The New'ark Post ~======VO LlJj\!E XXVII NEWARK, DELA WARE, THURSDAY, lVIA Y 28, 1936 --= NUMBER 18
FIRsrSHORT I_ AcHveClergyman 1 FILING TIME !DRIVER HELD DUAL MEMORIAL C~~~~EJ~~~L14 --- FO~l::~~~iD ~o~t\WJlER CEREMONY HERE
Problems of Homemakers To I County Agent Announces Cherry Hill Man Critically Feature Three-Day Ses I N(:w Date, June 2, For Injured Near Here Late PARADE WILL sion at U. of D. Sign-Up Limit Saturday .!-_P_ara_de_M_ars_ha_ll ---!I OPEN AFFAIR VARI ETY OF SUBJECTS PLAN CASH BENEFITS DIED IN WILMINGTON Women From All Sections of T ime fOl' t he fi lling pu t of work Deat h foll owed critical injuries suf- ON SATURDAY State Expected to At sheets by farme rs in t his locality fel'ed by Ernest Harrigan, 50 years tend Series wishing t" pa rticipate in the new Ag- old, Che rry Hill , Md ., w ho was struck Lt.-Col. Ashbridge To Head ricultural Conservation pr ogram has by an automobile late Saturday night unday after noon, June 14, mem ' been extended by the New Ca stle as h'e was walking along t he Fail' Procession Which Forms bel' of Home Demonstration Cub s County Committee, County Agent Hill-Not tingham r oad between New At 9.45 A. M. fr om all PaJ'ls of Delaware a nd other George M. Won'i1ow a nnounced this ark and Head of Christiana. Qharles wom en interested in t he problems of week. Far mers will r eceive cash C. Jackson, Elk Mills, drivel' of t he VESPERS SUNDAY NIGHT homemaking wi ll open t he fi rst a nnual benefits, if appr oved, by fi lling out cu , was held in $2,000 bail by Magis College Campus To Be Scene Short ou rse for H omema ker s at the f orms for their individual farms, un- hate Daniel Thompson on a technical Uni vcr:ity of Delaware with Vespers del' t he plan. charge of manslaughter. of Religious Celebration erviccs on the Campus a t Newal'k. In making t he a nnouncement, MI'. Harrigan was removed to t he Ho- At 7.00 P. M. Rev. Andrew Mayei·, rector of the Worrilow stressed t he poin'\ t hat t he moepathic Hospital, Wilmington, in Commande r Walter R. Powell of t. Th om a ' Epi copal Church here, fi lling out of work sheets (loes not t he ambulance of the Aetna Hose, t he J . All ison O'Daniel American Le will olTiciate at the opening ceremony, obligate a farmer in any wa», but Hook and Ladder Company and died gion P ost, and Commander R. E. which wi ll be followed by a picnic does make him eligible to apply for ISunday . Patrolman LeRoy Hill and Reynolds of t he local unit of Veterans sUP lJer on the Campus. After t he pi~- Rev. Andrew W. Mayer cash benefi ts, some of which may be Elmer Morrison of t he local force no- of Foreign War s, have issued a spe nic, ~Ii ss E lizabeth McNeal, ~ewar~, Recto'r, St. Thomas' P. E. Church received without cha nges being neces- t ified state police of the accident. cial reminder to citizens of Newark will prcsent an organ recital m In addition to caring for t he man y sary in present farm pr actices. Privates Leisure and Cochran investi t o observe Memorial Day in a fitting Mi tchell Hall a nd motion pictures will duties of his parish, Rev. ¥ayer is Two-Type Payments gated. manner by displaying /lags in ob Victim T reated Here be shown . actively connected with many civic Two types of payment will be servance of t his day which is set Rushed to the offi ces of Dr. Wall ace Fu ll Schedule of Work patriotic and college affairs in this made under t he Soil Conser vation aside t o honor wa r dead. Wreaths M. Johnson, 257 E . Main street, Har a nd /lags will be placed on t he graves Those attending t he Short Cou rse section. He will pronounce t he invoca- P rogram. The Class I , or Soil Con- rigan was g iven first aid treatment f I tion Sunday evening at the Memorial serving Payment, will be made f or in the Newark cemeteries. will have a f ull schedule 0 d c ~ ss Sunday vesper service on t he .Univer - diverting crop land now; in soil de and was order ed r emoved to the hos Memorial Day Parade pital. He died of a f ractured skull , Lt.-Col. Donalll M. Ashbr id ge work. assembli es, and tours u r ~ ng sit y of Delaware ca mpus and will pleting cr ops ' as corn, wheat, oats, On Saturday, a Memorial Day par almost the entire right side of his (Retired ) their three-day stay at t he UniiVe rsl~ . offi ciate at t he opening ceremon y of barley cut for hay 01' grain, and all ade is planned which will start at head being ca ved in. H e also suffer ed All lho e reg istered will li ve in ~ Ie t he first a nnual Short Co urse fOl' truck, canni ng and vegetable cr ops, Heading t he annual Memorial Day 9.4 5, D. S.T., at the cornel' of Main ot hcr inj uries. Resid nee Hall at t he Women's ~- Homemaker s on June 14. a nd pla nting it to sll ch soil conser ving pa mde Saturday morning, . Colonel and Academy str eet s. This yea r 's Jackson, according to testiQlony, lege and wi ll dine in Kent Hall, t e cr ops a s legumes a nd m ixed grasses. Ashbr idge, who is Personnel Director pa r ade is expected t o be larger than stated t hat he was in E lkton when a dining hall at the Women's College. BIRTH OF STATE Payment will be made for di verting at the Uni ve rsity of Delaware, will be ever wit h many of the local lodges Both il londay a nd Tuesday morn- up to 15 pel' cent of t he ac r e~ planted g roup of f riends asked him to drive acting mar shall of t he procession for and orga ni zations cooperat ing wit h ings will be devoted to class work in in soil depleting crop in 1935, at a t hem home. H e was en route t here t he second year. the vet er an units. when H arrigan, who is thought to 1'3rious ]lha es of homemaking, health, rate of a pprox imately $13.50 pel' The order of march, announced this MARKED IN 1938 havp been very drunK, was said to and afelY. wi mming classes in t he acr e. week by Lt. Col. D. M. Ashbridge have stagger ed into the path of t he College Head Speaks pool in the Women's Gymnasium are Dr. Geo rge H . Ryden, head of t he The Class II or Soi l Building P ay- (Retired) , G~'and Mar shal 0 t he schedul d for both Monday a nd Tues- . . . t ment will be made for car rying out machine. I Before Newark Assembly procession, is as fo ll ow s : Mar da)' afternoons. U nl v~rs l ty of D e l a ~v.a r e D ~p aJ t men certain soil -building practices on crop T he drivel' reported the accident to shal, Major Samuel W . Ande rson, local poli cc. J ackson is a well k nown ~ I onday afternoon has been n a med of HlstorY "a nd p.o it t l ~a l .c l ehn ceD :~c~ land or nonrcl'op pasture la nd in Dean Winifred J . Robinson of t he C. A. C., U. S. A. and staff consist as lub ,,"omen's .Afternoo n dur ing also, Ger·el ~I Seci etal y fO I t Ce . 1936. Among t he mOI'e important amateur fot ba ll player, having per Women's Co ll ege, was the p ri ncip>l l ing of Second Lt. Curtis Potts, C. A. • . ' . All t ho e attending ware Swecit sh Te rcentenar y ommlS- of t hese pr actices al'e: fO I'med fo r both t he Elk M ill s Cardin speaker yester da y at t he Newark Res. a nd one member of t he local Boy the ShO! t OUI se. . sion h as been swamped wit h r equests . I . ~ als and t he Newark Yell owj ackets Junior a nd Senior H igh School as- Scouts of America; followed by color s thc Short ourse w ill meet ll1 a g en- fo r ~o in s which w ill be st ruck off to (1) . Se~ dlng egu m ~s ~ Rate. $ ~ to of a few seasons ago. He is generally sembly. Miss Robin son spoke on t he a nd color guard and t he R. O. T. C. cI'ul assembly at which sever a l . talks commemor ate the fou ndi ng of the $2 pel act e. (2) Plowll1 g undel g l eerr kn own as "Chinle" of intcrc:t to homemakers Will be .. . have manure crop: Rate $1 to $1.50 pel' advantages of a coll ege education. A of t he University of Delaware. . . t h' h wives of fac- St ate of Delawal e. T he l equests acre. (3) Ap plying lime to legumes Inquest Tomorrow N ig- ht talk o ~ college activit ies was given Automobil es carrying Mayor Frank glvcn. A tea, a w I C come to Dr Ryden eit her di rectly or Co r ~ne r Geo l'ge A. P edrick will by Miss Mary Louise Wolfenden, a Co llins, G. A. R. veterans and other ult ' member members of t he W om- . . '.' . t' . 01' pasture land, at a bout $1 for every co nduct an inquest in the Levy Court, Faculty: and t he lobi club t ht.'oug h va\'lous. 11'00 a ppli ed pel' acre. (4) Applying senior student at t he Women's Col- vets physicall y unl"it to march will en'~ hl s tOl l c ~ i :oC~r ~: Wilmington, Friday nigh t at 7.30 lI'omen will 'be hostesses, will foll ow t h ~ oughout t.he state . . Co c~u nt r phosphorus and potassium to legumes lege. follow t he R. O. T. C. Battalion. B e~ D.S. T. thc aftcrnoon assembly. I com coll ectol s all . ov~ r t he kin f~l: 0 1' pa ·ture at about 50 cents pel' acr e A member of t he Kennett Square Ihi nd t he automobiles will come t he letters have been I eCClved as g fO I' every 100 pounds a pplied pel' Country Club D~ nce Po ·t of the Amer ican Legion was in- Mil itary ~ i v i s i o n which will consist \' isiting A r ra nge ment Made coin s numbe ring f rom one to one hun- acre. (5) F or pla nt ing forest t r ees on troduced by F loyd J ackson of the 10- of the SEUllor officer of t he Dela wa re Y: its of some of t he beautiful New- dred. crop and pasture land in 1936 at The Newark Country Club will hold cal post, and spoke on t he r espect and National Guard, t he national g uard al'k gat'dens and homes, as t he g uests The Equitabl e Trust Co mpany, a bout $5 pel' acr e. . it,' third dance of the current season courtesy due t he American /l ag. Ia na staff, Continental-Diamond Band, 12c of the Newark Garden Club are on W ilmington , h as been named the The total a mount of t hiS second on Sa t urday. Da ncin g wil be enjoyed At t he assembly of t he primary de-Battel' Y "E" 198th C. A., Delaware the IJrogr!1m for Monday evening. agent of t he commission to r eceive pay ment cannot exceed t he total cr op f l'om nine unti l one o'clock. " Bud" part ment, J anet Godwin was crOWll- ' N at ional Guar d, Veter ans of Foreign subscript ions f rom coin co ll ect ors and acr es in legumes, and in pasture times Wilson a nd hi s orchestrjl will f urnish ed queen of the' May. The p rogram Wa rs, Ladies' Auxili a ry, Sons of the Pollowing anot!l er gener al assembly will d istribute them upon r eceipt from (Continued on P age 5) t he music. was in charge of Miss Sara Wyatt, Veterans, and the American Legion, Tu c~day afternoon, t he women will t he U . S. Mint a t Philadelphia. Dur- ======inst ructor in t he second grade. 'Fol- L a di e~ Auxili ary a nd Sons of Legion 29c make !1 tour of t he buildings and la b- ing t he summer, a nation-wide con- lowing t he crowning cer emonies, a aires. 33c oratories at the nive rsity of Dela- test will be conducted a mo ng sculp play ent itled "Mother Nature Keeps Civic Orga nizations To March ware. Stunt N ight, at which H ome tors a nd other art ists for t he best SEVEN .. YEAR REPORT SHOWS May Day," was presented. Behind t he Military Division will 29c Demon ·tration Clubs f rom the t hree design for t he coi n. A prize of $500 T hose taking part were: 'l'homas march t he Civic Organizations Di you countics will vie for honors as t he will be awarded to t he winner. " Not Sil k, Charlotte Lagasse, F r ank Mc- visions wit h Mr. E lmer E ll ison, Aetna best entertain er s, will ma rk the e nd less tha n 25,000 pieces," will be MANY STREET IMPROVEMENTS Berty, Gladys Reynolds, Doris Sta r" Fire Co"lpany as commander . H is of thc hort Course Tuesclay ·evening. minted. key, H a r vey Gregg, Royden Lovett, staff will consist of two Boy Scouts. The womcn wil l meet for a fin a l far e Sigmund Supervised $190,000 Worth of Municipal Altera In addition, the c~ mmi ss i o n will Domenica Catil di, J a net Murray, The rest of the division w ill be made wrll assembly ·Wednesday morning tions, Repairs and Additions As Town Engineer; Local Mart ha Jane Atkinson, Alice Stoops, up of Newark Hig )1 School Band, befon· their depar t ure. seek to buy The Rocks, the spot where Fort Christia na was er ected by P eter Equipment Regarded with Expert Approval E li zabeth DcBell , June Lambert, E va (Cnntinued on P age 4i Information concerning t he Short Reed, Vi rginia F rench, Shirley Minuet, leader of t he Swedish settlers. COlll'SC , w hi ch is s ponsored by t he With Town Eng ineel' Geor ge C. New Castle, in t his ana, with t hat R itchi e, John Maloney, Lindsey J ohn- Sale of Lots To Last It is hoped to establish a pa rk at Delawarc Exten ion De pa r t ment , be P rice completing his first month at in Newark, Sig mund's work and t he t hi s point and su rrounding tel'l'itory, so n, Clarence Knox, Rogel' H olton, Throughout the Summer gin s. 'tlllday, J une 14, a nd conti nues t he a rduous tao k of keeping Newark's efror ts of t he Town Co uncil u nder t he Lel'oy Campbell , P aul Colmel'y, Char- a nd t he erection of a monument com thmu.c:h Wednesday morning, J unc 1'1, g rowing streets in good co ndi t ion, administrations of Mayor Collins arc les I rwin , Juli a R ittenhouse, Jack Despite adverse weather cond itions m mOl'ating the founding of t he. t ate erecting storm sewers a nd the like, ma\' be obtained f rom local ou nty pa l'ticularly noteworthy, experts f ur Car mi ne, W ~ , li a m Donovan, Ea!'! w hich tended to dimin ish a ttendance, is pl anned. H o~c Demonstra tion Agents who w ill much interesting informa tion is to be t her point out. Walker, Marion P hillips, Nernia over $2,000 worth of lots, the proper gathel'ed by local taxpayers in r e IOc makc rcscrvations for those wishing T he Delaware Swedish Tercenten Street Work E xtensive George, Jane Smythe, Barbara Dean, ty of Dr. T. F. Manns, was sold at viewillg t he manifold improvements to attend. ary Commission, co nsisting of : Beatrice Kcyes, T homas Cochran, publi c auction on Wednesday, by S. IDe George A. E lliott, president ; John P . mad" under Mer le E. Sigmund, w ho A li st of street im provements from J a mes B rayshaw, D ick Cobb, and E . Damer on, auctioneer. N ields, vice-president; D r. ~yden , preceded Price in offi ce. 1929 to 1936 foll ows : .James Munger. Sale of t his p roperty, which in- Insurance To Be Asked ' gene ral secreta l' Y; A nn a T. Llllcoln, Coming to Newar k in 1929 as an Acadcmy - F rom Lovett avenue to cludes f ar m a nd orchard la nd, a large 19c employee of t he town , foll owing 15 Kell s a venuc, pa ved wit h hurd base portion of it Ii eing wit hing the town By State On Road LOllds "eco l'ding secr etary; Mrs. Alfred V. 9c DuPont, t reasurer, Walter W. Bacon, years of practical eng ineering cx a nd permanent surface. Aged Pencader Church limits, will continue t hroughout t he Philip D. Laird, E dward R. Mack, perience in general construct ion , A mstel a ventte - f rl'm Sout h Col- To Celebrate Founding summer . I'I'olcdion of the traveling public Richa rd S. Rodney, Ha rris Samoni sewer and street work, Sigmund su lege avenue to E lktor. road, new cu rb I -__ Subdivided into sma ll farms of is to be aff orded by a ruling of t he sky, and Christophe l' L. ,>V a l'd, has pervised street improvements, t he and g utter and surf ace. The 226th a nniversaJ'y of t he 01'- from one to fi ve acres, the orchard 19c . tatc Jlighwtty Commissioners, in a p e~ mane n t I a ma nd ate f rom t he legislature. to er ection of storm sewers, light a nd Annabell strpct - f rom Margaret gani zation of P cncader Presbyterian a nd Pomona Ga l'den land, which is slalcnwnt issued today by W . W . IOc prepare plans for the ce l e bl: a t lO~ , water extensions at a total cost of street to end, new curb and gutter Chul'ch, Glasgow, will be held Sunday, also for sale, will provicle suitablc ~Ia (·k. hief E ngincer , t hat b eg i n ni~ g w hich will be state-wi'le a nd histor i $190,848.86, including cng ineering ex wit h permanent surface. May 31, featUl'ed by special ser vices ter r itor y for fruit, truck farming or Jun ~ Hi, all persons seeking perm is I 22c cal societies and scb ,,~ .ar e ex p ec t ~ d pense, in slightly less t han seven Cha pel street .. f rom New street in both t he m01'l1 ing a nd afternoon. poul t ry r aising. sion for movi ng unusual loads over to pal·ticipate. S I ~ 'J ' ~ ;uent plans W111 years. the highways that differ in weight, to Main and f rom Continental avenue . It is t he twenticth a nnual r eunion IOc be submitted to t he General Assembl y Streets Absored Cost lell g h, and height from those P70- to t he Pennsylvania Railr oad, ali iof the co ngregation, sponsor ed by the Jr,:., ======:~ in 1937 for further legislation. Repairs and improvements to 23 virlcd I y law, shall f urnish pro?f wlth new curb a nd gutter with hard per- P e'ncadel' Cemetery Association . • Through t he authorization of a streets absorbed almost four-l"ifth s of IOc the application fol' the p e rm ~ t ~~at manent surface. . Wi th Rev. Henry G. Welbon, pastor Local Poppy Day federal committee, it is planned. to the money expended by the Council of they are cal'l'ying ~ uffi c i e n t .ltablht y Center ,street - h om Mam to New of' P encacler a nd Head of Chr istiana Sales Increased climax the extended crlebration With N ewark dur ing Sig mund's term in 15c insUI'ance in case some accident oc street, all n ew curb and guter ,vit h Churches, pr esiding , Rev. Thomas J . Accordi ng to ea rly reports of a final program w hen r epresentatives offi ce, 01' a total of $146,880.4 4. CUI'S along the l'oad traveled in wh ich ha rd permanen t. surface. Sard, pastor of Union M. E . Church, both t he Amer ican L g ion a nd f r om Sweden will be in attendance. Sform sewers demanded t he sum othl'l's might become invol.ed. Corbit street -' from West Main t l) Wilmington, will p l'each at 10.30 a. Veterans of F oreign Wars A ux of $6,258.72, t he low fi g ure of the New London road, completely paved . m., E. S. T. i1i m'ies, l'eturns f r om t he allnua l .'pecial permits have always been gl'oup, while improvements to t he Co ntinental a venue - f rom Haynes Rev. W elbo n will also preside in sale of .Memorial P oppies last required. under t he prescnt mot or ve Strawberry Festival At power system took $12,382.42, a nd to South Chapel, curb a nd g utter only. fhe aftcrnoon whcn Rev. J ohn Ha m Satul'day in ewark will exceed hide law for t he moving of long tim Ott's Chapel On Tuesday water system work cost $9,565.45. All E lkton r oad - f rom Amstel avenue the 1935 figures. This favorable bCI·q. lar~c boats or buildings which fi g ures are less engineering expense. to town limits at Barksdale road, m,ond, D. D., p~stor of Rehoboth I ce cr eam, strawbe rries, cake a ~ d repor t is in co ntrast with dis violatc thc usual laws of the r oad. Figured on a yearly basis of $27,- cur b and g utter and paved betwecn '" elsh. Presbytel'lan C~~rch , Delta, candy, \vith a fi sh pond as a S P~c l a l couraging r · por ts issued in Wil T hc~ permits may be g rantcd by the 263.7 5, experts, who have looked over d Id d Pa., Will preach at two 0 Clock, E. S. T. feature, will be the main attractIOn s mington and sever al surround hief E ngineer under special restric Newark's municipal pla nts, streets n e ~a~~t:: t~:e t ~ 11':: Main to Dela- So l ~ i sts f rom WiI~in gto n in t hc at a strawberry f eRtivnl to be held at Ing centers. tions as to hours and r outes. T he and watc\.' systcm, h.'IV e expressed t he ware avenue and from Lovett ave- mornmg a nd the chou: of t he Reh? Ott's Chapel, I ron Hill, Tuesday eve While final returns have not new I'uling will add even greater pro opinion t hat t he expenditures are sur nue south 270 feet aved, curb and bo t h Wclsh PresbyterlUn Chul'ch m tection to thc public by the fili ng of ning, June 2. been f ully tabulated as yet, prisingly small. ' , p It he afternoon have p repa red an un- c"idencc that proper insurance is ca r Returns from t he affair will be gu;e:;. f S th College usual and delightful mus ica ll program. loca offi cials are already assured used by t he Sunday School. I n case Comparing t he condit ion of streets ried should any serious accident oc 'mproved Janvie l' is secretar y of of a 1936 ncrease of inclement weather t he festival will a nd t he town-owned equipment in ave n~: ~:e~:n~e l ro:re e~~ Ma ry ~. CUr thl'ough the movement of uncom E lkton, Oxford, Havre de .G r ace and (Cont inued on Page 8) the committee on arrangements. mon and irregular loads. be held on t he next clear evening. 2 THE NEWARK I)OST, NEWARK, DELAWARE Thursday, May 2 , 1936 ., WOMAN s PAGE
Child Health Course' I STRICKERSVILLE Mrs. Justis' Recipe Lemon Bread l' uddi n~ Fl O i\1 E EDUCATION egg whit s Opened Here Monday I Mrs. Ann Singlcs, of Philadelphia, Earns National Award 5 egg yolks • That each child mal' bc free to I was a wgraduate of Mrs. Justi 'endorsed r ecipe fo llows: United States. -even to Europe," she added impres- vited. My husband, Gl'andma, and my Newark High School, was awarded a COOCH'S BRIDGE sively. "So. of course, now, we don't two eldest, Will and Emil y, were the scholarship of $250 for post-graduate have ever ything we should like to onl y ones included. We decided that study in nursing at the Delaware MI·s. P. R. Roberts, of Cooch's have. Father has explained it all. He old g rievances, complaints, vain 1'e- H ospital co mmencement e xercises Bridge, spent the week-e nd with r ela- . says we must plan for travelling, be- I grets, gossip, unpleasant recollections held last week in t he Wilmington tives in Germantown, Pa. On Satur cause it should be a part of our ed u- and unkind references must go. Century Club. da morning, Mrs. Roberts attended AMERICA'S fItuiUit cation. Ami now, of course, we need "We agreed that when one of us Miss Elli ott shared scholastic hon- a lecture with her daughter, Mary, good food, books, music, and co mfol"t- began a speech on any of these for- ors with Miss Rose Maser of Westen given by a graduate of the School of F60D VALUES able clothes. Only we can't be fine!" bidden topics, some one else should port, Md., during her three-year Veterinary Medicine at t he U. of P., She laughed and added, "Often we excuse himself to the speaker a nd course at the Delaware Hospital who will practice in South Africa. wish that we could have some of the very casually begin talking of some- School of Nursing. Miss Maser was His talk was a most interesting S OUPS that are flavor other 'specials' that many girls en- t hing pleasant. awarded a duplicate scholarship. one on t he conditions in Africa and feasts of real Southern j oy, but we just can't afford it, if we "Oh, for a while, sometimes our t he method used to combftt the mul- char m and savor. S ixteen are to continue to have the very best talk was a bit artificial, but we really STAIR RAIL tiplicity of di eases prevalent t here. popular varieties made things." im proved. Our con versation become All inside cell ar stairs should have f rom fin est, fi eld-rrpened PICTURES IN COLOR This child already had a~ education much m ore agreeable, and the little a hand rail on at least one side. ·It vegetables- g rown in the lacked by the aver age person. For children were no longer endangered." need not be fancy, bu t should be Photographs r eproduced in their heart of Maryla nd and education should mean, among other "Few ed ucational movements have sturdy: Four - bY ~four or even two-by f ull natural beauty are printed every sold at a neighborly price. things, the power to distinguish be- had as fundamental an effect in foul' posts as newels, securely fastened Sunday in the " Baltimore American." tween t he es entia!' and the non-essen- changing education as kindergarten. to the carriage 01' suppor t of the Don't mi ss this great feature. Your tial and to make wi se choices. Cer- Not onl y shou ld all communities have stairs, with a stout wooden r a il well favorite ne wsdealer will supply you tainly, Martha was happier and bet- t he kind of training of young chU na il ed, will be inexpensive to install with the " Ba ltim or e Aherican" every teI' prepared for anything that might dren symbolized by the kindergarten, alld will save many a dangerous fall. Sunday. befall her t han she would have been Ibut the philosophy underlying it if kept in ignorance of family re- should permeate the educational pro- sources. cess far beyond the kindergarten As for the danger that children will years."-W. Carson Ryan, Jr., Dh'ec betray family secrets, t hey are little tor of Research on Planning and De more likely to do so than their elders velopment, U. S. Indian Service, The A BC of Crpcbet if, from the beginning, they feel that Washington, D. C. f amily affairs are their own affairs The National Kindergarten Asso and that each of them has a part in ciation, 8 West Fortieth Street, New + + + + + + + + + + + + the family plan. York City, wi ll tell you how to work Crochet is an art centVMes old. Yet today it U on6 qf And now her e's a different angle. to obtain a kindergarten in your pub tDialriflg ~6 copie, of these 12 articles can get them the few creative aris which no can accurately "But I'll tell you some other time," lic school. maeMne btl sending a stamped) self-addressed envelope to this reproduce. It affords you countless chances for individ newspaper, or to its Crochet Bureau, 522 Fifth Avenue uality, for sma1·tness, and for economy, Any reader N. Y. Specify "The ABC of Crochet." , Newark Woman Returning SON' FOLLOWS WITH CUE After Interesting Trip Herb P eterson, son of "Show-Me-A Shot-I-Can't-Make Charley," is show I-Chain Stitch Mrs. Charles B. Evans of Newark ing promise of developin g into a wil l return tomonow from a very in three-cushion billiard expert. P ete is teresting trip w hich cove red a total t hree-rail champion of St. Louis. of 34,500 miles. Mrs. Evans left New 1======York January 7, on the Cunard liner , Franconia and visited s uch out of t he way places as St. Helena, South Af MAIN ri.ca, Madagassar, Singapore and J a- va. , While visiting t he Phillippine Isl ~ nd s, Mrs. Evans was enter tained bY ,' relatives, Commodore and Mrs. J ohn Palmer. RU At C hi ~a, she was entertained by John P ool, of Middletown, a U ni ver sity of Delaware graduate who is well known to Newarkel·s. Pool is TOMA TOES attached to the American Consulate at Hong Kong. With Red Ears Mrs. Evans went from Japan t o OMATOES are generall y con Honolulu w here she was entertained Fig. 1 Fig. 2 T ced d to have red 'c he e k s~and by Capt. and Mrs. Ephraim Jolls, al lit o red ears gu to good old Amer so formerly of Newark. ican co rn. Yel if lomatoes co uld She ' will a n'ive in N ew York to hear a ll of the ni ce things house wives a re saying a bout them, morrow, May 29, after 11 total of fi ve tbey'd surely grow red ears. months voyage. Tomaloes [,re some of tbe best fri ends of the housewife. They look pretty, and t ll ey taste good and to top it all. they are very Special Mission Services inex pensive. When sbe ma kes To End 'at Iron Hill.. Sunday sou p tha t needs fl u vor a nd color "I'll add tomatoes," says she. Special mission services being con 'Wh en she lII a kes a meat loaf ducteD nightly at Ott's Cha pel , Iron whi ch doesn't produce gruvy Hill, will end Sunday, May 31. ''I'll muke a toma to suuce." These meetings, unde r the leader Gay 1nd Good ship of Rev. Homer Stanly Morgan, In fact every di sh on the meuu, froll1 soup to dessert, and not ex· have been attracting good congrega
Lloyd; "A Boy Who Can Be 'I'1'U t;: State Sanitary Officer. _..-. ...-- ---ft. MERMAID The Newark Post Inveatigate Condition. by Stanley Kwiatkowski; .. " h:n The Women's Missionary Society Mother's There," by B lty AY3r<' Founded J anuar y 26, 1910, by the late Everett C. Johnson Dr. J. R. Downes, county unit of CALENDAR of White Clay Creek Church held a "Fal'mer's Life," by Donald . 'h or~ : fi cer for t he State Board of Health, quilting in Harmony Grange Hall last "Don't Give Up," by Evert Brown: Issued Every Thu;'sday by The Post Publishing Co., Inc. OF Wed nesday and Thursday. T he group ,. and two sanitary officers from the COMING EVENTS play, " Old Fa hioned 1~low e l "," b~ Printed at The Press of Kell s. Dovel' headqual'tl.ll's, made a t horough completed eiG'ht beautifu patchwork girls of the 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5t h Newark, Delaware inspection of White Clay Creek from -.. - .. - .. - .. - .. - .. - •• - . __• __ .. - ,.:... quilts which had previously been grades dressed to represcnt the differ. Telephone Nilwark 92 N ewark to above Krapf's Bridge last :.:::::::.::::'::-:':-.:::::::'::':='::::::== pieced by 1111'S. Addie Pennock and ent fl owers; pla y, "Lady BUlt's Gar. Friday, following complaints that 1111'S. Lel'oy Pennock. The qui l ~s a1'e den"; and a May Day pageant with 1I1ay 30-Newark Country C I u b donated to the Hockessin branch of EDITOR ...... CHARLES H. RUTLEDGE t he stream was being polluted by the fololwing cast, " May Queen," Bett\' r emains of dead dogs. Tests of the dance. Dancing from 9 'til 1. the Needlework Guild of America for Reed; " Moth of Ma y," Belly o\ )'ur;; Entered as second-class matter at Newark, Delaware, water were made fo~ laboratory ana- May 30-Memorial Day Parade, 9.45, distribution eh~ring the cOI.lli~g winter. "Announcer," Harry Nelson; "Crown_ lys is. . under Act of. March 3, 1897. D. S. T. Start at Main and Aca- Those attendln~ t he qUlltUlg pal'ty er," Donald hort; crowner "<'arCI' Howard Meredith, 75 E . Main demy streets. were Mrs. Leslt e Derickson, Mrs. A. Betty Jaquette; attendant, Cilhcl" Make all checks to The Newark Post. st l'eet, who co mplained to State Sani June 1-Memorial Day Vesper' Ser- Pennock, Mrs. Mary Smalley, Mrs. Walker; "ll'Iilk Maids," Dori' Allcorn tal'Y Engineer R. C. Beckett about the vice, Memorial Library. Nathaniel Richa1'ds, Mrs. Walte1' Ruby Brown, Betty Brown; Qu een'.: The Subscription price of this paper is $1.50 per year in advance. condition, accompanied the health of June 2-Recital, auspices of Pythi- Scott, M1's. Elizabeth ,' Moore, Mrs. attendant ·, Ann Beyerlein, :\anc\' Single copies 4 cents. fi cials on their tour. an Sisters. .30 p. m., D. S. T. Harvey Ball, Mr.s . Harry Bmekin, Sta~l ey, Donald Jaqu tte, Rodne;. June 3-Chl'istiana-Salem con soli- Mrs . . Charles ~klllner,. Mrs. L. H . Reed ; " Robin hood," Edwlll'l1 h.wiat_ W e want and inv'ite cO'l1t11tunications, bt,t they lIutSt be signed by the Grand Chief To Be dated schools commencement ex- Pennlllgton, Mrs. FerriS Eastburn, kows ki; " Little John,!' . lanley l(wiat_ write,"s na1lte-~not lor publication, but 101' ou,' inlo?'mati~n and protection. Here Tomorrow Night el'cises. 1111'S. ~nnie ~ e nni so n, ~i ss Ma~'y kowski; " Will Sca1'lett," Daniel Heed ' I June 5-U. of D. G1'aduation Pro- Rubpncame, Mts. B. L. Dickey, MI S. "F)'ial' Tuck, " Edwyn Brown. Rt>: MAY 28,1936 Mrs. Mabel H all , Grand Chief of grams start. George B. Pierson, Mrs. Hem'y f reshments were enjoycd folloll ing P ythian Sisters of Delaware accom- Mitchell , 1I1i ss Sara P ennington, Mrs. the May Pole dance. 'panied by
themary Ameri manner.can Legion~' lood1i, ginh t st hewi cllu stb ..e - to=: ======~==::;=====:5:======91 • erecteJ on the campus in order to make this picture visible at llight. Past ational Chaplain of the N A R D O' S SHOE REPAIRIN Ame!'ican Legion, Parke W. Hunting , ton will be the principal speakcr oC the service, and, an amplifying sys- 11 Academy Street Sboes Half Soled, SIc Work Guaranteed II ~EE __&& __ __EE&B a&a&=~======~1 'Thursday, May 28, 1936 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE :;:::::::::::=::=:: I Ohio Granges are tremendously en- The Highway Essay Contest for ------"-I' u_,______Receivea Award t thused over the coming of the Na- I Grange young people ,viII be again NE'VARK SOCIAL NOT E Sse R E ENS NAP S '--______, tiona I Grange session to their state conducted this yeaH', with liberal cash next November and will work hard prizes, medals, etc., awarded, and a ~E:E::_:.:;::;,:;,::-E:,~~:-~::~,~~.:~=-~:~=-~::~,:-~::~=~:-~.:~:-~::~::-~:~::-~::~:~=~~~:;,:;::-E:i:O::_;':;::E:-i:O::;;;;::-~:i:O::-;;;;::~_:-~::;;:::-~._~~E:=-i:O.:~::~:: By "SN APPER" ~~:na 8~~~~nth Degree class of not less free trip to the National Grange ses sion fo r Winner No. 1. Mi s~ Rubt'rta Leak entertained MI'. was a dinner g uest on Sunday of Mr. and ~l l' s . Orvill e R. Foster, Elkton ; a nd MJ·s. Al onzo Messick. M' and ~11 ·R . Will ard Ochl etree of --- . I . ,Inti MI'. Meredit h Hope of Mrs. H . C. F etter olf, of the State Third Dimension Film Va ., at her home, s atur- I D e pa~· t m e n t of Public Instruction, At State Theatre , . Ha rrisburg, Pa., tra nsacted offi cial glowers dp)' evening. _ _ business wi t h 1;' rofessor R. W. H eim, E xcitement is high today umong the techniciuns of Holl ywood over what ~ll' . anti .\lrR. O"hl etree, Miss Leak, on Suturday .. For might be t he next big turning poin t in MI'. and "I·S. . D. Cheney of New M,'. and MI·s. Howard A. Weeks of motion pictul·es. It is the Met ro Castle, ;\1 1'. and Mrs. W. '1' . Campbell Vincentown, N. J ., will spend the Goldwyn-Muyer short subject, "Au MEMORIAL and SOil II i lly. we re g uests on Su nday week-end in Newark at the home of dioscopiks," coming Mo nday and of MI' . an d Mrs. Orville Fos te~ at I thril' 5Ul1lll1t'I' ho me on t he E lk RiveI' . Mrs. Week's son, William L. T ryens. Tuesday to t he State Theatre. DAY The short combines sound, colol' Paul Thompson Griffith' 1\ 1 RI h L H f Prof. R. W. Heim attend ed the Ex- From Kirk's Green~ou s es ~l r: all,1 "S; a P . ' aney 0 eC lH.jve Co mmittee Meeting of the and t he thi rd dimension. Playel's Of NewH r k, Cadet Lieutenant of :\ orJ'l~tU\\n. j a., WC I e week-end I Delawal'e Vocational Association in seem to literally step from the SC I'een F irst Platoon, Battel'y B, who was For the convenience of Cus guests "I' ) [ 1'. and Mrs. Geo rge M. Dovel' on Tuesday. a nd approach the audience. In many pl'esented a abre at the University tomers we . will conduct a Haney. cases players a ppeal' actuall y to holr! of Dela wa re R. O. T. C. Co mmence- Stand Friday and Saturday on E. Main Street, next t.o M,·s. Carl eton Douglass entertained objects a few inches f rom the ~ pec - ment Exerci. es held last ThUl'sday. ~[ b, ~[:II.i or i e Jones will entertain Eubanks' Barber ShOll, a number of f riends -at luncheon and tator's fac.e . . . • . Lt. Grfffi th's co mma nd was judged the P 'lIumlJl'r of I'e ll ow students frol11 bridge on Tuesday aft~ I'I1 OO~. .Some of the exc l t l n~ deta.,l s that mo st efficient platoon in the annual :\e\\'a rl; liigoh Sc hoo l at the home of wlil be shown. al'e: A gll'l s.w.lIlgs out competitive drill held some time ago. KIRK'S GREENHOUSE her pan·llt,. 1\11' . and Mrs. R. T . jones, , CA PITAL TRAIL PHONE 221- [vl Filing Time For over t he au(il ence. A maglCulIl pro- , H will graduate in June. 11' . )1 ail t n'et, tomorrow night. In duces a mouse on the end of hi s wand I ,I'iled 1(1l1' t include: R ~be l't Stewart, Farmers Is Extended and hand. it to anyone wi Rhing it. Jane [.11 (In, Paul Skillman, Elean- (Continued from Page 1) A gil'l . blow. up a balloon which fu nny lady of the sc reen Louise Fa,;- or 1';1(11'" Narv 1 Robinson, J a ne Hu ,tilll' Ott Widdoes, Jr., Marie $1. Fal'mel's are eligible to receive seemingly bursts bu t a few inches en da. Th film plays this t heatre Wcd- ~""'.'f""~V "v"" """"""""""""""".J .. The. e and many more amaz- and Thursday. Cash pl'izcs Egn or ami Guy Wharton. t hese second 01' soil-bui lding pay ~\\'ay n ~s d a y SPECIAL OFFER FOR A LIMITED PERIOD ments even though they do not quali- IIlg t hings happen dUl'lng the show- wlil again be awardeci to t he hold- . )[1'. :11 ,I )[1'8. Raymond L. K l'am- fy fol' any of t he first type of pay ing of the picture. CI'S of t he lu cky nu mbers. er of Philadelphia, Pa., spent unday ments. Pete Smith handles the uproal'i ollti dialogue. with '[I'. lind 1\[ l'S . Robert P otts of I Members Study Prog ra m Avenue Theatre ~ew T echnic-o lor "Lonsome Pine" En st ,ltlln ~ treet_. _ I $100 Won By Local Ma n The members of the co mmittee, aJ- , Outsta nding Film ;1[ 1'. :lnd ) [rR. Eddie L. Milles and tel' a cal'eful stuciy of the new pro AHel' many w eks of dl'awing fo~' . rhild l'rn. of ?l lariborough Village, Pa., gram, urge every farmcr to become t he winner oC the $100 prize on'el'ed In Walter Wagner's prod uction of SjI lit T It'sday with Mr. and Mrs. mol'c f ully acquainted with the bene by the State Theatl'c, ick Moore Of j"The 'fl'ail of the Lonesome Pine," Robcl·t p"ll,; and attended the play, fits they may de1' ive from participat N ewark wa the lu cky t ie),et hold el' whic h wiil pl ay nex t Monday and "Chintz Cottagc," at t he Presbyter- ing. III order that farmers may have 01' the pl'ize ticket di'awll last T uesday at the Avenue Theatl'e, inll Chun'h. t hi s opportunity, the committee mem- Thursday cveni ng. The number was I Ma ryland aven ue at Adams street, 758B. The $50 prize wa not clai med, Wilmington. the fl "st motion picture or inll'rcst to 1 ewark rc idel)ts i bel's will as'ist in filling Ol~t work the anllounccmpnt of the engagement, I s~ eets at t~e ll ' homes by alJJlOlll tment. therefore, tonight Thursday, May 28 1 a~t uall y f'~hn cd out~ l oo l's in fUll . Tec h- the grand prize will be $75. nlcolo r wlil make ItS bow. la~t \H'ck , of Miss Catherine E Jj za_ 1 11~ e fo ll o wlll ~ farmer ~ make up th.e beth Broad to MI'. Will iam J . C. SO I~ conservatlOn. co mnllttee: W. LeV IS The winners of t he $1 prizes last Directed by H enry Hathaway, " The Amend ,It a luncheon given last week P hi PPS, Centerville ; Geor~e K. Ball, week w ~ r e Mi ss Edna Lindell, Mastci' Tra il of . th~ pt hcr home on Ramsey road, Wil- ~a l .s ~a~t o ni WE: ~. Naud~n , Hockes R ussel Silk , Mastel' George Danby, Lonesome Pille 1\ ["S. Frazer, a nd MI'. J ohnson all of l i s a warm, mington . )[iss Broad is a graduate ~1Il;. ~ n d N 0 oway, . ewark ; J. of Women's oll ege, University of es le 01' , F ewark; BenJ. W. J ohn- Newark. glowil,g, sympa thetic presenta Delawan'. son,.. B e~r; 'rank Moody, Newark; ENGLISH CREAM State Theatre Briefs t i o n of J 0 h n M,'. and irs. Horace Gambill and Ben]. VlIlton, St. Georges; Geor ge , Including trial ja rs of family of Baltimore vi. ited Mr. imd Danby, Bear; J . La \~ so n Crothers, Friday and Saturday bl'ings to the Fox, Jr.'s clas sic of the Cum- ;III'S Ol'\' ille Little on Sunqay. M~. P leasa nt; B. Irvlll Armstrong, screen ' at this picture house "Little FOUNDATION CREAM and NIGHT CREAM . . Middletown; E. H. Shallcross, Mid- Lord F a un t leroy" starl'ing Freddie bel'1ands, w i t h at no extra cost MI" . AlbNt Strikol spent the week- dletown; H erman Cochran, Middle- Ba rtholomew, the lad who so charmed Sylvia Sidney, end with friends in Philadelphia. town; J oseph C. Hutchison, Towns- you in "David Fred l\'IacMur- PRICE $1.10 end ; Walter L. Markel', Clayton; G. ' C 0 p p erfi eld." Sidney ray and H e ~ry Prof. R. W. Heim attend ed the Arthur Ginn, Townsend ; Robert This young stUI' F onda headmg annual hanquet of the Epsilon Pi Tau Doug las, Towllsend . Work sheets may walks st ra ight a large and well cho. cn cast. RHODES DRUG STORE Fl'a tcl'nit)' al Rutgers University in also be fill ed out at the office of in to xour h e~lI' t I The film, which tells of the primi- the \\-oodI'OW Wil son Hotel, N ew Cou nty Agricultural Agent G. M. again in this t ive n:ountain folk and the.ir. i.n s t~nc- Phone N ewark 474 36 East Main Street Brunswick. N. J., last week. Won 'i! ow, Newark. warm and hum- t lve d, stl'ust for modern clvlilzatlOn, 'II" ." 1,:I." I·c \\' I'I'ght Sl)e nt las' week Co unl. ,, -\Vid e Sig n- I) an story of a ha.s its action entirely set in the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;: " - ., • J b thickly wooded hill country of Ken- = th l' Dennis Hotel, ,At lantic City, Tuesday. e've mn. g" J une 2 , beg ln-. aoy,ll mawhon. Sup-was tuck,.,.., which has givell 'rec hnicolol' ;Ill' and l\!1 s. Floyd Wmgate, of ning at 6 o'clock (Standard Time) Freddie porting Freddie photogl'aphy a magnificent opportun- ,Clanton, Pa. spent the week-end thel e will be another regular county- I Bartholomew ' in . the fi lm are ity to bring to the sc reen all the \\Ith 1"I('n(\, in Newark. Wid e sign-up and interested farmers Dolores Costell o natural '0101' and beauty of thc mag- SAFETy ll -- I may fill out work sheets at t he fol- Barrymore, Guy Kibbce, C. Aubrey ni ficent scenery. Dorothy Holton has r etul'l1ed to her lowing places : Talleyville, Talleyville Smit h and a host of othel's. ======funds hOllw 110m Randolph-Macon oll ege. Gl ange I-[all ; H ockesslIl , H ockessl'n Another twin bill will be on hand iF======ITI for your travel I Supply Co. Offi ce ; Hal'mony, Grange Saturday. Along with ".Little Lord ;Ill'. and M,' . . Harold H offecker, of J Hall; Merma id , Newark, County The fu nd s for yo ur busine s Ph llacirlpha, spent the we k-end III Agents Offi ce ,' Glasgow, Dayett': Fauntleroy," Tim McCoy in "Fight- ing Shadows" will be . presented tho or plea ure trip can be safe Xewal'k. __ lStore; St. Georges, Directol s' Room, same day. Ira c. Shell~nder guarded if, before leaving, you ~li s, E. F'l'fInccs Med ill s pent. Satur- St. G!Wrges Trust Company; Mt. Cary Grant and J ou n B nnett will Successor to E. C. WILSON ha ve us convert them into day and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Pleasant, Crothel·.· Bros . .O~c e ; Mid~ t be seen Monday and Tucsd.ay in "Big AI\'in Salt rthwaile of Stanton. dletown , Shallcl.oss BI os. Office, Brown Eyes," a fast excI tIng story AME RI C A N Townsend, Money-Maloney Office; I about a gi l'i who breaks society's most Funeral EXP R ESS Mrs. \\,illiam Irwin s pent the week- Blackb!nl, Regular voting place. (For ama~ing jewel-stea ling l'aci,et wide TR AV ELER S nd in A llantic City. co nvel1l ence, farmers are asked t? open. This Wa lter Wagner pl'oduc- C H E Q U E S MI'. and M,·s. Carleton Doug lass en- sign up at t he meeting place nearest t ion was directed by Raoul Walsh, tel'taine(\ a number of friends f rom their farm. one of Holl ywood 's mo t expert cli- Director They are spendable .vel'Y where and no identification is BallimOl'e at din ner on Saturday CELEBRATES VICTORY ]'e~~~~'h e r sensational drama re- evenlllg. unites t he unforgettable lovers of "Oil 254 W. Main Street necessary other t han yo ur signature. If lost 0 1' stolen, M". and Mrs. Harry Bonham en Tradi tion tha t t he victory bell must For the Lamps of China" in Sinclail' Newark tertain ed a number of friends from be r ung by a n a lumnus was upheld O'Brien a Rd Josephine Hutchinson. Newark, Delaware uncount ersigned, yo ur money Newark in their cottage at Rehoboth when Gov. A lber t B. Chandler helilcd "I Manied A Doctor," they are Pat is refunded. Issued in denom Over the week-end. Transylvani a celebrate a 47-33 basket- O'Brien and J osephine Hutchison. Phone 30 inations of $10, $20, $50 and T~st Company . ball victory over Ce ntr e Co ll ege. The Supporting these t wo great stal's are $100 at .75 ce nts £01' each $100 Rev. and Mrs. J. L. NIChols enter- youthf ul Kentucky Governor gl'abbed Ross Alexander, Guy Kibbee and that ue======iJ! Newark, Delaware tamed Dr. and Mrs. George H . T rull, It he bell cord and with vigorous jerks purchased . lof I cw YO I'k, and Rev. and Mrs. W m. announced the schoo l's viCtOl'Y. H. chail, of P hiladelphi a, at d inncr ~SE V E NTH KENNETT SQUARE =Jch n T . Hall Di re c t or~ ;;:======'; onSaturciay. LEGION PAGEANT-' 'RAMONA' MI". ORCa I' Munda of W il mington, ~ J 18 19 20 MAIL ORDERS NOW RECEIVED! visit 'd fricnds in Newa rk on Sunday. un e - - Tickets, $1. Reserved, $1.50. Address Box 491 Mrs. Robe rt T. J ones entertained Ihe executive board of the New Cen ~ r. !ones LONGWOOso
6 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE
RUTLEDGE By BILL FLE1TlJr:R
. - •• _ ''_ 0I00I _ _ ... ______. ..:::::: ___1 - •• - •• _ " - •• - ... _ 1 - ' _'"--- . First Post Tennis Affair ~ttracting Canditla tes ~===~======~
G~~~ I~;l~~ute Rockne is crcdited BRIDGEWATER'S NINTH INNING . I ENTRIES FOR ~hl! ~~~e~t ~~Rt~e DC::~ ~O;'I·lll;lI ,~,a;\~~~ :V~~~t h ~:!ngi:ll:1t ~le t ~!:~:~~ ~~I!~~ HOME RUN DROPS- PERRYVILLE TINY MOTORS TOURNEY NOW 'i'·ill grab hIs ~het'p~;!::JI\iJ,I,ll 1 ~i:~:I: ::I~Ch ~~afe~uOt~ dQwntowll street cor- . ..I...:I TO' SPEED IN ~ . ::,t~· t' : :~ ~ I~:~: !::.:,;;; s":"':,~ Jeb,b Outhud, W;n'., ~n G ..a' Game He.. Sunday; Rec.o,d PHILLY BOWL OPEN TO FANS I ,. "" :;'~"; ",' ,," ~:: tel' b a c k s - Crowd on Hand; Whiteman, Barrow and Lucas Also Hit I ___ ,'~ Bl ue 11 11 ull oi would enter ~o- for Circuit; Providence-Elkton and Canners-Rivermen /S . St d-' --L se d F Close June 1; Ned McCully II "' fanH' . tre Dame, the Divide; Tough Week-end Ahead ~Msq~dl t R8 n~m BeaM or , Expected To Defend Title I Johl II, ,,'nt· Fighting Irish I ge acmg y ayor I R C Y (1\\ I, the w 0 u I d never By "The Roamer" S. Davis Wilson I n acquet ontest thll' 0> II I ,IHl,( \ lose a grid tus- While Te wark succeeded in accomplishing what no other team in the TO --- SEEK COLLEGE COURTS "BILl." FLETCHER M: 0 , T ) l' T. wa s sle. : Bi-State Leagu has been able to do thi year-score a victory over Perry- RACE EVERY WEEK --- , TA.)iDI~~ ATHLETE and he is afternoon of II the same 'ville-the circuit standings remain unchanged as a result of activities last Philadel hia Pa. Ma 27.- Recent des I v1l1g of the mil. \I hlch IS agO. P Host of Stars Expected To we~1 ir.. . wark, or "THE ROA ME R" week-end. acqui ition of ~ h e P'hilad~lphia Sesqui- 'play; Invitations Sent I strl(' t1y an hon.o l·ary awar, On e rod, so It Reem" Th" Following an -6 defeat on their own grounds on Saturday, the Pandours centennial tadium by Ralph A. To Local Performers . EqUipped Il'lth a. fine )ll'r~ , ~un . ca ught twe local BI- t~te entry.handed a power- bounded back for a 5-3 conqu ·t before the largest ('rowd of the campaign at Hankin,.on as 'ures th Quaker ity . .--- .. Ikl~sed by Ocean ~lt.~"S l'a~ "itl!. to seventeen ame boat us ful PerrYVIlle team Its fir t defeat of I ontinental Fi Id on unday. Providence and Elkton split, as did Aberdeen Iwor.ld champion hip midget car racing . Entl'l e~ co nt1l1ue to ptle 111 for t~e mm D, and wl.tat I. Just It- 11ll] ,rtant, the season la t aturday. away, but and Havr de Grace which brought about an even division of the spoils on this summer. FlI'st Annual Newal'k P ost Tenms a confidence m hImself thm ,. ·~a le~ There is a light fly-rod committed what appears t? be .an in- all fl·onts. 1 Lease contracts, awarding Hankin- Tournal11en~ , scheduled to t~ ke 'place Ithe difrerence in a. good atlm·tf' and excusabl blunder of 10 Ing .0 the . A ninth-inning home run with Aaron Argo on ba e was Managcr Jacki on pos ession of t h $12,000,000 ~h e week of June .21. Nn e~ort .IS be- a poor one, John WIll be ,adl~ mis cd crappie and Pandours on unday her: econd Bridgewater's lone offensive contribution of the day, but it proved to be the I municipal bowl, were signed several mg made to obtam t.he nlverslty of in three sports next YNll·. sions. If: gu~ssers have bee.n needh.ng Jack ' deciding blow of the Jackets' -6 win over the leaders Argo, incidentally, did days ago at a conference between Delaware c?urts f('r these matche ~, I J ohn, 01' "Bull," built up alll 'V Iable
~~ ; ~~I(~ewate.r for h.1 poor Jud.g m e~t II some neat pitc~ing aftet: relieving :'Boney" Jackson with one away in the Mayor . Davi Wilson, of Philadel- and, UnOffiC13. ~ ~ 'e~o rt s .seem t~ mtl- I record during his four Y'" I' tay in I~,_ ••. led) In handhng t~e Jackets m eighth. He receIved credIt for the vIctory. phia, and the lessee. mate that ])etmlsslon WIll be .gtanted. Newark. He was awarded three let. the ~abbath class ever ~ mc e . Teams Hit Hard Beginning J une 9, w ekly presenta- A, host of town t~ l.tm & enthu I.a~ts ar~ tel'S in fo otball, thl'ee in .wimming GI and~tand . managel s I:ave been . .-, tion will be offered every Tuesday expected to ent t mto com'petltlon for, and four in track. both whl permg and yelltng them- I " hile P elTyville outhlt the Jackets, MAYOR cOLLINS TO night t hi summer Hankinson an- the statuette trophy whIch will be In his fir t year, J ohn e,raJ,ll .. hed a . selves hoarse ,.over ,~h e pilot's fail- 12·9 on aturday and 11 -10 on un- START RUNNERS ON nounced today. It i~ hi; intention to awarded to the singles champion, and new record in the jaH'lin Thrn \\', a Ul:e, to ~ Ia y m ~de baseball. One day, three Newark home run proved EIGHT MILE GRIND import the fin est midget racing talent the two gold medal to be presented mark which still stand~. and waH nllght think a major catastrophe had Ito be too much in the fir t clash .Paul --- ' I in the cou t ry. to t he winning double team. hold r. of the shot-put record for tll'O taken. place and t~U\t the pe~ce a nd Whit man belted his t hird of the year Sel'enteen entries have been re., r '" A pecial invitation has been issued ear s broken last ear bl' "'11' " eeul'lty of the enttre community was and Bill Barrow, marking his return ceil'ed for th eight-mil e marathon . New Clrclll t "'ormed to summer school tudents Ind ni- y , y . ' ede in danger. to' th line-up, socked one for the cir- race, which will take place on atur- F rmation of a new circuit to in- versity of Delaware faculty members, Droz.dol', a. fellow tOW11l1l sn. Such a condition is an excell ent in- I cuit. Barrow also figured in the day JU:1e 6. The announcement wa clu de t he Philadelphia tadium and in the hope that the list of entries I As captain of the track , ... am for dieation ihat genuine interest exists, Isco ring of six run, counting t wo on. made by Phil o l'l1og , chairman of th i\!adi on quare Garden bowl will will well to unprecedent d propor- the past two years, J ohn I 'd. the Blue but it 's hardly sporting. ~nd base- his own and driving foul' mates across the Race Committee, who tated that Iprovide the Ea t with outstanding t ion . Hens through. one of the m", sue· ball, lest many of the rabId razzers the rubber for important co u"n ters. all entries so fal' are local boys who performers from the Pacific coast and Ned Me lill y To Defend ce ' ful campaIgns a D lall arc ,cam have. fOrgotte~, comes under the Lucas, Perryville's talented hort- are racing enthusia ts. . middle we t. The 'new combine will be Although his entr' blank ha not ha e~'er ~ndergone. . heading of POltS. Istop, crashed a fOl!r-master wth two Jack Sharp, one of the fav~rlt e~ to k.nown as the greater Metropolitan yet been received, it \ ex Jected that SWlmmlllg wa undoubt,,(\,j' hiS RWR aboard to accot~nt. f or half. the .Pan- wil: t he event, announced hI S \\,th- CI rcuit. .' . . Ned McCully, defendin ] cha m ion ~trong ~pOl't for J ohn crea ~t'dium to witne~s the um~C1slt) faeult~,. "~d a ho t . of which hal'c built up wha' _ •.rhup results, if you will--in ba eball. It's was on hand at ontinental Field to elude: )Iayor Frank ollin,;, Slarter; fil·~t Dempse\'-Tunney tight. It was: othe r~ have been. lllVltcd to. parttci- I the fine~t l' cOl'd any Blu II teanl a g-ame an.1 there's always an oppos- njoy a nip-and-tuck battle that was Roy Deibert, Unil'cl'sity of 1Iaryland, the large., ~I'owd to ever att nd a pate m what, It I: hoped, WIll prol'e Ihac heell pril'ileged to 'POI' II a I'mg ing team to consider. tight all t he way. I't'f r P; Inin Smith,C. of D., clerk sport,; (,I'cnt in the ity of Brotherly I to be the rno·t suece~~ful tennis time, , Where, incidentally, was the host Jebb. Perryville, and Winter, ~ew- of couI'se, James mith and David LOl" and attracted the second lar<>es't Itournament co duct d In ~ ewar k. From out observatio _ . . I I.J' . eo Adl·ance reports seem to hcar ut thi 1.-. Jcrhap, of yoltmteer ach'isor" last spring- ar k , en~ag.(' d . In a sco:e ess ~~.~~ lll .~ OI'erdale, "'ewark, judge'; Jack g,ne m the hi. tory of world heavy- hO]l<' . throe chal'< ctt.ristic< "ta d 1': the when !iuey. ;lIorris and hi c~rps of dual fm file mnmg , ele the I ItQ]~ Sharp and Frank ;lIayer, timers; and weight boxing. I . I a " uredne. with which hl I I nwd des rnng chrectors were combmg the weI' able to crash through for a pall IDr J R DOI,'nes phv~ician E Qu e tlon .\nswer d and cracked record. th c.. .i th c woo~ls for a manA~ r? Bridgewatel' l of r.uns in the fifth. , Th~ I'~nners. \I:hich.' it i.: expectl,d, . :'Jl e r~ ~ ] akes h ang~ I Tht'rc ha ' been considt'rable contro- whieh 'ne pr oted~' hl.1! ';:I \~nd recell'ed .the asslgnm,:nt because , "Il~ one out and runners on first will total betwccn twenty-fil'e And EqUlpp e~1 WIth a quali.er mIle track, I'(:I'"Y (lver the rule that stateg that health, and, his willin!!n.. --' c)ach s~meone had to do th~ Job and can- and .lhll'd, Bud Lloyd rolled a ]lerfect thirty, will vie for fivc loving cups the mumc~]JaI sports center otTers ac- n plarer mu~t appear to play his anyone who desired as"bt nee. chdates I~'ere SCat'ce-~II, to b~ exac.. I dou?le pl~y btl," :0 Cage. The ove~'- and fh'e medal~ which will he pre- com~noda.tlOns. unexcelled. in midget match. The principal argument cen- I A cro ~ between (,l- l' \ 11' and If BrIdgewater farls to gl\'e hIS anxlOU ~ oung,t t booted the chance . enled by the Alto Athletic lup, local auto racmg CIrcles. A mIdget track tel'S around lhe fact that the entrants R . .," ., ' . ~ , be t as manager a all times he 1for _ ewark's lone error of the con- expert is now modng East from Los I find it difficult to playoff their Obel t Ta~ 101. Bull b Jll- n dcan should be criticised. ;lrore than that te -t and set the stage for il larqu ss' sports ol'gi TO CIIOOSE FRO~l leag-ue-Ieading PerI>"\'ilIe crcw has pichl'd game in winning on atul'day, noon. Pl'ovid nee nterlains the local "lim' Hill was in top form ~[on- _ _ . EE 0 ' R SPE IAT_ 1.95 RA QlET taken eight games in nine starts. stoppinl! th Elk r n outfit with fiv club on unday at du Pont Field, day night as he stopper! Batt I'y E A 1~l'\OCK Ou'r BUY IN BA EBALL HO ES-,2.~;; Pnlr Newark is the lone aggregation 0 scatten!d hlow5. ix xtra basehits Following A game at Perryville Sat- I with a pair tJf hits to lead the Junior SPEC IAL PjtTCES ON 'XIFOR~ ! S FOR CLUB - G Ol'R .\0\ r I;>;G stop it trus far, ot bad on two were registered by the Papermakers, U1'day morning, the Pandours and Legion 0 an eo. Y -1 conquest. The PROPOSITION AND PRICES DEFORE YOU DC\' counts, ' . om\ ay and Manag l' Ort pratt Rivermen 1110l'e over to Havre de ~' ol1thfu l flinger whitTed nine oppos- I Maybe PerrYVIlle was lucky un-I divded mound duty on undal' for Grace in the niternoon when the 1935 IIlg batsmen. Iorgan was the catch- Jackson·s Hardware Store day and maybe Bridgewater's mis-I Providence, pennant wii be hoisted, pecial cere- el·. Stanley, Evans and Husfelt takes (claimed) were costly, but monies have b en arranged for t he formed the Soldiers' battery. A Full Line of Golr Equipment•• B8gs, Balls, Clubs--Rcn onabl,. I'ricrd what about the other seven Pandour I Aberdeen Takes ,Marathon acca ion. The Legionaires slammed 11 solid 90 EAST MAIN STREET NEWARK, DELAWARE victories? More luck, no doubt. An old fashioned slugging bee was (Continued on Page 7) basehits in winning, Thursday, May 28, 1936 THE NE\yARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE 7 BASEBALL STANDINGS CRANSTON HEIGHTS FLASHES FAMOUS WRITERS HUMBLES SCOTTIES \\ l'i ters of inte\'l1ational prominence ORTS BI ·STATE LEAGUE G. \~I f:S SATL' IIDA Y (Continued from Page 6) contribute urticles on important CUl' I{ESL' LTS I..-\ST W"EK Nt'\\ark at l!illere t INTO THIRD PLACE \\' ilmlllJfhm ;tt ('mn tOtl I h'iMhts ·tops p rforming around these her e rent topics every Su ndal' in t he " Bal- NE WARK 8·3. I'EHHYVILLE 6·5 Glasgow at Furt duPont parts. • ti mol'c Amel' icun." Ge't your copy P rovidence 6-5, E.lkt on 2·' Trampling the Gla sgow Scots for a POST EXPERT Aberde.en 15· 2, lI avre de Grace 12·4 r;A~IE S SUNDAY pui r of victol'ies, 13-7 and 8-4, la t WITH PLA DEFI !TELY rolling from YOU I' favorite ne wsdeale r 01' (;A II'S SATUIW AY lI OIlN I:-IG Hillcrest til ' ewark week end, ranston Heights advanced for the tennis tournament to star t news boy. NI:: \\·.\ IIK .\'1' £I.KTO:> 'ra n tou Heights til \\ilnullJttoll to second place in the ew Castle Fort dUPollt a t Glasgow June 21, it behooves us to issue a HAS AN IDEA Aherril'ell ut P rt") \,idencc I!;wre tit: Crace a l l'e!'"l")ville ounty L eag u , one-half game behind I'emind I' (maybe even a plea) to STAND ING OF THE TEAMS Wilmington. Glasgow tumbled f t'om MISCELLANEOUS' G,\ . IES SATI'R!)A\' AFTER:> X \\'QIl La st you tennis players to get your ntl'i s FOR NIMRODS I".KTOX .\ '1' 1'1£\\·.\I(K ( ·UII. Field) \\,illllingtoll ...... 7 2 a first-placl! deadlock into a t hird in as soon as possibl e and help put !-'\,·:ry\,ilh.' at lIa \'re etc Crace ("ra llll\tou Heights ...... 7 .1 place t ie. w ith FOI·t duPont a a re Pro\,idelH.:e a t Ahe rdec:n l;I;t:oiKO\\' •••••• . .•• •• . •. •• . . . • •.• 6 t his thing aCI·O SS . AUCTIO lEER-Experienced serv1<:es 4 ult of t he skirmishing. Fa or Artificial Lures For t;.\'.("S Sl' XDA\, Fun du P.lll t ...... •... •.. ..•.• (, 4 Alt hOll gh no definite word has been in ' calling and managing sales of II lll('l't:1 ...... 2 8 Under t he guiding hand of "Jllck" Bait Over Worms; :'iEII·.IRK AT I'IHlI'IIIE:>n: ~ c \\ ;l rk ...... 1 8 r eceived as yet, it i expected t hat merchandise, livestock, and real 11 "'rt: .Il· (;race' :tl EI~hHl MLGovern, the ewark V ets showed d McCull y, d fending cha mpion, estate. R. A. O'Neal. All communi Tells Why .\herdt·,·u \ . Pt·t:r ) \'il lc ~t OxCurd, POI . . NE'N'ARK T~GHT LEAGUE decided r eversal of form in bowing a will be on hand t his year tQ prote·t cations t o M. T. E wing, Phone l3l-J, STANDING OF THE TEAM S I.AT EST H I·:SU LTS to t he classy Wilmington A. A ., 5-4, ('a nls 8, \ 'c'l s 7 his laurels against all comers. or Lester Scotton, Farmers Trust REPORTS GOOD CATCH \\'nll I .OM in ten heuted innings on Satu rday. 1" ' 1' 1 ) ,·ille ... , ...... R I JUllinr Ll,,,inn 8. Ba lle ry E I The matches will probably, a l Co. 11-lS-26t 11 .. 01,1 :-':ote- lf. you have beGn ~E \ V. \ I{K ...... " . . . / 1 .1 i\ l"1 iionnl Flhre 15, ("ullli:1clllal 8 'fhe Sunday tilt was postponed. P e rry .\ ht rd(·(,H ., ...... :; tlJoug h n o definiLe consent has been on a Ii IT )! party, have made a rec?rd Schedule of Games :; pitched nice ball for the losers until . III lIal catch, Ot· have anything ':lI'ds "~So B al1~ry E (~ l l)lId ay ) granted, be }l iayed on t he nivCl'sity h XaticHial Jo' ihre vs . \ 'els rl'ucs rl ny) h weakened in the 10th. ~t u " ti't! like eXliressed ill print : ;~~~~:i:I :'::~ ':~ ~I ~ ~,.::: : ::::::::: : j 7 of Delaware courts . FOR SALE JUljior Lt'gioll \'~ . C'untillt'utal ( \\'cdncscl" y) The entire Vet crew showed its I;·h !Tgo Hcnt it to. the P ost, Box ~ ~"tI' LEADING HITTERS Get behind th is toul'l1ament and I;;P. \,1:11'1', 0 1' dcpostt YOU I' tale at STANDING OF THE TEAMS b st form of the season and look like Play\'!" • Tt".1 111 .... ){ ah I' you might be t he one to walk out I Rhol . )lrllg' tor.) \Von I..ost Pet. a t roublesome aggregation for the 1.000 with a s tatu lte trophy 01' a gold B NGALOW-Smnll. Phone ewark f~: ,'~ i! :r LCj:{i o;; . . . .. : . ... : :: : :: : J ~ .750 balance of the r ace. Pierce at second By Ott Widdoes, Jr. Xa tiomd 1fihrt' ...... , .. ..1 2 .600 m edal. 3G -.1. ~~;I~·;~.i;\~~~~~~e\~il~~;:~i ':~ Ii~ :: ~ ~ :: : : ~ ~i ~ ('ontillt'nt al ...... 2 .400 base turned in a g rand game against 5-28-3t AI \ you wlto happen to r ead .\I{CO. XE \\'.\ RK ...... 5 9 5 Ha ltC'!'Y E ...... 1 ,250 the leaders. I'e t .... .n th" .l' a ·tit h-~ on fi s hing have prob kl\I~~\~ ;. J~ ~';~~i~ li; ~ ~ct'··:::: : · .... :~ j ~ I,: .000 F I'azer Field will be the scene of Gasoline Dealers Need . PIA 0 - prig h t Angelus in excel obll' ~atl1l'I'l' t1 Lhat I am a firm a d vo ";\ 1. Pci t' I'SOIl, 1'1"00'idt' lIcc . . . . . 9 ,1 7 II NEWAR~ SOFTBALL LEAGUE t he postponed game between t he V et.s lent condition. r easonably priced. K('in!. P rovidence ...... f) .15 Q Licenses By End of June Cllt~' til 'Ill' a rtificial lure over live I · I(,T()I~. NI"V.IRK ...... 5 22 9 LATE. T I ~ E. lI l.TS and Wilmington tonigh t, the t il t Also many unusual antiques fo r blli!. \\', . my opinion on this p oint .\ Jaillsl reet cr 14 14 . Golden E a~ l es 2 June 30 is t he deadline set by t he . ale. HOME RUN LEADE RS Presbyterians l8, U y Sl'oUIS 2 starting at 6.30. law gove rning the purch ase of li \I'll" • ·,·,gl hencd con. idHably by an WII I TE~ I i\X. I\'EWARK Golden EaJ,(leg 11. I ~(':111 )' 25, n oy Scout s ., M . 1'eterson. P rovidcnce censes to oper ute a gasoline service Roseville Park "I'I\'rnl' n of fi shing a few undays r ln.rke , Ila \'rc de Grace .\l alll 'i treeters 21. R(·cI -'h'n R pluce in t he standings by dividing w ith K . of P . II , P rc s b y l('rinll~ 7 station in Delaware. Application 5-2 -3t IIg(l· Trll st. Aberdcell F or t duPont, winning on Saturday, Lincoln H ig hway blanks were mail ed from the State Om' rot!. md ng a light fl y-rod lure, NEW CASTLE COUNTY LEAGUE STAND ING OF THE TEAMS 1. 9-12, and losing on S unday, 10-6. Hig hway D epartment, Dovel', this Hou e- even room s, lOOx200 ft. cough twenty-one fi 'h, as compared \Von Lost P e t. CD Xewark I \\·illll. A. A . HESU I.TS LAST \\,E I ~ K ~Iain s t ree t crs .... . 6 I .859 ab rho a ab rho a f ront, foul' cal' garage, and chick K . o ( p, week. to "~H'lllepn Laken on two rod , in the .... . 4 I .1lOO 1 \V"hi1t, 3h 4 0 1 1 I \Vdsh. d 5 0 1 I 0 \\'ilmington 5, Newn.rk 4 (to innings) Aelna ...... e n house. All m odern conveniences. ~nnl(1 buat using WOl'1l1 S . ..4 I .1lOO Whethe r such notices are r eceived (Sunday Gn.me Post pOlled) Preshyterian ...1 .1 .500 ~ ,~ :; ~i~~ ~ ' .;h. ~ ~ : ~ ~)~~~,~ii· . 3!'. ~ : ~ ~ Inquire Fiore NardQ, Academy Hoy SCOllts . t g 01' not, however, it is t he duty of Then j:; a lot to be said for these 1-1 illcrest 19· 6, Fort el l! POll t 12· 10 . ... . 2 -1 ..l. U J ~ .~ !lush, If 2 0 n 1 0 ' l oolle y. If 5 I I 1 0 . 1 4 .200 Street. light n~··rod luI' in pursuit of t he rans ton H eight'i 1.1 ·8, Glasgow ' .4 ~ ~~[l c :~ 1 e~ag.I~~ ... (;regK, d 4 1 1 6 0 Alkl'n. rf '* 0 I 1 () t he person selling gasoline 01' about .. .. . 0 (, .000 S!~ ('ook. I" ... I I 100 ('al"lll'Y . 2b .1 0 12 I 5-14-tf crll pplI' and sunfish of porLly dime n to engage in t he bus iness to secure ======~"~~~~~;: J ~ ~ ~ : : ~ ~l ~~~III. ~e};il c : ~ ~ ~ i on ·. If you hope to have a sunfish :?! such license, and the secretary of the FERTILIZER-Reasonably p r i e e d I.UI11"X, rf 4 0 0 2 0 Finne)", p 4 I 2 a 2 iu te r>I" '!"" t he catching of c rappies It \ Vhitem 'n,lf 3 0 0 I 0 Highway Commission, John H. Cos for all types of crops . We ar dis Press. c 1 0 0 0 0 by, Rtate£ t hat unless such licenses lI ud ('>tIlt·,,>, you would do well to cast lJ eck. p 0 00 0 0 tributors for t he Virginia-Caro th e lun·. If. howe\'er, you wish to BI~:~: f ~~;~~ ~j,;:;::~l~~;:~f:!;~:;~,';~~~~~i1~ f4 1 e ,~ec u red before t he last day of lina Chemical Corporation, Phone Total. 39 4 7 "276 To,als 395 II 30 13 J une and are displayed in the p lace catch ollly n appies, you should t roll Aberdeen and Providence play at 2 hr •. L'",pire. : F os~ l l a , e). loak (ba.c.). • Nonc IlUt in 10 111. 220. Jarmon and Moore, South Providence Saturday morning and of business, such dealers f ace Ihe Ill!!' I ·hind t he boat.. close to t he Errors: \Vhil e, Price, :Hlle y. will College A venue. move to Aberdeen in the afternoon . Saturday ORE IW INN INGS arrest. . edge of the s platter docks and fairly \I·IL,\I. A. A...... 011 001 lOCI 1- 5 5-l4-36-tf The fee is $2.00 for the year and deep. . Saturday :>I" WARK ...... 030010 000 ().....I T wu h .. s ~ hits: F innC'y. \\'hite. Pierce . Rig· much has been done in the past to Cu nfus ed Identity le r. Earncd runs: !\cwark J . \Vilminghm A. SWEET POTATO PLANTS-by E lla A . 4. Struck out : by Finn 'Y 11. Uase on halls: stamp out the sale of illegal gasoline. Ragan, near Mechanicsville, D el. O~s n.I::i:lle Y· n~ i ' ir~~rr(:o l;: ·n,i,~(! h~f 1 ~~~ll:~d I~~." : All dealers have been instructed to 5,2l,lt. Newark, R. D. 2. send for their license early. They are " ~i)g:,\: 0 a warned that a rush of business dur- 4 I 0 0 0 ing t he la t few days might cause a FOR RENT 2 J I J ~ d elay in the issuance of t he neces ~ 2 111: 6 sary papers. APARTMENT-5 rooms, modern in ~ : ~ ~ ~ As the law m a kes no provision for , ever y respect, unfurnished, insulat- 240 gg 31 2applications ' on file, but instead di- ed against heat and cold, comfort 4 00 I I rect ly states t hat t he license must be guaranteed. I 0 I I 0 d is played in the place of business, de- Jackson 's Hardware Store, lay in securing t he licen se should be 4,23,tf 90 East Main St. avoided, urges MI'. Cosby. APARTMENTS-Two in excellent lo cations, 10-room and 4-room each. CERTIFICATE OF REDUCTION OF Phone S. E . Dameron, CAPITAL 5,7,tf Newark 222. I'IT T. II L' RG II TOR I;: I'JXTUI'E AND EUU I PAl EN'!' CO., a corporat ion organized APARTMENT-at 69 West Dela and existi ng under the GCllcrnl oq )orat ion I.ilw of th e St ate of ~)clawar c t DOES H ERE.· ware A venue. Saturday Ill' CE RTI FY a. (ollows: 517tf Aberdeen II :lvre de Grace (I) Thnt at a special m eet ing of the Bou rd ah r h o il ah rh o It of Dir('cto r<1 (Jf the ah vc cor p ration, held on El k toll \ P l'ovir:ClICc Trust. If , ss 4 .1.1 1 0 Myers. 21> .. 2 2 1 0 the 5th tltty of Mar, 1\ . D. 1936, and supple- APARTMENT-3 rooms and bath, ah rh o n ;111 rhO :1 Budnick, c .. 3 1 9 0 J ubcs. 11> (i 2 2 5 2 II1 cll tcd hy :1 specml meeting of the stock· De nnison, 311 5 I 1 04 S IOCk lil1. rr " 0 2 0 1 heat, G. E. Refrigerator, gas stove, R. J ackson,ss 42 J 020. prntt,d.l) 5 I 0 1 0 Bell, 211 4 t I 2 I L. Preston, H (j 2.J I 0 holders of Ihe said corp ra lion call ed ulJon Baldwin, PI 1£ 4 3 2 J 1 Clark. d. Jl 5 1 2 1 tell days' noticr, gh'cn in accordance with the screen s and shades included. New Harvey, If 4 0 I 60Kdlll. Ih :1 2 I 7 a t Cronin , d 4 I 2 J 0 'l'o llcllger. ci 5 1 240 by· laws thcrcuf. :m.d helt! 0 .1.' the lSt.h day of Bryan. Ih 5 1 27 a\ p eterson, C 4 1 111 2 ly renovated, immaculate order. Newark Perryvillc Burns. rf 5 1 2 2 0 Stcphens, S5 5 1 03 3 May. A. D. 1936, III the Cily of Pittsburgh. nh r 11 0 a I all rh o a \ Vilkinsoll, Ib 5 I ? 7 1 S. P restou. c 5 I J 7 0 Commonwealth or P ennsylvania. a l t wo o'clock 170 W. Main Street. Apply Mrs. sometimes not even g~~~~ : :~e'rfcf ~ ~ : ~ 3~ 1I1{i~~k~b:"'~ ~ g ~ ~ ~ n r'gew't'r,2h '5 0 1 5 4 Cooney. 2h 5 0 2 5 0 Hent ine. 2h I 00 2 2 E. Spratt , 3b 4 1 1 0 1 Jones, SS, Jb 4 0 J I Grtlnt. 3b 5 I 1 1 1 in t he a fternoon, fo r the purpose of vo ting of Shaffner. 3 2 1 0 P reston, J1 2000 1 upon thc clucstioll of reducing its capit ;:ai to Edward W. Cooch, Cooch's Bridll'e. Cai ll . cf 5 0 I 2 0 S, 1.11l.l'd. 4 0 I 4 0 Malin. c J 0 I 100) f
,,~o n. let children go barefoot any ti re I a flOOde d region for Borne thllie to me. Cuts and scratches on o e leet ny become infected from rgallism left in the mud. 8 THE NEWARll l>OST, NEWARK, DELAWARE Arranging Fo'r C1t:tb Course Her! In June MERMAID Iincluded: a hort sto r y," ~ 4-'! y :::::::::::~~::~~~:~~:~~~::-:::::::' ISevM:-~eS~r~:rI~~;::;:entl ( ontinuecl from Page 4) in a TrojI y,:' b. ~lr '. H'J\\{'na Pen- \\'el'e: Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Derickson, lIIngton , Walnel 1 audaln. I.{'on ( onlinu d from Pag 1) Gil. IN REVIE" ' cntire length with cu rb, gutter und Mr. and Mrs. A. G. troud, Mr. und more, W. \ .. Naud ai~, B. W. P. Hick, perman nt puv ment, :\11'5, L. H. P nnington. Ralph Klalr;, readtnK, ' Ill GI'and: Kent Way - from outh ollege Jlal'mony Grange will hold its an- fathel"s Day,' by Mr,. l. ~ul (H1ntnre· l\lay 21, 1911 avenue to rchard road, new gutter nU1I1 slt'awbel'l'Y f sliv!!1 on June po m, "Gateway to Jun.," by Steel~ and paved, . ' . , . ,Atwell; rellding, "If I Call, Ly )li'-B 111 front of the hall. Tnls ) aI, there Marion Gilmore. 'f .a..a..a.~.a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a..a.AAAJ Lovett uvenue - fro'11 AcadelllY will be a platter supper served by the .. -;~~:n:;~~~~;~Wi;~!~~;W~¥; street to outh Chapel, paved with ladies. Al'I'angem nL are in charge of I The Fl'lerdshlp c1u" • . I!"d Cia), curb, guUer and perlllunent surface. all the offices. Next fonday evening, I'eek unday chool w", "ntl'rtained Personal , fain At rc t - East und We t, curb ,"FathH's Night" ~vill be observ.ed. by Mi s~ Nancy Brow.n., !'al day ~\'e. Mrs. amuel Frnzer, of 'Washing- and gutter extensions and some pav T.he pl'ogrnm at thIS week's meetll1g nmg, f lom 3 to 7, fOI ,I lilt! It ,upper. ton, D. ., has been the recent guest ing made to town Iinfits. ______, ThO RC present wm'e: ~I~ , I:l'lh Ball, of i\lr. larkson Paxso n. ' l\l anuel stl'cet - East Park place to leader; Dorothy. ,kl!1/", ~lar)' Mrs. J. M. onnel' is 'pending the Kells avcnu , curb and gutt~r on ly . . hak speare, :l1al'gan'l . 'lIa {"Iware week at the h ome of her father, G. Margaret street - from orth The GrOWl h Betty Cass, Mildred Burnh, Ill, (;rac; Fader. hapel to Race. tl'cet, paved and new ' B Burnham, Ann Rogers, . 'IIntl' Brown Mr. George F . m·tis and family ('urb and gutter. o f ul'eaucracy IJane Denni on, Dorothy Woo·'llI'ard. ' left Monday for their home in Colo_I New street - from Center to Ohoate By RAY 10 0 PITCAIIl Members and former I!h!llh~IR of rado Springs, aftel' an extended vi it Ist l:eet, pa,ved, concrete curb and gut with J Rankin Armstrong and fam- tel con tlucted. . atioMI C/aairmull . the Milford Cross R oad~ ('hr, 'al Club ily. . . ~ew London road - from old town Sell/wels 0/ til e Uepublrc __ Iand their families last c\'{'ning en. Miss Eleanor Harter is vi iting ' lim It to Boggy Run, new curb and lDuring the past five years the pop- joyed the annual picnic SUPI'~r ~~ t\'ed ulation of the District of Columbia, seat Icafeteria style on the la\lll of M friend in New Jersey. gutter, paved and bridge widened to ot our national government, has in- d r L T St t' r. Arthur Geesaman, of trickersville, accommodate present width of road creased more than 22 per cent. an]\l rs. . . aa. s home, Fox_ spent Thursday with his father, Mr. street, a\1 n w curb and gutter wi th No state, or group of states, has ?en Fa~·ms. The ev e l1ln ~ \~'a spent Finley Geesaman. way. idewalk extension. approaci:>.ed that rate of growth during III plaYll1g games and ~1l1s:nng . Mrs. the same period. It compares with a Carl Rees of ewark sling a KI'oUp of H . M. Campbell, who has been re North street - from Wilbur to I cuperating at Rehoboth, has ret.urned. Creek road, cu rb, gutter and graded. :~~:~:~~ :c~e::~o~~ 3.9 per cent for solos. Piano solos w 1'1' :iv~n hl' ~Ii 5 Miss Jennie Greg on spent Satur East Park place - curb and gutter What caused the jump? A recent J ean Eaton an.d 11"." . F. Jackson. day and Sunday with lIIr . John L. from Academy street to Manuel and report of the Census Bureau, whose es- Those present II1clud cd: ~f r. and Mrs. paved from Academy 650 feet eaRt timates supply the figures, attributes It Walter ewton, Mrs. F. Loyett. ~lr. Griffith of Coatsville. F~on t row, left to right-Laura B. Rutherford , New Castle County with permanent surface. to an unprecedented peace-time ln11ux and Mrs. G. K. Ball, Mi s~ Ru th Ball Mr .. Casperson, of Coo.h's Brirlge, Club Agent; Anne B. Moore, ussex County Club Agent; Helen L. Race stl'eet - from Margaret til Mr. and Mr . Leonard Paul visited her daughter, h s. William Il mstock, Kent ounty Club Agent. Back row-C. E. McCauley, State ~~or!:~~r~e':'::~;~~~~ ~d jc~b~~I~~ N elso~, orth Chapel, paved full width and functioning during the past !t: .Y years Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Lee LeWIS, Jean rowe, la t week. I Club Agent at large on the left, and A. D. Cobb, Acting Director of length. at Washington. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. W. Fl o~'d Jack. AIr. and Mrs. Norris Worrall and Agrcultural Etension Work at the Univer ity of Delaware. daughters, Evelyn and Elizabeth, Ray street - from North College These are significant tacts. They in- son, Billy Jackson, h . and Mr. troduce an arresting element of novelty Francis Lindell, Mr. and Mrs. Rich. were Philadelphia visitors last week. avenue to Rose street, excavated and A full program of events is rapidly i To Lh'e on Ca mpus News Notes Here and There widened. • being completed for the eighteenth The youthful clu b members will live ~:h;r1~:n:~~~e~~~~r~f ~:?tl~~~~~ ard Cooch, Vit'ginia Cooch, ~lr. and most striking growths heretofore have Mrs. Carl Rees, Mr. and ~ l l·s. Ca rl Elmer Elli on was one of a party Sunset road - from South College annual 4-H lub hort Course, which in the Univer ity residence halls dur- occurred along what might be de- Nelson and on, Mr. and _[1'5. John of ~O guests who attended the ]JoveI' avenue to Orchard road, paved with ing the Short Course, the boys in distllct meeting of insurance agents permanent top, new curb and gutter. is to be held at the University of Hartel' Hall and the girls in Sussex ~~r~~~o~tt~~. geographical and indus- Lynch, Charles , Hal'old and Merritt of the Prudential Insul'ance Co., held Townsend road - Sunset road to Delaware in Newark starting Wed- Hall at the Women's College. Boys Population Increased at the swltf4lsl Lynch, ~rs. Paul Lovett, .lfr. and last Friday under the management West Park plaee, graded. nesday, June 17, through Saturday, and girls wi ll eat together in Kent pace In states where new and prOOuc- Mrs. LOUIS DI'abeck, Mrs. Anna Cam tlve lands were being developed by eron, Anne Beyerlein, Mr ~. William of L. ]. Haye. Mr. Hayes was the Wilbur treet - from Prospect to June 20, according to A. D. Cobb, Hall, the dining hall at the Women's host at a banquet held at the Hotel NOI·th street, improved with cu rb, a&Ticulture; In cities where new and H . Dean, Helen and Mal'garet Dean Acting Director of Agricultural Ex- College. ~~~d~=:d::~~strles were originating Mrs .. Leon~rd Eastburn, ~l iss H ele~ Richardson on Friday afternoon. gutter and graded. tension Work in Delaware, who is in Be ides A. D. Cobb, C. E. McCauley, George E. Dutton, member of Class Winslow road - from Orch,ard road charge of the Short Course. tate Boy.' Club Agent at Large, Inevitably such growth 'meant greater Mal'tm, MI S Ruth Reed. Be y anJ of 1903 Delaware College, ' and so n of to South College avenue, new curb Laura B. Rutherforu, Helen L. Com- opportunity for the men and women Jane Staats, Mrs. Charles Grecr, Miss State Senator James E. Dutton, of and guttel', also paved with perman Among the events included on the stock, and Anne B. Moore, County who took part In the development; Sara Pennington, L. T. Staats, Jr., Seaford, has accepted the Assistant ent surface. tentative program are class sessions Club Agents in New Ca tIe, Kent, and !Tt~!!~ :,~I~h~~~ . the nation and Its G. E . Evans. and Paul J one~. Professorship in English at Dela Additional minor improvements at which memQers of the Univel'sity I ussex Counties, respectively, are But an unprecedented increase of Mr. S. L. Johnston is ill at hi s home ware College. have been made such a enlarging and Extension staffs will meet with assisting in planning tbe program for job-holders at Washington has quite near Milltown. a different meaning. It shows Duly a The Horrigan Constructing Co. has the curb radiuses at Main and Chap- the Club members; recreation periods the Short Coul·se. They will all be on el; Delaware avenue and hapel; growth ot Bureaucracy. Unlike the men MI'. and Mrs. Reynold. Rockwell about completed the road leading which will incl ude game, swimming, I hand during the four-clay meeting at and women who, by thetr energy and and son, spent the week-end in Wash. from Newark to Appleton. 'fain and Academy; and ew and and organiz d sports; a sembly peri- the Univer iw and will take an active ington, D. C, A lasting memorial to the civic NOI·th Chapel. Removing iron plates ods, ancl other feature planned to part in the 'various sessions of the ~~:~~~b~S~~rn~~~u~o;~ d~:~~~Pg~:~: co mmittee-a fountain erected at the and replacing with concrete drain at interest the boys and girl. hort oU I·se. :rue!.\~~n~r ~~;~~lg . Jo~h~~I~~~~~O;, Mr. and 1rs. W. Floyd Jackson front of the college, a town clock and Delaware a\' nue and Academy. Instead-{)ut of the share ot all men were guest of friends in Asbury clu tel' of light -all in orne pretty (orm Drains and women who labor In the home, on Park over the week-end. de.· ign would be welcome. Local Attorneys Are ILaw Scho I of the farm. In the factory or tn business. Academy street su rface water di And the greater the number of those Miss Clara D. Morrison of Phila· The 'ewark High Varsity won \'et'ted from the old open ditch into Admitted to Supreme Bar Pennsyh'ania, f rom which he grad- who merely consume, the greater the delphia is visiting at the home of from the ewark High crub on a new storm drain for over 600 fect. uated in June. 1931, with the degree burden on those who produce. Mr. and II' . L. H. Pennington. Monday by the score of 3-2. iII ew drain laid on Am tel avenue G OI'ge BUI-ton Pear ~o n, Jr., of of Bachelor of Laws. The Teachers of 'ew Castle Co. _'e wark; Edwin D. teel, Jr. former- from Elkton road ea t over 200 feet ly of Newark; Ivan ulberts n, and He is a former member of the enjoyed a walk under the direction of and from Ol'chard road west a di - • •••• • •• • •••••••••••• • •••••• • ••• ••• ••••••• • ••••••.a.'ll Alexander Lowber :\'ichols of \\ i1- l\'ewark Board of Education and suc uperinter1dent paid last Saturday. tance of 400 feet .improved. They observed birds, flowers, etc., in water piped into outlet. miftgtnn. all engaged in law practice ceeded i\ l r. H. Hanison Gray in 1933. th wood around Brandywine outh Chapel street - from Contin in the offices of former Fedel'al Judge teel, former manager of the Springs. TRI-ST ATE STORE ental avenue outh 250 fect, new con ~.i:C~ic~ 1 in ~~~~Ti~it:~el:eta~;~mi~~;:~en~~ ewark Lumber ompany, lived in I Garage For Newark crete duct con tructed. ourt on Monday. Judge Morris ac- ewark fo r sev ral y aI's. He is the Libby's Sour Pickles , .... , .... , .. , ...... llc Newark is to have a garage. A. F . orbit street - en,tire length (950 com panied the gl'OUP and recommend- Son of Mr. and .1111' '1 Ec!win D. Steel, Fadel', the local electrician and auto feet) drained by a large pipe laid ed their admittance. 1'., now . of Phtlade phla. MI'. teel ,under the street saving ~\'ea r by Home Dressed Poultry for All Purposes .. , _ . , ,tb 35c expert, will erect a garage on Main I P · on 0[' Dr and Mr ,wa admItted to the Delaware Bar at wat l' on new pavi~g. JI r. eal . on, s ' . . the samc time as MI'. Pear on, after street on the vacant lot known as Su n et road - an extension to th:! G. Burton Pear. on, was adll1ltted to receiving hi s law degree f rom Yale. the Roach property. The building the Delaware Bar .by t he upreme H ha also b en pl'acticing in the J ustrigh.t Crushed Corn , , , , , , .... , , .. , ,2 cans 19c will be one story brick 27 x 60, a torm water drain laid in 192 made along and across for 200 feet. ourt of Delaware 111 Dovel', .on ~c - office of Judge MOITis. glass front and 10 foot cement drive. tober 27, 1931. H e wa. born 111 lIlld- Lovett avenue - new drain pipe Reg. Size o. 2 T om~toes ...... , ...-4 cans for 27c An office and store for electrical and dletown and lived there until 1920 hom outh hapel west 300 feet to automobile supplies will occupy the when he took up his residence in improve drainage from low ground GLASS CLQTHES front of the building. In the real' will N wark. nOI·th. ew pipe laid acro s t he Uni be capacity for ten machine ' and iiiI'. Pear.·on received his early edu- tfhread, yarn and new fabrics spun Jarmon & Moore wOI'k shop. A concrete washing stand \'er ity of Delaware campus II' m outh ollege avenue east 300 feei. cation in the Middletown and ewal'k from the same substance that makes Free Delh·ery Phone 220 ?\ ewarl.. Del. and a pit !for working under the ma public sc hools and a lso the Wilming- bottles or window panes are now be- chine will be installed. The build \ arious improvements were al so ing will have a cellar, steam heat and made in the .drainage condition oy ton Fl'iend. School , from which he ing perfecled. Read about this new .... ,"""""""""""""""""""""" "'''' ditche and the cleaning of old drain. graduated in 1923. In ] 927, he I'e- invention in the May 31 issue of the electric wire throughout. Every con- ce ived the degree of Bachelor of Arts American Weekly, th big magazine venience for the rna tel'S of the car Water ystcm from Princeton niver ity, graduat- which comes with the Baltimore Sun will be given. An extension of 50 feet to the ing with high honors. After leaving day American. Your newsdealer has T he work on the building will start water main was made on Ray street Princeton, Mr. P earson attended the your copy. in a few day.. It will be known as and new valves placed at stragetic ======the Newark Garage. points along the y tern to im prove Coll ege ~o(es contl'ol and I'educing inconveniences to con. umers. It Always Room at the Top" 'l'he Juniors are actively engaged One new well was brought in and in co mpleting arrangements for the two new pumping units were install Farewell Hop to be given by them to ed, improving supply and greatly re the class of 1911 on Wednesday eve ducing pumping costs. ning, June 21. An innovation which I ume~ improvements introduce'l will be very much apprec iated by the for repairing main leaks. In repair sterner sex, is that it will be li "shil't ing old house en' ice copp I' tub waist dance" and not even the ladies ing was introduced with success and will be expected to wear coats. The at little convenience to traffic. "male man" who persists in sticking A daily, monthly and yeal'ly record to the old conventions and appears in of all water pumped, currcnt con .pB~GAINS this very useful part of masculine sumed and co t of same, was accur wearing apparel will be strictly de ately kept to show the downward trop. IN GOOD USED CA S costs a impro'.·ements were mad ~ , Flushing Gutlers leaks stopped and efficiency increa. ed. At the suggestion of the Civic Com ow Town lap ;\Iadc ~ ~ ~ mittee Town Council ha consented to Among other things accomplished Here' your opportunity to own a good used car al:1I bu r flush the gutters every Saturday clul'ing thc Sigmund admini tration morning. A local note ir. the Press as engineel' was a new town map, it on reasonable terms_ All model and make at pricl'.' fa r stating the time will appear and all showing projections for future street below the usual cost for I!a rs in thi excell ent concJjliol1. ('ome residents are urged to use this op and a large-scale propel·ty map with in today and look over these bargain. portnnity in a bit of "cleaning up" the ownership of various tracts and out front. pal'cels of land contained within the In a walk around town, one is im 1934 Old mobilE' Eight Trunk 1930 Pontiac 'edan town limits shown. The record is Sedan 1930 Chev rolet Truck. l'z (on PI' ssed with the condition in which constantly maintained by in forma Chapel street is kept, This has been tion secu red from the Recorder of 1934 Chevrolet Master Coach with dual wheels pronounced by several as the ban Deeds' office of ew Castle County. 1933 DeSoto Sport Coupe 1930 Chevrolet Truck, liz (on ner section of the town, when the The Light Department's distribu 1982 ' Chevrolet Sport Coupe with ingle wheel: cleaning of pavements and the sweep tion system was modernized and thc 1931 Chevrolet Coupe ev€ral other lo w-priced cars ing of gutters is ' concerned. police-call system was devi eel, being the only one of it kind in the State. Real Bargains Every Car Recon di(io\\,d STRANGE HONEYMOON Price, meanwhile, is continuing to calTY on with extensive impl'ove An absorbing article reveaiing the ment ordered by the new Council. Financed Through the Economical G, M, A, C. 6 1", Plan hair-raising tales and startling sights Work is progressing rapidly on the of a newly-wed couple who visited new stoi'm s cw~r being constructed Devil's Island. On" of the many fea on Old Oak road. Wilmington AutQ Sales Companr tures in th May 31 issue of the There is a pussibility of work start American Weekly, the mp.gazin ing on the construction of a new The maxim is especiallY.!lppUcable Itruction relieve ~ of ~ NEWARK BRANCH Phone 27 OPE EVE~~G which comes regularly with the Balti sanital'Y sewer on Hayes street, north to the 1ew 1936 Nub and LaFayette Ituffy, enuou ' more unday American. Get your and south on Delaware avenue, this cars with the increued helght:.!ld in Iow~ Yen ~Ia bet 164 E- MAIN T_ NEWARK, DEL. week, it has been stated, headroom prcJViding extra comfort for ter, too, Three perIOIII caD lit COlD....: copy from your lQ:Cal new dealer. ~ge:L High ci!IllngI made pot- fortable IUd reIIiIed III till atra ... liblllbj all«eel. oae-plece body COIl- eeatl.