The Newark Post ~LUM~ X X='I=I======~==~======~N~E~W~A~R~K~,~D~E~L~A~W~A~R~E~,~T~H~U~R~S=D=A=y~,~F~E~B~R~U~A~R~Y~26~,~1~9~Sl~======7======~N~U~M~B~E~R~5 NAB]ACKSON'S NEEDGRADUATE iFRATERNITIES LEGISLATORS LEGISLATORS PROGRAM FOR STOREL OOTERS SCIiOOL AT UNIV., TO GIVE PLAYS TO VISIT U.OFD. INTRODUCE 164 DISABLED VETS IN WILMINGTON HULLIHEN SAYS MARCH 4 AND 5 . THIS FRIDAY BILLS MONDAY GIVEN BY V. F. W.

Two Men Held After Robbery I Urges New Section of U, of D, Competitive Productions Ex- Biennial Inspection of Plant Rush as Deadline Gets Closer Local Post Gives Entertain- of Store and Gasoline at Alumni Aaaociation pected to be Hiahly Will Bring Lawmaken Causes Flood' of Measures ment at Coatesville Soldier Station Banquet Entertaining to Newark at Dover Hospital GUNS, WA T~~ES, TAKEN MAJOR SASSE SPEAKER TRY FOR TROPHY LUNCHEON PLANNED CLOCK TURNED BACK BAND ACCOMPANIES Two WIl mi ngton men who broke Recommendations for the establish- The second annual Inter-Fraternity Members of the Legislature will A last minute rush to introduce An entertainment, sponsored by the t And robbed J ackson's Hardware ment of a graduate school for the Play Contest sponsored by the Alpha make ,their biennial visit to the Uni- new bills Monday .afternoon, resulted Lt. J. Allison O'Daniel Post No. 475, ~t:re here unday night, and then University of Delaware, mention of Psi Omega, ~ dramatic fraternity of verslty of Delaware on Friday of this in a total of 523 finding their way on Veterans of Foreign Wars, the New­ broke into and r ob b e ~ a gasol.ine fill- the need of a second chemistry build- the University of Delaware will be week. The lawmakers will arrive in the calendars of the two houses of ark chapter of that organization, was ing station on the L~ nc?ln Hlghw~y, ing to relieve the present congestion, held in Mitchell Hall on the'evenings Newark about 1U:30 o'clock. They the Legislature Monday. Of this num- given for the enjoyment of the dis­ \fere nabbed by. Wll?"llngton pohce and praise for the stimulation of in- of Match 4 and 5. will be met by Dr. Walter Hullihen, ber, 333 are in the House, with 190 in abled veterans in the , shortl y after thell' crimes ha~ b~e~ terest in university athletics, due to Last year the Footlights Club ini- president A. G. Wilkinson, business the Senate. Veterans Bureau Hospital at Coates- committed, and are now held m Jail the active interest of the alumni, feat- tiated the idea of interfraternity play administrator, William H. Heald, There were 93 measures introduced ville, Pa., Sunday. More than 35 Iwaiting trial in Court of General ~red the a~dress of Dr. W:alter. Hul- competition, and the success of the chairman of the finance committee of in the I;£ouse Monday, while 71 were me~bers of t?e I~cal post, accom­ Sess IO ns. hhen, president of the University of plan was gratifying not only to those the Board of Trustees, and several offered m the Senate, for a total of panled by their Wives, guests, and The men, orm an Smith, 28, and Delaware, before the annual banquet participating in the venture but also other trustees and a committee of the 164. F"u l:' o'clock that afternoon members of the auxiliary of the V. F. Francis Layton, 18, are being held of the. Alu~ni. Association of the pleasing to the student body' and pub- faculty. . .. ~arked the dea~line for the introduc- W., made th~ journey to Coatesvi!le under $2500 bail o ~ two charges of school m WII"!lngton I~st Saturday lic who attended the highly-entertain- T.he Vlsl.tors ~Il first be t~ken .on tlOn. of n~w busmess.. to take p~rt m the show for the dls- breaking and entering. The robbery night. AcademiC education and aca~ ing performances Sigma Phi Epsilon an mspectlOn trip over the university Bills hterally poured mto the two abled soldiers. o( Jackson's Hardware Store occurred demic sports were the outstanding was the winner of last year's trophy. plant. The~e will be many new things houses Monday. Everything was hus- The entertainment was one of the shortly after midnight. The men had themes of the program of the meet- The name of the play was entitled for the legislators to see on this ocea- tie and bustle, as the solons rushed most elaborate ever given by the local appa rently planned their work care- ing, which was attended by more than "The Cad" and was written by Mal~ sion compared with two years ago. the preparation of bills, in order to group. The Continental-Diamond Fi­ (ully, as they waited until the town 1.50 member~ of the Alumni Associa- com Ada~s, a member of 9he winning E".anl ~all, the new engin~ering introduce them ~n time.. Both houses bre Company ~and accompanied the policemen had passed the front of the tlOn and their guests. fraternity - bUilding, IS now complete and Mitchell concluded the mtroduetlon of new post on the trip, and gave a concert store on their rounds shortly before A Delaware boy who. attained na- A .' Hall, one of the finest auditoriums business on time. ' for the soldiers, as well as providing midnight and a half hour later, when tional prominence through his suc- tccordmg I tO ~~rr;ntt ca~.push re- any college\ or university can boast of, The efforts of a Sepate attache to music during the vaudeville and en- f the oflic~rs passed by that place cessful first year as coach of the PO\~' sever.a 0 e ra ernl les ave a gift from H. Rodney Sharp, will no set back the clock at 3: 45 in the after- tertainment part of the program. The again the robbery had been commit- United States military Academy foot- ~I en tth~lr hOwn play~. ~~e r~le~.of doubt especially interest the legisla- noon, were hlllted by President Pro Harmonious Sextette, a group of local ted ~nd the men gone. ball team, Major Ralph I. Sasse oc- I e con es, owever,. or I t e IS- tors. They will also be shown the new Tem Simonton, who insisted that the men, sang a number of songs for the Entrance to the store was gained cupied the spotlight in behalf of ~ osure of the playwrights or th~ n~- gymnasium at the Women's College introduction of new business would be disabled veterans and the Lyons Sis­ by breaking a heavy lock and staple sports. He recounted numerous anec- bur~1 of the P~~s. Ehach ~rat~~nlt1Is which, however, awaits an appropria- concluded at 4. As a result, the few ters, also of Newark, gave several in the front door. A number of boxes dotes within his own experience as U~I y engage. m re earsmg. I spay, I tion from the state before it can be remaining bills which had not been sketches. o( cartridges, three rifles, several coach illustrative of what he describeci an k.ever~ t~re~or h;S his. gro~p Ientirely completed and equipped. In offered up until that time, were rush- One of the most outstanding feat- knives several fla shlights, and some as the development of unselfishness, wor mg, tt e ope 0 securmg t e addition to an appropriation to finish ed to the secretary's desk and read. ures of the afternoon was the appear- wrist ~nd pocket watches were taken. tenacity and character through foot- permanen rop h Y' . . this building, the Women's College Is In the House, the clock was set ance of the Ferko Aces, three times The rifl es were fu lly loaded and were ball. He stressed the value of foot- The purpose .of thiS contest IS to also asking for an appropriation for bac~, but this vas not necessary, as winners of. the Mummers parade in placed between the two men on the ball as a safety valve during the for- develop dramatic. talent and the art the erection of a much needed Science the introduction of new business end- Philadelphia. (ronl scnt of the automobile in which mative period of youth, asserting that of ac.tmg, to cultivate a taste for the Building. The maintenance appropri- ed just about on time. Lt. Colonel S. J. Smith, of Newark, they were riding when they were cap the sport has an important place in best In the drama, and fin.ally to fos- ation that the university is requesting While there has been considerable former National Chaplain of the V. tu red by the Wilmin gton police. American life because of its contri- ~ er the cultural values. whIch dram~t- from this legislature is slightly more agitation against skeleton bills, sev- F. W., made a short address. Wesley The gasoli ne station broken into is butions both physical and moral, les d~velop. ~he merIt ~ up0!l whlc.h than the one two years ago, to take era I were offered during the day. Dempsey, of Newark, and S. J. Bar- owned by Edwin Baker, and is located which it makes toward the develop- the Judg~s Will be gUided m . their care of the natural growth of the in- nett, of Newark, sang several solos near the Diamond Tea House. About ment of citizenship for everyday life award WIll be as follows: quality of stitution. COL. GLASSBURN TO during the entertainment. twelre gallonsof ga oline were taken, and for the nation in times of emer- play ch~s~n; quali~y of actin~; q~al- At noon the visitors will be guests STAY ON AT U. OF. D. - ______and then the two men proceeded on gency. Ity ?f interpretatIOn ~nd d\l'ectlOn; at luncheon at the Women's College, -- BIRTHDA Y D~N EIV towards Wilmington. The robbery of Unanimous endorsement was given quality o~ stage techmque;. a~? ~n- when there will be short talks by sev- At the request of the University of -- the fi lling station cau sed their arrest, by the alumni. On motion of J. ally, quahty of uegree of 1I11tlatIOn eral members pf the legislature and Delaware authorities, Lieutenant Col- Mr~. ,George W. Va sant celebrated howerer, as they were seen b;reaking Geo rge Stewart, of the class of 1911, a show n. . ' . officials of the legislature. onel Robert P . Glassburn, command- her birthday on Febr ary 22 at her in there and the alarm was sent out bill is now before the General Assem- Stanley Salsburg IS 10 charge of This biennial visit is made to better ant of the ROT C at the Uhiver- me on South College avenue by at- to State' Highwa y Poli ce and to Wil- bly providing for a chair of phys'ical the entire pr?duction. The chair~en acquaint the legislators with the prob- sity, has bee~ g~an"ted' an extension of ending a dinne: party given in her mington poli ce to be on the outlook education at the university. The bill, of the com~mttees · . are: Paul S~lth, lems and needs of the university, as his present tour of duty at the uni- ?onor by ?er chIldren. Those attend- lor the m. prepared by H. G. Lawson, of the ~t age commIttee; GI.lbert Chase, hght- well as to anow them to gain a per- versity to include the school year mg the dinner were: Mrs. Vansant, ___-~ _ class of 1906, provides for the teach- 109; Frank Stewart and Mar ~ hall sQnalllnowledge of the progress that 1931-32. Mr. and Mrs. F. Bruner and son Paul IW.GIX REPAIIH G DAMAGE ing of physical education lind allied McCully, make-up. is being made here. This will give Colonel Glassburn of Stonehur~t, Pa., Mrs. B. F. Singles TO OLD ACA DE 'IY BUILDING health at Delaware College leading to five years of duty at the university of .Dr~xel Hill, Mrs. Mary A. Wood of a degree, and authorizes an annual and his time will now expire in June Wilmington, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Van- Work on repairing and rebuilding appropriation from .the State Treas- of next year. During the last three sant, Mr. and Mrs. James L. Van- the old Academy Bui lding has been ury for the maintenance of a chair DENTAL CLINIC FOR CHILDREN, years the R. O. T. C. unit at the Uni- sant, Helen Vansant, Mr. and Mrs. started at the o 'd . f th T t of physical education. SPONSO versity of Delaware has won the Homer L. Vansant, Eleanor Vansant, of Ihe Newark IA~ladOemy.e T~~s :~: "~harlie" Rog,:r~, football coac~, RED BY CENTURY CLUB, honor of being design~ted by the War M~. and Mrs. T .. R. ~acobs of Newar~, which th reatened to dQstroy the his- pr~l ~e d the qual!t1es of. Delaware e Department as a distinguished college MI. Walter Grlmmmger, Mr. Le~ls to nc building a f QW , ..e ele s ago caused gridiron team which durmg the .past in military affairs. The present Coast P~ank , Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grlm- quite a lot of damage, and it is esti- season ~ave th~ col!ege an enviable OPE,NED TUESDAY IN TOWN BLDG. Artille;y unit was originated under mlnger and da.ughter Margaret of mated that the workmen will be busy re~ord m the VIctorIes won. Rogers the .gUldance of Colonel Glassburn, it Chester, .Pa., MISS .Belle Forwood o.f (or a month getting the buildin back said that Delaware had a ~ne team --- havmg formerly been' an infantry BrandYWine Summit, Pa., ~~. Cectl into ~od shape again g last year, that they were mexperi- Equipment and Labor of Fitting Out Clinic Given by unit. Vansant, M:s.. B. M. Williamson, A .etilcment ha s been made with enced but that they worked hard. He Generous Citizens; Welfare Committee to ' H~rry B. WII~lamson, Mr. and Mrs. the insura nce company and dama es said the fine spirit, created largely by Recommend Patl'enb SEEKS RETIREMENT FUND Willard S. Dickerson and daugh.ter to the bUilding have bee n es tima~ed the alumni's regula; appearance at FOR UNIVERSITY FACULTY Nancy, all of Newark. In the evening II about $~,750. Archie Peel is the t?e games, and theIr loyal c?ope~a- WILL BE HELD EACH TUESDAY AFTI:'ID.NOON ~i~~ V:e~sa~~:e~~~~ed ~orsS~:r:~:~t . to ntrutor m charge of the repairing tl.on, had played a la~ge part m WI.- I:a"l Two new bills concerning teachers' . g,. . and rebuilding nlng some games agamst teams which t' t f d d th' Many friends of Mrs. Vansant called DUring th . .. were superior to the Delaware teams The new Dental Clinic, sponsored the Fersche Barber Supply Company l'e Ire.men un s. ma e elr appear- Ito wish her a happy birthday, and she th T .c work on the bUlldmg, H 'd th t 'f th "t t' . by the Welfare Committee of the New of Wilmington and was donat d to ance m Do\'er thiS week. Representa- also received many lovely gifts f~c ie~~I'~l'o~~I ' ary will be closed. The to eg::~ it :m ~reveentS b~;a::;e ~~~: Century Club, was opened in the the clinic. Robert T. Jones pro~ided tive Rupp intr?duced a bill, in .the . I'fnted the flaor the ~ o ca l t1re me~ pre- retiring into stagnancy, althletically. rooms .on t~e ~econd fioor of the Town .material and labor in upholstering House to estabhsh a .teac~el's retlre- W ASRINGTON COLLEGE the libraI' .mes fr om sprea'(hng. to Speaking of athletics Dr. Hullihen CounCil bUlldmg Tuesday afternoon. the chair, ann also gave the window mont fund for the Um~e;slty of Dela- BtrLLETIN IS ISSUED ~ rou h / looms, bu t water seepmg said' .Mo·re than a dozen children were shades for the clinic room. Mr. Jones w~re. faculty and proVldmg an appro- -_ Qu. ~ h he fl oo rs above the room . (Continued on Page 4. 1 present for t,he opening day of the also went to Wilmington and brought prlatlOn of $20,000 a year for the The latest number of the Washing- .el t e plastcl'lng to fall. ______clinic, and received examination and the chair down to Newark. Plumbing purpose. '.. . t~n ~ollege Bullet!n, the official pub- MISS NORA LINDELL HURT treatment from Dr. P. K. Musselman, fixtures, including a wash basin, were . Representative VIrden offered a bIll hcatlOn of Washmgton College, of BllNEFI1' PLAY - WHEN CAUGHT IN BELT who, with Dr. C. W. Dunlevy, will given and installed by Daniel Stoll, m the .Hou.se to. e~able the Board of Chesterto,wn, Md., has been sent out " - __ conduct the clinic. and I. Newton Sheaffer painted the EducatIOn m W.Ilmmgton to establish to alumm and friends of the college, titk\! nrys Castles in lhe Air': is the Miss Nora I:indell, .o~ Cleveland The fir~t pati.ent for the new clinic chair and door to the clinic room, a teache~s' retlre~ent fund ~or the ~nd contain~ a number of ant.icles ~f ~ t n ~l lhe pl llY to bc held III Fra- avenue, was painfully inJured Tues- was !'auline Ring, who, after being 'and is going to paint the entire room ~eache:s. In that City. Thes~ bIlls ~re mierest to Its readers. The Issue IS I; a Hall, March 4, by New London day while working at the local plant examined, had one tooth extracted. within a short time. Charles G. m additIOn to the on~ pending which known as the Educational Number, iI!~e talent. The cast, as they have of the National Vulcanized Fib:e S~v~ral other children. during the Smith, contractor of Christiana, was sp?nSored ?~ the State B?ard of and has inc.orpol'ated yvi.thin its pages r gll'lng plays for the past few Company when she became caught m chmc hour had extractIOns of baby built the partition separating the EducatIOn w.0vldmg for a retirement several articles pertalnmg to college f ~rl, WIll be well worth see ing. a revolving /lelt on a piece of machin- teeth and trea~ments for bad teeth. large room into a reception room and syst~m for all te~chel:s in the State in- and school e~ucational methods. lit ~eed s from the play will be for ery. Her hand was caught first, the Most of the children entered the re- office, and completely arranged the cludmg the UllIverslty of Delaware The Washmgton College ranks as P. T~n c fit of Wneola Cou ncil, D. of revolving motion of the belt. gradu- ception room of t.he clinic rather re- room so it would be suitable for use faculty. the. eleventh oldes~. college In. the !lIa1l c ~r~ ce Of. admission will be oully drawing her :whole arm mto t~e luctantly, and '':'Ith some fear and for the clinic. Alfred Finkernagel in- Umted States! and :s the only c?llege . E1 elyone IS welco me. pulley. The mach me was stopped m dread of what might happen to them, stalled the electrical fixtures. THREE MEN HELD FOR to bear Washmgton s name by hiS ex- time to prevent serious injury, but bllt, after being examined and treat- The 'l'own Council is providing LARCENY OF CHICKENS pressed consent. The college is no:w FiELD FIIlE 'I'flJ. AFTER ' OON her hand, arm and neck were badly cd, all of them soon lost their fear, I room, light, heat and watllr for the -- more than 148 years old, and.is Mary- _ lacerated and skinned. If the ma- and, after finding- out that they were Ic linic. The Chamber of Commerce Floyd Baker, Tony Sanborn and land's oldest school. Aetna Hose, Hool< nnd Ladder Com- chine had run afew moments longer, np~ going to be hurt, soon began to provided the lumber for the erection P.aul Murcer were arrested Saturday ~,,) Wa call ~d t, H g rass fire be-I it is said, her neck would have been ~ n .1oy th~msclves, and ~Il took .a great of the partition wall in the room. mght by Town Offic~r Ja?'les Keeley MRS. COOCH ENDORSED R!En the 1'. R. H. Jlum ping station at broken .. mtel'est I.n .th~ work being done. The cU ni c will be held each Tuesday ~nd we~e charged WIth chicken steal- FOR NATIONAL D. A. R. OFFICE :thby and 0lrlf'town b l 2"0 Mi . s Lindell is now at her home The' ch mc IS the result of a great afternoon at 4 o'clock with either Dr. mg.. '1 hey were arranged before E ndol'sement of Mrs. Edward W. ~tlotk this aft~l'n"on. At 3~:5 th~~e Iunder the care of physicians, and is deal of effo~t . and work on the part Musselman 01' Dr. Du'nlevy in charge. Magl~trate Thompson later and were Cooch as a candidate for the vice­ ~ anot her gl'a ti l' ~ on enl l' St recovering from the shock and effects of several Citizens of the town, and Children fol' tl'eatment will be recom_ lcommltted t~ the New Castle Count?' presidency of the National Society of . of the accident. t he rcsult of the generosity of some mended by the Welfare Committee of Workh.ouse .m default. of $500 batl the D. A. R. featured the annual State l r-======~~~~~~~~~ of the bu s ine s~ men and organiza- t he New Century Club, and will be and Will be ~eld for trial In Court of confel'ence of the Daughters of the TOWN nEPAIRS CROSSING OF tions. The chair used at the clinic brought to the clinic by mem'bers of General SessIOns. Baker had been re- Amel'ican Revolution in Delaware held I 'llg B. & O. AT W. MAIN STREET was obtained by Petry Towson from the Welfare Committee. leased from the Workhouse only JeSUS Sendl about two weeks before, where he had Saturday, in the du Pont-Biltmore, in F The West Ma~treet crossing at ====-======;======served a sentence for the larceny of Wilmington. orth Missionaries the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was SAMONISKY TELLS LIONS SINGLES, DOUGR.ERTY, AT an automobile radiator. Mrs. Cooch is State Regent of the repaired this week by Town Engineer I OF NEWSPAPER EXPERIENCES BANK MANAGEMENT MEETING D. A. R. in Delaware. She presided at wi ll be th e to pic con sidered Sigmund and a crew of men, and a __ the business session. Committee chair- number of deep holes in the pavem~nt Harris Samonisky, city e\litor of the J. E. Daugherty, of the Farmers' ORGAN CONCERT PROGRAM men made reports. Luncheon was at the were tilled and smoothed out. Durmg Wilmington Every Evening, addl'essed Trust Company, and Warren Singles, Seven numbers have been chosen by' served fo~lowing the cusiness session. the f all of last year, the B. and O. R. the Newark Lions Club at its meeting of the Newark Trust Company, are Firmin Swinnen for the 17th organ Mrs. Wilham Matthews had charge of Baraca Class R. officials announced thl1t the cross- Tuesday night in the Washington In Washington today and tomorrow recital of the season, to be given in the arrang_e_m_e_nt_s_. ___ ing at that point and at North College Houee on the subject of "Newspaper attending the annual meeting of the Mitchell Hall, Monday night. The pro- FACULTY CLUB TO HEAR Presb t . avenue would be paved this spring, Ramblings." Mr. Samonisky told of a Atlantic States Bank Management g1.rapmroicsesasslofnoalll°.Mwsa:rch . .. . Ch. Gounod ADDRESS BY DR. KRAEMER y enan Sunday lbut the condition of the crossing was number of experiences that he had Conference. They will return to New- so bad that the Town decided to make had during his twenty years as a ark tomorrow evening. 2. Aria: ...... A. Lotti The Delaware College Faculty School Itemporary repairs until the railroad newspaperman, and also told of some 3. (a) Spring Song .. F. Mendelssohn Olub will meet on Tuesday, March 3,

NEW IlK 11 ~~~~~ny can make the pel'lJlanent re- ~~i.t~hr~ ;!a!~pf:i~e~r~bo~a~~~:UI~fit~~ GRASS FIR~ ON PARK PLACE m~:~c~;~:~ '::::E: ~~~D~:;n ~hl~hhe t~~: :~~~d~~s?I~I~~:g;;a;! for an editor to determine if a certain A small grass fire'ln the rear of the 4. Berceuse I ...... S. Palmgren by Dr. William, H. Kraemer, of Wil- I PORK~PPER piece of news should or should not be property of J, E. Daugherty on Park 5. Slavlscher Tan,a ...... A. Dvorak mington, on the "Aspects of Modern SUnday, March I The Ladies of Leola Council No. 14, published, and of some of the scrapes place at 11 o'clock this morning was 6. Andante (Symphony No.6) Medical Research." Dr. KlIIlemer is a f D., will hold a pork supper In and unpleasant situations that an promptly extinauished by Ioc:al fire-I . L. van Beethoven well-known speaker on medical sub- D. O .M. Men's Hall, March 18, at Union, editor will g!!t into in trying to please men. Roth ena\nen answered the call, ? Sixth Sonata in D Minor jects, and the meetIng will prove to be Del.Red the reading public. and the fire was put out In short order. F. Mendelspohn a most interesting one. ~=====:J) THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE Thursday, February 26, 1931 Lent. The Season 01 Hope and Inspiration NEWARK SCHOOL NOTES Lent is the outstanding season of Testaments fasts and meditations Written by Students- of the Newark School 11 the Church year. It is a time when were continued for 40 days. The idea we integrate our forces and place has rooted itself into the Christian Il,.,======:!), emphasis upon life of the spirit. For consciousness. For 16 centuries pass­ "" 40 days believing Chl'istians attempt ing generations have celebrated Lent. A WORD FROM THE EDITOR Ivar sity players: Joan Fletcher, Louise to make life different through renun- There is no particular signiftc,ance Fulton, Frieda Handloff, and Dorothy Our School Library Wilson. However, the prospects for ciation and aspiration. Social activi- in the length of the season. There is For pleasant surroundings and an next year al'e encouraging. ties are held to the minimul'l\. Bus!- no essential virtue in the profession­ Forty Years Experience ness worries are tempered by moods alized act of fasting. One time of the opportunity for leal'lling, harmonious- Ail of the girls have displayed hard Iy combined, there is no place to be work, perserverance, and good sports­ of trust. For 40 days a hush comes yeal' is as good as another. Individual I In Serving You! compared with our school library. All mans hip in the games, and deserve a over the life of the church. Not the choice is as important as the collective winter there are green plants and great deal of credit. hush of quietism but the hush of con- recognition of a speqific period. There ------~m mm------__ sec rated expectancy. is, however, an advantage in sharing fern-s to give it a ('heery atmosphere, Baseball and in the spring we usualty have Lent comes from the Anglo-Saxon at one place and time the inspirations tlSCi) 'Coffee UJ word meaning Spring. This season and privileges of .Iarge groups of 25e several bouquets of flowers to add the The baseball team will be soon in Rich, Rare Flavor. Delightful A,·Ol1Ut. brighter touches. Light, floods in action, under the guidance of Coach comes always in the spring ,of the people. There is strength in numbers. through large windows along the west Gillespie. We hope to make the year year. The keynote is life's ever last- There is dynamic urge in carefully 0 : , ingness. At first the season lasted but prepared programs. To be alone with Ib aide, and there are electric lights to 1931 one of our most successful sea­ ,.. , Victor Blend Coffee 21e be used. The first impression given by sons in baseball. In previous years a day. The Third Century Christians the presence of God comes frequently Mild Flavor. The choice of thOI/,SClmd8. feasted for a week and separated through groups who set themselves the library is one of neatness and of the team has been hampered by lack 8:~ beauty. There are two rows of tables; of funds for equipment. themselves from wordly things in pre- apart with specific intentions and paration for Easter. Holy Week re- specific conseuslness meetmg. o~ next ASCO Pancake Flour 2 pklt 15c in America ! lanky IIElnter; WIlham Dean, a Jumor, great deal of time the co mmittee toes are sellmg at an average prICe of M,onday mght. A small admiSSion fee ~ Reg. 12Vzc Choice who plays ~uard; and John Edmond- has icked but three ;'in s that seem one dollar perbushel. . Will be charge~. Mr~. A. E. Tomlla,:e --~-- son, a Semar, who plays the other p g In order to secure data of thiS na- and Mrs. OrVIlle Llttle, past presl­ Lima Beans 2 cans For the Sick guard position. The other members of to ~:f!::o~~~ b~~i~rc~asc~n make a ture for a sufficient .len~th of time to dents of the Newark. Unit, wi.ll act as I9c ' Room the squad are Raymond Johnson, . , . . prove that the practICe IS a sound one hostesses. There Will be prizes and Reg. 15c Farmdale Poaching or Charles Schwartz, William Ro~inson, ~~fin~~~e~e~~~~n r~~a:i~e ~~c~~:t~a;o~r for any potato grower to follow every refr~~hments. Every member of the Boiling cans C Paul Hawthorne, and Jack Colhns, all th:Y must finla wa t~ finance. Thi~ year, the County Agen~ plans ~o co~- AUXIliary, as well as the members. of Lima Beans 2 29 members o~ '30. The so-caUed secOl~ has been a very h:rd year and we tinue these demons~ratlOns a~am thlS the ~ost , are u~ged to come and brmg Eagle Brand Gold team consIsts of five sophomores. know that to ive a bake 01' an enter- year. Any gr~wer .1I1tereste.d In secu~- a friend along If t~ey care. to. I Roland Jackson, Wm. Fletcher, Wm. . g . ing more detailed information on thiS At last month s meeting, Mrs. can Holloway Ross McVey, and Dick tam.ment for such an affair as the project should get in touch with the Francis Lindell was initiated into Condensed Milk JI9c Seal Roberts. These boys play good basket- Jumor Prom would seem outrageou.s Agent who has his office in Wolf HaU, membership of the Auxiliary. A de- X-tli b II and make the first team step to ~hen there are so many people suffel- N k D 1 are. Iightful musical progra~ followed. Tetley's Teas pkg. 23c Strickly Fresh b:at them. ~ng as a result of the year we have ewar, e aw Home-de-Li te Paul' Whiteman leads the team in Just be~n thr~ugh. We aU hope that =~!!!!!!~;!!!!;!!;!!!!~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~;==I scoring and is an exceUent aU around the JUlllors Will be able .to find a ~ay Mayonnaise la~t. I 7 c : !at; 32c Eggs player. Charles Pie rAnks second in to finance ~he Pro.m Without calhng o I Good for Many " ot I 7 The Pick of scoring.. His unexcelled passing ~s on the pubhc for al~ertha Kirk. '32. XO Household Purposes. " C the Nests! responSible for many of the team s vietories. "Vic" Willis, although play- ing his first year in basketbaU, has TRADER HORN developed into a good floor man. "Vic" "Trader Horn," which opened in FRESH SUCC LENT MEATS i! six feet, three inehes tall. Wm. Philadelphia at the Chestnut Street at Speoial Week·End Prices Dean is a fast guard, always wide Opera House Monday, February 23, is awake. "Shorty" Edmondson, the a famed story of African adventure, other guard, is an' excellent fio!)r 'man. adapted from the book written by ...... Genuire La;;;;:..... The boys have only a fe;.v more Ethelreda Lewis in collaboration with games to play this season, and then Alfred Aloysius Horn. It was pro­ Rack Chops Jb 28f I Shoulder of Lamblb 22c baseball WIll take the place of basket-, duced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer who Loin Chops Jb 4qc I Rib Chops lb 3Bc ball. Games and Scores prociaim it to be the most pretentious '1" of Lamb tb 28, undertaking in the history of talking Newark 15; Friends 31 ' pictures. It was filmed by the biggest W~ Pork L.ve;-~-3llis:2s;-- Newark 13; Salesianum '31 Newark 28; Claymont 19 ~~;~:e :~e~~!~nw~~:\:~~e ~~~~ i:~~ Calves iver lb. 75c _ Newark 14; Beacom 21 only sound recording apparatus ever \ Lean Jlrea krast Newark 25; Dela\\\!lre City 9 to invade the Dark Continent. It con­ ~--;;ncy -~:;;;;;;;--~~- Newark 24; Wilmington High 49 sumed two years in the making and Newark 22; New Caitle 20 beggars description for its unparal­ Chuck Roast Pot Roast Bacon Newark 18; Condifico A. A. 23 leled thrills and.the defi'nite advantage Newark 31; Delaware City 26 of the talking picture medium in tak­ CJJetter Ib I9c .tb 22c I II> 32c o;~~r:; Newark 27; New Castle 47 ing gorgeous scenes of the beauties of ----, ~----~-

""nilinur the Trails of Our First President in These ColuJ1lns Through the Next Twelye Months

LAWARE MAN HAS SAVED MANY , George Washi~gton-How He Is Needed Today FLU A DEADLY FOE DE LIVES IN YEARS AT LONELY JOB ' II' . "America"-A Catholic Review Nobody Knows What Causes It, Or 'Yhat Will Cure It.-Prevalent Ch arI es PhI IpS In For Centuries , Amundse n, known to Del- ing the rescuing agencies to the as- We need George Washington today. Cae~ar was a genius. Napoleon ~as a Influenza ranks among the deadliest verse. During the war it killed nearly A, Lou~s Philadelphia shipping men sistance of the disabled boat. The Why do we need Washington to- genius. But they broke, they sph~ter- of the world's enigmas. Nobody knows as many men as bullets did. It is one afire a~'LeU " has been stationed for 200 passengera were removed irom day, What was there in this man, ed, they snapped, and as they did so where it comes from. Nobody knows of the oldest foes of the human raee. liplainfi y~ar s at the breakwater the burning ship in safety and the what is there in the memory of him, they destroyed, they scattered blood what it is. And yet, through the centuries, it has Iftn:f v:tation of the Maritime Ex- boat was beached three miles north- which would and does supply a need and hav?c around them. . 'H' Once every twenty years it stalks escaped the grasp of medi~1 science. :~nl~ th~ Atl antic off Cape Hen- west of Lewea. in ~ur lives ~ne hu~dred and fifty na:::h~!t~~a;aacs e~o~~ g:~~~~'alit~~ ~he earth spreading death and illne~s "Influ~nza seems to share with tu­ ~pen Star(lJIg as II youth of eight- When the Mohawk caught fire sev- yeaIs after he 15 gone. • a n~t angular'~ it wasP rather a In every nook and corner of the Unl- berculosls and leprosy the bad reputa- Ifn he has ri sen to his pres?nt p~st eral miles oft' Cape May on January Is !t brilliance of mjnd ~nd keenness :Ol~d and rounded ~hole . B~t it tur~ed tion of having existed at least since of superintcndent of the stat~on Wlth 2, 1924, Amundsen was the first to of Wit, t~~t we nee~. Is It the splen; and moved upward, in an ascending . history began, and. among everr, ItO assistants, Halton Schmelrer and sound the alarm. Through his prompt dor of mlhtary genius that we need, orbit, a wheel of progress that re- Increa~e of 863,49~ p~unds ov~r 1928, people to whom history relates" lames E, ,Ro~e, . warning, coast guard cutters with P~rhaps, we coul~ make use o~ t~ose volved with controlled, compelling, and accordmg to statistics compiled by writ~8 Dr. W. A. Evans, !ormer Unt- "[;)u" IS In ch.a:ge of the trio private craft removed the 270 pas- th~n~s m our hfe. today. Ce~talnly, steadying power, drawing others for- the Department of C~mmerce.. verslty profess~r and presIdent ~f ~he too",n at t~e, Maritime- ~xc~an~e as sengers and landed them at Lewes. brUhance and .~enuls. of any kind are ward and upward as it revolved. We The 1929 consumption proVIded an ~me.rican Pubhc. Health Assoclabon !he three vigilantes. Their Job 1S to The Mohawk now lies beached near none too pler..lful With us. But as a d th t t f t d 'ng and average of 13.69 pounds for. every In LIberty Magazme. ~port every ship t hat enters and Brandyw~ne Shoal. mat,ter of fac~, Washington was not, a ~~:troll~d s~~d \.)~:~~g~ ~: rur lives man, wo~an and chi,ld in the St~te, "The great world waves of influenza ~ oU,t of Delaware Bay together Amundsen's room in the re orting genius; certamly ~e was not a Wlt. today. Maryl~md s per capita consumption have swept. over u,s during the past Jith Its time, '. p And yet we need him. It ' t I th t th r is in the was shghtIy larger 13.77 pounds. four centuries at mtervals of about Th ey live In a frame structure station contains numerous letters We need Washington in our lives to- I.S no on y a. e e Climatic conditions contribute large- '!t the rocky foundation of the from ship officers anq plain seamen day we need the inspiration of his AmerIca of the twentieth century, in ly to the amount of candy eaten twenty. years. ~:e ::d a quarter breakwater strip whom he has. saved. ~ften Amundsen me~ory, the ideal that is comprised in Ithis age of .ne:vous tensio?, of speed throughout the country, the report of "Betv.:een the g~eat world waves, or ~ miles from Lewes, Del. Twenty- catches the distress signal of boats on his whole nature, because of the large and superficlahty, 11; nec,esslty ,for ba,l- the Department of Commerce states. p.andemlcs" the~ IS always a proces­ foor hours a day they are on duty which injur~d or sick men require integrity, We need the inspiration of ance. That necessity IS obVIOUS; m The Southern states show consider- ~Ion of epIdemics-some local, some , shifts in the tower scanning the prompt medical attention. One in- moral balance which he gives us. some degree of measu~e the world has ably lower per capita consumption In ~aves, and some bette~ spoken o~, ~n , for craft stance of this was early last year. Seventy-five years ago Edward always suft'ered .from It. What makes than those with colder climates. The as Irregular surges. Durmg the epl­ o~:~n s ible fo ~ the saving of hun- :rhe captain .of a Bri~ish ship coming Everett, in his famous address on ?ur need a speCial and a~ urgent one Rocky Mountain states had the demic. of 1918 the nl;lmber of deat~s dreds of lives, Amundsen is the vet- 1m wl\,s .strlcken Wlth appendicitis "The Character of Washington," IS t~e fact that we are m danger of sweetest teeth. Nevada led the nation of United States sol.dlers caused by It of the group. several miles oft' breakwater. Amund- brought out his special characteristic havmg. taken from us, bur.ned out of with a per capita tonsumptlon of was 46,992 as agamst 60,386 battIe !~~o hulls resting on the bottom of sen picked up the distre~s signals and of Washington; his common sense, our minds a,nd roote? ou~ of our 22.66 pounds and took second deaths. Dtlaware Bay are two reminders of notified the Beebe Hospital at Lewes. Washington's character was likened hearts, .t~ose Ideals whIch Wlll correct place with 18.73 pounds per person. "To begin with, we do not know Amundsen's vigilance, They are the A doctor with nurses set out in a by Everett to a rounded circle' "to our, fa1hng~, make good our. short------what microbe causes it,' or whether it remains of the passenger liners Len- motor launch, applied first aid and complain" he said "of the char~cter commgs, g,lve us the one thmg we NEWARK JUNIOR MUSIC is caused by a microbe, a virus or ape and Mohawk. :us~ed the sick man to the hospital of Washington th~t it is destitute of haust ~a:~a~f i:e :::r:~l e~:I!~ec:n;~: CLUB HAS MEETING what. Early in th ~ morning of December In time. . b!illiant q~alities is to. compla;.in of a na~: 'the mem~ry the ideal of Wash- The regular meeting of the Newark "Nor is there any specific cure. We 18, 1925, t,he l~n e r Lenape, caught .fire Amundsen has not m1ssoo report- cIrcle that It has ,no. sah~nt POints ,and ingto~ gives us no;mal balance. Junior Music Club was held in the are even denied the opportunity of oWAtlantic City. The skIpper Wired ing a ship in years. By use of Morse no sharp angles m ItS CIrcumference." , Opera House Building Saturday even- making what physicians call a thera- to owners in New York that he light code and his field glasses he is It s the angles of genius that make DELAWAREANS LIKE CANDY, ing. The vice-president, Helen Cron- peutic test, For example, if a sick thought hc could make the break- always able to obtain some clue to a it conspicuous, They stick out. They ATE 3,329,648 POUNDS IN 1930 hardt, presided. After the business man has an obscure fever, and plty- water safely, However, the fire spread ship's identity even in foggy weather. attract attention. They make talk. session a program in honor of George sicians cure him with quinine, they until when eight miles oft' Cape Hen- Amundsen and his assistanta live They are sharp and brilliant. They For some reason not explained, Washington's birthday was given ,say his disease was malaria and lopen fear was fe lt for the safety of at the station. When they want their are sensational. But they break off. Delaware people ate well on to a mil- under the direction of Mrs. Florence proved by the therapeutic test. With the passenge rs, Amundsen on duty at mail or need supplies they pull the They may emit pyrotechnic flres that lion pounds more candy in 1929 than Hastings. Dorothy Holton and Ann Irespect to influenza we are devoid of the time saw the glare and notifled oars for the two mile stretch to dazzle as they snap. But they do snap. in the previous year, the State's con- Hamilton were on the hospitality com- a clinical as well as a bacteriologic the coast guard at Lewes, Del., start- Lewes. Alexander the Great was a genius. sumption being 3,329,648 pounds, an mittee. method of diagnosing."

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A MULTIMILLIONAIRE'

recently told a group of prominent business executives of the country that each year his firm spent more than $5,000,000.00 for advertising. The product manufactured by this concern is one of the best·known articles on the market, and is used in preference to all other articles of its kind throughout the world.

tb 22c tb aBc " Does Your Advertising Pay"

his Jisteners asked. Many times over its cost, this ma'n lose our position in business. Without advertising, we replied. "My firm is internationally known," he said, would cease to operate our business." The small·town merchant and business man cannot "and enjoys a reputation for making the best product of expect to gain a world·wide marl<.et for his business, yet its kind in the world. Yet, if we did I}ot advertise the he can dominate the field in his own community through superiority of our product, we would soon lose our 'extensive and consistent advertising. In Newark and volume of trade, lose our place in the public mind, and the surrounding community THE'NEWARK POST

will carry an advertising message to more homes and to more people than any other newspaper. That is its guarantee, and the results gained by its advertisers prove the truth of this statement. Advertise in The Newark Post /

=='======~_======~===j~~==TH==E==N=E=W=A=R~K~P=O=S=T='=N~E=W==A=R~K='=D=E~L=A=W==A=R=E==~~~====~==~~======~=T=I=lu=rs=d=a~Y,=I~"e~bl~.u~ar~Y~2G~' 19 3 IMuch documents turned over to the Archives Commission. Due than twenty-five dollars nor more P'£,OP" E'S --=:::::::: The ·Newark Post acknowledgment would be made in the preBS by the State Archivist than one hundred dollars or in case C. L COLUIIN Founded Januarl 26. 1810. bl the late Everett C. Johnaon for such gifts and better care would be taken of them in the fire- of non-p.ayment of a fine ~o undergo _ lrl proof Hall of Records in the State House than 'would be possible an j~prJSonment for a perl~d not ex- The following co hlued Every Thursday at the Shop Called Kelll Newark, Delaware in the average private dwelling. c:ed~ng ffiVteh:a§:~t~~~ ~~:tl~~:gfe t~~ was rece ived by ~~eOf : ~e ~lut ion eace 0 f rom the AI ' lIark PO!t By The Post Publishing Company. • •• • the Municipal Court of the City of 2 J 0 Hertcan Flag Council N Charles Edward Bounds, Editor It s a Great Ltfe-Betng an Edt/or ~i!m!ngton shall have power a.nd jur- ,I'. . U . . 1\1. '0. " lsdlctlon to hear and determme ·the Dear Sir:- Entered as second-class matter at Newark, Delaware. No greater truth IS known m the newspaper world than offense created by th.is Act. ' Realizing lh t th under Act of March 8, 1897. this-that no matter which way the editor jumps, he lands iil the I ------tions of' our De~10 ~. VetI' founda. Make all checks to The Newark Post. ar of G Telephones, 92 and 93 fire. In .other words, any de.cision he makes,. ~nr stan€! he takes, NEED GRADUATE ~rnn~ent bt ' il1l(crt~:~a~orm The Subscription price of this paper is $1.50 per year in advance. any pohcy he pursues,-he IS bound to be critIcised and censored unmlgrant Wh o hu ' c ened by Single copies 4 cents. by some o~ the readers of his paper: shores and e1j:wge;1 i~ll1C) t~ Here IS an example. If the editor favors the Wets, the Drys SCHOOL AT UN IV • propaganda wl deh i. d r.lll~e l' O~read We want and invite communications, but they must be Bigned bll the writer'B natne-not for publication, but for our information and protection. score him; if he upholds Prohibition, the Wets howl loud and long" T' Wh erea , t1w principles nnd! ~n If he choose~ the middle road, and writes impartially on both sides HULLIHEN SA \ S ~ha t d a ~luat ('d otl r f o refnther~ ; of the questIOn, BOTH of the groups go gunning for his skin. If OU\~l S ~f tlll~ .Cou ntry, fosl ~ 21 ~ 7Ifl :It L 21 Q. I. 1 rn he favors the Democrats, the Republicans blast him in their --- ~?gu:t~ y 0 lllun 1n privileges U/.t'uUu mOUud, ~ UtutfS.... af'~S. J1111'U1'f .pC./OU fl. wft1'd. s'peeches-vice versa. If he conducts a non-partisan newspaper he ,\Jontinued from Paa-e 1.) Wh ' .an 1 . W 71T I. ""t Q. I.- ~ 1l1li it f 2: b ~y" t·t f b h ..' el eas, those Ilrinci I ~f1'JI./ .l"\ f • .puns./tn1'. nnu _Uf Uf Jl,;.U1'rU Pu • ge s I rom ot sIdes. If he prlllts a story, someone gets mad "I wou ld like to say, however, that ideals have formed '1 b '. p e - OUR MOTTO. because they see their name in print, and if he does not print the I beg you not to a.llow your enthusi- ground on whi ch the a:~~ and ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I item, the other readers claim that they have been cheated out of a~m to carry you mto any mea ~ ure s stability of our noble cO;lnltr~,g~~ and = a news story, and accuse the editor of being afraid to print 01 methods that can not be apP.lOved " eloped and, S de· the news. by t~e ~aculty, for the .faculty IS en- Whercas, the cri minal elem FEBRUARY 26, 1931 It' t l'f th t f b . d't It' th d 'f t huslastJc about athletICS, also, but our lar£,e cities a ent in S a grea I e, a 0 ell1g an e I or. s e euce I you completely disapproves any violation f th f . ., I'e composed largely ======1 do, an~ the deuce if yeu.don't. Take it?r leave it,.you:ll get.it ?ne of amateur athl etic standards. As ~ra ceet h ~ r e~7:~i~r~n~\':o will n.ot em. Unwise and Unjust Legislation way 01 the other. And Just about the time the edItor IS beglllnlllg long as the method and measures used a free gove ' t b pportU nJlies of to believe that everyone is satisfied and happy, a whole chorus of are correct, you can count on me in privileges ,~~~:.~~ '. ~t ~Ibuses these We have been reading in the daily newspapers with interest "growlers" burst into full song, and life again becomes hectic but all pro~re.ss i ve athletic developments R e80 1 1Ic~l. thaI ~~~ Aeml!rica n of the controversy being waged in the State against the measure natural: , to ,~he h.mlt. . Coun ci l No.2 , Junior Ord Flag introduced into the Legislature prohibiting contractors from out­ It Isn t often that we fall into a poetic mood, but, while I t~llnk the alumlll ~hould hear United AmericHn Mec hanics Ofe~ of side of the State from coming into Delaware and bidding on con­ meditating on the inconsistencies of the public recently we had a somethl.ng of the academIC progress, ark, Del. , rcpresenting 190 m 'ell'. struction jobs. The measure, framed and sponsored by a section s~ries of thoughts that .rhymed .. Hastily jottin.g them d.own on. a ~~~e.PI~~l~~~cI~e:~e:~~d~~~~J:\ Pau:d in meeting assembled ; ll1qU:!~~'::li of the Wilmington Chamber of Commerce, appears to be meeting piece of paper, we got the followll1g results, which we pnnt herem equipment is well known Tl! fo _ re~?~m e l1d the en.aelment of a bill with more than the usual amount of opposition. with apologies to no one in particular and everyone in general: eign study plan we hope is to be e~- ~ IC h:s R bccn tnlr~ duced in the As we look at the matter, the measure seems to be a rather THE EDITOR tended to Germany, as you have prob- H ~~S: °J oin~pr~' n\a~l.ves known as large mouthful for even so augu"t and high-and-mighty a body as Who tells about the stork that flies? ably heard. The foreign study plan which cUls dow ~o u l:on. No. 473, the Wilmington Chamber of COfamerce to chew. If the Wilming­ The Editor! of the University of Delaware has ninety per cent r;~Il1!l pr e lll\~lgrati on ton Chamber of Commerce had limited its bill so that it would Who gives the. news when someone dies? b .rou,~ht great prestige to our univer- aod we ardently so li ci t t~~\l ~~~~; apply only to Wilmington construction work, it would be more The EdItor! slty.. of Congr es~, from the Slate of Dela. within reason, but when that organization takes it upon itself to Who has to sit through lectures long J. G~org e St~wart, chaIrman of. t~ e ware, to give their aetivc in ftu say how Newark, Dover, Milford, and the rest of the towns and And praise some sour singer's song, Athle~lc Comllllttee of the Alu.mlll, In and vote for this bill, and ~n~ communities in the State shall conduct their business, we say that Who's supposed to right all civic wrongs? ~tress lll g .the developm~nt of IIlter~ st further it is a step too far. If the Wilmington Chamber of Commerce The Editor. . III athletiCS and phYSIcal educatIOn Reso lved, that copies of thi· re wants to build a 10-foot fence around the entire State, with signs a~ong AmerIcan schools and colleges, j tlOn be forwarded to our C sol~. pOinted out that because of the ab- man and Senator ~ f rom the ~~!7~; reading "No Trespassing, by Order of the Wilm. Chamber of Who has to smile when skys are black? sence of a well-rounded physical edu- Delaware. Commerce" nailed up on the fence, we for one are going to fight The Editor! cation course at Delaware College, America n Flag Council No 28 such a move. Who has to walk the narrow track? every high school of the State has O. U. A. M., Newark, Dei. ' We wonder if the Wilmington Chamber of Commerce ever The Editor! found it necessary to engage their F L } heard of a document called the Constitution of the United States? Who listens to the space-hog's guff, physical directors from other states. ' . . lall, Secretary. If they have heard of such a thing, we wonder if they realize that And gets cussed out and treated rough The bill now before the Legislature, BIRTFID AY PARTY the measure they are sponsoring is directly in opposition to one of When he turns down the filthy stuff? ~~i:~~lared, seeks to remedy this con- A birthd ay wa s celebrated at Ihe the basic principles laid down in that document-the right of free The Editor! trade between residents of one section of the country and another. Alexander J. Crothers, president of home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Balling We wonder if they ever have heard of such a thing as the Ameri­ the association~ .presided. Former lin honor of thei r so n, Bi ll y, who WIS Who's called a blackguard by some folks? !J0ngressman WIlham H. Heald, pres- seven years old . Th e ti me was spent can ideal opposing class legislation and distinction, and the law The Editor! Ident of the Wilmington Club, and " . against the restraint of trade. Who's invited outside for a "poke"? chairman of the finance committee of m plaYlllg games, aftcr which reo If contractors of other States are to be outlawed in this State, The Editor! the university board of trustees, freshments were served. Among how about the other professions and trades? Our doctors and Who's inflicted with the tales of woe served as toastmaster. t hose presen t we re : Jane Eissner, physicians send to Philadelphia, New York, and Baltimore for When his story trods on another's toe, TO HOLD BAKE Eleanor Mumford, Betty Mumford, specialists in certain cases. We have lawyers of national fame When he hunts 'til he finds what folks SHOULD Miriam Lewi s, Naudain Slnck, Ad. come into this State to try important cases. We have an automo­ know? The Ladies' Aid Society of the riennne Suddard, Marjorie Ri tten. bile factory in Delaware, but we ride in cars manufactured in The Editor! Newark Methodist Church will hold . Michigan and elsewhere_ We have textile mills here, but our the first in a series of "Bakes" on house, Cathryn Bryson, Ehzebeth Saturday, February 28, in the Reburn Aikin, Albert Aiken, Co nrad Lewis, clothes are made beyond the limits of Delaware. We buy wheat Who's supposed to know all things that are? from Kansas, 'corn from Iowa, and meat from Texas, yet we still Radio Store, beginning at ten o'clock. Edmund Lewis, Julian Rittenh ouse, The Editor! Bread, cake, pies, chi cken soup Willi Herber t Slack, Steve Gilligan, Jun ior have farms in Delaware. Should we make it illegal to buy a beef­ Who's threatened with the brush and tar? " for sale. Balling and Billy' Balling. steak with a Texas flavol', or a loaf of bread made from Western The Editor! ..- wheat ? We wonder! Who has to choose 'tween wet and dry, The idea of prohibiting outside labor from coming into this Praise Prohibition to the sky, State is, in our mind, beyond the bounds of reason. If this measure When the results could almost make him cry? were a sane one, it would be just as sane to pass legislation against The Editor! the importing of ALL labor, be it sl ' ... ClI n I~C and lI1dexI~g ~ubhc document~ of the State such as executI~f! In the city, where a trolley car i ~ public conveyance transporting pas- I No.2 Yz CROOK S Al RICO'! S ...... 20c papers, legIslatIve papers and Journals, court records and offiCIal operating the motorist definitely scngers, while said school bus, omni­ No. 2Yz C~OOK ' S BARTLETT PEAR .. . . can i9c letters of date prior to 1850. Many a Delaware document, however, Iknow s that the trolley is likely to stop bus, pas engel' bu s, trolley car, or I No.2 LIBBY'S SLICED PI ~EAPPL E ...... ca n JOc was scattere~ ~broad to the four winds before th~ establishm,:nt just before reaching the .crossing .In other publi~ conveyance transporting KANSAS CLEANSER" ...... 3 ca n11s 2jc of the CommISSIon, and consequently there are serlOUS gaps whIch l order to take on or t.o dI scharge Its passen!5ers IS stopp.cd for ~h e purpose should be filled, especiall y for the COlonia. I period of the Common- passengers, and .he IS prepared to of taklllg on or dI scharging passen- I MORNING CHEER COFFE~ ...... ::: 1I~ 3lc wealth's history. properly handle hI S machllle. But, on gers. . . . SPECIAL BLEND COFFEl" ...... ······ ' i l / c D ' G O'g H Ryden the recently appointed State Archivist I ~he open rond whcI'e t here are no des- Section 3 .. ~n y p e rso~ vlOlatlllg any LARGE SIZE DUZ ...... : 2 / . .1: e .1 ~ '. ~ _ . .. f ' th A' h' C .' Ilgnated marks and people are taken of the provi IOns of thiS act, shall be I 1 c I~ paItlculally ll1terested In reCO'iellng or e. IC Ive ommlS- on and di scharged all along the road, subject to pay a fine of not less than I SMALL SIZE DUZ ...... ' lb 29c SlOn and the State of Dela",,:are docul!,ents whIch ~ou ld fill these this bi ll would place all responsibility ten dollars nor more than twenty-five QUARER ROLL ...... r 19c gaps. There may ~be chests JI1 the attIcs of old famIly houses con- I£0 1" any accident's occurring on the dollars for the first olfense and for GIBB'S BAKED BEANS ...... 3 or . taining just the documents which would serve as valuable links in Imotorist , ruther than the buses. a second or subsequent off~n s e shall , the history of Ollt· old State. It would be a truly patl'iotic act were Mr. Hoopes urges that motorists be cntenced to pay a fine of not less l.______~----- " February 26, 1931 Thu rsda J I THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE

';;--PERSONALS Mt·. and Mrs. M. M. Daugherty Lodge Notes visit to the American Flag Council Brothel' Duhlldaway is going to give SPent the week-end visiting friends in BEGIN FIGHT TO Monday evening and gave us a brief an address on how to secure new ,d H u~crl , 0 Philadelphia, il Pe~t Washngton, D. c. PURGE JERSEY JR. ~. U. A. M. o~!~.ne of t he work for the coming members, as he had several applica­ F~e evening us t he guest of hiS Mrs. Edwin Olemence will spend a ~ The Mechalllcs of Delaware has y . , . tions on the table at our last meeting. fu ay Mr and lI1r ~ . . C. Hubert. few days in Glenolden, Pa. Ipa sted another milestone of doing Brother LeWIS s Indoo! baseball psN! nt s, . - OF MOSQUITOES good for themselves and the American team h~ s had two games In the P!lst Honor Accorded Scohman Mrs. W. E. Co lton, who has ?e~n Miss Muriel Ewing of Port Deposit Republic as a whole, with the State's week ~Ith t he Redmcn. Bro. LeWIS's John Nupler, II Scotswuu, ,wI! lived ',iti ng her niel"', Mrs. ,V. G. Wllhs, was the week-end guest of Miss Cath- ___ Council session at Middletown, Del., team IS ~eady for any opponents on In tho eurly Se\'enteenth ce ury, Is ~bl ret ur ned to her home. erine Townsend. February 17 1931. any evelllng. USllull)' I'cglll'lied RS I he entor o r . - Report of Study Group Shew. The foll o~ing officers were elected: Brother Coleman's Iris~man sketch l og llrltlllll ~. Ray Bend cl', who . .'s \~ e ll kno,,:n Mrs. Ray~ond Burn~tt has return- that Half.BiDion Fund State Councilor, J . R. J efferson, No. had a busy week at Milford Cross ======~~==== aUon fOI 8Plwncil.Cll1S thl~ week, ~n cd from a trip to PrOVidence, R. I. • Needed 26; State Vice-Councilor, J . M. Swee- Roads school house and Ogeltown TOO LATE er for apuend lcltls t hiS wek, m -- •• ton ' State Secretary Frank Siegrist. hall. rrlllO nt own, .. Y, a nd is r ccovering Mr. and Mrs. Dudley .Gray were --- State Treasurer, H~rvey Hoffecker; B~oth ers come out next Monday HAY FOR ~ Id fe Mrs. 8('11.1·r wi ll be remem- the guests Tuesday evenmg of Mr. WOUW REPAY COST State Conductor, Charles H. Sharp; eve~mg, as t he Councilor is going to W nl~:J' as til(' [OJ'lllC l Miss Evelyn and Mrs. C harl e~ Roger s. . ---. State Warden, Charles Billingsley; outhne the work for the coming year. 2,26,lt ~orreJl. Mrs. John C. Fedrick, Dr. Franklin ~maglne N ~w Jersey WIthout mos- State Inside Sentinel, J . H. Fisher; \, ----; . ht e ntel tained B. P edrick and Dr. Richard Hixon of qUitOS. Imagme vast, dreary, malo- State Outside Sentinel, N. W. Van- 1';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;~;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;~ llrs. Elllcst n illig IW h' to D C '11 b k d dorous marsh wastes from Hacken- Horn' State Chaplain S. F. Collison' IIr th; memb rs of the ,Tuesday Card gU~:t~n~f ~r. 'and' ~~ s ~ w~e ~i~- ~ac k to Eli.zabethport tran~formed Natio'nal Representative, Wm_ A: Club at lu n r h con~ \\eek. singer. . " IIl t.o lovely VIllages of .the plalll. Im- Law. Place of next meeting, Laurel, fo'lah~lty has becn con- __ agllle the dull, b.roodlllg ~aters of Delaware. . MI SS Jea n t hi s week with a Mrs. J. H. Hossinger has returned Ne~yark Bay teemlllg. with hners .an~ The State Vice-Councilor paid a Our Specialties Include ...... fined to her hume from Philadelphia and re-opened her freIghters and snortlllg tugs, brlllg- ======told. house here. ing trade greater than New York's Enjoy Its Cheerful GloVI !Irs . J. JI. Ii ossingc r has returned Miss Sara Chmnbers of Lewes, Del- i~r~~~I~eilt~i~~r~~I:nrehou se and fac- to Newark lind has rco pe ned her ho~ e aware, was in N ewark Friday of last That is what the Meadows Recla- after spending . cveral months m week. mation Commission has done in its Philadelphia . _ . . r eport to the Legislature presentlld HIGHLAND LIN E N HOMESOTE Mrs. S. E. Dal1l<'l'o n i ~ in Balt imore M l ~S MIss. Hoss l~ ger Will return to expenditure of $500,000,000 but self- Philadelphia Friday for further sustaining. IIfr homc on Kells avenue. Etc. treatment before she r eturns to her The general plan upon which the !lr. and ~ l l' s. Danicl Thompson are home to stay. commission's recommendations are entertaini ng II number of guests at a Mr. W illiam Walker was in Bridge- based. was p:epared by Ge~era l E.dgar Lridge supper Friday evening. port, Pa., this week. JadwlIl, untIl r ecently chief engllleer .~. -- lOf the United States Army. Associ- N E ,W Mi ss Mu ri el Drcilich, of F lushing, Mrs. R. T. Jones entertained today ated with him in the task were N. Y., and MI'. James O. Sinkinson, of at a bridge luncheon. , Morris R. Sherrerd, of Newark, and Port Washington, N. Y. , wer e week­ with colored borders end guests al thc home of Mr. a nd Miss Anne Gallaher entertained ~~~~r S. Wood McClave, of Hlicken­ Mrs. C. Robert Kase. t he memb~rs of t he Order of Eastern They see a territory larger than in. !II'. and AIl' S. . A. Owens returned Star at dlllne,r Saturday evening at Manhattan Island and capable of sup­ Sunda y frol11 a motol' t!'ip to Georgia. t he B lue Hen r ea Room. porting a 5,000,000 popUlation rising Miss Helen Gregg, a student at from the 22,000 acres of swamp land Miss Lau ra Lee Carley, of Darling­ now the stronghold of mosquitos. Coomb's Conservatory of Music, Phila­ Each paper COl 8 in three ton Semin ar)" was II week-end visitor they see a gigantic terminal for delphia, spent the week-end and colorful borde combina­ here. Washington's Birthday at the home of passenger steamships at t he northern tip of Newark Bay where t he Passaic tions with lined envelopes. Mrs. James Hu tchi son is confined to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William S. and Hackensack Rivers join. , la c boxes ar dainty cl'ea. her home with the grippe. Gregg. Ii n s of II fall10us d esign e r. Mrs. J. K. John ston was a Philadel- Miss Marjorie J ohnson, who is a A. & P. STORE REMODELED T c pape r itself has the member of t he faculty of t he Ridley phis I'isit or this week. Park High School, was home for t he The Atla ntic and Pacific Tea Com- pI' lid n a l e of Eaton, Mr. Ira S. Brinser has returned week-end. pany has just completed remodeling Cr II I) & p ' ke behind it- its store in Newark, and has added a llIH' 1I."dl re, we feel, can ::~ed\~~i~ o~~' e ~t~~I;~i;f ~;:~~ l ~~p:;~ Miss Dorothy Stoll spent Sunday in number of new pieces of equipment you find as b eautiful a intendent s of the ational Education Philadelphia. which will enable it to offer its cus- brill p ize 01' gift (for Association. tomeI's quicker and more efficient othe r 0 yoursel f) so Henry McVaugh, of Wilmington, ser ice. The storeroom has been mo

llr. and Mrs. ~J. Gaerthe spent Lard, 2 lb •. 25c Mackerel ' ilets, lb. ZSc e week· end vi siting in Philadelphia. Jello. All Kinds 3 pkgs ...... ~3e Mrs. Cha rles L.'Pcnny entertained 25e trical protect' n is always on Octagon Soap Powder Snowdrift .. the wc!!k-cnd her nephew, Dr. 2 pkgs, ...... 13e Can ...... I I A. Frontz, of Baltimore, and 23e Salmon, Fancy Pink Gold Medal uckwhent guard . B. Owens, of Wilmington. 2 cans ...... 23e 2 pkgs...... 2Se Mrs. Charlcs Hollister and Pleezing Corn Beef Old Fashio Buckwheat Can ...... 24e George and Charles, and Mrs. 6- tb bag ...... 35e Rose sp nt the week -end in Pleezing Pop Corn Raisins. S ded' Sun Maid lb. 15c Can ...... 15e 2 pkgs. . D. . 'l' hey motored ...... 21e lb. 25c haVing a ve ry enioyable ride. Apple Butter (Rosedale) Knighth Sour Krout 2 cans ...... 25e No.3 c n, 2 for ...... 25e ' Our Safe Deposit I Boxes lb. 21c Minute Tapioca Pkg ...... 13e lb. 16c Run-O-Pod Peas lb. 21c Ex. Fancy ...... Coffee provide a place removed from danger of fire and and Mrs. iK. Mussleman and Geisha Crab Meat lb. 25c ~!r s. Walter Holton spent the Can ...... robbery. / 111 Washington, D. C. Chocolate P uddine 37e 2 pkgs ...... lb. 25c H. E. Vi n- inger was in New A unt J emima Pancake 41e I lb. 14c days this week. 2 for ...... , ...... 27e They are Accessible to ~ r Convenience TB essie Wing;te a nd Miss Ger­ GINGER ALE. CANADA DRY, Doz ...... _ ., rnlll.l,olnulhtl.~\~~l spend the week-end 24e I has Fruits and Vegetables WE INVITE YOU TO CONSt T WITH US ON .pkg tOe Beets Bunch 8e Meats is in Newark, Carrots Venl Rib Chops ANY DETAIL OF DEPOSIT, AVINGS, INVEST­ jllr 20e Bunch 8e 10 ...... 35e CauliRo wer Venl Loin Chops Large ...... 25c Ib ...... 42e MENT, TRUST OR SAFE DEPOSIT BUSINESS. for 2~e Broccoli Bonless Cross Cut . ean JDC 2 lbs ...... 25e 10 ...... 32e .enn 20e Turnips, Yellow or White Fresh Hams ·10e 10 ...... 24e . Cll n t9c 1 pk ...... While Potntoes Lean Chuck Roast cans tOe 1,1., bu. bas ...... 80e 10 ...... 1ge l Jb 25c Sweet. Potntoes Stllllding Rib Roast 2ge l . "b alc _ bu. bas ...... 90e 10 ...... ' 7Vl c Chi ckens (Fresh Killed) l Trust Company Roasting 01' Stewing, lb . 37e Ne-wark i\pples, Grimes Goldcn .. .' .. 75e I .. ' 2Vzc pinorh Sausage, Tower Brand 1ge lb ...... 25e .. ib 29r 2 lbs. Newark, Delaware ~ I ., nngeri n es, ...... for 19C Large, pel' doz. 21e Sc~allb~ ~c 25e Oranges Swift's Dried Beef Doz ...... _ .. 23e, 27e, 38 e ~ It> ...... 17e 1'1 1\ / • THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE Thursday, February 26, 1931 The Market Basket

Put this under the head of SAVINGS in your BUDGET BO OK

,/ (

simple mechn ni sm i, hermetica II)' ,.aled in the /I1 on l< or Top gi~tll~~ ~e~ n1aJi;~~ \ - "')U can enjoy all ( h ~ (onven' - 1. '" n c ~ , a ll the help, all (he ~h e compact Gen· j eltcious frozen d esserts, (hat 0 eral Electric motor Ge neral Elec tric R efri gerator consumes far les, b rin ~s - and at the same time c u r re n t. Cahi neu posiuvely reduce livinC expenses. a re All -Steel. wilh maximu m food ca· ~:br:~ t~~~~s f~~sj o~h~:' foe;J~ pacity, and raised on fro m

RBl'lllOBIlATOIl El'tllJ(jI!I<."'HJlM'Sll~ ~~E~.?;,~I~ WATER COOlERS

j".1U ,. Ib, G,.".I E.k. /ru "" ' C" ' ••,. •• , ... , ' "" ) S.,,,rd.) " " 111", on II " lIlIu ·wul , N. B.G. .11"'"

The Nash Chassis is remarkably free from squeaks, IS long-lived and trouble- free because Nash employs- /j Automatic Centralized Chassis Lubrication

N ALL three Nash Eight-cylinder se'ries. Bijur A tomatic I Chassis Lubrication cushions the chassis. ThIs system automatically meters oil in exactly the correct am unt io tbe various chassis bearings, as the motor runs; eliminates ha n.d lubrication and service expense; and assures perfect chaSSIS lubrication to all points without any attention of the car owner. Let us show you how this wonderful lubrication system works. I 18 New Eights, $945 to $2025 • • 4 N ew Sixes, $795 to $ 45 Prie.. F . O . B. F aotories a:J(ew J)ealjor Toda)' 's JJoliar For 1\ good job emlJ)oy a GOOD PLUMBER. You will H get advice from us for nothing and a very fair estima te NAS on what the cost will be. DANIEL STOLL Dennison Motor Company ROOFING Phone 424 N ewark, Delaware February 26, 1931 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE 7

t · I I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,' plete annihilation of the British duty should universally attend with Uniform tnterna lona T, .. army. . that seriousness of ~eportment an.d The setting up of the actual ma- ~ratitude of he~rt which the reco~lll- '. ,,,..<-""1, chinery of religion in the Continental ~Ion .of such . ~elterated an~ astomsh- ~'y C 00 ~ ~L~' g''''' '" Army is important as a paI:t of Ing interpositIOn s of Provlde'nce de- li- S h 1 a .~.tJr JIll)':\fi1lks Washington's r eligious record. The mands of us." • ~_ (~ 'i1.1\11 y,)" ~ Congress authorized the employment Here are Washington's words on ~rf 00 II ,.>~ ~ of chaplains, after Washington had the connection between religion and \ , I /J.:'fI-A'~ '1 . .~ urged it, and the general orders of government as taken from his Fare- '//If4/U::I'J, July 9, 1776, when the Army was in well Address : "Morality is a neces- Aill New York City, directed: "That Col- sary spring of popular government ~. • 0 m..-tJl;. ",~ - ~ ' onels or co mmanding officers of each . . . let us with caution indulge the Q.':r::..:",,, ~(~~TIJRAl:"4IlTHORITlr~ ~ ,. c,"""", regiment are directed to procure for supposition that morality can be Ne M. eVVARO' -~ Chaplains accordingly, persons of maintained without religion. What- 1.22.([ good character and exemplary lives. ever may be conceded to the influence ---- To see / t hat all inferior officers and of refined education on minds of pecu- ~~~=~~~~~;~~~~ GOOD FEEDING REDUCES the necessary surplus of bodily re- soldiers pay them a suitable r~ spect liar struc.ture, r eason and exper~ence = WORM TROUBLES h k f wth and attend carefully upon religIOus both forbid us to expect that natIOnal serves w lch . m~ e or g.ro .' exercises. The blessing and protec- morality can prevail in exclusion of By Dr. John M. Evvard strength, and vlta.lIty, and which, In tion of Heaven are at all times neces- religious principle." In co mba~ting the rou".d worm in addit~on, are of immense value when sary, but especially so in times of On his deathbed, after nearly the production of hogs, hberal feed- the pigs are so unfortunate as to pi~k public distress and danger. The Gen- twenty-four hours of struggle for ing. of. a go.od scientifically balanced up ~ha ll enging worm eggs from their eral hopes and ~rusts , that every o!ft- breath, he placed the tinal seal of ratIOn .IS of Immense benefit. ?ur bet- e.nvlronment. The brood so~ and her cer and man Will endeavor. s~ to live courageous manhood upon his life and tel' sWine producers are learnmg that litter must be full fed t he nght fee~- and act as becomes a Christian Sol- went to his Maker with his brave it pays real dividends to keep the ing combination fro~ the very earll- dier defending the dearest rights and faith unshaken. "I felt from the ;~;,;;=:===~~==:=~::==:==;= young pigs coming right along from est days, thus insurmg a maximum Liberties of his country." first" he whispered "that the disor­ lATE AND S lm IOn T OP­ pre-birth days until they finally go milk produ~tion on. th.e p.art of the In January, 1777, the Continental der ~vould prove fat~1 . .. but I am p,,~p~~U1Nv ADUL T TOP. ove~ the market sc~les.. sows; the liberal. milk Imbibed by the Army for t he first time since the siege not afraid to go." Pigs fed a supenor ratIOn are the glve.s them a marvel- of Boston, established a permanent ______. MI"lon.ry TIl.I<. youn~ p~rkers ones that develop the greater strength ous 11ft m the trymg days of early encampment base. This was at Mor­ send ing ~ of the seventy and endurance for Withstanding the suckling. ristown, New Jersey, and among the CARD OF THANKS lor a special time un d purpose. various vicissitudes to which young The feeding of a sUIlerior ration early things attended to was the prac­ I il onftrV enterprise today hall growing and fattening pigs are daily gives the pigs a big lead over their tice of regular Sunday worship for We wish to express OUI' thanks and appreciation to all those who sent ml: cOIl1~lO n wIth that of that subjected. Pigs t hus pushed nutri- enemies so that, in most cases, the t he troops. On April 12, a Saturday, Ihere are certain essential tionally have much less difficulty in pigs are able to combat with success it was ordered that "All the troops flowers and cars or helped in any way wh ich should bc recog- handling their internal worm attacks their internal parasites, the worms. in Morristown except the guards, are during our recent bereavement and than do those pigs which are "skimp- Poorly fed young pigs are splendid to attend divine worship tomorrow at loss of our mother. May and Edna Chambers. LThe Seventy sent Forth (vv. 1,2). ed along" on inadequate feeds subjects for marked infestations of the second B e ll~ the Officers com­ APpolDted by the Lord (v. 1). throughout the pre-marketing months. the ambitious round worms, yielding manding the Corps, are to take spe- ======L went lorth not merely because It is particularly important that a fertile field for the worms to grow cia! care to have t heir men clean and LIN t' InD er urge but beca use of per­ young pigs be started out, from the and prosper, all to the expense of the decent, and that they are to march in ega 0 Ice K AFT, I and direc t appointment. Only very first, at a rapid clip! so th!'-t t.hey porke~s whose alimentary tracts they proper orde~ to the place of ,,:,~rship." Estate of Elsie Wingate Davy, De- Prospe9' Ave. ,hou ld go forth as miSSionaries may gather very early m theIr lives mhablt. Next w.eek It was ordered: All the ceased. Notice is hereby given tha appointed by tbe Lord. -- troops .II~ town ~not on duty) to at- Letters of Administration upon FOR ~ two by two (v. 1). 'rile pur­ tend dlvme service tomorrow agree- Estate of Elsie Wingate Davy I of - - this was that they might WASHINGTON'S OWN WRITINGS able to the ~rders of the 12th ins~a~t." White Clay Creek Hundred, d' ased, FO~ 6~ALE-One us r help, counsel. and support HOW HIS RELIGIOUS ATTITll DE The convenience o~ a chur~h bUlldmg were duly granted unto Farm s Trust $ .. MRS. MAR OT Y, S was an ele~ent In Morristown and Company of Newark, on th 19th day D 1 --- the army paid due observance to Sun- f DbA D 1930 d 11 ewa , e, Had High Regard for Religious Practices and Encouraged Recognition of day It may be noted however that 0 e~e~ ~r'd . . 'd ' n ad per- 2,26,lt Route 2, A leton Road. God's Goodness An10ng the People at Large onl; the ~roops in the town itseU: w~re ~~~~e;~ede :: m~kes~ m~~~s~o :~: FOR SALE-1900 For Fordor Sedan, As a boy George Washington prob- I without help from on high, and cer- ordel~~ to bChur~h for no hb~II~I~~ Administrator witho delay, and all guaranteed 3 5, $360. Ford The (orce back ot missions (T.2). ably thought as much about religion tainly the verdict of history as to the ~ou . ave een ~r~.e :~ou~ . ~ 0 persons having de nds against the 1928 Standar Co , $260. dllclples were Instructed to pray as did the average normal healthy magnitude of . these , has t deceased a e req . ed to exhibit and 2,26 D MOTOR CO. o( the harvest to send torth diffi~u!ties. ~a:e~Yt~:~an~~~ ~~en: ~~~n;hrfted F boy o~ that age. As he grew old~r! he confirmed Washm'?ton s political JU?g- to Middlebrook th: well-known order pr~sent t ~ ~ame uly probated to the FOR SALE- -room bungalow. Prnyer Indtted by the Holy l o has been back or el'ery mlsston- steadily d~veloped a .deeply rellgl?u,s m~n~. An. I1: s , m stead of be~ommg ! a ainst rofanity was issued on May said Ad mlstr or on or before the concre~eaI', garage and hen- t~rn of mmd, ac~ordmg to th~ DI.VI- oplnl?nated, Instead o~ developing an 13f Wa~hington characterized it as 19~h day f D et,nbe~, A. D. 1931, or house. F ' e acres good land. Easy slon of InformatIOn .and Pub.lIcatJon el?o, In.s~e.a d of becommg confi?ent of the "foolish and scandalous practice abide by tel w In hiS behalf. terms pply J. R. C DEN, I The Seventy Instructed (vv.3- of the George Washington BlceTiten- hiS abIlities as he succeeded In sur- f f . " d dd d' "A Address I Md nial Commission. mounting one. difficulty after a~other, ~ ~reoa ::e t~W~~~\~:h ~~is a an~ 'ever; Farmers Tr.ust Comp y of Newark, 2,26,3mo. R. 3 kton, . As 10 Ihe source of th,?l r com- At the age of twenty-three, he IGeorge W~shlngton became mOle and other species of immorality Briga- Newark, Dela are. . FOR SALE-1930 Fo Tudor Sedan, I (v 3) "I send you. Every- counted the bullet holes in -his coat more .convlnced t ~at the ha nd 0: God diers are enjoyned to take effectual Farmers Trust pany o~ :r-:ewalk, only six months old, $425. 1929 depends up?n the authority of after Braddock's defeat and acknowl- was m these. t l'l~n~p h s and . ~;eater care, to have divine service duly per- 1,1,10t. Administrator. Chevrolet -do Sedan, splendid co mmission No miss io nary should edged, with common:sense practical- and ~reater h.l s s ~ll'Itual humlh.y.. formed in their respective brigades." .' condition, $ 9 1930 Ford Tudor lorth II'lih ollt the co nsciousnesS ity, t hat a ~ owe r higher than man , ThIS humility In . s uc ces~ and wlll- At Middlebrook, also, on June 28, the HIGHEST rice pilld for hve stock Sedan, $396, II guaranteed thne being sent hy the Lord. had saved him. The R eVO luti o narY l m g?es~ to accep~ failure Wit hout com- order s were as follows: "All Chap- cal~or rite I months. , .... , ~ ! to the (\nng~rs co nEl'O nting War taught him lessons he was too p.lamt IS exe,mplified at ~he end of the lains are to perform divine service 1. PLATT. 2,26 OTOR CO. (I 3) ~l lsslonnrIes thru st torth honest to deny, and as a result, Wash- s ~ ~ge ?f Boston. The seizure. and for- tomorrow and on every succeeding Pho e 89 Newark. Oel Ihe Lord 11 111 he exposed to dead- ington's belief in God became t he sim- tificatlOn of Dorchester . ~elghts are Sunday with their r espective bri- FOR SALE-James ay 8-gal. heatea plril. pie faith of a chIld, confirmed and rccall ed, and how t he BI'I ~ls h prepar- gades 'a~d r egiments where the situa- fountains. Also ice-prooI nests. A to IlI el r support (v.4 ) . Being trengthened by the actual li ving ex- ed for another Bunker Hill, ~o r they t ion will possibly admit of it. And I MURRAY OULTRY/FARM. \~ rorlh by Ihe Lord, they ~"e re to perience of a man. attempted to cross the bay III ord~ r the Commanding offi cers of co rps are T. M. SWAN 10,3,tf ,I to IIlln 10 prO l' lde for th ei r .need. The per sonal record of church at- to storm the works, .an,d Bunker Hill to see that they attend themselves FOR SALE-Ford 192/ Model A As 10 the speed of their mIssion tendance his estimate of the value of would have been child s play to t he with officer s of all ranks setting the 49 W M.iD 5lr.el Roadster , $260. aranteed 3 .o,urgent "'.RS th~ n~ed Jot ~h: r eli gious' practices among t he people ~ l au1 hter. th.~~ ;O~~da;a;~e e nr~~~~~a!! example. The Com mander i~ chi:£ Phone 429 months, Ford ¥fA928Sport Coupe, !Inngellzotlon 0 t 1e ew S at large ' hi s desire and effort to en- IS a so l cca e . expects an exact compliance w1 th thIS Office Hou-a: Daily 11 to $236. Guarante 3 onths. / I thnt the di stinctions of 50- co urage ~ n d to inculcate in the people wer e prevented f r om crossing t he wa- order, and that it be observed in the I~:~~:;~.~ht':.9da)' FADER MO COMPA}"lY_.. were to be om itted. Ia s P il'l t of gratitude toward the tel' . by a sudden and Violent st~ rm future as an invariable rule of prac- L!::======~I I ------'--=----:-7L-:- ' 10 behnl'lor In homes where D t .. d h's own expressions of which lasted so long that by the time fce And ever y neglect will be con- FOR SALE-1927 Chevrol truck, III' 5 9). o i ~in;o'n ~~ s pec~ ing God, give concrete It was over Howe felt that t ~ e works s~d ~red not only as a breach of 01'- express body, $160.00; set oi n O~er Ihe pen ce of the gospel ev idence of hi s faith. had become too strong for hlm~ga~ e del'S but a disregard to decency vir- 30 x 650 tires and t ube , 1 set of (VI 5. 0) Till Is to be do ne regard- His religious recor d pr actically over the att~ mpt a~d eva,cuat t e tue ~n d religion." ' OBERLY B~K CO. 29x460 tires and es; 3 good Ie ' 8S 10 IIhether It Will be received starts with the ti me when he was tow~ . Here 1S Washmgton s comment On the day after the surrender of BUILD WI ICK Chevrolet radiators. Ir DOl There Is l\ reflex blessing In commanding the ,virginia troops on I~ ~T~~St b~~~~ e l~;~~~k~~I~h ei~~~~r::i~f:~ ~o rnw a lli s, Octobe~ .20, 178~, Wash- Annual Capacity 1 0.000 Brick. CHAS. W. KEITH, prPl chl ng the ~ospel the western frontier after B.raddock's of Providence is for so me wi~e ur- mgton's gre~ test mll~tary tnum~h . of Phone 152 W Newark, Del. h Do not shi rt quarters (VI'. 7, 8). defeat. At Fort Loudoun, Willchester , I ltd obt" And ~his t he war, he Issued thiS order: "Dlvme 909 Oranll" St. Wilmiaglon 2,19,6t R. F. D. No. 1. ~ sloDarles shonld remain In the at the age of t w e ? ~y:fo ur, this COlO- I ~voaE:' rath~I~~nn~xt~'ao~ din~ry thing to ~e rvi ce is to be performed to.m.o~row PhD". 2·5614 SALI!! me where they have been received, nel of Virginia mIlitia on Saturday, f ' th th t ' d III the sever al bngades and diVISions. FARM FOR RENT OR .... IIlIiI what Is given them. They Scptember 18, 1756, ordered t h~ t "the !ft coo~~i;lencie: ~~~~~~:dlO~~r,m~nd The Commander-in-Chief earnestly 148 Acres-86 tillable, 20 pasture; ~ onl d not demand better rood and men parade tomorrow mornmg at 'h g ffi . f 'f r ecommends t hat the troops not on 3 acres good alfalfa; 100 fl' It trees; lore com[OIln hle qua rters than are . h I ' th th . IWlt a su clency 0 ammum IOn, Phone 1696 SBEULY acre asparagus. . It! d beatmg t e ong 1'0 11 ,WI . elr arms none of which things were present at WE 1h Prol ======L Ii i I e . and amullltions clean and III good or- the affair of Bunker Hill it is quite PARTS FOR~OS AND 12-room Brick House, r en t ,. Ick (v. 9). These dl s- del' a nd to be marched by the Ser- ' H ' TRUC S and excellent water at urles were given power to heal the' ct' . to reasonable to assume that owe s at- b lei The mlnl ste l'!j of Ch ri t should geants of the r espe Ive. co mp~lme g tempt would have r esulted in the com- PLOEN AUTO arn. . to gll'c relief to thos e in dls- ~~: :r~r~v!~~;e to r emalll untl pray- SALVA CO. 2-;arb;~~~e c:~;en ac~i~~\h!~~nary, .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:.ll. :~ and lise ~ve ry opportunity to After his marriage, Washington at- WE SPECIALI IN TRUCKS 36 acre' heavi limed fa111929. I, Ihe ~ospel message. tended P ohick Church at Pohick, Vir- . Ploener, 620 ~iir!f~~~:! St. a 1he RII ~UI rote of thoile who re- ginia, and later , Christ Church, !tel Chrl~t s meqsnge (vv.10-16) . Alexandria, Virginia. Both churches ALB II e;r case L O1O I'e 1I0pelcss than that were distant f rom Mount Vcrtwn, so .odn:u. 11108e who reject Christ's that it was something of a journey 1,1 ,tf: gm :'en :e.lect Chri st nnd reject to r each them by coach. An important Til •• Caot Stone '1I :leuleUI) Fn ther who sent him. point established by a close ,check-up Fare to McKeespo $7.00 ART TILE CO. LEGAL NOTICE I." The Ret urn of th e Seventy (vv. of Washington's church attendance is To Braddock $7.10 Estate of Hester L. Colbert, Deceased. ill: that th1'oughout his public life, in ~ :11hel r I'pp"rt (1'. 17), Thc ~' were t imes of political stress and strain, he Notice is hereby ,;iven that Letters ,n1 elnted. They rounrl thnt they went to church oftener than he did in Feb. ~tb, ar. 1st of Administration upon the Estate of ~DIII nr't onl)' henl the sick. but cast t imes of national calm and quiet. Hester L. Colbert, late of White Clay Tick ts good coaches Creek Hundred, deceased, were duly ~~ I'I~'lI ons nl~ o . It Is casy c,'en In On October 19, 1765, there is record o Speci Train I .~I~p: 8m'lcc to he ~po ilecl by ou r of hi s taking the oa~k ~o .conform to granted unto Edna R. Wood and Florence E. Fader on the T~rd day of ~ .. ,:. the doctI"ine and dI SCipline of the Leal'es ilmi gton 9.50 P. M. FebrOary, A. D. 1931, an all persons Id/,'IS n~ w;r (VI'. 1 ·2 1). (OW He church of E ngland "as by law estab­ Leaves New.~ark 9.05 P. M., Sat- indebted to the said dec sed are re­ I' IIIem th .lt It lI'a no smprlse to li shed" a nd during t he year 1774, urday, Fe 8th. Returning ,~ (II. J nnd l Ol. With prophetic the d~y the Boston Port Bill went into quested to make payroe ts to the Ad­ ~;:, he saw Ihri r success as efl"ect t hat he "went to church and Sunday, Ma 1st, lea\'es Pitts- ministrator' without elay, and ,a il i ','3!111~ Ihllt lillie whcn the fasted all day." burgh. 7.00 _ M. ).""r ~ persons having dem ds against the TTS BATTERY CO. said deceased are r ujred to exhibit r"~ M Ihl, 11'111'1,1 wfluld be over-' In the hectic days of the outbreak ORROW 5T5. a nd present the sa e duly probated to ~t;'I~ (.ll1h" I ~;;l l ). fir 1'II'tue of his or the Revolut ionary War, Washing­ Baltimore & Ohio WUmln.loD the said Adminis 'ator on or bcfore 'J II) Ir lUlllpl1 01"1' Sllln n. he us- to n in the letter to his wife, stated the 3rd day of F ruary A. D. 1031, or I r" IIIl'1II Ihlll 1111')' nl'rrl have no tha't hc "relied co nfident ly on that R~rllil \\'hllt .hnllirl hcfnll them. (b ) pr~v i den ce w hich has heretofore pre­ abide by the la\ in thi s behalf . Addrcss pn,~,~;~I1'" fill' "('IIIlrin;( (v. :!O) . He ~e r ve d and been b o untifu~ to me:" I' r,·huk".i 1111'111. tl'lIi nl( lhem In thc maflly speech With which he ha d es B. Ev li S, Esq., ~ ,,:~ itizens Bank Building, "1" r I'hlr f 1".1' 'hllll ill 111' hl'ra use accepted the appointment of com man­ Wilmington Trll st C.ompany . .I!':.:~ 11""1"111)' 1','1,,1 illn. not hecll use dcr-in-chi ef of the army hc made no 'COKE EDN A R. WOOD, " 3t111~ nllrlll'I~"II' ~ifts. (f') .J c liS ' ex- r eference to God or to heaven ; but FLORENCE E. FADER, I", I (II'. -I. ~~). Tile co nscious- on!' month aIter taking command of 2,26,10t. Administl'8tors. "'D : I I ~""n 1111' "i(-tory 1V0ui d be the army the matter of prayers a nd I ~r." 'N".""" (;"d had "ommltt!'d nil c hur~ h . ervi ces appears in the gen­ Delivered promptly in , ,.i:eunlll him line! thllt on ly IlS men ral order s for August 5, 17.15, at Legal Notice "r 1';1 him rllllltl Ihp~, know the .FrI- Cambridge. 'I'hese order s d1rected quantity 111, I .q'NI 111111 to rl'Jolce In wha t that "the Church bc cleaned tomor­ Estatc of Arthu;·L. Beals, Deceased. lIa;~;e,t\J(.l\r"n In(1I1S~ll'd, (rl) ongmt- row and the Revd. Mr. D oy l ~ will. per­ Notice is given that Letters Testa­ "'lrf'lltllf Ilisr'lpll's (\'\'. ~3. 2 1) . Ue f orm Di vine Scrvice t herelll at ten Clean Quick Heatin mentary upon the E st e of Arthur L. ,r ;!lh,",.~IIl'IiI.lhl\t till'), '1'('1'1' Rhnrlog o'clock." The modem Beals, late of Wi! gton Hundred, D,' ~ l'III1'h hl\rl he('n ;' .~o.dney feverishly re- tasks well-night broke down the phys- The public is cordially invited to all Phone: 21 W rived in Co ngress (tho detained "immediately proceed to form a gov! crultlng ~he militIa ~f Kent County ical co nstitution of the man. of these services. • ______.... by Thunder and Rain) time "ernment on the Authority of the a~d s('ndl~g the so l~hers forward to Immediately upon his relinquishing Enough to give my Voice in the "People of this State, in such Sort as ald. ~a s hln~ton . HIs. freed~m from his office in 1781, he repaired to Phil­ Matter of Independence--it is dP· "may be best adapted to their Preser- polltl~al duties made It possIble also adelphia to seek relief from the deadly termined by the Thirteen United "vation and Happiness." for h~m to answer the summons of cancerous growth that had constantly Colonies without even one de­ Thus we see how important a part Washington and ~ake command of the been sapping his strength ever since I centing Colony. We have now Cresa r Rodney played in bringing Post of Trenton In J anu~ry and Fe?- the seventeen sixties. The first t.ime II Got through with the Whole of about peaceably the political transi- ruary, 1777, w~en ~ashlngton's main Cresar Rodney consulted physicians in the declaration and Ordered it to tion from the colonial establishment army. took up Its winter quarters at Philadelphia and submitted to an be printed so that you ,vill soon of the Three Lower Counties on Del- ~ o rrlstown , ~ew Jersey. As briga- operation was in 1768'. Now in 1781, have the pleasure of seeing it­ aware to the independent status of dler-general, It became Rodney's task thirteen years later, he was in desper­ Hand-bills of it will be printed the State of Delaware. He presided at Tr~nton not. only to guard the post ate straits. )"et his letters from Phil­ and sent to the Armies, Cities, at the demise and burial of the old and river crossing which the Hessians adelphia reveal him in a hopeful mood (i"Hlu~ County, Towns, &t. To be pub­ r egime and took a very active part in had so recently contr~l1ed, but also and, although he continued to decline REP· lished or rather proclaimed in arranging for the birth of the new to forward to Washington all the physically until 1784 (the year of his form-Don't neglect to attend regime as when first on June 15 as Southern troops which were coming death) his interest in his business Closely and Carefully to my Har­ Speaker, he pl'esided'over the As;em- up in. response to Washington's call affairs'appeared as keen as ever, and I IF YOUR AI M IS vest and You'l oblige bly which passed the Resolution for for aid from the states. When the he even accepted a political honor Yours &t. supplanting the authority 0:1: the dange.r was past, . Rodney . asked again when in the fall of 1783, he was HEATINO ECONOMY Cresar Rodney Crown by the authority of the Three Washington to be rel~eved Whl~h. re- elected a member of the upper house To Captain Thomas Rodney, Es­ Lower Counties; Seconrl, when on quest was .granted WIth the dIstinct of the legislature, the Legislative AND COMFORT. quire July 2, he arrived in Philadelphia in u~d e rsta.ndl1lg .that he should ~old Council. This body made him Speak­ Per Mr. Bett. time to vote with Thomas McKean on himself In . readln.ess sho~ld Washlng- er, and he served in this capacity un­ CO STRAICHT FOR Lee's Resolution to wit: "That these ton need hiS services again. til the following Spring. The minutes , The ~ummoning of the members of Colonies are and of right ought to be On February 21, 1777, Rodney was of the Legislative Council for April 8, THIS TRADE MAR~ t he Delaware Assembly to meet in free and independent states;" Third, elected by the joint session of the leg- 1784, show that that body "met at the New Castle on July 22, referred to by when on .July 4 he voted for the adop- islature as a member of the Supreme house of the Honorable Cresar Rod­ Cresar Rodney in the letter just quo- tion of the Declaration of Independ- Court of the State. This was the year ney, E~q.,. the Speaker, he being too ted' was for the purpose of winding ence; Fourth, when he presided as of the invasion of Delaware by the much lI1dlsposed ~o attend at the OLD up the business of the last Colonial Speaker of the Assembly which pass- British and when Rodney ' as Com- usual place of me.eting." The minutes Assembly, which had been elected in cd the Resolution referred to above mander-in-Chief of the State Militia for May 24, 1784, appear as follows: October, 1775, and of arranging for whereby provision was made for set- was keeping in close touch with Wash- "A sufficient number of the members t ~ e holding of a constitutional conven- ting up the mac.hinery of State Gov- ington. It was the year, too, when, not having met to form a quorum on MPANY'S tlOn to frame a state government en- ernment; and Fifth, when on August after the battle of Brandywine on that day they adjourned from day to ti rely independent of Pennsylvania 2.01' some time thereafter, he affixed September 11, the British entered day until Tuesday the 15th of June with respect to the executive as VleU hi S signature to the parchment copy Wilmington and captured the firllt h II th b t t th' H ANTH RACITE as the legislative and judicial depart- of the Declaration of Independence president or governor of the State w en a e mem ers me , excep e ments. Cresar Rodney went to New despite the fact that at that very time Dr. John McKinly. Upon McKean'~ Hon. Cre sar Rodney, Esq., Speaker, E SELL IT Castle and presided at this last ses- thousands of British soldiers had en- temporarily taking over the reins of and Richard Bassett, Esq." This is sion f.rom July 22 to J.uly 28 when the , tered .~ew York harbor on hundreds state government, he commissioned the last reference to Cresar Rodney in Col.omal Assembly adJourned forev:er. of Bl'ltlsh t ~~n spo rt s, protected by a Cresar . ~~dn ey as Major-General of life in the minutes of the Counc'l: He ~NGSWORTH CO. ThiS Assembly passed a resolutIOn Reet of British naval vessels, and the Militia a nd thus Rodney's star . calling for the election on August 19 when every man who signed the docu- again was in the ascendant. In time died a f ew days later. of delEgates to the constitutional con- ment laid himself open to charges of of dangel', it had been discovered that .. LUMBER. AL, MILL WORK, BUILDING vention to meet in New Castle on Au- t reason and was liable to be hung. no man could be depended. upon to the Newark gust 27. Immediately after the adjournment degree that Rodney was. The legis- MATERIALS. ARDWARE. PAINTS, GLASS, "The H0l;lit ,taking into Consider- of the Assembly on July 28 and -after lature in December, 1777 appointed t \ "atiol1 the •• t lO lution of Congress of It~e Campaign had begun for the elec- him as a delegate to Congress again 131 East FENCING. FEEDS, FERTILIZERS, ETC. "the 15th of May last for suppressing . tlO n of delegates to the approaching and in February, 1778, when it ap~ \ "all Authority derived from the I Convention, Cresar Rodney found him- pear ed that J ohn McKinley would be BES "Crown of Great Britain, and for es- ' elf confronted by a strong opposition kept a prisoner in Philadelphia in- PHONE 182 Newark, Delaware "tablishing a "Government upon the from the Co nse rvatives of Kent Coun- definitely t he Delaware legislature AT REASO "Authority of the People, and the ty. He naturally wanted to.be elected elected Cresar Rodney as hi s succes- 10,16,tf "Resclution of t h ~ House of the 15th a dclegat~ but as he was kept busily ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "of J une last, in Consequence of the engaged in Philadelphia attending to "said Resoluti011 of Congress, direct- the affairs of the newly-born nation, " ing all Persons holding Offices Civil he co uld not be on the spot to repair "or Military to execute the same in hi s political fences. His brother, "the Name of this Government until Thomas, tried hard to get 0resar elect­ State "a new one should be formed; ' and ed but to no avaiL Consequently, he "also the Dec laration of the UNITED had no direct part to play in the Con­ "STATES OF AMERICA, absolving stitutional Convention in New Castle "from all Allegiance to the British in August and September, 1776. His Theatre "Crown, and dissolving all Political correspondence, however, shows him "Connection between them and Great- in close touch with the situation. Both Program "B.ritain, lately published and adopted the President of the Convention, "by this Goverl1l11 ent as one of those George .Read, and Rodney's other col­ "States, are of Opinion' that some league in Congress, Thomas McKean, "speedy Measures should be taken to who had also been elected a deputy to FRIDAY··SATURDAY "form a regular Mode of Civil Polity, the Convention, wrote to Rodney from "and this House not thinking them- New Castle and Rodney wrote to them CHARLES "selves authorized by their Constitu- from Philadelphia. "ents to execute this important Work, When the Convention had adjourn- FARRELL "Do Resolve, ed and the campaign had begun to , "That it be r eco mmended to the good elect members to the new state legis­ " People of the several Counties in lature, a bi-cameral body, the conser­ "this Government to chuse a suitable 'Vatives in Kent County again pre­ "Number of Deputies to meet in Con- vented Cresar Rodney from being "vention, there to ordain and declare elected a member of either the upper "the fuhlre F orm of Government for house, then called Legislative Council, "this State. or the lower house, then called House " Resolved, of Assembly. He, moreover, lost out "THE P NDESS " That every Elector shall (if re- when the time came for this new leg­ "quired by one or more of the Judges islature to elect delegates to Congress and THE P UMBER" "of t he Election) take the f ollowing for the year 1777. McKean and Read "Oath 01' Affirmation, to wit: were returned but not Rodney, the Plus Short S " I A. B. will to the utmost of my third member of the triumvirate Saturda Only "Power support and maintain the In- which had represented Delaware since ' BUCK J NES in "THE LO RIDER"

millions What a glorious feeling it is to hop out of bed ill the morning when you know en all's right there is lots of hot water ready for your toilet. You can ha rdly wait until you the world g'et the old razor tuned up.

" Then let thc hot faucet. run a bit, How about YO R hO llle',' Do ~ Oll en· . joy comfort lil\c that-or are Comedy thc brus h . .. you can actuall)' feel th ~ ' OU I' morni ng'S dismal afTair:-. warred hy hot water and soal> softening- your razor bitcs a nd s li ces'! WEDNESDAY- -THURSDAY beard, fre hening tissues and cleansing­ Install a Self- Adine: (;as \\'a~cr Flol'enz Ziegfielc1 and the s leepy pores. The razor meets a Heater and you'll n('\ CI' agai n he diS: ClI)pointed when OU turn the hot wn lci Samuel Golelwyn present ready skin and g lides with feathery faucet. You'll h ~"e pl ('nt) of hot water a touch. More hot watcr. Then towel. for every hOll ehold ne(,d ... act uall,r at PATHFINDER EDDIE CANTOR Now look-sce a face that's fit-ruddy Ie .' co t than you can dn it an,r other Size Per Pair TN 28 x 4.75 ...... $6.65 $12.90 and rcady with a smile. way. 29 x 1i.00 ...... 6.9 13.60 "WHOOPEE" II tI' ,,,nd a ao x 5.00 ...... 7.10 ]3. 0 Co me in lind I ~I us lell. you all about A utomatic Gn s I.fol Wa tcr-:-or '. ,\c house. .30 x 5.50...... 98 17.;;0 Hear~ t Metrotone l'\ews representative. You arc cntltled to know the fact s about tillS l11o(l crl1. 111I"llttl I hold service. . GOODYEAR ALLWEATHER Burton Holmes Travelogue The QlIM.ln' li re " itltln Mickey Mo se the He..:h of f\LL iz e Per Pair See Your PLUMBER for Details V t'LU[~p .. /ht .. f ... uu" t:oc ,u, 3t x 5.25 ...... $111.05 825.30 hult.h l-1l11101"S )fQREd,,,,, lb.- 3.3 x 6.00 ...... 15.65 or .nyolhrrcam,"ln",. ' .30.30 COMJNG SOON "Hell's }\ngcls:' "The Ln sh," "Outward Hound." "The Man Delaware Power & Light Comp a~Xo~ HENRY F. MOTE Who Clime Back," "Abraham 27 & 34 MARKET STREET WIUI!· ' Phone 131 M Newark, Del. Lincoln," "The Bat 'Vhispers."