy. Gen. W. W. Atterbury Best to Achieve It" was a highl;ght 16 white-the red and white stripes alter Post, No. 3420, guard ; Mrs: Emily of the closing of the auxilia ry ses Inating, a nd a union which consists of M . Shields, Speer P ost, preSident of ' sion . Mrs. Co hen made the national w hite stars of five points on a blue fi eld Wilmington D istrict No. I ; M rs. presentation and Mrs. J a ne M . placed jn the upper quarter next the Caroline Hansen. Diamond S t ~te Sparks, the sta te award. staff and extending to the lower edge of P ost, president of New Castle Dls- Form r Sta te Representative WiI the fourth r ed stripe from the top. The triet No. 2; Mrs. Madeli ne D icker- liam F . Rupp. first commander of number of star s is the same as the num son. president of Kent District No. the L t. J . Allison O'Daniel P ost No. ber of States in the Union. The canton 3, and Mrs. Esther Peterson. Ray - 475. was chairman of the encamp m ond Reynolds P ost. No. 293 t, El- ment committee here. lend ale, president Sussex Dislricl The next encampment w ill be No 4. held at Rehoboth Beach. in an east and west street or to the east Mrs. Lillian Morrison, Thomas in a north and south street. 10. Wilen used on a speaker's plat ~~i~~e~f ~~~~: M~~.· c!~~'e ri~:\\;~~: ILocal Repl'e entatives the flags should be of approximately form, the Flag, if displayed fiat, should don, Colonial Post. No. 838, New To Attend Conference equal size. Intel'national usage forbids be displayed above and behind the the display of the flag of one n ation speaker; If flown from a staff, it should Castle, patriotic instructor ; Mrs. The summer state conference of should be on the right, the Flag's own above that of another nation in time of Anne Himmersbach, Diamond State Ith e Delawa re Daughters of the right, and its staff :;hould be in front of peace. P ost, historia n; Mrs. Anne Burton , American Revolution will be held the staff ot the other fiag. '7. When the Flag Is displayed from a Diamond Sta te P ost, banner bear- Sa turday a!ternoon. June 17, in 1r union now contains 48 stars arranged 4. "Vhen a number of f1aJ:s of S!·ates starr Jlrojeeting horizontally or at a.n er; MTS. Susan Barnes, Colonial ISmYl'l1 a, with members of the m six horizontal and eight vertical rows, or cities ur pennants of societies are angle from the window sill, ba lcony or Post, Mrs. Edna Brown and Mrs. Eliza be th Cook Chapter as hostesses. each star with one point upward. On grouped aud displayed from staffs with front of building, the union of the Flag Thelma Cheadle, Thomas Cooper The business session will be held Ithe admission of a State into the Union Post, and Mrs. Viola Grah am, Speer in the Twentieth Century Club a star will be added to the union of the P ost, color bearers, a nd Mrs. Stella H ouse, Commerce Street, at 11 :30 flag, and such addition will take effect M or an, Polish-American P ost. flag A. M., D. S. T. Mrs. J ames H . on the 4th day of July next succeeding bearer. Scott, state r egent, will preside. such admission. The proportions of the Addresses were delivered by O ti s At 1:30 o'clock luncheon will be M . Brown, na tiona l senior vice- served a t the Wayside Inn. Res Flag as prescribed by Executive Order commander; Maj.-Gen. Smedley D. ervations should be made with Mrs. of President Taft. October 29, 1912, arc Butler, retired ; B e n j am i n P . George R. Miller , Smyrna. A r ep as follows ; Thomas, quar t.:! rmaster a nd adju- r ese ntative group of the Cooch's Hoist (width) of fl ag ...... 1. tant of the D epartment "r New J er- Bridge Chapter w ill be present for Fly (length) of fl ag ...... 1.9 sey, who presented Commander this state confe rence. Hoist (width) of union .. .. . 7/13 Gray with a past state commander Fly (length) of union. 0.76 should go clear to the peak of the staff ~~~:~ ; Chester R. Evans of Pit(s- Strawberl'Y Festival At Width of each stripe ...... 1/ 13 unless the Flag is a t half-staff. (When Diameter of each star...... 0616 the Flag is suspended over a sidewalk Dinner Closes Encampments White Clay C"eek Church from a rope, extending from a house to The encampments closed with a The Young Peoples Society ot banquet in the New Century Club the White Clay Creek Church will PROPER MANNER OF DISPLAYING where the R ev. Dr. W illard G. sponsor a chicken salad supper and THE FLAG Purdy, pastor of First and Central strawberry festival W ed n es d ay There are certain fundamenta l rules Church, 'Wilmington, m ade l he evening beginning a t five o'clock of heraldry which, if under stood gener principal address. Donald R. Mor- in the Sunday school room a t the ally. woulrl Indicate the proper method the Flag of the Ullited States of Amer ton, honorary president of the Past chllrch. Cakes, ice cream. candy Ica, the la tter s hould b '~ a t t t.c center 0 1' ot rusplaying the Flag of the United Commanders Association of the V. and fancy work w ill be for sale. at the highest point of U:e bro:tP. States of America. The matter becomes F . W .. who acted as toastmaster 5. "Vhen flags of Sta t s or cities or said that the Veterans of Foreign A tired man with a violin case a very simple one if It is kept in mind pennants of ,socletics Grc fl owlI on the Wars was the logical organiza ti on among his efl'ects appUed for a that the Flag r epresents the living same h alyard with tho F lug of the to continue the work of the G . A. R. room at an Oklahom a City hotel country a nd is itself considered as a United States of Americn, the latter should always be at the peale When Lieut-Gov. Edward W . Cooch , recently, only to be told that the living thing. The union of the Flag is flown from adjacent staffs the Flag of Mrs. Ida S . Cohen of Roxbury, hostelry was filled, the clerk ad t he honor point; the right arm is the Mass., national senior vice-presi- rlin g: "You couldn't get a rcom rword arm and therefore the point of dent of the auxiliary; Councilman even i1 you were Rubinofl'." The " anger and hence the place of honor. Charles C. Hubert, and Charles H . would-be guest was really Rubinofl'. 1. The Flag should be displayed only from sunrise to sunset, or between such fix ed was the common and corporate ; hours as may be designated by propel' Legal Notices seal of the said corporation. authority. It should be hoisted bri ~ kly , a pole at the edge of the sidewalk, the IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I have but should be lowered slowly and cere F lag should be hoisted out from the CERTIFICATE OF REDUCTION OF hereunto set my hand and afTixed my moniously. The Flag should be dis building towards the pole, union first.) CAPITAL ofTlcia l sea l the day and year hereln- during the ceremony, but the Flag Itself OF above written. played on a ll National and State holi 8. When the Flag Is displayed in a GLEN W. DICKINSON THEATRES. Anna M. Puhr days and on historic and special occa should never be used as the covering INC. Notary Public maimer other than by being flown from for the statue. sions. (However, being the emblem of a stall, . it should be displayed fiat, TillS IS TO CERTIFY that GLEN My Commissio n expires: our country, it ought to fly from every W. DICKINSON THEATRES. INC. Is May 10. 1943 w hether mrloors or out. When displayed 12. "Vhen flown at half-stall, the Flag a corporation created by and existing· • • • • • fiagpole every day throughout the year, either horizontally or vertically against should be hoisted to the peak for an in under the laws of the Stale of Dela-· Anna M. Puhr weather permitting.) a wall, the union should be uppermost stant a nd then lowered to the half-staff ware, the resident agent in charge of • Notary Public position; but before lowering the Flag its pri.ncipal office in the State of DeJn- • Johnson County, K an s .• ware being CORPORATION SERfVCE ' • • • • • for the day it should be raised a gain to COMPANY. 900 Market Street. WII - 5-25-31. the pea le By half-staff is meant haulin g minglon, Delaware: ------=~c:::::-::-:-:-- . he United States of America should be down the Flag to one-half the rustance THAT the holders of record of the CERTIFICATE OF REDUCTION total number of shares of said GLEN OF CAPITAL OF 'lO isled first and lowered last. No such W. DICKINSON THEATRES. INC., DTLL AND COLLINS INCORPORATED :J ag or pennant flo wn in the former having voting power and now out- SYDNEY FERGUSON. President. and position should be placed above, or In standing. have consented In writing to C. E. BARNARD, Secretary, of DILL t he latter position to the right of the a reduction of the capital of said cor- AND COLLI NS INCORPORATED, a poration from Forty-nine Thousand corporation organized and exis ting Flag of the United States of America, Four Hu.ndred and Forty Dollars ($49,- under any by virtue of the provisions i. e., to the observer's left. 1. Do not permit disrespect to 440.00) to Twenty-Rve Thousand Dol- of an Act of the General Assembly o[ shown to the Flag of t he United lars ($25.000 .00); the State of Delaware. entitled. "An of America. PROPER USE OF BUNTING THAT said reduction of capital Is Act Provi ding a General Corporation 2. Do not dip the Flag of the eJTccted by reUring shares owned by Law," approved March la, 1899, and Bunt ing of t he National colors should Sta tes of America to any pc rson the corporation as follows: Seven the acts amendatory thercof and sup be u ~ ed for coveri ng a speal