·ltle Newark Post NEWARK, DELAWARE, S EPTEMBER 24, 1924. N

Firemen Win First HOW' T HE INorman H. Collison, rmu.... u_mm ... mumm __ mu __ m__ ._ um_mmmu_um_m_mu .. __ mu.. _...... mm ...... --m·11

:.~~:~:~~fl~l!:~::~ : "~:U~:J:r[.~:·~~~~~ i D.~::~:~!~~sJ~~!::i:. I ~· ·· ...~·~ ·~~~·~~!~~~· ... ?·~·~~·~ ....~ .~~.~, ~.~ .~~. ..: .~~.~.:...... Ill Been Feature of Firemens' \ ! und a complete Newark Re- I day Night Calts Gloom Men's "Frosh" Enrollment Reaches 110· Dr. Stearns Addresses Parades All Summer - tail ~ I arket Report, including ' Over Campus Here 107 N Gi I· E W 'C 'C . d· 68 in Line Last Night I ~ ~~eP r ~:c;rain, Meal, ~t eats :\orman Harold olli on, aged 20 ew r s nt~r omen s ollege I onvocahon Au lenc~ Till I I ,hirt of the Aetna Ho e, Farmers. Hou ewives, ~t e r- year' . of Bridge\'ill, Del., and a Total of Universitt Student Body Will Reach Well Over Degrees Conferred on Mem- Ho nK lind Ladder Compuny, of chants and Out of Town hop- Junior in th Unh' I' ity of Delaware, 50 A d' ng L F- rel 5 k b f C ark, ag in flashed to the front at the per are il\\'ited to take advan- was fatally injur d hortly after 0, ccor B t0 a~*: IlgE - Newar era N19~ /asa - Two Flrl'lllln', Parade in Huvre de Grace tage of T he Po \' Market col- midnight, Monday morning, wh n the oyl, 14 If I, nter ew ro elsorl . III' l'\·,·ning. umn. car he wa driving wa ' struck by 11 M ANY ENT E R HIS CO U R S E ollege totalled 105 und at the \\-om- (3.1- P. ~1. freight train on the D laware Road I Till· :\l'wark laddie. were awarded at th cros 'ing in Bridgedlle. ======en' ollege, 107. The 'niver ity of Dclawur WII till' IiI''' l:a~ h prize of 25.00 for th Young ollison was thrown out of ' It wa the lurge t Freshman enroll- offi ially opened for IInother term thi' br'; loo king outfit in line. Firemen th car again t a telegraph pole and I ment in the hi. torv of the lutter in- afternoon shortly after thr e 0' lock, il"m " dozen nearby town comp ted Savage Gets 10 Years utTered a fractured kull. He died I titution.· when the unnual Convocation exer- in thl' parade. which wa held in con- F about fifte n minutes later. The clas of 19~:. i believed to ci es were held under the trees on the ju\;ctiu!l with the Havre de Grac Fire- or Attack On Girl From report of the tragedy, it was hold the record at the ~len' s olleg. upper campus. Illen·, ( nrnh·al. • learned that the young man wa re- 'Yhen that elas enter d in 191" ov r Th Rpeaker of the day was Dr. AI - ~Ixty- ... ight men were in line a 30 Lashes and $200 Fine Allo ' turning to his home in Bridgeville, 1~0 m n were enrolled. fr d Eme [ tearn. head master of ·"\\·,·ll·k ~w ung into he proce ion. I d d h I PIII'II' p- Ando\' I' ' cadelll'" l'n '1 ' . mpose on Hockessin a.n a( to.pped hi coup to talk. to I - -"' J ' " a. a- 'Tw ." \'-four member of the onti- Neara in Court oll.le acquamtan~e near the cro mg. .\' U'al·k }-OllllgStCI'S E liteI' chu etts. one of the leading prepurn- l1~n"II' Da d helped well the total. . EVIdently he dId not see the ap- )1ewark . ent fourt n of h r duugh- tory schools in the country. Jlanv ;\t'wark- r~ "followed the fire- wift a nd peed~ ' ju tice wa meted prouching train, moving at u moder- tel' to th Women's 011 ge thi year, President Hullihen's announcement IIll.II:' " Hane de Grace, and they re- out by Judge Richard and Rodlley ate rate of peed, for it i reported mo t of whom are graduates from at 'OI\\'ocl1tion today w re as follow ' : pIll hat he locul boy made a great in the ourt of General es ions he drove on the cro ing directly in the )l ewark High chool. Th town Before making any nnnounccment· impl'l""io'1 upon the hundred ' of spec- ;\[onday afternoon in the Cll e of the front of the engine. The force of the never nt a larg t· number to the [want to expre - my pi a ure in ee- taton'. tate \·s. Lee avage, 30 years ol d cru h wrecked the car, and threw college. ing back again so many of the faculty 1-1:1\' Had Brill iant Sea on I "'egro of near H~ckessin... Colli on against a n arby pole. The "len's College drew five young and stud nt- of la t year, ready on Taken all in all, the Aetna boys avage plead guIlty earhel' 1Il the Was On 1 "(11' ity quad )lewark men into t he fold, with a op ~illg day f I' the wOI'k of another ma\' wdl be proud of their parade day to an attempted serious a ault The unfortunate young man promise of at lea t two more being se slon. 1 al. 0 want to xL nd a \'ery 'l.z· _.' hI·" "ea on. E\'el'.'·\vhel·e they I upon 15-year old ~lary Hannu.m,· , k th I tt t f I' g is er d bE'fore the week close. . hll!lrty greetlllg to the Fr shmen ana pr , _ _ ., 1Il ewar e a er par 0 all othel' new students on behalf of wen. hey were applauded, and in granddaughter of Mr. and Mr. AI- week, coming up from D laware I P rof. George A _ Koer ber The g}rls who nt'oll d from " ew- the Trustees, Faculty and upper nearh' c\'cry ca e came home with a fl'ed r~ san of near Korner Ket~h , Beach wl~h. the football squad.. \~her ark as l' re ' hm n w r : cia se5. \\'e are glad to hay you prize: on the ntght of Augu t th la t. Bnef he had JOllled them m prehmlllary Twenty Fre hmen have 0 far Eleanor . Brooks, Emilie P. ar- her und to receiv YOU into OUI' Th dr reate tingle feat was the argument by counsel reviewed the pl·actice. H .Ief t hr. atul:day ~f- I ent l' d th Electrical Engineer- I penter, atherin Holton, [urjorie , academic fellow hip. \\'e are glad to fi d d ca e, and the judges decided upon the t f h h B d 11 D I h winn ing of both rst an secon sentence while still on the bench. ernoon or lome Ill . n .gen e Iing ours at e aware tiL. Johnson, Lora H. Little, Hazel I. accept you as our partner in a great p riz~5 a Kennett Square, Pa., ubout to spend th w~ek-end WIth hI. par- term. This ourse i becoming I Malcolm, arah E. Pott , Bonnie A. and worthy enterpri e and we count two weeks ago. Seldom ha this suc- Judge Richard then entenced ent , and had In~ended returlllng to m re popular each year. P r o- Walk rand H tel' P. " iddoes. upon your be t endeavor to ussist u ce ~ been equalled in Delaware fire- Savage to pay the costs of the .case, Newark londay m ord I' to regl ter Ife or Koerber head that De- The Xewark boys 0 far enter d at in holding always high thE' '~tandard men 's circles. to. pay a fine of 200, to be whIpped for the coming tenn. partment. the Men' oll ege 'are: lof thi Univ r i'ty's ducuti o~ nl -lim I i;: al~o pointed out that Newark I w1th 30 I~ hes next aturday, ep- Young olli on howed to good ad- • A B 11' I H dl a:, und undertakings'. We want each' one alwa\'; urn out in a practical way. I tember 21th at the 'ew Ca stle vantage in the eady football prac- :u· .I.no H ' k~ tn R b at~U~ J an ~t of you to feel that you are now a '1'1 \: ar fire men first, la t and al- C?unty :V0rkhou e, and to then be- tice thi year, and wa expected to With I' gi tration about completed, - ~11~n . op ~ni 0 I d . I1que e, full co-operating member of this I . I If t I gm serVIng a entence of 10 year. land a guard on th \'ari tv This but official figure not a yet forth- an eOI ge . own en . way::. and carry no nove ty e ec l It wa con idel'ed by court attache I . . .., ': . ent purely mutual corporation; that your along to ;way the judge. When they one of the e\'ere t enalties handed :\ o~ld hav~ been .hl th.'.ld ~eal .on the coming, indications point to new high intere ts are, and your purposes \' ,down the streets of Havre de . p ~q u"d. HI WIllIngness 0 lealn and ,' nrollment mark in the Women's hould be from the very first identical C\ .~~': II\~ night they looked the part Idown tn y~ars: rugg d phy ique greatly impr s d College Freshman las thi Fall, with. tho' of the larger whole. We ,;a . II rained practical firemen. .In deltv ~ rtng .nte.nce, ~udge oach McA\'oy and the other III m- I and a tptal registnltion mark of well · 1 bid you w lcome and wish each of ~h e \~~g ladder truck, piloted by Ira RIchards saId, "It IS tn~oncelvable b rE of th team. O\'er 500 students for the enti.re ni- you, -pel onally, high ucc ss in ~'our hellene! r followed the long line of that a f.ull grown man,. WIth the a p- ( ontinued on Page -.) versity, it was larned la t ntght. collcg CO Ut·_e. ;'e d-~h ir ed Aetna boys. Pharent tntelldltglence h\~IUch YO~f havde All da~' Monday the o ffice ~ ~f Dean Elkton-, . P. Pi her, Jr., al d W . .Ve w ~ ' l cl/I.bel"s 011 til. I I18tnrctional sown, wou eave IS own WI e an Dutton and Business Admllll trator R. Pierson. t /J Th e ~ew a~ k Company .h~S Ewon home and at~empt. : uch a . vici~us FORMER RESIDENT RE- Wilkinson were crowded with appli- hi Ids, I\Id.- H·. W. Mackie. Major Arthur a. Underwood, who pmI': at :\llddle;own, Ott ast, at~ck on a Itttle gIrl.. In Impostng TURNS AFTER 20 YEARS cants for admis ion to the Men's 01- Hocke ·sin-J. II. Roser. comes to u from t he staff sch 01 at Elkton. Oxford, Kennett Square and thl entence, I want It to tand a • lege. A similar ituation prevailed The follo\\;ng is the Ii t .of Fresh- Fort Leavenworth to take i'liuj or Ha\Te d Grace. It ha been a most an example in order that it will deter C h a rles W. D avis, Now H ead at the executive office of the Women's men of both colleges up untIl noon on I Row's place a Professo r of i\1ilitary : u cce~'ful ea on and has bro~ght the any other from attempting a like of Mem p h is C ity P a rks, College. " Tuesday : cienc and Tactics. local company into real prommence. crime." H e r e For V i it ~londa:v' regi tration at the l\Ien's ( ontinued on Page 9.) Mi ss Ethel Lee Pl1rker, B. A., r. COL L IDE IN R A I N On the night of Augu t th, la t,' (Continued on Page 4.) a\-age cros ed over the field from CA R hades Davi , of ~lemphis, Tenn., · B 0 ~·d DR WALT STEEL AGAIN I • - • Hear Whe I of Mi ll er's Auto Goes the Eugene Robin on farm where he is paying a visit to his father, Mr. ICerS, ent n ai, ' TAKEN TO HOSPITAL ' 313 REGISTERED IN worked to the rossan place, entered ,"\ esley Davi, Elkton Road, near Off rnder Monday Night the house and . tarted to drag the Newark. Mr. Davis i ' superintendent D octor s Believe H e Is Suffer- TOWN SAT. Two Ford cars, driven by Bayard girl from her bedroo m. The grand­ Find Great Open paces ~TRICTS of parks in Memphi . He wa an em­ lII iller of thi' town and Hibbard Caulk parents hearing the com motion, r ush­ • ing With T y p e of M a laria; Inc r ease In umber of Wo~·nen ployee of D. . Rose at the P. R. R. of F:l ~ m e r . respectively, collIded at ed to hallway and grappl d with the Alleged Exponents of the Is B etter T o d ay By O bservers; Upp er Dls- garden, Newark, for many years. the corner of Delaware Avenue and , negro. Mr. rossan was painf ully Great African Game Elude trict Total Mr. Davis i maki ng a stay of about 614 bkton Road about 6.30 Monday even- I bruised and battered in the struggle. Battalion of Police Dr. Walt who wa be- ten day. and wi he his many friends H. ~, ing. The girl broke away from avage Sunday Iieved to have recovered from a re- Three hundred and thirteen men to call and see him before he return ;\0 one was hurt in the crash. The just outside the door and ran to a cent illne 5, wus I1gain rushed t the and women qualified t \'ote at the I to th,e outh. Hi wife, i\lr. Fanny left rear wh el of Miller's sedan was neighbor's house for protection. The Ell''' n ee m~ mo t unlucky next to Lhe la t Registration Day last Davis, is HI 0 widely known in Homeopathic Hospital Monday morn- 'aturday in the two eWl1rk districts ditched and collapsed under the st:ai~. I culprit wa. captured by Highway numb I' for the members of the police ark. ing, suffering with a reCUlTence of the of White Clay reek Hundred, it was Miller had the right of ~vay, It IS IOffic er Jones the next day and con- poss , which raided a supposed crap claimed, but the fog and ralll, accord- fessed, it is alleged. Mr. Davi and John hiveler game a long White lay Creek, nor~h trouble which has k pt him ill for announced ye terday. ing to Caulk, made the vis ibility ItO __ • Newark about twenty years ugo. of I wark, la t. unday. Eleven IS some weeks. Of this number, 17 rcgi -tered in low that he did not see the approa~h - REA L E S T A T E TRANSFERS uid to be lucky in this particular The first alarm over h i serious ~~:il . F~I:l~~l esDi:tr~i C:hean~0~:5 il~la~~~ form of I1thletics, but bore down hard ing car until too late. The partIes -- " TOBY" G O ES T O H EAVEN condition cu u. ed concern throughout middle di ·trict. concernl.d ar believed to have set- I West Farm At Kemblesville Sold This on t.he ofl1cer and spoiled a fin e day's "Toby" the valuable and sweet di s the town but it i believed that he is Authoritative reports from t he tied th . damages. Week To J ewark Man wol·k. . . . I The Real E tate Depal·tment of the positioned foxhound belonging to om where a long the liason line a in no grav danger at this time. Third district urc lacking, but it i William halmel's, of this town, leak cropped up, for when the eleven R . fr m th hos ital this I I.eporLed Lhllt the I' gistratlOn II ts TOT T R UCK B Y CAR Newark Tru t and afe Deposit om- POltS o. e p there howed about 100 new names joined hi ' good and faithful brethren minions of the Law alTived, they All en. liv -year-old son of Mr. and I pany r eports the following local prop- morning tated that . he was much aturdllY. in Dog Heaven a few days ago., "To­ were greeted by great open spaces, a Mr5. Philip ~[yers, of East Delaware Ierty transfers: . by" took ick and died with hi sor­ better. Doctors are waiting for the A notl 'eable increase in the num- A\'enul. was st ruck and painfully h urt The Charl.es R. Holton house and (ew trees and the rushing waters of rowing owner by hi s id e. He was a results of tests before a complet her of wOlllen registering aturday by II ,·ar owned by Robert Tweed, of adjoining lot on Depot Road belo ,~ th creek. plendid, well bred hound a little became apparent. Political leaders thi. town. last Friday, while playini Kells Avenue has been sold to Mrs. There is li ttle doubt but that the diagno is of th cas . They are un- ov r;;r a year old . are arpdous to get llw woml'n to the in front of his home. H tel' A. Morri ,of ewark. regular unday tournament wus go- derstood to agree, how \' I' that Dr. poll. thi year, and an extm efrort Th . kip and HaIry J. Wagner, aloof Newark, ·n' on pri I' to the visit. Emblems I . . . . I ~fg the cont st were ev rywhere; and, St 01 IS s uff ~rtng WIth a pecuhar will be made along thi line, locally, k e y"ung: te ~ was PI~ e( ~ e wa. has purchased the farm near Kem- at the la st day for registering. it is furtively report d, some you.ng form?f mul a nil fever. f:~I~~ t~\~ ~u~eri~u ~~i;~ se~:e r abra- I ble ville, formedy owned by DI:. J. ·B. Bro n ze T ablet R ead y ~io n , of the face :nd neck. He was \"V est, for many years a doctor III t hat men cam hOI e thut afternoon WIth ======::::::::======their clothes ull wet. 'I'hey slipped about thl ho u:e again next day. vi llage. F o r Mem orial Mark e r ED $ I and foil into the Cl'e k, of courSf' : LONDON BRITAIN FARMERS NE 1800 'l'h rc is now on display at ffi ers Jones and Wardle, of the FOR PART OF NEWARK ROAD KS the Millard Davi. store in Wil- County Highway P olice, led the HS- • LIVE DUC mington a beautiful bronz<, uul upon the virgin soil of th White REGULAR POND WITH R~AL One thousand. eight hundred !lnd get it for the cllmplction of the road W HERE tablet, which will he on plA ced lay's banks. Dot tive, constables, FEATURE BIG POULTRY SHO on th boulder on the upper ome I·S from Wilmington, insurunce fiftel'n dollal's Hnd some ocld cents thi~ yea 1'. TO campi 0{ the niver ity, mat'k­ agents and official in terpretcrs were are nil that stands between the groups H ha ~ bee n learn d thaL a lettel' Th at. '('wa rk is doing everyt hi~It was ano~nc d last we k t~at a ing the pot where the selective earri d along in the punitive xpedi­ o( farmers in the southern end of will b wriLlen shortly to ))1'. G org London . Bl'itain township, over in W . Rhod s, prl': ident of lhe Newark po .ihl,. to make its first State total of 14 s tiver cups had aheady service nl en of Ruml ew tio n. All to no eff ect. The goose hester ounty. and the success ful Chamb I' of Commerce, in which an Poultl'Y Show a success was rev aled been pledged by ewark fi~ ' m s and astle ounty weI' indu ted had fl own. Re. idents out thut way completion of their hal'll fight (01' a appel1l will be made by Lond n Bri- in a rOlwe l' ation with one of the individuals towards s welltng the into the service of th ir country say, howev 1', that he will bo back 'ood road. tain farmers to that rganization fot' leading I.oultrymen of the vicinity on prize li st. ev~ ra .1 more .eups arc ex­ in 19] . The inscription on the agllin n xt unday and the next. Per­ William . Kennedy, n promin nt aid. They poi nL to Lhe fn·t that the . alurdnv la~t. pected from Wl lrnmgton 1I\ the c~urse tubl,t reads us follows: haps some day they will b caught. One ~f th' f atures of th weelt's of a few weeks, 0 that there WIll be "J !H7-1!l1 ; in honor of the far'mer of the township nnd one of com pi lion of the last link will open fes iviti " in January n xt will be a pl enty for each of the classes to be men of Rurlll ('w astl AT HRIN E CONVENTION the early pioneers in th fight for a UJl a new source of trade to ewal'k good road from Kemblesvill to New- and will be of benefit to the co m­ large p1md with running Wilt r in it, hown. County who ent I' d the militHry cwark Peopl e Attend Bilt Aff a ir In service of their country on this ark, stated to Th Po ~t last we k that munity and m rchants therein. pon to be rlared in the center of the William E. Renshaw, amuel Little Atla ntic City spcciou< Al'mo l,),. and other Newark fanciers are work- spot during th World War this 'this slim wn s ne ded to complete [I I·eceipt of th ldter Or. Rhodes said Among the Newark people who ( w hundred feet Qf road by the he would tnk the matter liP with nu ck~ o( many diffe l'ent types will ing hard for the success of the show. tablet is cl'ected by the niver­ sity of Delawal' and the com- visit d Atlantic ity last aturday Lincoln H ighwllY ,onstructi n om- th hamber. he placed In the pond, und the whole A t a meeting of the Diamond State during th ' nnnual convention of Shri· pany. The jrt'eat troubl expcrienc d by urrounded with f rns, fl owers, moss, Association held last Sunday at E Is­ munity of ewark." The fund (or th tablet was ners, held in that resort, wer Mr. and Appeals to th tate of P nnsyl- 1r. Kenn dy and hi s fellow workers to ks and anything else which goes mere, J ames ·Wilson was na med presi­ Mrs. David . Rose, Mr. and Mrs. vania for aid have failed as their is the (act that the new rOlld crosses with It prop 'rly organized duck pond. raised by voluntary offerings Wild ducks, tam ducks and in-be- den t a nd Robert Cloud secretary. I made a t the pa triotic exercises George Griffin, Warr n A. ingles and budget for roads has been exhausted but a small part of Lh township I\nd til' n-ducks will be on display every Newton W. Cosh, of Vineland, N. J., held here on the Fourth of Irving row. to the la st penny this year. Mr. the farm I'S in th northern nd have K ~ nncdy li nd his a ss'lciatcR nrc OtlSY rhown only a luk waml intel'est in day in the w ek. T his will not only one of t he most prominent poultry July, this yea I'. Mr. and r ra. Griffin remai:1ed ovcr he an ('x tremely origina l idell but j udlS s in the East , was selected to act I _____ at the shore for a few days vacation. rounding ti p the money, lind hope to I h driv for fUlldR. will b~ an attractive part o( the show. in that capacity at the Newark sho w. \ .------~.~..;.;--- 2 NEWARK POST, NEWARK.. ~~ WARE. SEPTEMBER 24.!. 192.4. r·····THE···WEDNfSDAy···RWiiw····--iI ~~H~~SrgBs ~~~6N : . . ! BY ! \ Expect to Sing at Wolf Hall ! UI1R. JOE SPIVUS i Here Sometime In ,,------~ I Jan uary

WHA~ HO! THE JOLLY TARS! The Wilmington Orpheus Club, I composed of pl'ominent business and Them swashbuckling tudent sailors of the good ship professional men of the city united "Delaware" depo ited their duffle bag and wung their for the purpose of singin g their way hammocks Monday. into the hearts of the people of the Now that ain't exagerratipg it one bit, either. Of city and state, hllve stllrted theil' re­ hearsals for the cominA' season. Dr. a1.$25 to $50 course, t he effect would have been changed somewhat if it hadn't rained so hard. But when I druv to town Monday H. Alexander Matthe~vs, of Philadel­ night with Sally Ann, and trotted the mare down Main street, phia, director of the club, has agaill I got that old salty smell in my nose oon as I saw the Oilskin ussumed the reins of leadership thi Hussars decoratin' the campus. yen I' , and if unything, the program In Quality, Style and Value They're so fHr outlined i~ fHI' more strenuous It seems everybody except Prexy Hullihen and my good thlln ever before Httempted. friend Arthur, the business maggot (I mean magnate) of the The opening concert of the Orpheus Unapproachable at Our, college has yaller oilskin. Up the street, down the street as seHson will be given in the PlHyhouse far a you can ee, there's a bobbin' yaller coat up against on the ~vening of , December 4. Mi ss the horizon. Elizabeth Bonner, for a number of Maker=to=Wearer Pricing Now to anyone except an ord Aluminus like me, you years soloist at St. Paul's R. C. Church, w 0 has won laurels as a might think they was a River Pilots' Convention goin' on, or This season our factory at "Broad and Wallace has even surpassed maybe a monthly meeting of the Delaware Bay Mackerel contrHlto singer in grand opera and Snatchers' Union. on the concert stage throughout the its splendid previous achievements in turning out larger varieties of country, will be the assisting artist. ' quality garments than ever before. Men will find here clothing as • I asked Looey Handloff why in the name of the Pink On December 9 this co ncert will be smart and fine as expert designers and skilled workmanship could Toed Prophet they couldn't be satisfied with ordinary rain­ I'cpeated at West Chester. coats, and Looey answered back and said: In Janullry, the exact date to be make it. announced, the Ol'pheus Club will The New Styles for Young Men have a vigorol!s 'athletic air and "You can see 'em further, Joe." sing in Wolf Hall, University of Del­ include two-button, soft-rolling English lounge models with wide Which wasn't such a bad answer, at that. .. aware. The organization has already gained much favor in Newark and .. trousers or the t'hree-button Collegiate with broad lapel and semi­ Seems to me no ~adays that a college student stands out its appeal'ances here now regarded as width trousers. Shoulders are broader, and there's a trimness at the against the sky like a barbel' pole-but, I guess he's just as among the red-letter events of the waistline. good 'a boY,as I was oncet. Grandpap had worse things to say winter. to me than this when he saw my furat pair of yaller shoes On February 25, in the PJayhouse, The New Styles for Men are easy fitting, comfor,table and grace­ back in '96. Clarence Short and me went to a football 'game Wilmington. the Orpheus Club will ful. The three-button conservative mode) is the accepted style for with 'em on one day, and both tea,ms forgot their signals. have the unusuat honol' of singing in business or professional wear. So, as Don Quixoto~r was it Babe Ruth- would say, joint concert with the Glee Club of "It's all in the point of view." the University of Pennsylvanill, of The Fabrics are the finest of ~he Foreign and American makes­ which Dr. Matth~ws also is director. Fancy worsteds, unfinished worsteds and cassimeres. The latter organization has advanced Colors-A new lavender shade, smoke grays, oxford, blues and to high rank among glee clubs of the country under Dr. Matthe~s and has browns. I CALLS IT A SIN! won severa) notable prizes. • Patterna.-Stripe, overplaid and plain effects. According to the figger experts, there was something . .. . like 27,000,000 qualified tel'S in 1920 who went duck shootin or some place on Election Day. WHY RIGHT HAND TIRES Add to this the infants who has reached 21 since then WEAR OUT FIRST Students' Suits and then think of what it would cost at the present Vote . Motorists Should Change Rear exchange rates, to get 'em to the Polls this year. I doubt if WITH EXTRA TROUSERS there's enough people in Cooch's Bl;dge to finance even the Tires to Front When First District of White Clay Hundred. W~ar Shows The fact that tires on the ri~ht hand side of a car wear out faster at $25 to $35 in proportion than those on the left EXTR~! ! hand side, often puzzles motorists. We noticed Hizzoner The Mayor slip quietly into Nathan... The popular supposition that this This department is shqwing many new styles for young men weill' is cllused by turning many cor­ Motherall's store the other day. I'll bet them two is a-plannin' of 16 to 20 rears, who are preparing for College 0,1' Prep School some slick political scheme. ners to the right is incorrect. The LATER: Oh my gracious, I'm glad the above didn't get fact is that the increased wear is ac­ in 2 and 3-button soft roll sacks or double-bJ'ea ted model with on the press. Hizzoner . has been "slipping quietly" into . tually ca used by the pitch of the road, wide trousers. Motherall's every clear day for nigh onto 30 year . I am in­ which throws more of the car on the formed he goes in to borrow matches. right side than on the left. The round of the road from cllrb to curb is far more important in detel!­ mining the sequence in which tires Sale Extraordinary Celebrated Ir.------normally wear out- right rear, left rear, left front- than are gutter wear and abrasions from grinding off PAPER and PAINT and on pavements. PATRICK TOPCOATS The slope of tha .., road t.!auses the right rear tire to ca1'l'y more wei!!ht makes things what they ain't than the left rear tire. Thus the J'i ght rea r wears the faster of the There's a world of difference be­ two. The right front al so, acco rding to . tire experts, will \vear more tween making sales and making J' apidly than the left front, for the Cu ·tomers. A selling policy which Isa me rellson, However,'as the left real' wheel re­ in 'pires confidence will always build Ice ives a driving pull while the right for the future. front does not, it will wear the faster of the two. Under average conditions the right rear tire wears out first It·~ the topnotch character of these ~opcoats whtich we want to and the left f ront ~ s t. To secure uniform weal' from a set emphas~ze. Such style, such fabrics and such needlework are seldom of tires, change them around about offered m Topcoats at'these very special value-giving prices. once a month. Particularly is 'it im­ portant to reverse the real' tires. Af­ ter the rear tires are worn down, re­ verse them with the front. $30 and $35

BOYS' TWO-TRO~SERS NORFORK SUITS ...•••.•... $10.00 BIG LEAGUERS IN ACTION uP.-to-date ~odels In all ~he n e ~vest fall colorings. Plent of the wanted owder blues, With one pall' of regulatIOn kmckers and one pair of goll knickers. p Herb Pennock and Other Yankees May Play For Kennett Square BOY~~d~~; ~!t~~~~~~_!!~~:~;K SUI!S. • • • • . . . . •. $1~.50 , Plans are now being made by a Coats lined with exceptionally gOod i't 0 or, caSSlmeres. Newest fall colorll1gs. 7 to 18 years. qua I y mohall'. Pants lined throughout. izes , / group of Kenn ett Squa~e, Pa., sports­ ,I games between Kennett and nearby I , men for a series of local baseball BO;~;e!~~~J~~~~r~!~o~~~FOLK SUITS •.. ,' •...•.. $13.75 , teams, in which the fans will see some up-to-the-minute models. Sizes 7 to 18 ;eaaJ!~wool tweeds, cheVIots and cassi meres in , famous big league ball players in ac­ tion. BOYS' TWO.TROUSERS NORFOLK SUITS •.•... $15 & $16.75 "Hel'b" Pennock, of the Yankees, Some of the very newest of the ever p I "R' SHEAFFER assortment of tasteful co lorings and f b' op~har 19ht, Posture" suits, in a large who is native of Kenn()tt, is expected Sizes 8 to 18 years, a rlcs. e two pall's of pants are full lined. to pitch for hi s home town again. i knows------how Wally Schang, Gaston, Bush and per­ ! haps Ruth may be in the lineup. BO~~' t~~d:~?~~~~~n~~~!OLK SU~TS...... $18 & $20 L.. ______. _____ ._._. ______. ______. ______J Last year the EmbreviJee team and lines that will heighten a boy's well-d ~estJf fabrICS, the most faultless tailoring were opponents and the game drew BOYS' QUALIlY lesse appearance. SIzes 8 to 18 years. an enormous crowd. It is expected Sturdily made of ~o~~~~fSr" ...•..•.• ,' •••••.•. " 75c and $1 that both teams this year will be Sizes 7 to 16 years. p lilted madras In! popular collar-attached style. strongly re-enforced for the battle. Many Newal'k fans attended the game BOYS' SHIRTS at. • • • • • • • . • . . 95 The Misses Hebb's School Striped percale in collar-attached and' • t' c Franklin Street and Pennsylvania Avenue at Kennett last fall. n'e~kb' d . i ... : ...... Wilmington BOYS'.ENGLISH BROADCLOTH S~~ s yes. Sizes 12 'h to 14. White, tan lind blue in kb d TS. • • • • . . • • . . .. . $1.95 Grange W ,ell Financed BOYS' NECKWEAR. nee an and COllar-attached styles. Sizes 12 V. to 14 , A Day and Resident School for Girls One of the big assets of the Grange Principal, Miss Lillie James, A. B., Bryn Mawr College movement of the country is the fact College striped re~p' ii~s' . d' . i ..•.•...... 25c, SOc and 75c . , that it is substantially financed, BOYS' GOLF HOSE an a arge assortment of knitted ties. A traditional school that meets the educational needs of this which cnables it to carry out many Sturdy all-wool hose, n~\~e's~ fa'II' c·oio; ' i~~;.• ..•..... " $1.00 and $1.50 projects of Turlll benefit in legislative new era. lines and other wise on an extensive BOYS' SWEATER COATS A highly trained Faculty with scientific spirit, outlook, methods. Exceptiol1ll1 values ; Collar and V~n~~k' ~t~l~;. .' .•... $5.00, $6.00, $7.00 Departmental teaching. Small classes. Adjustment of indi- scale. The National Grange has a tre~sury of nearly $160,000 and many vidual differences. of the State Granges are equally well Promotion by subject. financed; Michigan being a note­ Science, Crafts, Music, Dramatics. worthy example. with a treasury sur­ Hockey and Basketball. plus of more than $60,000. In the Lunches served. case of all these Grange funds a large N. SNELLENBURO & CO. ror cata~ogue, address the school, or telephone 3015. portion is invested in Liberty Flonds, The fifty-first year will begin on September 24. purchased during the stress of the I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill war emergency. I YnrllD1lllllDllllllllDIIIIlllllllillllllllllilllllllllDll1llDll I UlUmDnlllllllllllllllllllllllUiIIlIIiliIlinmmmOtillUUlIIlIIDIIiIllIidlllllllllllllllli1ilillllllllililiiilliiiilmnlilliili' .. i ~ii: 'i r :J:::i w. NEWARK POST. NEWARK. DELAWARE, SEPTEMBER 24, 1924. 3

"A Finer Store ·Open·in'g Sale Now On In Twenty-lour Years No Sale .Like This

THIS opening sale is' the' climax of twenty~four of this community and vicinity are to an institution years of effort! A greater Miller's, keeping pace which serves them loyally and well. with a greater Wilmington and a gre'ater Delmarvia This Opening Sale is the result of months of Peninsula! painstaking preparation. The achievements of our Whiie we have had a substantial sh~re in the tire~ess buying staff . over this busy period are little building up of this great building to its present dimen~ short of miraculous. The values positively stupendous. sions, we owe an everlastiug debt of gratitude to the You will realize immediately'that the tim~ for furniture people of , thi~ section, who for twenty~four years 'have buying has arrived. 2igger, broader and 'more advan~ given us the encouragement of their patronage and the tageously bought showings than any in our history. inspiration of their faith. IN TWENTY· FOUR YEARS NO SALE LIKE THIS! And it is in that spirit that we cordially invite Now is your opportunity to buy at great savings. you to inspect the new enlarged Miller Brother's store, See this magnificent new store and the vast stocks it which we formally present, not as a material evidence offers, and the prices that are unusually low. of !tow good we are, but rather, how good the people COME TOMORROW!

DELIVERY EASY FREE PAYMENTS RIGHT TO TO SUIT YOUR HOME Twenty-four Years C!f Satisfactory Service .YOU Ninth and King'Streets . Wilmington, Delaware 4 NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARl:., SEPTEMBER 24, 1924. ~e Newark Post Is ued Every Wedne day at "Good Roads, Flowers, a~s , Better Schools hop Called KeUs EWARK, DELAWARE Trees, ure Water, Fresh Air, Sunshine and EVERETT C. JOHNSON-Editor and Publisher Entered as second-class. matter at I.. 'I e wa nt and invite communications, Newark, Delaware, under Act of but they must be signed by the ' Work ,for Everybody"-ouRMO TTO March 3, 1897. Make all checks to THE NEWARK writer's name--not for publication, POST. but for our information tlnd protec- Telephones, D. & A. , 92 and 93. tion. ======,,======- DR. STEARNS SPEAKS Ico mpletion. It, may, however, be of work, were awarded diplomas.. They Imon 11.00 a. m. Ep\\or h League The Subscription price of this paper is $1.50 per year in advance. AT CONVOCATION intere t to know that the architects are Kenn th . Iendenhall, Vmcent 7.30 p, 111 . ' Single co pies 4 cents. Mr, and Mrs, (Continued from P age 1.) and co ntractors expect to have the Tempene and Howard L: Corkrhan. A special en'ice wa ~ held la t Hall and daugh A l' h ' C II C I b' U· building ready for occupancy by De- The exerCI es were pi eceded by an ISunday 1110rlllng 111 behali of th e SEPTEMBER 24, J9:4 \'~:'Rit;~\v~: . u~c:;:~ ~i:smC;:rk :~ I cember. AcademiC procession from Wolf Hall Member hip :ll anual lass. The clas Frances, and Profe 01' of Home Economics. Mi ss * • • •• to the upper campus. Members .of had compl ted the ,tuuy of the mo tored to ternoon and S t o c kho l d~rs Meeting of the U . S. A 'J N ovember 4 Pal'ker's former connections as a ew Physics Building the Board of Tru tees', both faculties 1 ",lanual and had .passed an exa mlna. Saturday nigh ATTEND AND VOTE teacher have been with the \\ inona It may al 0 be of interest to know and both tudent bodies took part. for ntrance IIllo full member'hi p ~lOn t1efi eld before U ' Ithat we are to have a new Physic s Dr. F. M. K. Fo tel' was marshal of III the church. The pa tor'· s b' l'eac h ers 0 11 ege, 0 f Inlllneso ta, .' < • I . . "Th . ' U leet evening, T w nty-s V n million p oJ)ie stay d a,way from th Polls in Ka n as State Agricultul'al College, Building at Delaware College thiS the plocesslOn.. _ • was e ntt odden Road." After 19~0. and Indiana State Normal School. year, though it is new only fOl' Phys- I CHURCHES the sermon the pa~tor called the el as . . all Mi s Lulu M. R'lchal'd on B A ics , The removal of the State Board ' Ito the alta.~ of the church and held T wenty - sl~' million peo])i -A ?nt1W?'ity of the vote?'s- Goucher M. A. Johns Ho kin ~ f~l'In~ of H alth . L~b o ratory . to Do~ e r h~ s __ ~n appr oP~la~ ervlcc. The folio\\,. i ed a President in 19_0. e l'l y an 'instructor at TO~le I~ st it u te I" ft the bUII?lllg .occup,ed by 1t avaJ!- METHOD IST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Ill~ were l ecelved Il1to full member. Were ou one of the twenty- even million who failed to per- . able for Ul1Iverslty purposes and t he C ) ship of Ebenezer hurch : Anna Ruth fo rm their f ull dllty a citizen ; or one of the twenty-six million an.d later. at Ir v l~g College, succee?s building has been assigned to the De- (The Cent ral hur ~ h. • Mary Kirk, Walter Knotts, Herb ' who properly fu lfi ll ed their obli gations? ' MI SS WeiSS, As Istant Profes or 111 1 rtmcnt of Ph sics. It is bei n ren- Rev. Frank H.erson, Mll1lster IKnott s, Henry Whiteman, Frank~ :t the Modern Language Department. P& d h Yd' th g d 10 a. m,-SesslOn of the Church Ferguson Erne t Rut! W' II d In • I ovate and c ange to SUIt e nee s h I R II D . 11 d .t t ' 1, I ar John. Whateyer the an wer, regi tel' a promise now that you will MISS Rean Allen, B. A. Teachers Iof the Department and will be ready c 00 , a y ay m a epal men s. I son, George ook , Paul Whitema allege Columbia niversity recent. h ' . h' New hymnals. Everybody welcome. James Kirk <\Ii c Sh Id L n, go to the polls on Election Day and well the rank of the twenty­ ly con~ecte d with the H o ra ~e Mann ~Ol' t e Department to move Il1 WIt - 11 a . m.-Divine worship with ser- Whiteman ,. e eon, eRoy "ix mi llion 0 they will cast a vote truly representati\ e of the will f of all the eligible yoter of the countpr. choo l and the Demon tration . choo l III a • ew ,,:eeku :Ime.. • • man. Subject, "The Modern lave," The R e~i\'al of hr'.t· R I' . at Columbia. Ul1Iver"' Ity, succeeds MISS 1P I r L 7.3 0 p. m.- D"IVllle wars hIp' Wit· ·h Will. begin October 5th at1.lan Eb e lglon '\ ote a you plea e-but-VOTE! Eckman, Assi tant Professor in the u~ IC ecture\ I b d t sermon. ubject, " The Di sasters of I splendid program of mus' enez~r: A School of Education. t his llt~~~en~~::na n c ::~u:~~ 1 :u :~e; ~f Life." . . I arranged for each evenin~~ I~ ev:~~ The Father of OU I' Constitution, by Divine in piration, gave l' R T " 'h't B S M S ~ . ., Students and trangers cordially 111- 1ne h . . t ·' 11 you equali ty before all men; made you a participating stockholder I. oy . "V I ney, . ., . . l lectures wtll be given thiS Yerd, 229,4 15 261 ,283 427,264 17,\54 N ot,-NeUJ Fall Suit3, $35 to $55 :I.fass. ·1 4,200 530,720 990011 1, 55,250 " Black Oxen " Mich. 540,790 6-1 ,507 1,045,280 1, 1,597 :>1inn, 32-1 ,12 1 3 6,606 730,010 1,237,203 cr:;HE GREA TES T PICTUR E OF THE YEA R Mi s, 64 ,52 6,156 82,492 872,094 :\fo, 69 1,404 7 5, 60 1,330,636 1,969,0 6 Y ou can't afford to miss it! Mo nt. 79,794 177,3 77 179,006 2 9, 31,.., I b. 245 , 25 2 6,177 3 2,653 686,347 WHAT YOUR' ROOF NEEDS 20,115 33,316 27,194 -13,419 HANARK-Thurs. & Fri., Sept. 2.5 & 26 7,425 9,123 159,092 235,466 FOR WINTER 420,425 49-1,646 904 ,000 1,525,190 }Iex, 51245 66,967 105,399 16 ,60 N, Y, 1,564,313 1,693,526 2, 4.'l,672 5,10 ,545 C, 243,430 2 9,912 53 ,75 1,207 ,343 ~, D, 5,337 10 ,677 205,776 292, 30 Oh io 1,022,953 1,165,0 6 2,019,500 3,22 ,294 Okla, 25 1,616 292,] 2 4 4,951 1,004,516 Mrs. Ore, ]32,6 3 261,3-1 0 237,007 .150,567 LeWis, Pa, 1.197,265 1,296,6 0 1, ,19,692 4,326,73 -1 BUNGALOW Rh, l ' . 7i,04~ 7,636 167,3 6 2 ,560 . C. 50,350 63,531 66,440 776,969 .OR TWO-STORY HOUSE , . D. 92,415 12 952 1 2,237 321, 3 , l' nn, 246,996 272,194 -12 ,626 1,20 ,2 19 Tex. 29(1,660 372,-1 61 411.157 2,233, 5·1 "Three yeal'S ago w b an to l tah Ill, 76 1-12,771 1-1 5, 2 207129 _av for a home of our own," Rhe \"t. 61.74 6 64,,165 9,905 19 ,6 13 ] 0 .70c ,~ aid . "La t fall we had a chance \ ·a. 136,217 15-1,023 230,!l !l l.l!l2,550 061,551 to buy a lot at a bargain for ca.· h. \\ a~h. 311,11 7 3 0,300 397,3 ,I 746,95 3·10,574 Winter torms, with alterJlate freez­ \\', \·a. 264,026 2 9, ·12 1;09,942 710, I 200,fl c12 We bought. Now we are trying to Wis. 390, 61 4·W,377 705,6 6 1,3H,9 1 636,29fi decide wh th I' to build a bunga­ ing and thawin g, w ill oftentimes Wro. .n, 62 5J, 40 56,253 103,479 47,226 1 low 01' a two-. tory hou e. It look cau e even the best roof to leak. . ctd Yote 23 ,002 55,2!J7 37,012 37,O J2 At the corner as t hought we'll be in ou r OWI1 If your roof is n ot in good condition, Total< 1S,Ol l ,l,0 I , ,62~,7 .jO 26,6 G,2n 5 t, 1 '5,D07 27,5' '[),(;3; I home this wint 1'." now i the time to have it repaired and put in shape to ith land Header, ha"e you an ambition to winter without leaking. build 01' buy a home? apitaliz it through a savings account, pay­ \] e pecialize in "RUBBEROID' day-built. That is the sure t way. Smooth Surface Roofing. It' be t hard weather. LET US GIVE YOU A Farmers Trust Co. ESTIMATE Newark Delaware THOMAS A. PO TTS NEWARK, DELAWARE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE. SEPTEMBER 24, 1924. 5

.John l\1c){urray, Jr., eldest son of PER SONALS Rev. and Mrs. :\lcl\1urray, left for 4th and Princeton, New J ersey, on Monday. 1------A 0 ---- The Smith Zollinger Co. Market i\1 r. McMurray will nter Princeton niver ity to r ume hi ' stud ies in SOCIAL NOTES Ithe departm nt of ivil Engineering. The New t You'll find -h la t t Beautiful New Silks JUDGE WOOLLEY style in th cl ir el color :\11'. and I rs. Harry H. Cleav s, of I Fish r's dllUght r, Mrs. Edward Zim­ TO LECTURE HERE here in e\' ral different l\ !·ll~ Avenue, entertain d at dinner merman, of Philadelphia. kinds. porty I oking, dependable high qualitie 'unday ~!r. and Mr. . H. Baird, Circuit Court -Jurist To Ad­ omfortable fall garm nt low price 'Ii,- La ura Baird, Mr. H. D. Baird Mr. and Mrs. our ey Hammond, of dress Students and Public that are elling rapidly. ;lIld ~ I r . A. 'Iurphy, all of Philadel­ Ha lTington, Del., and Mr. and Mr . T. - First Floor, front. ourtney Ennis, of Philadelphia, Pa., In Wolf Hall, Oct. 28 H I' \. u will flnd th fashionabl weav s in black and phin . hav returned aft r spending several xqui ite coloring . The fil' t I cture of th Political the new .\11'. and lItr . Warringt~n, Mrs. Ora days with Mr. und Mr . Leonard A. iance erie, to be a feature of that Black Faille of lovely quality an I fini h, 3.75 and ,1 .50 Hull and duughters, Irma, Thelma and Rhode. Persian Trimming course Ilt the niversity thi ' yeal' are very good this season a yard; 36 and 40 in h s wide. F ral1l'e ~ , Ilnd Mr. Thomas Anderson Mr. and Mrs. W. Paul Rhodes, of will be that giv en by Judge \ ictal' Black atin :Moi r , 40 in he wide, $5.50 a yard . • nlOtor~ d to Getty burg aturday af­ and are being used in all Philudelphia, are receiving congratu­ B. Woo ll y, of the nited tatesir­ manner of ways on fa hion­ telllOon and camped at Locust Grove euit ourt of Wilmington, Delawa re. piral r pe in th n w fall col r , $2.50 to $4.00 yard. lations on the arrival of 1\ baby daugh­ able fall garments. You utUrduy night. They vi ewed th bat­ Judge \\ oolley will ,.,eak in Wolf Veh thine, fashionabl for ell' sses, $-1.00 yard. Iletil.ld b fore returning home Sunday ter, Bptty Jane, on the 17th of Sep­ will find, at our trimming tember, in Wilmington. Hall here on Tue3d ay nlorning, Octo­ department, all the late t hift'on Yely t for dre e of style and distinction, ber 2 th at lL o'clock. His subject and most fashionable ef­ $5.00 and $6.00 a yard. will be "Federlll and State Judici ­ ~lr. Rob rl G. Rou ton, of George- fects in variety of prices aries; Their Relations, Purposes, and Satin repe in on e t lors for fall, $4.00 yard. town, Del., was a Sunday visitOl' in A imple and pretty wedding was and in different widths, 25c Functions." ~ ewark. solemnized at the home of Rev. and to $5.00 a yard, from one­ anton Crep> of superior quality, in a plendid olor In addition to tudents intere ted Mrs. John Mc Iun'ay, on We t Main half to six inches wide. range, $3.25 and $3.50 a yard. ' ''HAINS " .IS AN~LE . I Street, last Sat.urday afternoon, Sep- in this study. faculty members lind both student bodies will be in vited to Handsome Fringes in Br ades, fou r hand ome pattern, from $1.50 to $6.00 ~l r . John Doyle IS u.ffel"lng at. hIS tember 20th, at 3 o'clock, when their plain and knotted styles a yard. home, on Park Place, ':Ith a sprumed eldest daughter, Ruth Louise, became attend. The town peo ple of Newllrk are especially invited by the co mmj t­ from four to twelve inches Satin harmeu , stylish and -' atisfactory for str et ankle. caused by walkmg off an em- I the bride of Major FI'ed Douglas Ray­ long at 50c to $2.50 a yard. bunk m(' nt while walking around the I mond, M. ., of Montreal, Canada. t e in charge of the series. and evening wear, $2.50 to $4.00 a yard. ilk Ornaments and Cnivcrsi y ampus recently. The ceremony wa performed by Flat repe, in the wanted hades, $3.00 to $4.25 a ya rd. MILLER'S ST<)RE A BEAUTY I Bead d Ones in colors and epl. S. H. Mumford, of Ft. Totten, Re.v. John M ci\~ ulTa y, ~ather {If the Many Newark People Attend Formal in jet are effectively used I repe de hine, splendid qualities and perfect colorings, Lont,: Island, . Y., spent the week- brIde, after whIch a damty luncheon Opening Last Night on the new ostume by \ $2.00 and up to $3.00 a yard. d t th home of Misses Anna A. wa erved. fa hionable maker , 50c to - ilks, First Floor. nd ~, -t.e d Llo d. I Following a honey-moo n to Atlantic Several Newark people took advan­ an el I u e y City, t he bride and groom will reside tage of the invitations ent out by $5.00 each. -" b: Edith "right, of Port Penn, in Overbrook, Philadelphia. Miller Bros. 0., of W.ilmington, to l\Ietal Laces in gold and attend the formal opening of their silver colors from one-half Del.. wa ~ u guest of .Mrs. R lph Ed- TO PLAY AT CHERRY HILL manson the pa t week. __ enlarged home at inth and Kings to thirty- ix inches wide, I "How the Story Grew" will be given treets, Wilmington, last evening. make beautiful trimmings Save Purple Stamps Mr. Ilnd Mr . Wm. Money, of Wil- I by the Ladies' Aid Society of Cherry Flower, souveni r., plenty of music and panels as well as hand- ome evening dresses, 35c 4th and min t,: ton, spent Sunday with the for- Hill M. E. Church, in Red Men's Hall, by horter's Orchestra, and all the Market nt r's sister, Mrs. Wm. Heavellow. Cherry Hill, Md., Tuesday ev ning, things that go wi th a dedication of a to $4.00 a yarel. The Smith Zollinger Co. w~ ~~n a~~ th e~~ d ~~y L ______- Laces and Trimming, 1 t Floor ~ ______~ September 30th, beginning at new tore were present. The visitor 1 .\'\r. and Mrs. George Ware and o'clock. daughter, EI ie, of Christiana; Mr. and i\ lrs. \ aughn Heavellow, of Mil­ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;\ Irooms , offic s and upper flo or by (, members of the staff. lI than Miller, ford Cross Roads, went on a motor dea th. French Girl Enters owner of the store, pe rsonully greeted Weather Out look trip to Roxana, Del., Sunday. scores of people. howeI" towa rds end of week. ville. Hi s father is chairman of The [unel'll l servi es will b held from his late home at Bridgevi lle to­ Women's College The remodelling of the store has Moderale temperatures except cool Sussex County Democ ratic onUllit- ~lr. F. E. Strickland, of Park Place, I mOlTow aft'l'n on lit 2 o'clock slan­ placed it on a par with the best estab- weather about mi ddle of week. tee, and a prominent fa rmer. The is sufi' ring with a severely mashed Mi ss Loui se Marie Castex, of dal'd t.im. Interment will be mil de Ii hm ents of nearby cities. Larger I • _ • boy's mother is almost pro trated Prade , FI'ance, enrolled Mon­ in Bl'idg viII cemetery. di s pl ay windows, more room, and more NORMAN COLLISON with grief. i\lr. and Mrs. William Holton and day in tire FI'eshman lass at The pall ' bearers will be selected the Women' Co llege here. at~ra~ t iv e decorations feature the KILLED BY TRAIN Ic sag s o( co ndolence and sym- daughter, Dorothy, and Mrs. Helen from hi s co ll ege clas.·mates lind chums The young lady from France butldltlg. ( ontinued from Page 1.) pathy have b en sent by University Wilso n visited Mr. and Mrs. John and hi s f riends in Bridgeville. Mem­ is one of a series of excha nge He wu enroll ed in the four-yen r officia I ' !I nd tuden t. to the stricken ~I ace, at It: Airy, Pa., over last week­ bers of the igll1l1 Nul- mtul"Ility will students between the United TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY Agl'iculture cOlll'se and stood well in parent. ntt nd the funeral il 11 body, and will end . I States and that country to W A TED- Steady, reliable man to his ·tudie , according to in structors. The football practice sch -duled (or b joined by I'epr!' cntnt ivcs from the -'11'. and Mrs.()llister Moore and matriculute at Delaware. Mi ss work in Lumber and Coal Yard. He was a member of the igmu l'111 Monday wa called ofT by oach M'­ othel' frnternities all t he cnmpus, llnd Mi s Pauline Moore, of Selbyville, Marthe harbonneau, who was Signed Fraternity, having joined that organ- Avoy, becaus of yo ung Co lliso n's by omcinls of the Univel"lity. spent the week-end with relatives graduated last yea I', was the EDW ARO L. RICHARDS. ization la st Spring. He was very here. first. 9-24-3t popular with hi s cIa 'mates and with the stud ent body in general, and hi s Mi s ue Clendenin and Miss Sara I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FOR RENT-Small apartment for sudden death, when reported Monday Wil son spent several days last week I America's Purpose li ght housekeeping, at Illoming caused a pall of gloom to with relatives in Baltimore. Are we not realizing a noble 170 W. Main Street. desce nd 0\-(' 1' the ca mJlu here. 9-2'J-2t D ceased was the so n of Mr. and Mi s Alice Durham, of Fayetteville, destiny? The great Admiral who North 8 1' 01ina, is visiting her sister, discovered America bore the ~I r s . W. H . Evans. significant name of Christopher. I It has been pointed out that this r,--.... ------.... ------.. ------.... ------.. ------~ Nlr.. omad K~ Lewi s and little name means Christ-bearer. Were son are sp nding a week visiting the not the men who stood at Bunk­ former' parents, in Hurlock, Md. er Hill bearing light to the world by their sacrifices? Are ! " ~li s Mi ldred Wolfenden, of Phila­ Black Oxen" not the men of today, the entire delphia, was a visitol' at the home of Nation of today, living in ac­ THE GREATEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Brinton, on West cordance with the significance Mai n b'eet,' Sunday. of that name, and by their serv­ You can't afford to miss it I ~ l r . . Elroy W. &eedle and children ice and sacrifice redeeming man­ ha ve I' tUl"Tled to their home here af­ kind fro mthe forces that make ter an extended stay with hel' fam­ for everlasting destruction? We HANARK---Thurs&Fri., Sept. 25 &26 ily, in Martin burg, W. Va. seek no territory and no re­ AN wards. We give but do not take. Mrs. Robert Seasholtz, of this town, We seek for a xictOl'Y of our ======has acce pted a position as teacher in ideas.-Calvin Coolidge in Ad- the ak Grove schools, and started dress at Bunker HiLL, June 17, her new duties last week. 1918. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Griffith are spending a few days in Atlantic' ON City, N. J . BATTERIES ~h. Jos. Wagn~nd daughter, Ida, of Philad Iphia, were week-end vis­ Rebuilt GOOD#Y.---~.~ and Groceries DS itors of Mrs. Wm. J. Lovett. Remember the BIG OPENING DAY-Come ~Ii ss Blanche Edmanson is visiting I Ch~rged TIRES to Finkernagle's Saturday-bring your basket. relatives a1. Phoenixvill e, Pa. Reliable service Stand~rd Groceries, Choice Meats and Attentive ~~~nd MI·s. Curtis Strong, of Phil­ Service await you! ad elilhi a, vi sited Mr. and Mr.. W. L. Reasonable prices 30 x 3 ...... $ 6.65 ~' ell over the week-end. FERD FINKERNAGLE 30 x 31/~ ...... 7.65 ~l rs . Lewi s Fisher and little son, Saturday Specials Lewi8. 31 x 4 ...... 16.20 Fresh Sausage 23c lb. ~ 32 x 3 II :! ...... •••.• . • 15.25 ~ Fresh Scrapple Z lb. for 25c §: THE BLUE HEN 32 x 4 21.00 :; 33 x 4 ...... ( ...... 21.65 Look at these low prices on absolutely First :. Simplicity, such good thlng$ to eat, " 34x 4 22.35 Grade Mea~s! :: :~ Rump Steak Ib. 38c I o' ready 'to serve you C: with a full lin of Fresh ~: Round Steak Ib. 35c and Salt Pork, Veal, Fresh :.'. Sirloin Steak Ib. 45c Shoulders, Groceries. :: GOOD ROOFING PAINT - 50c. Gal. Chuck Roast Ib. 18c -: And, of course, our :: AGENT FOR KALO BATTERIES F OR ALL MAKE Our Choice Roast lb. 25c '. OF CARS regul ar line of Fresh Fruit ANNOUNCEMENT Plat Rib lb. 8c and Vegetables.. ~~. I 11111 organizing 1I ClaSH on the Violin in Ncwl1l"k. The enroll­ I: »tenl all'l'ncl has hegun hut still is open (01' pupils f rom 7 yea rs Up wa rclf'. \Vrit for lcrms. Uei ng a gradufl tc from th' Peabody Geo. R. Leak ~: ('OI I!1l'I"V lltory of Mu sic, and u form -I' teacher ' in the prepal'utory dl' Pfll'lmcnt there, 1 shall lI R t h(' melhods of that veil-known NEWARK, DELAWARE ('I' '('I'valory. Newark Add r 'SR, M R,'.E· "[,ELLA HILLERSOHN I"Rf,< KEL, Phone 306 50 I. RODNE:Y ST., WUAllINGTON , DEI,. 6 NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWAR~, SEPTEMBER 24, 1924.

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ·MARKETS SALES , WANT ADS LEGAL NEWARK RETAIL MARKETS Want to sell? or ren t ? Are yon in the mari.:et for furnitnre or farm im· plements? se Th. 'Po,1. The bestelassified medium in northern Delawarl' (Corrected each week-Prices subject to change) RATES - Legal: 50c rst insertion, JOe' all snbsequent in se rhon ~. GRAIN AND FEEDS PROVISIONS Sales: JOe per colnmn in ch, flat CiaSlijied: Ic per word, l Oc minimulII ij charge. I Wheat (good milling grade) Chickens, young ~======d' Corn (1923) $1.50$1.40 bu.bu'. Chickens, old Oats (Western) 73c bu. Eggs, strictly fresh REWARD WANTED Flour, 1st grade $10.00 per bbI. Best Creamery Butter REW ARD,Any infol'mation leading ------­ Meal (Corn) 4c lb. Best Country Butter to the a rrest or conviction of the HIGHEST PRICES paid for Second- Dairy Feed Mixture $52.00 ton Sugar person or persons who took the Hand Furniture, old glass and old Poultry Mash $3.25 per 100 H Mayor-Eben B. Frazer. olumbia Victrola, records and di shes, or a nything from a needle Bran (Western) $1.80 per 100 Salt M~ats, . am In case of fire calI the follow' Pr6sident--E. B. Frazer. numbers: 99, 1 0 or 30. 109 table out of the McClellandsville to an auto. Pork Side . chool will be liberally rewarded. ELKTON FURNITURE EXCHANGE COAL AND WOOD Best Lard By order of Fire Chief Wi! on. MEMBERS OF COUNCIL McClellandsville School, 207 Bow St. Coal (Anthracite Nut) $14.20 Picnic Shoulders No. 40. 9,3,2t Elkton, Md. Coal (Bituminous) $8.00 Beef, best steaks Eastern. District--A. L. Beals, J. L. Grier. 9, 17,lt Teacher, Marian L. Newton. WANTED-Girl's used Bicycle. Ad- Wood in stove lengths (Oak) Rib Roasts RAILROAD SCHEDULES Central District--Charles W. Col­ dl'ess BOX 432 $4.00 load Pork Chops mery, Howard Patchell. Note-AlI t imes are Standard. Mrs. Dudley BElL-The Tailor )lich., and her 9,10,lt Newark, Delaware. VEGETABLES Stewing Beef Western. District--E. C. Wilson, O. GUARANTEED ALL WOOL LINE NEWARK-D ELAWARE CITY BRANCH Jones, of Mi W. Widdoes. OF READY MADE CLOTHING White Potatoes ( % bskt.) 75c Lamb Chnps guests of Mrs. _ $12 AND UP W ANTED-A white maid; chamber- Sweet Potatoes ( % bskt.) Stewing Lamb AttorneJI-Charles B. Evans: Leave Newark A n 'ive 1'1 ewark I maid and waitress. Apply Mrs. Henry A. 22 Academy Street Newark, Del. I 9 24 1t THE NEW ARK POST 75c-$1.00 V I C tI t Secretary and Treasurer and Collector 8:33 n. m. New Cabbage 4c lb. ea u e Laura Hossinger. 8:2 a. m. spent last week Phone 107 R of Taxes-Mrs. 12:11 p.m. 11 :0 I ' , . 40c doz. Veal Chops 5:52 p. m. a. m. Sweet Corn Alderman..-Daniel Thompson. 5 :12 p. m. Crothers. FARMER WANTED - March 1st, LEGAL NOTICE Tomatoes 75c bskt. Ste\ying Veal 1925; farmer on thirds. One who Superintendent 01 Streets-C. R. E. BALTIMORE & OHIO Lewis. intends to stick to fa rming and CONSTITUTIONAL (The prices this week came from the following firms: H. War- m ~ e a permanent home preferred. ner McNeal, Edward L. Richards, A. C. Heiser; J. Irvin Dayett and Superintendent 01 Water and Light- DAILY Jacob Shew. We8t Phine 86 R 4 JOHN NIVI N, A==' F=i=n=ke=r=na=g=l e=.)======East :9,24,tf Newark. AMENDMENT Police-Frank Lewis. 4:48 a. m. Building Inspector-Rodman Lovett. , 6 :1 a. m. 7:18a.m. 9:23 a. m. Milk Inspector-Roland Herdman. 8:35 a.m. 9:52 a. m. Plumbing Inspector-Rodman Lovett. 8:54 a. m. 11 :29 a. m. ASBessor-Robert Motherall. 2:03 p. m. 3:54 p. m. 3:03 p. m. 5:08 p. m. Street Committ6~Charles W. cOI- 4:00 p. m. mery, O. W. Widdoes, J. -L. Grier. 6:09 p. m. 5:55 p. m. 7:11 p. m. Town and Sewer Committee-A. L. l 9:45 p. m. 7:2 p.m. Beals, E. C. Wilson, J. L. Grier, 9:41 p. m. Howard Patchell. SUNDAY Light and Water Committee-E. C. Wilson, Howard Patchell, Charles West East W. Colmery. ' 4 :48 a. m. 7 :03 a. m. 8 :54 a. m. 9:23 a.m. TO BE SOLD AT ONCE Collector 01 Garbage-William H. 2:03 p. Harrington. m. 9: 52 a.m. Household furniture, consisting of 3:03 p. m. II :29 a. m. 4:00 p. m. stoves, qavenpor't and all other house 3:34 p. m. 5:40 p. m. 5:0 p.m. furnitures. Apply CHAMBER OF\ COMMERCE 9:45 p. m. 6:09 p.m. MRS. B. W. GREEN, President--George W. Rhodes. 7 :11 p. m. 9:41 p. m. Real' of Handloff's Stor Vice-PreBident--L. Handloff. 9·17-tf Main Street. ~~~~;:r~~eK.~o~~~~~~s. ======::!:'===== Directors-E. C . •Johnson, John K . DOVER BUS LINE . J:ohnston, Louis Handloff, 1. N. (Standard Time) Estate of He.q t.e l' ~. i\Il(t)wel, .De-I Shaeffer, Daniel Stoll, John Shaw, ceas ed. Notice IS hereby gIven E. B. Frazer, George Griffin, George N ewa?'k to Dover Dover to Newark that Letters Testamentary upon the W. Rhodes, Dr. Walt Steel, Frank E state of Hester A. Ma nuel, late of Collins. 7:15 a . m. 12:00 m. 12:30 p. m. 4 :00 p. m. White Clay Creek Hundred, deceased, BOARD OF HEALTH were duly granted unto Newark President--Dr. C. H. Blake. 11 a. m. Wilmington Bus connects Trust and Safe Deposit Company on Secretary-Roland Herdman. with Dover Bus a t Newark lea ving the third day of September, A. D. Orlando Strahorn, Robert Jones, at 12:30 p: m. ' 1924, and all persons indebted to the Professor Charles L. Penny. 7 :15 a. m. Bus out of Newark con. said deceased arc requested to make BOARD OF EDUCATION Dects at Dover for points South. payment to the Executor without de- Preaident--Dr. Walt H. Steel. lay, and all persons having demands ~:~;;::,;5-~~.HO~~!~~ Gray. against the deceased are required to R. S. Gallaher. P.B. & W. exhibit and present the same duly OUTGOING MAILS DAILY probated 1;0 the said Executor on 01' before the third day of September A. North. "nd ECI.8t South and West No?·th South 5:17 a. m. 8:03 a. m. D. 1925, 01' abide by the law in this 7:4& a. m. 7:45 a. m. 10:00 a.m. 10:45 a.m. 6:37 B. m. 8:22 a. m. behalf. 11 :00 a. m. 4 :00 p. m. 7:37 a . m. 10 :30 a. m. NEWARK TRUST AND SAFE 2:00 p. m. 6 :45 p. m. 8:31 a. m 8:22 a. m. DEPOSIT CO., 2:45 p. m. 9:19 a. m. 12 :09 p. m. Executo?·. 6:45 p. m. 11 :18 a . m. 3:03 p.m. JOHN ANDERSON 2 :43 a. m. 12 :09 p. m. Address INCOMING MAILS 4:37 p. m. 5:42 p. m. Cecilton I Md. Newark, Delaware. 8:00 a.m. 8:00 a . m. 5:47 p. m. 6:45 p. m. 9:30 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 9:08 p.m. 9 :36 p. rn. 12:30 p. m. 12:30 p. m. 1 :25 a.m. 11 :25 p. m. The winners are: Arthur M. Blam­ 6 : 80 p. m. 6: 00 p. m. 1:2 1 a. m. phin, of 214 Bala avenue, Cwywyd, A VONDALI:, LANDENBERG AND Pa., and Granville Ramey, of 305 CHATHAM SUNDAY BARGAIN Trainer street, Ridley Park, Pa. $800 CASH and balance in Mortgage Incor:rung-12 and 6:30 p. m. Out­ 8 :31 a.m. 11 :33 a. m. Thljse scholarships, amountig to a gomg~:,45 a. m. and 1:45 p. m . 9:28 a . m. 9:24 a.lII. will buy a well-located home-6 yearly sum of $600, each, were creat­ CooeD S BRIDGE, DELAWARE 11 :41 a. m. 11 :33 a. m. acres, 10-room dwelling and good ed in 1907 by the children of the late Incor,ning-9 a. m. and 6 p. m. Out­ 2:43 p. m. 4 :51 p.rn. outbuildings, on stone road, 3 miles Appro\ft:d February 13. 1923. gomg--,7 :45 a. m. and 4 p. m. 4:32 p. m. 5:42 p. m. WM . D. DENNEY, Frank Thompson, formerly President STRI~KIlR8V1LL1l AND KIlMBLESVILLE 5:47 p.m. 6:35 p. m. from Newark, Del. Go,·crnor. Centreville, Md. - The Maryland of the Pennsylvama RaIlroad Com­ F. H. THOMPSON, Incomlng-4 p. m. Outgoing--5:30 p. m.' 9:08 p.m. 8: 19 p. m. T. A. R. Denson. Secret3ry of Stale of the Farm Burea u Federation is getting pany, in memory of their father. 1:25 a. m. 9:36 p. m. 6,18,t!. Elkton, Md. ;~~ : ~ ~~ ' dDi~~:~':i~;g (\~ ~e~:~: a';:'d t~trr~~~te~;; ready to inaugurate an essay contest There are eight of them, for a periad . BANKS 11 :25 p. rn. FOR SALE-Kitchen Stove, Room f~g S~~a~~ll~;~m~~; ~o e~t;:l~re '~A~f ~~~ t~~~j: which will be open to all boys and of four years each, two being award­ FARMIlR8 TRUST COMPANY 1:21 a. m. tut ion of the State of Delaware, relating to girls of Queen Anne's CouAty who ed each year. They entitle the suc­ M~ing of ,Directors every Tuesday Stove; Baby Carriage. . Apply . t t' f t" h . d d . 8,20,tf 28 Choate St. ~~fl1~h~' ~~~olfed vbillrsfile/~n I the s~ffi~e a~re~h: are m gra es up . to an mcluding the cuessful candidate to select the uni­ morrung at rune o'clock. WILMINGTON BUS LlNE Secreta ry lof Slate and approved by the GOV' I second year of high school. The con- versity, college or technical school NEWARK TRUST AND SAFE DEPOSIT DAILY-DAYLIC'HT SAVlNG TIME ~~~::~~ I;~~~ "~~ e ~,~im~~' t : l;l~; C~~~ti~~:';.)::r~i I test will likely ~e conducted during COMPANY FOR SALE-Pennsylvania 44 seed which he desries to attend, subject to Leave NewCL1'k Leave Wil mington Ihis State i. publi shed in accordance with the the month of Octotber and the first the approval of the Railroad Com­ Meeting of Directors every Wednes­ wheat. Fine quality and clean. t day evening at eight o'clock. re~uir ... n!,n!s. o! lh~ ~oni~Il;~ oE so~ i"M ;/" of November. This is a part of the 7:00 3. m. Phone 86 R 4 JOHN NIVIN, 8 pany. 6:00 a. m. I 8:001l. m. • • WHEREOF. have plan of the Farm Bureau to inter est BUILDING AND LOAN 7:00 a. m. 9,24,tf Newark Shelled Nuts:. Put- shelled nuts in 8:00 a. m. 9 :1511. m. C~E';\i; : ~~~Iun~offici~ : ~~al h a :~ the youth of the rural communities in ASSOCIATIO NS a cheesecloth bag, lay flat on the 9:15a.m. 10 :45 a. m. • s~XTl IIJF : ~:h;'he rciay t1~ r J~:~ tr~ the co unt~ in . the work and principals NEWARK 12 :00 Noon table and tap lightly with I\. hammer 10 :45 a. m. FOR SALE • DELAWARE • the yea r of our Lord of co-ordmatlon and co-operation as Secre.ta711-y/arren A. Singles. 12:00 Noon until the nuts are broken as fine as • •••••••• : d~~rl t~~ds~:?en~~n.fo :r~n. exenlplified in the Farl11 Bureau. M:~~t-Flrst Tuesday night of each 1:00 p. m. 1 :00 p. m. FOR SALE-Ford coupe, 1922 A. R 'S~~:;;r~N~f Slate. To Select Th?'ee Best desired. This is a much quicker way 2:00 p. m. 2:00 p. m. 3:00 p. m. model. Good condition. Apply 8,16,13 The winning essay fl'6m each coun- than t he old method of the chopping MUTUAL 3:00 p. m. 4:00 p. m. 4 :00 p. m. ty in Maryland will be submitted to bowl. Secre.tary-J. Earle Dougherty. . REED A. EWING, 5:00 p. m. 5 :00 p. m. LEGAL NOTICE" the State office and t he three best ==:1::::;=:;;::::.:=;::.;===:,====::.=:=.=== Meehng- Second Tuesday of each 6:00 p. m. 6:00 p. m. Opera House, Newark. will be selected with attractive cash month at 7:30 p. m. 7:00 p. m. 7:00 p. m. LEGAL NOTICE TOWN LIBRARY Estate of Cha1'les H. Blake, Deceased. pl·izes. In addition, the first prize Est.llt.e of Willillm V. Gallery, de- 9:50 p. m. 9: 00 p. m. 9-17-2t The Library will be opened: . I 11 :15 p.m. Notice is hereby given that Letters Iw inner wi ll be ?"iven a free trip to ceased. Notice is hereby given that Monday - - 3 to 5 :45 p. m. FOR SALE- Bershire Boood Sow Testamentary upon the Estate of the annua l meeting 0.£. the M~l'Yla~d Let.ters of Administration upon the Tu~sday - - 3 to 5 :45 p. m. Charles H. Blake late of White Clay Farm .Bureau ~ e del'atl o n, whIch WIll ERtate of William V. Gallery, late of Friday - - 3 to 5'45 p and 10 little Pigs; Cheap. meet In Ca mbridge next Junuary 7 Whi te Clay Creek Hundred, deceased, Saturday 9 to 12 m. 7 to 9 ;00 p:~: SAT URDAY SCHED ULE IRVIN Mc ALL, Creek Hundred, deceased, were duly d 9 . ' d I d 9,24,4t Neal' Polly Drummond's Hill. granted unto Helen C. Blake on the an. . were u y grante unto George P. STATED MEETINGS / Leave Newark -6:00, 7:00, :00: ======! eleventh day of August, A. D. 1924, ---.-...- ... ~-- ReaJ'don, on the fifteenth day of Sep- M da, 2d 9 :00, 10 :00, 11 :00 a. m., 12:00 noo n, 1 A. l-;nd A.n~. 4th, every month, , 1 :00, 2 :00, 3 :00, 4 :00, 5 :00, 6:00, and ull perso ns indebted to the said P. R. R. SCHOLARSHIPS temb 1', A. D. 1924, and all persons in- W Al TED- To buy a Farm, ~ 25 to debted to the said deceased ar; re- M07lda,y~r 0 d A' 17 :00,8:00,9:00,10:30 p.m. S' Oo 40 acres, near ewark. decea cd are requested to make pay- AWARDED RECENTLY quested to make payments to the Ad- chancis 7"30 l' er merlcan Me- L eave Wilmin gton - 7:00, .: llii~~~~~ ment to the Executrix without delay, , . . Tue8da 'I' p. m. / 9:00, 10 :00, 11:00 a . llI .. 12 noon, JOH A. K IRK, and all perso ns havin g demands Two sons of Pen ~ sy l van l a Radroad ministrator without dclay, and all per- y- . 0 : R. M., 7 :30 p. m. 1 :00 2 :00 3 :00, 4 :00, 5 :01). 6:00, 9,2-1,11. Landcnbcrg, Pa. Tt~e8da,y-AAnclent Orde.r. ~f ~rn- 7 :00' 8 :00 '9 :00 10 :30, 12 :00 p. m· agai', ~ 1; th deceased are r equi red to e mpl oye ~s were n ~t lfi e d recently t hat sons having demands against the de­ Ions, or . O. H ., DIV1Sl0n No.8' , , ex hi '.· and present the same duly Ithey havc been awarded. t his year'R ceased are required to exhibit and pre­ 2d every month, 8 p. m. . ' LOST probulk cl ,to the said Executr ix on or Fr!lnk Thompson memOrial scholar- sent the same duly probated to the Wednesday-Heptasophs or S W M SUNDAY CJiEI)l' LE 7 :30 p. m. ,. . ., ton LO T- Signet ring, monogram "E. before the eleventh day of August ships which ~ver e esta bli s h e~l some said Administrator on or befor e the Wednesday-1st and 3d of e Leave Ncwaf'k Leave lVil ming V. B." Lost on schou l ground., A. D. 1925, 01' abide by the law in this I >,:;a rs ago to gIve the sons of h vi ng or fifteenth clay of September, A. D. month. White Clay Camp N;e7 9:00 n.m. Friday ev ning. Rewurd. Return to behalf. deceased employees an opportunity to 1925, QI' abide by the law in t his be- 7 :30 a.m. Woodmen of the World. ' ., 9 :00 a. m 10 :30 a. m. MRS. JOH BECK, Addre s secure a technical education. Compe- half. Wednesday - Board of Directo 10:30 a. m. 12 :00 Noon 13 Annabelle St. titive examinations for these scholar- Address Chamber of Commerce every 4fh' 7 p. m. ' , 12:00 Noon 9,17,tf Newark. EDWARD W. OOCH, Atty. at Law, ships, embracing subjects correspond- WILLIAM T. LYNAM, Att'y at Law 1:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. Th!'-r,day-I. O. O. F., 7:30 m 3:00 p. m. 3 :00 p. rn. ======~======Equitable Bldg., I to the entrance requirements of Equi tabl e Bldg., - ' F~y-Modern Woodmen of' A~er­ 4 :30 p. m. 4 :30 p. m. LOST- Pocketbook with driver's Ii- Wilmington, Delaware. I sc i e~t~ n c departments of higher uni- Wilmington, I~a, No. 10170, 7:30 p. m. 6:00 p. m. 6:00 p. m. cense and money. Finder please r e- ver sltles, colleges and technical Delaware. Friday-FriendshJp Temple No 6 7: 30 p. m. Pythlan Sisters 8 pm.' , 7:30 p. m. t.urn to \ HELEN C. BLAKE, schools, were held in June, fifteen 9:00 p. m. 9:00 p.m. !l,10,1t 23 Choate St. Executrix. young men participating. GEORGE P. REARDON, Satk'l'dall-Knlght's of' Golden Eagle, 11) :30 p. m. 10 :30 p. m. Administrator. 8 p. m. 12:00 p. m.. NEWARK POST. NEWARK. DELAWARE. SEPTEMBER 24, 1924. 7 News Bulletins of Interest From Ma=n=y~N=e=a=r=by=T=owns

CECIL COURT CLOSES Heavy Sentence;Mark Short Term GLASGOW STA liE DAHLIA SHOW r······································1 NEW CASTLE ALARMED , Held Last Week unday School at the Pencader . After examining 74 witnesses, mak- Presbyterian hurch at 1.30 p. m., Cen~:~~~::~:~g~~~ II---.... ~~~~~~~~.~~~.-... JI BY M~ ~ SCARE' JIlr .. William M. Francis, of WiI- II1g 34 presentments and indictment and preaching at 2.30 p. m. mingtoll. was the gue t of her aunt, and ignoring thirteen other cases, th~ -- Be Scene of Gorgeous The Willing Work--ers Cia s of State Laboratory Fmds Canme Mi ss Emily Thomas, on Fdday. Septembel' term of Circuit Court for Rev. Geoghegan of the M. E. Church D' I Ebenezel' M. E. Sunday chool will Suffering With Rabies lSP ays hold an entertainment in Fairview Last Week Cou nty Treasurer John H. Terrell Cecil Co unty adjourned Saturday last. has retu,.ned to his duties after a Sentences pronounced upon Alexan- mcation of a few weeks , The Delaware tate Dahlia Asso- School Hou e Thursday evening, j ha s returned from a week's visit to ciation will hold its second annual October 2. They will be assisted by his brother, \\ illiam M. Terrell, of del' Carr, of near Co nwingo, self-con- Rev. J. Ma,,~lurray, of Newark, exhibition in the New Century Club ewark talent which will give "The , Friday afternoon a mad dog was \\'Il ;;hillgtOn, D. C. fessed assailant of Constable Leland was a Glasgow visitor Friday even­ F 'd d S Kitchen Kabinet." Sandwiches and shot and killed by Chief of Police here Ott and upon Charles Kassing, con- ing. t II ~y t an I aturday. :r are home-made candv for sale. IWilliam Palmer, after the animal had Mr ~ . J. Brooke Jackson, who has victed by a jury of complicity in the ~v en y- wo cases, and twelve spe- '__ . bitten J. Harry King, a New astle been ~pen din g the summer with her murders of Joseph Dorance. of near Mrs. Ella Dayett who has been sick cia I classes open fOl' entries. Gover- IIII'. lind Mrs. John Buckingham ice merchant Ilnd resident of t rllnd paren's. 211r. and MI·s. Robert E. Barksdale, were among the heaviest at the home of Mrs. H. L. Dayett, nor Denney and Mayor Forrest have Iand children, Florence and John, of and Harmony street Ilnd an ftalian F raz ~ r, left on Friday for her home in imposed in recent years by the court. Jr., with an attack of pneumonia, is acce~ted the invitation to. attend the Wilmington,. visited the latte~'s Uncle I girl nllmed Mary G~rnes~i, who re­ Detroit. Mic higan. Carr received six years in the peni­ no better. opelllng 0 fthe show Fnday after- I Alban Buckll1gham and fanllly, Sun- sides in the we tern section of New noon at 2 o'clock. day. Castle. The dog, it is claimed, had fonowin, tentiary and Kassing ten years. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Uord and children, Mrs. L e Ruly McDonald, of New Dora Vaughn, also alleged to have ~he jud~es are Frank W. Baker, Mr. Ilnd Mrs. Cillrence Collins, of I been running Ilt large during Thurs- York. d.ited Elkton friends this week. been connected with the plot to mur- Marie and Betty Jane, of Cooch's Wilson. Bridge, spent Sunday with h8l' par­ PhJ!~delphJa, and. Ca l~n B: Boll~s, Hockessin, visited Mr. anI! Mrs. day and Friday, and it is understood ~I r, ..J. Frank Blake has returned to del' Dorance, was freed after the Court ents here. ~edla, Pa . . The ludgll1g. Will ~egll1 Arthur Atwell recently. sevel'81 animals were bitten. After her hom at Childs, after a month's decided that insufficient evidence had 111 the mormng and the prizes Will be -- Ith e dog had been killed the head was l'isil to Wild wood, N. J. been brought in to convict her. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Davis have as awarded before the show opens. Many Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Buckingham sent to Dr. Middlebrook, State bac- • • • theil' guests, her brother and wife, of the prizes have been donated 'by and son, Ralph, spent Sunday with terologist of Newa~k, and it wa Mr. Dud ley Frazer, of Detroit, ffiKING HOMEWARD Mr. and Mrs. Watts, of Wilmington. local. merchants \~h~ ha~ e be?n sup- ~heir son, MI'. Raymond Buckingham, found that the animlll was suffering Mi ch., and he r mother, Mrs. Allan Cecil County Man On Way Back, Still Earle Brown, formerly of this porting the assocl8tlOn sll1ce Its first 111 Newllrk. from rabies. Howard L. Wilhelme, Jones, of lIilford, Del., were recent Pushing Cart place, now of Newark, ,is confined to and successful attempt to hold a # president of the Board of H~llth, and gue sts of 1111'S . Robert B. Frazer. dahlia show, ' Mr. J. T. Dempsey, MI'. 'and Mrs. Dr. Lewis Booker, New Castle city -- • Elkton relatives of John L. Grash, his bed with an attack of typhoid George Dempsey and children, and physician, have issued notices that The co mmittee in charge of the show MI' . Henry A. Miller, of Baltimore, of near that tgwn, have received word fever. Miss Elizabeth Buckingham spent a ll dogs in tha't town must be con- consists of the offices and e..xecutive spent la. t week with Mrs. Omar D. that the lattel' is on his way home Those who visited Mr. and Mrs. C. board who are: W. P. Lynch, presi­ ~~~:\:i~ \~~t~a~I;~lo:~~ ~1:.. Robert fined for tw.o weeks and th~t all dogs CroUler . aft~r more than 1009 miles of hikini' A. Leasure Sunday were: Mr. and dent; R. F. Lunt, vice-president; H. , . , ,..found runmng at large Will be hot . Y H. - ~Ir and :'I-lrs. Hasson T. Terrell, of behll1d a push cart. IMrs. A. Carey and children, Leona H. Gallagher, secretary; E. B. High- , Dedicate Farm Homes I lIl1medlatel • Che tel', Pa., are visitiJlg his father, Mr. Crash strated out from Elkton and Ray ~uthur, of Ogleton; Mr. and field, treasurel'; E. S. McCarthy, G. The National Grange provides a ---... _--••--- J. H. Terrell. by way of Lewisville, Pa., early in the Mrs. LOUIS Thorpe, of Christiana; E. S~ith and H. ~. Reed. ritual ceremony for the dedication of Variety Social - . - summer, bent on ./Ieeing the country. Mrs. David and sons and Mrs. Casho, ~[r ' ~ran k K~I! I?ft Tuesday for His camping outfit and other neces- of Iron Hill. farm homes, which is widely u s~d in There will be a variety social held MRS. BESSIE McMULLIN many sections of the United States. a VI SIt With relatives III Rhode Island. Isities he carried on the p h t . . -- Such an occasion never fails to bring at Mrs. Leslie Ford's, at y nolds. 1 ree onvenhon Mrs, Paul Birch, of Wilmington, Sun- the past two years in Elkton with tion in rural communities. day evening. Rev. Frank Herson, of Newark Mrs. David Scott, died Friday last Mr. and 2111'S. Sterling Dunbar en­ was one of the principal speakers at MARRIED ·wini CONSENT in a New York hospital from a nerv- A Grange milling and supply com­ Slab Wood ous breakdown. t pany operated neal' Oakland, Mary­ tertain ed at Bridge last Friday even­ the 27th annual convention of the East land, has been running successfully I ing at their home on North street. Mill Creek Hundred Sunday School Parents AI)prove License Granted Elk :03 a.m. for. a number of years and proves of FOR SALE Association held in Hockessin M. E. Mills Couple WEDS AT PROVIDENCE :23 a.m. great value to the farmers of that ~li s Helen Gilpin was operated on Church last Thursday. Rev. Herson Edward S. Walker, 18, and Cath­ Ideal for Fall fires in :52 a. rn. Miss Armstrong Becomes Bride of locality, handling feeds, fertilizer, at nion Hospital last Friday'. Her spoke at the morning session. erine M. Potts, 16, both of Elk Mills, :29 a.m. Mr. Luver Saturday Next binder twine, coal, spraying material furnace or fireplace. :34 p. rn. co ndi tio n at this writing is still Rev. A . W. Sonne and Rev. Robert were granted a marriage license last and farm machinery on a large scale :08 p.rn. se rious. Bpll were the main speakers at the week by H. Winfield Lewis, clerk of Miss Violet Creswell Armstrong, of DELIVERED FREE :09 p.m. and at a great saving to the farmer alterlloon session. A large attend­ the courts of Cecil County. Providence, Md., granddaughter of :11 p.m. buyers. Co-operative selling also dis­ ance of the Association was noticed Due to the immature ages, Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Armstrong, Ox­ I-Jenry F. Mote :41 p.m. poses of large quantities of the farm- i PROVIDENCE at both sessions, and a most pleasing Lewis was compelled to ask the par­ ford, Pa., and MI'. Luver, of Pitts­ NEWARK, DEL. program was held. ents of the contracting parties to ap­ burgh, will be· married in the Rock el'~' products at the highest cash I ~ Ir . V,'illiam Mackenzie and family • _ • prove the match. This the latter did Presbyterian Church, Providence, Sat­ prices. 11.:======:'1 moved to the old Strickland house on Butter: Before unwra,pping butter, and the license was granted. urday, Septcmber 27th. Thursday. Henry Spence will soon hold under cold water. The paper will oecupy the ho use vacated by them'. come off without any of the butter sticking to the paper. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph' Morgan and Thinking of Building? son , of E lkton, spent the week-end At REHOBOTH BEACH, Its the wi th her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. CllThen it will , pay you to see me for Mackenzie. Be Careful in Silos; BELHAVEN HOTEL estimates on your proposed operation. M. C. BARNETT, Owner and Proprietor Mr. a d ~ lrs. George Stewart were Gases Are Dangerous Prompt and personal attention. ol'er unday guests of Mr. and Mrs. I Special jllmily rate3 jor the Summer Season. Excellent Parker James, of Cherry Hill. ' That poisonous ga es fOl'm ed cuisine, with personal attention to banquets and dinners. Mr, and Mrs. George Fillingam in si los overnight while jn pl'O­ Dining Room seats 250. Large, airy rooms. Every mod­ cess of being filled are deadly, ern convenience. Make reservations now...... w. REX WILLIS and fami ly were home visitors this week, of her parents Mr. and Mrs. is the seasonable warning of the OPEN ALi THE YEAR Offices 140 E. Main Street Newark Cha rles Du nsmore. United States Depal-tr..c nt of S01tt~ Agricultui·e. :03 a. m. Mrs. James Steele spent one day :22 a.m. Freshly cut silage in a :30 a.m. this week wi th Mrs. George Stewart. partially filled s ilo produce' a :22 a. m. Ra lph Dunsmore was a home visitor poisonous gas. If t here is no p.m. circulation of air this g-as re­ on Sund ay. :03 p. m. mains in considerable volume. :09 p. m. :42 p. m. Mrs. James Mackenzie, Sr., spent Death may result from cnter­ :45 p.m. Wedne dav afternoon with her daugh­ ing a silo containing this gas. 0 :36 p. m. ter, Mrs. Henry Dunsmore. A precaution reco'mmended ~ 8 0/ :25 p. m. by Government speciali sts will 1:21 a. m. Mr. and Mrs. Gilorge Kolb and avert the danger of entel'in!.' a 'iy, of Philadelphia, spent the gas-fill ed silo. They advise run­ with Mr. and Mrs. William ning the blower of the' ensilage Excellent Investments for Delaware Money cutter for a few minuteR before Feeley has r eturned anyone enters the silo. week's visit in Phila- Air currents stirred up by the blower will dilute the gases suffici ently or drive them from GILT EDGE 80/0 GOLD BONDS the silo. It is then safe to enter. ON IMPROVED CITY PROPERTY AT WEST PALM BEACH, FLA. ·ul·t is Brown who has been ai'ling , several weeks was taken to Union FEDERAL INCOME TAX 4 % PAID BY THE BORROWER lao t Friday and operated on ap pendic itis. At this writing he These Bonds are base value of 50 % of actual cost of pro.perty making security of $200 for each getting along very nicely. IN $100 Bond issued Backed by the unconditional guaranty of the WEST PALM BEACH Guaranty Com· Mr. Hayes Saxton and daughter, of Ilany, a strong brokerage with a paid·in capital of $500,000. This company is operated by a Board , spent the week-end with Used Cars Mrs. Lewis Sprout. of Directors composed of the best business 'men in West Palm Beach. Having spent the last fifteen Mr. Leon Ewing, of Providence winters there, I am personally acquainted with them, and recommend the bonds sold by them to any :00 p. IlL ",i ll move his family to one wanting a good investment Saving 8%. Why take 4% at. home, when you can get 8 % there. I :00 p.m. :00 p.m. Hill in the house owned by can furnish any bonds they have on short notice and give any information wanted as to their loca­ :00 p.m. Harry Malin. tion and value. I represent them for the state 0 f Delaware and the Eastern Shore of Maryland. :00 p.m. 1923 'Star Touring :00 p.m. :00 p.m. 1923 Durant Demonstrator P. S. :00 p. m. Like new. DAVID C. ROSE 1:15 p.m. I am not only a Representative of this Company but am an investor. I am investing in these bonds to the limit. ve ning. D. C. ROSE . and Mrs. Walter Wright and . of Kirk Mills, Pa., visited Mr. rs. Wilber Wright on Sunday. THREE NEW OFFERINGS

1. $195,000 First Mortgage 2. $73,000 8% First Mort· 3. $28,000 First Mortgage Under New Manalement 8% COUl)on Bonds on build· gage Bonds on Florida Hotel Bonds on Gunn Apartments B. M. BIRX. Prop. located at Lakeworth, Fla., 7 HOWARD HOTEL ing costing ,$375,000 in West miles south of Palm Beach. at Miami, Florida. Building Palm Belich, Fla. cost $46,400. Elkton, Maryland Building cost $160,000. BANQUETS AND SPECIAL DINNERS " All the abOve offerings are fully guaranteed, as to prompt payment of interest and bonds I in addition to the real estate value of the bo nds,· by the Palm Beach Guaranty Co., which WHY spoil a good day'!! outing by haviug to go howe and has a paid·in capital of $500,000. pr~pare supper, when you can get such a good meal here? HOME COOKING AND COMFORTS • 8 NEWAR~ST. NEWARK. DELAWARE. SEPTFMBER 24~24 : ~~ .. u..... u.. u.uu.u ... uu ... u.u .... u.. u.... ;.u...... u ...... ·= ·.. ···· ...... ·· .. ·.. ······· .. ·.... ·.... ········.···· .... ··.. ··=1 COL SMITH RE-ELECTED I NAT. CHAPLAIN V. F. W. I Newark Resident Si gnall y ! AT THE . THEATRES ! Honored at Atlantic City Encampment l.m .....; ...... m...... ,u ... ~ .. ;.. ___ ...= ...... ·..... ·· .. ·~::~~::i~·~: ·· :~~:~ ··~~· ·~~:··~·;::~~: ··· ~;:~~·· ~~·~·o·~:· ·~~:~i~~~~··\~ MUSIC without an equal in the realn of annual engagement Monday even. By unanimous choice of t he hun-' Show Coming ~o Opera Housel ~I S magic. m g, Sept.ember 2 , and Will also play dred of delegates present, olon I : ;:;-~--:;--=;-,;-:::::-:-:-=::-;:;::~<==::::-----::;:;;;;;;;;;:;;--:-;;:;jjjiiiiiii~· ~;;:;.i i' Thurston seems to be endowed with two ma tille performanct's, \Vodnes. amuel J. mith, . . A., retir d, of a magic power with which he dis- day . and Saturday. For his forth. Newat'k, was again chosen ational .1 es the secrets of the supernatural ~ o mlllg engag m e ~t, Thurston prom. haplain of t he' et · r

willthc gooph intos t hiesff ectyear. in a Frcdayshman or two. rul es III.iiiiiii••••••••• iiiiiiii~ L.:I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~m~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ SECTION TWO The Newark' Pos·t ,'OLUME xv NEWARK, DELAWARE, SEPTEMBER 24, 1924, NUMBER 3S

e College Campuses -1n Splendid Shape as Term Begins

The two illustrations above show the main buildings of the Men's and Visitors to Newark repeatedly stated ·that Old College Hall is ,one of Women's Colleges of the University, the central parts of their respective the finest examples of southe'rn Colonial architecture to be seen anywhere. groups. As the 1924-25 term opens, it is the opinion of all who have in­ I The ' FreShman enrollment at the Women's College jumped to a new spected the two campuses, that they are in the' finest condition. Super­ high mark this year, and practically equals that of the Men's College. It intendent of Grounds D. Lee Rose, Engineer Herman McKay, and Business is believed that about 110 new students have entered in each institution Adptinistrator A. G. Wilkinson have, with the limited resources at hand, up to this morning. • brought the buildings and their surroundings liP to a standard one a par with any small college in the East.

/ Ahern, New Castle; B. H. Alex­ Men's "frosh" Enrollment Reaches 110; ~ ander, Wilmington; 6 . P. Bacon, State Democrats Plan Norristown, Pa. ; R. S. Baker, Bobbed Hair 107 New Girls Enter Women's College! Georgetown; E . W. Cannon, Active Comp~igning Bridg~v ille; E. F. Carmichael, (Continued from Page 1.) German, Laurel; Frances R. " Newton Baker, Governor Dooined? Goldstein. Virginia Hastings, Wilmington; ,A. ,C. Churchman, WOMEN'S COLLEGE Wilmington; W. 'H. Clemo, Wil­ .. AI" Smith and Others Laurel. The following young women have I mington; B. S. Cohen, Wilming­ "Absolutely," says Exper Margaret E. Higgins, E lsmere; Scheduled To Speak enrolled in the Freshman Class at the ton; Phili p Cohen, Wilmington; Alice B. Holloway, Dover; Cath­ Next Month Womi!fl's Co ll ege of Delaware. Where A. B. Collins, Newark; E. P. arine Holton, Newark; Kathrine. no addresses are given the student is Cordray, Harrington; J. D. Democratic State Chairman Harry National Bathing Beach Prizes LaV. Horton, Milford; Dorothy a resident of Wilmington. Craven, Wilmington; Fred Crea­ T. Graham' met last week with City Awarded Only to Girls With E. Inderlied, May J effris, Lor etta E li zabeth E. Anderson, Laurel; mer, J enkintown, Pa. ; C. L. Daly, Chairman Robert Kramer, of Wil­ Tresses Unmutilated - Style M. J ester, Ellendale; Evelyn M. Christine Bakel', Selbyville; Har­ Dover. mington; New Castle Chairma n W. Specia li sts Predict R turn of riet E. Barkley, H illcrest; Anna Johnson, Philadelhpia, Pa .; Mar­ W. A. Danes, Hartley; J. B. Truxton Boyce ; Kent Co unty Cha ir­ Transformations and Banish­ F. Beaver, Washington, D. C. ; jorie L. Johnso n, ewark; E lea­ Derrickson, Dover; W. B. Der­ man I-1erman C. Taylor, a nd Su sex ment of Sci so [·s.' Evelyn -F .J3ell , Wyoming; Mil­ no r M. Ka ne, Sarah Koppel, K. rickson, Selbyville; H . B. Dough­ Co unty Chairma n Norman Co llison, dred H. Bennett, Selbyville; Isabel Kra use, Ruth Larter, erty, Wilmington; O. C. Eskridge, to plan an extensive six weeks' cam- ' L illi a n F. Benson, Wyoming; Rosalie E. Lawless, Lora H. New Castle ; S. P. Fishel', JI·., paign, at t he co untry headquarters, WRITTEN EXPRESSLY FOR THE 'POSl" Sarah L. Betts, Milford; Edith Little, Newark; Geneva A. Lo­ E lkton, Md.; T. R. Fleetwood, Dove l' . F. Biddle, J ean W. Blail', Dol'­ bach; Mildred T. Long, Green­ Seaford; A. G. Gluckman, Wil­ ' Plans were fo rmulated for tours othy M. Bond, Newton, Pa.; wood; Ha2el 1. Malcom, Newark; mington; J. E. Gordy, Laurel; throughout the State beginning Sep­ Is bobbed hair doomed? I have a chance. E li zabeth P . BI'ady, Mlddletown; F ra nces L. Malcom, Louise Mar­ R. K . GI'ubb, WilmingtOD; Charles tember 29, and continuing until the Beauty specialists, theatrical True; There were a number Margaret S. Brady, Middletown; shall, Lewes. Gurney, Jr., Wilmington; Samuel night before election. ma nager. and style authorities ' of girls at the contest whose Eleanor C. Brooks, Newark; Mary E. Martindale, P ort De­ Handloff, Newark;. Edward Hart, The schedules mapped out designate in !'< ew Yo rk agree that the locks were attractively clipped F lorcnce H. Bryan, Lewes; Nettie posit, Md.; Alice, E . Marvel, Sea­ Jr., Townsend; Frank Hayes, work in Kent county from Septe lOlber po t-\\'ar epidemic of shprn -but they disappeared in t he Budin, WincJna P. Buting, Selby­ ford ; Martha M. Maull, Lewes; Dover; C. J. Hehl, Wilmin~ton; 29 to October 4 ; RU ;:'al ew Castle trcsscs has reached its peak, first elimination and were never ville; Margaret Burke, Newport; E . Pauline McCabe, Selbyville; R. t G. Rill, Smyrna; J . I. ' Hoff­ county, October 6 to October 11; Wil­ an d women who seek to dress heard of again. Marjorie. L. Cameron, North Melissa McCabe, Frankford; ecker , Philadelphia, Pa.; F. M. mingtol1, October . 13 to October 25, "diffel'enily" are turning to B eauties Are CU1'l Ado1'ned E a t, Md .; Ma rgaret K. Ca mpbell. Pea 1'1 McCabe, Frankford ; Mary Hoopes, Wilmington; Marion with the last week given up to na­ "transformations," the Paris- pn the other hand, Mi ss Ruth E mili e P. Cal'penter, Newark; W. McGol'dy, Route I, Box 4, Hopkins, Newark; T. E. H ynson, tional party speakers thl'oughout the ienn bandeau and other means Malcomi3on, who e dark, luxur­ Ma l'gar'et M. Cater, Kenton; Wilmingtori; Harriett D. Millel', Smyrna; R. T. J~qu ette, Newark; State. of di , guising t heir snipped iou s curls fall far over her Marie L. Castex, Paris, France; Collegevillc, Pa.; E li zabeth Mor­ C. E . J ones, Delmar; J. W. Jones, The various weeks to be devoted to loeb, according to late reports shapely should er, wa chosen Sarah F. Coffin, Hartsville, Pa.; gan, Lewes ; Edna M. Myers, Middletown; W. B. Jones, Wil­ the various cOllllties wil l find nom i­ from the east. Beach Queen of America. She H elen A. Co leman, Greenwood; Motor Route, Pleasantvill e, N. J .; mington. I nees on the Democratic State t icket Sewspaper women, in attend- I comes from Philadelphia. Her Mary Mae Colliso n, Bridgeville ; Beatrice M. O'Neal, R. D. No.3, vistng the outlying di stricts during Frederick Kayhart, Mountain anee al the Long Island social curls have never been scissored, Phoebe O. Co nahey, Port Norris, Bridgeville ; H elen B. Pearce, th eday and hold ing party rallies at Lakes, N. J.; Emanuel Karp, aeti\'ilie' in honor of the Prince she said. And now she has a New J ersey; Margaret Co nnor, Baltimore, Md.; Alice E. Phelps, night. Wilmington; A. R. Kelly , Wil­ of Wale:; were impressed with secretary-working ten hours a Elsmere; Katherine E . Contant, Christiana; Dorothy M. Pierson, The national speakers slated to mfngton; C. }'. Kelly, Wilming­ the ~pr ~ ding habit of letting day, 'tis said, answering offers Wilmington; Bert M. Cooper, Sarah E. Potts, Newark; Fannie make addresses include Homer Cum­ ton; F. H. Kell y, Wilmington; H. the hair grow long again. So- of contracts from movie pro­ Still Pond, Md.; Leli a Davis, T , Rendell, North Arlington, N. mins, former manager, ex-Secretary W. Ken nedy, Jr., Wilmington; W. ciely women, they found, are du~ers, ~oothbrush concerns and Federalsburg, Md.; Anne du J.; E dna B. Reynolds, Dagsboro; of War ewton D. Bakel', and Gov­ S. Keys, Clayton; E. T. LeCates, pen ~ioning the barber's shears, hall' tOJ1lC manufacturers. Rose" Edith G. Dutcher, Frances Ella Reynolds, North East, Md. ; ernor Albert C. Ritchie, of Maryland Hollyoak; C. J. Lewis, Selbyville ; beeallse "eve ry shop girl now ' And t here was Mi s Catherine A. Eckert, New Cumberland, Pa.; Florence W. Roberts, Ocean Vi ew. during the clos in g week of the cam­ F. J. Lewis, Bridgl!vill e; Victor ha, a l;oyi. h shingle, my de~r." M. Campbell of Colum.bus, 9·, Elsie Eva{ls, Frankford; Maude Pauline E. Rodney, Laurel; paign, according to the pl ans outl'ined Lichtenstein, Wilmington; D. C. Boblml Hair Too E xpenstVe who won the AtlantiC City Evans, Frankford ; Roberta Norma G. Russell, Laurel; Helen at the meeting, with Governol,' AI Lloyd, Smyrna ; M. F. Lohman, "I cut my hair three years beauty crown for the last two Foard, Marsha ll ton; Mi ldred B. .E. Scout, Smyma) Jeannette B. Smith, of New York, scheduled to \lP­ Wilmington; D. S. Loveland, Jr., ago," ~ai d a young business years. She was "runner-up" Forman, Julia E. Francis, Del­ Sllallcl'OSS, T helma N. ~hellend e r , peal' in Wilmir~gton October 4. Woman in a downtown office tNis year. And she's never heard mar; Ruth A. Frazier, Wayne, Marshall ton; Grace E . Smedley, Woodstown, N. J:; H. S. Lynch, rec ntly. ,"I thought I'd save t h ~ barbe~s cru~u-u~ l clippers. Pa.; Mabel A. Fuller, Mary E. P leasantville, N. J .; E li zabeth C. Jr., Wilmington; H . W. Lynch, a dl'eadful lot of time. But, Another fascll1atmg beauty, Garbutt, FI'ederica; Mary E. Smithers, Chesapeake City, Md.; Geo rgetown; F. R. Mackie, Childs, F ACUL1'Y RECEPTION gracioll S, my 'King Tut" cut whose long, flowing tresses at­ Marion H . Steele, E lsmere, Del.; Md.; H : L. Maier, Jr., Wilming­ ood les of bother and hair- tracted the judges to such a de­ Ethel B. Stengle, Reta M. Ta t­ ton; J. G. Maliney, Dove r; Max New Memhers of College Staff To Be ing expenses - far more gl'ee that she was awarded num­ drew the admiring glances. man, Grcp.nwood; Dorothy S. Markowitz, Wilmington; J. H. Entertained in Club Rooms Martin, Jr., Wilmington; T. C. mV' ol d coiffure cost." erous cups and a place in the Bobbed hail' is not passe by Tharp, Hanington ; E lizabeth J . Announcement has been made that McCaskey, Wilmington; R. J . ' u-Aild bobbing does destroy select few called for final con­ any means : Some girls will cut Thornley, Smyrna; U. Joy Unger, the Faculty Club of the Uni vcrsity McLucas, Wilmington; O. G. gil'i '" pe r onal\ty," chimed . in id.eration. was Miss Faye Lam- their hair for years to come. And 'Gree nwood; Bonnie W. Walker, wi ll enter tain new members of the Melvin , Fredel'i ca; Samuel Mill er, companion. "You look lIke phler, prIde of Santa Cruz, some married women. But the Newark; Sara Walker, R ichard­ staff a nd their wives at the annual re­ Wilmington; James Mitzner, Mil­ other girl, at dances, ~he Cal if .. Her. long hair frames a trend of fashion is toward long so n Park; Jane D. Warner, ception to be held in the Club roo ms fOI·.d . pariies. We all look lIke charmmg, mtellectual counten­ hair again-with the aid of Roselle, N. J .; Alice L. Webb, in Old College, Monday evening next. G. H. Moran, Hillcrest; L. W. asylum inmates. No in- ahce. "transformations" ancl the allur­ Philadelphia, Pa.; Amy L. White, A program of entertainment is now Moore, Smyrna; W. A. Moritz, ualit". Yes I'm letting The arne applies to Miss Mar- ing bandeau and hair net, until Housatonic, Mass. ; Hester P. a rranged by a committee. gl'O \V again.''' garct Leigh, "Miss Chicago," nature reasserts itself. Widdoes, Newark; Viola M. Wil­ J. W. Morris, Wilmington; R. M. Anyway_ who finished among the final "Every girl," concluded a liams, Prospectville, Pa.; Lydia Moyer, Norristown, Pa.; Keith You may be as beautiful as five. Her dark cu rls stream New York beauty pecialiJ.t, H . Wilson, Milford. Murray, Moylan, Pa. ; Nevins, J . W. Short, Ocean View; C. of Troy or as shapely as gracefully down her shoulders. "should study her personality in Scaford; L. E. Noble, Federals­ L. Smith, Oak Grove; M. H . - but you'll probably Sobs- Destroy Personality the mirror, If she can make MEN'S COLLEGE burg, Md.; D. L. Ott, Jr., Wil­ Smith, Wilmington; S. 1. Speigler, wi n a national bathing I And when you asked one of herself distinctive, strikingly mington; H. K. Paxson, Jr., Wilmington; G. M. Stant, Town­ ontest if you have bob- the Atlantic City beauty judges ~ttract i ve and vibrant with per­ The total enrollment ~ f the Fresh­ Cynwyd, Pa.; W. R. .Pierson, send; C. L. W. Stein, Seaford; ir. "Why?" he replied- • sonality-by means of long hair man Class at the Men's College on E lkton, Md.; G. O. Poole, Wil­ H. K. Tatman, Wilmington; G. JU dge from the recent That beauty ~f face and fi~- -she is foolish to submit to the Monday evening, ~tood at 105. Three mington; F. 1. Ponsell, Wilming­ L. Townsend, Newark; Truitt ing;.; at Atlantic City, ure and personahty are the mam scissors every two weeks." more were registered yesterday, and ton; O. B. Pusey, Seaford; F . A. Tull, Seaford; M. O. Watson, the fairest of the fair requisites of the judges, but If you don't think hair styles it is expected that today the enroll­ Reardon, Wilmington; W. U. Dover; A. F. Walz, Wilmington; more than ninety Arneri- girls witli bobs lack that essen- are changing, just notice the ment wiII reach no. The complete Reybold, Delaware City ; W. H. F. T. Warrington, Georgetown; citi , assembled to compete tial individuality which was smart women in the shopping list of Freshmen enrolled Monday Reynolds, Townsend; P. A. Robin, S. R. Wharry, Wilmington; J. N. follows: th honor of being named needed to make them stand ~>ut district one of ~ hese autumn af­ Wilmington; J. H. RO!Jer, Hock­ White, Wilmington; J . E. Wilson, .America," the girls with from the crowd-al?d the. girls ternoons: Long t resses are com­ Myers Ableman, Mi ll sboro;W:­ essin; J. J. ROBS, Jr., SeafoTd; New Castle; N. W. Wolfe. . hmgle or boyish bob didn't with long locks Imme

HOW CANADA HAS SOLVED THE LIQUOR PROBLEM ri~~~ i~/:~i~~~i~1d~~1 ~'ef~~~~n~ :~o;a~u~:~~ O!p~:~;onnaS'~~i~:ei:uir~ Some Speed Record D F L B the store too often, questions A Grange in Saratoga co unty, New ( r. ranI'( ohn. in The New York Times) may be asked. Presently his the W. L. David building, next to the York, holds the record for rapid ac-

~~~~~::~~~~:~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~llTh e fo llowing is a clear th' l ~~pohce, mQ~iM~tiP~d~fue" and the ultimate disposal ~~- • - - cha~~r terO~=b~~lli m,mbers in a ~ssmall ~n rural W a.nd ad eq.ua. te survey of how mg the English-speaking back.' ?f his purchases may be looked A Fanners' Spokesman haml et, a building project was im- world has ever given us. Thou- t OU I' B nttsh neighbor has sands of lumbermen, miners and "He went out, but he never In o. In Orego n the Granges of Columbia mediately gotten under way. and cowboys would come I'nto one of returne.d. . He went up to hl's NEW S'MYR·N-A -BANK county ha ve ca ll ed together the vari- when the Grange was 84 days old it hanLiquo dr lP"oble d emthe TIstren uous I I b laid the cornerstone of a substantial ad b l' te aver- these towns and waste their sea- .one Y JO m the mountains, sat- NOW BEING ERECTED ous other farm organizations and hall of its own, which is now rapidly agetit l'D O'In'e,",n . e ievi. ng that s. on's savI'ngs dUI.!·,...... g a sl'ngle IS.fied bto drink out of the run- - have llli. ' t'late d a movement to finan ce nearing cO lllpletion and i alt'eady wh 1'e the• 'Winwn It'/,s a 1place l Idle week. The I'es ults for' both mngt h rooks.hie But for ten ml'n- W'll B 0 ne 0 f F inest In the and send to the state legislature at being occupied for Grango purpose. . e ows ree y the town and the men can never u .es e ad been quite intoxi- ltnd cOrlststently, will be itn- be for~otten. One who never cated .with the idea that he could State, According to its next sess ion an acti ve mall to • - • tel' steel to "ead 01 the new sa B b d buy lIquor when he wished to. Reports represent all the farm orga nizations 'l'IPS FOR THE HOME 01'deT of things whicl'• lol- andw TonopahIS ee an In. Butte,th IdNelson d Th a t was a II h e really wanted. -- and to work for whateve r PI'OJ'ects Stale bread: Never throw stale lowendudm tlasthe Julypeopl. e's reler- cannot quite ,eimagine the 0 utter-ays I ~ou ld h ave sold to him had I bankWork buildlllg has be foren stathert Nationaled on th eDank new will benefit the rural interests as bl'ead out. Cut it in slices as thin as The Canadian solutl'on of the most evils of the old-time drink "'t'lshelld to ~o so. But my job is of Smryna, Delaware. The structure well as to op pose those which al': ad- poss ible-pu t it in the oven and leave drink problem may be seen at traffic . 0 se as httle as possible." will have a steel frame, and will be verse. to. the fa rmer's welfare. The Iit unti l .brown. Then crush into fine its best in British Columbia and ' Ve~y 'Yell. ' On a Saturday . During the month of travel- of fire-proof construction. Aside from und ~ I 'ta klll g has been enthusiastically powder and pl ace in glass jars. Quebec. Saskatchewan adopted mormng 111 June, 1924, the wri- 1I1g ·in British Columbia in May the attractiveness of the exterior of r ece l ve ~ by the farmers, whose re- These crumbs will be fo und excellent it by a r~ferendum vote in July tel' entere~ the Government liq- and June last the writer saw no the new building, the direc tors saw to sponse IS vel'y general. I for frying croquettes, cutlet, etc. la t. It IS more than likely that ~or store 111 such a town in Brit- intoxicated person. The differ- it tha t only enduring materials, such all the Provinces of Canada will Ish Columbia. There was no ence between British Columbia as bronze, marble, metal co unters, soo n come to it in one form or sound but the humming of a bee and Quebec in this matter is due etc. , will be used in construction of another. To an American who in the lilac bush at the back not only to the system, but to the new building. Particular atten­ travels wi dely in both the United door. ~he Government agent other factors as well. Undoubt- tion ' was given to the vaults, and the States and ' Canada the results sat ~t hiS. desk from 9 till 12, edly British Columbia exercise bank will not depend, alone, on mas- TO ' are so evident that they can castm~ hiS accounts. During greatel' care, and there are com- siveness nor reinforced construction st ry ur , I lea\'e no room for doubt in the that time only one person, a paratively few American tour- for sec urity-they are having install- 'J L £t S • I 81 d C ff mind. woman, entered. She was well- ists there, To purchase at the amllortehOtseaanPPserOrvveeh dadseaViccehSal\JvehnigChe MePrcoeCla eFn LI'neOof MeeercSo ~:i~l I b.""e£ta:"VNo UI1 The Canadian sys tem, where d~essed and soft-spoken.. S~e Government store in British J ~ seen at its best, functions en- purchased one bottle of wme 111 Columbia one must take out a to the most exper\ence and adept (1 f(J Royal Breakfast Cheese, Rice and lirely through a chal'n of Gov- the same manner that. she w.ould permit,. t pa f ying Oftwo dollars as a bankva ult s robberwill osff. er Wh.protectl'onen compl suetcehd, a sth 'IeS 0 ££ Morning Delight Lanned)., Goods ernment warehouses and sales- as.k f o~ ~ yard 0 f l'lbbon 111 a regis r y ee. course it is roo ms. Where a majority in the n;lghbormg shop. When 12 also more difficult to control the ~i~~e s~o ' be found outside the larger I MERCHANTS WHOLESALE Orange Pekoe Tea com munity desires a shop, one 0 clock str.uck t,he door was business in Montreal, a city of eRoc:H~~?:~;A~Y . Inc. 28c Yz -lb. pkg: is established. Local option locke~ until 9 0 clock Monday 750,000 inhabitants, than in a The llew building will prove a 1 me~n s. that the local community morn~ng . . rural community. But the point valuable addition to the busin ess CAB R Y A N maJol'lty cannot be overridden. ThiS Government agent IS one made by the British Columbia centel' of Smyrna and will be one of •• There are no local private inter- of the most respected men of agent, that it was his duty to the very finest bank buildings, out- G ROC E R ; ests seeking to open a hl'ghly the community. W.hen the o. ld seeoplell as littlto ebllY'S a s he couldtl' persuade side of Wilmingto n, in the State of I O'ppaslte --: :-- Phone 1: profitable business. The result sa Ioon sys t em was 111 operation P ,1 vas ' y Impor- Delaware. A large water co lor ren- I . is h'iking. he was an ardent temperance re- tanto And British Columbia h as dertng of the new building ~ll be P. B. & W. Station 47 ,i Only the larger cities and f?~mer. He took his pr~sent po- ver y wisely introduced a car e- on di splay in the front wi nd ow of t h e I IH~~~~~~~~~1E1E~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~s inB riti~C~umhlahne~wn~a~noo~Y~fi~. ~ f =u=l=a=c=c=o=u=n=t=in=g=s=y=s=t=e=m=.==E=v=e=I=~=t=~~n="=r=a=r=y=q=u=a=rt=e=r=s =w=h=~=h=t=~=N~~ I ~::=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-:-=-=-=-=-:-=-=-=-:-=-=-=-:-=-:-:-=-=-=-=-=-=-:-=-=-=-=-=-=~= requested the establis hment of Wi shes! ~s an honest and 1I1telh­ public liquor stores. A large gent citizen and temperance. re­ city li ke Montreal, in Quebec, for~er, t? see the. system given has sev raJ. Of the two Pro- a fall' trial. He .IS t he sort of "inces mentioned above, British m~n one would hke to see ap­ Col umbia has worked out its sys- p01l1~ed. postmaster or. county tem with t he greatest care and s ~el'lff 111 th~t commul1lty. He success in operation. Saskatche- laid down. hiS .pen a.nd r elated wan, which will institute Gov- the fo\low1l1g bit of history : e\'l1 ment sale on January 1 next "Recently a mining prospector will probably folIow the British came down from the mountains Columbia precedent throughout. after a ~ o ng period of loneliness Quebec, \\'ho e ystem is as yet Ion t he Jqb. He had not hear d a bit lax and untrimmed might about the new system. For sev­ we ll study t he perfectior: of the eral year Brit ish Columbia had British Columbia method. I tried out a prohibit ion law. The ,hall describe the latter as the prospector was ecstatic wit h de­ best which has been worked out, light. He r ushed wildly i~to the and then draw a comparison with store and asked whether It was Alber ta, its neighbot· Province. realIy true .that h.e could buy a For Al berta has made the great ~ottle of lI quor In broad day­ mistake of combining Govern- lIght. ment distribution with private "'Yes,' I said, 'you wiIl find sale for pr ofit. . the price list hanging t here on One enters the Government the waIl.' liquor store in a British Colum- "For several minutes he scru­ bia town of 3,000 inhabitants. tinized the list, which then in­ This town is the commercial cen- cluded about fifty varieties. tre of a g reat mining and lum- "'Ain't it glorious?' he said, bering district in that enor- 'you've got all of them right mously rich Province, The there in that list . I can't decide Have you seen this new car? writer recalls only too well that which I want. I'll be back this sort of Western environment afternoon, You sure you got twenty years ago. At that time plenty' of everything 7' the drinking and gambling 1'e- " 'We've got a carload in t he -It is a closed .. open car! sorts in these smalI commercial store room,' I said. 'Don't wor­ centres of the Far West were ry.' WEEK ago the new Studebaker Spe. · Even aside from the sensational new a evil, as disgusting as any- H 'All right. I'll be right A cial Six DUPLEX-PHAETON was DUPLEX BODY-the Studebaker Special first announced. Si~ has no superior in value in any car yet ~ . _ _ ._. __ .. ______• ______1~ butlt. It was the conscientious intention Today, countless thousands of people are of Studebaker in planning and designing talking about this entirely new type of car. the new Special Six to make it just such a One moment it is a closed car-in five sec­ leader-to that end every resource of th onds it can be transformed into a delightful, great, Studebaker organization has been VALUE POINTS- airy, open car. But it is always the closed concentrated. New Special Six: car in deep soft cushions, beautiful fittings Even if we had the space we could not and finish and luxurious riding comforts. The New Duplex- Phaeton begin to tell you of the very many new Body-it solves the c1osed,open When you see it and ride in it you will and unusual features whicl1 indicate its car problem. know why it has made so profound a sen­ superiority. sation-you will realize then that it gives Certainly no words could do justice to Easy Genuine Balloon Tires - 20 x you more than the finest open car can ever 6.20 inches. its distinctive beauty. give you, plus the comfort and protection In appearance it is unlike any other New Satin. Lacquer Finish. of the closed car. American car-yet its long, low, broad, Living Spanish chrome tanned leather And all at the price of an open car I sweeping lines are conservative, crisply stylish and in beautifully good taste. OW easy it is upholstery. And this is the new DUPLEX BODY on the famous Special Six Chassis. to live today New idea In ease of operation Think of the new Studebaker Special Six -to live, to be and control. Hundreds of thousands of owners all over Duplex-Phaeton as the ultimate in value H and performance in a five-passenger car­ h ea lth y, to grow this country and abroad have given the I Vlbrationless Engine; force­ Studebaker Special Six a name for value, think of it as a car matchless in practical strong. So different feed oiling system with new dependability and performance second to convenience and desirability. f rom the time of our grandfathers, when, to just i Idea in oil supply. no other automobile. . But to appreciate the sparkling beauty of live, was a struggle. Today any of us can live on Four-Wheel Hydraulic Brake. The new Studebaker Special Six retains Its totally new lines you must see it., To know its perfection of operation and per­ Easy street, if we want to. optional-totally unlike any all the qualities which make great reputa­ other system on American cars. tion-to these have been added every real formance you must ride in it and drive it. The mere turn of a tap, and there is water- hot Automatic braking pressure. or cold. That'!'; one of the things the plumber has improvement which science and OW:1er­ If you have not see~ this NEW type car 0 service could suggest. -come today I . .. .. $125.0 done to make life easy to live. II (Run A hOll e that does not have modern plumbing 600.00 is not a home. It's just a house. If you doubt ! t his, try to sell a house to a man who wants a STANDARD SIX. SPECIAL SIX. BIG SIX 550.00 J13In. W . B. SOH. P. . 121lln. W . B. MH. P. 127 In. W . B. ?S H. P . home. 5-Pass. Duplex.Phaeton $1145 S-Pass. Duplex-Phaeton $1495 7-Pass. Duplex-Phaeton $1875 250.00 A home i a place where it is easy to !iv.e. And 3-Pass. Duplex-Roadster 1125 3-Pass. Duplex-Roadster 14S0 5.Pass. Coupe ...... 26:;0 120.00 t here can't be easy living unless there IS good 3-Pass. Coupe-Roadster. 1395 4-Pass. Victoria...... 2050 5-Pass. Coupe ...... 1495 7-Pass. Sedan .....••., •• 2785 120.00 .plumbing and heating. . ' S-Pass. Sedan ...... 1595 S-Pas!. Sedan ...... 2150 , Plumbing is convenience; heatmg IS con:fort. S-Pass. Berline ...... 1650 S·Pasll. Berline...... 2225 7.Pass. Berline . .. , . . . .. 2860 ) 150.00 And convenience and comfort are the first Items . . , 175.00 in the making of a home. , Studebaker Hydraulic 4· Wheel Brakes, Optional Equipment. We shall all be on Easy street by and by. qf pn all Standard Six models, with 4 disc wheels and spare rim, $60.00 extra. course we shall. Just as soon .as every ho~ e IS pn all Special Six and Blr Six models, with S disc wheels. '75.00 extra.. turned into a home with plumbmg and heatmg. .(AU prices f. o. b. U. S. factories, and lubjcct to chanie without notice.). CHARLES W. STRAHORN DANIEL STOLL ...... I T H I s I s --- A u D E B A K E R y E A R L 12 NEWARK POST, NEWARK,PFJ..AWAR£. SEPTEMBER 24,1924.

Let's be Pair- or What Constitutes Citizensh i p

\ . I .

USINESS and TAXES make a Town grow. , C~t~nsh~p ~s .not me~e legal residence­ B CItIzenship IS Interest In the town from a business, tax-paying standpoint. The History and Growth of Newark is written from the business­ man's desk, tl;te cash register, the tax receipts, and gross sales for the week. Every improvement we have came from the cash contribution of our busi­ ness men. Their moriey put the Idea over the top and without their money, Newark would not be Newark as we know it. Admitting that, it is only business, only square, only fair, that we buy from them, or order through them. The best-dressed man in Newark buys on Chestnut -Street, but it isn't necessary. Nor is it fair, when Main Street Business Men gave him the improved surroundings of his home. LET'S "BE FAIR AND BUY AT HOME.

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POST ADVERTISERS and Antwerp. NEWARK WILMINGTON C. A. Bryan N, Snellen burg & Company I. Newton Sheaffer Mansure & Prettyman David C. Rose Louis HandlofI Jas. T. Mullin's Sons The Newark Trust & Safe Deposit Co. S. L. McKee George W. Rhodes Wilson Line E. C. Wilson W. Rex Willis The Smith-Zollinger Company Daniel Stoll The Misses Hebbes School The Farmers' Trust Compapy Huber Baking Co. Kilmon's Restaurant John W. Toadvine Sol Wilson Rittenhouse Motor Company Sam. Bell MISCELLANEOUS H. Warner McNeal The Howard Hotel, Elkton, Md. Geo. R. Leak Belhaven Hotel, Rehoboth, Delaware Newark Opera House / Thomas A. Potts Pennsyivania Railroad Mackenzie & Strickland Char1es W. Strahorn Miller Brothers Newark Opera HOllse Playhouse

WHEN YOU: NEED ANYTH.IN·G­ 'TRY F-I"RST "' -TO BUY IT AT HOME

" '11'1'1111111111'111111'1111111111111'111111111111111,1'11111111:'111',111'111111'111" 1,-1111111 I'NI 111111' , 11'1'111111,1'1' "1 1"1"<:111:11 II III 'II I 1 I - I-I1-11-11111-1'1111'1'-' ~IIIIIII-IIIIIIIII'IIII'IIII"~~ ___ -_-_' ___ ' _'______I"IIIII~-' ------~------~-~I~~'~'-;;I-"'II-' --:1--;;;:~'"-I'I~jj;11 ' 1I"'I-lllill~I_lfi~IIii'IiI------'- 1I'_'''-'-'-'_"'_III~-'i''II~IIIIIi'I!!I~II~~---, N~WARK POST, NEWARK, DFl..AWARE, SEPTIiMBER 24,1924.

Delaware ~tate Fair Goes To The Wall; \REHOBOTH' ~OD SEA ON ~~-~-~~-~~~~~ I rr======l HATS! Receivers Asked By Stockholders rowds Biggl'r : rhan En'r Before At. Newark High School's Delaware s Ocean Resort Football Schedule HATS! Deficil of Year, Lar t bt Ih 'hob th . has had about t he most $14,000 Thi. Added To e P D I eptember 2li-Elkton at New­ Cauae Deciaion T B M d g aa e a, "Ul' ~' (' ss ful sel1son that it hl1 HATS! S doe a e p nenc d. reopl a e b ginning to al'k. atur ay I' nliz that bathing is better here Octob r 3-0p n. Cool weather demands the Octob riO-Dover ut Xewark. I< .. ti,'n for a receh' rsll1p for publicity 11 11 th Ih ' . than Ill. other lesort on the coa ·t Felt H~t. H ere they arel .~I'l an ~' . ctober 17- Delawal' ity at Ihl' 11 'a"ar\! tat Fair Inc .. \Va hnd b ,:n arr~u l' l~ U~IIIS11l . which and the fo d is bettel' and cheaper Good -looking, up -to - the - ::1 D laware ity. fi l~" Ill' w ~ ~ k by Murvel, Man' 1. 1 . '. ~ th€ stockholdl'r thnn elsewhere. \\ enther conditions tober 21 -Elkton lit Elkton. minute-the finest obtain­ LU)tlll ami Hughe' . aUorll 'V~ for ~n l ~ CHm~)nlgn 111 the spring Ilnd the Iwere exc llent this year- not too hot o Octob r 2~- myrna a t myrna. able. (,1I!'lId ill" D. ,urr t on a tock-hol der. ~;~ el~.~~~t~ o llf ~~ new ;nallagl' r from Ior too cool. und but few accid nts Octob l' 31-Do\'er at Dover. A \'l d\~r will probabl" be I1PI101'I't- 0 I' 1111'1'1' lanls and man- hll ve 01' UIT d KNOX , ,uf ctuJ'ers of '\\ ill1lington " Nov mbel' 6-Delaware ity ut (:d \I)' Chll ncellor W olcott this we k. 'I'h t h' '1 he large hot Is have clo ed for N wllrk. '1'1 bvard of dir etor' of the l' ail' I' rei )tsl'~\~~.r 1, owed that the ga te the season but almo t all the cottage ' $7 13, myrna at 'ew_ in n ,pelhll , e. ' ion call d to l'onsid I: stllllJ that are rent('d for a longer ell on. !\Iany "TOADVINE r ecei~tsCSSill~u t t~e ~~and- I /Irk. the 1'1II t cr. d<'ei ded that thev w re I d been mel ased of the large bou rding hou 'es st'lV . nearly 60 pre lit, indicllt.ing thut u ntil late in Decemb r. '. SPECIAL" not in position to resi t th appoint- U,e show Iln" races were entirely op n :Ii\~::'~ a(~t~l ~he::~e~:~lr a:~Pt~~e Il PI~~S~~~: ;:~. rt~~dica~:~ t(:~~I~~: tF~~/~7 a~:r:~ \\ HERE FIRST BONUS CHECK SENT $S tion .,ulhorizing the officers to file an partments was sup rior to anything andidates fo), office on the R -I ' an, \\!'! to the bill, admitting that the her tofore offered in Delaware. publican ticket will be the gue t o! The first eheck IS u e ~ under the JOHN W TOADVIN Fn ir \\'a~ unable to pay it current Deficit 0/ $1!"OOO I the Y.o ung Men' R .publican Cl ub of oldieI' bon us law was Signed at the E debts a, they mature. The report howed that there woul'd \'\ Il mmgton at their quarters, 10 nited tates eterans' Bureau on •• L \. \\' i~ P. Randall, ecretary, read be a d fi cit for the year of some- King treet, tomorrow evening. Thur 'day. The check i made out to I 8SS Market Street his n'l.lO rt at the meeting, showing thing over $1.1,000 and thnt the In addition to the national candi- Felton Edward Lee of t. Louis. It that th(' attendance a t the la t Fair deficit last year had be n more than I dates, t he state nnd county cam- is for $36. . L::======-~ w n ~ 1 ~ thun in 1923, in spite of that and for the y ar 1922 even I paignel" huve been invited to uttend Approximately 1,000,000 bonus ap- ======iliOn' than double the amount of greater. and it is expected that a generlll plications have been received by the "getting acquainted" party with an war department and of these 12,796 hour or so taken to outline the cam- have been certified and sent to the paign, will be the chief items of Veterans' Bureau where adjusted CHEVROLET ANNOUNCES NEW BANK COMPLETED busines . compensation checks and certificates WE OFFER FOR RENT-- NEW COACH MODEL ' IN STATE CAPITAL Dr. ictor D. Washburn, chairman, are to be issued. The hevl'olet Motor ompany an­ D D 1 GeOl'ge F. Lang and Ralph E . White After the checks and certificates nou nce- a new model to its line, the over, e.: I constitute the eommitteee in charge The remodeling und enlargement of of arrllngements. are prepared they will be mailed on A Brick Dwelling in Newark with six rooms and ('hr\'rolet Coach, which will be the the Farmers Bank building on Loock- the date fix ed by the la \'. The in- lowest pricecl coach on the market. erman treet, west of State Street surance certificate~ will be mailed on bath. Investigate this offer at once, for the prop­ This hevrolet Coach, however, has been completed and t he new stru c ~ ' HERE'S A GOOD January 1 and the checks for cash on differs from most of the coaches on erty will not be on the list many days. the market in that the rear panels ture was open for public inspection on ONE ON "JIM" March 1. arc ste 1 clear to the top, like the Thursday afternoon of last week. I ======Colonel James C. Wickes, who other h('vrolet closed models, and is The siz e of the building was in­ owns the Delaware State News, fini shed in black with gold stripe­ creased by more than fifty per cent BY WAY OF REMINDING--- the same as the Chevrolet Sedan. which permitted the use of a larger has a peculiar his tory that runs The door on each side is exception­ amount of pace for the handling of in cycles of 21, says the Re­ WILSON ally large allowing for ea y entrance the bank's affairs as well as for the porters' osegay in the Phila­ and exit. while the wide windows We make it a point to do everything poss­ introduction of several oth6{ features I delphia Reco rd. He became two on ach ide, afford an extrem~ that will provide convenient service owner and editor of the News range of vi ion during all season for the bank's patrons. in fact as well as in name after ible to help our client, whether home seek­ and refre hing ventilation in warm FUNERAL 21 years spent in paying off all weather. The ~ear quarter windows I obligations, so that he is now er or home seller--It is Iservice cheerfully are the ame Width as the door win- The People Pay the Taxes an absolutely free lance, hurl­ DIRECTOR do\\'11 . . . . 1 Another mo t important con- ing invective at political rot­ given. The Intenor of the coach IS large sideration aftc th t t b I tenness wherever he meets up I and. roomy, with th~ driver's eat controverted, fs tha: ~~~~~av: with it and it doesn't slink out stationary and ~ foldmg seat to the to be paid by the ublic. The of hi s pat.h. H e secured a valu­ IPrompt ' and Personal Attention rIght of the dl'lver. The rear seat cannot be imposed Pon any c1as:' able franchise for his paper BRING YOUR PROBLEMS HERE! ~~~~e~ the back ha ample room for There is no power that can pre- after being t urned down 21 vent a distribution of the bur- times. He was recently the Hfe The ats and cushions are up- den. The landlord may be the of the party at a fishing seance hol stered in striped taupe wool cloth, one who sends a check to the Real Estate Department on the Delaware Bay, given by Best while the ides, doors and head- public treasury, but his tenant Governor Denney, and partici­ Appointments the lining are in a mottled taupe of the nevertheless makes the payment. pated in by 21 persons who same material. There is a floor car- A great manufacturer may con­ were all over 21 in age. At the Newark Trust and Safe Deposit Co. pet to match. tribute a large share of his in- fi shing party Colonel Wickes Doo r windows, a s well a s side win- come, but still the money comes made a few sarcastic remarks Awnings, Window Shades Jame~ V. Davi~. Jr. 'dows are raised and lowered by ' from the consumer. Taxes must about " poor fi sh," as the real Tern tedt window regulators. There I and do fall on the people in fish did not bite with sufficient and Automobile Curtains is a dome light in the car. The rear whatever form or name they regularity, and he came near I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I window in the car is wide and deep are laid. There is no other being thrown into the bay for and is equipped with a satin curtain. I source rich enough or powerful bait, but he has a steadfast = A metal sun visor comes a s standard enough to meet the public re- friend in the Governor, who equipment. quirements. It is useless to de- shielded him as host. Not • ._ • Ilude ourselves, and fraudulent ready to recognize "21" as a Dr. Bevan Returns to attef!1pt to delude others, with the claIm that the pubhc reve- jinx, Colonel Wickes is thinking out a scheme whereby the al­ Dr. W. L. Bevan, professor of His- nues are or can be derived from I phabet can be reduced to 21 tory at the University here, arrived I any source save the people them- lette,rs instead of 26. Although aturday la t in ew York, aboard selves. Property cannot long be he would never think of run­ the S. . Zeeland, from Southampton taxed. It can be confiscated. I I ning for so much as dog catcher and Antwerp. Dr. Bevan spent the Ultimately it is always the user A N ON 0 U N C I N G of Kent County without expect­ entire summer on the continent, part of property that is taxed'- I ing to be defeated 21 times.­ of the time being consumed in an ex- Calvin Coolidge in his Inaugural tended stay in Italy. He ,viII resume Address as Gov ernor of Massa,.. Philadelphia Record. hi duties here this week. chusetts. I~ ______;!J . , AN UNUSUAL SERVICE FOR OUR CUSTOMERS Output of Cement at Record Mark . • ~ In Contrast with Other Materials No Cut In Production Through our Arcola Merchant Franchise, confirmed yesterday, .we Shown By Data Of are extending to our customers the convenience of a Monthly Pay­ ~overnment ECENT government reports of busIness act\vely whIch In ment plan, in connection with installations of IDEAL BOILERS R a national election year are regarded with more than ordInary interest show that one of the de­ and AMERCIAN RADIATORS. termIning commodIty factors gen­ erally considered In gauging the future. Is establishIng new hIgh records. That factor Is Portland cement. whIch. accordIng to the This means that you can have modern heat--clean, safe, economical. latest figures. presents a rather sharp contrast wIth other basic materiala used In the building In­ permanent -- this fall and winter, and pay for it easily out of your dustry, such as steel. lumber and copper. Geological survey statistIcs for the Orst six months of. this year mcome. show a production for the perIod In excess of even la.st year whIch established the hIghest output up to that time. and for thu monrh of June. shIpments greater than In any prevIous month. "SEND FOR STOLL" to--day! ' One of the Interesting fes.tures ot the sItuation Is that thIs extra­ OrdInary volume of prmluction and shIpments has still lett. Illonth by month. comparatively larger stocks of cement a t the millS than existed tor the same months lMt year. These facts arc regarded by econ- ~ '" 21 ~ om IsIs 0.9 s howing that ho control rat'1l'l 'tT6ev' /~ Or cu rtailment of production exists L..-_------J DANIEL STOLL In i:;!S !~I~~~' at cement to th~ Water pIpe ______, Department's Index sbowtl an In. employment of common ..,bor In Paving and hIghwayS --- 24 crease for Portland c ment frOB road building and of both common Railways ______6 70 In January to 203 In June 8.1 and skilled labor In other con- Bridges, damB. reservol,.., agaInst declines for Iron. steel, ItnlcU hed corullderable light etc. ______8 copper and a amall In~ for "Selling .H ealth Is OUt· Business" on act~~tI~S I~ other nelda. It Is MIscellaneous ------2 lumber. estImated that portland cement la The Department of commerce Completo statlllUca for 1923 show Used In aboot the followIng pro- gives the Index numbel' of cement that the rate of cement produeUo~ Portions' IIhlpments tn lane as '03 (number- last year rea.c.bed 80 per cent above • , Percent Ing the shillmenta of 1911 lUI 100 normal yet production thlll year Publ\ d ID8I'CIa1 tor comparteoD)· Thill compares exceeded It. Although productton BuUd~an com III wtth a productiOn lDdex of ." tor and lIb1pmentll have reached th_ Dw run: ------. pIg Iron. 81 tor !IleeI lngota. 124 htgh proportion. the w~e Bld! wano., p;;.;;t;,-;;;t;;I::, tor eopper. and 111 tor lumber price ot eameot bu DOt &4..-4 Vartc- tu1D UIIII _ 11 ,(bUll ltl' eqaaI to 100), Tbe .. mJ4$t ..... beaD ~ Adv.I~======~~ 14 NEWARK POST. NEWARK. DELAWARE. SEPTEMBER 24. 1924.

coat of pRint, and then a prayer that GRANGE A, Liberty and Law I ORGANIZING = she'll stay afloat another season. GOOD FIGHTER It should not be forgotten, I RADIO UNION But the "Grand Old Lady of the I "The Grand Old Lad~ of the Bay" I however, that liberty. does not Good N ews F;;' - the R d' Bay" has the thanks of thousands mean lawless ness. LIberty to Fans of a 10 ringing in her ears if she could but Has Vigorous Program Ahead Th' S ' ! Remember the Old "Louise," and the Tolche.ter Excunion.? I make our own laws d~ not IS ectlOn hear them. ! They'ye Ju.t Stabled Her for the Sea.on After ! In BeQalf of the give us license to break them. I Sixty Yearl' Service I And thllt's a little bit of Reward.- American Farmer Liberty to make our own laws A:II person s ow nil,g' 01' operati T. R. D. commands a duty to observe ra,dlOs are requ 'sted to cO lllmunica~! .,; .... __ .. _---._ .... _------_.------_ . ------.~ • • • Ample evidence is furnished that them ourselves and enf~rce With John ." . Justice, t'isfield Under a simple, unadorned news "Louise." But it's back in the har­ NEWARK RURAL I the Grange fighting days are by no obedience among all others wIth- ~d:, ma;a~er o,f the United Rad i~ article appearing in a daily paper ness again next spring. ROUTES SERVE 424 means over, notwithstanding the fact in their jurisdiction. Libert~, mon , 0 , •. m 1·lca. .Mr. Ju tice IS this week lies a rell lly wonderful lit- " . ., . ______.- that some of the big projects on my fellow-citizens, is responSI- u Had lo nion in the tie story. It's about the old "Louise," ] hut First Glo~\Ous frlp ~~\:t;I~;a:::~n g w~ich hilS been running to Tolchester Last, y~ar she car~led over ~OO,OOO Figures Compiled by Wil- which it has exerteq its energies have bility, and resp.onsibility is duty, Itere sted sho ~~ and a ~l who. are in. mington Chamber of been fully achiever, such as rut;al and tl'lat dutY.IS to preserve ~he address and u th send III thell' .name, and Baltimore from points along the Ie xcursIonists. Multiply that III pro­ upper Chesapeake 'Bay since grand- portion by sixty years-why nearly mail delivery, parcels post, good exceptional liberty we enJoy I . .. e make Of their set Commerce roads, direct election of United within the law and for the law IS n. yea l"s subec rip: father was a boy, almost. everyone in nOl't,hern Maryland, so ut~- ~e gIVIll,~ f l' ~e ern Pennsylvama and half of Baltt- States senators, pure food I~w s, equal and by the law.-W'illiam Mc- tlO~ .to the Hadlotrlclan," to all who The article, observing thllt the boat more has ;'idden the "Louise." It is interesting to note that the suffrage for women and natIOnal pro- K'')c l Ii des II e . to . become a membe r. Th' was in dock now ~or the season, J11e~s- Can't you still see the long wOQden Newark post office serves daily on the hibition. In fact, the Grange as a I tt e7_. • magazille IS pu bli ~hc d each month (18 ured about two . IIlches. The stories train pulling down the siding at Per- three rural routes emerging there­ whole is engaged in a sharper fight- . ' Canned F :ii uit: When canned fruit the benefit of the radio fa n. or back of that artl~l e would ~il a book. ryville; hear the wailing strains of from, a total of 424 separate patrons. ing program ~t t.he pr,esent time than II is to. pe ser;ed, open an hour or two ,======Who of you did not ~hl'l I as yO~ the three-piece orchestra and t~ Of these, Route No.1 has 122 boxes' ever before In Its history, and the before serving and POUI' the contents ' == ~too~ a~, th ~ gnarled 1'811 of t?e ~ I scrape of dancing feet over the old No. 2 has 144, and No. 3 has 158 "milita~t side" of this. nation-wid.e of the tin into a dish. The contact LOUise, With the breeze whlpp~ng knotholes on the "dance hall" floor; boxes. fraternity of farmers IS well eVI- 1 with the ail' will improve the taste. your .brand new straw hat brim, can't you h ar the babies squealing, denced by the projects for which the watching the low green shores of the and the laughter of the kids? The entire lists of box holders for Grange is fighting in a number of ======I bay slip past? all the post offices of New Castle states. I forest resources from monopoly's Anel the fried chicken? Remember Wht> of you have not felt t hat old county have been compil ed by the In Massachusetts, Connecticut and gl'asp; in Ohio deman~i n.g a . de.bt it? . Why, if all the chicken bones Wilmi;1gton Chamber of Commerce I deck jerk and shiver as the big "rider" New J ersey Grange energies are mo- limitation law and .fo rbld d l~ g'. t he IS­ thrown over the s id e of the "Louise" with the co-o peration of the post drive shaft, hi gh up on the third deck, bi li zed to aboli sh "dayli ght-saving" suance of a~1Y mOle b.ond : III N.ew in t hese six ty yeurs co uld be put to­ offi ce in that city. ' I dipped and recovered with a "hish­ gether again , eggs would be given time ' in California opposing more York, opposlIlg an unjust InspectlOlJ elT-hi sh-h-h"? have not felt your away this winter. New Castle post office has the gove;'nment expenditures for il'l'iga- of public buildings and in behalf of I eardrums rattle at the blare of thE! tion, reclamation or colonization u better school system. , Then the warm, mell ow evenin g l'Oute with the largest number of shiny whistle? schemes ; in Washington, fighting All the above state projects are in ride homewa rd-the snatch of a song patrons. Route No. 1 of that office butter substitutes and in beh,llf of addition to the national legislative For nearly ix ty years, from t he up forward; the plaintive cry of t h ~i t , has 263 boxes. Nearby offices and pure dairy products of every sort; in program of the Grange, to whose ar- I first day he proudly nosed her way everlasting violin downstairs. Cou­ theil' routs follow : Michigan, initiating an income tax comp li shm ent State Granges are lend- t hrough the blue waters of the Bay pI e' sec luded around the pilot house; in '64 until a few weeks ago, when Hockessin- Route TO. 1, 156 boxes ; fight and in Oregon, J11a ssing all its ing their undivided efforts. The worn out sleeping kiddies still grasp'" route No.2, 68 boxes. forces to prevent the repeal of the in- Grange fighting spirit is well illus- she labored into Baltimore, old and ing the r emains of the last box of Marshallton _ Route No. 1 204 co me tax already enacted; in ' trated in where it was S. L. McKEE bent and s lu g~ i s h , she hus carried popcorn. And always the "hish-er-r­ Pe~n- ~ichigan, I boxes; route No.2, 167 boxes. ' sylvania, enlisting all Grange energies necessary to secure 58,000 signers to young and old to fairy lands .of pleas­ hi sh-h-h" of the throbbing engi'nes, Opto metrist-Optician ure. She's lost rudders and propel­ . Ito stop trespass damage by nervy initiate the income tax measure. The I and the soft purl' of the black water Porter s-Route No. 1, 123 boxes; motol'ists ; in Muine and Idaho, s!:ek- Grange effort quickly secured over 816 Market St. lors, passengers have fallen over­ as it splashed back from the old pad­ route No.2, 72 box·es. ing to save the water power and 100,000 names. ~------___~ board; und deck chairs by the t hou­ dle wheels. sands have co llapsed, lunch and all in It was Life itself to many a kid, these long years. that first ride to Tolchester. Still she plies her beloved bay; Year after year, through one gen­ still she holds her funnels aloft, bear­ eration and into the next, the "Louise" ing burdens of bright eyed, laughing has broug'ht joy to young hearts. No humanity from the cities and hot in­ pension comes I her way; no star or land towns, for a day along the wa­ medal for her funnel. Nothing but a ter. She's resting now, is the old rest when the ice gets thick, a fresh IT'S THE CUT OF YOUR CLOTHES THAT COUNTS

H H 81

b§O ~i ~e New Two Button Suit oU i for Fall !! Only 10 ~~ Ii Wrappers Many of the well dressed ~ ~ §i from this men who come here think o ~ i~ l this is the one and only ~~ delicious ~ Ii suit. An easy fitting coat, Loaf and with a somewhat shaped rJ I back; a very comfortable !~ feel, a very dressy look. .J ~ C Made up in unfinished I worsteds chosen to em­ ~ phasize this effect. Some Ii 39 remarkable values In un;­ I~ usual fabrics. ~ Presented to splendid selection of , oiH, your Grocer :4 H will secure ~nrirty 1Bruub D ·for you QTlntqrs ' This Gorg~ous are here for your Cretonne choosing Rubberized Apron The Apron is a wonderful one and has delighted thousands of housewivesl It is a slip-on with strong straps Sol Wilson that cross in the back. It if cretonne-faced and rubber­ lined. Full-sized aud water­ THE QUALITY proof! SHOP