NEWARK POST Alf but Res Ed

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

NEWARK POST Alf but Res Ed period ponenta the lead blue and until the ing Was game. number NEWARK POST alf but res ed. LUME VIII NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DEL., FEBRUARY 28, '9' 7 NUMBER -6 a good Topics Of The Day ISchool Children In jClub Wome~ Drop • . New Profeaaors Recom- SPEAKERS URGE T B D' d' Movie Censorship Bill mended By Trustees o e ISCUSSe I Charmmg Operetta ! Miss Emily P. Bissell ha I'e- At a meeting of the Executive NEW TAX LAWS --- I --- cently announced that the State Committee held at the residence Ab/ Speaker at the Women's Show Wonderful Progress Under Federation of ~omen's Club ' of Mr. Henry B. Tho~pson, on Why Urge Rel'orms Without First PrOVIding Means, They Ask " . would not have mtroduced and l'FebrUary 23, the followmg recom- J' College I DtrectlOn of M,ss Shepardson would not advocate in the present mendations to the Board were A repre entative gatheriilg of on visiting it, until a ll danger or The le~t ure announced for Fri- The entertainment given by Legislature a bill providing for a agreed upon, That tax-payers of this community at- blindness is pa t. She figures da)' eve ning, March second, at 7.30, school children in the Opera House censol'ship of moving pictures t{)' 1. John Rl)bert Moore, A. B., A . 'tended the meeting held in. the Ithat every citizen as an agent d in S!'.ie nce Hall, Women' College, last Friday evening mea ured up be exhibited in this state. Mem- M., Ph. D., be appointed A sist- 'Opera House on Monday evening, 'production is wort'll to the stat prlJll1 lS eS to be ~f unusual i.nterest. in every particular Lo the promises bel's of the Executive Committee ant Professor of English at a sal- under the auspices of the Taxa- $2500, and he takes care of him Th e speaker, MI s Janet Richards. made by the management. It was of the Federation and of the Nev ary of $1,500, beginning Septem- 'tion Revision Committee. Dr. These things, apparently, to)rm is H \Va hington woman, known indeed the best school entertain- Century Club of Wilmington have bel' 1, 1917 Caleb R. Layton and Robert G no part of our thought in Del a th rou ghout the East for her able ment ever given in Newark. The had s uch a bill under considera- Mr. Moore has taught at the Houston. of Georgetown, t ·h e ware. Do yo u know that it costs di sc ussions of :ul'l'ent. events. business manager triumphantly tion for 'everal weeks, providing University of Missouri and at the speakel's, urged the public, men $200 to get into the Court of Ap­ P er ~ o na ll y acquamted With the announces one hundred sixty- that pictul'es approved by the cen- 1Jniversity of Wi sconsin and is and women, to see that two bills peals in Delaware? That means, national leaders, Mis~ Richa:ds se';cn dol al 3 :ldded to the chool SOl'S of Pennsylvania or Mary l ~n~ highly recommended by the au- now before the Legislature-the friends. that the ri ch men c~ '1 gat he rs at first hand mfo rmatlOn fund as the result of the perform- 'Wou ld be acceptable for exhlbl- thorities of both institutions. He Graduated Inheritance Tax, and get there, but the poor men ('!I n t whic h in these critical times, can- ance, but the spectators declare tion in Delaware. will receive the degree of Ph. 1 the Equalization Tax, be passed. I am working, my friends, to nol fa il to int~rest every Am~rican. the money represents, by no After two conferences with the from Harvard in June. Dr. Layton dwelt upon the ef- create a recognition in the minds The .Iect.ure. IS .for .the pUbhc. A means, the ,:"ost gratifying part of moving ~picture thea~re. managers 2. Finley M. Foster, A. B., A. f e c t of Delaware's antiquated of the people of the ~q.uity, the conli al mVltatlOn IS extended to the entertamment. Newark, s uf- and producers of Wtlmmgton the M., Ph. D .. be appointed Instruc- taxation law, as applied to Edu- righteousness, of a revi Ion of the el' er.\'one. fering f rom a dearth of musical club women decided not to advo- tor in English at a salary of $1, cation and E tates. "Look at tax laws. There are people wh') talent for years, could well ap- cate a censorship law at present. 500 beginning September 1 1917. Education," he said. "One of the deny the righteou ness of a man Attends Pageant At Columbia pre.ciate . the marks of . promise Miss Bis·sell said the club women Successor to MI'. Frederi'ck P old est states of the Union, close paying a tax accordin~ to hi 1'1' fe or Myrtle V. Caudell, of which the young people dlsplay~d , felt t hat they did not ~are to put Pohl, resigned. to the Atlantic seaboard, right wealth. Every man should pay th Department of Home Econom- after ?nly one term. of expert .I n- their stamp of unqualtfied appro- Mr. Foster has taught succe&s- next to our oldest ci vilization, acording to his means. I say w ~ ir ~. \\ omen's Go llege of Delaware, structlOn. The ~USIC had a s ~m g val .on the censors of Pennsy !- fully at New York University for with in Sussex county, after 250 want ne wtax Jaws because W f) attended the annual meeting C' and ~hythm whl.c h was e pecla lly vania a~d Marylan? .because they three years, having had charge of years of settlement, only 350 for- want new. ~ax . laws be ca u s~ we th e Teachers' College Alumni, and pleasmg; the chtldren proved that are subject to pohtlcal changes the Freshman Composition from eign born; with no insuperable these old Illl qUltous laws stl'l cken the Festival at Columbia Univer- t~ey have ~earned to s ing~ reall y which might lower their stand- February to September, 1916. His or. abno~'ma l conditi?n to contend fro.m our books because they are si tl' last Friday and Saturday smg,-mus1cally: The .entIre p.er- ards. training .and experience fit him with ; With all our history back .of unjust, and because .th.ey ~reed the rh'e pageant, The Spirit of Ameri- for~ance .was given With a finish I well for the position here. Iu s, and yet. rated a the. thlr- wrong that followf\ mJustIc~. ha ized Law Liberty ann which dehghted everyone. ILecture On Yellowstone Park 3. Charles Ganson Cook A. B .. teenth most Ignorant state m the Delaware men of RevolutIO nary c~'r :i~l: as three' ideals 'that The r!sing curtain revealed t he On Saturday the 24th, which was A. M., be appointed A ss ist~nt PI'O- Il!nion! And ~xact ! y in ?ropor- days made just laws, and they put sho uld be ever before the citizens I empe~or s &:arden, a . spot . ma~ e an "Open Night" at the Women's fessor in Modern Languages, at Il tIon to our !ntelhgence IS our these laws on our books. A hun- r· ' t ation beautiful With flowel'lng wisteria I Co ll ege Dea n Robinson gave a lec- salary of $1500 beginning Sep- government. Delaware has re- dred and fifty years ago they were o ,I gl ea n . and boughs of ~pple ?Iossoms. Th.e l'ture o~ "The Yellowstone Park." tember 1, 1917. Succes. or to Mr' l mained stationa.ry, she ha~ failed perfectly fair; they didn't then WEDDINGS emper.or and hiS tra1l1, the beautI- 1Nearly a hundred slides were A. W, Bernhardt. to keep pace With her nelghbo~ :s take advantage of the poor man. f~1 prmcess, ~bout to ce .l e br a t~ her s hown. giving the stude"nts glimp- Mr. Cook has taught at the be c~ u se she .has neglected pi 1- In those days there .were ?n ly Tweed-Robinson eighteenth birthday, With hel at ses of river, geysel', rock forma- Massachusetts In stitute of Tech- mal y educatIOn. three classes of wealth. negloe , ;\Ii. E ssie Tweed and Mr. Vo- tendants, m.E.d.c the scene a color- jtion, and flol'a and fauna of thr nology, Boston. He will probabl" j Then there is the .question ~f l li. ve s t oc k . and real estate. But ,hell Robinson were quietly mar- f ul and bl'llitant one. Act two, ,g reat National Park. receive his Ph D from Harvarc' Estates. Do we prOVide as Ilh- smce that day we have gone to I' ied at the home of the bride's presented the revels of Saucer- . J " . noi s by a state-wide commissi'Jn I·sleep. We have let the old laws arent. Mr. and Mrs. Mancil eye . and his Sprites! arou.nd the HOW LOYAL MEN m u;e' E CI k Ph D A _ to go into every home . after the remain alth.ough a co ndition has d Tw eed. on Wednesday, February cave of Inky Night, 111 which the I ' YLAND' 4. re . aI', ..., S death of the bread WinneI', and Is prung up m the last forty years 2 t ~t, b~' tt> " Rev. E. P. Roberts. princess had been concealed. The KEPT MAR s l ~ t~nt P~ofe ss or of Busm es Ad- find out what fin a ncial and tem- that has made the e laws iniqui- After Ma,'ch 25th, Mr.
Recommended publications
  • Idaho Room Books by Date
    Boise Public Library - Idaho Room Books 2020 Trails of the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness Fuller, Margaret, 1935- 2020 Skiing Sun Valley : a history from Union Pacific to the Holdings Lundin John W. 2020 Sky Ranch : living on a remote ranch in Idaho Phelps, Bobbi, author. 2020 Tales and tails : a story runs through it : anthologies and previously Kleffner, Flip, author. 2020 little known fishing facts Symbols signs and songs Just, Rick, author. 2020 Sun Valley, Ketchum, and the Wood River Valley Lundin, John W. 2020 Anything Will Be Easy after This : A Western Identity Crisis Maile, Bethany, author. 2020 The Boise bucket list : 101 ways to explore the City of Trees DeJesus, Diana C, author. 2020 An eye for injustice : Robert C. Sims and Minidoka 2020 Betty the Washwoman : 2021 calendar. 2020 Best easy day hikes, Boise Bartley, Natalie L. 2020 The Castlewood Laboratory at Libuyu School : a team joins together O'Hara, Rich, author. 2020 Apple : writers in the attic Writers in the Attic (Contest) (2020), 2020 author. The flows : hidden wonders of Craters of the Moon National Boe, Roger, photographer. 2020 Monument and Preserve Educating : a memoir Westover, LaRee, author. 2020 Ghosts of Coeur d'Alene and the Silver Valley Cuyle, Deborah. 2020 Eat what we sow cook book 2020 5 kids on wild trails : a memoir Fuller, Margaret, 1935- 2020 Good time girls of the Rocky Mountains : a red-light history of Collins, Jan MacKell, 1962- 2020 Montana, Idaho, and Wyoming 100 Treasure Valley pollinator plants. 2020 A hundred little pieces on the end of the world Rember, John, author.
    [Show full text]
  • Henry King (Director) Ç”Μå½± ĸ²È¡Œ (Ť§Å…¨)
    Henry King (director) 电影 串行 (大全) Pay Dirt https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/pay-dirt-3373234/actors Social Briars https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/social-briars-3487390/actors One Hour Before Dawn https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/one-hour-before-dawn-3549539/actors Dice of Destiny https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/dice-of-destiny-3186693/actors The Bond Boy https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-bond-boy-3520051/actors The White Dove https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-white-dove-3523359/actors The Sting of the Lash https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/the-sting-of-the-lash-3522853/actors Help Wanted-Male https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/help-wanted-male-3129968/actors When a Man Rides Alone https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/when-a-man-rides-alone-3567696/actors Shadows and Sunshine https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/shadows-and-sunshine-3346009/actors Told at Twilight https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/told-at-twilight-2870550/actors Salvage https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/salvage-3470354/actors Should a Wife Forgive? https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/should-a-wife-forgive%3F-3482558/actors Uncharted Channels https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/uncharted-channels-3549201/actors Sunshine and Gold https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/sunshine-and-gold-3377339/actors Southern Pride https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/southern-pride-22009953/actors All the World to Nothing https://zh.listvote.com/lists/film/movies/all-the-world-to-nothing-2837619/actors
    [Show full text]
  • Lost Silent Feature Films
    List of 7200 Lost U.S. Silent Feature Films 1912-29 (last updated 11/16/16) Please note that this compilation is a work in progress, and updates will be posted here regularly. Each listing contains a hyperlink to its entry in our searchable database which features additional information on each title. The database lists approximately 11,000 silent features of four reels or more, and includes both lost films – 7200 as identified here – and approximately 3800 surviving titles of one reel or more. A film in which only a fragment, trailer, outtakes or stills survive is listed as a lost film, however “incomplete” films in which at least one full reel survives are not listed as lost. Please direct any questions or report any errors/suggested changes to Steve Leggett at [email protected] $1,000 Reward (1923) Adam And Evil (1927) $30,000 (1920) Adele (1919) $5,000 Reward (1918) Adopted Son, The (1917) $5,000,000 Counterfeiting Plot, The (1914) Adorable Deceiver , The (1926) 1915 World's Championship Series (1915) Adorable Savage, The (1920) 2 Girls Wanted (1927) Adventure In Hearts, An (1919) 23 1/2 Hours' Leave (1919) Adventure Shop, The (1919) 30 Below Zero (1926) Adventure (1925) 39 East (1920) Adventurer, The (1917) 40-Horse Hawkins (1924) Adventurer, The (1920) 40th Door, The (1924) Adventurer, The (1928) 45 Calibre War (1929) Adventures Of A Boy Scout, The (1915) 813 (1920) Adventures Of Buffalo Bill, The (1917) Abandonment, The (1916) Adventures Of Carol, The (1917) Abie's Imported Bride (1925) Adventures Of Kathlyn, The (1916) Ableminded Lady,
    [Show full text]
  • Filmography: Balboa Amusement Producing Company, 1913-1918
    Balboa Amusement Producing Company, 1913-1918 Film Title (no. of reels) Film Company Distributor Release Date • Abide With Me (1) Pathéplay General Film Co. Mar. 11, 1914 • Acid Test, The (3) Pathé Exchange Feb. 27, 1915 • Adventures of a Madcap, Pathé Exchange Nov. 03, 1915 The (4) • Alien Blood, The (4) Fortune Photoplay General Film Co. Mar. 29, 1917 • All on Account of Polly Pathéplay General Film Co. Feb. 13, 1914 (1) • Almost Crazy Joy BOA • Ancient Blood, The (3) Knickerbocker Star General Film Co. June 23, 1916 • Angel Child (5) Plaza Pictures Hodkinson Sept. 09, 1919 • Awakening, The (3) White Star BOA Oct. 05, 1914 (The Dawning) • Bab the Fixer (5) Mutual Aug. 13, 1917 • Bear Escape, A (1) Joy BOA Nov. 07, 1914 • Bell Boy, The (2) Comique Film Corp. Paramount Mar. 18, 1918 • Beloved Vampire, The Knickerbocker Star General Film Co. Feb. 16, 1917 (3) • Best Man, The (4) Falcon Features General film Co. Oct. 12, 1917 • Better Instinct (2) Knickerbocker Star General Film Co. Oct. 06, 1916 • Better Woman, The (3) Knickerbocker Star General Film Co. Aug. 11, 1916 • Betty Be Good (5) Mutual July 16, 1917 • Beulah (6) Alliance May 08, 1915 • Big Brother (3) Knickerbocker Star General Film Co. Feb. 11, 1916 • Birth of a Man (5) BS Moss Apr. 01, 1916 (When the Wheel Turns) • Bit of Kindling, A (5) Mutual June 18, 1917 • Bitter Sweets (3) Nemo BOA Nov. 03, 1914 • Bliss of Ignorance, The (3) Pathé Exchange Mar. 23, 1915 • Bolt from the Sky, The (3) Pathé Exchange Nov. 08, 1915 • Boob and the Bandit, Joy BOA The (1) 1 • Boots and Saddles (5) BS Moss Oct.
    [Show full text]
  • Weight Loss Program Teaches Healthy Eating Laura Edington Al Concepts, Such As Losing 10-May 29
    WWW.YOURDAILYJOURNAL.COM Wednesday, March 27, 2013 Rockingham, NC 50 cents Weight loss program teaches healthy eating Laura Edington al concepts, such as losing 10-May 29. Richmond County Daily Journal weight and keeping it off, “The program is extreme- An eight-week class that weigh-ins, healthy recipe ly effective as long as par- will help people eat healthy tasting and a one-on-one con- ticipants have a will to and lose weight will begin sultation with Mammarella. change their behaviors … ,” on April 10. Mammarella said that Mammarella said. Sarah Mammarella, during the first week, it is She said the one-on-one MS, RD, LDN, through important for participants consultation is important the Richmond County to schedule a consultation because it allows partici- Cooperative Extension, is to come up with a realistic pants to figure out problem offering the program called, weight loss goal. areas in their lifestyle. “Eat Healthy, Be Active The program will be “I think that the one- Weight Loss Workshops.” Wednesday evenings from 6 on-one consultation is the key to success for some of Contributed photo The eight-week class will to 7 p.m. at the Agricultural Two groups participated in the weight loss pilot program and lost a total of more involve different nutrition- Services Center from April See WEIGHT LOSS | 3A than 150 pounds and more than 45 inches off their waist. Operation Medicine Drop has great turn-out Upham elected to Long-Term Care & Rehabilitation Governing Council Special to the Daily Journal es they represent. They Patty Upham, director also play a liaison role of FirstHealth Home Care with other health care and Services, has been elected consumer organizations to the governing council concerned with similar of the American Hospital issues.
    [Show full text]
  • The Image of the Journalist in Silent Film, Part One: 1890 to 1919
    Journalist in Silent Film 35 The Image of the Journalist in Silent Film, 1890 to 1929: Part One 1890 to 1919 Joe Saltzman Professor of Journalism Director of the Image of the Journalist in Popular Culture (IJPC) A Project of the Norman Lear Center Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism University of Southern California Los Angeles, CA [email protected] with Liz Mitchell Senior Research Associate Image of the Journalist in Popular Culture (IJPC) Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism University of Southern California Los Angeles, CA [email protected] Introduction This is the first installment in the landmark study of “The Image of the Journalist in Silent Film, 1890 to 1929.” It covers 1,948 films from 1890 to 1919. Part Two will cover the years from 1920 to the beginning of recorded sound in 1929. This is the first comprehensive study of the beginning of cinema’s earliest depictions of the journalist, mostly newspaper reporters, editors, and publishers. Newspaper fiction flourished at a time when journalism “was a revolutionary force, tearing up traditions, redefining public morality, and lending voice and encouragement to the disenfranchised. It reflected currents sweeping through every phase of American life. The skyrocketing circulations, the manic search for exclusive news, the sensational headlines, and the concentration of newspaper ownership were signs of an America changing from a rural society to an urban and industrial one. Since journalism so clearly mirrored and so loudly supported the new order, it became the preeminent symbol for the mechanization, standardization, democratization, and vulgarization of culture.”1 Historian Howard Good points out that the 1890s “represented a watershed not only in American journalism but also in American history.
    [Show full text]
  • Excerpt from Balboa Films, by Jean-Jacques Jura & Rodney Bardin
    Maid of the Wild. Three-reel drama (815m). Balboa Amusement Producing Co., Released, Oct. 9, 1915, by Pathé Frères. Cast: Baby Marie Osborne, Marguerite Nichols (Lucy Bingham), Gordon Sackville (James Sterling). Commentary: Baby Marie Osborne appeared for the first time in this movie, though her name did not show in the credits. According to Tony Scott, Baby Marie made 28 five-reel films and 2 two-reel films, and some claim that she performed at Balboa till 1919, though most probably she was already making movies in Glendale at the Diando Studios by that time (“Southern Exposure” 132). Of the 30 movies with Baby Marie, only 8 have been conservatively listed as ones made at Balboa Studios: 1915, Maid of the Wild, Should a Wife Forgive?; 1916, Joy and the Dragon, Little Mary Sunshine, Shadows and Sunshine; 1917, Sunshine and Gold, Told at Twilight, and Twin Kiddies. Ankerich explains in Broken Silence that Baby Marie always accompanied her parents who played bit parts at Balboa Studio. Unexpectedly, Marie was asked one day to play a little boy, since no boy was available the moment production was scheduled to begin. Marie told Ankerich, “I had a Dutch bob, and when they put little boy’s clothes on me, I was the little boy they needed” (225). In this way, Baby Marie’s career was launched with this film. According to Ankerich, both the public and Pathé liked her performance. At the height of her acting career during the silent era, Baby Marie was reportedly making as much as $1000 per week.
    [Show full text]
  • History of American Literature
    History of American Literature Reuben Post Halleck This page copyright © 2002 Blackmask Online. http://www.blackmask.com PREFACE CHAPTER I. COLONIAL LITERATURE CHAPTER II. THE EMERGENCE OF A NATION CHAPTER III. THE NEW YORK GROUP CHAPTER IV. THE NEW ENGLAND GROUP CHAPTER V. SOUTHERN LITERATURE CHAPTER VI. WESTERN LITERATURE CHAPTER VII. THE EASTERN REALISTS SUPPLEMENTARY LIST OF AUTHORS AND THEIR CHIEF WORKS Produced by Tom Allen, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. PREFACE The wide use of the author's History of English Literature, the favor with which it has been received in all parts of the United States, and the number of earnest requests for a History of American Literature on the same plan, have led to the writing of this book. It has not appeared sooner because the author has followed his rule of making a careful first-hand study, not only of all the matter discussed, but also of a far greater amount, which, although it must be omitted from a condensed textbook, is, nevertheless, necessary as a background for judgment and selection. The following chapters describe the greatest achievements in American literature from the earliest times until the present. Many pupils fail to obtain a clear idea of great American authors and literary movements because textbook writers and teachers ignore the element of truth in the old adage, ŖThe half is greater than the whole,ŗ and dwell too much on minor authors and details, which could reasonably be expected to interest only a specialist. In the following pages especial attention has been paid, not only to the individual work of great authors, but also to literary movements, ideals, and animating principles, and to the relation of all these to English literature.
    [Show full text]
  • List of 7200 Lost US Silent Feature Films 1912-29
    List of 7200 Lost U.S. Silent Feature Films 1912-29 (last updated 12/29/16) Please note that this compilation is a work in progress, and updates will be posted here regularly. Each listing contains a hyperlink to its entry in our searchable database which features additional information on each title. The database lists approximately 11,000 silent features of four reels or more, and includes both lost films – approximately 7200 as identified here – and approximately 3800 surviving titles of one reel or more. A film in which only a fragment, trailer, outtakes or stills survive is listed as a lost film, however “incomplete” films in which at least one full reel survives are not listed as lost. Please direct any questions or report any errors/suggested changes to Steve Leggett at [email protected] $1,000 Reward (1923) Adam And Evil (1927) $30,000 (1920) Adele (1919) $5,000 Reward (1918) Adopted Son, The (1917) $5,000,000 Counterfeiting Plot, The (1914) Adorable Deceiver , The (1926) 1915 World's Championship Series (1915) Adorable Savage, The (1920) 2 Girls Wanted (1927) Adventure In Hearts, An (1919) 23 1/2 Hours' Leave (1919) Adventure Shop, The (1919) 30 Below Zero (1926) Adventure (1925) 39 East (1920) Adventurer, The (1917) 40-Horse Hawkins (1924) Adventurer, The (1920) 40th Door, The (1924) Adventurer, The (1928) 45 Calibre War (1929) Adventures Of A Boy Scout, The (1915) 813 (1920) Adventures Of Buffalo Bill, The (1917) Abandonment, The (1916) Adventures Of Carol, The (1917) Abie's Imported Bride (1925) Adventures Of Kathlyn, The (1916)
    [Show full text]