The Newa-rk Post VOLUME XVIII NEWARK, DELA WARE. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1927 NUMBER 2 State Bankers Hosts To D. T. A. A. UPHOLDS Rittenhouse Motor Co. H. Warner McNeal FOOTBALL OFFICIALS Assemblymen Are Impressed In Takes Nash Agency D· Of L b Farmers Here Friday At a meeting last night of the -- Isposes um er arbitration board of the D. I. A. A., Visit To University Of Delaware c. E. Rittenhouse, of the Ritten- A del B . Heads Of Granges And ASlociations at Dovel', the protest of the New­ holts: Motor Company, South College n oa uSlness ark High School concerning the • Avenue, announced yesterday that __- To Formulate County Program championship game with Laurel See Need of Additional Facilities and Equipment; they had expanded their automobile To Promote Joint. Improve. was ruled "no ]lrot~st." The pro­ distributing agency to take in the Sells to E. J. Hollingsworth Com­ test was pased on the decisions of Praise Work of University; Need of Nash cars. pany, After 41 Years in Businesa ment certain officials at the game, and Engineering Building Vital The Ritt(mhouse Motor Company the board voted to uphold the was four years old January 1 of this in Newark; Will Devote officials. On Priday at 12: 16, at Old College year, having incorporated in 1923 to Time to Other Interests The members of the General there is no room for installing other distribute Star and Durant cars. l/ull, the Ag ricultural Committee of Assembly made their biennial visit of 'apparatus necessary fol' efficient in­ Since the demise of the Durant, they On Monday H. Wamel' McNeil the Stllte Bankers' Association will inspection to the University of Dela- struction. The floors are not suffi­ have been selling the Stal' foul' and Father Of Vocational ware last Friday and were not only cientiy strong to carry heavy pieces made the final step ill a transaction ad us hosts to the officials of New six, and, now to develop t he market that disposes of his coal and lumber impressed by the work that the Uni- of apparatus nor solid enough to pre­ for a higher priced car, have decided ('nsllc County Granges and Agricul- Education Bill Dies versity is doing, but were shown that vent a serious amount of oscillation. business to the E. J. Hollingsworth on the Nash as the most suitable car Company of Newport and Marshall­ lu ral Associations, at a dinner and --- the results were astonishing in view Some years ago officers of one of to introduce in that field . While a ton. The H011ingsworth Company ItlC ling. The purpose of the meeting of the lack of equipment and housing the greatest engineering plants in the Dudley Mays Hughes, Pioneer In compai'atively young concern, the will take possession March 1. i~ to formulate a joint agricultural facilities. world, the Welltinghouse Company of Rittenhouse organization has had a Mr. McNeil has been active and The legislators arrived in town Pittsburgh, told the President of the Movement For GoverD,Jllent Sup- I'emarkable success, selling approxi­ pro_lllinent in business and civic affairs m for New Castle county, in about 11 o'clock, some by train and University that Delaware was counted port Of Vocational Education, mately 300 Star cars during thejr in Newark for 41 years. He came wh ich all organizations concerned may ethers bv motor. Thei were greeted by them among the six 01' eight best four years of existence. Mr. Ritten­ here from Bell Hill, Maryland, in work toward an improved agriculture. Expired Last Month by a re~ e ption committee headed by engineering col\eges in the United house expects Nash models to place 1886 to start an ice business, harvest­ meeting was ararnged at the Dr. R. W. Heim, chairman, and com- States. This company employs hun- hi~ on his floor within a few days. ing his ice from West Amwell Mill f'onvenlion of the State Ba~kers ' Dr. R. W. Heim, State Director for posed of former Governor Charles R. dreds of graduates from engineering Farm Ho~s~ Burns ' pond; later building an addition to the .\ sRoci ation, held last week in aver. Vocational EducatioA, in his news let- Miller, chail'man of the finance com- col\eges all over the country. They old Dean ice house and cutting his ice Those attending the meeting Fri- 'mittee of the board of trustees of the keep a rating of these colleges based Last Night at that point. Several years later he will be: the Agricultural Commit- tel' for the month of February, has University; Walter Hullihen, presi- I upon the engineering ability shown built a large plant neal' Curtis Set­ of the State Bankers' Association, called attention to the death last dent; Dean Winifred J. Robinson, of by the gmduates of each college at Last'night at 10:45 the Aetna Fire tling Pond which was later destroyed Masters and Ooverseers of month of Dudley Mays Hughes and the Women's College; A. G. Wilkin- work in theil' plants; which is, of Company responded with one piece of by fire. !'omona and subordinate Granges of has sketched briefly his part in gain- son, busin ess administrator; Dean course, the best way to measure a apparatus to a fire on the farm of During the famous coal strike of Castle county, the executive ing Federal aid for vocational educa- George E. Dutton, Dean C. 4. McCue, college's efficiency. ~ e w James Lynch, between Kemblesville 1!)02, Mr. McNeil saw the opportunity mmittee of the New Castle County tion. The following is excerpted from Dean V. G. Smith, Professor W. A. The University of Delaware does and New London. to enter the coal business at a pro­ Bureau, the crops, poultry and Wilkinson, Dr. J. R. Adams, Dr. A. S. not want to lose thi~ splendid reputa- • The fire, in an unoccupied farm pitious time and persuaded the Read­ reed associations of the county, and' Dr. Heim's letter: Eastman, Prof. C. R. Runk, rrof. tion for its engineering department; house, had gained considerable head­ ing Company to deliver a supply to members of the Agl'icultural Exten- "One of the pioneer leaders in the George L Shuster, Prof. Robert W. nor does the State which owns and way, and without water there was him. Shortly after that he added a sio n Service. County Agent R. O. movement for the of voca- Thorough good, Prof. H. B. Preston, supports it. Yet it cannot sustain it prom~tion little could be done, but save the other supply of lumber and built a plant on Bausman .is issuing the invitations. tiona I education throughout the Un i- Prof. George A. Koerber, Miss Parker, longer without adequate equipment buildings. The farm house burned to the site of the Jacob T. Wall Paper The Agricultural Committee of the Miss Kelly and Miss Allen. for instruction. The number of stu- the ground with a probable loss of Company's Plant, which had burned Bankers Association is com- ted States was Hon. Dudley Mays They were taken directly to the dents in engineering is twice what it $3,000. Newark was first at the fire. down. At that time he sold his inter­ of Warren Singles, Newark Hughes, former representative in experimental farm where Dean Mc- was eight 01' ten years ago and the ests in the ice business and devoted T~ e Oxford ap~ar~us "also responded. Company, chairman, and in Congress from Georgia, who died at Cue explained the operation of the equipment in buildings is no greater himself to coal and building mate­ l· ha rge of the. program for the meet- Danvi1le, Georgia, Thursday, January dairy and poultry plants. Each mem- than then. rials. The site which the Hollings­ in g; Governor Robert P. Robinson, 20. MI'. Hughes served in Congress bel' of the legislature was given a The engineering department for Legion Auto Show worth Company has purchased is sit­ Dan iel Corbit, president of Odessa from March 4, 1909, to March 3, 1917' COp! of the ann.ual report of the Ex- eight years has called the attention uated on North College Avenue, near ~atio na l Bank; President Jess L. In 1914 Congress created the Com- j perl mental StatIOn. of the Board of Trustees to the seri- . Opens In Elkton the B. & O. r{lilroad and comprises S'hepherd, Delaware Trust Company I h' t d th d f .. b I'ld 'ng about five acres of land. mi ssion on National Aid to Vocational . From the farm t ey tnspec e e ous nee C) an engtneermg u I . Mr. McNeil's residence was the first of Middletown. . . 10Id College buildings including the The Board has admitted the need but Third' Annual Event Under Auspicei • - • E~ucatlOn, fo~' the purpose of consld- t Faculty Club quarters, and were then hus been unwil1ing to ask the General house built north of Amstel Avenue Bill to Extend Town ermg what might be done by the Fed- I shown the engineering buildings. Here Assembly for the appropriation be­ Of American Legion Starts on Depot Road. During the past 10 years, Mr. McNeil has built 16 eral Govemment to promote this pro- the Assemblymen noted one of the cause of the more pressing needs ' of houses with the idea of providing sub­ At the meeting of the Town Coun- ject. MI'. Hughes was one of the nine and grav.est of the Teacher Training department of Today In Armory I m o~ t vi~al ~ee~s ~he I stantial homes- for working people. d l on Monday evening, two important members of the Commission. Ul1tvcrstty. The Ul1tverslty IS askmg the Women's Col1ege, for which the He will devote himself to his real es­ ·tt .~.laLt ltl earst· 'a"ebrt~11 dsehcaid led bUeyopnl'e' seTnhteedfirtSot "This Co mmission spent several $310,000 for an Engineering building 1I!19~2t" appr?priaftitohns Gwere nllaAde at btlhe '£he third annual Cecil County Au­ l tomobile Show opened this morning tate holdings and many other outside ., ancl equipment. That this amount, 0 scsslon 0 e enel'a ssem y. interests he has always been active in . the State legislature granting to the months in conference, conducting whi ch is calculated to cover r equire- The situation is now, however, &0 in t he Armory, Elkton. This event, town of Newark the right to extend hearings and considel'ing the need for ments for t he next 20 years is not urgent that incrcased space and better whi ch will continue until Saturday "Bert" thc town limi ts. A separate bill will a broader progl'U m of vocational edu- extravagan t is shown in comparing facilitics for enginee ring instruction night, is held under t he auspices of E~e;s~n also be presented which shall give cation througho Li t t he country. this with th e cost of the new building mu st be secured. Cecil Post 16, American Legion, and Fractures Thigh the town the power to borrow money "At the c ~ n c lu s i o n of the investiga- at Lehi gh, which will cost over $900,- No money has been voted by the has been a decided Success each year. Albert "Bert" Everson, star athlete with wh ich to in stall water and light tion the Colllmission I'Cco mmended the 000, and the building ,at Princeton, Statc for permanent improvements at Wi th sixteen exhibitors, showing and baseball pitcher of a generation in t he newly included districts. The creation of the F ederal Board for Vo- which wil cost over $500,000 without Dclaware College (the men's college) t hirty-fiv e models, the Legion expects ago, was taken to the Homeopathic plans for the la rger Newark have not cational Education, and requested providing for civil engineering. (01' twenty-one years, except that ap­ the biggest attendance in the history of the occasion. The committee in Hospital, Wilmington, last Thursday, I'ct been co mpleted, so that the newly Congress to appropriate funds to be The amount asked is the estimated propl'iated fifteen years ago for a suflering f rom a fracture of the upper ;lJ'oposed limits cannot yet be stated. used by t his Board in aiding State cos t of the most economical building hoiler house. charge of the show is composed of H. Frank Hearn, chairman; Dr. W. H. part of the_ thigh. 'ouncil has also voted to co-operate programs in the following foul' fields that CUrt be erec ted of the size neces- After an inspection of Wolf Hall, Everson, who has been a cripple fOl' with the insul'ance companies in the of study:- Agricultural education, sary to furnish laboratories, shops, the Memorial Library and the build­ Wright, Calvin Fox, Sterling Dunbar, Wallace Williams and William Gilpin. some years as a result of a motor­ matter of electric wiring of buildings trade and industrial education, home 'and class-rooms that will suffice for ings of the Women's College, a lunch­ cycle accident, fell in his room at the within the town limits. Hereafter, economics education, and commercial the enginp.el'ing department, taking eon was served in the new dining The following cars will be exhibit­ ed: Ford, Chevrolet, Buick, Cadillac, Newark Inn, sustaining the fl·acture. I wil'ing must be examined and ap- education. into account its probable increase, for room at the Women's College. Ex- Peerless, Nash, Hudson, Essex, Hup­ Besides his record as an athlete, Ever­ by the Underwriters and- that "Following the recommendations of the next twenty years or longer. Governor Charles R. Miller was toast­ mobile, Reo, Chandler, Oakland, Pon­ son, who is 60 years old, has always, I must be turned into the the Commission, Congress passed in Three-fourths of the ground space master and in his opening remarks tiac, Willy Knight, Overland, Star had a decided genius for mechanics. office, before light service l<'ebruary, 1917, what was known as lo be occupied will be only one story gave credit to the University of Dela- and Chrysler. In recent years he has turned this I be given. the National Vocational Education in height and will be built like the ware for turning out men and women There will be no admission charge geniu8 to development of the radio. - - • Act. ' This act was the result of a usual industrial plant, -with saw-tooth who were the cultural, moral and to thc show. Wallington Palmer and Bert Crowe RS. CANN TOD.Ar.·:.N~EETINGS bill introduced jointly by Mr. Hughes, roof, concrete floors, metal frame intellcctual equals of any graduated took Everson to Wilmington. in the House of Representatives, and sides and partitions, without plaster- from any other academic institution Mrs. J. P. Cann, State Regent D. VIOLATES PHOHIBI- Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, in ing 01' wall board. This will be the in the country. Carveth Wells "College . R., is enjoying a busy and interest­ the Senate. Of the membership on part of the building devoted to work Mr. Miller spoke of the great effect Hour" Speaker TION LAW week in Washington. Yesterday On Monday, Federal Prohibition Di­ the House Co.mmittee on shops, lathe rooms, boiler rooms, en- the young women graduating at the Carveth Wells, British engineer, ing, she attended a meeting of ~du~ation rector George A. Hi11 appeared before at the time of the passage 0 t e act gine rooms, cement testing apparatus, college are having upon the boys and explorer and biologist, was the speak­ National By-Laws Commi.ttee, Judge 'Thompson with two prisoners, fostered by MI'. are to- and elcctl'ical equipment. girls of Delaware because many of er at "College Hour," held in Wolf A. R., of which committee she is a Hu~h~s, t?el~ both colored, he had arrested for vio­ mber ; at one-thirty she attended a da~}lullt thJl'eeSremall1fll1Fglln'd onFgresds The fronll, occupying one-fourth of these graduates· are taking up teach- Hall this morning at 11 o'clock. He - .. I am . ears, 0 01'1 a; re - ing in the publie schools in the state. lation of the prohibition. regulations. .lun(mec)J1 given by the committee, and erick W. Dallingel', of Massachusetts; the ground space, will be three stories "I have visited many other 'institu- spoke of his experiences during a six­ The arrest took place on the State o'clock a meeting of the Fi­ and Simeon D. Fess, now Senator in neight and will contain class-rooms, tions of learning throughout this year slH'vey and exploration for the highway between here and Elkton. Committee of Constitution from Ohio. The National Vocational offices, drawing-rooms, -storage rooms country," said the former governor, British government in Indo-China. Charles D. Wilson was charged / all. Education Act is best known through- for fine instrumen.ts, etc. This part "and I do 'not fear contradiction when Mr. Wells recounted many startling with transporting liquor and released Today Mrs. Cann will be present at out the country as the Smith-Hughes will have to be finishedt with plaster I say there is no finer set of young adventures and spoke of unusual on a $1000 bond for hearing before all-day session of the National Act, and the schools where State and and . interiol' · wood-work of an inex- women being graduated from any col- phenomenon he had observed.. He is Commissioner Cann. James E. James, of the D. A. R. This evening, federally aided vocational classes are pensive type. lege or university in the United a fellow of the Royal Geogl;aphic So­ charged with having liquor in his pos­ wi ll be a guest at the dinner given I!onducted are commonly called Smith- The present scattllred buildings, States than those who are being ciety and in an address to that' body session, unable to furnish bail, was the Washington chapter to Mrs. Hughes schools. In 1926 more than thl'ee of them wooden shacks salvaged graduated every year from the Wom- on his return to London last year, his committed to the Workhouse, where Brosseau, President-Genera\. 876,000 people were enrolled in part- from a War plant, are unsuitable in en's College, University of Delaware. statements, specimens and photo­ he will be held for hearing before Thursday, she will attend a meet­ time schools, evening schools, all-day arrangement, too crowded to house It is all due to the splendid woman- graphs made an international sensa­ Commissioner Cann. o[ the organization known as the schools, and shol·t unit agricultural necessary apparatus, and in such a hood of Dean Robinson. She is their tion in scientifi~ ci:le:. c Women of America, and in FIRE SIREN To "BE courses, which have bSeen hPHrovidhed bad condition as to make it a waste inspiration -and she is responsible for .ASSESSMENT BOOKS HERE SOUNDED EACH DAY cvening will be a guest at a din­ for in the terms of the mit - ug es of money lo continue to try to repair the good effect that is being ob- Fire Chief Ellison announces that tcndercd to the National Board Act. In 1918, one year following the them. tained." The assessment books for the three " Mrs. Brosseau at the New Willard. beginning Monday, February 14, the passage of the act, the total enroll- The crowding in the electrical lab- Mr. Miller introduced President local districts are here and open for srren ont he FiI'e House will be OC AL D:A:-'R."CHAPTER ment was less than 170,000. orotol'y has rcached the point where Hullihen who spoke of the rapid examination: They are to be found at sounded every day, excepting Sunday, "Mr. Hughes was born at Jefferson- growth in the enrollment at Delaware the following places: First District, Thc ooch's Bl'idge Chapter, D. A. at 0:16 p. m. The purpose of this is viVe, Twiggs County, Ga., October 10, College, the boys' section of the Uni- R . G: store; held the F ebl'uary meeting at the Bucki~gham's Secon~ to make a daily test of the mechanism 1848. He attended the country schools WHITI'EMORE CHILD ILL versity. He told the legislators that Dt~trlCt, .Sq~lre Thompson s office, of M I·S. Edward Cooch, at operating the siren. It will blow one and the UniVersity of Georgia, at Arthur, the sixteen-months' old the college Is developing fast and Thml DIstrIct, Currinder's store, 's Bridge, last Saturday after­ short blast, and, in case of fire at that Athens. In 1871 he engaged in agri- child of Captain and Mrs. Whittemore declared it is necessary that they .Christiana. The Board of Assessors, Mrs. Ernest Frazer, regent of time, will keep on blowing a regular cultural pursuits; was a member is ill at the Deillware Hospital, suffer,- have more instructors in order to take New Castle County, announce that chaplel', will go as n delegate to alarm. While the ~ iren will blow, ap­ of the State Senate in 1882-83; ing with an abscessed ear. It was at cal'e of the great increase in the they will sit in the Deer Park National on'ference, D. A. R., Ho~el, proximately at the time announced, it President of the Georgia ' State first feared that the child had scarlet number of boys in the various classes March 8, for the purpose of hearmg will meet in Washington in wi11 not act as an official time signal. Agricultural Society, 1904-06; Com- fever, but an examination at the P. and to insure everyone of them being making correctio.ns . 'rhe foll owing members were app " al ~ , a~d missioner General of Georgia at the and S. Hospital in Wilmington re- given the propel' instruction, to which noting ommissions. WIll BIt 111 H. S. ALUMNI "BENEFIT us dclegates: Mrs. Ruth ~he~ Wodd's Fail', St. Louis, 1904r Trustee lieved the family of that anxiety. ull are entitled. "We try to the County Offices, Wllmmgton, from The Ncwark High School Alumni Mi ss Anna Frazer, Mrs. opera~ of the Danville School, the State Nor- __ • 1 economical11 as we can" he de- March 16 to April 30. NO.IIPpeals Association wi11 hold a card party and Wil son, Mrs. Edward Cooch, mal Institute, the University of Geor- SUPPER clared, "and I challenge :nyone to wi\1 be considered after AprIl 30. benefit in thc High School auditorium, GTl'tu McKinsey, Mrs. A. L. gia and the Georgia State Agricul- find a colle"'e 1"11 thl's country that I'S AMBU-LA-NCE- CALL Monday, February 28. The proceeds Mi ~s Mi l'ia m Alrichs, Mrs. tur~1 College; and President of the Newark Chapter, No. 10, O. E. S., .. of the party wi11 go to thc Scholar­ It ltt,!, Blackwell and Mrs. Annie FI'uit Growers' Association. He was will hold a supper tomorrow evening, operutcd any more economically than Saturday evening, the Newark am­ ship Fund. Mrs. J. Harvcy Dickey, IJor. .'ixty-five dollars has been also one of the original projectors and February lOth, from 6 to 8 o'clock, In is the University of Delaware. We chairman of the committee, rep~rt ~ lrihuted by the chapter to the Del­ builders of the Macon, Dublin and the New Century Club. Also a card have asked you fOl' $O,!)OO more this bulance was summoned to take Her­ man Messick, 16-ycar-old 80n of that there will not only be attractive box in Lh auditorium of Con­ Savannah Railroad, and hc served as party and dance to begin at 8:30. year than we reecived two years ago Alonzo Messick, to St. Francis Hos­ pri7.es, but ellch and cvery guest will Hall , which is be built in President and Director of the com- Tickets to cach may be obtained from .fol· the maintenance fund because to bc fed. tngton. pany." the members 01' at the dool·. (Continued on Page 8.) pital, Wilmington. Wednesday, February 9, 1927 THE NEW ARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE, 2 = ,rOP"E'S COLUMN their observance, No cuunt!''1 can long I Do not forlll youl' estllll/lte of each healing of the Nation's ills" In ,the!~ I i ; £~N" L L enel ulc ancl no COIll IllUlll t) can com, other by the texture of the garments should be f~uI~d a,systematlc PI~C~ I t~it P mand the respect of Chris LiaJl living worn nor by the position heir! in the for ,the ehmlllatlOn o~ s upel'stltlOJI AI __ Amcl'ic/lns whose p "'pill ollly teS p ~ct Isoc ial, ed u ca~ ional , holitical, final~cial and Ignorance, the l~lakl!lg of the1es mel; , """"" STORJs~CL ,-~""...._-,.. ...~ _-;Wi:'.l- ~.....~1lIr-,, -...,,~ THE RESPONSIBI LITIES thohe laws which Lil ey J\ke mid ClUlIll 01' eccleSiastic/II gp eres of society, and womcn,,,the , ste ~plllg s;ob ~ I ------~- t.r. c pl'lvilege of vlOlat.ll1[ th o~c which Look woll to th heart; ' look well to u sef ul~ css , 100 muc ~~ nno e sale I , OF CITIZENSH IP they dl Sllpprove, and if t ~o se wh" the innor qualities ,of the soul !I~d o,n 111 urgll1g yo~r fellow cl,t lz e n ~ to s up- I wal'k, Delawllre, Feb" 7, 1927, claim that pl'lvilege prevail, but n these base your estimate of a citizen s port the pubhc sc h~ o l s hhnanchtalltY alhld I U;====-irii_-======-_riI e short tlllle call (' lapse until no law cf value in the community, If he 01' sht' p e r sona ll ~ by knowlllg t at t e eac - Editor, Newark Post: any subject will co mmand the respect can say and mean that they value ers who Impart the knowledge meet I" C' A Patriotic Citizen preaches un- of any considerablc part of ou1' 1honor more than life, then acknowl- a standard gauged only, ~y the I Th e "'M-lraC e of the an selfish devotion tel his Country and citizcnship, edge their fellowship to the world, for standal'd of their work, Theil' IS noth- practices it evcry houl' of. his life, He Pili'll hrasin' the words of t hat 1 truly you may be proud of th~se in I ing so dangerous, to, th~ welfare of believes that HIGHT makes MIGHT, Ideal Imericll~, Abraham Lincoln,-- whose hllnds rests the destil1les of OUI' ,ed u c~tlOna l IllstltutlOns as the h d nd that no correcL rule of human "This Nation cannot continue half Iyour beautIful town, public att,ltude of, holdl!1g aloof from I The magic of the fabled Aladdin and is won erlul lamp pales 'ol,nSdOul ~dtl'devl,enlt' eOI'\ev:td, i~eo~~t;~llrf\:e~r~~ law-enforcing and half law-breaking, When you meet your fellow ,citizens, a propel' Illterest III theu' welfare and in~o insignificance when compared with the present day method s It Will be essentially all one or all of. be g lad to meet them, for they like advancement" I of canning. • 'elf above the fog of personal pro,:\o- the other," If all 01' largely all of the yourself, have interests here and per- I In your ~~mmun, lty IS a broa~ fi~ld As an illustration, the luscious, -grown Peach, pick- tion, advanccment and tlggrandlze- latter t he institutions of our govern- haps the "sunshine" of you r ways may for good CitizenshIp, to be applied.. a I ment, tlnd lives hi s life in the clear Illent' ti re shattel.'ed, its foundations I be t he mean" of rolling the clouds wond~rful OPPOl'tul1lty to be PatrIOts ed when sun-ripened in Nature's Garden Spot~ canned at trle very e ~~ude i:tg g~e:nel~~~f:\ stoa ~'~~l l Cci~i~~;i. un,dennined, its ~estiny 81:!'ested" tlnd away in some other person's life, ~td It so r~~~; ~heat:tie ai~~~~;eg ~~: moment when perfection is reached-locked up in the can with all upon whose shoulders must be borne thiS, the first great expellment 111 a Have tI regard for the personal and 11\ oot p t b h d t the original Ilavol' and goodness of the fresh fruit. the burdens of good government and government by th~ people, will Ju: professional reputation tlnd good name erj Ions may no e as ame 0 Truly. man's inventive genius has indeed performed a mirac le n whose mind must be solved, the catalogued fo r all tllne as a dream of name of your 'neighbor and their fo~~w , bt'I' b 'tl d f with the humble can and the choicest products of field, Orchard 'o mplex, and sometimcs confusing dreamers, But jt, will not be all or II families Have an appreciative valu- "e a, ove ~r IC e I~ s U '~hl th h'om and Garden. uestions which will determine the Itll'gely a IL a nation .of I,aw-breakel s, ation of' each other, and in your social a tasslllg s ranger WI e ope 'ood 01' evil consequences which If those who take pl'I~le m ,the future intercou rse be sincere and courteous, th~Whii sailin o'er life's solemn II/here Qualr't, Counts vour Mon',ey Goes l:'urthest.' oming generations will enjo:,c or of each local commulllty, Will awaken Nevel' permit your self to be a party e, g - ", II r, 'uffer, t.o the dangers confrontmg our Na- to the wrecking or injuring of an- mall1'l . d h' I "'''' We are prone to the mistake of t.ional welfare, t he citizen ~h o vic- I other's character, To the men of the Somb,f~h' ~rn an s IpwrecKee f i :1, !1. : lIil,:::,: ::~':, f " Iates the 18th Amendment Will be as community,-treat everSt other man's S" 10 e, k h' '" ASCO Cali orn a 20 ;! .bfCel~Vooal"ninBgettr:r drl~l~r~~: °asie~,~I'1~~ ~ IIlfamous as, the of!e w,ho steals, The wife, _mother and sister the same as W~tehll1tgh'l may ~a e eafl t agha!llh' , Big C II t. ,'ue condition into which the twin person who ,IS not 111 IllS or her he~l't I you demand that every other man 'd f I' ~haeSS~~!~ce~/ NI;~arlf all~d can l: l:,. , loyal to tillS country or any of . Its treat your wife mother or s ister and g~1 0 " Yellow CDeaches I vi is of t he influence of ahn increasll1 g mun!cipal divisiolls will be known and you will have ~o fear for the m01'8ls With best .wls'l.~es tNhat t~e pMotto as Packed in Heav)' , Rich S)'rllp with all their ;\Ia tllral Flnvor, i i oreign population a nd t e forgetf u l- conS idered as an outcast from and a of your citizens, expressed 111 he myal k ost may , css caused by immersion in co m- leper to society, and will be spurned ,; "become !In actua l r~allty, I am ~lllIIilliiliimmll!m.iim!!!IUI!iIlUI!lI!lIl1i'mlill!i!iilmllllimi,!!!!m!llli!ll ii,II!li'U.!!!II'I,iIll,"Um,:n,'j":i::::::::::' mercial purs uits have plunged us, and nd bar 'ed from social converse em- I Good Roads, Palks, Bettel Schools, CordIally and sll1cerely yours, Reg. 15c ASCO Fancy Golden State seek and find if we can, and we can ~Ioymenlt and association by all Employment':;-Spend your money at JAMES R, BENNETT -if we will, the remedy, ' , , I home und build up home trade, Never ' A' , ' Shced Peaches CahE. ApriCOts We grieve because, in many co 111- honest CitIzens: ' " " : be afraid to say a good word for I (Amellcan ssoclatlOn of Plotestant munities the "Faith of Our Fathers" Our responSibilities begm when we NEWARK, Don't let it be ~lIid t.ltat Laymen,) 2 ::~Is 25c seems, to be forgotten, The same fi,rmly resolve and keep t h~ resolu- you know more a bout a m:lil ol'der • .. • s pirit is here, sometimes sleeping, but tlOn, to h o~d no commUlllon WIth th~se catulog than you do about yOU1' Bible, "" ready at the call of duty to awake, who ~re disloyal ; whe!1 w~ determme Improvements come from taxe, " ' " It has been contaminated to a certain and live by the ~etermmatlOn, t? have When you spend your money away In Fme Manners, her latest Para- Del Monte degree, by those who have no concern n ~ c0!11merce With those who lIy~ ,by from home, you do not in uny way mount starring production, Gloria Calif. for our Constitution, 11') res pect f ')l' vl?latll1g our laws, ,Our res'po~s!blhty assist those who have investments Swanson adds stlll another charac- terization to her large gallery of in- Del Monte ~~~ I~:ds~r a~~ho~~ rf~id~e n~h e~O\!~~ ~1~~e~~:!\l~~r~ha\h~:I~~0~~ ul~i1; 1~~iJ : ' ~e~;~t;o f~;' i~o~arvo~~i~~a~?od~~1 i~isl~~~; California fo und protection, and which has stood a plac~ for t h e n~ , and th~t there IS no lor industries, Make it a point to teresting screen portraits, :~~ lec Sliced at the head of the onward march of spot of ground m all th,lS broad land know the nature of each citizen's "Fine Manners" comes to the Opera Peaches Peaches ~:~ l4c a convincing and compelling Christian of ours so foul , that their feet are fit business and then advertise it, if it is House tomorrow and Friday, James I clvilizution, to tread up,on It, and when t ~ e law- a business that is legal and a credit fiiiII:lfillIIllII!linnHlIIII!lllllllilliHlii!lIllUllllllllilililill!lilliiiiiiiiiiiiii!liliiliiii!!mlii'iiliimlili' Ii iili'i, in:'t:;i:::::::: The 'o rgllllul t.hirteen states, of br~akerg- WIll know tha,t pumshme1.lt to your town, Nevel' let an oppor- Ashmore Creelman and Frank Vree­ Reg. pkgs willch your own stands first, had t heir SW ift, sure '~nd severe , IS the certall1 l tunity go by to turn trade 01' patron- land ure credited with t he story, 9c Prim Rice 3 20c Illspiratioll 111 t he high hope of free- result of theIr malefactIOns, , age to those in business 111 your home Richard Rosson directed, , Rice Pudding with Raisins lIlak,e a very healthfnl dessert. dom and Il1d ependence, T heil' pl'ob- Let us know and realize that OUI' community; help them to succeed and lem was to attain,-ours to r etain I r esponsibility does not end with the be happy and thereby you will add to ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ California Seeded or Seedless Raisins , , , , , , pkg 10c What they secured for tilelllselve" and I castlllg of a ballot, Vote not politics the fOl'ce of joy, towards dissipating I ~ _____ "'______u ______" !i!!,!!!!I.1!IlII!!l!!!!!!Il,I!'!!i!!ii!!l!,!!.i!i!!!i!llU!!!ll!I!!!!!I!!!III ,i!.rmii!m i,l i:!i:::::~; for us,-the first was a battle', the Ibut patriotism, Exercise your rights I the'sorrow, grouch and gloom of this I :1 second is a contest, and true to as a civil citizen for the best interest life and making NEW ARK brighter , SPECIALS : One 5c pkg Wilbur's More Big Values! 1,l historic expel'l ence, the contest is as of your state :lnd community and for and better, Have implicit confidence ,i, ! ,tubborn and of longer duration t hnn I the general public good, No citizen is in ' your town; don't give your neigh- Cocoa Cubes Kirkman' s Borax Soap 4 cakes 25c l! t he battle, a patriot who does not vote, No voter bor a chance to say that you betrayed IUd C ASCO Hard Water Soap 6 cakes 30c 6i and One Tall can The responSibilities and duties of I, a patnot who does not vote for Ihis confidence, Dedicate your public :1,: n se ars Palmolive Soap ••• 3 cakes 20c l ~ l ~~~~~r~~i: ' f~~~r::;;~ing~n~~~~ioo~e aans~ ~i~i~na~~il:n~:tl;~~ ~~~f ' heNoorg ~ h~ ~~~ N~~~a:~d I~~u a\~iJ?~~o~vb~l~d~~~ 1926 Ford Sedan, New paint, Evap. Milk Brillo Cleaner •• . _ 3 pkgs 25c i ~ i sumed both 111 public and pl'lvate life, performs the full duties required at Iing the "Sunshine," "Trees," "Parks," excellent condition, ASCO Ammonia •.. Big Bot 25c l'l In the first are included OUl' dUtll~5 to the ballot box, in the jury room and etc, and a ll that which will eventually : Both Fels Naptha Soap • • 4 cakes 21 c l:l for 11 C ~ ~~t a1~v~;~dm es~tpp~~~f i~tsin lati~e ~~ at i~~/~o~~y c~~ eh~i~:'all t he wonder- cO ~~o~~it\~h~o~:m~t~f~~~h~~u a~ieli~~' be I Cheverolet Coupe, cheap, Ivory Soap Flakes •. pkg 9c, 23c ~: l peace, as in time of war; to recognize [ul things mentioned in the motto ex- considered,-that t he children who I Chevrolet Touring, cheap, Save Five Ccnts, Lux Soap Flakes . pkg 10c, 25c n t hat the same heroic courage i3 need- pl'es!\ed on the editorial page of now prattle at yourfeet may grow into ! IlliliiilllillU!!iiiilliliiiliiliii!iliilliliil!Hlll.lliliiim!iimiiiilliiiliiHimmmliiJiiiij'ji'imi'i1iii!lmm.il'ii.!m .... iiii!ld ~?v i Joco~~;'~~e;~i~ s,v~~ ii~ sde~;'~ld~~i~1 ~r~\~~:V:a~~, PB~~~~~~~;~~, ~~~~:: ~h~ie\h~t:zd~~oW:~ ioO Uth~fl~eN~~i~~ i Carefully Baked-Big, Golden -Brown Crusted loaves of Good­ the same and other citizens who bare Pure Water, Fresh Air, Sunshine, and and HOME TOWN may be more un- ::::,'::,:: Rittenhouse ness--Direct from our own Sanitary Bakeries to our Stores. iheir bleasts to the storlll of death Work for Everybody") if the individ- selfish than ours has been, that a which hovers over the battb field, In ua l citizens will be determined to so generation of men and women may Motors many sections of our Country we find live and act as to safeguard and en-I follow after us to strengthen our gov­ not only men who WOUld destroy I he hance each othe r's interest and weI- I ernment und adorn its future history Victor Bread r::16e g'u\'ernment itself, but many pe01Jlc, fare in all ~he sevel'al relationships of is our dream, our hope, our inspira­ STAR AG!:NTS ------TIIen a nd wc>r ~n , wh'l make lhE "'aim I ltfC and being, Have due regard for tion, NEW ARK, DEL, tl,at those laws wh0 3~ enactm<:nt tbey the health and bodily well-being of Our schools are the training insti­ Bread Supreme , , , , , , , , , big wrapped loaf ge dll not advoc a~"" and wb":e wi sdom each citizen and protect YO UI' neighbor 1 t.utions for the potential responsible mmmil!llim!l!IlUl!!IlIH!,!!,I!i!l,!!!!I!.!iIli!L!!!.!!!!!Il1H!liiI,.!!,!!!I:U!ii,!!!.!,-iili,'I :'i:.!m::) Lhey now l]u~stion, Are ,not entitled to in every way possible, citizen, In them should be found t he ~----.------~ onte or ASCO. can 29c II ragus TIps 3 cans S5e 11 mii!.mm!!lIiIIiiiill!ii!jjj]!illiii~mii!im!iiii :iiiiUiiIHlniUt!ii.UlI' .imUj'·'iliii"" lin rotn i"i:iU:ir;:::::i: Mother's Oats .. , , , pkg 10c Gol d Seal Oats , , 3 pkgs 25c ® TELEPHONE NEWS ® Campbell 's Tomato Soup 3 cans 25c ASCO Tomato Catsup bol 15c Ritter's Catsup, ' ,' bot 12;{c ASCO Table Mustard, jar 12c FEBRU A RY 0, 2 VOl" II 1927 Baker's Coconut .- , , , can 16c ASCO Soups , , , 2 cans 15c STORM TROUBLE Many Direct Circuits Del Monte Cherries , , can 33c ASCO Sandwich Spread jnr 23c SUBMARINE CABLE Shaker Table Salt , , pkg 10c Hom-de-Lite Mayonnaise jar 2 3c The toll and long-distance expansiou You can travel rn:\Jly JOB NOW COMPLETE program of the Diamond State Telo­ miles by telephone for a few phone Company has now reached a A BLEND FOR EVERY TASTE ! point where all the principal central cents, Rlltes in front part of I! Telephone Cables on Deeper offices in the State are interco nll cctcd loral directory, by direct telephone circuits, 'l' hi s Ih 65c !! Canal Bed at Delaware City means that a quicke r, more comp "o- '--______--1 ASCOTeas ~k~' 17c: and St, Georges hensivo out,of-towa telephone sen-ico Orange Pekoe, India Ceylon, Old Country Style, U is at tho disposal of Delt~wnro tele­ BUILDING OPERA­ phono usors, From tho Wilmington central office, TIONS UNDER WAY ASCO Teas X lb pkg 14e : Ib 55e ::,r::,! The second and tlnal phase of the Plain Bla"k or Mixed loweri ng of the telephone suhmarine direct Iiucs now radiato to New York, Baltimore, Washington, Roading, "" Lies of the Diamond State Tele­ AT MILFORD, DEL. phone Com puny at St, Georges and Philadolphia, Atlnntic City. elc, Pride of Killarney Tea ' , 1" Tin 7 5e l i Delaware Cily was completed on Janu­ The advantage of direct lines Iios in the fact that out-of-town calls over Diamond State Telephone a ry 31st with practically no interrup­ ml!!lii!ii!iii!iiiiiillilii'llill.il,lI!1!!iI,!!l.!Ill!II!i1l1!!lIilliliil!iilllliiii!l!llHmnl'!!!!_,;!'irnm,'I.'I!l.iil!l!,Il.!,:!ijr::::: tion of telephono se n'iee, slIeh ci rcuits cnn he handled ns quickly as local calls, It i8 not necessary to Office to Be Operating in Compare the Q~aJity and Flavor of ASCO Blend with coffee ~ - i 1'ho wOl'k "'liS clone in conjunction \\ ilh lhe government project for deep­ cnll an opcrator somcwhere betwecn Masonic Hall in Early Selhng at 45c to SOc a Ib el.ewhere ! 1 1 tho po in t where tho ca ll originat.es 'ning the C h esllp~n ke. and Potomac :lnd the dostinntion find I' CQ llost tho Summer ,, "nal, whi ch is crossed by telephone Ib ,nlmurrino cables at St, Georllcs und o[!o rn tor at thaL place to co mplete the ASCO Coffee 39c tl Ileiliware City, call , ''pho originating opel'atol' 1I 0W Just try a cup an'1'0111 ma xi mlllli effieicllcy ill spite of the Street to the lila Round Rump Sirloin SlIOW IIlId sleeL StOl'1II8 which wci~h HELD IN WILMINGTON soui c Building, :1<: ­ -, dow n the wiros alld co\'or tho outside cO I'dill!: to ,Jllhll Steak Steak Steak tl'l~p h oli o eqlliplllellt with the pic­ Argo, Plallt Wire tllroS ltll" iJllt danraging offerings from Talk of Service from .. Sub- ,JOflN AII,G O Ib thl' worl,shop of Jack l'rost, Chiof of tho Dill 32c Ib 35c Ib 45c scriber's' Point of View " IIl1t II !l i'Hll te 1'elepholle C'Ol1lpnll ~' ill I Oo\'er, ~ I ,', Argo, whoso supervision ili - Imported Back Fresh Killed NEW WILMINGTON A distus.ioll of dn,les the lIlilford area, is in chnrge Bacon ~ 28c Beef Liver Ib 16c se rvice I'ronl Ih l' of Ille worl( in cidentul to lho change, DIRECTORY ISSUED subscriber's Jloilll Il l' s" id Ih"t lho 1\ '1 01'110110 Comp'lII), Pure Pork Lean Salt of view WII S held WII" plall'"l1g 10 hll\'o all prolimitHlI'y Ib 38c Ono of the r08ults of tho lowerilll\' ill Wilmillglon liy work olll pleted Ihis sprillg unci tJlM Sausage Bacon Ib30c of lho en nni bed is the draining of the Illl'Dialllu,rrl Rtll le Ihe oOice wonld be ope'-flling !It the Over 6100 Listing Changes; marsh at i')t, Gcorges, where telepholll' To lcphollc ( 'nm new lO l'tl tioll ill the c:I1'I," SlImm('r. Country Talty reference to Book There­ poles h:I\'o ueen 8ublll.!l rged for a COli pHlly ,'cccllt.ly IInri ~ I oro sp:\.,'o is ,n-llilabll' in Ihu IIrw Scr~pple Ib15c pic of yen,'s, 11'118 :lIlclulecl hy qlll~rlcrs to t"ke "lire (If the 1\'1'011'111 Sour Kraut fore Impor~ant An ir l l\~ I 'c !iti lig incidont occurred ill a ll supervisory Willi'll the '.I' clrphorr !l Compli llY 1'01'1. the on rly morlling hOll rs Olle day 'T 111"'1'1,' ill the Ir,d will ch"nlttl" 'i"c Ih e "i t ,"_ 1'1:lIIS nr,' Small Lean cCll tly when the unrge d 'opclI lng l in Ill· dcp:II,tlllt'l1l of IIOW lII~d e l' W:I)' fUI' ""lIl'l'lIl1;.{illg Hurl 'l'ho II 0W Wilmington directory re­ rll lll11 .. ut Oil e of Lhe o;.lbl os III .0[,111 , h,' 'J'clrpholl ,' "Xlllllldll'g thl' ""Iolr 1'1:l IIL ill Ih,' "ii" WIII'O Cil y, A tclcphollc crow wns il> Smoked Skinned Hams till' 11I0V(1 Ib32c Cl'lIt1y i"" lI ed co"lnined Ilbollt 20000 ('01111':111." ill the i ll 11I'«'p:untioll 1'0 1' Hlltl i~l nll'halH' liea l lislillr,s nlld 700 c l~ssi ' I ' c adilll's~ for jll"t sli ch all C\'ClltUllli l,\ "ily, II rl ltor 10 su pply 1"lllil :o",, 1 Ii Ill'" ror (11'001 11 (, ~1Ilr(·u~. C'oIH:.\ tl'ul'lion Fol'(' fir,l Ii"till):", said K p, J3l1rd o, MII"­ ' . , •. :--;~II'J'II Till' I'u r pu:w o f 111(' Il(,W lck1,ilClllr!. whie'h, it i!-l fl' lt. Fresh Killed Delicioul Fresh Pork "IT,' r hc,'c fo,' Ihe Dinrnollcl Slate '1' elo, IIInll r"r I he (li.It'iet, had t h ~ ('r,'w f ht6('():Ii't' ! f'I1('(lWlt., will h~ f(l(l :,;n·d. pl h'(' II 11 eW sertioH of ('able in plat·,· Stewing Pork pllllllO C'01ll I'll II Y, II tulk over t l'll'pholH' opr'rating' p l'o l1 • The lit' \\, ( .ll1 : II',It'I ·~ of lhl' T '1 ~ )l hlll1 'l'her<' W(','r l\ pages of t.h e white "lIIl1ed illlel.l', t.hcroby restoring Ih l' , 11 1:-1 t ~nd ,LO ,pn'Hcnt 1I (' lp fl1l fH l;tl!l'H (OIllP:'II,\" wil l 1:1',11111(' lI ' l O"('I.lli _ Chickens Tenderloins Loin Roast 1(" It'I,lIol1(, ~\"I' \' icc in n fow hounot ... (I" :iI"h:.I,,'li'·1I1 Hce tion ancl forly,eight :1tItt4 for til(' It II l' "O\'l'II1 (' UI of fill' :;4 ', ,' rOtllll.:I I' t' f ir-i l1 g' ,'''0111 fnt' 1Itt ' \ ' tHI ' l n Ib Yo Ib tJRg-t'f' of t!l,· l'an:l ry ·t'olorrd 01' hU:ii · c' (' \Vh il, ~ I c-I,' phull ' 11 1\ il'l' IN '" J:olld \\"' 11 t' :1 nil,' ':itOI!"l :1:)(1 :olP :U' ,' fo r ' I" 'I ~ 40c 28c Ib 29c I h '~.~ t' I:1MM iril't.1 S l~ l·tiOll. I, the '1'('h' l1 il llll' ("'omp.II,,' I a :1 lin ill g' th,· ' 1'1 pll/JI lIl "'Jll ipII H' lll 11\'P ,I1' I " S;lI cC Ihe i""':l IIrr of Ihc Ilisl di,'ec­ NEW APPOINTMENT 'H all ly IIIIl IH' It. I I i ~ II ,.(' i ll ,f ,, ;~ f,,' 01' 'nIh.' Ih .. • O f l:\'I', . GENUINE LAMB lo r,'" ilion' Ihall G100 IiSli1l1( ,'hallgcs IlIIt thl S.' 111 (' I i llf~" 1I1 '~ or ~ '\,;11 \··,' 11 I ( W(' rl' dU ll Chops ' , , , , , I" 5oclshoulder Lamb , IIJ 111:111 (' to p t'oplc mO\'illg from ~Ii l:l!i I\l1l1a Collins \Vas r Cc(, lIt h ' III ':, L, klllit", (:" I1 ,'"d T"lI f1i " ~I :I II I 1 ' L~1n 28e Olll' plIl'l of the ,Iistl'icl to allolhrr, "nilliod "prl'lltM ill ehnrgc of tl ':,' r (or 1>"':1"'" "" _atld rc,,,.. ,1 I" ' III .,,' I r-. t r / IJ \ ';11 lit" 0111 _, ( . t ,,\ ,., Rib Chops ' , , , , , , III 42c Neck Lamb ' , , " tb C h~ lIhC. 10 otller cla8dCS of telepholle 11 0 ·kca_ill ""itrhhonrd hy tllO IIi" 25e · ... n ·jc· C' , "t,'. Thifil m r llHR that the. ltl'W mono Htllt e T£.Ilcphollt! ('onqIflIlY. ;,T i., ': ;~:t 1I.!(II(I\iL: ~ i ·/li(l I' : ' ·l \:It" ·} '~''; ; :;~;:~~I.~h:l'!lt : ,~, If'\'l dlfll1 f' 1S r I!.·:tp jtlld ,.. " ~, Rick Chops , , , , , , Ib 38c Breast Lamb Ih Be 1'" ",'10",\ shoulll h ~ refrrn' !1 10 hrfore r'01li1l8 tllkl'S thc "lace nf M's.' 'i,II '" "',IiIII(M III'(' ",'Id I'" .. ;"d '['"I1,\ :I"d i:z II 11<-< itt (ro,oI 1,111 '1 (,f 1,,,,; 1i 111:1 ldllg rail" ill oTlIt'r 10 IIvoill the ttn n.' 1 MrVllugh, now ~fl'K :t1. \ . 111 11.. ' all ope ll d 'WII .. ; un ::~ w '1 :', rI · re(·l ol'~ '. ~ Le____ • of L.mb . . . " . ~ ). 38c ,. ~ 'tt1dli l.'· IIf wi-o llIT Hl1mh!'I·"'. n ;~ h, . (. n dlll\ ~~('~ of th t~ "1" 111H1l1 r I " j ·::I I ~l.1 L-______TheBe prltet elrec:U •• 'In oar Newark Itor. \Vcdnesday, February 9, 1927 THE NEW ARK POST, NEW ARK, DELAWARE, 3 CHURCHES Mermaid IGOLDEY QUINTET accompanied her, where she will Elkton ffpend a mont.h. Pleasant Hill TO~PLES ELKTON Ebenezer M. E. Church . Mrs. Wm. P. Peach, Miss Caroline MI'. and Mrs. Hal'l'Y T. Alexander Mr. E lmer Leach, warden ut t he The Mi te Society of .Ebenezer M. E. Peach, und Bancroft Peach motored left E lkton SatUl'day at noon for Gi lbert T. Gehman, Minister Foulk's Passers Win Hard Workhouse, Greenbank, Del., will ad- Church will hold its monthly meeting to . Bultimol'e Saturday, returning Deland, Florida, where they will Ch urch schoo l, 10.00. Sermon, 11.00. dress the Men's Association of the at the home of Mrs. Sarah L. Worrall home on Monday. Mrs. Peach visited Fought Game at W. I spend a month. ('aicchi s m class 12.10. Epworth hel' daughter, Mrs. Shermer Garrison "" Elkton Presbyterian Church, Thurs- Thursday evening of this week. H S day evening. Lengue 7. 30. Ser mon 8.10. and family. Miss Caroline Peach and . . Gym. Miss Evelyn Sparklin, of Elmhurst, MI'. R. G. Buckingham entertained The Mite Society will meet at the The Go ldey College basketball fiv e - on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Rogel' Bancroft Peach were visitors at the The following Elkton persons who Dol., spent the week-end with her ho me of Mrs. Sarah Worrell this Goodan home. Paul Peach spent Sun­ won a well-earned victory over Elkton are recent graduates of Beacom Busi- pllrents, MI'. and Mrs. John F . \Volleyhan and son Roger, of Chesa­ I peake City, and Mi ss Elva Bucking­ Thul'sdny evening. The gentlemen will day and Monday with his father, Wm. High Friday night at the Wilming- I ness School in Wilmington, have been Sparklin. ,·n iel'tnin. P. Peach. ham, of Newark. ton High School gym, 27 to 23. Il ocated by the institution heads : Wil- Mrs. Caroline McNeal has gone to MI'. and Mr:>. Windle Darlington, of Mi ss Lillian Frazer, teacher at Shaw a nd Monigle excelled in the liam H. Terrell, bookkeeper in the S L Thomas Episcopal Church Harmony School, No. 32, was at her ~rizon~, where she will spend some Kennett Squa re, Pa., were Sunday scorin g department but t he entire ' Bank of North America and Trust tIme With her son, Henry McNeal. visitors at the home of the latter's Dr. n. B. Mathews, Hector home in Felton over the week-end. . ' Company, Philadelphia; Miss Zolpha M' Alb ·t D M k h . d parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Atwell. 10.00 a. m. , Sabbath School and Mi ss Frances Ball, Miss Alma bus lOess college team played good Camero~ ,.. Victory Sparkler and IS. et . ac ey as Issue M' .F H B k' h M lG ndergarton Sabbath School. Spencer and sister and Miss Belle basketball. The score: Specialty Company, Elkton; Miss cards for a bridge party Wednesday I. .. U C lIlg am, r. and . I MI·s. Warren Buckingham and chil- 11.00 a. m., Morning prayer and Chambers were guests at Miss Cham- Goldey College Marjorie Deibert, Citrus Chemical avelllng. __ dren of Red Mills were Sunday visi- ~~ l' mo n. bel's' home on Friday' and Saturday -Goals- Company, Elkton; Miss Clara Pierson, Mrs. A. Victor Davis gave a large tors at the Buckingham homestead. There wi ll be no evening service and at Miss Ball's home on Saturday Field Foul Pts. Hal'vey H. Poole and Company, Wil- bridge party at her home on Wednes- The Misses Emaline, Annie and lI nti! further notice. and Sunday. Shaw, forward .. .. . 3 1 7 mington. day evening. Margaret Derickson and MI'. Steel - - - I The poverty social given by the McElroy, forward ... .. 000 Mrs. Jane H. Hopkins, widow of the Ahvell were Dover visitors Tuesday Me thodist Episcopal Church Young People's society of White Clay Renshaw, forward . . . . 000 Mrs. Henry Kay and Mrs. George T. of last week at the Grange Confer­ late Robert B. Hopkins, of Elkton, Rev. F rank Herson, Minister CI'eek Church was voted a success. Bloxom, forward 2 0 Witworth, of Elmhurst, Del., visited ence. died Thursday at the home of her Ill., From $14 to $15 wns realized. Monigle, center Mrs. John F. Spark lin on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. S. Clifford Bucking- 10.00 a. Session of the Church o daughter, Mrs. Ethel H. Crouch, at I chool. Lesson title, "Making Our J. Mason, ' center o ••• h "d hl ' 0'= H AHMONY. - GHANGE Chase, Md., after a brief illness. Her IN MEMEORIAM I am Vls lte t e atter s parents, Mr. lavor. Stroud, guard 2 Homes Christian." In s pite of sickness and. bad roads, f uneral was held from the home of and Mrs. John Cook at Kenton on II. Ill., Ewell, guard o In loving remembrance of our dear I Sunday. 11.00 Morning worship and Harmony Grange had a very good her mother, Mrs. Katherine B. Parker State boy, Ol'iando Smith, who was called Mrs. Estella Crossan and Mrs. se rmon. Subject, "To See the End." meeting on Monday night. During the Totals 27 on Saturday, with interment in the 6.4 5 p. m., Devotional meeting of 12 . home one year ago, February 6, 1926 : I Ernest Crossan were recent visitors business hour the clover seed order ~Ikton Presbyterian Cemetery. t he Epworth League. Topic, "Mission was closed. The Lecturer gave a re- Elkton High I at the home of MI'. J oseph Worrall Study." The Auxiliary of the American port onthe Lecturers' Convention held -Goals­ In ~~~rr~h: ~~~~rSsaf;!~tr~e~!~~ I and family. 7.3 0 p. m., Evening worship and Legion Post of Cecil County will hold in Dover last week. Also, a communi- Field Foul Pts. Lies the one we loved so dearly 1======sel·mon. Subject, "Abraham, the Chal­ a dance a nd card party in the Elkton cation concerning the biII in opposi- R. Kay, forward 204 In his lonely, silent grave. FOR FLOWERS dean and Abraham, t he American." Armory on Wednesday evening, Feb­ tion to Daylight Saving Time, from Marquess, forward ... . 2 0 4 -.--- r uary 16. Holiness Christian Church Mr. Irvin Dempsey was read. Haberman, forward . . . 000 H~~~~~ ~h:llr h~: ;::~~~;~:nfade, Pho~e Wilmington 203 Rev. W. F. Hopkins, Pastor The Lecturer's hour opened early Warburton, forward 3 7 The Board of Education for Cecil sW1~~~~~ t~heu~~.;svew~he~~v~~s i;i~~d: BRINTON'S to admit vi sitors. The program, in Corridean, center .. . . . 6 county, in special session in Elkton Pi'ayel' meeting, Tuesday, 7.45 p. m. 203 We at Ninth Street charge of Mrs. Naomi B. Simpson, Blake, gunrd ...... 2 on. Friday, elected Howard T. Ruhl, No one knows how much we miss him, 9. ' Cottage prayer meeting, Thursday, consisted of readings by Paul Mitchell, Lawrence, guard ...... o of Prince Frederick, Md., superinten- No one knows t he t ears we shed, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 7.45 p. m. and Steel Atwell; music by Raymond dent of schools for Cecil county to fill But in heaven we hope to meet him ~ Where no farewell tears are shed. Class meeting, Friday, 7.45 p. m. and Sherman Wivel, Hazel Simpson Totals ...... 10. 23 the vacancy caused by the death of Sunday services: Sunday school, and Beatrice Banning. The music on Referee-Garvine. Hugh W. Caldwell. Sadly missed by 'Mother and Father, Dr. Geo. B. Riegel 10.00 a. m.; Preaching, 11.00 a. m.; banjo ukelele, guitar banjo, accordion 1======and Sisters and Brothers. Preaching, 7.30 p m Everybody wel- and piano--solos, duets, concert, ac- I • . - . Muffin pans may be used for baking Chiropractor rome. companiment with singing, - was and Mrs. L. H. Pennington, Mrs. Pearl apples, stuffed tomatoes, peppers, and thoroughly enjoyed by everyone. Harrington, and Mrs. Kate Greenwalt. I APPLETON WOMAN'S CLUB I Mrs. D. Roy Perkins and daughter, for baking yeast rolls. 57 Delaware Avenue The hospitality committe chosen to Mrs. S. E. Bancroft, wife of former Lorene, who have been spending a The Appleton Woman's Hotpe Dem­ serve for the year are: Mrs. Bessie State Master Bancroft, of Wyoming, couple of months with her parents, 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ MONDAY, WEDNESDAY onstration Club held its January Ball, Mrs. Bertha Klair Armor, and is seriously ill. Mr. and Mrs. John F . Sparklin, re- II FRIDAY meeting in t he Club Room, at Cowen­ James Derrickson. . • On next Monday evening will be turned to her home in Cumberland, I 6.30 to 8.30 P. M. town, Wednesday evening, January Among the sick reported are Mr. held a Valentine meeting. Md., on Sunday. Mrs. Laura Harris U There's Music 19. The meeting was called to order PHONE 242-M ~ ilie pn~d~t Mr~ ~ B~~ andl=_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In the Air" was opened by singing "Old Folks at I~ Homt;" by the club. The minutes of I Let us catch it for you the December meeting were read and with a a proved. Election of officers for the W·I LSD N coming year was held and resulted as. follow's : President, Mrs. A. Baus, who Koister Radio was unanimously re-elected; vice­ president, Mrs. Frank Adams; secr e­ Mullin's . ORTHOPHONIC tary and treasurer, Miss Mary Otty; FUNERAL pianists, Miss Lillian Brown and Miss Victrolas Radiolas Mary Moore, press reporter, }\1rs. W. Fullliat of DIRECTOR '1'. Lofland. The co mmittee to arrange Semi-Annual, the program for the ensuing year are VICTOR RECORDS Mrs. C. Blackson, MI·s. S. Pryer, Mr .~ . Chas. Burton, Mrs. Edwin Nowland, Latest' Hits! Mrs. A. Baus. Subject for next meet­ Appointments the Best ing, "Food: Well Balanced Breakfast." 1-2 Price All members try and come out to the prompt and Personal AtteotiolJ next meeting and meet the new Newark Radio Store De monstration Agent. The club ad­ CLARENCE J. FOX journed to meet in the Club Room, Awnings, \Vindow Shades Wednesday evening, February 16, at Sale Kolster - Crosley - Atwater Kent Sets 8 o'clock. and Automobile Curtains Hostesses, Mrs. Ellis Brown, chair ­ ma n; Mrs. Alfred Baus, Mrs. William Every good housewife understands a well-regulated 'house­ Castner, Mrs. Margaret Creswell, Mrs. John Cowden.- Press Reporter , hold must have a thorough readjustment twice a year­ Mrs. William Lofland. and in order to put our house in re-order we will dispose BARROWS' McC LELLANDSVILLE SCHOOL of the following articles of Men's and Boys' wear at ex­ Perfect Attendance-Brice Galyen, actly ~ their former value. BARBER Raymond Thompson, Helen Thomp­ and, . son, Grace Ferguson, Edwin Green­ plate, Eugene Smith, E lwood Camp­ bell , Edward Comly, George Crowe. Men's Suits and Overcoats BEAUTY SHOP Good Attendance- Vernon Comly, Thomas Frame, Leonard Hobson, Special Scalp Treatments Charles Downey, William Greenplate, 1-2' Price Six for $5.00 J ohn Frame, Rachel Greenplate, Special Facial Treatments Louisa Willis, Nedra Downey, Kath­ eri ne Neil son. Percentage for boys, Suits, former values, $25 to $50; sizes 34 to 42, in regulars • Six for $5.00 D4. Percentage for girls, 95. and irregulars; cloths, Fancy Mixtures' in Cheviots and (For ft limited time only) The following shows the general averages for each child by letter for Unfinished Worsteds. HAIR BOBBING, FINGER WAVING, WATER WAVING, thc month of January. MARCEL WAVING, MANICURING A: Louisa Willis, Grace Ferguson. Overcoats, also a goodly selection of Topcoats, mostly all B+ : Katherine Neilson, E ugene Smith, Nedra Downey. sizes, 34 to 46, in regulars and stouts - Patterns. dark 13: George Crowe, Vernon Comly, Oxfords, Fancy Plaids and through and through cloths. Washington House Eddie Frame, Raymond Thompson, -Formerly $25 to $75-now just half. Helen Thompson, Elwood Campb!!ll, Phone 190 Bootblack Stand Edward Comly, Charles Downey. B- : Leonard Hobson, George Hob­ son. C+ : Bruce Galyen, Thomas Frame. Boys' t Suits 'Le : Lee Nichols, Rachel Greenpiate'l Edwi n Greenplate, John F.rame, Wi!­ lil~m Greenplate, Wade MIller, Dean I 1-2 ( Overcoats . I have sold my Yard an'd ~111 I er. ·UKIKI '~ Price) Tc;>pcoats Equipment to the Tom01'l'0w a nd Friday, the Hanal'k Ib'Se Theatre will show the picture version of "Kiki," the play that, under Boys' Suits, in one and two pairs of knickers; ages 6 to 20 Belasco production, made Lenore Ul­ E. J. Hollingsworth Co. ric k fa mous. The screen version has years . Former values $8 to $22.50 - Now, don't forget, :-.1o l'm a Talmadge in the title role. just ~ price. . Ol'ma, sUl'I'ounded by a brilliant I Come and get some bagains in ~ ast, ena ' ts the role of a Paris street I Boys' Overcoats, Chinchilla, Kerseys, plaid backs and gamin with the soul of a "great I ludy. " , he is a harum-sca rum char­ tweed patterns; ages 3 to 18 years. Now ~ price. acter, unus c> d to the good t hings of I Lumber and Millwork life uniil shc meets II theatre man- I agel' (Rona ld olman), who, partly I through sympathy and partly through ' love, takes the gi'" into his luxurious ~ullin ~ before March 1st. ho me. ! Jas. T. Sons, Inc. · " Kiki " is picturizcd on a lavish I Wilmington Delaware "calc. A section of modern Paris, in­ Men's and Boys' Outfitters d uding cafes, shops, theatres, etc., I H. WARNER McNEAL has been faithfully reproduced in Miss 'rulmadge's latest picture produced by i Joseph M. Schenck forF~ st NationBI. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ,..--

THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE, 4 . ht me of this man whom I honor as no othel:' I Personal and Social history r~~ t~u~k and fil e of that part of our citizenship of which The Newark Post ~~ ~:s ~ ead:/~ m proud to pay my huml)le tribute to his memory. (Continued from Page 5.) Issued Every Wednesday at The world wi'n little note n?r ~O~lg re~e:;fae;' ~~~ :~a~~: :~rd~ tended the dedication exercises of the The Shop Called Kells but as descenda'nts t o the prll1c~p ~s w ICn we follow out his ideal new Laurel Armory last Friday and NEWARK, DELAWARE and you represent only ano.t~er vlef'~~ . ·th all that that were guests at the reception and mili­ The college campus, the and the library wcre almost ESTATE OF EVERETT C. JOHNSON-Publisher and agai? here t?day, as cll~l~eg'~'~n b~ft~:\~e~ize our respo)1si­ tary ball which was tendered to Gov­ implies Il1 her history ane ta I I, . h d k f hich the past week-end. Tired MRS. EVERETT C. JOH NSON-Editor ernor Robinson in the evening. bTt' ' d dedicate ourselves to the unfims e wort or w . I had gone home to rest or to CHARLES B. JACOBS, In.-Associate Editor h~ I~:ee a~is life and highly resolve that here t?da~ In m~!I1~r~ Olive Lomax is ill with an abscessed after their mid-year exams. Entered as second-class matter at Newark, Delaware, to the honored' dead we take increased devotIOn or w IC e ear. the patient faculty rcmained under Act of March S, 1897. the last full me~sure-that as we face the problems o! our Miss Elizabeth Brady spent last duce t he mass of examination' Make all checks to THE NI1WARK POST, . ~ave he shall not have lived in vain. And that so far as I~ us week-end in Wilmington with her sis- a nd to attach the qualifying Telephones, 92 and 93. lj:~' this State and this ~ at ion under ~odhs~rl! ~:~d ~'b:~llr~~ till', Mrs. Jefferson Pool. which would mean so much to the The Subscription price of this paper is $1.50 per year in advance. turning students. Single copies 4 cents. of freedom and that this Governmen s a In d th t .t I Miss Elizabeth McNeal, of the fac- people and for the peoplE)," and assert a manhoo a can ru y ulty of the Sleighton Farm School, Schedules of classes hnd been w. want and invite contnttmications, but thc'l/ mU8t .be siudned ~Y,t .the sa I·t shall not perish from the earth. . . . 'f d' pleted last week, and classes writer's' name--'Ilot [or publication, bu.t [01' our m[orntatton an pro ee 101: Y St d' firm and serene amid the turmOil of pohtlcal strl e, Darling, Pennsylvania, ·is spen mg a promptly at 8.10 on Monday men 10aonkedll1!nd saw him fall, but as history' rears the sta~ue of three weeks' vacation here at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. American ideals, carved deep Il1. I't sase b as I, n our hearts IS the Invitations have been issued for ..~ .. ub EUaLlS, 1JHu1U1'rS, ,arlUl, irtt1'r &rquulB, Wrl'1'6, simple name, ABRAHAM LINCOLN. H. W. McNeal. reception to be given next ~ Mrs. James Davis and daughter, evening by the members of the 'urr lIntrr, -.1JTr1'.a1, Air, &1mllqiu1' nUll lIurlt fur Virginia, have returned from a visit ulty of Women's College. This rU"r'J,IIllLltt."-OUR MOTTO. AHAM LINCOLN Newark New at the home of her parents at Galena, mal'k the formal opening of the _ CI b l 'JI;. 4 U :J ~') ABR Century u Maryland. ulty Rooms, recently fitted up in l!:======: He grows no turther from us with Mrs. Clifford J. Sawdon and Mrs. basement of Residence HaJJ, in FEBRUARY 9. 19n the years; '1'he Newark New Century Club met Miller T. Lynam, of Wilmington, and old dini.ng rooms. The furnitUre Rather, time draws him closer; and in the club room Monday, February Mrs. Lionel J . Keyser and young son, de.corabons have been the our tears 7th. The benefit c'ard party on Feb- of Oak Grove, spent Monday here with fl'lends of the college and Well free as though 'twere yester- ruary 1st was a success, and the pres- MI'. and Mrs. Harvey Hoffecker. Ichosen and arranged by the ident, Mrs. Cobb, on behalf of the of the art department of the ABRAHAM LINCOLN day he died, t' Ways and Means Cothmittee, thanked Henry Whiteman, who. had .recov- Miss Taylor, Miss Templeman S(lreading a cureless sorrow na IOn the club members and friends for ered from an attack of grIppe, IS now Miss Harding. AN APPRECIATION BY EVERETT C. JOHNSON DELIV­ wide. their cheerful cooperation. ill with rheumatism. ERED BEFORE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF All of the things that can be have It was announced that Dr. W. Owen Miss Margaret Brady spent last Last week, during the stress of DELAWARE ON THE TWELFTH DAY OF been said: Sypherd would lecture before the club week-end at her home in Middletown. aminations the students were "Fathomless eyes," "kind lips and April 4th instead of in February, as informally to the Faculty D. R. McNeal, of Abington, spent FEBRUARY, NINETEEN HUNDRED craggy head," was stated in last week's paper. cheered by a cup of tea. These last Friday here with his parents, "Quaint humor," "awkward figure There will be a luncheon and Valen­ fill a long-felt need, that of a AND ELEVEN MI'. and Mrs. H. W. McNeal. monstrous tall" - - - tine party in the club room Monday, where members of the faculty Yet that remains which none may February 14th, at one o'clock. Lunch­ Miss Kathryn Oller, of Wilmington, slip away from the activities N a commemoration such as this we are inclined to agree with say at all. eon will be served for the nominal sum spent last Sunday here with Miss student halls, relax, and Emerson that an institution is but the lengthened shadow of I of thirty-five cents, after which one Evelyn Worrell. their friends. one man: Just as a man Cresar is born and we have a Roman The mystic in him - - who may lend may play bridge, hearts or sew. Mem­ Mrs. William J . Holton returned Miss Florence Jackson, vocation Empire, so no one man so represents the. American idea of it name? bers are urged to be present at this Sunday evening from a visit at the visor, came to Women's College American institutions as does the one whose bIrth we honor today. The charm of him that gave him meeting and there is a special invi­ home of her son, Charles Holton, in Sunday to remain a week. She No phrase nor epigram, no eulogy nor description can depict our more than fame? tation for house guests of the mem­ Bethlehem, and at the home of her an introductory talk on national life as can the one name, Abraham Lincoln. At home Scarce human seems the person bers. Anyone wishing a place re­ daughter, Mrs. J ennings Sparks, in she will conduct group and and abroad he stands today the undisputed representative of the that might doubt him; served please phone Mrs. R. O. Baus- Media. conferences during the ideas and ideals of our life and government. Indeed, in his life And none may read, dry eyed, ten man. the idea of helping the we find striking resemblance to the birth and life of the nation. lines about him. • The program of the afternoon was Mr. and Mrs. Robert Seasholtz, of solve the problems of subjects, In his birth and surroundings we find the hardships of the -Strickland Gillilan. -two piano solos, "From a German Wilmington, spent last week-end here subjects in college courses, and colonists; in his youth, the struggle for independence; and in his Forest" and "Improvisation," both by with Professor and Mrs. H. R. Baker. aftel' college. Miss Jackson life work we find the ideals and the heart of y:e people at large. McDowell, beautifully played by Mrs. Miss Alice Charsha spent last week­ here after a week of similar work In those hardships and struggles through wliich he passed, we WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Robert Price, and Dr. Richard Wat­ end in Wilmington as the guest of Hood College, FreBerick, Maryland. ' read the sentiments of the nation. And today a recital of his MI'. and Mrs. Howard Reed cele­ son Cooper delighted those present Miss Bessie Wharton. career may bring us more fully to realize o~r duties and. to .re- bra ted their sixth wedding anniver­ with a talk on "Modern Poetry." The Misses Marjorie, Edith and Rhea Todd completed her new increased devotion to the cause for WhICh he gave hIS hfe. sary .at their home on South Chapel Mrs. Jas. C. Hastings, Secretary. Dorothea Rose spent last Sunday in years' teacher-training course No character in American life gives th~ cou.rage to the young and street, I~st Friday evening, February Washington, D. C., with friends. end of last semester and is fourth. Mr. and Mrs. Reed received the strength to the old as does the RaIl-sphtter of the West. He Professor Ira S. Brinser, Superin­ at the Tomahawk School, is proof of the American opportunity and its .reali~at~on. The Imany useful and pretty gifts. The MOI'e than fifty guests attended the tendent of Schools, is attending the ington. Cora Trimble has founder and undisputed leader of our party, hIS prmclples hold guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Robert annual banquet of the Christian En­ Legislature today, in Dover. position at ?illside School, the admiration of all men. Around. his !1aT?e cluster the dreams Reed, Jr., MI'. and Mrs. Leon Powell, deavor Society of the Newark Pres­ Thompson Station. of the young and on adherence to hiS prmclples rests the success Mr. and Mrs. George Krapf, Mr. and byterian Church held Monday night. Miss Hannah Lindell is celebrating an anniversary of the natal occasion of our institutions. Mrs. William Register, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Steel, president of the society, today. Born in the South, reared in the pioneer West, untrained, Albert Boys, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest acted as toastmaster. The Reverend with keen insight and feeling of men, he ruled with a statesman- Burris, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Powell' j M,·. Arnold, of Greenhill Presbyterian Mr. H. B. Reynolds has been con­ A delightful afternoon has -' -Ik"':i"~'''~'~' ship based on common sense. And with a diplomacy founded on Mr. and Mrs. Normand Battersby, Church, Wilmington, was the main fined for several days with a severe planned for the members of kindness, he won the respect of men and nations. Mrs. James Keeley, Mr. and Mrs. E. speaker and took as his subject, cold and sore throat. Newark New Century Club and . . . house guests for next Monday 8f ter' I';"!1~,;a;lnh,,'-t With an initiative and inconsistency of genius, unknown to Platt, Miss Jane Chalmers, Misses "When is a Christian Endeavor So­ noon, February 14. For the sl111! political circles, he molded radicals and conservatives to the main Dorothy PowelJ, Helen Register, Jane I ciety ~ uc cessf ul." Othel' speakers WEDDINGS central idea. Humble and submissive, with the heart of a child, I Reed, Lynam Reed, E. Chalmers, and I were MIss. Blanche Malcom, Professor sum of thirty-five ce nts, the hospj."·""· "" ___ L._ ll he was the autocrat of American institutions. With a tenderness I Jack Keeley, all of ewark; Mrs. Ira S; Brmser, Mr. Paul D. Lovett, Franklin-Barnard tality committee will serve seldom seen in public life,- without striking a cruel blow, he Esther Bais and son, of Elk.ton; Mrs. , M:. Rex Shaeffer and the Reverend Mr. and Mrs. William J , Barnard, at one o'clock. Afte l' luncheon, drenched a continent in blood with the audacity of Napoleon. He Joseph Scarborough, of Ch,lds, Mrs. H. E. Hallman. Rex Shaeffer, all old of this town, announce the marriage will be a social afternoon, would listen to the story of a widowed mother and break all rules Thomas Kay, Mr. and M.rs. Arnold me~ber o~ the society,. n~w living in of their daughter, Miss Katharine opportunity to play bridge, of war while a statesman waited in the. ante-room. He would Cook, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Kay, Philadelphia, led the smgmg Barnard and Mr. Lawrence Kays sew, or just to rest. Those shock his cabinet by his trivial stories and tramp the floor all Misses Mary Kay, Anna Seth, Zilda Mr. Hallman awarded certificates of Franklin, of Wilmington. The cere­ be able to attend the luncheon night burdened with the gravest situation in history, Dismiss Scott, Alverda Ford, Hazel Murray, Expert Endeavor to the Misses Sara mony was performed last Saturday notify 'Mrs. R. O. Bausman at , a conference of war to visit a soldier boy. His broad understand- Ella Ford, Mrs. Joseph Ford, Mr. and Steel, Anna Frazer, Hazel Malcom, afternoon, ' at four o'clock, at the ing of human nature links our life to his. He had ideals without Mrs. Andrew Moore, Edward Moore, I Blanche Malcom, Mae Malcom, Mr. Church of the Transfiguration, New aloofness. His life represents our better self and makes us kin. Normand Moore and Clifford Moore, Paul D. Lovett, Mr. Alvin Wakeland York City, Reverend Culver Alford And his idea of life can well be our motto of living when he sai~, of E lk Mills. I and Miss ~iriam Scarborough of the officiating. Mrs. Franklin was at- "I want to so live that when I die those who knew me best wIll I E lkton socIety. tended by Mrs. Russell V. Carmen, of say 'He planted a rose and plucked a thorn wherever he thought BRIDGE TOURNAMENT I ---,---.., --- Quogue, L. I., who was her room- ' ld row'" JOINT MISSIONARY MEETING Dull Headaches a rose wou g . . . .. Local card enthusiasts will start a .. mate and chum when she attended With the idea tha~ no hou.se diVided agam~t Itself co~ld du li cate brid e tournament this Sat- T.he members of the Mlsslona.ry George School, at Newtown, Pennsyl- are often call ed by

stand and at the same tIme convmced that no natIon coul~ e~lst ur~a evenin g at the home of Dean I( Society of :he. Newark Methodist vania. Mr. Franklin was also attend­ half slave and half free, he f?unded a party on the old prinCiple and ~rs . C: t McCue. Mrs. McCue Churc? ?as mVlte~ ~he members of ed by a school-friend, Mr. Carl Evans, Eye Strain of right and wrong and carned the burdens of the North With E . W . h ' 1J b the mIssionary socle~,es of the Pres- of Plainfield, New Jersey. A Supper its abuse and thos~ of the South with its condemnation, until and Mrs. l'~es~ l'lg t. WITh e , byterian and Episcopal Churches to was given to the bridal party by Mr. Your eyes may he thc calise. both saw'the wisdom of a united people and the blended beauty h ~slte~ses for ~ e :' s ~ evel1ln~: er~ meet with them at the Methodist and Mrs. Victor E. LeBarre, of 39 W. Y-Jave them eX :lIl1 ill Cd and wll e a senes ?ll tV: par Church on Friday afternoon. 72nd street, . . be sure a bout thelll . We of the original flag Holding the balance of power in his mighty l ~es ;~ hand until passion' should giv~ way to reason, he protect~d ~he ~::::r , ~n~r:~· :s ;v~r. :n~ ~~:.' Hulli~ CHUIicH-SUPPER Mrs. Franklin was graduated last can tell you. government of the people. untIl a reverence for the ConstItutIOn hen, D,'. and Mrs. Price, Dean and Junl! at Women's College, University was restored a~d t~e fabriC of freedom preserve~ . Mrs. McCue, Dean and Mrs. Dutton, The ladies of Rock Presbyterian of Dolaware, and has been society ed- s. L. McKEE Look at hIS giant, a'Ykw!lr? fig~re add.res~ll1g . the. ~ultured MI'. and Mrs. W. E Holton, Mr. anci Churc!h, Cecil county, Maryland, will itor of the Wilmington Morning News -Optometrist-Optician East at Cooper U.nion, mamtaInml?! With majestIc SimplICity that Mrs. George L Townsend, Jr., Mr. serve a chicken salad supper, on Wed- since her graduation. Mr. 'Franklin right is always nght, and wrong. IS. always wrong, and that sthe and Mrs. E. B. Wright, Mr. and Mrs. nesday, February 23, from 5 to 8.30. attended New York University. Mr. 816 MARKET STREET safety of nations res~s. on the prl~clples o.f the .~oral code.. ee J. P. Cann, Mr. and Mi.s. Harry Tickets 35 cents and 50 cents. Pro- and Mrs. Franklin will live at 810 Wilmington. Del. him at Gettysburg glVI~g ~xpr~sslOn to hIS heart and ?ur Id,ea.'s Bonham, und Dr. and Mrs. Eastman. ceeds for church purposes. West street, Wilmington. its classic purity and characteristic dignity. , - , ~~~~~~Il1~~~~~~~m~~1l1One cannot compare him with other men. He could know JOIN BISHOP'S CRUSADE 1 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ victory without the desire for conquest, power without ambition, The members of St. Thomas Epis­ firmness without anger, and charity to a fallen foe. What nature co pal Church of this town will meet gave him in the obscurity of his birth she made up in the patron­ on Wednesday evening with the other age of her wisdom and set at naught the tradition of heredity church groups who are joining in the and power. Nature endowed him to stand amid the wreck of Bishops' Crusade at Trinity Church in fine Haberdashery empire and save to mankind the institutions of popular govern­ Wilmington. The women of St. ment. With a heart as big as his brain, loving as he was wise, Thomas' Church will meet with the tender as he was strong, he was as considemte as he was women of the other church groups at Greatly Reduced resourceful. Emmanuel Church on Thursday after- Thus he was, when struck down by a hot-tempered south- 1I00n. emer, who ill represented his people. The South lost her best 1,------, This i~ a real opportunity to procure high _ J.:rnde friend and the North her wisest counselor. haberdashery at attractive prices. Born as lowly as the son of God himself, reared in penury, THE BUSINESS destined to step from obscurity to supreme command in the OF BEING EDUCATED Shirts Leather Jackets world's greatest crisis, the life and words of Abraham Lincoln As usual, many exasperating and Robel provoked a sentiment for which even this material and practical Neckwear Glovea Pajamas ridiculous answers have been given / Ijoaiery age need offer no excuse. All over this country today, men just and much distressing lack of Sweaters Mufflers as we, steeped in the practical things of life, are laying aside the thought shown by some of the duties of the hour and acknowledging that hero worship' still lives, pupils in the public schools who It is our policy not to carryover a ny of th e ahol'c by paying tribute to a man. And though we tramp the path have recently taken the required which towering genius disdains; though we may never acquire named articles, as \I e show lJelV and attracti" e hHhrr' mid-year examinations. For in­ das~\ery each ~eaSO I\ . distinction where by the stroke of a pen we can emancipate stance: G" eec has been ~eclared slavery, we have yet a duty to perform in seeing to it that the to be the largest city in South greed and avarice of today enslaves no freemen. To us comes Amedca; Julius Caesar to be king the duty to teach those slaves how best to enjoy freedom with of England; the Mediterranean Sea its responsibilities; and too, it is for us to see that no freemen to be the possession of Great bow heads in slavery to the commercial lash of the times. Bdtain. To the question, "In go­ We must have a care in seeing that our institutions are not ing from New York to Wales, MANSURE & PRETTYMAN seduced in bondage. Though the work of a genius may not be where would you probably land?" ours, manhood is in vogue-and the need for men is just as great came these answers: On the sea­ in our present evolution, as when our hero faced the crisis of shot'e; At Bristol; On the Thames DU PONT BUILDING the hour. River. ~~~~ ~~qfi~~~~~~~m~lli~~ ______~I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Febl'ual'Y 9, 1927 THE NEWARK POl:)'f, NEWARK, DELAWARE. 5

=W~~~ CLUB AND MEETINGS SOCIAL NEWS The Week In Review PERSONAL NOTES ANNOUNCEMENT 'I

~- fi ML'R. C. A. McCue spent last Week- ! Armand Durant spent two days this Dr. Louise Lawrence came here on pital in Wilmington, is improving sat­ Owing to the bad roads which end with friends in Baltimore. week i?' New York City on a bus i- Sunday to spend a fe»' days with her isfactorily. have confined many of our The Ways and Means Committee of ness trIp. niece, Mrs. Walter Hullihen, and to Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Huston attended attend the funeral services of her country customers, we are ex­ I l he Newark New Century Club report E~roy .Steedle, who has- been at At­ the fum'al of Mrs. Huston's grand­ $110 cleared from the Card Party held Ian tIC CIty for two weeks for treat­ brother-in-law, Mr. Winchester, on mother, Mrs. Mary Ellis, at Laurel, tending our ANNIVERSARY . lhe Club Room on the evening of ment, has undergone a second opera- Monday afternoon. ' last Wednesday. ; ebr uary 1st. tion, the first one for tonsil trouble; Miss Jane Maxwell entertained two Miss Minnie Gatchell, of Wilming- SALE one week to February 21 Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Johnston and the second one, for a sinus trouble. tables at bridge yesterday afternoon. ton, was a recent guest of Misses LiI- - that they may avail them­ daughter, Genevieve, and Miss Mary The condition of Miss Hal'1'iet Ev- Friday, Mrs. C. A. Green, wife of lian and Nellie Mackie, Nottingham J ohn ston were guests at a dinner par- ans, who was injured in an automobile Sergeant Green, of the University Road. selves of the· unusual bargains ty given by Mr. and Mrs. Menitt accident neal' her home .in Elkt~n on Military Unit, left for Syracuse, N. MI'. H. S. Palmer is spending to­ we are offering. Fishel' last Wednesday evening at Monday, January 81, IS practtcally Y., where she will spend the mont~ of day and tomorrow at Vineland, N. J., their home in Wilmington. I ~;~:~nged. She is stiJJ in a state of February visiting her parents. 011 a trip for general information at Captain Morse and daughter, Mar- . Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Fader and AI- the center of the most concentrated garet, 1!pent last week-end in Wash- !'fl'. and Mrs. Ray Baldwm ent.er- fred Ewing returned I!lst Thursday poultry raising ai'ea in the country. in gton, D. C., where they visited Mrs. tamed twelve guests at a coastmg evening from a six-weeks' motor trip He will make a study of the reports Morse, who is a patient at the Walter p art~ and at supper last Sunday to Florida and points of interest en of the Vineland Poultry Associatio Louis Handloff's Deeartmellt Store Reed Hospital. evelllng. route. records and their egg laying co ntest Mrs. Delaware Lovett is very ill at Mr. and Mrs. Armand Durant will Dr. George P. Paine, who under- reports. her home on Lovett avenue. go to New York on Friday to meet went an operation for removal of ton- Hon. and Mrs. J. C. Hastings at- Mrs. Benton Raughley is a patient Mr. and Mrs. John Quinn, who are sils last Monday at the Delaware Hos- (Continued on Page 4.) at the Delaware Hospital, where she returningabroad. Mrsfrom. Dman'ant extended visited Mrs.trip 1======11 _. ______--, ~DANCE~ underwent a tonsil and adenoid oper­ Quinn in France last summer. Mrs. I; I1 tion on Monday. SWEENEY BROTHERS ORCHESTRA Durant will remain in New York over The The Women's Auxiliary of St. the week-end as the guest of Miss FEBRUARY 12-NEWARK ARMORY Thomas Episcopal Church will meet Esther W. Payne. [[1DANCING 8.12 ADMISSION SO CENTS with Mrs. Walter Geist on Wednes­ Miss Charlotte Hossinger, of Miss NEW MUSIC STORE day, February 16, at 2.80. Lippincott's School, Washington, Offers the fined in Miss Doro~hy Cooper, daughter of D. C., and two friends, Miss Emily Dr. and Mrs. Richard Watson Cooper, Mathews, of Alabama, and Miss Helen Musical Instruments left last week for Columbia Univer­ Koch, of Pennsylvania, will spend this I VARIETIES THAT SEEM END­ sity, where she 'will take a course in week-end here with Mrs. Joseph Hos­ At Popular Prices LESS AND VALUES YOU FIND public health work. Miss Cooper is a singer. EXCLUSIVELY AT AUP STORES I graduate nurse. Mrs. H. E. Vinsinger is at the Dela­ REPAIRING Mrs. S. E Maloney, of Baltimore, Here a,e Ihe prided product. of every nalion: coffee. ware Hospital for treatment. BOW HAIRING /rom Soulh Amalea .. . . lea. from India and China •• , • spent last week here at the home of Mrs. C~ A. Owens returned on Mon­ 0110 ... from Spain. her son, C. G. Maloney, on Kells ave­ day evening from a visit in St. Louis. REPLACEMENT PARTS Alway., of (au"., AmerIcan product. predoml"ale: nue. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Maloney, of .ereal. from Ihe Well a"d Soulh ... . vegetabl... from Ihe 01'. and Mrs. G. Burton Pearson Philadelphia, spent Sunday at the C. Ea.I .. . .frUit. f,om Calljornla ....• almon from AIOI/ca. were guests yesterday afternoon at G. Maloney home. To /cnow the A.s-P I, 10 know value,-and I/rl. the celEibration of the golden wedding, meanl food valun a. well a. dalla, vulue.. Each one Miss Sarah Brokaw, niece of Mrs. t. equally /mporlanl lo-dajl. anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Harry I Harold Tiffany, of this town, who was Davis, at Still Pond, Maryland: "TBE PUBLIC DEMANDS QUALITY­ taken if! while visiting at the Tiffany AUP STORES ARE FAMED FOR ITr' Miss Elma Robinson, who is a stu­ home last week-end was operated on dent at Goldey College, will spend 222 West Ninth St. fo r appendicitis at Dr. Richards' pri­ th ~ MaJ. from Ihe finul fro/II Their full, rich bean flavo, I. du. rest of the winter in Wilmington, at ob/alnablef 10 .Iow cookIng I vate hospital at Port Deposit last -Phone 14R8 the home of her . sister, Mrs. J. P. Monday, Miss Brokaw has been criti­ SCHIMMEL'S CAMPBELL'S Truss. Miss Robinson is a member of cally ill, but is now recovering. 1;..------;...... ; P PUREFRUIT the Goldey Oollege basketball team, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Mrs. Charles Maxwell, of McClel­ but has been obliged to discontinue fir ' RESERVES BEANS landsville, spent TUfsday with Mr. playing because of a sprained knee. c c and Mrs. Robert Campbell. Jtlr.9 COni Mrs. Reynolds, hostess of the Blue 3 Z3 . Mr. 1\. P. Williams, Federal Agent Hen Tea Room, iii. iJJ with tonsilitis. for Agricultural Education of the Wholdome wheal food. /hpl offer wide variely to your meal. I Marion Hopkins spent the week-end Federal Board for Vocational Educa­ with his family. Marion, who is at­ MACARONI or :~~ c tion, Washington, D. C., transacted tending Rutgel's Prep, has been mak­ SPAGHETTI BRAND Z·Pks·1S official business with State Director :Books of the ing the sport pages of the New York R. W. Heim Monday. dailies with his sensational work as AUP T~~~'iR SCOTT TISSUE Mrs. William Hetherton and Mrs. forward and roving guard on the Rut­ Mutual Building and Loan Association Robert Reed, of Wilmington, recently gers' basketball team. He has a bat­ PEAS PAPER spent a day with Mr. and Mrs. Robert ting average of 84 points in 7 games. Campbell. C C Mi ss Estelle Wheeless will enter­ can 18 Z roll·19 Mi'. Robei.'t Campbell spent last tain at bridge on the afternoon of open for subscription to their Friday with his sisters in Wilmington' j February 12, at her home on Orchard Some Tasty Breakfast Suggestions! Miss Bertha Gamble spent last Road. Thursday in Newport with. her cousin, . Harry Griffin, of Philadelphia, is 14th SERIES Motber's Oats fJkg 10c Mrs. Thomas Hanna. I visiting hi s brothel', George W. Grif­ Sunnyfield Dried Beef fJkg 10C Mrs. R. G. Ford will be hostess to fin , 'of this town. Pillsbury's Health Bran fJk g 1M Heinz Rice Flakes fJ/eg 180 the Friday Card Club this ,,,{eek. Mi ss Margaret Anderson left Sat- during FEBRUARY and MARCH Wbeatena fJkg Zlo Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Price will enter- urday to spend ten days with friends Quaker Maid Cocoa ~ -lb can 10c lai n a few friends at a buffet supper in Baltimore. Subscriptions received by the Secretary Ilfl fRollt. Prunes can Z50 this evening. Mrs. Heim, Mrs. Dayett and Mrs. §unnylleld Sliced Bacon fJkg Z~o Mrs. Oliver Goffil{an has returned W. A. Wilkinson attended the annual Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour • fJ/eg 140 to her home in Elmira, New York. club luncheon of the Wyoming Round at the Brer Rabbit Molasses Cold Label can 17c Co lonel and Mrs. S. J . Smith left on Table last Friday. lall can Monday to spend a few days in New Professor Charles Bush and his White House Evaporated Mtlk llc York City. mothel!, Mrs. Lewis Bush, of Wilming- SWEET S g C FARMERS TRUST COMPANY CRUSHED Miss Elsie Wright is spending some ton, were dinner guests of Mr. and oar orn 2.. .Sc lime in Washington, D. C. MrS. Er- Mrs. George L. Townsend, Jr., last Red Ripe Tomatoes ~ cam ., nest Wright and Miss Harriet Wilson Saturday evening. Tender 'rasty Peas visited Miss Wright last week-end. _ Mrs. S. E. Tarbutton, of the Cedars, spent last Wednesday here with her Marsball'. Tomato Herring • can Z70 can 170 daughter, Mrs. Arthur Hauber. J. Rumford's Baklnl PDwder ~. "Salada" Tea X-Ib fJkg Z50 Gorton's Clam Cbowder can lZa Full·Strenltb Ammonia Z bol& 15c Dress Your Hair nY Liquid Blue bol 50 As You Do Your Person DELICIOUS Our Own Brand Transformations and Switches NASH Apple Sa~ce KETCHUP $2.50 and up The World's Greatest Z cans .Z5C Z bol& Z5C Motor Car Value FOR EVENING DRESS A&P collee. are deliciously fre.h. That'. one AND PARTIES rea.on why they d.light .0 many thou.and.! We make them from your A d.llc1ou., ,/rong-j/aoored coff.e- srown in Brazil and Colombia I own hair c The pre$ent mode calls for RED C:IRCLE Coffee Ib 39 more elaborate coiffeurs. and Thou.and. prefer 8 0 'Cloc/c Coff.e becau.e of 118 mild, yel rIch flavor I we will gladly advi8e you on becoming style8. cfiNN,OUNCING c 8 O'Clock Coffee lb3S PermanentMarcll with Ringlets Marcel Walling that Stays Rlcb, Creamy Cbeese - 16 :5.C Facial Massaging. $1 to $10. Our Acc~pting of the Agency for lona Calli. T~t~:.r Peacbes Ige can .8c HAIR BOBBING TO SUIT YOU md jIlontt T~t.'::' Peacbes 2~' can ZZC YOU ARE SURE TO BE SATISFIED AT Nash Cars- as a Fitting Companion AIIP ClaUI .aa.. • bol .s. Col'IMd BHI • f2 ·06 CIIn ... Belna Ket."ap • hoi a7.lllaternatlOnal .alt • pIu ... 111 WEir S· t Phone KraIt Clae_ • can al. M ...la 011 • pi can ... 9th St: IS IS ers 75·J to the STAR, in the higher price Bone ...... 1__ can .,. Cut .trlnll_ ...... can a .. 24 year.' of valuable experience Pure Gra.. .raloe • pt bol a9. VanUla ElItr•• t bol a .., ... field. 11,1 "dill, Spl_o" • can a7. AIIP Pearl ...... • PU." md jIlontt Aspara.us Tips can zge , - Blue Rose Rice :5 IhI zoe A fine, golden-brown. wholesome loaf wllh all of II, fOOd quallllu Raymond F. Widdoes relalned In .plle of the lowered pric. I Announces RANDMOTHER'S iar~e 9 c His connection with RITTENHOUSE MOTOR CO. G BREAD lD'i::t . oa / Newark Radio Store PAN LOAF 6c Rn BREAD 10a/6c AS SALESMAN OF SOUTH COLLEGE AVENUE RADIOLAS ORTHOPHONIC VICTROLAS -- --- ~ -- !6======~======~~~TH~E~N;E~W=~A~R!K~P~O~S~T~.~N:E:W:A~R~K:.~D~E~L:A:W~A~R~E~'~~~~::::~;,::::;====~~~~~~~~ = T Rodney was winner of individual Delaware Mermen ed too late in the season to fill out a Newark Wins wo on ly to that of Jaquette with 6 field d Nat~-Curti. Wins Firat schedule, it has been · laying careful R d goals and 4 fouls for 16 points. Face Teat Satur ay plans for base ball and football or- From Caesar 0 ney The girls' game was featured by Half Bowling League ganizations that will include the clever and close guarding on the part - -- The Delaware relay t Iln! cream of local talent. The original of both teams. The Misses Chalmers Blue and Gold Swimmers Will Meet group has recently held a secret elec- Both Conte.t. Clo.e: Boy. Triumph "nd Robl'nson teamed 'with their usual U. . of Reybold, Reese, Taylor and Last Nights Games End First Brack· b . f I h th " Catholic niverslty In are favored to take t h i~ rvent. In tion of mem ers It ee save e 42 To 39; Girls Win 16 To 12 perfection to gather the winning et In Champion.hip; Con­ propel' spirit, ambition and ability to statistics. Miss Coverdale, Caesar Wa.hinrton Swarthmore meet th y look the promote local athletics in the ' best Rodney was winner of individual lay by a wide margin. tinental Second possible mannel', and these elected Friday night, in the Armory, New- scoring honors with 5 field goals. - of Another feature D In ware is prospects will soon be invited to be- ark, the boys' basketball team of the The scores: On Saturday the Unive r~ity fident of winning is the fanc), Last night, each team bowling three come members. High School exacted revenge for an Delaware swimming team Will have Wilson Boyer, Tony Ru ...; o and games, ended the first half of the The club room is comfortably fitted early season defeat by winning a Newark Boys their second meet of the seaso.n w~en Rose are the entries. Boyer in tournament for the championship of up with easy chairs, a victrola, pool tight game from C(lesar Rodney, 42 -Goals­ they oppose the Catholic U.Olverslty ticular showed hims If :l "big the Aetna Bowling League. The Na- table, punching bags and boxing para- to 3\:1. The Newark girls also won Field Foul Pts. tank men in their new pool 10 \Vash- I performer in the Swa rthmore tiona I and Curtis team won with 15 phernalia. The rules and purposes of t heir game, 16 to 12. Doordan, forward 1 S 5 ington. . I Reese and Reybold will games won and 5 lost. Continental the club have been formulated with Both games were fast and close. Eubanks, forward 1 0 2 While Delaware was conSidered at Delaware inthe 50-ya rd dash, was second with 13 won and 7 lost; an eye to excluding any practices that The Newark boys were not sure of Williamson, forward .. o 2 the beginning of the season to have Harry Maier and Larry La the Fire Company third with 7 won will be demoralizing to the ends it their victory until the finale whistle. Morris, center ...... o 14 the nucleus of a team, they sprung a ca1'l'Y the Blue and Gold in the and 13 lost, and the Business Men last has in view. \ At no time in the course of the game Johnson, centel' .. . , .. o 0 big surprise on everyone, including dred yard free style. with 5 won and 15 lost. The teams The original group of fourteen is were the contestants separated by Jaquette, guard ...... 5 17 themselves, when they handed a stem Captain Nobis will b ' will start the lower half df the made up of Corbit Crompton, presi- more than 4 points. Morris starred Holloway, g~ard .... . o 2 trouncing to Swarthmore; taking ~1I 1 only entry in the 150- bracket on a clean sheet. If National dent; Irvin Cornog, vice-president; from the flool' for Newark with 7 but one first. Saturday, they Will i stroke, but he is consid )'ed and Curtis wins this bracket they James Smith, secretary-treasurer; field goals, while Jaquette did the ex­ Totals ...... 17 42 face a more severe test than the crack sink any compet it ion ill that will hold the cha mpionship. If one of Waldo Lovett, ' Marvin Walls, Loring pected by contributing 6 doubles and Swarthmore crew could give them, for Nobis and Boyer wil swim the Ceasar Uodney Boys ' • the other three teams wins, they Will i Cordrey, John Cunningham, Ewell 5 fouls. Catholic University is ranked second yard breast stroke. bowl it off with National and Curtis Buckingham, Paul Maxwell, Hiram Fifer, str offense man for Caesar - Goals­ only to the Navy in the Sou:h At- • • • f or the crown. Renshaw, Edwin Shakespeare, Leroy Field Foul Pts. lantic district. As the Navy IS am­ The Sell er: "You see the cow On Sat.urday night National and IC I'ompton, Leonard Eubanks and son's start have rounded into veteran Fifer, forward . 6 4 16 .phibious by profession, the Washing­ 204 longs -to my wife and she says she Curtis and Continental fattened their Kennedy Fell. form. Marker, forward ...... ton boys will prove beyond question batting averages two games each by I ---...... _-- The tentative line-up will probably Short, cen tel' ...... 4 3 11 the mettle of the Blue and Gold sob herself into hysterics if I sell beating the Business .Men and. t he Newark Teams find Morris at center; Williamson and Cool; guard ...... , .. 2 4 natators. It will break her heart." Fire Company, respectively. NatIOnal Doordan, forwards, and Jaquett and Rae, guard ...... 2 4 Alec Taylor, Delaware frosh dis­ The Buyer: "All right, i t'~ no and Curtis had high team score, with Beat Beacom Holloway, guards. Morri~ has done tance star, will probably find the The Seller: "Sa-ay,-" 798, while Little of that aggregation excellent work at the pivot position Totals...... 14 11 39 toughest opposition of the afternoon The Buyer: "Well, what is it!" won first individual prize with 193 Boy. And Girl. Both Take Hard and in last week's game with Caesar Referee': Gallagher. when he tackles Lee in the 440. Lee The Seller: "Make it $60, and pins for one game. - let her sob." Games Lut Night; Boys 27-21; Rodney, the hardest this season, was Newark Girls is a star all round performer, but the Last night, each team played three high man on field goals. Doordan re­ -Goals­ instead of two games. National and Girl. 38·28 cently developed into a sharp-shooter Field Foul Pts. Curtis won from the Fire Company and can be counted on to find the Chalmers (capt.) forward 4 1 9 2 to 1, and Business Men beat Con­ The Newark High School basket­ basket at any reasonable opportunity. Robinson, forward .... 2 3 7 tinental by the same score. The Fire ball teams strongly intrenched their Williamson, one of the veterans, is a Fraser, center ...... 0 0 0 Company had high game with 816, position as leading contenders for the finished player at every department Armstrong, center . ... 0 0 0 Sprogle's contribution of 192 pins to D. 1. A. A. championships, when, last of the game, and makes his small Dawson, center ...... 0 0 0 that score giving him first individual night in the Armory, they toppled the stature an asset on the offensive. Singles ...... 0 0 0 honors. strong teams of the Beacom Business Jaquette, captain, who has corne to College. Beacom, ,,,ith more mature Burke, ...... 0 0 0 NOTICE Saturday Scores late form because of bootbal1 in­ and experienced players, was expect­ Thoroughgood ...... 0 0 0 Continental juries that kept him inactive early in Ramsey 122 ... - 122 ed to give Newark a drubbing. The the season, has been showing brilliant Wright .. 184 135- 319 boys won their game, after trailing floor work, and is in first class phys- Totals ...... 16 To Federal Income Tax Payers Jackson ...... 150 138- 288 the first half, by a score of 27 to 21. ical condition. Holloway is a fine de- Caesar Rodney Girls 1 Bonham : ...... 157 161- 318 The girls just nosed out their op­ Hopkins ...... 167 176- 343 fensive player and a shifty floor man. ' -Goals- \ For the convenience of those who are Hancock 123- 123 ponents by a score of 3 to 28. In addition, Coach Malin has. a I Field Foul Pts. Doordan, who has recently de­ string of substitutes that can hardly Cataldi 1 0 2 required by law to file Totals 780 743-1523 veloped as a strong offensive star, be classed as second string as their Markel' 0 0 0 Fire Company was high scor e man in the boys' Sprogel ...... 166 147- 313 records are as impressive as those of ICover dale ...... ~ ...... 5 0 10 game with a total of 11 points. the varsity. The only casualty is Lafferty ...... 0 0 0 Federal Income Tax Returns Tasker ...... 115 144- 259 Ann Chalmers and Pauline Robin­ Anderson ...... 159 111- 270 Whiteman, who is confined with ill- Baker ...... 0 0 0 son shared scoring honors for Newark L. Hill ...... 105 . . . - 105 ness, and will be seriously missed. Evans ...... 0 0 0 Shellender . . . 119 131- 250 in the girls' game, with 15 points a Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue Whiteman, one. of the steadiest boys Jackson ...... 0 0 0 Crow . ... 168- 168 each. Miss Ellis, of Beacom, was in I in the High School in a crisis, was not Roe ...... 0 0 0 will be at THIS BANK Totals . 664 701-1365 dividual star, with 20 points. only a sterling player, but could al- The scores: ways be counted on to key his tea Totals ...... 12 N ational·Curtis Newark Boys Ill-I on February 10 and February 24, 1927, ·Steele 139 185- 324 -Goals­ mates at a fighting pitch. Referee: GaJ1agher. Hill . .. .. 181 108- 289 Field Foul Pts. to assist tax payers in preparing their Cornog 176 15i1'- 335 Williamson, forward . . 0 2 2 Little . 149 193- 342 Doordan, forward . ... . 5 1 11 Durnall 153 120- 273 Riley, center'...... 2 1 5 returns. Morris, guard ...... 0 0 0 Totals 798 765-1563 Jaquette, guard ...... 2 3 7 Business. Men Holloway, guard ...... 1 0 2 You are cordially invited to make use Herdman ...... 103 154- 257 Powell ...... 158 . . . - 158 Totals 10 27 of this opportunity. McNeal ...... J72 157- 329 Beacom Boys Stoll ...... 106 ... - 106 -Goals­ Mote . . . 143 141- 284 Field Foul Pts. Ewing .. 121- 121 Jackson, forward . 226 Rhodes . . 147- 147 Brown, forward . 1 0 2 Wilgus, forward 000 Totals 682 720-1402 Boddy, center .. . . 1 0 2 FARMERS TRUST ·COMPANY Tucsday's Scores Markel', guard ...... 2 1 5 King, guard ...... 1 0 2 National-Curtis Smith, guard ...... 2 0 4 H. Hill 180 140 154 Wise, guard ...... 000 Eissner 149 112 Cornog 148 169 Totals ...... 21 Little .. 152 160 168 Referee- Gallagher. Durnall . 110 138 128 Levis ...... 113 167 Newark Girls -Girls- Totals 739 663 786 Field Foul Pts. because no modern Chalmers, forward . . 6 3 15 equal their tone. Fire Company 143 Robinson, forward . . 6 3 15 be duplicated in Sprogel 140 192 156 Fraser, cen.ter ...... 0 0 0 Tasker . . .. 133 173 139 Doordan, Side-center " 0 0 0 a large degree, Ellison 145 147 126 Singles, guard ...... 0 0 0 ance of age, the Shellender 117 Sheaffer 144 137 .. ' 1Berk, guard .. . : . . . .. 0 0 0 production failed L. Hill . . 167 125 Totals ...... 12 30 HERE THEY ARE! varnish. While Totl.lls 679 816 689 Beacom Gir~Goals_ Business Men Field Foul Pts. Ewing . . 122 171 148 Ellis, forward ...... 8 4 20 In real life (not · a picture). Powell 154 136 175 Fogle, forward ...... 4 0 8 Herdman 171 140 188 Stotesbury, center . .. . 0 0 0 McNeal 137 Watson, side-center . 0 0 0 Come in ~ and see the splendid Mote . . 134 129 146 Casey, guard ...... 0 0 0 Ellison 115 Eskridge, guard ...... 0 0 0 "Fortune" Gas Ranges now on To commemorate him, give Stoll 129 Totals ...... 12 28 display at our plumbing shop. a special Valentine box of Totals 719 691 786 Referee-Gallagher. productions, it Whitman's lous dealers Continental CHALMERS SCORES. -. 46 POINTS ~ Samoset ~ c..A ppollo Wright ...... 123 187 Compare the prices. orbitant IN TOME'S 3 BIG GAMES Bonham ...... 135 127 t~: - Chocolates originals of Jackson ...... 130 137 170 "Shorty" Chalmers, who is the out­ temporaries. Hopkins ...... 176 147 We'll leave the rest to you! Ramsey ...... 120 159 ~:~ Istandirrg star of one of the best ments uses wood _ basketball teams Tome has ever put I old, Totals ...... 684 757 771 on the floo;, has outdone himself in : GEORGE W. RHODES LEAGUE STANDING their three big garnes, getting a total i DRUGGIST FIRST HALF of 46 points. He scored 18 against Won Lost Gilman, 17 against Baltimore Poly- DANIEL STOLL National-Curtis ...... 15 5 technic Institute, and 11 against City Continental ...... , ... 13 7 College. These three teams offered PLUMBING Fire Co ...... , . . . 7 13 Tome the strongest opposition on HEATING ROOFING Business Men ...... 5 15 their schedule. ~ Hardware Man of Newark Newark Spo;ting Club -_.-..-...... _- " Fortune" Gas Ranges Friday's. Game The Newark Sporting Club, organ­ Decisive To D. I. A Full Line of All ized six mont hs ago with 14 members and with a club room on lhe top floor A. A. Championship of the Opera House building, is an The basketball game Friday even­ organization of local boys, sport ing between Newark High School and lovers and athlet es, who may be ex­ ew Castle High School, tp be played pected to furnish ewark with ath­ at New Castle, wiII decide'which team I letic representation that will compete will win the Northern bracket of the with honor in any company. D. 1. A. A. Newark and New Castle The cl ub was organized by a group a)'e tied for firs t place with one lost I -CHARLES P. STEELE who recognized the rich athletic ma­ game each-Newark losing to Caesar lerial, beyond the school age, in New­ Rodney in the first game of the sea­ FRESH and SALT ark and who sought a medium that son, a~d New Castle losing to Newark would turn' lhe social and athletic in a game played at Newark. I Tree and Grape Vine Trimmers and Pruners energies of this material into efficient­ While New Castle has a fast, well- I MEATS ly organized and conducted teams. drilled team, Coach Malin is sa.nguine While, as yet, the club has not put I of victory Friday night as his squad Telephone 44 Newark, Delaware THOMAS A. POTTS teams into the field with the excep­ has shown steady improvement, and tion of a basketball team which start- players who were green at the sea- ..------""!'"------..J 'Phone 228 --~----~~~----~I February 9, 1927 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE. 7

PLACE YOUR AD THE COMMUNITY HERE-GET RESULTS II CLASSIFIED ADS PAY BIG! II MARKET PLACE Governor Robinson IN MEMORIAM WANTED Attorneys' Sale Endorses Del.Mar. Daniel J, Casey. In sad but loving WANTED - Second-hand oil cook Classified Advertising remembrance of our dear husband and stove, in -"ood condition. At once. - Of Valuable V a C ongres.s daddy, Daniel, who departed this life 2,O,lt PHONE 284. RATES: FOR RENT t h Want, For Sale, For Rent, Lost and ~ I r. Fredel'ick P. Adkins, President, wo mont s ago, December 11,1926. SALESMAN WANTED- 'The Oil Rea I Estate. !':chn~ddr:t~~'::f~o~f~!eet ~:, {e~;~i FOR RENT OR SALE-5-me Farm JJ ol-Mar-VIl Eastern Shore Associa- We who loved you sadly miss YOUi business is booming with a steady per insertion. at McClellandilville, 10-1'00111 house, lIOn, We, who loved you, very deal', volume growth. Men who are quali- LEGAL: 60 cents per inch first in- 2 gal'ages, outbuildings, all kinds of i ~ bury , Maryland. And 111 lonely hours of thinking fied for personal contact selling to sertion; 30 cents subsequent inser- f ruit. Apply y dea r Mr. Adkins: Often feel your presence neal'. consumers, especially farmers wilh The undersigned as Attorneys ap- tions. . FRANK JAMISON The State of Delaware is vitally in- Alld we tl'Ust that you are Ilappy tractors and etc., may obtain perm- pointed by a deed from Della Moore, PUBLIC SALES: 60 cents per mch 8 CI I d' et ai, dated the 6th day of February, ! flat. 1 eve an Ave., cl'esler! in the success of the Del- In your heavenly home above anently profitable all year market- 1927, and of record among the Land I . . ._- . 2,9,3t Newark. r,Va Congress. While not all of Where all is joyous pleasure ing ·connection. Auto required. Age Record Books of Cecil Cbunty, in All adv~tlsl~g copy for thiS page ! ______State of Delaware is dependent And everlasting love. limits 28-60. Prefel' men with busi- pursuance of the power contained in should be m thl.s office before ~ P" M' I FOR RENT- 3 rooms for light house- h f . It' I said deed, will sell on the :premises I Tuesday .precedm.g day of publtcatlO~. keeping. Address pon t e SUCCIlSS 0 our agrlcu ura By his lovi ng wife, Anna Casey, and ness and sales training, for local located in the Fourth ElectIOn Dis- Advertlsmg receIVed ~!ldnesday will POBOX 2 du stry, I am very well aware of the son, Edward, territory. Interview arranged. trict of Cecil County, Maryland, on not be guaranteed pOSitIOn. ., 41, . that a large portion of our people THE ATLAS OIL COMPANY, the road from the Newark-Appleton 2,9,lt Newark, Del. ust take t hei r profits and losses with I LEGAL NOTICE care Terminal Wareho.use Co. road to the Newark-Kimblesville road, FOR SALE FOR RENT-House, with all COll - farmers and fruit growers of the 2,9,2t. Philadelphia. ~?~~~e~~~~ate residence of Willia!ll H. veniences, 4 Prospect Ave. Apply in sula. We l'ealize the s trat~gic Estute of John J. Stewart. Deceased. FOR SALE-Kitchen Range-Sun- FRANK GARATWA, ion of Deluware on th~ ~~~ins~la Notice is hereby given that Letters LEGAL NOTICE Saturday, Feb. 26, 1927 shine B; splendid condition, good 105 N. College Ave. aware of the POSSibilities 111- Testamentary upon the Estate of John Estate of Isabel P. Wright, Deceased. AT 1:30 P. M.. baker. 2,9,2t Newark in organization, not for pol~- J. Stewart late of White Clay Creek 2,9,2t. Phone 112 W. . purposes, but for the econor~lIc Hundred, deceased, were duly granted Notice is hereby given that Letters All that Farm or Tract of Land I FOR RENT-'J,'wo rooms and cellar. ncement of the fourteen counties unto Farmers Trust Company of New- of Administration upon the Estate of which is described in the above men- FOR SALE- Two up-to-date 6 room 54 E, J?elaware Ave. e t hree States of our Peninsula. ark on the Thirteenth day of Novem- Isabel P. Wright, late of White Clay tioned deed , and also in a d~e~ from houses, with all conveniences and 2,2,3t has been kind to us, but we bel', A. D. 1926 and all persons in- Creek Hundred, deceased, were duly R.achel A. Smgles, et ai, to Wilham H'I nicely located. Inquire of 1------:--- - not always taken advantage 'of debted to the said deeeased are re- granted unto John Pilling Wright, ~el~~:ed~d daa~~ngMa~~~ 3~~n~92~ec~~~ WM. J. LOVETT, , FOR RENT-Front bedroom, furnish·, that she has so liberally eon- quested to make payment to the Ex- N orris. N . W'..rlg h t an d E rnes t B . Books of Cecil County· in Libel' J. G. I2,9,lt _ Be INSow ew c hied.00. 170 W. Main Street. The proposition of making ecutor with.out delay, and all persons Wright on the Sacond day of Decem- W" No. 14, Folio 166, etc., containing FOR SALE-Four heifers, one Guern- 1,26,3t, Newark. examination' of the debit side of having demands against the deceased ber, A. D. 1926, and all persons in- h FOR RENT-Furnished dwelling, 8 I' community ledger appea1s to me. are required to exhibit and present debted to the said deceased are ra- 68 Ac re s sey cow, will be fresh ~ Marc . individu.al, firm. 01' community the same duly probated to the said quested to make payments to the Ad- One good family cow. T ese cows room and bath on first and second hould, from time to time, take stock Executor on or before the Thirteenth ·ministrators without delay, and all and 33 Square Perches :~ea~~lr~~:=C:~~~.T~:~~/nd from ~~~r~~s~v~~~:'s~;:~eater, garage. in the face of re ~ nt developments. day of November, A. D. 1927, or abide persons having demands against the 'W I FT.ANCIS A. COOCH, While we here in Delaware have by the law in this behalf. deceased are required to exhibit and more 01' less, all of which are tillable, Phone 168 R 4 M. T. REGISTE~ Newark, Del. to beli eve that great progress I Address present the same duly probated to t.he except about five acres in woodland 2,9,2t N;w~r ...: __--C... ______as recently been made in solving FARMERS TRUST COMPANY said Administrators on or before the ~d~ ~~~'::! ~~difr~~~e3w~11in~, f~~~; FOR SALE-4-Tube Roberts Radio FOR RENT - Small-sized House. problems which once appeared' to be I OF NEWARK Second day of December, A. D. 1927, barn, garage, chicken house, corn Set. Moderately priced. ' Demon- Apply in ol uble, we are frankly conscious of Executor. 01' abide by the law in this behalf. crib, granary, and other out-buildings stration if desired. ::t ,10,tf L, HANDLOFF. I' in ter-dependence with the Eastern 1215 lOt Newark, Delaware. Address all in II good state of repair, R. W. THOROUGHGOOD, ======counties of Maryland and Vit·- " JOHN PILLING WRIGHT: This property is located wit hin a 202 S. College Ave. CLEAN SWEEP SALE S ne ia. Therefore, it give me a great LEGAL NOTICE ,_ NORRIS N. WRIGHT, e:~~e~W; °ro:at;3 t~oa~ch~~I~s c~~d 2,2,3 I' deal of pleasure to assure you as far ERNEST B. WARdImGI.Hnl:st'rator •. churches. FOR SALE~Newtown brllOders, the O'F HS in my powel', of the co-operation ~ TERMS OF' SALE-One-third cash best of them all. PIP t of the business, industrial and farm_I Estate of An~ie ? Church~an, De- CHARLES B. EVANS, Atty. at Law, on day of sale and balance in thirty ersona roper y ing leaders of the State, and to sanc- I ceased. NotIce IS hereby gIVen that Ford Building, days, or all cash at the option of the 1,19 Murray's Poultry Farm. lioll your proposal that I sponsor this Letters. Testamentary upon the Est~te 12,8,10t. Wilmington, Delaware. purchaser; credit portion to bear in- FOR SALE-Ford Coupe, late model. On the E. W. Dawson Farm, West Congress with the Gov.ernors of o! Anme O. Churchman, lat~ of Chrls- ! ======! i:~~i;n a~1 :he b~nd~~~f:~e~~ the satis Five good tires. Excellent me- Amwell, locat.ed 2 Miles from ~la ryland and Vit·ginia. bana, .Hundred, deceased, were duly FO R S L E chanical condition. $200.00. Elkton, Md., on Highway to iccB~tS~~::!:::ta~;t~:~ i~t~;:n: e :~~ !~~nt~:r~~to B~e~~~:ch~a~hu~~h~~: A ~~~E~\rT LD,c~~~kf~~:n:;sd 1_19_2~IL~UNGTON N~~;r~ i~~~Ch. Newark, Delaware, on wa ys, and that, if in serving them, I Seventeenth day of D~cember, A. D. 4 Reg 'I- s t e re d Tuesday, Feb. 15, 1927 (' an also be of assistance to Qur good 1926, and all persons mdebted to the At the same time and place as the FOR SALE OR RENT - 46-acre AT 1 O'CLOCK P. M. neighbors to the West and South, it said deceased are reques~ed to .make I H I above sale,' there will be sold by farm, good house and barn, silo, 2 will afford me very great pleasure. payment to ~ he Executn.ces WIthout I 0 stel" n COWS Louis E. Singles" Administrator, the miles from Newark. , Possession As follows:- With a sincere wish for the success dela.y, and all persons havmg d~mands following March 1st. Apply 5 Head Horses of the Congress I am jagalllst the deceased are reqUired to An accredited herd the PERSONAL PROPER-TY FARMERS TRUST COMPANY, Very ;ruly yours, exhibit and p;;'es,:nt the s~me duly • Table and six dining room chairs 2,2,2t. Newark. d M I ROBERT P. ROBiNSON, probated to the saId Executrices on o,r l second year, tuberculin refrigerator, sideboard, oil stove an u es GovernOl', State of Delaware. before the Seventeenth ,day of Decem- tested Jan. 10 '1927. :~~~:e~i~a~!~ce~~;s~p~f:hf' :h~fr:~b~!.s~ F~!wS~~~;~:~!r/;~~k~~b~:hi:~: Nos. 1 and 2, Nan and Nellie, ba'y • ... .. b. el',h' A. b'D. h 1927If , or abIde by the law ' slotOtVre'aSg tcharrepeetOaiindstloinveosl~ ucmhu, ncklocskt,ovloet' for future delivery. mares,2700 Ib 13s., yearsexcel\ent old, willworkers. weight No.3,about 0 f III t IS ea . Herd is home grown, acclimated BI k B bl k . Instruments Add I of rugs, sausage grinder, two bed l,6,tf MURRAY'S POULTRY FARM uc eauty, ac mare, commg 4 Cremona Masters. ress and vigorous, each and every cow room sui tes, cot, and numerous other years old, broken to all farm wOl'k • CHARLES ~. ~VAN~, ~tty-at-Law, in it a breeder. small articles, FOR SALE-10-acre Farm, (3 build- and true as steel, will make big mare, Duphcated Exactly Ford BUlldmg, WllmlTjgton, Del. R L RICHARDS ing lots front) with 7-room Bunga_ , NOS . 4 and 5, Jack and Kate, pail' REBECCA P. CHURCHMAN, •• , Pl~~e~~~C~;h . SALE for P e r~~t.:~ low, all conveniences, including gas; ~~~ 'I~art~:~. splendid wOI'kers and \111'. Ralph Salter, in his Music I SARAH B. CHURCHMAN, I Bei!lr, Del. barll; chicken houses and brooders; I Shoppe at 222 West Nil) th street, Wil- t 12,22,10t. Executrices. IPhone 16 R-4 New C ..tle LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT fruit of all kinds, Ca'ttl e min gton, has a violin from the hand W, CARLISLE, o[ Andreas Modlli, the Il ew Italian Ir;~~~~~~~~~~~ .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I 128 Newark Del I 33 Head of Tuberculi n Tested Hol- muster, who in his workshop in t he Pursuant to the requirements of ' , . ~ ~~il~~ ~~~~h,an~'h¥seif:r~~:b~fU \~ea l~ e~~ Swi ss Alps, is turning out instru- I HELP WANTED ~:~~on of' ~e1~~:;e, 63theV01~11~wi~~ FOR SAND and dirt, apply dairy herds in Cecil Co unty, Big m~nts that a re exact duplicates in roads are recommended for conver NORMAN SLACK, roomy cows that wi'll give 11 12-quart lone quali ty and a1:tjstic finish of the sion into State Highways: 9,15, Phone 197 R ~~i~r o:f ~~\o~ie~~d ~~v=rar~:i~ff~ in struments of the Cremona masters. W ANTED-100 girls for work in fire- New Castle County heifers pure,bred. A 3-year-old pure- Fot· year s ex-perts have tried to I du Pont Road-Lancaster Pike 0 BUILDING LOTS for sale on Dela- bred Holstein Bull, bred by Norris ~ t Clea ork steady em Kennett Pike. . ware avenue, opposite Wolf Hall. R nolds f R" S Md d duplicate the m~ste rpie ces o~ Stradi- wor k s laC ory. n w, - Adam's Dam-Perry _Tavern.. Apply' S:~te mb ~/B ulll c~ff, b~~d by " E~~en: va ri us, GuarnarlUs and Gughano that ployment, good wages, good working con- Newport & Gap Pike. 7,14 L. HANDLOFF. Feucht & Son. These cows must be have become of fabulous value Lime'stone Road (Lincoln Highway ______seen to be appreciated as -they are the because no modern instrument could I ditions. Transportation to Elkton will be Stanton). HIGHEST price p·aid for live stock. kind that put milk in the bucket and I th' t While thev could Relocation Lincoln Highway through Call or write money in your pocket. mile cqbe uad upliceatn' ed one.in measurement,. and to provided. MaTlh.sohmalpltsoonn' 1,4Statl.on' -MI'lford CI'OSS I. PLAT'r, lambs30 GOOD at sid eEWES, by day all of shouldsale. haveTwo a large degree, in wood and appear- Ph't Roads. Phone 289 Newark, Del. Southdown Bucks. ance of age, the attempt at exact re- one or wn e Newport Bridge with road connec HOGS-Three Prime Shoats, will production failed when it came to the tions and consideration of railroad S dress 200 Ibs. apiece. varnish. While the wood and shaping VICTORY SPARKLER AND grB~~r~coo~til. elimination. Public ale FARMING IMPLEMENTS, ETC. were all important in producing' the SPECIAL TY COMPANY Ohristiana-Rare's Corner. -0 F One Heavy Duty Farm Wagon, ex qui site tonal qualities, the varnish New London-Newark. nearly new; Low-Wheel Hay Wagon, gave it the final touch, and now PI~~3~e 271 Elkton, Maryland lalgldiJLawl.Bn~el)~.i~~7e-Ppr~e P(C~~ch-Mary Personal Pro pe rt-y ~~~~SOliv;!:a~~ct~~. j;'1~~~en;e~oI~= Morri lli seems to have sl1lved this perial Tractor Disc, Cultipacker as long buried secret, for his violins not ~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;::Icr~~e:h~~~~~e)~own (widen by con On the J. P. Armstrong Farm, Yz Mile good as new, New Idea Manure on ly match exactly the appearance of Pleasant Valley extension to Lin North of Newark, on Newark Spreader, used only about a week; the genuine instru!'llents, but equal i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i'~ !i!i!i! i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i!i !i! i!i!i!i!ili!imi~! coIn Highway at Maryland Line. and Appleton Road, on R::W;I~-tn~!~e_~~~~u~earC~;V~ ~I~e:~f. them in tone. Were it not that I I Dexter's C.orner-Delaney. 7· 11-spout Superior Disc Grain Drill, ~fo rrilli brands his instruments as re- C. B. DEAN Kent County Thursday, feb. 17, 192 I all as good as new; 2 Sulky Cultiva- product ions, it is likely that unscrupu- tors, Deering Binder, No. 20 Olivjlr _ lous dealers would be receiving ex- Groceries MEATS Fruit Tubmill to Hering's Cornel'. AT 1 O'CLOCK P. M. Plow, Potato Hillel', lot of new 40- t orbitant sums for these violins as ~~!~r~~~~s °lv~~~:~·Dover. 'l'he following:- MUiik ~~~2aL:~~~,~~~a~l;~:~lta~~~: nri gi nals of Stradivarius and his con- Phone 70 Main Street .North Entrance to Smyrna. \ Milk Can Cart, set new Heavy-duty ltmporaries. Morrilli, in his instru- ili!i! i!i!ili!ili!i!i!i!i!ili!i!i!i!!:: i!i!,!i'i!i!i!I: :ili:i!,:.'i!i!" : : : i!i1i ! ! Wyoming - Almshouse - Hazlettville 4 Good Farm Horses Wagon Harness, othel' good Harness, menls uses wood that is over 10 years .R oWd~odside to conneet with the ~! i;~;,ows~::;essh;a~i~~s Oe;;;fi?o~~d old. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Il l Willow Grove-Petersburg Road. 6 Cows 1 Heifer 1 Bull Shear Grinders, lot of Trees, Forks, MI'. Salter, pointed out the impor.t- II --~---- Leipsic-Dover.' , Shovels, 3 Oil Drums. No Junk! 400 ance of the li ttle bar of spruce III Openin, g Business Dovel' Water Works to du Pont Three Cows will be fresh by day of Bushels COl'll and about 5 tons Soy- t'vn ry vio lin, known as the sound post. BO~!?;:i~~Magnolia via'Little Creek sale. ~~i~ceHKrtche~nRan~~' u s~d 3C~!~r:'s~~ The position of this post decides the WILLIAM T. QUILLEN and Barker's Landin·g . Brood Sow,04 Shoats, 50' Rhode Island is $125 range; Chunk Burner, Oil tone of the in strument and the posi'- MB::~~t ,~ifthat~~~se lo~~~~" west of Red Chickens, 3 'rons of Hay Heater, Iron Bed, Walnut Parlor lion is dec ided after the most minute Felton. ~ FARMING IMPLEMENTS, ETC. S U¥E'RM~""::'~I~r~~~~~f s$30 or under mathematical calculation. He told how PRACTICAL PLUMBER Wendall's Corner-Woodland Beach Farm Wagon, Hay Flat, McCormick Cash. On larger a mounts a credi t of recently a test was made in New York Sussex County Muw"r, Bickford & Huffman I<:rain cShixa seMI.o ngtl' vhl~llgwiall bbaenkaallbolweednotteo wPul'tlh'- with the "Alard" Strad., a part of 44 W. Cleveland Avenue Newark Drill 11 hoe' Corn Planter ."orse the Havemeyel' collection, and valued Lowe's Cross Roads through Gum- Rak~, St~el Roller, Spring-to~th Har- approved endorser, interest added h JOBBING A SPECIALTY bol'O to Selbyville. row, Sulky Cultivator, John Deere from day of sale. On sums exceeding at $35,000. The sound post of t e Milford-Shawnee Road-Greenwood Sulky Plow, 2 No. 40 Oliver Plows, 2 $30 a discount of 2 pel' cent 'will be "Alard" WIIS moved one thirty-seeond PHONE. NEWARK 255-R U. S. Compass Station-~ehthany Hand Cultivators, Grindstone _ Cross- allowed for cash. No goods to be re- of an inch, and immediately its ex- Beach to Ocean View State Hlg way cut Saw, 2 ' Sets Wagon HarnJ ess, moved until tel'ms are complied with. qui si te tone was made to sound like ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ellendule-Miiton. Collars, Bridles, Halters, · Double and This is a Clean Sweep, come out Milford - Five Points Road to Single Lines, 2 30-quart Milk Cans, J awnl.d sbeee .• aOlJefaolrStahlee hW\'ghheredOelvlaerr.ything thut of a co mmon machine ~ade Slaughter Beach. 2 40-quart Milk Cans, Sanitary Milk ll q 'J fidd le. Roxana-Millville Road to Bayard. Buckets, Sanitary Strainer, lot 1-, 2-, WILLIAM H. SAVIN. Mr. Salte r has the distinction of A'RE YOU COMING. TO CALIFORNIA? Bacon's through Whitesville to and 3-horse Trees, Forks, Rakes, Wm. S. Armstrong, Auctioneer. having the only musical repair shop Pittsville concrhteCr~td. ~ k (L'ttI Hoes, Shovels. J . E. Dougherty and 1. T. Kepler, in Delaware. The fact that there . Road thdOUg e ar ec Ie . TERMS-All sums of $3 0 and uf! - Inside Cletks. were no repair shops in the State To anyone interested or intending to come now or in CrSh!f!~: rc~~ner _ Frankford, or ~~r'6 C~~~t1~:e~J~a~e a~~~~~ b/l;~:~ w. C. Jester, Outside Clerk. 2,9,1t brought him to Wilmington 15 years the future, will be benefit~d by ac;king for literature. Omar. chaser giving a bankable note with Bridgeville east via Two Bridges or approved endorser. Interest from day "This is the state of man: To­ ago. He recently opened his new Robbins' Cross Roads. of sale; 2 per cent off for cash on all day he puts forth gl are and repair shop on Ninth street, Address . Se~!~1~eville east via Sunny Side credit sums. The tender leaves of hopes; to­ moving from his old quarters at 913 ATASCADERO CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Greenwood-Ellendale. We are going to quit fa~ming and . morrow blossoms, (11 an ge stl'eet. . Dublin Hill-Scott's Store-Maryland ever~thing to be sold for High Dollar. And bealS his blushing honors • - • ATASCADERO CALIPORNIA Line. WALTER E. McCONNELL Cauli flower keeps white if one or , • Ellendale towards Bridgeville. JAMES T. McCONNELL thick upon him, l"o tablc Jpool1S of lemon juice are ER BIDDLE STATE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT Armstrong, Auct. The third day comes a frost and added to the water in which it is CATHERIN~ OICK 2,2,2t C. D. Buck, Chief Englneer. IJester ·and Dougherty, Clerks. 2,9,lt nips his root." llOq d. I Wednesday, February 9, 192'/ THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE, 8 February 6, at Turkey Point, !'1ary-1 Representative Thomas C. Curry, of I OBITUARY land. MI'. McHenry had been III f~r Assemblymen Are Bridgeville, declared he would be. v~ry two weeks, following a paralytic A Wide and Appetizing Menu at Reasonable Pri~es " Ihappy to vote for the appropriatIOn Mr. George Winchester stroke. Funeral services were con- Impressed In VIsd· giving the University. the mO.ney it ducted this morning by Dr. Harvey needed. He stated thiS was hiS first Died.-On Saturday, Febr~ary 5, at Ewing, on Kent Way, this town, at --- visit to the institution and he was warthl11ore, MI'. Geor~e Wlnc~ester, the home of Mrs. Bayard Perry, a The B. & O. Restaurant (Continued from Page 1.) l11u ch impressed with it. aged 72 years. MI'. Wlnchestel, who. f the deceased. Interment was lhere are today 60 more students en- had been in failing health for several llI e~le ~ Newark Cemetery. . Oppolite the B:. & O. Station rolled than we had anticipated would Representative John W. Carrow, Jr., years, was t he father of Mrs. Walter . maul.' In co me to the university and during the of Middletown, said he is not sorry Hullihcn. Dr. R. B. Mathews, rector ---.-....---- next biennium we may expect to have that when he was a membel' of the of St. Thomas' Church, of this town, MISSIONARY MEETING Delicious Fountain Conftctions Schrah 's Candy 60 more enrolled ubove our calcula- House two years ugo he vote~ for the cond ucted the services, which were The Young Women's Home Mission- Con appropriation to make possible the privatI' on Monday afternoon. ary Society of the M. E. Churc.h will L~~~~~~~;;;-;;~~~~;;;--;;;--~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~ I H~ suid the reuily need six addi · new buildi.ngs at the Women's College '-- hold its regular monthly meeting at = . I f y. t' the colleg'e but and he sU ld he felt equally favorable I William Ward the home of Miss Hannah Lindell on llOna pro e s ~ol sa. to the requests of the University at I . they are asklllg for only thIee, the this scssion of the LegiSlature. . I WiUiul1l Ward, an aged and highly Monday evening, February 14, at 8 $6,900 being suffi cicnt to cove l' the . . D 'd H Bell of l'eSpfJctcu co lored citizen of this town, o'clock. salary cost of the three th(·y mu st I Representative aVI f ' D I ' . died on Saturday, February 5, at the ======have now. He said it has always Smyrna, un alumnus 0 e aW:le home of Mrs. Samuel Roberts, on FY been their ~)olicy to Ilsk for the ahso- Co llege, declared he was more t ~n Cleveland avenue. Funeral services I TOO LATE TO CLASSI l»lWlfliifiWlCiNaW~lRington, Du Pont Building Delaware Phone 696 lute mininum lo meet lheir nceds and pleased to ~·etu.rn .once mOI:e to t ~ will be held tomorrow Ilt 2 p. m . . this will always be the policy o·f the hall~ of the tn s tl~utlO~, th.at IS so de~1 I' FOR SALE-Florence Oil Stove, 4- institution. ffIf we do not get these to hi S hea rt, saylllg hIS plesence. thel e Matthew McHenry I I t know how brought back pleasant memorIes of I . burnel', excellent order. Will demon- 3 ~J~~J;~G Thursday, Feb. 17, at 8.20 three professors (0 no h" ., tl d that have gone which he Mathew McHenry, aged 83 years, a stmte. H. K. PRESTON, MATINEE SATURDAY, AT 2.30 we are ?oin~ lo get throug, saw Ie t a~s the college as a student. He Civil War veteran, died on Sunday, 2,9,2t. 200 S. College Ave. Dr. Hulhhen. spen a I He told the visitors that they had aid he would be pleased to do. any- ======seen for themselves how the en~ine e r- thing he co uld ~o a~vance the IIlter- , ~ ______, ing department is overcrowded and 2stS of the U~lvers l ty and he .w~s J . ·E.DW. REYNOLDS {:J SONS obvious need for a new engineering I1Iore than de\tghted to know It IS I building for which the State has iJfcn making such pl·ogress. CLOTHIER AND TAILOR D.-ked to appropriate $310,000. 'He MI'. Miller said the idea of a wom- We Hire-Collegiate Tuxedo. For All College Formal. showed that they have the equipment en's college was original with the I 104 W. 6th ST. 'WILMINGTON, DEL. for such a building but no place to Federated Women's Clubs and back

isput not it. askingHe mad fore itany clear additional the college de- -Ofscie thatntiou ideas a workerthere was than no Mrs.more A. con- D. ] ~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~~~~ I partments. He declared it looked al- Warner, who, he stated, is known as i ~ most dangerous to him to have the the mother of the Women's College. Electrical Supplies Covered Garbage Cans various machines so close together in Mrs. Warner asked if there were any lhe mechanical department of the legislators pl'esent who had been in Lawn Seed Paints and Varnishes pl'esent engineering building, claiming the General Assembl~ in 1913 and it was a menace to the boys working voted to establish the Women's Col- Carpenters' Tools of Every Description there when everything is in operation. lege. Senator Willard S. Jester, of Dr. Hllilihen showed that Delaware Harrington, proved to be the only one ,;- College has not asked the State for present who was in the General a nything in lhe last 21 years except Assembly at that time. Mrs. Warner for a powerhouse which has long congratulated him. Referring to the Alfred D. Peoples ince been abandoned, and he added student body at the college she said they all felt it was now Delaware all of them are splendid young women 507 ~arket Street Wilmington tCohe"ege~tumtoaskfora~,s~es~ng point that the help sought is ="w:h:o~a:r:e~n:lli~k:h:lg~g:OO:d~. =====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~11II1I11II""""""""IIIII"""""""I11""IIIIIII""IIII""I"1II1111111111111111111I declaringenormous lythat urg heent .felt He s ureconcluded he could by I~~== ==Im~~==!i8ii===~Im~==!i8ii======~ safely leave the whole matter in the hands of the LegislatUl·e. NEWARK OPERA Mr. Miller pointed out the Impor­ NEWARK'S LEADING THEATRE tance of the engineering department at the college and the necessity for having a new building to house this THURSDAY and FRIDAY, FEB. 10.11 department. He said that 40 pel' cent of the students take up the engineer- . ing course and pointed out that the IN graduates in thi s course are recog­ nized as high class men by all the "FINE MANNERS" (;littering Gloria in the role of a shop girl and her attentpt to becollle great industrial concerns in the a society leader. country. In fact, Delaware Coll ege ALSO graduates are ranked with the grad­ uates of the first eight universities THE ADVENTURES OF BILL GRIM in this country. He paid tribute to President Hul­ SATURDAY, FEB. 12 lihen, saying his' work spoke for itself FRED THOMPSON and that the results being obtained IN were evidence of hi s efficiency. "He is GAS S·ERVICE a r eal man and that is one of the )'easons why Delaware College has "HANDS ACROSS THE BORDER" Puts a retinue of servants to work for you A western photoplay. gone ahead," said MI'. Miller. NEWS Dean Robinson seconded all that COMEDY President Hullihen had said in extend­ - For any of tho'se ing a welcome to the visiting law­ The Newark Of- MONDAY and TUESDAY, FEB. 14 and 15 makers. She said it was especially ZANE GREY'S pleasing to be able to welcome them I fice will be open- Gas Appliances which will mean so much to in the new dining hall at the Women's you in HOME COMFORT '1 College and she expressed her grate­ ed as soon as re- "FORLORN RIVER WITH f ulness to the State for having made I modeling is com· it possible to have such a buirding. - TRY YOUR GAS CO. JACK HOLT - W AI.LACE BEERY She spoke of how the old dining room pleted. 1I01t as the intrepid hero of Zane Grey's latest no\'el. had been in the basement of one of FIRST ...... -.... -...... -.-- . ---.~-~...... -- .... ------...... the buildings and added: "We are WEDNESDAY, FEB. 16 g lad to be able to eat above ground. Our meals are costing us no more Gas Servants now do the TIM McCOY but they taste much better." 'IN She stressed the need of an en­ Cooking gineering building at Delaware Col­ Wat ~ r Heating "WAR PAINT" lege. "You could not find a better Room Heating A new kinrl of western. group of boys than we have at that HOUle Heating college," she declared. She added it "J.f it', done with Garage Heating is the business of the University to Lighting return to the State g'ood citizens and heat, you can do Clothel Drying Ironing this is what they are tnaking the it better with gas" young men and women who graduate Inc;nerating HANARK there. Refrigerating EVERY PATRON AN HONORED GUEST William Wintrup, speaker of the c.fill that',. worth while in Photoplay,. House, said he was pleased to again hiive the opportunity to visit the Uni­ Wilm~ngton Gas Company versity and to eat in the new dining THURSDAY and FRIDAY, Feb. 10 and 11 hall. He said the former dining hall Phone 5390 827 Market Street NORMA TALMADGE was really a di sgl'8ce. "As one m(tm- IN ber of the Legislature," he stated, "assuming t hat there are sufficient •,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I funds in the tl'ellsury, this institution '- would not want for anything if I "KIKI" could give it to them. I hope t he WITH members will realize whllt is needed here and, i'f they can see their way RONALD COLMAN clear, that they will give them all COMEDY they ask fo'r." TIlH ~1.\N;\(;Ei\IE1\T OF 'j'111'~ In the absence of Senator William SATURDAY, Feb. 12 F . Allen, president pro tern of the Senate, MI'. Miller asked Senator BUFFALO BILL, Jr. Hervey P. Hall, of Smyrna, to speak Poilt-Biltmore IN for the upper branch of the General Du , Assembly. He said he felt sure all of Desires to Inform T heir Plltrons That Beginning COMEDY "RAWHIDE" t he members had seen the needs of KEWS the University and that the members February Twelfth, N inetee n T went y-seven ~~~------of both branches would give the MONDAY and TUESDAY, Feb. 14 and 15 budget of the institution their care­ ful consideration. The Saturday Night Dances liTHE EXQUISITE SINNER" Representative Howard M. Buckson, WITH of Dover, said this was his first visit \\'i11 Be U eld in tbe to the University and he expressed CONRAD NAGLE and RENEE ADOREE himself as very favorably impressed COMEDY with everylhing he had seen there. GOLD BAI.L ROOM Representative William E. Virden, WEDNESDAY, Feb. 16 of Wilmington, said he had always ' ltarge, ::; 1.00 I'lea!it! Make J~e s er\' a ti olls I':urlr been favorable to anything the Uni­ ,HTHE GREAT DECEPTION versity of Delaware wanted and he WITH knew of nothing to change this atti­ tude at this time. BEN LYON and AILEEN PRINGLE COMEDY