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i I • . • « ... . - •£&&&**'.::. *>>&&&*&^H?^0"' The Wilmington Crusader VOL. 16 NO. 43 THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1J53 PRICE 10 cents Special Town Meeting November 23

SELECTMEN CALL FOR TOWN MEETING lower the level of the culvert in FIVE AND TEN CENT STORE FINED IN WOBURN COURT MRS. ISABELLE McMAHON back Of Altmans store, and prob- OPENS IN THEATRE BLOCK CELEBRATES 90th BIRTHDAY The Board of Selectmen, Monday George R. Dean, East Boston, evening, called for a Town Meeting, ably tho culvert near Gildart's gar- fined to be held on November 23rd. Act- age. *£jt£L*£Zl j£Li*Jif £.«!*■• **>•-* in Woburn' Mrs. Isabelle McMahon of A 28F SS *ZZL Rf «?« h.«iSf«« court- on °*">°er 27th, when he Middlesex avenue celebrated tar ing on a request of the Additional 6 1 School Accomodations Committee, theTown could heip°o drainTpece'ff ,££ JSS^'tate TtaSSS H* ?™ **£ SKMVSB »th birthday, with a small qnjet the Selectmen issued the call so that the town could hear the re- port of the committee, together with &JfStaftit5S gffi ioSlf Se 'owner S.^^.^rf»3p^5. W^".^ rnoved £ j£ ' their recommendations, which will culvert near Gildart's were lowered.; the store, which opened its doors, ^OkSWi Sfd ™Sn- SSf^ritaJ* ti° la^ThoSS pVobably include" a motion to e£ J-'ude din this -"'d be ,h d i for business ™™^>«a*tl»£"i3 been driving ^McMahon * and ha^ liv'edT power the Selectmen to petition the "f«- igh, -re P-d (the oW | . »SK^:.^.2Mv.*25 >o fast, at the.corner of Grovf the old homestead for all tta> Legislature for the right to borrow turnout for the. Middlesex Canal), Arlington, has managed five and avenue and Main street, at 3:10 years. In her home the first Cav p e past m additional money, for school accom- t . K• K ,,, • ,'L" , * £«nt» ™, !„ «.». ™wJT „fP - October 16th, at the time tholic Mass was celebrated V- modations. The meeting was called feet higher than is the water near twenty years, in manyMpartB of h the children were com- Wilmington, at an altar whie* for Nov. 23rd in order that suffici- Main street Other activity by the New E^O^ In a ^toent te-^ from tne MMred Rogers stUl sUnds in a smaU chapel • ent time be given to various boards town could lead toward the drain- sued yesterday afternoon, Mr.i^jj^j " ^ j^^ ^OQr jt was thtae and officials who would have to age of the 30 acres of land between 'Bresnahan said that he chose. D n entered a plea of guUt reiigious services that led to taw act on articles submitted for the Burlington avenue and Shawsheen to locate in WUmington because | * * * establishment of St Thomas warrant to fully consider the articles avenue, and in the area near the he likes the town, and'X"^ WHITE FIELD MOTHERS CLUB church, almost across the street. submitted. Fire station, east to Belmont street, that he wdl do some business RUMMAGE SALE a few years later, The meeting has to be held in and also the area near the Walker ifnd make friends here. He had( j PreS4int at tite celebration school. i looked over a number of places rummage sale, sponsored by re the five children of Mrs. sufficient time to enable the Sel- 1 A we ectmen to draw up a petition for The states share, to which the TM before locating here, and he is the Whitefield School Mothers' McMahon Mrs Alice Lee Eliia- the state Legislature, and have it has had indications that they would certaini that.he will not be sorry Club, on November 6th, will be beth McMahon, Mrs. Rose' Caw- submitted to that body before the agree, would call for the clearing. Store hours will be from 9 held in the ambulance room of naugh, Joseph T. McMahon by the Department of Public Works, ••m- to .8 P-m- daUy- Friday from the Wilmington police station. Mrs Eleanor Day. There ai first Wednesday in December, in or- 8 y ei der that the Legislature may act of the culverts under Route 38, and Both new and used articles will giandc"h7idren 'and 7 great- under Route 62. This might involve be sold, and donations will be grandchildren upon such a petition in the coming GIRL'S BASKETBALL TEAM session. By so doing, it has been ex- relocation of some of the culverts. accepted by a committee in 1 If the state and the railroad did ORGANIZES charge of Mrs. A. Allgrove, 311 GRANGE MEETING TONIGHT plained, the petition can be acted 1 eM L upon before the annual Town Meet- what ha, been indicated, Cushing' j*^^ jg ^llSt^Zl^T™;^ t ° " I Wilmington Grange will 25 said, than the town could deepen the ^ ^^^nL^^M^'^L^1^: f°n P»*»P «"*<*. tonight at 8 p.m., at the.Graa»e ing, next March, and the town cbuld Both the then be ready, if everything else ditches leading from Church street,*" if"?- rP«Mi anH^fp T»P ,. 9S°^ Furniture' Hall, with Master Clarissa BaX goes well, to vote actual construc- and from Main street, towards the I ffiJ^Vjj. ^/TfH vearJ?^a?^ompany and Weinberg's depart- ey presiding. Movies on far tion of a new school, or an addi- wi,h fun e shown* tion to the high school. ^£%zr*- "iSnrL^ PiS' ?i*^&Jmjm*pjxj*by assistant Lecturer, John Sea- Because of illness in his family, Cushing reported that as a result Faulkner and Veni Melzar. ! BALDWIN CLUB TO HEAR son. Refreshments are to be Dean Cushing, Town Manager was of his discussion with the various) Practice for the team began TALK ON TOWN MEETING served. forced to leave early, and the meet- parties concerned it is entirely pos-1Monday, with 45 girls reporting.'REPRESENTATIVES ing continued without him. Before sible that 50%, or even more of the : 10 of whom played last year.! FOREST STREET CHURCH he left he submitted a lengthy re- costs would be paid by the state, un-;Lucille Cavallaro, Patricia Ben-' The Baldwin Civic Association HALLOWEEN PARTY port to the Selectmen. der Chapter 91, under approval of nett, Jean Ashworth, Sheila Ho- next Thursday, at their regular The Forest Street Congrega- ban. Frances Pellerin, Dotty De[monthly metting in the Wilming- Hon,al Church School will hold a Drainaf a and Land Reclamation the Department of Public Works al we TM Cushing reported on activities Commissioner. Felice, Sandra Harris and Mau- ton Skating Clubhouse, on Chest- « J» en party tomorrow night reen McKenna. Early practice I nut Street will hear a talk on aL T P,P- lnsteJ!2? of H* ST leading to drainage and land reclam- New Inchutrici gina y ose att n ation, in Wilmington. The report A k..:iAi'^~- "TTT ~" . i 's the rule for girls in the basket the Representative-Town Meet- °"r \l J . , * «"f A building .s being erected, on ball t ^ ^ere is no ing form of government, by Atty. * e asked to please eome 1 was not that the drainage would Burlington avenue close ,o the right ^ „ for ' costume. begin immediately, but that steps court t can h a v e John Sullivan of Natick." Atty. of way of the Boson & Maine. practlce ln the winter time, and were being taken which could lead Sullivan was one of the original BOTOS FAMiLY MOVES Construction started last Friday the there is a place in back of the T MOVE to such activity in the near future. rep< he la sponsors of the representative S2 S?Df Be S TM Cushing told the Selectmen that £™ P "t,-which will high school, where practice can form of government In Natick. | "£,J? ,.hrT D . J v occupy 21,000 square feet, will be Kg heJd before the weather gets The meeting will start at 8:15 Mrs. Isabel Botos, and her he had good reason to believe that of brick and glass, and will front too cold Chipper" have left their* Bow- the Boston & Maine railroad would p.m. sharp. Refreshments will be on Burlington avenue, with offices The t^n, is under' ^g ggfo served. derhouse Circle home and gen* participate in a land reclamation, near the front. In back will be work- nce of Larry Cushing, Physi- to Naples, Italy, where they wfll near Wilmington center, and that a ing space. The product, it was under- cal Educational Director of Wil FOUR WINDOWS BROKEN Join Mr. Botos, who is stationed the state would put up a contid- stood, would be packaged condin- mington schools, and is coached ON NORTH STREET in the Mediterranean with the erable amount of money (amount ments. About fifty people will be em- by Miss Thespina Triantiiflou, . His address not specified) under Chapter 91 of ployed there. Valuation slated in high school teacher. Four windows were r eported is Joseph T. Botos, BM1, USH, the General Laws. The project dis- the Building permit: $125,000. broken at the Heard property on USS Benewah, APB 35, FPO. cussed centered near Wilmington N«w Industry DAV BANQUET North street, on October 27th. New York, and he is attending a center, with the problem of drain- A company from New Jersey, in- Wilmington police have obtain- school there. The family expects ing near the railroad station, at the le res ted ,n Tickets for the DAV banquet, ed confessions from the children to spend several years in Naples, roundhouse, and the area between . , ma»«tactury of prefab- to be held in the high school responsible. Gildart's garage and Burlington av- ncated windows and similar items, I cafeteria on November 7th, at GERARD FORREST HOME enue having priority. Indications, has decided to locate m Wilming- (which George Spanos, "Mayor of LARCENY OF TRAILER Gerard Forrest, of the United the Town Manager stated, were that ton, on Route 38. If the land this Wilmington" will be the guest of States Marine Corps is home tar company now desires is readily av- Wilmington police are search- the Boston & Maine railroad would honor, will be sold until Novem- ing for a home-made flat trailer a short stay. He will shortly be ailable the construction of its build- ber 2nd, according to an an- assigned to recruiting duty, ing will begin immediately upon which was stolen from the home noncement by Steve Wendell, of Mrs. Bishop, on Martin street, somewhere in New England. 1948 Mercury completion of legal details, other- chairman of the ticket commit- on October 27th. wise construction will begin in May tee. Convertible 1954. Initial construction will include The deadline of November 2nd HOLY NAME about 10,000 square feet of execu- was set because of the heavy HALLOWEEN DANCE Radio - Heater tive offices^ display rooms and as- call for tickets, Wendell stated. NEW HOME FOR SALE New Top A Halloween dance in the sembly plant, with ultimate plans He further stated that the dead- high school cafeteria, Friday 4 room with expansion attic. Extra Clean • Inside A Out for an additional 10,000 square feet. line was necessary, in order that evening, (Halloween) will be Base ray heat, forced her Cushing told the Selectmen that he the caterer may be properly no- sponsored by the Holy Name water. Poured foundation. expected the building would be lo- tified of the number of guests Society. Artesian well water. Plastered Arnold Ford Sales cated across the street frrm Louie's to be served. interior, well insulated. Wendell may be called at OL Boston Rd. - Billerica Ctr. Oil Station. ADDITIONS TO FAMILY OF Built by contractor who has 8-2654. built homes for 40 years. Bill. 662 • Industry Magazine TOWN ACCOUNTANT Cushing exhibited :i copy of a Born October 23rd, in Somer- Evenings Call Bill. 3103 CAMP DAMAGED ON ville hospital, to Mr. and Mrs. magazine, known a-. Industry Mag- COLUMBIA ROAD $9,500 l Robert Peters, 5 Grant street, -^r=Jr=if='f=Jr=Jf=Jr=J Continued on Page 4 h Wil,nington Wi 0 8 Call Billerica 459 after S p.m. A camp, belonging to a man id- l,Jf?fik Qt e i, l ", f " ' entified as Lombard, on Columbia ^f pSt/v ns and Richard John. OUELLETTE BROTHERS road,,™A near„„,, .u.the D;II„;„„Billerica-Wilming- \A;;I™: M r. Peters is the Town Account- ton airport, has had several windows ant. broken, as a result of rocks being hurled into the building, according to a report to the Wilmington po- BILLERICA WILMINGTON lice, dated Oct. 24th. Hamilton No. 722 ! Family 4 and 5 rooms ■ Lovely S . room ranch ■xcHlrnt income . 21M sq. Real Estate ■ Tect of land - 5 rooms and white sink - electric stove WALLPAPER bath on first floor - 4 roonu STONEHAM Liv'ng room with ftie •nd sun porch on second 256 MAIN STREET place - bath 1 becVooeas • I ouraine • Kyanitc PJ all hard wood floors . - it floor. All hard wood floors Ovir 15,000 roll, in Sll (across from the heat - Thi beautful raacfc Steam heat. To be sold tin- New First National home la in excellent cosv Bradbury's - Woburn week for tKM. Telephone- Store) dition I Billerica 74S or 27H STOneham «V0291 Telephone O'ivcr I-3T57 111 Main it. WO 2-2747 PAGE 2 THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, lt53

THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER on confusion. when a writer can-'est.te opportunities and the fuel and Published Every Wednesday vasses the whole area of the Mid raw material and water supplies in Entered as Second Class matter November 22. 1950 at the Poet Office west five and one half years be- most on-track communities, at Wilmington, Massachusetts, under the act of Match S, 1807, by the fore McCarthy comes up for re- "Our industrial men traditionally Bfllerica Publishing Company. election, and mostly among people who cannot vote for him help industry with site surveys as tTANLEY J. BOCKO Publisher well as with long-range moving Box 606, Wilmington, Massachusetts anyway. That is why the conclu- Lowell Office, 95 Bridge Street, Dial 45-8812 sion of the long article arrives plans," Mackie said. simply nowhere, and tells no- The railroad spokesman said that, LARZ NEILSON Editor thing about the impact of Mc- 47 High Street, North Wilmington, Tel. 8-2346 in his opinion, industrial dispersal, Carthy. if found necessary, would be less BERNJE PATTERSON « .A Business Manager Britain has her own particular of a problem in the United States The Wilmington Crusader assumes no financial responsibility for problem in Aneurin Bevan. In than in any other major nation be- error* in advertisements, but will publish without charge a correction the House of Commons this Ill- cause of the over-all excellence of am the next issue. disguised Communist has little this country's transportation sys- Subscription Rate $3.00 a year. Half year (2.00. Newsstand Price 10 to say. He delivers a speech only tem. He noted that all forms of cents a copy. The Wilmington Crusader is mailed to every serviceman from when drunk as an owl (gin is transportation, including those that Wilmington through the co-operation of the American Legion. Service- his obsession); and because of completed with railroads, are at are asked to keep the Crusader posted as to their latest address. this condition, he is rarely re- peaks of efficiency. Back copies IS cents, after 1 month 20 cents if available. plied to. The newspapers in Bri- As for the railroads themselves, Address all communications to Box 606, Wilmington, Mass. tain find that he makes even better copy than McCarthy does Mackie stated that "never before ~*xz in the United States. Hence, if in history" have they been in such good shape to meet an emergency. TRICK OR TREAT Bevan addresses an audience of 50 persons in some mining town, 'Since World War n, U.S. rail- There was a day, in these New England towns of ours, the Express—with a circulation roads bave spent almost $8,000,000,- when the night before the Fourth (of July) was considered to of millions—carries his utter- 000 on capital improvements," Mac- be the time for high jinks, by the young bloods of the town. To take care of the growing ances in headlines. The magnifi- kie said. "This, as it happens, is That was the night when it was considered great fun to steal school enrollment,. the School De- cation of personalities far be- more than the Atomic Energy Com- partment of Wilmington this year yond their actual value, but with mission's total expenditures through the town hearse, and imprison that unfortunate individual hired three extra halls, for use as deference as to news value, is a the end of the 1952 fiscal year." known as the Town Drunk in the hearse, to be paraded around temporary classrooms. Pictured a- fault to which the press is prone town. Another particularly exhilerating sport was to dis- bove is Janet Letter!, of Winston In any country. However, the snantle a carriage or shay, (preferably one belonging to a avenue, in the American Legion British press would do well to staid deacon or doctor) and then reassemble it on the church Hall, on Adams street, and behind assign veteran U. S. newspaper- her is Lorelei Matonis, of Nichols men to cover American news AT GILDART roof. street. items, which might make for a That day seems to have passed, in favor of Halloween, The use of the American Legion clearer picture. CHEVROLET CO. and Halloween, itself has now spread out to cover a two week Halt as a classroom marks tbe fifth Select Used Cars period, during which sundry hobgoblins can be seen, at times, use to which this building has been put. Originally a pump factory, be- SPOONIN' ON TMI MOON 194« Pentiac prancing along the roadsides, and begging (if that is the word) fore the Civil War, it was converted Hydrsmatic *1O45.00 far treats, at the various homes along the way. to an apartment house, then became (Foxtrot) m« Chevrolet % mm We have no quarrel with the youngsters who do this. It the clubhouse for the Wilmington My love and I one starry night, is, in many ways, a form of entertainment, especially if it is Catholic Club. Now the property AS IS SPCCIAL Looked up at Mister Moon 1940 Pentiac $ 75.00 kept within bounds. W<: do fear, however, for them dressed, as of the American Legion, it is be- so bright; ing used as a school. they are, sometimes in black, and prancing along our country We got a message from Mister Main St. - Wilmington Two classes were studying up- Moon— highways. It doesn't take much to make an accident, in a stairs, until this Monday morning. Invitin' us to come up "n situation that combines high speed automobiles and careless A sixth grade under Mr. William spoon. youngsters. O'Rourke, and a fifth grade, under There is still another facet that should be maintained, and Mrs. Mary Sculley, had to study to- CHORUS: gether, because of lack of space. that is the one about the youngsters who are no longer really An invitation—from Mister The American Legion corporation Moon, young. It seems that the number in this category increases has now completed a fine new Askin' us to come up 'n each year, and that the destruction they cause increases too. room, downstairs, and the two clas- spoon; Perhaps it is because we are living in a too hurried, too ses each have separate rooms now. We wasted little time you bet- irresponsible age. Mother and dad, too busy with their busi- Zoomed right up in our fastest jet ness of living and providing for a family, have tended to leave COMPOUNDING their young teen-agers to their own devices for self-amuse- MIS INFORMATION We zoomed along the milky way. ment, devices which, too frequently includes the reading ot It Is almost as fashionable In To Mister Moon—to spoon the gory type of so-called comic books. the English press to smear at away; Senator McCarthy as it is to If you haven't spooned—Oh boy! We can only cross our fingers, and hope, as Halloween You're missin' lots of love approaches. And, in our hopes, we pray that there will be no take a shot at Colonel McCor- mack. The London Times, an an- and joy. accidents, nor great or small property damages. cient publication of wide influ- ., fence, took the trouble recently |Now a y°u want to ,earn t0 to send a reporter to the U. S. _. . spo0,n~ „, . Infectious hepatitis of dogs, tect dogs against the disease by Midwest, to look over the terri-l Take £ tip—go see Mister building immunity. tory vis-a-vis McCarthy. I. . Moon; which resembles distemper, is And you U soon hear a wedm Cats can be allergic to fish or The reporter, whose name was! now widespread throughoutB thet not carried, wrote several thou- tune, >-*«-- """" """'J"' | fish products in their diet. Small, ^H ""St „h«rh mfoht hX" 'Cause with him every nation and is still spreading individual ,esions Qn ^ »"? ^words which might have well been omitted entirely. The month is June. Dogs which have even a mild at- back ^ neck often dey essay was a masterpiece of cir- Copyright 1953 tact of the disease become car-,fn)m thU aU ic condition Eli. cumlocution, which said in ef- Joseph F. Denman ners of the virus for some time _,__.. _ „. ,.„. *___ »u„ Aint fect that the Midwest is a busy Lilas Road and r0Sper0US place wh re and can spreadZ. the . condition_■• , to \l flnd™ 0l1 , "treatment «Wn, f„rforVI the? lesions„£ people P are prone to takef Mc-^ E. Billerica, Mass. others in the area. As m distem- ;will usua„y clear up the condi-jCarthy or leave him alone, with- per. vaccines can be used to pro- tion. out making much fuss one way PAL — , or the other. This is the way the British press has been covering It wasn't a dog we buried to-! Ireland for many years—on a day hit-and-run basis, without much Some curly black fur, as still SHOPPING'S FUN... meat in the sandwich. as the clay; The British preoccupation It was two cocker eyes that, with McCarthy seems to be bas- shone with delight, OUR... ■ ed upon the assumption that When he bounded to meet, something can be done about us by day or by night. him or his actions. That is a na- CHEVROLET STORE i tural misunderstanding for the It wasn't a dog, the two paws i average Briton, for he has a that begged. form of government under which That stump of a tail that j a vote of no confidence is pos- once joyfully wagged ' i sible. Unfortunately, he does Brief were the tears for his un- Well it's /1 not realize that this is not appli- timely end, cable under our system to a Under the old oak, we United States Senator. A Sena- buried—a friend. POWER tor is elected for six years, and not too ! most serve out their terms. Thus, —A. G. F. 'there can be no elimination of I the doughty Senator from Wis- ^HRi.rMA^r Early!! consin; and therefore a lot of U. S. RAILROADS HELP the hopeful hogwash which is LOCATE INDUSTRY STEERING written about him should never have been written In the first New York, - Russia's reported EXCLUSIVE IN THE ■ '; I place. It is as futile as digging a possession of the H-bomb puts new LOW-PRICE FIELD? w hole in water. emphasis on the dispersal of vital Then again, the British also U.S. industries, particularly in the Northeast, a spokesman for 36 ma- * Easier parking have the idea that the United or I States operates on a national , > Eastern raNroads said here to- ■k Easier turning TOYS basis politically, and that a da-v- freshet of criticism in the lead-: David I. Mackie, chairman of the * Easier handling ing papers will have an effect— I Eastern Railroad President Con- CLOTHING or that widespread discussion ference, added that Eastern rail- ir Safer driving will do political damage. It does, r°ads are ready for any industrial not. The New York press is rare- movement found to be in the public / ASK FOR. ly read in Wisconsin. Only the interest. G.FTS GALORE citizens of that State are privi- "Railroads, particularly in the leged to vote for or against Mc- East, have acquired a fund of Carthy—and then only five and know-how about industry move- USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN one half years from now. We ments that is available to any bus- M OUR SPECIAL DEMOKJTRATOR | suppose that most London writ-! inessman planning or considering mm jers fail to emphasize the perma-la plant shift," Mackie said. "EacTi i j nence of an American Senator railroad has a department or agent The Childrens Shop because they believe the aver-]whose major responsibility is aid- GILDART Jage informed Englishman realiz- ing industry in locating and re* 187 Haven St • RE 2-0090 • Reading ies this. But on the contrary, not locating." CHEVROLET CO. Opposite "EXIT" Municipal Parking Let jone in 100 knows that a Senator, Mackie noted that the railroad has a six-year term, or that a experts are familiar with not only Wilmington Member Toy Guidance Council member of the House of Repre- the transportation needs of varied TEL. OL M576 'sentaUves has a two-year term, industries, but also with the labor OL 8-2411 Therefore, confusion is piled up- supply, the tax structures, the real THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2*, 1953 PAGE I NICE SCHOOLROOM proper development of children. Re- tail stores are appointed only after • TOWN NOTES • One of the nicest schoolrooms in they have met special Council re- WEATHER town, at the moment, is in the Am- q| i in& encan Legion hall, downstairs. Since L_ HOBBY SHOP l The weather forecasts for last the hall was converted into a school, I Friday said "Fair". So it rained this fall, there have been two classes CONGREGATIONAL - .22 inches. Saturday the weather, upstairs, while a couple of Legion - Model Airplanes - Ships - Traina report said Drizzle. So it was fair. Aires worked downstairs, converting The Quaintance Chib will hold a costume Hallowe'en party in the ■ ■■■■■■ Complete Lint of The North Wilmington pumping, what had been several rooms into a LIONEL - AMERICAN FLYER SET - ACCESSORIES station showed .01 inch, but that; classroom, vestry on Saturday at 8 p.m. , on , A r was actually a part of the heavy | Tne.v nr!'sne^ 'ast Friday evening, There will be a special meeting i" J: . • PP «v«d Service Station 01 e OIL PAINTINGS — STAMPS rain Sunday, as the rainfall is meas- and the class moved down Monday i uca,l "» Committee on Religious Ed- ured from 8 a.m. to 8 a.m. of the morning. The room is verv nice °n on Sunday noon, following TOYS — FISHING TACKLE next day. • with a tile linoleum floor, all very' church. We also have a complete line of bright and clean looking. Very niceI The'"*. Fall*"a",""y Rally of°' the">e Pilgrim*,«lfin> Fel- b held ,n th Melro Fine Furniture and Appliances NEW INDUSTRY is about the only word for it. \fg£P 7*41 * . « " •34 - 646 MERRIMACK ST. flL. LOWELL 2-4061 PEAT ' "'Kn'ant™ Congregational Church on """ in."""" Everyone has been stopping, from S U ly sU in 3 m M mbe Our Town Manager has reported ( ?? i- " « " P; ' « " time to time, to look across the rail- that the highway department is hav- °* £« Fireside Fellowship will meet road tracks from the Wilmington ing trouble, with'the bridge on Sal- at.. he, churc,\ ffom wluch ,he Mrs GROSSMAN HOUSING EXPERTS SAY: theatre, at the bulldozers at work. em street, because there is so much, w~. start' at. £:I,~- ' , ' The new building which has been peat in the ground there (Peat, as . J,ne "jnoal Fall Tea of the Miss- started will be a place in which you probably remember, is the stuff ii TL^T'"" °f ,he„^f-S- wlU BUILD-IT YOURSELF HOME PLAN condinments (i.e. salt, pepper, etc,) that the Irish cut for fuel, because SJ,eL'Lln !he.vestry on Wednesday, will be packaged. they have no coal.) Nov. 4th, starting with a coffee hour GAINS STEADILY IN POPULARITY Our story, however, at this mom- Way back in the 1850's there was at 1:30 p.m. Following the business ent is not about the new industry a company chartered to cut and sell meeting, Miss Grace Heartz of Wo- In a statement issued frnm but the remains of an old one, which burn will describe her tour to some its Quincy headquarters, the|._H h._,„. MMt K„„„ peat, from the bog that is just a- nd seekers stood On the site where the new bove the bridge. They evidently had of the Mission Schools of the South firm of L, Grossman Sons, larg-1 fn .EHSSZFI L1 » building is going up. Our readers which the L.B.S. has helped. est buildingr materialsm«*oWoi0 ^=i«.~dealers in«„ in the lesser income 1bracket* great expectations. Maybe they The economic structure of tajr will recall that a fairly large number were going to export the peat on The Woburn District meeting will Ngw_ England, declared that the of irregularly cut . granite pieces be held in the First Congregational great American "do-it-yourself plan is designed for the low-te- the Salem and Lowell railroad, medium wage earner—and inas- stood in that field for years. We which was built in 1851. Nothing Church of Wakefield on Thursday, talent is finding full expression Nov. 5th. starting at 10:30 a.m. All in the company's exclusive much as the monthly terms are enquired once, about those stones, ever came of it though, even though usually for LESS THAN RENT, and we got two answers. We shall they had peat beds eight and ten women who desire to make lunch- '•Build-It-Yourself" home plan. give you both, and let you have your eon reservations should call Mrs. That statement is supported by there is no strain on the budget feet thick to work in. the fact that thousands of these Those monthly payments are pick. Walter Bennett (8-2548) on or be- a convenient method of saving— The first answer was that they fore Nov. 1st. Grossman homes have already TOYLAND 1953 HA5 MOST been constructed throughout with a constantly mountis* were left there from the time that For the benefit of new women in equity—a sure road to rent-free the bridge was built, over the rail- AMAZING TOYS YET the parish or anyone interested in the New England area, and that this year's sales will reach a re- debWree home ownership. road tracks, at Burlington avenue. What will they think of next? an evening meeting, the East Branch National "Bulld-lt-Vourserf- It sounds plausible, but it didnt took Adults who are constantly amazed of the L.B.S. meets the first Tuesday cord high. Inaugurated shortly after the Trtnd like the right kind of granite to us. I by the ingenious toys of today just of every month. New members will The widespread desire to bidW The second story, which we pre- haven't seen anything yet. The 1953- be most welcome, and anyone who close of the second World War, the Grossman Low Cost Homes small homes offers a challenge fer, for the romanticisms, if for no 54 crop of play tools from Santa's is interested may call Mrs. Marion to everyone. The significance *f other reason, was that these stones Smith (8-2636) or Mrs. Dorothy Program has an interesting back- toyland is the finest ever produced, ground from both the point of the present has already had fur- were all that remains of a "stock according to The Children's Shop, Babcock (8-4603). The next meeting reaching results. Manufacturer* swindle" back about 1885. According 187 Haven Street, Reading. will be at the home of Mrs. Marion origin and the progress of de- velopment. That war, because have been quick to realize the to our informant, some Boston stock There will be a three and a half Smith on Tuesday, Nov. 3rd, at 8 acute shortaee* of material - demands of this movement mat propoters, in the last century, sold foot aluminum trailer with complete p.m. stock for a quarry which was to be scale model furnishings, a motor- point of non-existence, all types fer special merchandise for the located in Wilmington. The granite cycle cop who chases and catches RAILROAD SCHEDULE of home building. Seeking to al- small home, products that are was not of good quality, but that a speeding car, a doll equipped with Boston to Wilmington leviate the grave housing short- quick and easy to install, pro- didn't bother these gentlemen. As brand name cosmetics which can age confronting returning serv- ducts that can be handled by the a proof of their ernest intentions be applied and wiped off, an acrobat Lv. Boston AIT. Wilmington icemen, Grossman's, with well- amateur as well as the profes- they had some of the granite cut, who does somersaults as a music box 6:00 a.m. 6:30 a.m. directed ingenuity, envolved its vsional builder., ^ Homes. are and hauled down to the railroad, is cranked, a space rocket launcher 6:35 a.m. (a) (c) 7:13 a.m. lav ready for loading. Then they headed a "radar" sighting device, a scale 7:40 a.m. 8:15 a.m. plan of home ownership. j" _ . , „. for Boston and sold stock, after model bucket loader with working 8:40 a.m. 9:11 a.m. 3le who nt vpr 9:40 a.m. This plan was to provide all ^ eU^ a narruner A^rf ?W which they took off, maybe for conveyor belt, a housekeeping unit 10:09 a.m. the necessary building materials, people are findTrS a wrV^S Mexico or France. with real soap in sample sizes, a 10:20 a.m. 10:40 a.m. Our informant told us that the cake mix set with Pillsbury flour 10:40 a.m. 11:10 a.m. 11:40 a.m. 12:14 p.m. drawings and easy-to-folow in- their own hnrnw-mtf mv. iC granite was cut from the old quarry, and frostings that can actually be structions—and then let the,Kactir?n that r7Tm£ fE5 up on Taft road, which may have baked and eaten, a gas engine rac- 12:20 p.m. 12:56 p.m. purchaser do his own hrtMhiw IS?"™""1 «« .W **■ been so, and then again may not ing car that hits 25 miles per hour 12:40 p.m. 1:00 p.m. have been so. (we know that quarry on the straightaway, and the latest 1:05 p.m. (b) 1:38 p.m. Sb^SSrTSJS ggTi«MSySS? tSTuam- 1:40 p.m. its primary purpose, because it ment of that all-nonwrrur ri«.«w was used for other purposes, later, scale model electric trains. 2:15 p.m was found to be a sure method of mankind to All these toys, plus hundreds of 2:40 p.m. 3:09 p.m. BUILD, to . but that is another story). Our in- of defeating the high cost of cute a tangible and lasting formant also told us that the small others, are presented in full color 3:40 p.m. 4:09 p.m. housing. The basic element of hole, in the rock, opposite Swain illustrations in The Toy Yearbook, 4:10 p.m. 4:46 p.m. the "Build-It-Yourself" home pression of man's creative power. road, off Burlington avenue was an- the annual Toy Guidance Council 4:45 p.m. (a) (c) 5:24 p.m plan is to keep the financial in Sidney W. Grossman, presi- publication available free of charge 5:05 p.m. (c) 5:44 p.m dent of the Grossman compaay. other hold that these promoters vestment to a minimum. Initiat- also pointed out that the hage had cut, to show their good mten- onlv at The Children's Shop. 5:17 p.m. (a) (d) 6:04 p.m. ed on the "self-help" basis, this 5:40 p.m. (a) (d) 6:09 p.m. buying power of the firm—opera- Now in its 15th year, the Toy plan has a strong economic at- ting eighteen complete yards Yearbook is "the social register of 5:50 p.m. 6:27 p.m. traction to the would-be home I An'yway, it is a good story, - 6:15 p.m. (a) (c) 6:53 p.m. throughout New England—ef- take it or leave it. toyland." It contains 250 toys, each owner of which has been voted "an out- 6:40 p.m. 7:06 p.m. PAYMENTJrtT«*£, is required. ^SThat's feMS* materials saving. FOOTBALL TROPHIES 7:10 p.m. (d) 7:50 p.m. the home owner-builders—n standing example of its type for what makes it a natural for of whom never realised that 1953-54" by educators and experts 7:40 p.m. 8:09 p.m. those home-seekers with little Wilmington's score, to date is won 8:40 p.m. 9:07 p.m. home ownership was witbli affiliated with Toy Guidance Coun- or no reserve capital—those their reach. 2 and lost 3. However, if the boys cil. The toys were selected from an 9:40 p.m. (a) 10:16 p.m. whose dream of home owner- go into George's they can see 10:40 p.m. 11:17 p.m. entry list of over 7,000 toys. Each ship would otherwise have to be Children Leant About Oil With something that will remind them of was rated on its safety, durability 11:40 p.m. 12:12 a.m. discarded. one game they will not lose. The Mocbl-BoiMiag Kit and play purposes. In The Toy Wilmington fo Boston All the prospective home School children can learn the fas- two trophies, presented by the DAV Yearbook, each selected toy is also Lv. Wilmington Arr Boston builder needs, under the Gross- are on display there, one for the graded according to its proper age man plan, is the deed to his land cinating story of oil discovery ami winner of the 1953 Tewksbury-Wil- suitability. 5:40 a.m. 6:21 a.m. —and a small legal fee to cover production by means of a modrt- mington game, and the other for Toy Guidance member stores are 6:48 a.m. 7:20 a.m. cost of title verification. On the building kit developed by aa ail the outstanding player. George is qualified to advise parents about 7:00 a.m. (a) (c) 7:40 a.m. theory that a person who has a company. The kit provides Mae- quite proud of them. play equipment that will aid in the 7:18 a.m. (e) 7:57 a.m. "sweat equity" in a home Is a prints, buttons, metal snaps, wires 7:42 a.m. (a) (c) 8:15 a.m. good credit risk, satisfactory and wooden dowels. The youngsters JpdpdpdpdpdpdpdpzJpdpdpdpdpdpdpzI^ 7:48 a.m. (e) 8:12 a.m. mortgage terms are easily ar- supply paint, paper and additional 7:49 a.m. (d) 8:30 a.m. ranged. wood. When complete, the model ( 8:05 a.m. (c) 8:50 a.m. Exclusive Features includes a drilling rig, tank. | i ■p. 8:43 a.m. (a) (c) 9:17 a.m. Originators and developers of and a flowing well. Future kit~ are 9:50 a.m. 10:22 a.m. the "Build-It-Yourself" home planned for the refining, market- 10:43 a.m. 11:20 a.m. plan, this method of easy, low ing and transportation phases of 11:24 a.m. 11:55 a.m. cost home ownership is exclu- the oil industry. They ran be ob- KIDS! 12:32 p.m. sive with Grossman's. tained from Models of Industry, 1:07 p.m. 1:12 p.m. 1:32 p.m. Grossman supplies every sin- Inc., Berkeley, . \ 1:20 p.m. 1:57 p.m. gle item for building the home, 0 IN UIFT CERTIFICATES 2:14 p.m. 2:50 p.m. from the foundation materials Lack of care in handling live- 3:14 p.m. 3:50 p.m. to the finishing touches. That, stock shipped to market takes a 4:14 p.m. 4:43 p.m. coupled with the ease of financ- costly toll. A recent survey in- 5:12 p.m. 5:41 p.m. ing, makes the Grossman plan dicated one of every 15 cows 5:17 p.m. (a) (c) 5:52 p.m. completely unique—and offers shipped to market was bruised FREE! 5:45 p.m. (a) (c) 6:45 p.m. speed and economy in the con- and one of every 10 pigs showed 6:14 p.m. 6:45 p.m. struction of the home. bruises. Losses ranged from aa 6:50 p.m. (a) (c) 7:25 p.m. These homes are designed ex- average of nearly $2 for every 7:22 p.m. 7:56 p.m. clusively for Grossman's by a bruised pig to nearly $6 for each FOR THE BEST registered and highly skilled ar- injured cow. 8:15 p.m. 8:47 p.m. • • • • • 9:14 p.m. 9:45 p.m. chitect—and offer a wide range PICTURE DRAWN WITH of traditional and modern types Experiments on lambs in Ver- (a) Except Saturdays for selection. Grossman homes mont indicate that the addition (b) Saturdays only are architecturally engineered to of antibiotics to feed provided SOAP ON OUR (c) Will not run on Oct. 12, Nov. comply with strict building no benefits. Lambs raised on a 11, Nov. 26, Dec. 25, Jan. 1, Feb. codes, and have been endorsed normal ration were as thrifty 22, April 19. by Veterans Housing Authorities, and heavy at the end of eight Pitas* register in our store before you draw. (d) Will not run Oct. 12, Nov. 26, banks and loan associations—as weeks as lambs raised on feed Dec. 25. Jan. 1, Feb. 22. well as being heartily acclaimed fortified with antibiotics. Only. Pictures Drawn With Soap Will Be Considered (e) Stops on Saturdays and Holi- by home owners, builders and • • • • * Boys or Girls 13 years or Under May Compete days, only. contractors throughout New Eng- land. STORY HOURS TO RESUWE Awards Will Be Made Saturday Noon SUNDAYS No pre-cut or prefabricated IN PUBLIC LIBRARY Awards To Be Awarded by 3 Capable Judges Boston to Wilmington • "assembly line" jobs—every Story hours, for children, a Lv. Boston Arr. Wilmington Grossman home insures a cus- feature of the past year, in the Ample Open tom built look to suit the buy- 1:00 p.m. Wilmington Public Library, win EVENINGS 1:26 p.m. er's individual requirements. for children of 3 to 5, according FREE 3:00 p.m. 3:39 p.m. Perhaps the biggest initial at- Oeinb 4:15 p.m. be resumed on November 4th, Parking Until 4:41 p.m. traction of this home plan is that to an announcement by the libra- OF Wll MIMGTON 7:15 p.m. 7:50 p.m. 9 NO.JX)WN PAYMENT is requir-..,ry staff. Mrs. June Coombs of 8:40 p.m. 9:07 p.m. North 9:40 p.m. 10:16 p.m. A 15 usu P 11:40 p.m. 12:12 a.m. i,ally sthe ^rv? biggest factor™* facing-will - sst last jwas from 3 to" 4s&. p.m. •£«<£ PAGE 4 THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1953

quiring a lot of work, shoring, while money in each of the accounts to Selectman Woods observed that being built, because of the extra take the town through the next nothing was being done about "blow- amount of peat in the area, Cushing regular meeting, on November ninth. ing out" a fire, either. The board stated. Photographs were shown of After his leaving, remarks by the agreed to call the attention of the the work. selectmen studying the two copies Town Manager to the curfew law, 1954 requests by the town Man- indicated that insufficient money ex- which states that no child under Id ager, for Chapter 90 work were as isted to last out the year in the years of age shall be on a public follows: finish relocation and wid- cemetery department, the highway highway or public place, alter V ening of Route 62 from present ter- department, the water department, p.m. or before 5 a.m. unless ac- minus of work project >x> rotary at the police department and the fire companied bv a respousible adult. Salem street and Middlesex avenue, department. Sidelinker Kennel. $20,000.00; bituminous concrete from Kelley'« resignation refused Selectman Black reported that he North Reading line to Woburn The Town Manager told the Board had been told that the Sidelinker jstreet, $12,000.00; bituminous con- of Selectmen that he had refused to Kennels were in "full" operation, crete from Woburn street to White- accept the resignation of Kenneth with about 40 dogs on the premises. field school in 1954, $12,000.00; Kelley, chairman of the Additional Mrs. Drew suggested that Mr. Side- straighten Burlington avenue from Accomodations School Committee. linker be invited down to a Select- Route 38 to Chestnut street, $25,000- Mr. Kelley" said the TM" has done men's meeting to "talk things over". 00. Cushing reported that he might too much work to be allowed to re- Selectman Lyons suggested that dis- not get all he requested, but ex- sign. We can appoint another man ciplinary action be taken against pected more that the town has had to take his place, but his name the Sidelinker in the police depart- in previous years. should appear on the committee re- ment. He further suggested that the Cushing reported that a request port, when it is submitted to the police be served an order to serve DANNY DUPRAS IN SCHOOL received for widening Ballardvale town." The Selectmen agreed with on the kennels, and that Sidelinker street, at the Andover line had been the TM. be the person to serve that order. Seven year old Danny Dupras, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Dupras, discussed previously and acted upon Other Item. Black: "Let's get a report first!" Record vault 45 Andover sueet, pictured collecting papers from his classmates unfavorably. Lawrence H. Harriman was un- The State Department of Public Selectman Black drew the atten- m the second grade room of the Whitefield school. Danny, struck animously voted a Surveyor of Works has tentatively agreed to Leather, by the Selectmen. tion of the Selectmen to the fact dawn with polio last year, was unable to attend school as a result,! Const7uct~a sidewalkon Route 38 A letter was received from the that the vault, for town records is kut is now in the second grade, having made up his first grade I from Cain's Garage to Forest avenue, Director of the Census of Massachu- getting "more and more crowded, studies while staying at home. On the left, looking at the camera,' if the town will pay for the sur- setts (Ralph Currier, Boutwell st.) without any improvement of con- ditions" "Shouldn't we direct the m Lucille Medico, of Federal street, and looking at Danny is Wil-!,fadn8' a»f obuin ,h« [*le*,e* of drawing the town's attention to the town manager to take steps that it Ham Long, o, Oakdale road. (Polaroid photo in a minute by the ^ Jg hXd'agreVd S*S 1955 census soon pending, and the rl necessity of having funds earmark- be brought up In the town meeting?" Wilmington Crusader. subject to approval of expenditures ed for the work involved in the It was voted to refer the matter to by the necessary boards and ap- town. The letter was referred to the town manager. propriation of funds by the town in the Town Manager to have the item Old Fir* Station ECIAL TOWN MEETING paper had carried an account of town meeting. included in the budget. Black drew the attention of the NOVEMBER 23 Selectmen to the fact that an ac- problems, with reference to a police Mercury vapor lights have been Telephone Discussion ambulance, in another town. He also cepted street now runs through the Continued from Pago 1 ordered for Wilmington square and Selectman Bhck reported that he- » (Olson road). noted the letter, in Last week's Cru- Silver Lake, with six lights at Wil- r sent fire ; had heard that telephone improve-1 ^ tha( nothi has ^ done * in which were pictured tht sader, which had praised the actions mington, and three at Silver Lake, of the Wilmington police depart- ments were to be made in LoweU'boat ••pos,ing" it. Lvons reported plants of Raffi & Swanson, now Cushing reported. Delivery date is and Tewksbury. This drew varied , « & „ g r seven buildings, and the J. ment, at the time of the recent still tentative, and the cost of these hat he unde stood couts comments from the other Select- wouW be ; tfc nre.hou af. Grecr plant. The magazine, fatality on West street. Cushing i lights, which will give double the men.Woods: That s where (lewks-, , , ,, g» .Cashing told the Selectmen, will was pleased that someone should illumination, will be only $188.00 a er he fire d ment ad write the letter, as he stated that bury) the heaviest vote came^from ferred to ,he new buiIding Mrs Slave a complete detailed report of year more than the present cost. He that swung us to Lowell I" There i it isn't very often that a municipal Drew thought that the old fire tsejrti activities, including industrial noted that stronger street lights had were comments about the Oliver crowth, and pictures, in its Jan- employee hears praise, or even been requested at the North Wil- house would be too dangerous for thanks, for a job well done. exchange name which Mrs. Drew- use by Boy Scouts. •ary issue. mington station, and in several other ended when she said "And they Plumbing Inspector Fir* Truck localities, but that no action had Highways couldn't even make it Whitefield!" Selectman Black suggested that Herbert W. Pickering, of the Wil- Cushing reported that the prob- been taken as yet. Selectman Lawler observed that ■eihgton Plumbing & Supply com- lems of the original fire truck chas Water Department .steps be taken leading to the rec- poay has been appointed temporary sis have been solved with the pay- nothing could be done in Wilm ng-, onstruction of Glen Road, from Cushing told the Selectmen that ton but that the exchange in Mar-. Main street ,Q Middlesex ave ■bing inspector, for the town, ments by the low bidder for the new he intends to appoint a five man blehead had somehow become Nep- ( He told ,he Selectmen that he rat- elective last Friday, Cushing told chassis plus chrome bumper and water-main extension committee to tune I the Selectmen. Cushing found it chrome trim, siren, flashing light study this problem and present re- ed this street as one of the most N. E. Gu important, that it was narrow, and •ecessary to appoint an inspector,'and two hand-crank booster hose!commendations for consideration at A question from Selectman Black, ♦bat a large number of school child- wader, the laws of the Common- reel. F.xcept for the loss of time, the next town meeting. He also re- about activity at the New England wealth, and Pickering was the only everything has turned out most sat-! ported that he would be meeting ren used it morning and night. Gas Plant was answered by Select- He referred to it as being almost smmn available with the qualifications, isfactorily for the town, Cushing shortly with the Water Commission- man Lyons, who stated that he be- Cashing stated reported. jerSi for discussion of capital ex- in the same position as Wildwood lieved the reason there was no street, which next spring will be * Polic* Public Works I penditures in the Water Department, activity on the Gas Company's lot Cushing noted that an out of town I The bridge on Salem street is re- for 1954, with such items as well- having large numbers of school was because they could not get a i | Selectman Lawler remind- —————^—————————_____^______^__ fields, necessary pumps and a new chi dren certain piece of equipment, and that ed the Selectmen that they had j standpipe to be discussed. there was no sense l„ building the ken of wndwood , , ' h Public Building, rest, and having capital tied up-for Town ManWfi some mon„,5 AVAILABLE AT A ! Cushing reported that an inspec- the need of the one piece. , and Woods WM , fayor f ,. . i tion of all school buildings and dis- Selectman Black wanted to know ating ,he c on Wildwoo(, cussions with the school supenn when the loam which was on the Lawlcr. ..Thcsc arc . • tendent, parents, teachers and jan- property of the Masonic lodge WW jects, which will cost a lot of money SENSATIONAL SAVING OF 25% going to be moved. Wood, wanted ; _ . £ ^"m I itors indicate that an excellent job tlu rc is no fo has been done by the maintainance to know when the new fire taUon ject, ,u„u]t{ ,„, ,, , * /» | department, with all ichools in good was gomg to begin to be used. Mrs. L, have m t0 do it _ , %™ | condition. He told the Selectmen Drew said she had seen lights In ... tnink U(, hav/enollgn mo j"™' i that capital budgctry items for nexl upstairs, that very same evening. ,„•„.,, departmenT budgett to take Lyons repeated previous in forma-' (THE NEXT TH|NG TO SIERLINc.il year will be for renovation. ? on a lot of streets like this." The Wilmington Skating Club, tion about waiting for the alarm Black: "There has been some very I Inc. desires to improve the former horn etc. to lie t ran -ferred. fine work this ye.r" He suggested * 52 PIECE FAMILY SET . South School building, and, in ac- Town Clock Service for S that the Selectmen take a ride down cordance with its lease, have | re- Charles Black suggested that the Roman Way, to see what a fine 16 teaspoons sented plans to the town. Selectmen direct .the Town Mai street it is now "wider than Church 8 knives Police Suit to see mat a suitable provision « is street, I believe" "Faulkner road is 8 forks A long standing suit, now lour made in the lv54 warrant foi re- another fine road". years old, involving the Wilming- pair of the Town Clock, in the | 8 salad forks Iron in the Water : ton Police cruiser and another ve- steeple ot the Congregational Tl„, Sele,„,„,,\ m«ting „u|0(, 8 cream soup spoons i hide may be settled out of court. church. He termed the present. eto^;,,, .,,, observation from Lawler 1 butter knifa The Selectmen voted favorably on tus a •'hsgracc . Lawler wanted to, „,„ ,,c ,,:ll| ,„,„•,.,.,, ^ h the recommendation of the Town 1 sugar spoon k2ow. 1/..B!?uCk wa'.'i 1. !u„ 'T„'." n"r" •"""' iro" in '''•• town water 2 tablespoons Maiuger that the Town Counsel be effected "with or without the gong! supply. "If it is a rase that the empowered to make such a settle- He was referring to a past state- water dr-nartment turned off the ment of the Town Manager that it PLUS ment. use of Calgtin they should turn it Cross Street would cost another $500 to have the on again quickly I" $18.50 Mahogany-finished In an action involving Cross street, gong working, if and when the town Drawer Chest now pending before the County clock were repaired. Commissioners, the Town Counsel This led to several comments that PAUL fiFARTY Torniih-proof Ijaular rotail . . . . $92.80 has entered his appearance (i.e. the clock should have the gong. Mrs. HOME ON LEAVE lined with Pacific Cloth Drew thought the sound of the gong, Aftpr romnleting the course at Drawer provide, extra room for kniv.,/ | ma°f a reP'>> °" behalf of ,he res- in the early morning hours, was j the Army Signal School. Camo forks, spoons and serving pieces pondents. Finance "beautiful". Gordon. Georgia. Paul Geartv NOW ON.XT69.50 Black reported that he had a lot!is enjoying a 30 dav leave at "1953 has seen the greatest ex- ; pansion of the Town of Wilmington of telephone calls, on Sunday morn- home. 122 Orove Avenu*-. He YOU SAVE ...$23.30 in its modern history. This expan- ing, during the heavy rain, because leaves about November 17th. for sion is orderly, controlled for the of street drains that had been plug-' San Francisco, and ultimately, best interests of the citizens and ged up. He reported one house- j . J«.00 0*w.o.d beneficial to the taxpayer. Such a holder, in the northern part of town, large growth, however, has neces- who could get into his home only $1.00 -*, by walking across the neighbors! SLBA TURKEY WHIST sitated increased activity in all de- The Board of Directors of the partments and has resulted in in- lawn. This householder had re- • Mo Carrytafl Choree — N. Federal Tax creased operating expenses over ported the condition of the. nearby ' f^J&J$^v*S^ Available la yOOC cfc.lt. y the budgetry estimates of nearly a drains last Apr., and nothing had fect lang f th ^gj ^ •f 9 ■erH.rae sn.wa year ago. It will be necessary to been done about it, Black under- to ^ held on Friday e^^",^ Offw feofaoi Oct. 31. IMS secure additional funds in the certain stood. Black also understood that vember 6th. Members are being appropriations prior to the end of when Glen road was resurfaced, this asked to donate prizes as in the the fiscal year. This problem has summer, that a drain near the Hale nast. and it is exDected that over been discussed with the chairman property was tarred over, and plugg- mo prizes will he on hand for of the finance committee who sees . ed up. the winners. All prizes are to Swvfef ***** *ho ovoltefcle h the*. clearly these problems and has al-1 Black also reported complaints as Dertain to Thanksgiving dinner itflir- **d *-T -«* be ordered o* ready aided greatly in helping to a result of the work on Faulkner and will include chickens, tur- .solve some of them. The town ac- road. He thought the road was a keys, fruit baskets and all sorts Icountant has the necessary detailed wonderful job, but the complainers of vegetables. The public is In- information." »ald that the land had all been tak- vited. The Town Accountant had the in- « from one side nf ,he street- r formation, of which Mr. Cushin hnpooext spoke. It was typewritten, with only Selectman Black referred to re- FOR SALE HENRY BILLAUER two copies, which passed back and ports of damage by children, in t.he SIX year old house. Solid brick, ESTABLISHED 1921 forth between the Selectmen, after evenings, and wanted to know if five rooms and sun room. At- the Town Manager had left. Jnythlng was being done about cur- tached earage. Automatic oil ew. The board looked into the by- XV Main St. * T.I. WO 2-1072 M WOwVfel Before the TM had left, however heat Youngstown kitchen. 7 the Selectmen and TM assured each law, found that it was valid, and a- clooets. Call OL 8-3421 eye- other that there would be sufficient greed that nothing was being done nings. THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2$, 1953 PAGE 5 WANT ADS Want Ads May Be placed by calling Lowell 8812... Rates availa13eTnTe

■ BABY CHICKS FOR SALI HOUSE FOR SALE RANCH STYLE - 6 Room Mouse ORDER BABY CHICKS Wanted with brick front Patio and ALTMAN'S, INC 2-car garage. Contact Mr. Dan- NOWII A FULL LINE OF WANTED Late Model wrecked iel Dennehy, 10 Auburn Ave- CHOICE MEATS AT and burnt cars tor parts and nue, Wilmington, Mass. Tel. REASONABLE PRICES TED'S salvage. Top prices paid. Tel. OL 84859. Main Street - Wilmington SEWERAGE Wobum 2-2988, Woburn Auto 0-14-21-28 Tel. OL M631 SIRED BY THE BEST TYPES Parts, 240 Mishaum Road, SERVICE and Woburn. CESSPOOLS - SEPTIC The 17341 House CAREFULLY SELECTED Gift* for all, Coma and Shop MieVBete* Avena. TANKS PUMPED OUT Yarn., Crochet Cotton, Hand Work, at Shady Lane Drive AND INSTALLED Hatchery DoB., Card., Article, for Decorate Tel. BiBerica 2S17 MERTEN'S Woburn Painting, BROWNIE Chri.tma. BOUVIER Card*. Open Evening-., and Saturday Watch - Cloek • Jewelry Concord Rd. Billeriea Floor Covering: Co. Sunday afternoon.. Repair and Gift* Wilmington - OL 1-3459 Tel Bill 272* Specialisiar Afl Type. E. S. Ttobott*. North Wilmington Appliances Floor Coreringa Next to Whitefield school Steel Tile - PH-tlc Tile Oct. - NOT. CLAPP ft LEACH, INC Keys Made * Carpet* • Counter Tope TU Electric Store" Floor Linoleum* KEYS MADE WHILE YOU TOe Electrical Contracting WAIT. Get that key yoo need J. & I. UNOMART WANTED Pfartar*. - Snpplie. NOW! All solid brass keys. Pine- FREE ESTIMATES 458 MAIN ST. WOBURN —Motorola Talovisien- hurst Hardware & Supply Co., OPP. Sears - gtoekack Large acreage. Condition of AppKanc*. Boston Road, Pinehurst. Tel. Bil- 4N MAIN STREET Complete Line of buildings, if any, inmateriaL Reading 1 A.h Strool leriea 8482. WOBURN 2-2589 National) Advertised 2-97S4 Write to, Floor Coverings JOHN CALLAHAN RUDERMAN'S * Lumber * Maytag Wa.ber. - Rubber Tile - Asphalt 79 A Broadway Frigid.ire Refrigerator* • WILMINGTON Magnolia Rest Home Steel and Plastic Wall Tile ARLINGTON, MASS. Philco Teleri.ion A Radio • BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. FREE ESTIMATES •> Lumbar - Cement Mildred Doucettc Clothing . Shoe* • Dry Good* Proprietor and Director CHEERFULLY GIVEN • Paint - Claa* Complete facilities for care of CaU Woburn 2-1819 Gould /& Haven St*. Reading • Door* - Window. T«L Reading 2-1Z17-J • Builder. Hardwaro convalescents. Excellent nurs- 334 Main Street - OL M621 ing and dietary service. Quiet, cheerful surroundings. W. C. LAHUE INC. 284 Ash Street RE 2-2487 * Automotive * WOBURN LUMBER CARLTON ft GRAY, INC General Contractors A SALVAGE COMPANY Repairs • Remodeling . Now H FORD Second Hand Lumber . Brick ParU • Sala* - Sarvien Building; Material, of all Kind. Tel 2-5261 —U.ad Car. - Lumber Milled to Siaa Main A Minot St. Readinf Tel. WO 2-2412 FOR SALE 969 Westford Street — Lowell Tal. 2-M24 24 Conn St. Wobum, Ma.*. * GRASS SEED JOHNSON ft SWANSON * FISHING EQUIPMENT • FERTILIZER CARL C «I!LSON,CARL «L NEsLSOM MUST J. FAJUULa, Automobile Pemting * Movers * • LAWN TOOLS Radiator. • CARMOTE PAINTS Cleaned and Repaired E. V. RONAYNE * FLOOR SANDERS EJJRNITURE MOVINC —CHAIN SAWS FOR RENT— No. Woburn Machine Co. — Now Coros — A Body and Fendei Work PACKING CRATING STORAGE rM Main St. Winehoater «-»St2 GOODS INSURED GAUDET HARDWARE MaUsMnirti - Steam Fitters - Mffiwrigfcfc") 59 Nichols St. - Tel. OL 8-2641 911 Main St. - North Woburn N * For Sale * WO 2-2932 Acetylene and EJectrk Weldfa* A complete line of lumber, win- * Restaurants * MettMUmg of Metal. dow*, builder'* finish, hardware, plumbing and heating. GROSS GEORGE'S If NIeb.1. St . TEL, WOBURN Mitt - Wafer* Maaf. K%AN'S - BOSTON ROAD, BIL- IN READING LER1CA. T*L Lowell 2-5411 or WILMINGTON UPHOLSTERING BiH. 443 'Lot', all *ay a Prayer George Robbins, Prop. HOT TOP DRIVEWAYS for the boy. over there * M Haven St. WALKS, Garage Floors. Price reas- onable. Free estimates- Loam for Reading - 2-1884 - Ma... BENEVENTO SAND & GRAVE sale Call Harold D. Baroni, Bill- Refrigeration * ROUTE 62, NO. READING-WILMINGTON LINE erica 8801. Plant Phone OL 8-4762 - Home Phone Lynn 5-1494 * Hardware * REFRIGERATION FINEST QUALITY THERE ARE LOADS AND LOADS SERVICE When You Buy By The Load Be Sure The Truck Is WOBURN HARDWARE A ANYWHERE - TIME - TYPE Meats Not A Kiddy Car PLUMBING SUPPLY CO. OR SIZE - FAIR RATES See Our Truckloads - Compare Trucks and Save Heating — Paint. MR. BROWN - Billeriea 8366 Hot Point Appliance. Groceries UNLIMITED QUANTITY SUBSOIL FILL Yoong.town Kitchen. $1.50 And $2.90 A Load At Pit V W-508 Main Wobum 2-230* Sport Stores * Delivered Five Mile Radius - $6.00 A Load HOT TOP DRIVEWAYS SERVICE BiBarica 443. ABUNDANT SUPPLY VIRGIN LOAM GUNS MARKET $1.00 A Yard At Pit Now A Uaod Open Sunday. - 18 ajn. - ( p.m. Delivered Five Mile Radius - $15.00 A Load * Insurance AMMUNITION 327 Main Street - OL 8-2404 N. H. A Maine Hunting Lican.e. SPECIAL LOW PRICES ON JOHN F. GLEASON HICKS' SPORT SHOP CONCRETE AND MASON SAND - STONE AGENCY 15 Mechanic Street - Wakefield PEA STONE OLiver 8-2671 Tel. Cryatal »-3652W General Insurance Fir* - Lift • AccWent * Sand & Gravel * Magee 1 Liability • Bonds 80 Florence Ave. • Wilmington S.Dd Filling Donnelly Grav«| MUSIC INSTRUCTION Loam Violin, piano, harmony, musical VAN'S POWER OIL BURNER foundation. Mrs. Exilda V. Laffin, Tel. CaH OLiver 8-4563 SALES and SERVICE Oak Avc Lowell Rd., No. Read- PLUMBING and HEATING ing. Tel. No. Reading, 4-3695. * Authorized Dealers of * Jewelers * LOAM • SAND • GRAVEL SHOVEL DOZER MAJOR H. S. SORENSON CO, INC Doors 1* ARrion Stroot CRYt-1128 SERVICE General Electric Wakefield'. Olde.t and Large.t Windows WILLIAM L. RICH APPLIANCES J^wnlry - Silverware and Gift Shop A Watch and Jowoh-y Repairing finish Nails — Hardware PHONE OL 8-2332 HAVERHILL STREET NO. READING. MASS 1 GENERAL Phone 4-3141 or 4-8142 HELEN LEE'S EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME. * TUNE-UP BEAUTY SHOPPE Financed if Desired All Make, of Car. OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS WILMINGTON Rusty** Texaco Station Wilmington Square BUILDERS SUPPLY COMPANY Tel. Wilmington OL 8-3368 OLiver 8-2698 334 Main Street Tel. OLiver 8-4621 PACE C THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1953

is extended to our many new and old friends and patrons to visit our new and modern plants recently opened in Wilmington. Here you will discover modern up-to-the-minute facilities for cleaning, dyeing, and the pressing oi your garments. Here also you will find the latest and best in automatic washing machines and automatic dryers for your comfort and convenience.

BRING WE WILL CON- YOUR LAUNDRY, TINUE TO KEEP Y 0 U K CLOTHES OUT... "SPARKLING NEAT"— ftcosts /ess TO KEEP YOU than uou IXHOKING YOUR think I! EST AT ALL TIMES.

MERR1-MAC CLEANSERS 460 Main St. - OL 8-3248 - Wilmington Free Pick-Up and Delivery

Pressing - Dry Cleaning - Dyeing Fur Storage THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, MM PAGE ?

LARGE TRUCKS ARE UNFAIR*that 4 percent of the nations truck* of 1887, were established when the the ointment, according to his be- ■ .'< ■ '"M U '■.*'■> * ■ ■ I SAYS RAILROAD MAN constituted a very unfair compet- railroads had a monoply in trans- lief. As things now stand, he said, Clifford A. Summerville, of the ition to the railroads, a compettion portation, and were - designed to the Railroads will never catch up HICKORY SMOKED] Boston & Maine railroad spoke to that was also unfair to the motorist protect the public of that time. To- with the increases in wages. Hams • Bacon • Sausage and taxpayer in general. These day, with all sorts of competition, the Wilmington Rotary Club, at MONADNOCK FARMS their weeky luncheon last week. trucks, the very large ones, were the railroads still are hampered by HIGH WATER AND LOW the ones which destroyed the nations these laws, some of which, at least, WATER Open Evenings An amazing speaker, who spoke Rte. 28 ■ No. Reading. Mas*. I strickly "off the .cuff", Mr Summer- highways, so expensive to the tax- do not affect their competitors, said Every spring we have a problem ville was not only able to marshall payer said Summerville. Summerville. in this town, concerned with the Summerville began his talk by The competition consist of trucks spring floods, sometimes called channel under the bridge, would go an imposing setof statistics, but he High Water. To look at the town, at Was able to deliver those statistics stating that New England has a very autos, busses, and pipelines. The a long way towards clearing the in a manner very pleasing to the good position, industrially, in spite pipelines today carry 12 percent of the present moment a casual ob- high water from Hundred Acres listener, with a precise and well of the propaganda from other sec- the intercity freight. servor would not dream of the prob- Meadow, come spring. modulated voice. tions of the country- With 2 percent It is perfectly true that the rail- lems ' of springtime. of the area of the nation, and 7 per- roads carry more freight today than Now, with the water at a very low Summerville told the Rotarians cent of the population, the six New they ever did before, but that is be- point, is the time to observe some EDDIE SADOWSKI HOME ON England states have industries cause the country as a whole is of the difficulties that the town LEAVE which employ 59 percent of all tex- growing. The railroads, at the same has, come spring time. Several sums tile machinery, 57 percent of all the time, are forced to keep up unecon- of money have been voted, for sur- Eddie Sadowski, of Forest street, WANTED news print, manufacture 49 percent omic services, which have outlived veys, and these surveys are due to is enjoying a 30 day leave at home, Experienced knife-coater op- of the nails and spikes made in the their usefullness, because of the rul- start shortly. We understand that after being stationed at Kitzingea, country, 33 percent of footwear, 30 ings of the Interstate Commerce the surveyors have waited until this which is about 70 miles east of erators. Experienced Camer- time, so as not to have to spend percent of the glue and abrasives, Commission, and the various state Frankfurtam-Main, Germany. Eddie on or dusendery, etc. slitter and 27 percent of machine tools and Public Utilities Commissions. money cutting brush. Visibility is operators. Responsible men fine papers. Summerville was particularly cau- much better, after the leaves have reports that the country is beautiful, with supervisory experience It is perfectly true, he stated, that stic about 4 percent of the trucks, fallen, in fall time. but it is nothing like home. He wil there has been a decrease in textile which, he stated, destroy the high- At least two observations have report again, for duty, about Nov. preferred. been made to this paper, i recent production, but this has been more ways for more than they are worth. n 1st, and is expecting to be promoted' A. L. Barney Co., Inc., than offest by the increase in other About 4000,000 trucks are involved weeks, that bear repeating. lines, such as electronics, plastics he said, trucks which use the high- One This is the time to get the to corporal about Nov. 30th. 105 Salem Street, Woburn and metal working. In the electronics ways that the public pays for, and glass off the beaches at Silver Lake. Wo. 2-3420 fields, alone, the number of workers in direct competition to the railroads With the water at a very low point, THANKSGIVING WHIST has increased from 55,000 to 138,000 who have to pay for their own right- much more glass can be found and NOVEMBER 20TH in a 15 year period, and plastics, in of-way maintainance. removed. Of course, more will prob- the same time have increased by 30 He also had a few words to say ably be dropped during the winter Wilmington Post 136, America* percent. On a percentage basis, New about the government subsidies, months, but a piece of glass that Legion has announced that there England far exceeds the national direct and indirect, to the airlines. lies on the bottom now can cut just will be a gala Thanksgiving Whist, averages, in almost any industry He pointed out that taxpayers mon- as badly, next summer. at the Legion Gubhouse, on Noveas- that can be named. ey is used to maintain large public Two. A motorist who should stop ber 20th, with plenty of prizes fo» Summerville decried the statistics |anding fields, and that the land- at the Mill Dam bridge, in North everyone. that come from some of the south- ing fees paid by the large commer- Reading, would learn a lot from ern and western communities. A cial planes do not begin to pay for casual observation, at this moment. town with 500 employed workers, the maintainance of these fields, and, The Ipswich River, which runs under »-"">w-»^ that expands to 1500 workers can as a matter of fact, are not suf- this bridge, has not had any water truly say that it has expanded 300 ficient to even remove he snow, in at this point for several weeks, be- percent, and scoff at a town with the wintertime. cause the level of the bottom of the 100,000 workers that has expanded Railroads, said Summerville, carry river, under the bridge, is several WANTED to 101,000, yet the figures are actu- %% of the nations mail, for $17 feet higher than it is a few yards ally the same, he pointed out. million, and the airways carry 6% upstream. In other words, a few "New England is not a dying con- for $34 million. That is why the air- dollars spent now, in lowering the cern !'" lines are able to give free meals, in REAL ESTATE Mr. Summerville was very happy their flights — they are doing it to be connected with a railroad that with the tax-payers money! serves much of New England, and Every time there is an increase LEARN A MERRIMACK REALTY CO. he paid tribute to the industrial in the wages in the steel industry Room 208 - New Fiske Bid*. awareness of Wilmington, which h the price of steel is raised accord- termed "dynamic". ingly, but the same is not true in the PROFESSION Lowell, Mass. Like New England, the Boston railroad industry. We have to go (Leam Insurance and Broker- 219 Central St. ■ Lowell 3-1754 and Maine Railroad has been un through a half dozen regulatory bod- .age. Local training opportuni* dergoing some tremendous changes ies, taking six months or a year, be- ties available to earn while! \ in the last fifteen years. It is today fore we can have a commensurate 'you learn. very heavily committed to diesel- increase, and meanwhile the rail- i We have cash buyers waiting electric locomotives, and within a roads are losing money. Summerville >MERRIMACK REALTY CO. few more years there will be no was willing to have to contend with (Room 208 - New Fiske Bldg.. ' for singles and two families. steam engines left on the Boston 219 Central Street • Lowell , i ctrK the Interstate Commerce Commis- Prompt and courteous service. It's N**r Too Eaify and Maine. A diesel d* JJ}*™e sion, but it was the various state Lowell 3-1754 TorfelpYou of 100,000 horsepower cost $200.(KKi Public Utilities that were the fly in against $85-106,000 for a similar loc- SekdYourRusl Craft omotive, but the savings in operation more than offset the original cost, he Christmas Cards stated. The Boston and Maine is buying these locomotives on a t,me" period" basis, similar to that which FIRESIDE the average car owner uses. It takes SILVER LAKE HARDWARE the Boston and Maine seven and GIFT SHOP one half years to pay for a diesel-el- MAIN ST. CORNER GROVE AVE. ectric locomotive. At Traffic Lights 438 MAIN ST. • WOBURN The Boston and Maine, however Cards ind Gifts is faced with other problems, chief Open Daily To 6 P.M. - Fri. and Sat. Until 9 P.M. For All Occasions of which are (I) too much govern- - Member • ment regulation, and <2) what the •■SI Woburn Boston and Maine considers as un- fair trucking competition. ROLL TOP Chamber of Commerce The Interstate Commerce Laws. * SPECIAL * WRITING DESKS Girls English r~ Complete with Chair Bike with— tf£J| Stand - Pump iU REG. $18.95 and Tool Bag. Reg. $75.00 NOW CARTS 'Saucy Walker" Metal - with Rubber Tires Turns Head # Walks • Sits $0.29 Cries • Stands fj Sleeps L and up Beautiful SARAN HAIR May Be WASHED - COMBED ■ and CURLED | WALL BLACKBOARD 17 INCH DOLL I with Alphabet Chalk and Eraaer 24 INCH DOLL '15* i '" There's a great feeling of satisfaction $1.50 for the thrift-minded person who saves DOLL CARRIAGES his money systematically in this Co- operative Bank. '4.50 and up JUST Our Monthly Savings Plan can be most Here it is — Mom and Dad!! ARRIVED helpful to you, and start you on the road to financial security. You receive FIRE CHIEF CARS ROCKING CHAIRS good dividends regularly and your money is insured in full under Massa- Regular $6.50 chusetts Laws. A SLICK SPECIAL J4.98 RED MLINED JOB Many - Many Toys - Games - Paint Sets READING CO-OPERATIVE BANK WERE Blocks - Modeling Clay to choose.' Drop in $18.98 and look at our fine selection. 643 Main Street, Reading NOW '15 Branch Office - Main Street, Wilmington, Masa. USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN A VERY COMPLETE SELECTION OF TOYS FOR YOU. \ PAGE 8 ~'--: THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 19SJ VERY FINE RUG EXHIBIT AT North Branch of the Ladies Bene- LOWELL BUSINESS CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH volent Society of the Congregational "You don't begin to tee the rugs church. Burner I until the second trip around". That Burner GUIDE was the way one of the ladies who ALICE CANELAS BECOMES DR. visited the rug exhibit, in the Con- BRIDE gregational church, last Friday, The altar, at St. Thomas church, Saks Service GEORGE VLAHO-GIANIS characterized it was beautifully decorated with red Optometrist Two rooms of the vestry of the carnations, for the Sunday after- — o — — o — 417 • Central Building church were completely taken up noon marriage of Miss Alice E. Can t» Central Street • Lowell, Mass. with rugs, on exhibit By actual elas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ven- 124 Wilminftaa TeL t-TIM count there were 88 on display, all tura Canelas of McDonald Road, hand made, and all beautiful to look North Wilmington, to Mr. Raymond at. They had been made by ladies W. Motschman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Main St. TeL OLiver 8-4700 who were studying under the lead- Alfred Motschman, 32 High Street, Nights Sun. Holidays OL 8-3182 ership of Mrs. Samuel Thorpe and North Wilmington, on Oct. 25th. Mrs. Samuel Grant While the two In a gown with a chsntilly lace THE FLORIST SYKES ladies who teach the classes come bodice, illusion neckline, and lace WOMAN INJURED ON ABANDONED CAR Flowers For All Qecssioas from Wilmington, there were a sleeves coming to a point over the SIDEWALK Fsaoral ud Wt***g number of exhibits by out-of-town hand, a long satin skirt, ending in An abondoned car, found near the ladies, pupils in the two classes. a cathedral train with lace inserts Mrs. Thomas Fleming, of High- Shell station, on Lowell street, on Tel. 4 4121 Free Deovery The exhibit, of hand-hooked rugs, in front and back, the bride wore land avenue. North Wilmington suf- Oct. 23rd, was towed to Cain's fered bruises and bleeding contus- garage, while police investigate the . ISM Uwreoce St UtriD was almost bewildering in its variety, a white orchid corsage, and carried with the two largest rugs being a prayer book to the altar. A chan- ions on her right arm, and a twisted ownership of the car. The number I made by Mrs. Wilhehnina De Lesle tilly lace crown, with illusion v effiaa*!'*" ankle, when she slipped on the plate on the car had been stolen sidewalk, in Wilmington square last from Alfred Eisenhaur, of North ALIGNING and Mrs. Rodney Buck. Both rugs completed the ensemble. She was were about 12 feet by 15 feet, and given in marriage by her father, and Saturday. According to a report, the Reading. sod FRSfNT BND SERVICE asphalt surfacing has been eroded at CARS sad TRUCKS the pattern, in each case, was of I the Rev. John Regan was the offic- squares, varied-colored. iating clergyman. the place where the accident occur- BURLINGTON GARAGE Mrs. Rodney Buck had the largest I Mrs. Kenneth Wilson, soloist, ed. ' t AUTO SPRING SERVICE number of rugs on exhibit, among sang "Mother at Thy Feet is Kneel- Stanley Young, Prep. f BRASS SERVICE which was an eye-catching repro- ing" by the Sisters of Notre Dame. PRE-HALLOWEEN ■U 7.2801 i 8fria«a for All Make, ef Can duction of the famous Currier and Organist was Mrs. Estelle Shelley. PRANKSTERS SET FIRE TO Complete Overhauling Spring. Repaired and Reaet Ives lithograph, "Home for Thanks-1 Matron of Honor was Mrs. Mary AIRPLANE Body • Fender \W Lawrence St. - Lowell giving". A very cute rug was one Correa, a sister of the bride, from Pre-halloween pranksters set fire Touch-Up Work Tel. 2-7M5 with a deer motif, reminding the Lowell, who was gowned in jade to an abondoned and worthless air- Electric • Aesfylene onlooker of "Bambi", made by Mrs. green satin, with a sweetheart neck- plane, on Oct. 21st, at the Wilming- Welding Eleanor Day. Mrs Ethel Williams line, and fitted bodice, and carried ton-Billerica airport. The fire was Cambridge St. • Rte. 3 and Mrs. Thorpe each made a re- a mixed flower colonial bouquet of put out by the Wilmington fire Burlington irm>@Masi* production of a famous painting,' pink roses, pom poms and snap department. "Rockport Waterfront", which re- dragons. Mrs. Catherine Canelas, productions were on exhibit on op- snd Mrs. Ruth Canelas, sisters in HYDRANT BROKEN ON '. WATCH REPAIRING posite sides of the largest room. |law of the bride were the brides- HOPKINS STREET AMBULANCE SERVICE Electronically Tested Outstanding was a Persian Or-.maids. The bridesmaids wore gowns Two teen-age boys have admitted >e»oooooooooooeoeoooo»oo« on our iental "Omar Khayam", made by of satin bodice, with nylon tulle to the Wilmington police that they 24 Hour Service . v Watch Master Mrs. Anna McMahon, which was' skirts, having cascades of nylon ruf- were responsible for a broken hy- Dial Lowell 4-0497 JOHN L. CATEN, JEWELER made to match a stair runner, made |"« and satin bands on both side, drant, on Hopkins street, on Oct. by the same lady, and exhibited two' and "tin jackets of aBMthist ana 21st. The boys told the police that Nurses and Oxygen Available ChaUioni Buildlsf years ago, and another rug, with a turquoise. They wore matching head- they broke the hydrant while they Lowell S-4T7I Bitleriea 833* rose motif, made by Mrs. D. S. Josie pieces, consisting of julienne caps, were attempting to turn on the HART of Arlington, which was made to with flowers to match their bouquets AMBULANCE SERVICE water, in a pre-halloweeen prank. Harold B. Hart match the wallpaper in her roomv !of mixed flowers. 377 Wilder Street - Lowell, Mass. NICHOLS Tea and Coffee A number of rugs, exhibited by | Best Man was Mr. Harold Mot- POLICE CATCH STONE Mrs. Smith, Someryille, were made schman, brother of the groom, from THROWERS i 35). John St - Lowell for the nursery room of her grand- Hopkington, and the ushers were Six teen-age youths, from South Wo Specialize la children, in , and an- Mr. Dennis Canelas, brother of the Tewksbury and Silver Lake, were ooooooooooooooooooooee ' Tea - Coffee - Spk«.« 1 other rug which attracted the eye bride, and Mr. Kenneth Motsch- caught by Officers Troy and Mar- . la Business 84 Years was one showing a leaping deer, man. brother of the groom, both of key, late Saturday evening, while WHERE GRANDMA TRADED by Mrs. Mary Fairweather. The North Wilmington, they were engaged in indiscriminate drawing, on which the rug had been | After the ceremony, a reception throwing of stones. The boys were HflLLSIDE FLORIST! made, was drawn by her son, Alex-,wa s held in the White Rock Club, later released. •M MAIN STREET ander. |jn Tewksbury. with music provided NORTH WOBURN A reviewer finds it impossible to! by the Star Dust Trio. For her place Telephone Woburn 2636J list every rug, in spite of their fine! in the reception line the bride's points, but other outstanding rugs mother wore a grey dress, with Free Delivery STOP were a matched set of yellow roses,, black accessories, and wore a cor- CORSAGES j for her bedroom, by Mrs. Gladys sage of pink roses, while the mother FUNERALS ,* Jolly, an Oriental, with a pt'ne motif, of the groom chose a navy blue BACK BAY I by Mrs. Mary Gilligan, another dress, with red accessories, and a WEDDINGS! FURNITURE CO. Oriental, "Ming" by MrJ. Daisy corsage of pink roses. Graduate of Simmons School of , Hodges of Reading, and a tapestry, Miss Louise Motschman, sister of FOR COMPLETE Advanced Floral De.in showing wild Moscovy Ducks, by the groom, was in charge of the fie* HOME FURNISHINGS i Mrs. Grant. guest book. There were more than rugs shown, After a motor trip to Florida, the Lay Away - Budget i however. Mrs. Gladys Jolly had a new Mr- and Mrs. Canelas will make 55S GORHAM STREET j chair, which she had upholstered, their home on McDonald road, in Philco Factory 1 LOWELL, MASS. TEL. 6488 I for the use of her husband, and an North Wilmington. Both Mr. and I antique foot rocker, very attractive, Mrs. Canelas are graduates of Wil- had been refinished and re-uphol- mington High School, and Mr. Can- stered bv Mrs- Nettie Parshley of elas is a veteran of four years, with TELEVISION Blanche Cummiskey North Woburn. Mrs. Parshley is the the United States Navy. He is em- mother of Mrs. John Hayward. ployed with the University Overland SERVICE Exclusive Millinery The exhibit was sponsored by the I Express Company. Member and Dresses Gifts & Greetings Guaranteed 15 John St., Lowell, Mass. for You — through Service All Makes WHEN YOU WANT TO WELCOME WAGON! iDoyon's TV Service DRIVING SCHOOL r BOTTLED GAS 1 from Your Friendly Reading 2-2076M , LEARN TO DRIVE AT WOPKBWrrHAZIrJS, Business Neighbors CITY HALL AMD MUCH HOME COMFORT and Givio and DRIVING SCHOOL ITWILLBRIN6 Social Welfare Leaders FARMERS Learn to Drive at Lowell's Off the occasion of: most Modern • Equipped School The Birth of a Baby EXCHANGE Regular shift and automatic READING LOCKSMITH Drive Sixteenth Birthdays Dual-Controlled cars Engagement Announcements Key* Made While-U-Wait Fully insured. Change of residence LOCKS REPAIRED Courteous and Capable Arrivals of Newcomers to DU PONT PAINTS Instructors City Strictly Fresh Small Eggs PHONE: OLiver 8-4839 Are Here 3 Doz. $1.10 and up Specializing in teaching young - iNt Mil or ,bllfHou) Opp. Theatre • Reading, Mass. aged and nervous persons Tel. Re. 2-1755 Call Lowell 7312 V 1 Osy or Night Appointment ERIC'S Greenhouses WINDOWS BROKEN ON WILMINGTON. FAIRMEADOW ROAD - CAS.S 1090 North Main Street - TeL Reading 2-0S47 A complaint to the Wilmington Floral Deiifnint School Graduate police department, last Saturday, i ^APPLIANCE Flower. • Cor.age. Free Delivery states that windows of new homes, 417 MAIN SI. For * Funerals being built on Fairmeadow road, '

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p Protect the Investment you have - YOUR HOME ~n~*- We ... at Grossman's will gladly work with you to iron out your home problems. Remember you can't ' afford to "Gamble" with your home. Protect it by ordering from Grossman's all the necessary lumber and building materials for its winter protection. Anyone_of our courteous clerks will be most happy to assist you in your selections.

RE ROOF 8BF0RB REPAIR PMTBCT YOURHOMt LEADERS GUTTERS fm WINDOWS mm/ BEFORE WINTER AMD DOORS NOW /scomthg*

Repair, Improve, Beautify your Home. NO MONEY DOWN .36 MONTHS TO PAY ... and as little as s5 per Month on R. B. P.

BOSTON ROAD BILLERICA Tel. Billerica 443 TeL Lowell 2-5411 PAGE It THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 2S, MM. Commonwealth of Massachusetts STUDENT COUNCIL 60 deeds were recorded, as trans- INSTALLATION AT W. H. S. fers of ownership, in Wilmington, Middlesex, as. ... in September 1953. compared to 39 To all persons interested >n the The installation of the 1953-54 estate of Constantinos Tingus and Student Council was held in the of a year ago, and the total, for MIDDLESEX EQUIPMENT CO. 1953 is 373, compared to 325 of a estate of Co«sta»tiBoe Tins-us and high school cafeteria Thursday, Georgia F. Tineas of Vresthena, 190 • 196 MIDDLESEX ST. LOWELL TEL. MM1 October 8, 1953. Eighteen Student year ago, for the first nine months. At the same time building permits, A petition has been presented to OPEN WID. AFTERNOON-ALSO MON„ FRI, SAT. NIGHTS Council Representatives were install- ed in an impressive ceremony. for new dwelling units, in Wilming- said Court for authority to lease You Always Savt MoiMy At Middlesex Equipment Company Among those present were Mr. ton, continued at a high pace, which certain real estate of said Minors. Charles Wilkinson, state represen- latter fact was not in agreement 41. you . desire to object thereto tative, Mr. Clifford Good, Superr with the average for other sub- yOO or your attorney should file a BARGAINS intendent of Wilmington Schools, urban Boston towns, the survey stat- written appearance in said Court Mr. Bernard McMahon, principal of ed. Wilmington, occupying fourth at Cambridge before ten o'clock in • BOILERS • EATH TUBS Wilmington High School, members place in towns of less than 10,000, in the forenoon on the sixteenth day of of the faculty, and the student body the suburban area, issued permits November 1953, the return day of • OIL BURNERS • LAVATORIES Miss Beverly Rounds, mistress for 21 new dwelling units in Sep- this citation. • WATER CLOSETS of ceremonies opened the program tember 1953, compared to permits Witness, John C. Leggat, Esquire, • RADIATORS with a bible reading and the salute for 12 units in September 1952. The First Judge of said Court, this • KITCHEN SINKS to the flag. total to date is 142, and one year twenty-second day of October in • PIPE A FITTINGS After installation of representa- ago it was 110. the year one thousand nine hun- • KITCHEN CABINETS tives and the advisor to the Student Of the 25 smaller towns covered dred and fifty-three. • VALVES Council, Miss Patricia Welling*s in the survey, Hull, as usual, led John J. Butler BUY WHERE YOU GET THE MOST FOR YOUR MONEY piano selection of "Moonlight Son- the list, with 12.61 deeds per thous- Register. ata" was enjoyed by all. and population, Lynnfield was sec- O-28-N-3-10 Miss Elene Farello was re-ap- ond with 11.97, Sharon, with 9.73 pointed as advisor to the Student was third, and Wilmington, with PLUMBING Mlnd HEATING Council- 8.56 was fourth, followed by Rock- ing to find more efficient and leas Remarks were givein by Mrs. Mc- port, 8:13; Sudbury 6.94; Westwood costly methods for bringing oil to Mahon and Mr. Good, congratulat- 6.34; Canton 6.32; Wayland 6-15, Americans in ever-increasing am- ing the new members of the student Concord 6.11, Manchester 5.62, Wen- ounts. ham 5.50 and Burlington 5.10. Med- THAT PTA MEETING CHELMSFORD 12 council and wishing them a success- WILMINGTON • ful year to come. ian for the twenty five towns was We take off our hat to the people The high school ensemble ren- Burlington. DUCETTS HARDWARE who planned that PTA meeting, last Wilmington's High School team Roflte 3 • Burlington week. We have only one term for dered "The Lovliest Night 'of the Neir Now Burlington Diner suffered its third loss of the year, Year" under the direction of Miss Sou»d Wave. May Find Oil Open Evenings it - praise. when it met a high-balling Chelms- Plevock. PTA meetings are not easy to ford eleven, last Saturday, at the After this, Mr. Wilkinson, guest Industry Use* Sunday* ana) Holidays plan. We have seen the results in Wilmington Town Memorial Park. Until 10 P.M. the past Excellent programs, educa- speaker, gave an interesting speech Sound waves, unheard because * Special * Chelmsford, with four previous wins on leadership and how it pertains they are pitched so high or so low Post Moss $3.25 Bale tional, would be planned, and the to its credit, went home with their people would stay away in droves. to school government as well as to they do not register on the hum- Whist parties, and such, sometimes fifth win, by a score of 12 to 0. state and national governments. an ear, may be harnessed to drill had better attendance, but, in our Gallagher and Hall each scored The assembly was concluded with wells, pump oil, or reduce the res- a touchdown, for Chelmsford, in the the singing of the Star Spangled idual oil content of a reservoir, if McINTIRE estimation, a PTA meeting is a first quarter, with Gallagher mak- place wKere Parents and Teachers Banner. early experiments prove successful. BUS LINES, INC ing his after catching a 20 yard pass, A sonic drill, with no big mach- can talk over' mutual programs con- and Hall doing it the hard way, with REAL ESTATE ACTIVITY CHARTERED BUSES cerning education and pupils. Pos- inery in motion, gets its energy from a 75 yard run- CONTINUES the movement of mud that is cir- For All Occasions sibly something ca„ be learned, from Wilmington then tightened its 450 Main St. • Stoneham, Mass. Real estate activity, both in sales, I cuiatrd down into the well. Yet this over a whist table, but nothing m ranks, and the Chelmsford boys C. B. Mclntire ■ ST 6-13*0 relation to what was discussed last and in the building of new homes, in aC0ustic drill can smash its way scored no more. Outstanding in de- Wilmington, during the month of through solid granite as rapidly and The PTA panel was an undoubted fensive play was Frank DiPiano, September, continues at a high peak easily as an ordinary rotary bit Wilmington Half Back. according to a survey of the real cuts through soft shale. There is THE success. By discussing the problems Chelmsford, LE Hicks, Paine, of Wilmington schools broadly, estate trends by the Suffolk First also an acoustic pump which causes Prescott, LT Prescott, LG Ander- Federal Savings and Loan Associa- oil to flow out of the well with tre- many of the newcomers were son, Miller, C. Chevalier, RG Bow- brought up to date, and given a tion of Boston, released last week. mendous force. Consisting merely of REEBENACKERS ers, RT Bell, RE Gallagher, QB. a pair of weights geared to exert BUY broader understanding of the school Desmarais, LHB Corkin, Moller, building program of our town. virtical thrust as they are rotated by RHB Hall, Hardy, Chevalier, FB ;«.c No. 17813 Misc. an engine, this mechanism is at- Antiques Marcotte, Luke. The tached to the top of a string of oil Wilmington. Re Preston, RT Tes- Commonwealth of Massachusetts well tubing. It puts wave energy into Call or Writ* 51 Temple St. " • SIL-DEL • sicini, RG Fisher, C. Chinn, LG Cav- LAND COURT the tube which, in effect, reaches Reading 2-1991 Wilmington's ONLY anaugh, LT Smith, LE Nelson, QB (SEAL) down into the oil and, at 10 strokes Delicatessen Di Giralamo, LHB DePiano, RHB In Equity persecond, lifts hundreds of barrels HOT PASTROMI Berrigan, FB Rooney. To George P. Welch, Lois Vir- of oil a day. The oil industry con- Complete Lin* of New York Styl* By Periods: Chelmsford 12-0 ginia Welch, of Wilmington, in the stantly is studying and experiment- Carbonated Beverage - 0 - 0. Wilmington 0-0-0-0. y S.S. Pi*re* Product* County of Middlesex and said Com- 22 Different Flavors ,pp,Sllv*r L.k*. Wnmlnotoja Touchdowns: Gallagher, Hall. monwealth ; and to all whom it may Non-Carbonated concern: The Provident Institution H- Orange • Lemon Ad* For Savings In The Town Of Bos- 113 wTATER'S BEVERAGE CO.* Teamwork Among Industries S.TC. ton, a duly existing corporation, hav- R-U-AWAPE ? 122 Lunenburg Street MONUMENTS Crop* for Farmers ing an usual place of business in Fitchburg, Mass. Boston, in the County of Suffolk BEST BONDED GRANITES Teamwork among oil companies, BETTER WORKMANSHIP and said Commonwealth; claiming crop spraying firms, trucking con- to be the holder of a mortgage cov- TV- Most For Yew Moaoy" cerns, and specialists in the U.S. 1122 CORHAM ST. Dud *M ering real property in said Wilming- and California departments of ag- ton, in that part known as the North PARENTS LUZ BROTHERS riculture saved anxious farmers in Wilmington District, and situate on AND NEW HOME OWNERS Chapman Avenue, given by George San Joaquin Valley, California, from FOR THE a potential grass-hopper plague. In P. Welch and Lois Welch to the National Shawmut Bank of CHILDREN'S ROOM a dramatic race against time, 35,000 Boston by instrument dated Septem- pounds of a powerful insecticide ber 25, 1950, recorded with the Mid- MURALS SALLY'S ma"de by an oil company, mixed with dlesex County North District Regis- CARTOONS - ANIMALS 149,000 gallons of diesel fuel oil try of Deeds, Book 1152, Page 322, WESTERN - SPACE PATROL and held by the plaintiff by assign- Tn* PLAY ROOM - HOME BARS HANDMADE which 13 local oil companies con- ment, has filed with said court a tributed were transported by tank bill in equity for authority to fore- PKSMV HIPPO MONK OP THt Billerica Publishing Co. • DONUTS• RAREST ANIMALS ON EARTM. TO ' : 95 Bridge Street truck to strategically located air close said mortgage in the manner Grvt. vou AN ioeA or rrs sn;m i RETAIL • WHOLESALE following: by entry and possession Lowell _ Mas*. 12 VARIETIES strips where airplanes, offered at ONLV ONt-^OUfrrUHTH THISCE and exercise of power of sale. OP THL NILE HIPPOPOTAMUS. WE CATER ond DELIVER less than cost, flew into action. It If you are entitled to the benefits CHURCH • PARTIES was an emample of American free ORGANIZATIONS of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil The WILMINGTON CLEAN- CALL WO 2-2705 enterprise and know-how at work, Relief Act of 1940 as amended and ERS will always give you and is estimated to have saved mil- you object to such foreclosure you good service ... no matter RTE. 30 • 1001 MAIN ST. or your attorney should file a writ- lions of dollars worth of crops in what type cleaning work has NO. WOBURN ten appearance and answer in said to be done. We use the most the area. court at Boston on or before the modern methods and equip- thirtieth day of November 1953, or ment . . . guarantee satisfac- you may be forever barred from tion. Call anytime for free- claiming that such foreclosure is delivery service. invalid under said act. Witness, John E. Fenton, Esquire. WILMINGTON CLEANSERS 2 MINUTE SERVICE Judge of said Court this sixteenth day of October 1953. TEL.OLIVER 8-472S JOHN E. CREAMER Sybil H Holmes. 444M4/H ST WILMINGTON, MASS. Strand Building Recorder. Tel. Lowell — 7183 0-28 EVERY FRIDAY VJJBsSHT KITCHENER FARM Washing Machine Our Roadside Stand On Repair Service Some Idoas Mako Sanaa, So ... It Is Only Fair To Atiome Route 3 In Billerica Has - That The Dealers Who Do Business With Us Need Money, And The Merchandise Is Auctioned Off At A Sacrifice Far FRESHLY PICKED Below Their Cost. ROLLS and PARTS To Me This Makes Sense — See You Friday. Native Vegetables FOR ALL MAKES FRESH FRUIT •FREE DOORPRIZE FREE* HOME MADE JAMS and JELL E S Private Sales Daily 12 Noon to 8 P.M. These are exceptional bargains SWEET CIDER We Have Everything COOKING Come early, stay late. Plenty of comfortable seats, EATING You Might Need plenty of parking apace. APPLES B. LOHNES PEARS For Pickling. Reading Auction House, Inc. Ridgeway Ave. Billerica MAKE SHOPPING A PLEASURE Tel. Billerica 2432 525 Main Street, Reading on Rt. 28 REading 24)655 Few doors from Reading Theatre Open 7 Days A Week 8 A.M. - 9 P.M. THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1953 PAGE 11

be described as more, picturesque, namely "Jugs" "The Pioneers" HODSON "Powderhouse Five" and "The Ham- ISPHALT VD, RIVES and 1ARKING LOTS mms". BROS. PAINT SERVICE CENTER Powtr Rolled by 3-1/4 to 5 Ton Weight Highest average, individual, a- All Work Don* as Specified mong the men, as of Oct. 19th was BAY STATE PAINT • WALLPAPER Bob Gunderson, pinfall 281, average For Rant - Floor Sandor and Edgar • Floor Polisher CESSPOOLS and SEPTIC TANKS 93.7, Walter Stevens, pinfall 272 ave- Profattional Wall Paper Outfit vPumped and Instilled rage 907, Bernie Jansen 257 average ART SUPPLIES 85-7 and Tom Powers 252, average 164 Havon St. Next to P.O. Tal. RE 2-0060 . RICH FERTILE LOAM 84.0. Team Standings: Chapman ^^♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦aoaootV^f won 1, lost i. Sheridan won 3 lost 1: "measures only changes in prices; Hathaway won 3 lost 1; and Chase it tells nothing about changes in JOSEPH E APP won 1 lost 3. High Single was Bob the kinds and amounts of goods and Ttl. OLiv.r 1-2223 OLiv.r 14379 Gunderson, with 101. services families buy, or th« total Gladys Bickford leads the ladies, amount families spend for living, ROY'S with a 261 pinfall for three games, or the differences in living costs in and an average of 87.0. Her highest different places ... If families buy Clothes for Men & Children single is 90. Runners up are Ruth poorer or better things, or buy more SHOES • MEN • CHILDREN WILMINGTON METHODIST Ridley, pinfall 236, average 78.7; or less than they bough in 19S2, the CHURCH Betty Comey, pinfall 234, average index does not undertake to meas- Now is the time to use our The Reformation sermon will be 78.0 and Margie Lynch, pinfall 232, ure the change in their spending Lay-A-Way Plan INSURANCE preached by the Rev. Richard E. average 77.3. that results from these changes In on Christinas Toys Harding at the 9:15 and 11 .-00 a.m. Team standing, for the ladies, Oct. their level of living." Secondly, the OF ALL 19th: Jugs won one, lost 3; The worship services. His theme will be: Index cannot accurately reflect sea- Boy's and Men's "The Promises We Make." Pioneers won 4, lost 0; Powerhouse sonal changes in the prices of many Heavy Winter Jackets The Qiurch School of the Wil- Five won 3 lost 1, and The Hammms commodities nor can it quickly re- KINDS mington Methodist Church will won 0 lost 4. flect changes in buying habits. 'Just Arrived' • • • • continue to meet at 9:15 a.m. on Thirdly, an index of this kind is "Brown's" Beach Jackets Sunday Morning. THE END IN COMMUNISM One emotionally-charged ar- necessarily a complex affair, and Lewis G. Vorrilas Society of Christian Service will all many doubt if it is or is ever likely Next to Theatre - Wilmington Society of Christ ian Service will all gument used to promote gov- North Reading ernment hydroelectric develop- to be a completely dependable bar- meet on Tuesday, November 3 at ometer. Tel. 4-3867 or 4-3211 8 p.m. ment is that water is part of the In any event, it- would be some- The Woman's Society of Chris- people's heritage, and must REAL ESTATE tian Service of the Methodist will never be turned over to private thing of tragedy if large numbers hold its November meeting at the interests for exploitation. The of people again got the idea that BROKERS Church Nov. 4, 12:15 p.m. with Mr. argument is being used now in prices are in danger of running Balcom, former missionary to Alaska favor of federal or state con- away, that manufacturers and mer- as guest speaker. struction of a $400,000,000 hydro chants are cashing in on the con- CONFERENCE YOUTH project at Niagara Falls, and in sumer, and that the solution lies FEARON opposition to development by in more laws and restrictions. In PRESIDENT TO SPEAK five taxpaying, buslness-manag many fields, goods are in abundance Commercial SIGN SERVICE Edward Wynne, President of the ed utility companies which are and competition is intense at both NEON SALES A SERVICE New England Conference of the; ready to undertake the project the producing and distributing levels Investments Methodist Youth Fellowship ?"",with their own money. LOWELL 4-2S51 —and that guarantees that prices speak at the MYF meeting, Sunday The holes in the argument are will be as low as today's cost of HOMES evening, November 1 at 7 p.m. Irv- big enough to drive a locomoitve doing business will allow. ing Belbin, presidet of the local through. In the first place, the LISTINGS SOLICITED MYF, will lead the worship service, water would not be given away. and Neal Byam, Chairman of Chris- After powering the generators, "The federal government is gett- FRANK E. tian Fellowship will lead recreation It would be returned to the riv- ing out of another business that with the other members of his pro- er in unchanged form. The utili- competes with private enterprise at CARTON & CO. gram area. ties would pay a substantial sum the expense of the nation's taxpay- ROBINSON Members of this group have made for the right to use it. And they ers. It has sold the federal barge 9 SALEM ST. SOCONY lincl on the Mississippi River to a FRIENDLY SERVICE plans to attend the showing of would not make a profit on the "Martin Luther" at the Majestic water—their profit, under pub- St. Louis concern for $11,700,000 and WOBURN - 2-1261 EXPERT LUBRICATION Theatre on Saturday evening, Nov. lic regulation, would be allow- at the same time has relieved the Rto. 28 at 62 - No. Reading 14. ed only on the facilities they U.S. Treasury of the necessity for would build for utilizing the making up for an annual operating Scrapie, a foreign disease of;water and producing and distri- deficit."—Fall River (Mass.) Her- sheep, was recently reported for'buting the power. And a very ald News. the first time in this country. large part of these profits would DANA F. PERKINS It seldom affects sheep less than go to government in taxes. Commonwealth of Ma*sachusetts A SONS, INC. \ one year old because of its long Furthermore, if the argument Middlesex, ss. JIVIL ENGINEER ( incubation period. Cases usually is valid, government should own and SURVEYORS * occur in sheep two to three and control all our land, our PROBATE COURT LAND COURT SURVEYS years old with death following ores, our minerals, our forests To all persons interested in the DEVELOPMENTS f one to two months after the these are natural resources to estate of Gardner Scott late of Wil- Tkeomm 270 MAIN ST. REA. 2-0115 disease is noticed. exactly the same extent as mington in said County, deceased. Wilmington - Call OL 8-4703 water. In fact, everything we A petition has been presented to HATHAWAY ACRES BOWLING have comes directly or indirectly said Court, praying that Barbara LEAGUE from natural resources, from June Moran of Uxbridge in the Paperhanalnf - Painting The residents of Hathaway Acres, food to automobiles. So the ar- County of Worcester be appointed / FREE ESTIMATES North Wilmington, who almost con- gument can logically be extend- administratrix of said estate, with- Ceilings ■ Carpenter.Work stitute a community to themselves ed to saying that the govern- out giving a surety on her bond. ON HOUSE CALLS have a "Hathaway Acres Bowling ment should own and run every- If you desire to object thereto you NO SERVICE CHARGE League" with a men's division, and thing. or your attorney should file a writ- LESCARD & PARKER LABOR CHARGE ONLY a women's division, which meet on In other words, this is the ar- ten appearance in said Court at gument that, once accepted, can Mt. Ploasant Street WHEN WORK IS DONE Alternate Monday nights. There Cambridge before ten o'clock in North Billerlca are about 20 members to each div- end only in communism, with all the forenoon on the thirteenth day Lab. at 778 Gorham Street the human poverty, misery and Opp. Fire Station ision, who travel to Woburn to play of November 1953, the return day Tel. Billorefca 8989 on the Woburn Bowling Alleys, with tyranny that involves. of this citation- Authorized for or Lowoll 2-5271 Jordan Marsh Service the ladies and the men taking al- Witness, John C. Leggat, Esquire, ternate turns at baby-sitting at NOT A "COST OF LIVING" INDEX First Judge of said Court, this twen- TELEVISION RADIO home. tieth day of October in the year one The men, have four teams, named The Bureau of Labor's Consumer LABORATORIES Price Index, which is commonly thousand nine hundred and fifty- after four of the streets in Hatha- three. Office - 53 Central Street way Acres - Chapmans, Sheridans and erroneously called the "Cost DIAL LOWELL 6597 of Living Index," hit a new high John J. Butler, Register. Hathaways and Chases, while the 0-28-N-4-11 ladies have chosen names which can' recently. At the same time, as any consumer knows, the prices of many items^in general use, running a wide gamut from beet to used cars, have HIKE'S FRUITLAND been substantially below the levels FRESH FRUIT AND VEGETABLES DAILY of a year or more ago. NOTICE WE SPECIALIZE IN ORANGES This confusion results from var- To Landlords ious factors. First of all, as the List Your Rentals 4 Doz. Oranges ONLY $1.00 Bureau itself points out, the Index With Us Trailer Court Route 38 Tewksbury Absolutely No Charge BILLERICA Tenants Thoroughly Oak Street - North Billerica Checked Phone Billerica 8148 MODEL CLEANERS • * PRESSING and CLEANING New and Used Trailer* LEARN TO DRIVE AT MURPHYS' Bought and Sold 24 HOUR SERVICE REAL ESTATE Rt. 38 Wil. No. Wo. Line Trailer Space For Rest Andover Rd.-Billerica Canter Trailer* on Coniigmaaent OTY HALL WO 2-0469-M

DRIVING SCHOOL ED'S AUTO SERVICE TEL LOWELL 7382 Boa ton Rd, Pinehur.t, Bill. 8258 • DUAL - CONTROLLED CARS • STANDARD USED CARS Modern and AUTOMATIC SHIFT • DIRECTIONAL BOUGHT aad SOLD COMPLETE WRECK WORK LIGHTS • COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE Repairs - AccMtoriea • fynanced Real Estate co. |48t Merrimack Street — Near City Hell Square E»«T Finance Plan Sales - Service - Appraisals TAYLOR FARMS COOMBS ♦ ♦ 4> Full Course Meals Served From 11:30 A.M. - 11:30 PJrt. FURNITURE CO. Residential Designing — Engineering

LIQUORS Furniture & Rugs ♦ 4> 4> Opaa tie* a.m. to ttM p- m. Our Own lee Croam • Ice Croam Sandwich Bar 50 YEARS IN V. A. Plans and Specifications Wholesale Business WINDOW SERVICE 4*4 MiddUaei Ann. ♦ 4> • Cones • FrancesFrapp** - SodasSoda* - Sundaes TELEPHONE 851 Main Straet — Tawksbury Rt. 33 616 Main St. Tewksbury OLiver 8-4511 Tel. Lowell 3-7744 w PAGE 11 THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1913

COURSES AND TEACHERS AT RAPHAEL P. M.KENWCIC AND WINCHESTER HOSPITAL V.F.W. BENEFIT WHIST NOVEMBER 4TH ADULT EVENING SCHOOL WILLIAM T. CRONIN NEWS The Wilmington Evening Adult REGISTERED AT Mr. Harlan L. Paine, Jr., the ad- Th Lafionati. of School, now in its second year, has WENTWORTH INSTITUTE ministrator of Winchester Hospital, has just attended a course condoct- tka Naa-EIUworth Po.t, 245S, VFW hu boom sorioosly injured in am a total of 373 different persons, en- Students from 12 states and Can- rolled, with the number of students „ ed by the American College of Hoc- |w M»(wifW plans for a ha«-a U- n •fit wkiat, to u.ut • Wilminfton Many fin* pi ill haye bean don- in classes being 473. The apparant SLfiJ^ttS! S t?' "o^V'»> Administrators in Cooperation >'• family, tka n*. of which ated, and plan* ara underway for a difference is explained by the fact "really bang-up time", according to that some persons have enrolled for ment by'H. & Beatty. pre.id- ^^^^ J^SS^ member, of the Peat. two classes, Harold A. Wittredge, director of the school, has stated. The benefit whi.t will bo held in "states represented in the student J^' aspects of hospital administrm- Pupils are attending, from towns body indude . , Wis-; J.*?"- "counting and medical records- the VFW Hall, on Main .treat, at other than Wilmington, in nearly consin, New Jersey, New York, Penn- The final *fternoon was devoted to 8 pj». o> November 4th. every one of the thirteen classes, sylvank. New Hampshire, Maine,'P™""'rou.nd table discussion. A- SNOW and teachers, too, come from sur- ffiSU, Rhode Island, ,er- Jo-t onejmmg-edgpaaladm.n^- rounding towns, in addition to Wil- mont and Massachusetts. Two stu- INDUSTRIES AND mington. dents are registered from Canada. coarse from October 5th to 9th. MERCHANTS BACKING Personnel of the evening school The second course to train hos- COMMUNITY FUND DRIVE Nine major programs are included ii:- in the comprehensive curriculum at pital aides began at the Hospital on SUITS A number of local industries and Mrs. Pauline Grant, Wilmington, Wentworth Institute covering 34 October 19th, under the direction of Rug Hooking. Mrs. Mary Mullec, R.N. Thirteen ARE OUR merchants have already contributed technical occupational specializations Miss Janet Lewis, Arlington, Clo- including air conditioning, aircraft, students are enrolled, coming from to the 1953 fund drive, of the Wil- thing. mechanics, architectural construc- Wakefield, Woburn, Tewksbnry, BUSINESS mington Community Fund, chairman Mrs. Whilemina DeLisle, Wil- tion, carpentery, diesel engines, draf- Melrose and Winchester. The grad- FINEST SELECTION Tim Cunningham has announced. mington, Rood preparation. ting, electronic design, laboratory uation date is November 30th, at Mrs. W. G. Schmidt, Billerica, which time the Aides will receive LOWEST PRICES Among those who have contributed, technicians, machine work, masonry, Rug Braidinn) steam engineering, surveying, radio, caps and diplomas, and will then he lists the Stop & Shop, Gorins of Mrs. Arlinc M. Smith, Methuen, refrigeration, television and weld- take their places as part of the nurs- DOWN Woburn, The Reading Co-Operative Decorative Ware ing. ing team at the Hospital. SJDO Bank, H. P. Hood and Sons, First Leon Tinal, Wakefield, Furniture This is Wentworth Institute's foi refinishing. ty-ninth academic year. National Stores, Raffi & Swanson Mrs. Dorothy Lafionatis, Wil- SATURDAY WORK National Polychemicals, General William F. Cronin, of Page Court, Holds Your Purchase mington, Clothing. Billerica, has enrolled at the Went- WANTED Foods, Louie's Oil Service, Hughes Mrs. Phylis Willis, Wilmington, worth Institute, Evening Session. Accountant Desires Work, Sat- Fabric painting. Use Our LAY-AWAY Lumber Company of Billerica and Raphael P. McKenwcic Sylian rd., urdays. Accounting or other Carl & Marie's. The list, Mr. Cun- Miss Pauline Leiter, Wilmington, Pinehurst Billerica, has enrolled at II AU'C BARGAIN Americanization. work. Jsmes B. Moors, Hatha- ningham has stated, is still incom- the Wentworth Institute in a Car- A L A il J CENTER Miss Thespina Triantafilou, Wo- —„,,.''and Building"Course! way Acres. OL 8-3279. 314 Main St., Wotrarn plete, and will be fully announced burn, Shorthand. ' at a later date. Anthony DeLuca, Woburn, Driver BOB EMMONS TO SPEND a.. Education. CHRISTMAS IN CANNES, Harry Mellett, Stoneham, Uphol- FRANCE WHIST PARTY stering. Miss Irene Sharp, Wilmington, Robert Emmons, of Glendale Cir- Every Tuesday Evening Typing. cle has written home to his family Mrs. Arthur Faulkner, Reading, to say that the USS Worcester, on 8:15 o'clock Clothing. which he is serving, will be at Can- Lester Smith, Wilmington, Custod- nes, France, at Christmas. The Wor- SCHOOL HALL cester left the US the first of Sep- ian. Goold St. • Waksf ield Harland Whittredge, Wilmington, tember, for the Mediterannean, via Principal. the Arctic circle, and Bob wrote his $25 TOP AWARD folks to reassure them that the story $10 SECOND AWARD LADIES HANDBAG FOUND of a collision, involving the Worces- ter, was to be greatly discounted, as $5 THIRD AWARD ' A ladies handbag, black, found by it appeared in some "stateside" pap- Many Other Prixes a passerby, at Perry's corner, last ers. Thursday, was turned over to the First calling port lor the Wor- II Wilmington police, and subsequent- cester was Cagliari, Sardinia, after ly turned over to the owner, a Med- which it will go to Greece and Tur- ford woman. key, and then to the Riviera, for Christmas. This is Bob's third trip Cozy Gift Shoppe MALICIOUS DAMAGE ON to the Mediterannean, with the US 859 Main Street NORTH STREET Navy- Everett Littlehale, North street, Now Open had his property damaged for the HEARING ON B A M FARE Gifts and Cards third time, in recent weeks, by van- CHANCES dalism, on Oct. 23rd. Littlehale has For Every Occasion. reported that two windows, plastic, Notice' has been issued that the towb*VcV«»danelec^ligM^ P^lic Utilities will 9 «.m. to 9 bulb taken, in the latest case. | h°>° a public hearing at its hearing , room. Room 166, State House, Bos- Monday thru Saturday / ton, on Thursday Nov. 5, at 10 a.m. Prop. Betty Sheehan Commonwealth of Massachusetts on the petition of the Boston and OL 8-2493 Middlesex, ss. Maine Railroad for permission to PROBATE COURT readjust fares. To all persons interested in the estate of Catherine J. Justice late of Wilmington in said Coun- CUSTOM KITCHEN ty, deceased. CABINETS A petition has been presented • to said Court for probate of a STORE and OFFICE certain instrument purporting to LANTZ & TILTON FIXTURES be the last will of said deceased ■Ncosrosans DETAIL MILLWOHK by David L. Martin of Wilming- 209 Main St. ton in said County, praying that he, or some other suitable per- SToneham 6-*458 son, be appointed administrator with the will annexed of said estate. If you desire to object thereto you or your attorney should file a written appearance in said Court at Cambridge before ten o'clock in the forenoon on the thirtieth day of October 1953, the return day of this citation. Witness, John C. Leggat, Es- Suire, First Judge of said Court, iis sixth day of October in the year one thousand nine hundred Special Offer Now and fifty-three. John J. Butler, Register. BENEVENTO SAND & GRAVEL ON FAMOUS PHILCO 0-14-21-28

Golden Grid Television Commonwealth of Maoachuaetta. SPECIAUZING EN FILL Middlesex, ss- Concrete Sandg Roofing Gravel PROBATE COURT. Plaster Sand • Gravel Stone The longer you wait, the leas To all persons interested in the Pea Stone • Trailer Service chance you'll have of getting estate of Gilbort M. Laito otherwise known as Gilbert Laito late of Wil- Bulldozer. • Shovels for Rent top allowance for your old, mington in said County, deceased. Plant Located Off Roata tZ - North Reading small screen TV set. Trade now fid***. A petition has been presented to Home Office-10 Dana St • Lynn 5-1494 TELEPHONE for this Philco 4002 with new said Court for probate of a certain OLiver 8-4762 to** instrument purporting to be the last super-size 21" picture. There's will of said deceased by Thomaa no obligation—get our offer. Laite of Washington in the District of Columbia praying that he be ap- NEW pointed executor thereof, without LOW PRICE giving a surety on his bond. EASY TERMS! If you desire to object thereto you or your attorney should file a PAUL D. EMMONS written appearance in said Court at Cambridge before ten o'clock in the REAL ESTATE forenoon on the fifth day of Novem- ber 1953, the return day of this cit- ation. 397 Salem St. RUDERMAN'S Witness, John C. Leggat, Esquire, First Judge df said Court, this Gould and Haven Sts. eighth day of October in the year North Wilmington one thousand nine hundred and fif- OL 8-4849 Reading — Rea. 2-1217 J Mass. ty-three. John J. Butler, Register. 0-14-21-28 ""

THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1953 PAGE 11 1 1 '■■ ■ w^an| M to be the Keeper of the Buck- MR. AND MRS. ROGER C. BUCK I skin for" the month of October. ( The boys worked on their In- J dian costumes for the Friday ) jnight Pack Meeting. Pack 58, Den 2, had its regu- lar meeting at the home of Den Mother, Miss Mary Bowen, 100 Main street, yesterday afternoon at 3:30 p.m. The meeting was opened by Den Chief Thomas Bowen and Color bearer was Jackie "Gushing, with Color guard Paul Lynch. The Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag and the Cub Scout promise and the Law of the Pack was recited. Scribe Richard Page collected dues. The Den completed their costumes and plans for the Den Pack Meeting to be held Thurs- E.»** -... day evening at 7 p.m. at the Sil- ver Lake Betterment Hall. All parents are requested to be pre- sent. A thank you was sent to Miss Ann Hogan of Employees WHISTLER'S MOTHER Liability, Milk street, Boston, Mr. and Mrs. Roger C. Buck, pictured at their home, 68 High who presented the Den with an street on the occasion of their fiftieth wedding anniversary, last Pictured at the rug exhibition, last Friday, in the Congrega- American Flag. Cubs present tional church is Mrs. Samuel Thorpe with a rug made by one of were: Ass't. Den Mother, Pau- Sunday (Polaroid photo in a minute by the Wilmington Crusader) her pupils, Mrs. Rodney Buck. The rug is an exact duplicate, in line Curtin, William Curtln, Ri- chard Page, Jackie Bowen, Wil- Several hundred well wishers were colors, of the famous Currier & Ives lithograph, "Home for Thanks- liam Wendell, Paul Lynch, Wil- present, Sunday, at the home of Mr. ed from five of the original members giving." Other ladies, present at the exhibition, suggested the liam Nolan, Roger Creamer, Ja- and Mrs. Roger Cleaveland Buck, of the Wilmington Congregational name for this photo, "Whistler's Mother4, while it wu being taken. mes McCort, Jackie Ward, Ray- High street, to help the couple cel- church, Daniel Killam, Ephriam (Polaroid photo in a minute by Wilmington Crusader.) monds Wells, Daniel McKay. ebrate their fiftieth anniversary. Buck, Samuel Eames, Deacon John The next meeting of the Den Mr- Buck was born in North Wil- Harnden and Deacon James Thomp- will be on Tuesday, November 3. mington, not far from his present son. His middle name, Cleaveland, is home, and is the son of the late the name of an early Woburn fam- DAV TURKEY WHIST LITTLE LEAGUE AUXILIARY TO MEET TOMORROW PROPOSED CHANGES Edward Buck of North Wilmington ily from which descended President The Committee in charge of IN B A M PARES and Melrose. He is a descendant, in Grover Cleveland. the DAV Turkey Whist party to A meeting of the Wilmington the 11th generation, from William Mrs. Buck is the daughter of the be held Saturday evening No- Little League Auxiliary has been The Boston & Maine Railroad Buck, who emigrated to Newtowne late Capt. and Mrs. Jesse. Ames vember 14th under the auspices called for tomorrow evening, at has proposed a change in fares, (Cambridge) in 1635 aboard the En- Wyman of Melrose, and through the home of Mrs. Carl Backman, which will affect Wilmington terprise, Capt. Robert Lee. Roger them is descended from the Wyman, of the DAV Auxiliary No. 106, commuters and which proposed at 60 Grove avenue, met at the Chestnut street The meeting Buck, son of William, was the first Pierce and Richardson families all home of Mrs. Adeline Riley and will begin at 8 p.m. change is scheduled to be heard of his family to live in Wilmington, early settlers of Woburn. completed their plans. Many in an appeal in the State House, and the present Mr. Buck is the Mrs. Maurice L (Beatrice) Walsh WEINBERG'S TO REPEAT on November 5th. turkeys, chickens and fruits are first <° bear ,hat name since that i of Wakefield, and Mrs. Robert W. HALLOWEEN CONTEST The new rate is beneficial to tne original Roger. Mr. Buck is al- (Barbara) Adams, of Reading ass- to be given as prizes for the patrons of the railroad who live high scorers. Mrs. Riley is chair- Weinberg-s Department store, so a descendant of many other early isted their parents in receiving on Main street, is to repeat its over a distance of fifteen miles, guests- Attending also were the man of the committee and will according to the railroad. Three Wilmington and Woburn families, be assisted by Mary Sottile, Mary contest of last yaw, during among whom can be named Sgt. four young grandsons, Edward ana which children of Wilmington types of tickets are to be issued, Starr, Eleanor Sullivan, Char- which will be changed in price, Abraham Jaquith and Peter Corne- Robert Walsh and John and Robert lotte Duggan, Bertha Allen, are invited to come to the store ille, Hugenots who settled in what Adams. and draw pictures, using soap while a fourth ticket price, that Blanche Carter, Ann Currier and of the single ride round trip will is now West Wilmington, and Rich- Miss Amy Buck, of Melrose only Esther Kelly. on the store windows. The Hal- ard Harnden, who made his home in loween contest starts this Friday remain unchanged. sister of Mr. Buck, was in charge A 12 ride ticket, which will be 1665 across the street from Mr. and lasts until Saturday noon. Buck's present home. He is descend- of the guest book. WOMEN'S CLUB Three prominent Wilmington signed by the owner, and can RUMMAGE SALE OCT. 28-29 be used by him and any com- residents will be the Judges of panion traveling with him will the drawings, and prizes are to be issued by the railroad. This posal is only for the Common- A rummage sale, by the Wil- be awarded. wealth of Massachusetts. If the mington Women's Club will be The contest, this year, will be ticket will be good for one railroad finds that this new pro-, held on Central street, Lowell divided into two classifications. month, and will cost $4.80 in gram is successful, they hope to on October 28 and 29. Members Wilmington, $5.10 at North Wil- One class will be for children mington and Silver Lake. The extend it to other states, the rail- of the club are asked to please between the ages of 11 and 13, road has stated. leave any donations at the Shoe- and another separate contest old price of 12 ride tickets was craft shop in Wilmington square. 6.13 at Wilmington and North will be for children 10 years old Wilmington and Silver Lake at or younger. Every child must $6.53. register in the store before he There will be no change in or she is eligible. There are no the price of the 46 ride monthly other qualifications. ticket, but changes will be in the Make this Holidq Dinner Drawings may be made on regulations for these tickets, if Friday or Saturday, the store the proposal is accepted by the a Week Ahead ot Time! has announced. Those who make state. The old custom of deposit- their drawings on Friday are ad- ing the ticket with the railroad vised to come down to the store will be abandoned, it has been on Saturday morning and check stated. This has been planned be- to see that the drawing has not cause of extensive abuses which been marred in any way before the railroad discovered, in which the deadline. patrons were getting 12 months of rides for 11 months of fares. CUB SCOUT NEWS Under the regulations the tick- DR. GILES ANNOUNCES Pack 56, Wilmington Cub ets may be deposited only in OPENING OF OFFICE Scouts, will have a Halloween cases of illness, certified by phy- Dr. Arthur H. Giles, Podiatrist- party (strictly for local Indians) sicians. In such cases the rail- at Camp Forty Acres, Friday Chiropodist, son of Mr. and Mrs. toad will cither refund the fare, Walter H. Eaton of 35 Andover evening. All Indians have been or extend the ticket, as it finds asked by the Cub Master to road, Billerica Center, has an- best, after the patron has re- nounced the opening of his of- bring their best war whoops covered from his illness. with them for the council fire, fice for the practice of Podiatry- A new type of ticket is to be Chiropody at 10 Andover road, which will take place in the sold, according'to the proposal early evening. Billerica Center. Dr. Giles is a of the railroad, a 20 ride ticket, graduate of Howe High School, fanitowoc Den 1, at its meeting last sold to one individual for one DR. SIMON BACDIGIAN Thursday, elected John Amato Clark School, Hanover, N.H., and month. This ticket will cost $7.68 ANNOUNCES OPENING OF the Massachusetts School of at Wilmington, and $7.96 at OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE Chiropody, Boston. For two HOME North Wilmington and Silver OF OPTOMETRY Commonwealth of MaatachtuetU years he has interned at the FREEZER Lake. New England Foot Clinics and Middlesex, ss. The petition of the Boston & The announcement by Dr. Simon Bagdigian of the establishment of at present Dr. Giles is a clini- PROBATE COURT. Maine has been filed with the cian in the Podiatry Clinic of the To Wen

Lt Robert F. Dexter, H. A. Hadley, ET3, USN Gilbert A. Madore, SERVICEMEN Co. A, 10th Engr. Bn, 3rd Inf. USS Liddle APD 60, O Div. (address unknown at present) Div. FPO, New York, N.Y. In accordance with the annual Robert Bourassa, APO 468, San Francisco, Calif. Pfc Brownell K. Malone, custom of the Wilmington Cru- (present address unknown) John P. Harvey, RA 11248656 sader, a list, believed to be cor- Joseph F. Doherty, RS, USN, Galley, Fasron, 121, G. Co. A.S.A. Stu. Bn, rect and up to date, is herewith Donald R. Caio, USS Cambria, FPO, New York, N.Y. Fort Devens, Mass. Coast Guard Trng Cntr. FPO, New York, N.Y. published of the addresses of all Groton, Conn. S-Sgt William G. Harvey, Lt. Cmdr. Albert Marfleet, USN Wilmington men and women in A-2c James E. Doucette, USMC 539399 USS Northampton, the service. This list has been ex- Cpl. Fred D. Cain, 814th Oper. Sqdn. Falrchild AFB Trailer Housing Area FPO New York, N.Y. tensively corrected during the Btry C, 8th Trng Bn, AAA RTC, Fairchild, Washington. 162 Mar. Camp Trgn. Center Fort Bliss, Texas. 29 Palms, Calif. A-lc Albert R. Manson, last week, as a result of the ad- Sgt. Robert F. Drew, USAF Hq. Sqdn, Sec. FAF, dresses printed at that time. George W. Calnan, USN, (new address coming) Harold R. Hitchcock, Lt. (Jg) Mitchell AFB,' New York. Printing of this list is accom- (no address at present time) USN. plished through the co-operation A-3c William Duggan, UP 45, Box 19 PFC Charles Martino, USMC, of Wilmington Post 136, Ameri- John R. Campbell. USN, 28th Periodic Maint, Sqdn, Coco Solo, Canal Zone. can Legion, which is helping the S-2-11 1st Marine Div. FMF, (now stationed in Boston) Ellsworth AFB, FPO, San Francisco, Calif. Wilmington Crusader to send the Rapid City, South Dakota. Pvt Joan R. Hodgdon, WAC, home town newspaper to the Pfc Thomas Canelas. 5017 ASU, WAC Det S-Sgt. Roger C. MaskeU, boys and girls in the service. In US 51180443 Bernard Eaton, Ft Leonard Wood, Missouri. a few instances, names appear- AF 111 704 61 Co. B, 841st Engr. Avn. Bn, USS Hale, DD 642, Headquarters ing in privately paid for sub- APO 64, San Francisco, Calif. FPO, New York, N.Y. S-Sgt John L Houlihan, scriptions appear. Air Rescue Service, 2001st AACS, Sqd. Washington, D.C. This list will not be printed Cpl. George Carey, Pvt Donald Eaton, APO 729, Seattle, Washington. Slain this year, but any indivi- 1013 ASU, I Co. Co. F, 8th Cav. Regt Pvt Lawrence Massone, Jr. u*i corrections of addresses Fort Devens, Mass. APO 201, San Francisco, Calif. William R. Hughson, which comes to the attention of D-A Radio Trans, Stat. WRH (USN) 3rd Div. Print Shop Woodbridgc, Virginia. this newspaper will, of course, Chester Carpenter, Edward J. Edwards, HM1, USN, USS Tidewater, AD 31, be printed. 1st Div. USS McCaffrey, USS Kiowa, ATF 72, FPO, New York, N.Y. A-2c Edward D. Matheson, FPO New York, N.Y. FPO, New York, N.Y. 11th Comm. Maint. Sqdn, Lt Cmdr. William Allen, USN, Lt C. W. Ingalls, Comfair, . Erding Air Depot Paul N. Carpenter, John J. Ella, Lt (jg) USN, 81st Cml S.G. Co. APO 207, New York, N.Y. F.P.O. San Francisco, Calif. Navy 103, Gen. Delivery, Telephone Officer APO 179, New York, N.Y. FPO, New York, N.Y. US Naval Amphibious Base CpL J. H. McAuliffe, Ronald D. Anstey, (Home Soon) Little Creek, Virginia. Lt George A. Janes, USS Vulcan, Newport, R.I. RA 11088037 Co. 5, BTG, SCRTC, COTH Div, 224th Inf. Regt Richard J. Carpenter, Charles F. Emmons, SA, USN, Camp Gordon, Georgia. APO 6, San Francisco, Calif. Elmo Anstey, Fasron 104, Box 230 453-4043 USS Yellowstone, AD 27, FPO New York, N.Y. F.T. School 1-54 A-2c Lawrence Juergens, USAF, FPO New York, N.Y. Al McCormack. USAF, Serv. Schl. Cmd. USNTC Base Finance, McGuire AFB, (presently stationed in Boston) Sgt John N. Carter, Bainbridge, Md. Trenton, New Jersey. Sgt Robert Arsenault, Box 254,, Truro, Mass. Robert O. Emmons, SHZ, USN Pvt. John McGilvary, Hq. Sqdn, 301st Bomb Wing, SFC Robert H. Kelley, Barksdale, . USS Worcester, S.S. Div. 38th Inf. Regt Service Co. A-3 Michael Castellano, FPO, New York, N.Y. 8234th Army Unit APO 248, San Francisco, Calif. 464 Instal. Sqdn. APO 503, San Francisco, Calif. John Babine, RA 11265704 Lawson AFB, Pvt William J. Fabiano, A-lc R L. McHugh, Det 4, C 1277 AS-N Fort Benning, Georgia. Pvt Ronald E. Kelley, Camp Kilmer, New Brunswick, Co. A, 47th Inf. Regt. 3412 Tech. Tng. Sqdn, Box 400 Fort Dix, New Jersey. Co. C. 14th Inf. Regt Keesler AFB, Mississippi. New Jersey Irving Chamberlain, EM3, USN APO 28, San Francisco, Calif. E. Div. USS Cascade, AD 16, CpL Carl A. Backman, Alexander Fairweather, BM3, Lt Augustus McLaughlin, FPO, New York, N.Y. USS Howard W. Gilmore, AS 16 PFC Robert A. Kerr, USMC. RA 11223810 Bcks 570, MAD, NAATC, (address unknown at present) 358 CR Co., Fort Bragg, N.C. Navy Yard, Boston, Mass. Lt H. P. Chinn, USN Jacksonville, Florida. James J. McLaughlin, USS Yellowstone, AD 27, A-2c George R. Faulkner, (address unknown at present) Knute Backman, FPO, New York, N.Y. Augustine J. Kobylis, FC3, USN Co. 274, 11th Batt 1st Regt Hq. & Hq. Sqdn, 60th ABG Box 119, APO 57, New York, N.Y. 2nd Div. USS Chuire, ARU 1 Sgt Leslie E. McLaughlin, USNTC John A. Chinn, EM3, USN FPO, San Francisco, Calif. Bainbridge, Maryland 73rd Sig Co. (WE.W.-4) Sig C. USS Sabine, AD 25, CpL F. J: Fentross. Fort Monmouth, N.J. FPO, New York, N.Y. John La Crota, PNSN, USN, A-3c Lionel M. Baldwin, Co. I, 7th Inf. Regt. 3rd Inf. Div. APO 468, San Francisco, Calif. PH School, Class 7-52, S-Sgt I. P. McNicoll, 519 Material Section, Corp. William P. Chisholm, Serv. Schl Command, Suffolk County AFB, Bainbridge, Maryland. - 3346th Student Squadron West Hampton Beach, L.I., N.Y. Co. B, 1262 ASU, Reception Cen- Pvt Robert Finn, USMC, Box 5542-A, Chanute Field ter, Fort Dix, New Jersey. PR 275, D Co., 5th Reg. Tr. Joseph Landry, Illinois. A-3c Daniel J. Ballantine, Bn, MCRD, Box 117 Ronald D. Clements, AE3, USN, Parris Island. S.C. Armed Services Police Detach. T-Sgt Everett McQuaid, Fasron 77, Navy 510, USN Gun Factory, 393rd Bomb Sqdn, 509th 3640th Supply Sqdn. FPO New York, N.Y. Washington, DC. Laredo AFB, Texas David S. Finney, MRS, USN, Bomb Wing, ADVON, A Div. USS Iowa, BB 61, APO 334, San Francisco, Calif. Pvt Raymond Clifford, FPO, New York, N.Y. A-3 Cadet Rene LaRivee, Jr Alfred A. Balkua, 4th Base PO. Av Cad PO, Box 129, (enroute US from ) Sgt John Meade, APO 403, New York, N.Y. Capt Fred J. Fish, HarUngton AFB, (address unknown) Harllngton, Texas. William Balkus, 443rd AAA, AW-Bn, (sp) Guy C. Clinch, FT 3, APO 635, New York, N.Y. Domenic F. Medico, (on way home) USS Sigourney, DD 643, William Lascelles, RM3, USN. FPO, San Francisco, Calif. Com. Trans. Div. 21, USCG Cutter "Cook Inlet" Mathias B. Bedell, 900-56-55, USN Sgt. Lawrence M. Foley, State Pier, Portland, Maine. Military Manager, Club 86, FPO, New York, N.Y. NATTC, Bks. 585, Jacksonville, Maj. John T. Cochrane, (Continued on Page 15) Florida VMP, H & C Sect Hq. Sqdn. 4430, Air Base Wing APO 777, New York, N.Y. IIS* Lepore, ADAN, USN, Langdon AFB, Virginia. VR8, Navy No. 943, Lloyd W. Belbin, SN, USN, FPO, San Francisco, Calif. WHERE QUALITY AND USS Wisconsin, BB64 Sgt. Robert B. Foye, USAF Cpl. Donald R. Coe, 39th Bomb Sqdn, Walker AFB, SERVICE RULES FPO San Francisco, Calif. RA 1112459-282 Roswell, New Mexico. Cpl. Frederick L. Leverone, Co. D. 56 Amph Tn Trk Bn, ER 11240947 ' GRAIN FEED PFC John J. Burke, APO 59, New York, N.Y. 523rd QM Subs Depot Co. Btry C, 8th Trng Bn, Sgt. David P. Frizzell, 4727 N. 11th Ave. Utah General Depot U.S.C. Products AAA, RTC, Fort Bliss, Texas H3c Everett N. Cole, Jr. Phoenix, Arizona. Ogden, Utah Box 352, 3339RD St. Op. Sheet Reck - Rock L.rht C. A. Bousefield, Scott AFB, Illinois. Cpl. Eddie Froton, USMC, Sgt Frederick J. Lilly, USAF, Co. C, 172nd Inf. Regt 43rd Div. Serv. Stock "B", Bushey Park * INSULATION * APO 112, New York, N.Y. (present address unknown) Pvt. Glen E. Connolly, 7532 M & S Sqdn, ' Ctrnont - Cinder Blocks 1st Pltn. Co. 12, TSESS APO 125, New York. N.Y. Sgt. Alvin E. Blaisdell A-3C Harold Fuller, USAF P Flu# LMn Camp Gordon, Georgia. 1932nd A.A.C.S. Sqd. "SiFiroplaco 'f* • Accessories 9 53 Court Avenue, APO 677, New York, N.Y. William P. Long, Benning Park, Columbus, Ga. A-2c John D. Cosman, Jr. USS Timmerman, EDD 828 Det. 40, 20th AWS Sq. FPO New York, N.Y. PFC D, Blaisdell, Cpl. Robert H. Fuller, Lino of Plastic Freezer Bogs Box 288, APO 73-1, Enroute US from Korea Hq. & Hq. Co, 26th Inf. Regt San Fransisco, Calif. Pvt Walter Lyons, APO 1, New York, N.Y. Arthur F. Gagnon, FN, USN, 8603 AAU, A-B Carol Costello, WILMINGTON Cpl. Donald A. Blake, USS Antietam, CVA 36, B Div. APO 331, San Francisco, Calif. Box 552, 3594th Flying Sqdn, Box 418, 3408th Stu. Sqdn. WAF, FPO, New York, N.Y. Keesler AFB, Mississippi Donald F. MacDonald, Nellis AFB, Las Vegas, Nevada. George Gagnon, GRAIN & BUILDING Richard E. Crispo, (address unknown at present) T-Sgt Charles S. Blake 3625 Motor Vehicle Sqdn. (stationed near Boston) Tyndall AFB, Florida. MATERIALS CO. Hq. & Hq. Sq. 5th AF (Advance) C. H. MacLean, BT1, USCG, Wilmington Center APO 970, San Francisco, Calif. Charles Crotty, HEAN, USN Pvt. Paul Gearty, USCGC Humboldt WAVP372 Now Tol. No. OL 94741 Ens. William Buck, USN, RA 21-290-249 Navy 138, Boston,' Mass. ETR NAS, Patuxent River, Hq ASA Pacific, 8621 AAU, Box 1129, Naval P. G. School Maryland Monterey, Calif. APO 500, San Francisco, Calif. Lee Bull, AA, USN, Albert Cuoco, Teleman 2c, Robert Gordon, 5 and 10c Store Line Maints. Corry Field, USS Salem. FPO New York, N.Y USS Seacat, SS 339. Pensacola, Fla. FPO, New York, N.Y. $1.00 and up Km236miam Dalt°n' USMCR- BRESS Cpl. Robert E. Gorman, Daniel Bull, GM3, USN, Mag. 12, Mabs 12, Trans. 3rd Div. USS Des Moines, CA 134 Co. B, 245th Tank Bn, 1st MAR-AIR-FMF-Pac. APO 86, San Francisco, Calif. FPO, New York, N.Y. FPO San Francisco, Calif. TO THE MANY PEOPLE OF WILMINGTON AND Roger J. Brophy, SN, USN Robert S. Goss, A-2c USAF, A-lc Frank Darling, Jr. Prov. Sqdn. Flte E. C. H. B. No. 3 (new address coming) VICINITY-THANKS FOR YOUR WARM WEL- FPO, New York, N.Y. APO 309-1, San Francisco, Calif. Pfc. John R. Dec, Pvt. James H. Gray, COME. WE WILL CONTINUE OUR POLICY OF Arthur J. Brewster, HM, H. S. Co. Rec. Cas. Bn, US Naval Hospital, Co. L, 3rd Batt, 278th Inf. MCTTE BIdg 21-1-5 APO 81, New York, N.Y. FINE MERCHANDISE AT MODERATE COSTS. San Diego, Calif. Camp Del Mar, Calif. M-Sgt James H. Grider, James W. Brennan, Pvt. John J. Deeley, Pay Us A Visit. Inspect Our Store. Co. H, 223rd Inf. Regt. Hq. Sq. 43 A.B. Group (present address unknown) Davis Monthan AFB, APO 6, San Francisco, Calif. Tuscon, Arizona. Bosn Joseph Del Torto, USCG New Merchandise Arriving Daily. Carl W. Butler, SA, USN, Pvt. Joseph P. Grinley, Jr. USS Flying Fish, USN Sub Base, US Coast Guard Academy, Co. H. 31st Inf. Regt, 446 • 448 Main St. — Next to Theatre — Wilmington New London, Conn. New London, Conn. APO 7, San Francisco, Calif. THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WgpNESDAY, OCTOBERJ8, MM PAGE IS

ADDRESSES OP PFC Kenneth Poole, Robert W. Soule, A3c, F. H. Ward, WORKERS CETTIHC 3rd Bn, 14th AC, Co. G. 1106 Boy lor Street; Service Craft, Naval Powder I PAYMENTS i SERVICEMEN AND WOMEN APO 46, New York, N.Y. Witchita Falls, Texas. Factory, Indian Head, Maryland. Over three million retired work- (Continued from p»fe 14) A-lc Alexander E. Quandt Pvt Rufus Stevens, er* are BOW getting old-age insur- 810 Inst. Sqdn, 810th AB. Co. C. 1st Spcl Trp. Bn, SFC William L. Weaver, ance payments. The three million Cpl. Peter C. Medico, Grp. Box 58, Fort Benning, Ga. ivy Tank Co, 7th Inf Regt, mark was reached during July, Miss Army Aviation School Briggs AFB, El Paso, Texas. 3rd Inf. Div. F.ilrel Eliopoulos, manager >f the Fort Sill, Okla. Pvt. N. L. Stewart, San Francisco, Calif. Lowell social security office, sa:d S-Sgt Arthur Renaud, ASAF, Co. B, 8th Inf. Regt today. Frederick Melvln, 1631st ABS, APO 34, New York, N.Y. SFC Woodrow L. Weaver, The number of retired workers Co. K, 350th Inf. Regt. . APO 202, New York, N.Y. Det CEYD, 8056 AU on the benefit rolls increased by APO 641, New York, NY. Pvt Stanley Stewart, APO 503, i.. almost One million during the last Cpl. William E. Rich, USMC, (address unknown at present) San Francisco, Calif. two years. In contrast, more than A-3c William B. Merrill, (address unknown at present) eleven years had passed after the 85th WHSE Sqdn, Depot, James F. Stone, A-2c, Pvt. Willis B. Whalen, beginning of monthly social secur- Box 335, Robert H. Richard, SU, USN, 602nd Food Serv. Sqdn, US 51213463 ity insurance payments before the APO 207, New York, N.Y. 34d, Div. USS , CVE 122, Salina, Kansas. Co. G. 32nd Inf. Regt. two million figure was reached in FPO New York, N.Y. APO 7, San Francisco, Calif. Capt. H. Modelevsky, USA April 1951. Richard E. Storms, SA USN, The more than three million per- 2811 lola Park Place, Apt 6, MaJ. Fred H. Roberts, USA, USS Piper SS 409. Charles H. White Houston, Texas. sons now getting old-age insurance 130th Station Hospital, US Sub Base, New London, (enroute home) benefits based on their employment APO 403, New York, N.Y. Conn. ■Lt Richard J. Montgomery, or self-employment in work cover- A-3c William White ed by the law are not the total of 190 Perimeter Ave, Kirtland AFB PFC Arthur A. Robinson, Charles E. Stowe, A-lc USAF, 7350th Base Complement Sq. Albequergue, New Mexico. persons aged 65 or over getting 57th FA Bn, 55th Maint Sqdn, APO 742, New York, N.Y. payment, Miss Eliopoulos pointed APO 7, San Francisco, Calif. Ramey AFB, Puerto Rico. Sat Albert Morelra, out. In addition, more than a mill- Lloyd Wicks, EN1 ion and a quarter people are get- Ansbach Det 7822, SCU, A-3c Richard Robinson, Cpl. Bruce Stuart, Jr., USS Glennon, DD 840 APO 177, New York, N.Y. 21st Ftr. Bmb Wg. Co. B 135th Engre. C. Bn, c-o FPO New York, N.Y. ting monthly benefits as the aged George AFB, 44th Inf. Div. wives or dependent husbands of Lt (Jg) Charles Morris, USN Los Angeles, Calif. Fort Lewis, Washington. PFC Lawrence Wlllwerth, retired workers; or as aged widows, USS LST 308, Hv Mort Co, 223rd Inf. Regt., dependent widowers, or dependent FPO New York, N.Y. William J. Rogers, A-3c David L SuWvaa, 40th Inf. Div. parents of deceased insured work- 14th T Port Bn, 320th Periodic Maidt Sqdn, APO 6, San Francisco, Calif. ers, 'she said Donald E. Munroe, APO 970, San Francisco, Calif. 320th BomB Wing (Medinm) For all of the three million re- USS Stong, DD 758, March AFB, California. George E. Wilson, tired-worker beneficiaries the aver- FPO New York, N.Y. A-lc Edmond V. Ronayne, R. Div. USS Chauncey DE 667, age old-age benefit being paid at the 782nd A C & W Sqdn, M« Cfcwlfs B. Sallivan, FPO San Francisco, Calif. end of June was a little over $50 John N. Nee, PM3, OSN. Rockville, Indiana. 3306 Pilot Trng S«dn, monthly. Of these, about 550,000 2nd Div. USS Wasp, CBA 18 Box 086, Bainbridge AB Lt. (j«) Raymond H. Wood, were receiving benefit payments FPO San Francisco, Calif. Daniel J. Rooney, JSCG based on employment or self-em- 433rd Ftr Interceptor Sqdn. USCG Baratovia, State Pier, ployment after 1950. Their average Capt Sylvia Neilson, WAC Traux Field, Madison, Wisconsin. Lt Comdr Edward J. Sullivan, Portland, Maine. was about $65. This higher average 1262nd ASU, WAC Det. B is due to two main factors. First, Fort Dlx, New Jersey. John Rosano, SN, USN, Box 'l49, Fort Amador, James Leo Woods, SKSN, USN, earnings in general are much high- USS Columbus. CA 74, 0th Div. Canal Zone. USS Yellowstone, AD 27, er and more regular in the period Arthur O'Connell, USN, FPO New York. N.Y. FPO New York, N.Y. since 1950 than they were In the (address unknown at present) S-Sgt Joseph B. Surrette, period from 1937 through 1950. Also M-Sgt Joseph Rosselli, 1932nd AACs Sq. Box 143, before 1951, the highest annual earn- Pvt Donald W. O'Connell, 7717 Hq. & Hq. Co. EUCDM, APO 677, New York, N.Y. HELD IN BAIL ings that couM be counted toward K Co, 14th Inf. Regt AM Sch. APO 108, New York, social security benefits was |3,000, APO 25, San Francisco, Calif. Pvt Robert Sutton, In a hearing in Woburn court, N.Y. before Judge William Henchy, Mon- while monthly wages or self-employ- Co K. 3rd Bn, 505 AIR, day morning, Edgar C. Dean, 34, ment net income up to $3,600 a year Gerard P. OTCeefe, SOSN, T-Sgt Marvin F. Russell, 82nd A B Div. can be counted after 1950. Fort Bragg, N.C. of Lee Trailer Courts, Revere was USN, 2M Weather Det ordered held in $5000 bail, and the Of the 531,000 insured workers who USS Compton, DD 847, APO 125, New York, N.Y. were added to the old-age bene- FPO New York, N.Y. Richard Swain, case against him ordered continued ficiary rolls in 1952, about one-third Joseph A. Russo, c-o Miss Addie Brent, until November 9th. He was com- were just reaching age 65. Some Lt. John O'NelL USN, Co. 301, USNTC, Nashville Rte. 1, mitted to East Cambdidge jail in lieu of bail. of them retired because of age lim- • Mobile Training Unit Bainbridge, Maryland. Murfreesboro, Road, itations for employment others in French Ship "Bois Belleau" Nashville, Tenn. Dean was arrested in Revere, on this group had left work because FPO San Francisco, Calif. Lucy M. Russo, USN. Oct. 24th by Officer Stanislaw Mic- halski of the Revere police, anr Wil- of illness or disability. Wave Bks, AN 68, J. T. Thiel, CT3, USN, The majority of those who quali- Pvt Gerald O'Reilly, US Naval Station, Norfolk, Va. US Naval Security, Grp Det mington policemen, on charges from the Wilmington Department. fied for old-age benefits in 1952, 923rd Ord. H.A.M. Co., USNAB Navy 913, however, had continued in gain- Camp Irwin, Calif. Paul R. Ryan, FPO New York, N.Y. Charges preferred against Dean, ful work after age 65. Div. 2, USS Wisconsin, BB 64 by the Wilmington department, to which he pled innocent, were: Driv- Statistics show that the average Pvt Richard J. Palmer, FPO New York, N.Y. Cpl. S. S. Thorpe, Jr., age of persons who started get- Hq. Btry, 158th FA Bn, Box 109, 1953rd AACS Sqdn, ing an unregistered uninsured car, ! and a serious morals charge, involv- ting old-age insurance payments 45th Inf. Div. Pfc. Edward S. Sadowski, APO 818, San Francisco, Calif in 1952 was 68.6 years for men and APO 86. San Francisco, Calif. 35th ECB, Hq & Serv. Co. i ing a young Wilmington girl. Chief of Police Paul J. Lynch, 68.2 for women. About 12 percent APO 46, New York, N.Y. PFC John H. Tilley, USMC, of the new beneficiaries were age Robert Park, FN, USN, I Co, 3rd Bn, 3rd Marines, Officers John Imbimbo and Joseph 75 or over. Box 271, USN, USL, William M. Sanborn, SA, USN, 3rd Mar. Div. Cuoco of the Wilmington depart- FPO, San Francisco, Calif. ment, and State Trooper Wisnioski Many of those receiving old-age EPCE (R) 850 901-60-40 insurance payments were able to New London, Conn. USN Hosp. Schl. Corps j appeared against Dean,' in. court. qualify for benefits because the 1950 Bainbridge, Maryland. George P. Umphrey, Sgt. William A. Parks, USA, 1725 West Howard Avenue, amendments to tne law extended Mod. Co, 72nd Inf. Regt. George E. Saville, Biloxi, Mississippi. A small shallow waterhole social security coverage to the APO 38, New York, N.Y. USS Chauncey, DD 667, was sufficient to save a barn kind of work they were doing. Bene- FPO, San Francisco, Calif. Lawrence E. York, and forty cows when the milk fits for persons aged 65 to 75 are ' lll-15-112th Street SFC Marjorie Patch, room began to blaze not long payable if they arc retired from WAC Det. Presidio, M-Sgt. Walter E. Schact, USA, Ozone Park (20) Long Island, N.Y. ago. Even a paii of water at the work covered by the law or arc San Francisco, Calif. 18th Ord MM Co. right time would stop most fires, APO 46, New York, N.Y. yet for a large farm building, not earning more .than $75 a month Cornelius R. Payne, Ch HM Robert J. Young, USN, from wages in such work or an 528 Maxim Street, a half dozen 2-'/2 inch streams SNO, Clarksville Base, Pvt. Robert P. Sheehan, may not be enough, once it is equivalent amount of self-employ- Clarksville, Tennessee. Co, P., 32nd Inf. Reg. San Diego 2, Calif. APO 7, San Francisco, Calif. involved. Make the size ample ment income. After age 75, benefits M-Sgt. Arnold Wallace. for any contingency when you William R. Pearson, plan your farm waterhole, and arc payable without regard to the 6th ETC, TOS, Lyndell W. Simpson, DM3, USN, 768 AAA Gun Bn, Bttry, D, amount 6f earnings the beneficiary Box 200, allow for the thickness of win- Aberdeen Proving Ground, UDT No. 5 ter ice. Maryland. FPO, San Francisco. Calif. Oak Lawn, Illinois.. PFC Roland J. Pellerin, Gordon L. Siteman, William E. Wallace. CDCN, USN, Co. B, 34th Inf. Regt. USS Worcester, CL 144, USNMCB, Six, APO 24, San Francisco, Calif. FPO New York, N.Y. FPO New York. N.Y Pvt. William E. Peters, A-2c Clifford M. Smith, Patrick V. Walsh, Postal Sect, APO 25, New York, 528 AC&W, Det. 4. Box 269, Veterans Adm Hosp. Ward D 3, New York. APO 73, San Francisco, Calif. Rutland Heights. Mass. Boston Garden Fans: PNS Robert J. Pierce, USN, Roger F. Smith, SN, USN, Daniel C. Wandell, AD3, USN, USS Worcester, USS Cascade, AD 16, 1st Div. VR6, MATS, SPECIAL TRAIN SERVICE FPO New York, N.Y. Newport R-. I " ' Westover AFB, Mass.

■ Robert Pilcher, CQM, USN, Sgt" Sheldon J. Solow, Cpl. George L. Weaver, SUNDAY NIGHTS USS E-LSM, 445, 20th Air Police Sqdn, B Btry, 201 AFA Bn, FPO New York, N.Y. APO 120, New York, N.Y. APO 46, New York, N.Y. Now you can get to the Boston Garden and back completely under cover every Sunday on com- fortable, dependable B and M trains. LORALANE'S THE SPORTS SPECIAL, a new train planned espe- 1740 Mass Ave. 654 Main Street 529 Main Street cially for fans in this area, takes you to the Garden on LEXINGTON READING WINCHESTER Sunday just in time for the event you want to see — leaves right after it Are Now Observing Their THE SPORTS SPECIAL starts Sunday, Oct. 18th, and will run all winter. Leaves Wilmington at 7:24 8TH BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION P.M., arrives North Station 7:55 P.M. Returning, leaves SALE STARTS OCTOBER 29th JV* North Station 10:50 P.M.. Loralane Offers You WU'\/ ^ 10% Off on All Merchandise arrives Wilmington at 11:20 '■■■DTI DM Mine** This i. our way of saying THANK YOU" for the patronage yon have given us in the past BOSTON and MAINE RAILROAD r~~

THE WILMINGTON CRUSADER, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER U, 1994

PINED IN WOBURN COURT RAILROAD WIRES CUT FOR ■ period, wires, belonging to the Bos- TOP THIS W YOU CAN: ton and Maine Railroad have been John F. Richards, 4 Salem THIRD TIME We win perform the following services fee our tuttoiMn street, Tewksbury, was fined cut, at the tame place,, near the and NMM who with I* become ewr customers. $10.00 in Woburn court by Judge For the third time in a two month I Lake street bridge. William Henchey on October For $23.50 per year 27th for speeding. Officer Shep- 1. 34 Hours service 365 days a year ard told his honor that Richards 2. Complete checkup and cleaning marly UP£RNARK 3. Furnish ALL parts necessary en burner had oeen speeding on Main This includes. Motor, Tranaformer, Thermostat, street, in the Silver Lake sector. FrPtiriipVI I VUUIV O TEWKSBURY H' Stack Control, everything Richards pleaded guilty. 4. Replace If necessary 275 gallon oil tank 5. Replace combustion chamber if necessary Posters Corner - Main Street - OL 8-8363 Call and Lot Us Explain Further Chapin - Nichols, Inc. 47 HAVEN STREET, READING — TEL. RE 2-059* IMPERIAL

LAWRENCE CHRISTIE CDA BANQUET WALLPAPER VERY SUCCESSFUL IN HOSPITAL Electronically The annual banquet of the Lawrence D. Christie, 12 Lang Catholic Daughters of America, street, North Wilmington is a St. Thomas Court, held on Octo- TRIMMED patient in the New England San- ber 27th in the high school cafe- Large Rinso 2 for 49c atorium in Stoneham. He was tak- For Easy Hanging en there on October 27th by the teria was a very successful one, Hunt's Tomato Juice 46 ox. 2 for 49c with about 150 guests in attend- Reg. or Drip La TouraJne Coffee lb. 93c Wilmington police ambulance, ance. driven by Officer Cutter. Speaker for the evening was Mueller's Thin Spaghetti or Elbow Macaroni 1 lb. 19c the Rev. George Casey, pastor -AUCTION SALE. of St Bridget's church, in Lex- Friday and Saturday eve- ington, and a popular writer for nings at 7:30. Antiques, furni- The Pilot. The Rev. Casey chose j ture, glassware, etc. HUR- as the subject of his talk, "Thej LEY'S BARN - Hurley's Farm, Human Element" Route 3, Billerica. Guests of honor were Miss 0-21-22-28-29 Mary Dooley, State Treasurer of the CDA; Mrs. Helen Zarella, H" District Deputy; the Rev. Fa- SINGER Sewing Machines ; ther Albert J. Shea and Father John Regan of St Thomas SALES REPAIRS church; Mrs. Wilhelmina De -. .■•■ ■ ■ Lisle and Mrs. Hermaline Ba- Fresh Shoulders lb. 45c and and bine, Past Grand Regents, Mrs. Fresh Pork Butts lb. 57c Mary Quandt, Grand Regent SERVICE RENTALS and Mrs. Dee Enos, chairman. Sliced Bacon 59c lb. 2 lbs. $1.15 • Reg. by U.S. Patent Off. Caterers were Walsh, of Wake- Pork Loins (whole or half) lb. 57c by The SINGER Mfg. Co. field, and music during and PAINTS of AH Kinds Order Your Thanksgiving Turkey NOW! after the banquet was furnished Prices Wdl Be Higher!! • Call only by the Spinelli orchestra of SINGER Revere. t ANNON N EELON Mrs. Enos and Mrs. Quandt, SEWING CENTER co-chairmen, have expressed |Wobum's Oldest and Largest We Have Special Prices 449 MAIN ST. their thanks to everyone who has Wallpaper and Paint Store WOBURN 2-2684 helped to make the banquet a 23 MONTVALE AVE. For Your Freezer >IM.HH*imiHNM.IM.I*HIHimillMHN.IIIIHII)«IHQ success. (Next to Woburn Dally Times

THERE'S nothing to the rumor that this is a picture of Jack Hughes as a young boy. Jack was bettor looking (he says), smarter and fifteen pounds heavier. ,y BUT . . . This is the kind of kid we like in our town, and the kind wo will have, if we keep Wilmington a good place to live in.

THE WILMINGTON COMMUNITY FUND campaign is one way of helping people, young and old, to realize the great promises this country makes to them.

The workers of the WILMINGTON COMMUNITY FUND will be calling on you, for your contribution. Just so you know who they are, we are listing them. They are fine people, in a fino cause. Give, and give generoualyl

88SAerr?W . Harry Cwtt*r' Thelma Sumner, Kathleen Gatkill, Anna De Angelis, Minnie Good now, Barbara Stack, Gertrude Baldwin, Ruth Lynch, Phillit Oi Tommaso, Paulino Curtin. Helen Casey, Gene Hill, Alice Weed, Elane FareL lo, Marion Dowling, Mary Quandt, Gertrude Saw- L yer, Betty Thibodeau, Ann Nolan, Evelyn Walsh, Mary MacLean, Doris Toby, Barbara Nims, Patri- cia Maynard, Patricia McLaughlin, Vickey Dreg- er, Rita Palino, Thomas Troy, Anna Troy, Mar- guerite Harper, Agnes Beal, Violet Curtis, Lillian Derate Edith Jayes, Mary Hadley, Connie Magoe, Marion Parsonn, Ann Bishop, Guy Nichols, Helen Lee, Elizabeth Van Steensburg, Ralph Allen, Elizabeth Downs, Anis Quandt, Paula Rice, Car- rie Lewis, Clara Simpson, Beatrice Randall, Peg- gy De Felice, Mabel Montague, Mildred White, Ruth Taylor, Edith Stevens.

CAPTAINS: Anna Barry, Wavie Drew, Ruth Hale, Dorothy Lafionatis, Thomas Galvin, Guilio Matron), Marion Boylen, William Carver, Elsie Woolaver, Frank Stevens, Harry Doming and Margaret Page. DRIVE CHAIRMAN, Tim Cunningham. DRIVE SECRETARY, Dave Elfman. Thafs the list, at the moment, but there will be more coming; and we take our hats off to them. They are fine people, in a fine cause. Don't let them knock on your door in vaiirl

? -B HUGHES LUMBER CO. Urges you to volunteer to work in this campaign. Hughes Lumber Co. Letchworth Ave., No. Billerica

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