H The Courier-Gazette 5 ? Entered u Second Clxii Mill Matte, THREE CENTS A COPT Established January, 1846. By The Courler-Gaiett*. 445 Main St. Rockland, Maine, Tuesday, May 23, 1939 V olum e 9 4 ...... Number 61, The Courier-Gazette A Great Stunt They Visited Macy’s [ EDITORIAL] THREE-TIMES-A-WEEK Meet Your Mailman Memorial Day GOOD MATERIAL LINING UP “The Black Cat” Editor Deer Isle’s High School Band Rockland School Group Sees WM. O FULLER and We have today one more candidate who Is seeking the Associate Editor Carried Off the Honors Sights In Largest Depart­ Republican nomination for governor, with an even prospect FRANK A WINSLOW Memorial Sunday In Worcester m ent Store that Franz U. Burkett of Portland may run the tally up to six. Subscription* $3 GO ner year payable The latest entrant Is Sumner Sewall of Bath, who made a fine In advance; alngle copies three cents. I Deer Isle’s youthful musicians—17 Thirty Rockland High School record as president of the Senate and did much toward bring­ Advertlaleg rales bused upon circula­ The Memorial Day committee of tion and very reasonable boys and 15 girls—composing the students vls'ted the world's largest ing order out of the chaos which once confronted the legisla­ NEWSPAPER HISTORY Anderson Camp, Sons of Union Vet­ High School Band of that town ar­ tive bodies at Afigusta. The Rockland Uazette was estab­ department store. R. H. Macy and erans of the Civil War, extends an rived home In triumph Sunday The Courier-Gazette makes it a point not to seek to lished In 1846 In 1834 the Courier was Company, Friday ln the course of established and consolidated with the Invitation to the following patriotic from Worcester. Mass., where they Influence primary results, but It cannot refrain from saying Gazette in 1882. The Free Press was their three-day visit to eeeabllahed In 1855 and In 1891 changed organizations to participate ln Me­ won top honors in the 'New England that Mr Sewall's appearance ln the fields adds to the high Ita name to the TrI| of Lewiston, Fellow of the French E. Blalsdell, the group visited the elsewhere In this Issue. The biography reveals a man who ••• He only confers favors who First Baptist Church Sunday, May Academy of Paris and an accom­ store's,hospltality center where they has the proper background, and a man who distinguished ♦ remembers them no more - War 1 28. All affiliated bodies of the plished composer, the band was signed the guest register and then himself ln behalf of his country as a World War ace. If any­ •w Cry, t ' G.AjR, Ralph Ulmer Camp, Spanish originally a grade CC unit. So fine were escorted on a special “back- thing were to be added to his claims it would naturally be Ginger and Sweet the Bangor War Veterans, and Auxiliary, Wins- was its quality at this festival, how- stage tour" of Macy's. The tour. the fact that Sagadahoc County has not had a Governor for ever, that one of the judges, before (a complete exposition of the behind many years, though in the center of activities, particularly on News Columnist speculates as to loy-Holbrook Post, American Legion; Apply For Degrees whom it had Its audition ln Com- (the scenes activities of the great the coast. President Bewail will have a large following, and what has become of Rev. Frank W. Auxiliary, and Sons of World Waj- merce High School auditorium, (institution, covers the 20 story will even have the well wishes of hundreds who were already Sandford, one time leader of the Veterans; Huntley-Hill Post, Vet­ pronounced it suited for Grade A j building from its delivery fleet head­ committed to the candidates earlier In the Aeld. Holy Ghost and Us Society who Two Rockland Boys Who erans of Foreign Wars, and Auxili­ competition and it received a cer­ quarters ln the sub-basement to Its vanished utterly after his release ary, National Guard, Rockland Ptre Have Made Good At "Ansel" i tificate of Jhls rating. The band elaborate hospital on the top floor from the Federal Prison ln At­ Department, Boy and Girl Scouts, was founded and is now managed lanta. The Bangor writer has Wheaton College With 26 years to his credit In the Included in the tour was a visit to IN FOREIGN LOTTERIES school children, and Police Depart­ by Carl Pickering of Deer Isle. Macy’s famed Bureau of Standards even heard It claimed that San­ carrier service Ansel 8. Saunders ment. Charles H. Ellis of 198 Rankin Aside from the certificate awards where thousands of laboratory and It appears that more than half of the winning tickets ford is even now at Shiloh, but Albert W. Thomas, Chairman. street is among the 203 seniors mak­ may be claimed among Uncle Sam’s there are no trophies, no cups, nor actual wear tests are made on Macy ln the Epsom Downs derby, tomorrow, are held in this country, that nobody has been able to con­ other championship honors at this and that nine persons will collect <140.400 apiece. Lucky, firm this fact. ing application for a degree at veteran toters of the mail bag. He merchandise annually. Is at present covering Route No. 4, 'celebrated festival. The individuals There are a large number of indeed, but the story does not take Into account the hundreds Wheaton College. Illinois largest lib­ Red Check I and group are merely classed by of thousands of dollars which were spent ln vain or the hun­ Sorry that I cannot shed any the patrons of which are able to Maine folks among the 12,000 Macy eral arts college, which will hold i judges who present their rating dreds of thousands of dollars which are annually sent out of the light on the subject. I was ln oc­ set their watches by him. so regu­ employes and the store pays tribute commencement exercises June 12. Pleasant Valley Grange Has I sheets to the supervisors. Neither country on bogus lotteries. Legislature frowned upon a State casional correspondence with Mr. lar are his comings and goings. to Maine and the other States of Ellis, who Is a candidate for the Fine Entertainment In ' are there any public announce­ lottery here In Maine on the ground of “corrupting influences," Sandford while he was at Atlanta, Saunders was born in Rockland the Union by displaying the shields degree of bachelor of arts, has taken ments of winners. but the advocates of such an institution thrust back with and It Is barely possible that I was April 16. 1894 and waa educated in Store Tomorrow of the 48 States on the pillers of an active part in campus acUvlties The Deer Isle band received a re­ the charge that money spent in foreign lotteries went out of the only person outside of the the city's public schools. In the the street floor. Part of the stores He has been a member of the Excel­ markable A rating in all of the circulation here in Maine, and that a State lottery would at strange sect who did hear from summer of 1912, after leaving High Pleasant Valley Orange will pre­ special World's Pair Welcome Cam­ sior Literary Society for the past qualitative divisions of music: tone. least be conducted in an honorable manner. As to "corrupt­ him, at that time, but from the School he worked for Thorndike A sent a musical entertainment called paign includes distribution of free four years He was a member of Intonation, Interpretation, tech- ing Influences" they ask for Information concerning the Pari- time he left the prison I have never Hx. and in the winter he was em ­ "Red Check Revue" Wednesday broadcast tickets to its program the basketball team and of the base- night at 8 o'clock. Many favorite nlque. and general effect. At its au- “Consumer Quiz Club of the Air" Mutuel and the legalized saloon. received word from him. and noth­ ployed by the Rockland, Thomas­ ing but hearsay as to whether he ball team of which he served as cap­ entertainers will make their ap­ dition Friday morning, it played which is head over WOR from 12.45 ton A Camden Street Railway. Is still living Whatever faults may tain ln his junior year. He was pearance ln excellent numbers. The Beethoven's famous "Egmont Over­ to 1 p. m. dally. Monday through president of the Student Council In But that wa< the end of riding ture " and, as a required number. have been bis they did not crop to scene Is the Interior of the “Red Friday Rockland residents plan­ SKIMMING THE CREAM for him, because he joined the car­ the surface ln our relationship. To his senior year He was a member Check Cafe.” The Festival Overture" written by ning a World’s Fair visit may se­ rier service in May, 1913, and has Robert W Gibb, of Dedham, Mass. me he was always the kind and cf the "W" Club and of the History P a rt One cure these broadcast tickets by ap­ The Division of Maritime Promotion and Information con­ Club, and served his class as treas­ been "hoofing It” ever since. There were seven bands from nected with the U. 6. Maritime Commission was responsible courteous gentleman and his wife "1 brought Ute parcel post up Will You Remember, Josephine plication at the store's Visitors’ Bu­ urer in his sophomore year. Maine among the record number for a bit of effective publicity the other day when It issued a was always the gracious lady. from a baby,” laughs Ansel. In Buckminster. reau on the street floor. Other Richard Snow of to Mechanic whose total membership was over services available at the Bureau In­ poster showing 11 ocean liners lying side by side. All but one those early days parrel post in I'm a HUI Billy Oal. Elizabeth I have had quite a few queries street. Is among the 200 seniors mak­ 5000 boys and girls. This number clude Information on New York and sailed from New York the same day, and none was American. Kr-.-kland waa a one-man affair, hi Passon concerning the Identity of Hamlin ing application for a degree at was not confined alone to bands, the Fair, a travel service to arrange There also sailed from New York that day three other steam­ rather striking contrast to the Just a Little Street. Vallle Mc­ block to which reference was made Wheaton College. there being orchestras, choral anything from a bus tour of the ships "Ten of the 13 were on special cruises to skim the cream present, when a speedy truck sup­ Laughlin. a few issues ago. My Informant Is Snow, who ia a candidate for the groups, soloists and ensembles. city to a globe circling Journey, tic­ off the American winter cruise trade. They skimmed about plements foot power, Auntie Skinner's Chicken Dinner. authority for the statement that degree of bachelor cf science, has The festival parade Saturday aft­ ket sales headquarters for every >1.500.000 cash and about 5000 passengers, most of whom were *T guess I haven't any hobby.” "Three Little Pickaninnies." the block

pounds, and there is ample grazing The Courier-Gazette Five In Field Now Down In Bolivia land and grain supply to much in­ THKEB-T1ME8-A-WEEK Believe It or Not, She Pitches crease this in case of need. Yet in j In the last day, that great day of Sumner Sewall, World War What Geographic Society that same year we imported about the feast Jesus stood and cried, Hero, Seeks Governor­ Says About the Country 80,000,000 pounds of beef and veal ! SALESMEN WANTED saying. If any man thirst, let him ship Nomination Where Bill Wincapaw Is We have been notably generous to come unto me. and drink.—John Argentina and other countries in , 7:37 A fifth candidate for the Repub-1 Bolivia's newly established dicta- purchases of canned corned beef.1 MAKE APPLICATION AT ONCE lican gubernatorial nomination ap-1 torship can affect foreign countries The 1937 importation of this com­ pcared in the field Sunday in the I more than would changes in many modity was 41.000.000 pounds and Several salesmen to represent one cf the largest stove and )()PPWAY this increased to 78.000.000 pounds furnace companies in the United States for territories in and person of Maine Senate's president.! other parts of South America, be- the following year (1938*. At pres­ around Rorkland, Maine. Guaranteed earnings arc assured. Sumner Sewall of Bath, who was an cause Bolivia's government is fi- ent we are Importing 90 percent of ace aviator in the World War. nanced mainly by the revenue from our canned corned beef. We thus Sales help will be given by a tar tsry- trained heating engineer. “You and I know," Sewall wrote its exports and its exports—par- seem to have discharged our duty as Autcir.cbUr helpful but not essential. For personal interview a "good neighbor" without placing to his brother Legislators, as he an­ ticularly tin—are in strong demand. write KALAMAZOO STOVE A FURNACE COMPANY, 22 MAIN this order of 48 000 pounds for the STREET. LEWISTON. MAINE, and one will be arranged In nounced his candidacy, “that one of “Tin. one of The strategic metals United States navy, as is now pro­ Richland. the most difficult tasks confronting highest on the United States' want posed a legislator is to distinguish between list, is Bolivia's number one pro­ There is the further thought that real majorities and small articu'.a'c duct and is responsible for its big­ our government must set a good , K 1- minorities” gest business." says a bulletin from example in "buying American" if "If, by the use of this new method the Washington. D. C.. headquarters individual citizens are expected to of measuring public opinion, we can of the National Geographic Society. follow that patriotic course. | more clearly and correctly determine “As the third greatest tin-produc­ Our beef growers, the industries IflfT G A\ f , the size of these conflicting groups." ing country of the world Bolivia is i dependent upon them and the em- Cl ADIT. I lie continued, "it seems to me that the nearest source for that metal I ployees affected need our patron- W IIL TOU^ 1 we will obviously be in position to to all countries of the New World, | age—and deserve it. better carry out the wishes of the since its chief competitors are the I With all good will and every good true majority of our people, and thus Federated Malay State and the Helen ••Jimmy" Carlson of Middletown. Conn., won eight out of nine wish for our South American neigh­ AMIl)IC\S ILGION ALAIIIAin I make real contribution to the demo- Ncthcriands indies in Asia games of semi-professional baseball she pitched against men last season Most This picture shows her as she appeared on the Friday night radio program bor. it is fitting and proper that our cratic process of government in of Bolivia's tin ore exports, how­ with Bob Ripley, showing Bob how she loesses her fast outcurve. She's first regai-d be for “The Home on PLEASE Maine." ever. go to Great Britain, since the only girl on her team. the Range" rather than for dweller ‘Nother Poppy Day He also pointed out in the letter there are no tin smelters in Bolivia on the pampas of Argentina. his belief that "real and sound or the United States. Bolivian tin The way The Courier-Gazette Want Ads get results will Receipts Next Saturday Will economy in state government" might returns to the Americas from ; please you. What's more, you'll get them more cheaply be accomplished through use of a HEARD, SEEN, SAID AT WASHINGTON than any ether way. And that will pleaae you some more! Go For Relief and Wel­ British smelters. You ran t beat 'em—whether you want to Buy, Trade, | public opinion poll to “re-examine By CLYDE H. SMITH, fare W ork Not a One-Metal Land Rent or Sell. the public usefulness of the many "In Bolivia, 'the tin standard' Representing Maine's Second Congressional District Every penny of the money con­ services which we are now render- substitutes for the gold standaid. ii*t' After an "open review of the tributed for memorial poppies on This metal constitutes from two-■ Suggesting Protection for "The ' high quality. Incidentally, it may costs of various state services. Sew­ thirds to nine-tenths of the coun- Poppy Day Saturday. May 27 will Home on the Range" be mentioned that the pasture all suggested, "the very broadest trry's exports; and export duties in go to aid disabled veterans and possible public opinion" should be this land of impoverished agricul­ The Nation's Capital. May 23 grown animal is not a good shipper, the families left in need by the mustered to "determine which of ture and limited industry are the i Special to The Courier-Gazette> He cannot be grass fed in transit, death or disability of a veteran ac-I our countless activities and worth- chief sources of the government’s We are learning much geography j consequently lo-es weight in an cording to the Poppy chairman ol i *bile functions may be extended income. During 1937 the nation of late. Today's lesson seems to be ocean voyage where he must eat Winslow-Holbrook Unit of the ; and enlarged, while the others can produced 12 percent of the world s on Argentina. This country is grain to which he is unaccustomed, i American Legion Auxiliary D t- curtailed or actually eliminated." tin output. tributlon of flowers will be conduc-l ‘ In this *»>'•" Sewall wrote, “we mostly in the south temperate zone Much Argentine beef is shipped "But Bolivia is by no means a | frozen or in cans, in which case the I ted by volunteer workers and all sha11 strengthen the forces of true as we are In the North Its climate one-metal land. Some 98 percent I feeding-in-transit considerations do contributidhs will go in their entire- democracy and good government. of her exports are minerals tin is similar to ours, reversing the not apply; but here again quality is ty into the rehabilitation and wel- under which alone industry and etn being followed in value by silver. season of course. Just now. that sacrificed by either process fare funds of the Legion and Aux- ployment thrive, opportunity and ^ ad antimony, zinc, tungsten, cop- South American state is facing the Hlaty. security exist and fairness to all pre-1 and blsmuth In antimony too, Our South American neighbor winter's cold while we are rejoicing and competitor ha? troubles in com­ "The dimes, quarters and dollars vails." thc counUy ranjts third on the list at the approach of summer. Its mon with us That is. such was which are dropped into the boxes of He pointed out also that Maine produeing nations. Its position crops m puiW llke ourg we formerly the case as to foot and the poppy workers on Poppy Day needs "refinement of our present, u n0K of added lmportance because comc mto competition with them mouth disease, the most contagious pregrams form the principal source of sup­ rather than new pro- china has previously been the lead- throughout the world of all cattle afflictions. The grams. port for the relief and welfare ing source of supply. It is a great country for cattle United States can announce with) work carried out by the Auxiliary "Today, by virtue of programs al­ "Silver made the high Andean ralslng exporting much beef and pardonable pride the complete GENERAL ELECTRIC URN 8ET - mn. ready submitted and adopted by the cup capacity um. with auger and cruamer and throughout the year." There is a plateau of Bolivia, averaging 12.000 many hides. Quite possibly your eradication of that scourge. Argen­ vast amount to be done for the Legislature." he wrote, "our State large trap . . , luatroua chrom aplatt finish feet above sea level, the boom coun­ feet are kept off the ground by tina is hopelessly infected with it with walnut iiniah handlaa. disabled veterans, for their famil­ Government Is extending aid to. co­ try of the iNew World soon after leather from an Argentine steer. and it would seem has little or no Value * 2 1 . 8 0 ies and for the families of those who operating with, or trying to control the famous mines of Potosi were Argentine livestock is not stall planning for its control. have died and we believe that those in the public interest, nearly every found by Spanish conquerors in fed. as a rule. There are vast level One of a very few countries with in distress because of patriotic sac­ group of citizens in Maine." Use of M A Y 22 - 27 1545. The cold, lofty city of Potosi, areas which we should call plains no foot and mouth disease the Man if Valuable Prius rifices are entitled to everything thc public opinion poll plan, he which now has 35000 inhabitants, or prairies. M06t of the Argentine United States maintains its envi­ which can be done for them. wrote, would enable the State “to C SEE COMPLETE RULES was thc 17th century metropolis of beef is raised on the grasses, grown able position by a rigid quarantine QUAKER X “Through wearing a poppy on come nearer than ever before to liv­ both Americas, reaching at its peak on this very rich pasture domain against all other countries, includ­ Poppv Dav, everyone can Help us be ing up to the splendid ideals of MUFFETS . 2«« 19c ? ON THE BACK \ a population of 170.000. It swayed which they call pampas Many an ing Argentina ready to respond to the calls for , democratic government. OF THIS HANDBILL ) j thc money markets of thc world by Argentine steer never knows thc All this has a bearing on thc DOLE'S help which will comc to us during Sewall was born at Bath in 1898 the volume of its silver output. taste of grain This keeps produc­ question of Argentine beef for tlie the year ahead. The poppy, which thc sen of Mrs. William D. Sewall FINEAFFLE JUKE ’S n'IJ c Bolivian Rubber Reaches World tion costs low but, from the Ameri­ . United States navy The President honors the war dead, also aids those and the late Mr. Sewall. members Through Brazil can standpoint, is not conductive to approves the purchase of 48.000 who did not die but who lost health of a family long prominent in ship­ DOLE'S “In addition to utilitarian tin and pounds of canned corned beef, for and strength in the nation's serv­ ping. He attended Bath public SPECIAL PRICE a a - the Spanish silver of such romantic j this purpose. "The price is lower." ice." schools and entered Harvard in 19t0. ROYAL SPEARS PINEAPPLE C A N 1 > C lore, exports of rubber, quinine, and ' say the defenders of this proposi­ Before completing his freshman year exotic chinchilla fur help to make ! tion It is. Grass feed and a lewtr LAWRENCE'S he entered the American Ambulance Bolivia known to the outside world.1 standard of living for the cattle LARGE She Bet On Blaine Field Service as a volunteer, serving Some est.mates rank Bolivian fo r-1 HULLED CORN s‘v,Llir o p r s,nd CAN workers make a lower price pos­ 1 9 « at the front for six months as ar. ests second to those of Brazil fo r' sible. The President says it is bet­ Broad Street Woman Tells ambulance driver until he joined the production of South American rub­ ter beef He is misinformed. We American Air Service. After receiv­ Of Her Disappointment ber; since much of the smaller grow thc best beef in the world, but NEW 1 LB ing training he was commissioned a VACUUM country's forest products float down if we do it in part on grain and pay LA TOURAINE COFFEE 27< When He Lost first lieutenant and assigned to CAN the headwaters of the Amazon to the American wage we must have Editor of Thc Courier-Gazette:- 8<’ua:lr°n 95 of the First Pursuit Brazilian ports their origin is ob­ the higher price. During the summer tn which thc Or0uP for combat over fe lin e s scure Foot and mouth disease is a By October of 1918 he had be­ LARGE SMALL late James G. Blaine was candidate “In an area more than twice as loathsome sickeness. which may af­ O V A LTIN E PLAIN or CHOCOLATE CAN CAN 3 3 < come an ace. having officially 5 9 « - for President, I was located in large as Texas. Bolivia supports flict any cloven footed animal. Hie brought down seven enemy aircraft. Springfield. On an annual vaca­ only 55 percent as many people as stricken creature becomes fevered HONEY FLAVORED He was awarded thc Croix de Guerre RANGER JOE WHEAT 2 PKGS 2 5 C tion. I bought a new wrap, dark the Lone Star State. This is the Disgusting sores break out on the with palm and the Legion of Honor hunters green flannel long light only South American nation with­ feet and in the mouth. Having by thc French Government; Bel­ weight garment style Mother Hub­ out access to the sea directly from seen animals thus diseased, a man gium's King Albert made him a its own ports; Bolivia lost her | bard. would starve before eating meat member of the Order of The Crown; coastal territory to Chile after the Excitement in thc Blaine cam- suspected of that origin. CLICQUOT CLUB G,J?&ER ’T 2 s 1 5 c 2 - 2 9 c nad the United States awarded him Men don’t act this paign was intense in Rockland and War of the Pacific nearly 60 years! As to guarding against an out­ thc Distinguished Service Cross wi’h I. as well as all tlie family, was en­ ago. Thc landlocked Andean p la-' break In this country, it is said that cak leaf His most prized award, thusiastic. taking in all the teau, cradled 12.000 feet above sea 1 "you can't ship foot and mouth however, was a medal paid for by way about every speeches, rallies, torchlight proces­ level between two snow-capped disease in a can." Of this we can­ QT • O Z pennies contributed by school chil­ sions and the inspiring music of ranges with peaks exceeding 21.000 not be too certain. The virus is In­ VALLEY SWEET MIXER PICKLES JAR 2 5 * JAR dren of Bath after word of his first tlie good old Rockland Band. One feet, has so impressed popular J tensely virulent. It would be pos­ victory in the air. day shirts. night a big rally was scheduled witn imagination—with its 'world's high­ sible for a healthy animal, thou­ EXTRA FANCY After the war Senator Bewail was SPLENDID RICE BLUE ROSE Tom Reed the star speaker. We est capital La Paz.’ and its world's sands of miles from the region of 2 re® 1 5 c captain of the flying group which all went down to see the parade. highest steamer serv.ee' on Lake ,Mo,t men lake m wt shirts as a infection, to contract the disease won thc first annual meet of the I hastily .matched my wrap as I Titicaca—that the low tropical from dust deposited by an auto­ Intercollegiate Flying Association. matter ef fact and we're afraid to passed through the hall. We were plains to the east of the mountains mobile tire which had travelled That year. 1920. he was one of the d tru ib e these for sure as guns, it among the first at the entrance to are frequently forgotten. Yet these through that section and crossed organizers of the Connecticut Aerial will und like Action. PREPARE NOW Farweh Opera House and that en­ extensive lowlands constitute about a trail where a diseased animal had Navigation Company with which he trance was very narrow. When the 70 percent of the nation's 537,792 walked. Epidemics have been began his career in commercial avi­ square miles. On the south they doors swung open I was literally The e ehirts are not the same sort traced to contacts as remote and ation. With Juan Trlppe, new presi­ for tht HOLIDAY borne up the short flight of stairs merge into the Gran Chaco, scene seemingly impossible as that. dent of Pan-American Air Lines, he you hare home. If you have ever by that tuighig crowd. I do not of the most recent war in the West­ How fussy is tlie Argentine packer seen patterns like these before, it recall *hat my feet touched a single helped organize and operate Colonia! ern Hemisphere. who puts up those cans of corned stair ir. transit but I kept thc wrap Air Transport, which held the first "Over half of Bolivia's inhabit­ must be that you Just stepped off beef, now offered to the United ZAREX FRUIT SYRUPS Allotted Flavon PINTS 2 1 < tight in my arms. air mail contract in thc United ants are Indians, successors to one a Pullman from New York or States navy? And how particular is States. of America's oldest cultures. Spa'n- Once Inside the auditorium. I Chicago. the ranch man of the pampas who UNDERWOOD'S—GENUINE HAM He is now a director of United Air made a bee line for my favorite sea* ish culture too is old in Bolivia. faces ruin by reason of an outbreak MEDIUM LARGE in any theatre—front row balcony Lines, first ccast-to-coast passenger Sucre, thc legislative capital, has a ; of foot and mouth disease? It is a DEVILED HAM s“^ L9c - CAN 1 4 c - CAN 2 3 c eppofite stage. I made it all right route and one of the largest air university established in 1624." Will you plea--r take our wont safe bet that, on discovering tht happy and breathless. Imagine transport concerns in thc world for it until you get here that j first afflicted animal, knowing his HORMEL RATH'S my surprise when I put my wrap Before applying himself exclusively Roland Smith Pest, American Le­ you’ve never wen such shirt I herd is dormed. he will rush his 18 O Z over the back of tlie seal to discover to air transport development, Sew­ gion. ol Bath. SPAM . . . CAN 2 9 < SAHRWICH SPREAR 2 - 1 9< beauty before . . . here or any­ wlwle bunch to market for im­ that I had been toting a man's sum­ all worked to recover his health after After serving his ward as a mem­ mediate slaughter. In a country GENERAL KNOX SEIDNER*S mer overcoat, thc property oi the Ins war experiences by employment ber of the Bath Board of Aldermen. where efse? 8 O Z 8 O Z | that cannot, as have we, stamp out SALAR DRESSING JAR 9 c MAYONNAISE JAR 1 5 c rate Arthur Lovejoy who boarded in various JcRjs. After working Senator Sewall in 1935 made hts the disease in the grazing areas. It with my mother. briefly in a bank in Spain, he first appearance in State politics $1.50 to $2.00 Is not likely that the factory Inspec­ I exclaimed audibly at thc dis­ worked outdoors on an oil field rig­ when he was elected to the State tion is rigid enough to eliminate the S u n s h in e covery. to the amusement of sonic ging crew near Tampico. Mexico, House of Represenative from the And speaking of shirts, brings diseased animals before canning. CUXTARD , A children nearby I wore Mr. Love- after which he successfully was em­ Shipping City. That same year he Io mind those matched , In such circumstances frozen beef C R E A M * 1 9 Joy's coal home but do not remem­ ployed on a Cuban sugar plantation, was head of a Maine committer ap­ would be unthinkable and thc CRACKERS ber *f hi was cold enroute as he on a construction crew building a pointed to raise the State quota of Cotton Shirts and Pants canned material very much open to MOM THAN 125 DAINTY . _ breakwater in Cuba, and on a Wyo­ TASTY I R SANDWICH COOKIBS WITH POUND wa’’not there and did not have my funds for a national memorial to question. A COOL CREAMY PILLINO ming ranch. for summer wear wrau. Will Rogers. These considerations seem to Before entering air transport work James G. BI a tne was defeated— In 1936 he successfully sought elec­ completely refute the Presidential he learned airplane construction by- $3.15 to $5.00 chested, in that election I have tion to the State Senate. At thc | claim of better quality for Argen­ NATION-WIDE PAPER NAPKINS 3 88 5 2 5c ncv«r been reconciled; I was so working cn the production line at conclusion of his first term in thc for the ensemble tine beef and justify the payment anxious and so sure that so able a the Dearborn, Mich., plant where upper branch, Senator Sewall en­ Neat and comfortable of a higher price for the home man would rule thc United Btates the Ford tri-motored transport gaged in a three-cornered race for grown article. 40 FT planes were being built. DIAMOND WAXED PAPER . . ROLLS for a time. I never or hardly ever bet the Senate presidency and won. Assuming that our own beef is 3 1 9 c In 1923 Sewall was married at oil anything but I did lose a small wholesome—and nobody questions it Bath to Helen Ellena Evans of New amount on that election which was The Chinese iserve fritters on —why import any at all? Is it be­ of no moment compared to my dis­ York. They have four children, GREGORY’S their New Year's Day made from cause of under supply? One would Olive. Alexandra. David and Nich­ NATION-W IDE SERVICE GROCERS appointment. Elizabeth O. Marsh rose petals. Years ago rose buds hardly say so. Our domestic pro­ Rockland. May 19. olas. He is a past commander of tables like radishes. were served on duction in' 1937 was "7.WnxOft> Every -Other-Day Rockland Courier-Gazette, Tuesday, May 23, 1939 P age Three

Prank Chase Perry of Lincolnville TALK OF THE TOWN is a member of this year's graduat­ Big Glass Eyes They Built Houses SPYING AUTO PLATES ing class at the Annapolis Naval The Rhoades Family . hy Sqnicr "COMING EVENTS CAST 'IUE1R SHADOWS BEFORE" Academy. And How They Help List Of Men Who Worked May 25 Camden—High School Follies Alabama. Minnesota and Washington plates were recently noted by at Opera House. Solve the Riddles Of the At Carpentry Trade Here May 26—Plano iccltal by pupils of Thc interested public is Invited Milton M. Griffin, which leaves only 16 States to be reported. They arc. Edna Gregory Rollins In Unlversallst to the pianoforte recital by the Universe SO Years Ago vestry Arizona Nevada May 26-June 30 Pre-school clinics pupils of Edna Gregory Rollins in In Knox and Lincoln counties. The "eyes of tty? world," the great On tiie threshold of the Gay Delaware New Mexico the Universalist vestry Friday night. May 27 American Legion poppy day. Nineties the building trades were North Dakota May 28--Warren-iBaccalaureate ser­ The hour is 7 30. telescopes that peer out from the mon at Congregational Church. much more active in Rockland than Iowa May 30—Memorial Day turning Earth to explore the far May 30—Union—Zone Rally of Nara- they are today, and the carpenter Kansas South Dakota rene Young Peoples Societies and Sun­ Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Daniels went reaches of the Universe, was in­ Kentucky Texas day Schools, at High School auditorium to Hallowell Sunday to attend an was an indispiensable personage. May 30—"Montpelier” opens for the creased by one more when the new The following list of men working Louisiana Utah executive meeting of the Maine Re­ season. 82-inch mirror of McDonald Ob­ Montana West Virginia May 31 —Appleton Commencement tail Jewelers Association which was at that vocation in 1889 was com­ exercises at Community hall servatory was dedicated May 5, on Nebraska Wyoming June 1—Warren Commencement ex­ held at the Wooster House. Lunch­ piled for The Courier-Gazette by I ercises at Baptist Church Mount Locke in the Davis Moun­ Mrs. Carrie B. Waltz: x June 2— Educational Club meeting eon was served. June 2 Rockport— Operetta. "Snow tains of western Texas. Llewellyn C. Ames Camden 6treet John D. Spear. 20 Franklin St. White and the Seven Dwarfs" by grade "The completion of this giant Robert Speed. 30 Franklin St. pupils at Town hall A new tanker which seemed to Christopher Ash. 4 Prospect St. 'eye ' which will photograph stars Charles R Staples. 58 Rankin St. June 2 — South Waldoboro — Play. fill the harbor half full arrived at “Billy's Aunt Jane" by Ledge School at only a millionth as bright as any Thomas Black. 1 0 Brick St. Dana W. Staples. 99 Cedar St. Borneman hall this port Sunday, and was on the June 4—Francis Havener, Jr., concert that can be seen by the unaided Leonard Benner, Middle St. Isaac S Starman. 5 Water St. at Unlversallst Church. course yesterday with a Maritime rkfa toda or when jou are oerrous. harried or human eye will bring to a total of Arthur Blackington. Oliver Starrett, 19 Ocean St. ttaw poorer flffkff atonweh o f t* Stan out too June 6—Dance Recital by pupils of Trial Board checking up on the much fluid. Your food doesn't dlfMt and you Doris Heald School of Dancing at Rock­ at least 40 the number of telescopes West Meadow road Albion Stone, 68 Grace S t. have 5m . heartburn, flaaaea. pain or eaur land High School. •tomach. You feel 8O«r, ■Tck end iiptH all over. ’’figgers.” Arthur A. Blackington, ttarteia.Mf norer take a leaetWe for auwaerk June 7—Senior class banquet at the of two feet in diameter or more now John Sutherland, 5 South St. pain. It Is daocoroua end fool I ah. It Ukw tboaa New Hotel Rockland Mark Twain aald that everybody talks about the weather, but nobody in use in the world,” says a bulletin Old County road Robert Sylvester, 33 Rockland St. June •— North Haven—Alumni ban­ Elizabeth I., widow of Samuel A dees anything about It. That’a about tht way It la with tha exceseivt quet at Havens Inn from the Washington. D. C. head­ Benjamin W. Blackington. Frank Temple. 66 Orace St June 9—Rockland High School Com­ Burpee, died suddenly in her apart­ automat I vt taxta. Everybody complaint about thorn. It the motorlsti s k i s r m II AU tor far UdlsW tta mencement ball at Oakland Park. quarters of the National Geograph­ 34 Masonic street John P. Tyler. 92 Camden St ments yesterday afternoon, aged 76 presented a united front, writing and talking to their legielative repre­ June 11—Rockland High School Bac­ sentatives tax relief would be ebtalaed before 'ong. ic Society. , Oscar Borden, 87 Union St. Edward E. Ulmer, 236 Rankin St. calaureate services at thc Methodist years. Services will be held at the Church. Second Largest In World Josiah P. Bradbury. 17 Warren St. Orris E. Ulmer, 49 Brewster St. June 12—Rockport—Alumni reception Burpee funeral home Thursday aft­ 'The McDonald Observatory tele­ George W. Bradford. Edwin Wade. Waldo Ave. June 14—Flag Day ernoon at 2 o'clock. Obituary de­ Cecil Murphy landed an 11-pound SUGGESTIONS June IS — Rockland High School scope is the second largest in thc 5 Grace Street Place J. B. Waterhouse, 26 No Mam St. commencement at thc Community ferred. trout at Mooschcad Lake on his re­ The Home Garden FOR Building world in actual use at present being Jefferson Brown, Mountain Road Charles A. Wentworth, June 24—St. John's Day (Masonic). cent fishing trip. Thorough preparation of Ute soil exceeded only by the 100-lnch tele­ Albert Burns, 704 Main St. 15 Rockland St. Aug. 17—Reunion (25th) Class 1914 The Rockland City Band has been R H S at Rockledge Inn scope at Mount Wilson Observatory. Burdice R. Butler, 186 No. Main St Philip F. Witham, 145 Pleasant St. JUNE BRIDES Aug 23—Owls Head—Grange fair. engaged to furnish music for Vlnal- At the Ramsdell Packing Com­ is one of the secrets of having a Pasadena. California. Both, how­ Zemro F. Callahan. 17 Suffolk St. havens Sesqui-Centennial July pany s plant this morning 230 pairs profitable garden, says Richard M. A Wide Variety in Styles, Designs ever, will be surpassed soon by the Vespasian P. Carter. Pales 8t aisd Prices The Copper Kettle dining room Fourth. Other bands which will of hands were at work on 1200 Riley, of the department of horti­ MARTINSVILLE 200-inch telescope to be set up on Fred K. Clark. 74 Mechanic St. Electrical G ifts Are Practical fairly smiles under the force of awaken the island echoes during thc bushels of herring. Gifts May Be Exchanged If culture. University of Maine. Mount Palomar. California, under Luther Clark, 51 North Main St Mr and Mrs. Wallace Watts are recent renovations. celebration are Vinalhaven and Deer Duplicated Plow carefully and disk well, sug­ joint auspices of California Insti­ Oliver A. Clark 72 Mechanic St. guests of their daughter Mrs. G ard­ Isle. In other words Vinalhaven is Sheridan Scott, manager of the gests Mr. Riley. Then harrow with tute of Technology and Mount Wil­ William W. Clark, 14 Willow St. ner Wall in Springfield. Mass. The dining room at the New Hotel going to have lots of good music. Samoset Hotel has arrived from son Observatory. The McDonald Frank T. Gatcombe. 34 Marsh Rd. Miss Mary Black has returned to Thorndike has been leased by the Florida and is busily engaged in a string-tooth harrow and perhaps Observatory will be operated joint­ Dennis Coakley. 77 Masonic St. Waldoboro. proprietors of the Paramount Res­ The Meadowbrook Riding Club preparing the Rockland Breakwat»r give the plot a final going over with ly by the Universities of Texas and Frank T. Coombe 34 Marsh Rd taurant. holds a meeting at Hillcrest Riding hostelry for what is expected to be a meeker harrow to provide a fine Mrs. Rosa B. Seavey entertained a good season Chicago. William H. Coombe. 129 Main St. the Ladies' Circle last Thursday. School today. Free instruction is planting surface. It is not neces­ "The increasing size of telescopes Cleveland Crockett, 232 Main St. The next meeting will be with Mrs. Mrs. Victor Grindle 1 Donohue given to all Riding Club members Henry Crooker. 284 Broadway Urban E. Leach of West Rockport sary to have the soil as fine for set­ does not mean that the various in­ Gertrude Small. court, was the winner of the waffle between 6.30 and 8 30 on night of William Crouse, Old County Rd is a patient at Knox Hospital for ting out such plants as cabbage and struments will compete with one Frank L. Crockett and Arnold iron at Perry's Main street market meetings which are held the second Henry Duncan, 8 Orace St. Place treatment. Also receiving treat­ tomatoes, as it is for sowing small another in exploring the heavens, Stanley who are employed in W hit­ Saturday and Mrs Gertrude Boody. and fourth Tuesdays of each month Edward B Eastman, 12 Knox St. ment at Knox Hospital is Henry U. seeds such as “ lettuce, beets and however, nor is g smaller telescope insville, Mass., spent several days at Pleasant street won the coffee-mak­ at 8.30 p. m. The charter member­ Fred H. Eastman. 8 Hall St. Lamson of West Rockport. They carrots. made out of date or useless by a home recently. er at the Park street market. ship list will remain open until John M. Eastman. 8 Hall St are brothers-in-law Straight rows are easier to culti­ larger one. There is work enough Mrs. Leroy Hupper has entered June 13. Alfred Elliott. 64 Mechanic St. vate and look best. Use of the gar­ for all in probing secrets of the tlie Central Maine General Hospi­ Officers of Knox Lodge will l>c in­ Joseph M. Farnham, 32 Cedar St. The Ideal Way To Make Coffee Col. I. Leslie Cross who directs Saunders Cabins and Tea Room den line for marking is about the vast Universe, and tlie task of ex­ tal in Lewiston for observation. terested to know that there will be James Filer. 85 Pleasant St. G lu s C offee MaJcers will open next Sunday, with Arthur most certain way of getting straight ploration is divided among the va­ Capt. Aaron Wall and family of a drill meeting for the first degree thc Memorial Day activities in this Charles C. Fillmore, 35 Broadway By E. (Nate) Saunders in charge of the rows. One may follow along side rious instruments. Arlington, Mass., are pending a following tomorrow nights mating city, has announced the appoint­ Oliver Frohock. 30 Orove St. General Electric, Universal ment of Col. Ralph W. Brown as tea room. Previous seasons have of the line with a wheel hoe and Ilravrns Explored by Photography few days at their home here super­ of Rockland Encampment. Knox W. H. Olover Co. 451 Main St SILEX given Mr Saunders a fine reputa­ make a furrow, or he may set thc "Astronomers nowadays seldom intending repairs. Lodge will work the first degree marshal of the day—a position Daniel Grant. 58 North Main St. tion as a caterer, and he is prepared line close to the ground and walk Took through’ their large telescopes. Miss Helen Hupper and Mrs. H ar­ $3.95, $4.95, $5.95 Monday night. which he has filled in such excep­ Ralph Green. 30 James St. to live up to it. on top of it to make a mark on the They do most of their exploring of old Hupper observed their birthdays tional manner for some years. Gen­ Elijah L. Green. 287 Broadway sail and then furrow with wheel the heavens by photographing sec­ Tuesday night with a family party Irving Quinn and Leonard Quinn, eral orders relating to Memorial Henry Gross. 107 North Main 8t. The heavyweight boxing title hoe. hand hoe, or thc corner of the tions of the sky. The great tele­ The evening was spent socially. Ice formerly employed by'the Under­ Sunday and Memorial Day will ap- Gardner Hahn, 10 IRankin St. hangs in the balance Friday night rake. If the soil is free of clods and scopies of modern times are pri­ cream and cakes were served. wood Company, have joined the year in Thursday's issue. Rufus T. Hall. 26 Franklin St. when Butch Wooster of Rockland rocks, a light hand marker may marily giant cameras. Their huge Mrs. Nelson Gardner is recover­ painters' gang at the Bath Iron Ellas T. Harrington. 14 Pine St. Thirteen of the 18 High School meets Danny Peal of Bangor in an prove satisfactory For a large gar­ mirrors or lenses act as funnels for ing from a broken rib. sustained in Works. The big yard is said to have Elisha P. Haskell. 126 Park St. 8-round bout at the Bangor Cha­ den a horse-drawn marker may be light, making it possible to con­ a fall while housecleaning. seven years work ahead, and k now- Seniors who has been taking the Alden Hayden. 13 Orange St. teau. Butch, idle since his fight in better. centrate a large quantity of star Mr. and Mrs Sidney Chase of employing about 2400 men. Oosh! Highway and Safe Driving Course Fred H. Hewett. 58 Warren St. Machias several weeks ago. is train­ The actual planting of seeds may light in one spot. By exposing a Haverhill. Mass, and Mrs. Joel under the direction of State Patrol­ Valentine Higgins, 49 Warren Bt. ing hard and faithfully for the ap­ be done with a seed drill or by sensitive plate for several hours, or Hupper and Miss Marjorie Hupper School opened at the Ramsdcli man Harry Thompson passed the John F. Holbrook. 11 Masonic St TOASTERS proaching battle, and those who hand. Unless a fair quantity of even for several nights, to light of Bangor have arrived for the sum­ Packing Company's plant Saturday, recent examinations successfully. Thomas U. Howard. 57 Grace St. Non-Automatic and Automatic have watched his workouts believe one variety is planted, the seed drill concentrated by a telescopic, an mer. but it was only a small school—85 The test was conducted by Cap; Frederick J. Hull. 81 Grace St. In B right (Chrome FinUh that the rugged lad from the lime is not practical. Too much time askonomer can photograph stars Roger Leonard of Bangor spent bushels of herring, which' were Burtis Fowler. Sergeant Levi Flint. Edward C. Jackson. $1.95, $2.95, $4.95 up area will either put Peal away, or will toe spent making certaut and galaxies of stars so distant that the weekend a t his cottage. quickly tinned. Thc bell rang again Sergeant Adelbert Sargent and 10 Washington St whip him badly enough to get the that all the seeds of one variety are lie could never see them with his Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Dwyer of yesterday and everybody's hoping Clerk Ellery Cunningham. Willard C Jackson. 24 James St newspaper decision A large Rock­ out of the seeder before beginning own eyes through the same tele- Hebron passed the weekend here, that it will continue to ring until Pillsbury Johnson, 85 Masonic St. That popular shore resort known land delegation will Journey to the with another. Hence for small [ scope if lie looked a lifetime. This preparing his gardens for summer the season ends. Rockland Jones. Old Countly Rd as “Trail's End" opened Sunday Chateau Friday night, spurred also amounts hand seeding is better. is because tlie effect of light on a • • • • Rate of seeding depends on kind Henry J Keating, 14 Mechanic St Fiftieth Anniversary Thc Merchants' Committee of the with the largest patronage ever by the fact that Ponzi Cochran of photographic emulsion is cumulative of seeds, visibility, weather and soil Addison F. Keizer. 54 Broad St Chamber of Commerce has made recorded on the opening, including Rockland is going to fight six which is not true of the human eye. The Ladies' Circle observed thc conditions. Small seeds that pro­ Edward A Knowlton, an arrangement with County Com­ one man who ate the first meal ever rounds with Young Fisher of Wa­ “The ‘seeing’ ability of telescopes 50Ui anniversary of its founding duce weak seedlings need to be 138 Limerock St. missioner Foy W. Brown whereby served there. The plant has had terville. Rockland will be pretty grows greater also as photographic Friday night with a public supper, F L A T IRONS planted more thickly than larger M artin D. Labe. 13 Grace St. roll call and entertainment which Non-Automatic and Automatic he will bring passengers from North some notable improvements since much on the map emulsions are improved and made seeds producing more robust seed­ George C. Lawler, 32 Rankin St. By Haven to Rockland and return on that time, and nobody seems to be more sensitive. Better emulsions depicted the first meeting. Young lings. Seed that Is rather old and Henry Leavett. 26 Franklin St. General Electric, W’eslingliouse Saturdays for the very low fare of prouder of it than that enormous | An athletic young man. on whose make the 100-inch telescope at women in authentic dresses and weak in vitality needs to be sown Frank Leavett. 4 Linden St. $2.95 to $8.95 50 cents. His new power boat will white turkey gabbler. The scene is features there was something Mount Wilson considerably more hats read the letters of absent | more abundantly. If soil is in ideal Owen Lermond. Old County Rd leave the island Saturday mornings one of unexcelled beauty which strangely familiar, appeared sud­ efficient today for example, than members at the roll call and re­ condition and weather conditions Robert Ludwig, 55 Grace St. r a m a i n i at 7.30 standard time and leave ! somehow looks more alluring than denly on Main street yesterday and when it was built 20 years ago. viewed the articles of the Constitu­ Z ^ are right, one can expect better Sabin Lord. 456 Main St. Rockland public landing on thc re­ ever. Even the genial proprietor. was promptly identified by Charlie though its mirror remains the tion. Mrs. E. R. Maxwell read a CENT) germination, hence seed more David Mitchell. 13 Grace St. turn trip at 3 o'clock, standard Otis Lewis, looks handsomer than Wot ton as Freddie Loftus who : same size. well written history of the organi­ FOWB lightly than if conditions are un­ John Mahoney. St. 6t. Place This very low cost service star’s he used to. played on the Rockland team in the ‘‘But astronomers still would know zation. 61&63 Maine Coast League in 1927 and on favorable. | comparatively little about the Uni- J. Mallett. 5 South St Other numbers were: Songs by June 3 —adv.* Thomas W. Mank. 47 No. Main St. I ------BORN the Camden team in 1928. It was Depth of covering varies with size ) verse, if they merely looked at stars Mrs. Charles Morris. Miss Christina of seed and soil conditions. Large John Marshall. 3 Elm St. Walt for thc Sale of Sales, thc Wooster—At Vinalhaven. May 19 to while pitching for the Rockland and photographed them, even with Crockett and Miss Virginia White: Mr. and Mrs. Bnery Wooster. Jr . (Bes­ seeds in general arc planted deeper John Mclnnes. 17 South 6t. original Rexal 1 One Cent Sale, team that he made his famous home the largest telescopies. The light an original poem written by Mrs. Cate’s Magic Water sie Clay ter I. a daughter than small seeds. However, seeds Daniel McLoud. 54 Pacific St. starts Wednesday. May 24, four b’g Malonev—At Knox Hospital. May 21. run poling the ball against the up­ that is concentrated by the giant David Ervine and read by Mrs. J. WONDERFUL DISINFECTANT to-Mr and Mrs Frank R Maloney, a per story of the grade school build­ such as bean that push up cotyle­ mirrors and lenses is not only Hiram A. McMichael, Glen St. Wesley Stuart; a reading by Helen days. Sheldon's Drug Store. 444 daughter. ing. He was enroute yesterday to dons. are covered to less depth than photographed directly, but is also Ambrose Mills. 48 Oay 6t. Hupper; welcome by Dennis Sim­ DEODORANT Main S t . Rockland —adv. 60-62 George Morse. 68 Grace St. MARRIED Sidney Mines. N 6 . where he will peas or corn. If thc soil is rather broken up into spectrum of dif­ mons and remarks by Rev. J. Wes­ Charles Morton 87 Union St. Sick Rooms l Edwards-Kennedy—At Rockland. May again manage the local team in the moist, as in spring, leas depth of ferent wave-lengths. By analyzing ley Stuart. About $50 was realized 20 bv Rev Guy 'Wilson. D D . Luther covering is required than later in Reuben D. Murphy. Glen St. r . Edvards of Westbrook and Mrs Cape Breton Collier League He is thc spectrum of a star, astronomers The women who planned this Emily J. Kennedy or Rockland. looking fit to capture a champion­ thc season when the soil Is drier in many cases can learn an amaz­ Edward E Orbeton. 355 Broadway successful Affair were: Mrs. T. B Kitchens WALDO THEATRE Ringer-Thomas—At Rockport. Msv 20 Amos D. Orne. 31 (Lawrence St ship. Seeds can be planted more deeply ing number of things about it—its Harris. Mrs Gertrude Small. Mrs Cao be Garage Floors MAINE’S LITTLE RADIO CITY by Rev Donald P. Perron. John 8tnger on light soils than on heavy soils Jason O. Packard. 80 Rankin St. TEL. WAIBOBORO 100 of Thomaston and Miss Helen Ruth distance, mass, brightness tempera­ Etta Harris. Mrs. Ethel Stanley. Concrete Floors Thomas of Lincoln. Neb. under same conditions of moisture Marcellus M. Parker. 58 Warren St. A movement has started in Ire­ ture. size, speed of rotation, and Mrs. Gertrude McDermott, Mrs. Used Stone Steps Show Times: Every Evening 7 4 9. Henry Pendleton, 64 Mechanic St. DIED land to pay a marriage bounty to even sometimes the approximate Lillian Stanley, Mrs. Oertrudc Hup­ Refrigerators Matiners. Saturdays, Sundays number of atoms it contains. Edwin J. Pierce 31 Purchase St. per. Mrs. Arlene Stuart. Mrs. Clarl- Edwards—At Detroit. Mich. May 21. poor couples. For Drain Pipes 4 Holidays at 230. Daylight Time Mabel J. (Abbott) wife of Henri' E Larger Telescopes Are Reflectors Lester W Hokes, 118 Maverick St. bel Andrews. Mts. E R. Maxwell, Edwards nt Birmingham. Mich and Toilet Bonis Ash Point, a red 74 years. Funeral In "Most of thc larger telescopes in Roscoe G. Robinson, 90 Orace St. Mrs. Elizabctli Davis and Mrs. TUES.-WED. MAY 23-24 Birmingham this afternoon. DANCING •A ! I t '.I \ use today are reflectors, that is, Levi Saunders, 10 Lisle St. Mrs. Elizabeth Davis and Mrs Lavatories BOB BURNS Burpee—At Rockland. May 22. Eliza­ Allison 8human, 18 Broad St. beth I . widow of Samuel A Burpee, AT they have huge mirrors which gath­ Olivia Verier. Garbage Pane GLADYS GEORGE aged 76 years. 4 inonthh. 24 days. Fu­ Oeorge Smith. Old County Rd. neral Thursday at 2 o'clock from Bur­ er star light. The light Is then re­ in pee funeral home. Glen Cove Oilman F. Simmons, Takes all away PoBses — At Ttrmaston. May 21. flected and concentrated at a given Thc maximum width of the path Onoe Always Used ‘I’M FROM MISSOURI’ Rrbert C. Infant son of Mr and Mrs. Every W ed. lioint, or focus, where the Image 54 Rankin St. of a solar eclipse Is 160 miles Ralph HolT es. aaed 8 months. Funeral Hanson B Simmons 150 Holmes St. THURS.-FRI., MAY 25-26 Wedne«dav at 2 o'clock from residence Night is photographed or sometimes ob­ cf .Silas Holtses. Walker's Corner. served by thc astronomer visually. Isaac B Simmons. 5 Fulton St Music By BARBARA STANWYCK The other type is thc refracting Austin W Smith. Old County Rd CARD OF THANKS JOEL McCREA D A N N Y PA TT telescopic, in which star light Is Charles Smith, Old County Rd In We wbh to extend our heartfelt thanks to our neighbors and many AND HIS NOVELTY BOYS gathered and concentrated by a Charles L. Smith, Old County Rd Cecil B. DeMille's great epic friends for -their kindness, letters and cards of sympathy during the bereave­ DOOR PRIZE series of lenses, but such lenses are Oeorge Smith, .Old County Road “UNION PACIFIC” Men 35c; Ladies 25c ment of our son and brother difficult to make beyond a certain with i Mr and Mrs Almond «f Miller. Mr •l»lt I and Mrs. Malcolm H. Winslow size. The diameter of the lenses Brian Donley, Akim TamirofT BEANO TONIGHT of the largest refracting telescope CARD OF THANKS 7JC . ’clock in thc world, at Yerkes Observatory, Wr wish to express our Seep appre­ AMERICAN LEGION ciation for all the kindness shown us LOAM FOR SALE Williams Bay, Wisconsin. Is 40 in­ during our bereavement To all the Milton Feinberg, of Twenty Regular Games; Also SpecUl For Gardens. Lawna and Flowers ches whereas the diameter of thc LOAM FOR SALE neighbors and trlends who sen* flow­ $2 per load, delivered. Gravel $1.30 Philadelphia, builds Gamez Door ers or offered their cars or In any wav mirror to be installed In the Mount helped we extend our thanks WILLIAM ANDERSON rock gardens in Admission 25 Cents $ 2 .0 0 yard Mrs. Josephine Orover and family • 4Ttf TEL. 23-W. W. MEADOW ROAD Palomar telescopic is five times as Gravel, $1.00 load watch cases/ great. CARD OF THANKS 61'63 Take a tip from leading pro­ "Despite their great bulk, tele­ TEL. 341-W or 500 I wish to thank all rity friends. WHAT IS YOUR HOBBYTI fessional growers. They use 60-61 neighbors, and relatives who were so warre OAvr ( lm a h n b c .ncwvorm scopes must and do have a high fertilizers specially- form u­ kind In our recent bereavement also l-bnan^ lated for each crop, because for thc beautiful flowers. degree of precision. The mirror of Mrs. Ida Greenrose SPECIAL CHICK SALE the McDonald Observatory telescopic each crop feeds differently. Box 52. West Rockport. frLAWNl.TI , Same thing holds for the Fifty or More, 8c each weighs nearly three tons, yet its Oct Yours While They Last eedtMRUl* home garden. That’s why CARD OF THANKS I curved surface has been ground and we offer TWO Agricos for the We wish to extend our sincere thanks Knox County Grain Co. polished to an accuracy of one-mll- to out friends and neighbors for their hom e garden — two differ­ loving thoughts and kindness In our TEL. 333. 31 NEW COUNTY ROAD Advertising In ■ lionth of an inch. The telescope and en t formulae, for two differ­ 60*63 BURPEE’S sorrow Also may we gratefully thank , its mounting weighs 75 tons, yet It en t Jobs: one, Agrico for Dr Ralph Earle. Dr. IWyland F. Lead- better and friends of the Lahey Clinic THIS is so perfectly balanced that It is Lawns, Trees A Shrubs . . . MORTICIANS for their many acts of kindness. the other, Agrico for Gar­ Mrs Clyde E McIntosh. Mr and moved by a motor of one-third Ambulance Service dens. Try some Agrico and Mrs. Andrew Ollcbrlst, Master Ernest SAVE FIVE DOLLARS M Gilchrist • PAPER horsepower and can be adjusted to • see thc difference. Ambulance Serried On every new set of teeth ordered a hair's breadth.’' daring this month. Make appoint­ RUSSELL sA Crie Hardware Co. CARD OF THANKS ments (or Tuesday. Thursday and Is a <08 MAIN ST. TEL. 191 TELA. 888 AND 781-1 The many kindnesses received by me Friday. Office over Newberry’s 5c 4 A Manhattan physicist has dis­ FUNERAL HOME from relatives, neighbors and friends 10c Store. Telephone 415-W. • CLAREMONT ST. TEL. 862 1-8M KAIN ST, ROCKLAND during my recent llllnees.mines were greatly Good Investment covered that infra-red rays from a appreciated. DR. J. H. DAMON, Dentist low-opwercd lamp aids In releving ROCKLAND, MR. IW -tf Mrs. Ada L. Spear 52-tf N-U AGKICO—THt Nfil lGh S l EAGIHC 1 1 R i Il iz (• H South Wwren . arthritis. Page Four Rockland Courier-Gazette, Tuesday, May 23, 1939 Every-Other:Dav

WASHINGTON PO R T CLYDE Shifting The Jobs Maine’s Clam Flats WALDOBORO LA W. Field Day Mrs. Merton Anthony was a WARREN Courier-Gazette Cross-Word Puzzle ft ft ft ft High schools of Liberty, Appleton, Rockland visitor recently. George Leadbetter Will ft ft ft ft Are To Have Systematic MRS. LOUISE MTLIJCR and Washington held a field day Andrew Wyeth of Philadelphia Is Head the Department Of ALENA L. STARRETT Survey; Mussels, Oysters Correspond cut here Friday. This was the first at the Wyeth cottage on Spruce Correspondent Institutions and Quahogs ft ft ft ft time the high schools have ever car­ Point. ft ft ft ft ried on a field day and it is hoped T el. 27 Mrs. Enid Monaghan has received The last Legislature passed a law Tel. 40 Plans for the first complete and that this will be continued in the the appointment of postmaster. | providing for the dividing of the accurate survey of Maine clam flats future. There were 140 present, in­ Sha has been acting postmaster Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Butters of Callers Sunday at the home of cluding pupils and teachers. Liberty since the resignation of Miss Emma department of Health and Welfare from Kittery to Eastport are being Cambridge. Mass., spent the week­ Mr. and Mrs. John Marshall were High School scored the most points Buker. of which department George W. made by the Sea and Shore Fish­ end at their summer home at Slaigo Miss Rosa Roberts. Neil Roberts and —00. Appleton came in second. Mrs. Charles Hupper is visiting Leadbetter is the Commissioner. It eries Commissioner Arthur R. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brown of Mr. Seeklns of Belfast. scoring 33 points and Washington; relatives in Massachusetts, was the judgment of the members Greenleaf. Within the next two Rockland were guests Sunday of third with 18 points. , Mrs. Florence Simmons spent the Mr. and Mrs. Everett A Bird of months he expects to have available of the legislature that Mr Lead- Mrs. Jennie Benner. Tire final baseball game was won ! weekend in’ Rockland Cascade. N. H„ were weekend guests a chart which will show every bed. Sumner Hancock, a member of by Washington; the final girls soft-I Mrs. Alice Marshall of Rockland better had too much not only of Mr. and Mrs. Henry V. Starrett. either producing or capable of pro­ the high school faculty, was guest ball game won by Liberty. is passing a lew weeks at her home Health and Welfare but the S tate Crescent Temple will meet Friday duction. as well as a case history of speaker Wednesday night at the Events and results were: * J here. Welfare Institutions. The bill cre­ night. Supper will be in charge of each of the areas. Mussel and po­ Lion's Club. Fifty-yard relay for girls: 1st: Mrs. Addle Kelso has returned ated a department oi Institutions the K P. members. tential oyster and quahaug beds will also be included in the survey, Miss Olive Piper, a student nurse Liberty; 2nd, Appleton; 3rd Wash-1 home after spending several weeks and another depaitmen of Healtn Mrs. Susie Phllbrook returned at the State Street Hospital, Port­ at Mrs. Poster's home in Thomas­ Sunday from Friendship where she Greenleaf said ington. and Welfare. land recently visited her parents, Half-mile run. boys: 1st. Liberty; ton. Mrs. Kelso is much improved passed* few days with her daugh­ He will assign the Job to his Mr. Leadbetter will be made the Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Piper. 2d Liberty. 3d, Appleton; 4th, in health. ter. Mrs. Kenneth Thompson warden force. Each man will be Mrs. Irene Sprague has returned Liberty. ,. Mr. and Mrs W P Mitchell of head of the department of Institu­ Roland Berry has been 111. expected to supply the necessary data in his territory. The laiger from several weeks visit in New Baseball-throw for girls; 1st Ap« Wakefield, Mass, spent the weekend tions and will be relieved of the The Oranunar pupils enjoyed an islands will be Included. The de­ York, New Jersey and Bermuda pleton; 2d, Liberty; 3d and 4th, at their cottage here. Health and Welfare work. The lat­ outing Saturday In Union. 8oft Mr. and Mrs. Albert Fidler. Miss ! partment will seek to find out why She was accompanied to Bermuda Appleton. .-Jjr ter will be a department by itself ball was played between the girls former abundant areas are not now by her sister Mrs. Marion Froelich. | Broad jump for girls: 1st, Libert# M. L. Lewis and Miss Elsie Lowell teams of W arren and Union, and and will have two bureaus, a bureau producing, to trace the effects of Misses Annie O. Welt and Anne 2d Washington; 3d, Appleton: 4tfiJ have returned home after spending base ball between the boys. War­ of health and a bureau of welfare. pollution and over digging and sum­ Welt were recent guests of Mr. and Liberty. Winning jump was 11 ft-efc the winter in Arizona ren grammar school lost both • • • • Dr Coombs who has served as di­ marize in graphic form all beds on Mrs. Charles Studley at Glen Cove. 8 inches; second. 11 feet 7 inches. > games. A damper was put on the Rose E. M o n ro which digging is restricted under Geraldine Achorn, 10-year-old' Short-put: 1st, Liberty, 34 feet rector of health since the depart HORIZONTAL HORIZONTAL (Cont.) VERTICAL (Cont.) Rose E (Cushman) wife of day’s outing, when in jumping to local laws. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Amos 4 Inches; 2d, Liberty, 31 feet 5 ment was organized, resigned some catch a line drive. Emily Stone and 1 -O rd e r 48-R epu lse 9 - Em mete Charles Monro who died May 12 at | ,nonths a({0 reslgnat;on not t0 Oreenleaf said that he expected 7-Part of a flower (pi.) 47- Hostllity between 10- Deface Achorn fell 25 feet Saturday from Inches; 3d, tie Liberty and Appleton Eleanor Fales of Warren collided, the age of 72, was born in Friend- the survey to be of great value in 13- Relieves clans 11- The act of escaping a ladder leading to the hay mow 29 feet. i take effect until June 1. In his the former sustaining two broken 14- Pertaining to 48- Wild (Scot.) 12- Th ln ship but had been a resident of this another physimn wU, ap. mapping out a long term program in the barn of Howard Benner. Tire 100-yard dash for boys; flnlalMr front teeth p u n ish m en t 51-Combining form. 10-A thick toup place for many years. She is sur­ for improving the clam industry. child was badly bruised and suf­ in 12 Seconds—1st, 2d. Bd laberttV pointed to be director of health. 15- Scintlllate N eedle 18-C om pact vived by her husband: one daugh­ Mr. and Mrs Harold Wotton, who He believes that eventually the 17-To enter without 62-To permeate 22- lnterdict fered a slight concussion althoughJ 4th Washington. Who that appointee will be has not ter, Mrs. Fannie Davis; several are residing a t the home of John state will recognize the value of In v ita tio n 65-Oevlce for browning 23- Orunkard no bones were broken. 50-yard dash for girls: finished in been decided Dr McDonald will be 19- European country bread 26-Wards off Fullerton, following their recent clam propagation and appropriate Miss Grace Gutchfleld, R. N., a 7’4 seconds—1st and 2d. Liberty; 3d„ brothers, sisters and grandchildren director of Welfare Then there (a b b r.) 68-Large tea-duck 28-Domesticated Kj Mrs. Monro was a devoted grand- marriage, were pleasantly surprised money for large scale operations. 3 2 - Keen er native of England Is guest of Mrs Washington 4th, Appleton. will be a commissioner of health 20- Japaneae coin 5 9 - W e lrd js^i mother to four whose mother, Mrs Saturday night. 28 relatives, neigh­ Experiments in various areas will 21- Man’a name (Ital.) 60- Reclalme 33- Volcano on Island Crosby Waltz. Three-legged race for girls and welfare who is yet to be select­ Hazel Davis, died several years ago bors and friends gathering for a be tried during the next two years. 22- Seiiea with the teeth 61- Clothed of Martinique Mrs. Anna McLaughlin who spent Liberty; 2d, Appleton; 3d, Washing­ ed. 24-To twist 34- Penetrated Funeral services were conducted party and shower of gifts which in­ There has been much discussion the winter In Blue Hill has returned ton; 4 th Liberty. The work of this commissioner ZS-Encloaure VERTICAL 35- Sardinla (abbr.) at the Advent Christian Church. cluded glassware, linen, lamp, and about conditions of the flats and 36- Chief Babylonian to her home on Main street. High-Jump for girls: 1st Liberty, will be very exacting and it is real­ 7 3 -A g lta te 4 feet 4 inches: 2d, Liberty. 4 feet John HoUn»n " tt^ tin g . Two kitchen utensils Punch and cake the industry in general and Green­ 27-Small child god Miss Besse Reed went Saturday ized by the Oovmernor that an ad­ 1- Burat asunder 37- Form ideas favorite hymns of the deceased were were served. leaf intends to find out the exact 29- Suffix. Used to In­ to Rangeley where she has employ­ 3 inches; 3d Liberty, 4 feet 2 inches; ministrator of exceptional ability dicate fulneta 2- 8topping 38- The devil sung by the choir. The floral Members of Warren Lodge. I. O. situation. Changing conditions will ment for the summer. 4th, Appleton, 4 feet 1 inch. will have to be chosen for the place. 30- Sced covering 3 - M a rln e r 3*-Tolerated tributes were beautiful. The bear­ O. F who attended the district be recorded each year providing an 31- One who curse hides 4- Beseechee 42- Hinders Mrs. Louise Gray of Hallowell High-Jump for boys: 1st, tie Lib­ He is now looking about for this ers were Forest Hupper. Calvin Sim­ meeting Wednesday in Tenant’s accurate check of the supply. 82-Wastee 5- Combining form. Far 43- Reclined has been recent guest of Mrs. Wil­ erty, 4 feet 7 Inches; 2d tie, Appleton man. Dr Hanscom will continue 6- Drug used to con­ 49- Conetructed mons. Samuel Davis and Rodney , Harbor were: Edwin Gammon, Ein- The Mussel survey will be used to 26-Cloee by liam Flint. 4 feet 6 inches. with institutions under Mr. Lead- *O -A fo w l tract pupil of the 5 0 - Nude Davis. Burial was in the Ridge erson O Perkins. Eknerson W. Perk­ determine the supply for a poten­ 53- Contend with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Miller have 100-yard relay for boys: 1st Lib­ better 41-Sorrowful eye 7- Old musical instru­ 54- Democratic (abbr.) e rty ; cemetery in Glenmere. ins. Fred Starrett and Capt. Charles tial market which Greenleaf and 43- Crimson moved from Augusta and are oc­ 2d Washington; 3d. Appleton. 56-Over (contr.j Young. the Maine Development Commis­ 44- L a ir m ent cupying an apartm ent on Marble Morning: Baseball—Liberty 5, Ap­ 4>-S(i'g>ng voice 8- Half a score 47-Llttle sitter SOUTH WARREN sion is developing. Oyster and qua­ avenue. pleton 1. GLENMERE Sisko Lehto. in behalf of the cast haug cultivation is scheduled in ■ (Answer To Previous Puzzle) The Senior Class will serve a pub­ Softball (girls)—Liberty 21, Wash­ Mr. and Mrs. Percy Lermond of of the senior class play, repeated Rev. and Mrs. J. Wesley Stuart Greenleaf’s program. lic supper Friday in Odd Fellows ington 4. Jefferson were visitors Sunday at G. Friday, presented a gift to Miss PLEASANT POINT attended the Baptist State Conven­ According to department records dining room. Afternoon: Baseball — Liberty 5, A Lermond s Eleanor Goodwin, coach. About 818 tion in Dover-Foxcroft the past no statewide study of shellfish has Mr and Mrs. Herbert Morse have Harlan McLain, Philip Hutchins, Washington 6. Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Hyler mo­ was realized for the Junior high week. been made and statements regard­ returned home having spent the Leon Hoak, Charles Howe Jr., and Softball (girls)—Liberty 17. Apple- tored Sunday to Auburn and called school building. Mrs Byron Davis has returned ing the industry in general have past winter In Florida. Ouy Abbotonl were weekend guests to n 9. on relatives. The Fire Department was called from a visit with her daughter, Mrs. been based mostly on speculation. Events closed with a weenie roast Mr and Mrs. L B. Wood of Milli­ to three fires Saturday—in the fore­ Gloria Orne daughter of Mr. and in Casco of Sum ner Hancock. The Chauncy Keene in Rockland. followed by a dance in the evening. nocket were weekend guests a t O. noon to a fire which had caught in Mrs Alfred Ome Is suffering with group was Joined Sunday by Elea­ Mrs. Ethel Day of Friendship was W. F. Hatch sustained severe in­ A. Copeland's. They were accom­ the room of the Charles Overlock CLARK ISLAND a fractured arm result of a fall. nor Miller, Virginia Genthner, Ella guest Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. A. W Rider and Mary Miller who were juries to his mouth and face Friday panied by Mr. and Mrs. Wainwright Ice house, from burning brush fire: MRS MAURICE JONES Miss Margaret McKnight of Rock­ Hooper. Correspondent when one of his oxen gored him with Reed who visited Mrs. Alice Cook in at noon to Sterling, where a grass land recently showed stereoscopical accompanied by Mrs. William Labe Mr. and Mrs C. A. Schellens of [ a lifted horn. He was taken to Warren. slides of the Holy Land at the home The party returned Sunday night. Marblehead Mass , were at their and woods fire set by Knox Rail­ Mr. and Mrs Lewis Yattaw and Knox Hospital for x-rays. Emily Stone and Eleanor Fales road Locomotive, threatened the of Mr and Mrs. Lawrence Stlmpson Mrs. Gerald Dalton, Mrs. Lila cottage a few days recently. family have moved to Rockport. were victims of an unfortunate acci­ All schcol children and their par­ Lovejoy and Mrs. Francis Reed Mrs. Watson Barter was recent Sterling cemetery and the Sterling Mrs Laura Richards of Rockland, At tlie New York Worlds Fair is dent while engaged in a game Of ents and a few friends attended. visited Saturday in Rockland. guest of her sister. Mrs Verona Mil-1 school building; and at 4.30 to a formerly of this place and her a precision machine that measures ball in Union. Saturday, the former (now married); Eleanor Howard Mrs Henry Mason spent Monday ler in Port Clyde. woods fire between W. A. Creamer s daughters. Mrs Nina White and Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Irish and the thickness of hair. A visitor I losing two front teeth and the lat­ Oray and Howard and De Winter with relatives in Nobleboro. Byron Davis is on a trip to New farm and the Virgil Hills farm, In Mrs Evelyn Ludwig, and grand­ daughter Beverly and Mr. Irish’s ter receiving a wound in the fore- Gray; also two great grandchildren, Alfred Ellis is visiting in Farm­ drops one of his hairs into the ma­ Brunswick. Canada with his nephew woodland on the latter farm. All daughter Mrs. Dorothy Libby and sister Miss Irish of Portland were rine and a printed slip comes out ! head. children of Carl Oray. 3d —By Mrs. ington. Byron Coombs of Cushing. were taken in the nick of time to her children Marilyn and Patricia visitors Mothers’ Day at the home showing the hair's thickness in Madeline Stlmpson. Mr. and Mrs. Kelsey Lash were Mr. and Mrs. Alvah Harris of prevent serious damage. Twenty Libby were visiting relatives here of Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Seavey. thousandths of an inch. visitors Sunday in Lynn, Mass. [Tenant's Harbor called Tuesday on GLEN COVE volunteers were called to Sterling Tuesday. Mr and Mrs. Leslie Young were Thomas Brown and Frederick " ...... - ■ 4 = Miss Edith Harris. and 50 to the Hills farm. Arbor Day was observed Friday recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Brummitt went Monday to Boston Edith Levensaler went to Machias A meeting of the Ladies' Circle Miss Therese Smith has sold her A rehearsal of the officers of Ivy at both schools George Cooley in South Cushing. Hints to Gardeners farm to Pearson Menher of Texas where they will spend a few days. Thursday, returning Saturday. last Thursday at Mrs. Rosa Seavey's Chapter. OX S. Is called for Thurs­ Mrs William Caven is caring for During the afternoon they motored whom will make his summer resi 6? Herold Coulter Mrs. Cassie Simmons has re­ Mrs. James Waltz was a Portland Port Clyde home was attended by I day at 7 o'clock. her father of Rockland. to Friendship to see friends of turned from th e Little Nursing visitor Saturday. dence there. VtitHble Expert Mrs. J. W. Stuart. Mrs. Byron Da- • • • • Mrs. Mabel Allison of Rockland Block Island, R. I., who are having ferry Seed Stitioe Home where she has been a patient Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Miller afld Sris. Mrs. Jennie Sheerer, Mrs. Frank Mr. and Mrs Chester Douglas of A Furniture Hobby spent last weekend with her sister. a boat built there by Frank Win- Mr. and Mrs. James R. Bancroft daughter Nancy spent 8unday in [Wiley, Miss Rosa Teele and Miss Miami. Fla., and children Lois and Bryan Robinson, machinist at Mrs. Edith M. Cameron chenbaugh. Donald were guests Tuesday at Mrs. • • • • of Waban, Mass., have been recent Bangor as guests of Mr. and Mr Edith Harris. Oeorges River Mills, has a hobby, J. B. Crittenden and Melba Ulmer Fogg. Sarah Lufkin’s. Mr Douglas has Mrs. Mary Baum guests of Mrs. Richard Elkins. Forrest G. that of making furniture in the were visitors Sunday at Lawrence On Mothers' Day, May 14 at even­ Mr. and Mrs. George Chilles of Mrs. Bessie S. Kuhn and daugh­ An Illinois sued for divorce be- employment at the Samoset Hotel basement of his home which he has Stimpson's. for the summer. tide after many of her children, Mt. Desert were visitors Sunday at ter, Patricia were weekend guests "cause her husband Joined the army equipped with electric machinery. In­ Mr and Mrs. Leslie Morton were grandchildren and great-grand­ Mrs. Annie G ran t’s. of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knowles ^without her consent. She charged cluding a combination saw and callers 8unday at Laura Flinton's. Miss Frances Achorn has returned in Portland. he broke his promise to join the Iron is rarely found In pure form, Joiner, a variety molder or spindle children had brought greetings and s e e s ■from California where she passed The Susannah Wesley Society Navy so he could help build up her except in meteorites. It must go shaper, and a combination drill and gifts, Mrs. Mary Baum, entered in­ Carl Gray will meet Thursday afternoon with stamp collection with letters from through many costly processes be­ to eternal life That she was look­ the winter. mortiser, electric grinder and band The friends and relatives of the Know Your Herbs Mrs. Maude Clark Gay and Miss Mrs. Porter Soule. foreign ports. fore industry can use it. saw. ing forward without fear to this late Carl Gray were much shocked His latest accomplishment is a experience Is revealed In the little to hear of his sudden death. This ERBS are becoming more popu­ Artist’s impression of cast and set of ‘‘ONLY ANGELS HAVE WINGS.” Waldo Theatre special holiday attrac­ beautiful grandfather clock case, of poem Mrs. Baum had clipped and community feels that it has lost lar each year because they are scroll design, made from kiln dried treasured: easy to grow and help make every­ tion, May 28, 29,30. a great member in one who held Hday dishea more appetizing and rock maple, finished in mahogany “It's only a wonderful Journey From an old world to a new such an honorable and high position flavorful. It has a scroll top and hood, with a Where Oolden Oates have opened wide in life. His congenial spirit and He|T are Important facta about pillMter each aide of the face. The To let our loved ones through the more Important herbs: And there with ju it the aame glad friendliness will always be remem­ Anise—Seeds used to flavor face has serpentine hands, brass nu - s m ile And the heart we cherlahed so bered by everyone who knew him. bread, cake, cookies and candy; merals screwed on and filagree work Our dear one waltv until we meet Mr. Gray's mother, Virginia Oray, greed leaves good for salad flavor­ In the land where loved ones go." ing. in the corners. The frosted two ton? daughter of Capt. George Davis, Mrs Mary (Grierson) Baum was Borage—Leaves and flowers give background of the face has the hour was born on the estate now owned nnusuat tang to fruit drinks and are circle In silver, with moving moon born An Dalbeatie Scotland and by Alva Carle. After the death of ! good j’&rnfsh for salads; blossoms there grew to young womanhood and markie landscapes in oil visible Mrs. Davis, Mr. Gray s grandmother attractive as cut flowers. and was married to Joseph Baum. Balm—Fresh sprigs add flavorful as the wheel turns Capt. Davis married the widow of To this union eight children were touch to fruit drinks. Antique knobs grace each side of Capt. George Young (Elizabeth Basil—Leaves give spicy taste to the face. Plate glass has been set born. Her husband and two daugh­ Young) thus uniting, two large fam­ green salads, to dishes containing Into the front, through which may ters preceeded her in death. Her tomato or cheese, and to meats and ilies. The former Mrs. Davis and soups. ‘ be seen the three brass weights. The daughters and sons. Mrs. Margaret Mrs. Young were sisters and rela­ Cariway—Seeds used to flavor Maker of Spruce Head, Mrs. Har­ feet of this case, the most difficult tives of the Davis and Young fam­ bread, cake, cookies, cheeses, baked apples and other baked (ruita. pArt of the cabinet, according to riet Niles, Mrs. Mary Ames, James ilies before their first marriages 1 Baum of Rockland. Joseph Baum Chives—Young leaves eaten like Mr. Robinson, are Queen Anne type, and their second marriages brought onions, or cut up to flavor soups difficult to get out because of the Jr., of South Thomaston, and Mrs. the two families into closer relation-1 and saladH. angles. Every piece of the case was Vida Blomburg of Clark Island; ship. Dlll-^Both seeds and leave* used with Mrs. Julia Johnson of Clark for moking dill pickles. made in his workshop even to the At the time of Capt. Davis' second Sweet Fennel—Fresh stems eaten curved moldings. Well modulated Island, a granddaughter and 27 marriage he made his home with like celery or used In salads; bulb cathedral chimes strike each quarter other grandchildren and 20 great­ his wife on the property owned by at base eaten raw or cooked; leaves hour. grandchildren, mourn the loss of add flavor to sauces and soups, her and through heirship, now seeds used to flavor candy • * • • this devoted mother and grand­ owned by Capt (Leslie Young. There­ Marjoram—Often used for sea­ High School Activities mother. Deceased Is also survived fore it will be seen that the de­ soning poultry dressings, young leaves -also good In salads and (By Madeleine Haskell) by a sister. Mrs. Charles Hinckley ceased leaves here several relatives. of Stony Creek. Conn. soups, innkes attractive house Sisko Lehto and Annette Haskell Mr. Grays mother Virginia Gray plant. went Saturday to Belfast to compete Relatives, friends and neighbors resided here and Mr. Oray himself | Sage—Excellent for use In meat In the finals In this district for a met in the chapel at Clark therefore spent a great deal of his. and poultry dressings Island to pay tribute to Mrs. Baum Summer savory — Leaves and l£/y < < scholarship at the University of boyhood here. flowering tops used In dressings, ■F / sk ~ v who had lived among them for 52 v j -J7 * . 'cSiiKsB Maine. In later years, because of his rela- boiled with peas and snap beans, or The girls’ soft ball team which years. She was known as one who tlonships he tried to buy his cut up fresh on salads. played Union High Thursday in was always kind, friendly and mothers birthplace, but being un­ z'Jk Read The Courier-Gazette Union, was victorious, 7 to 4. Bat­ thoughtful and gave all who came able to do so, he bought the prop- 4 J tery for Warren was Starrett and to her door a welcome. The service erty of a Mr. Payson, which had Simmons. was conducted by Rev. Newall been his summer home for many f o r Or. T ru e ’s E lix ir The play, "Aunt Susie Shoots the Smith of Tenant's Harbor The years. It is thus seen how closely / ! Works ’ was presented at Town hall many floral offerings gave a silent used he was affiliated with this commun­ Successfully Friday night. Ushers were Bertha but beautiful testimony of the sin- ity, and how residents feel that they 8 8 ] care respect and affection held for as * Anderson, Madeleine Haskell, Eve­ have lost a great friend and rela­ ^ Y E A R S j F am ily L ax a tive lyn Smith and Ruth Starrett. These one who had lived so long and so tive. However they hope that other ______for Young and Old well among them. (Contributed) girls also sold candy between the members of the family will continue A N D T O D A Y thousands fin d i t an acts. Music was furnished by the their residence here as they have agreeable aid in relieving consti­ High School Orchestra under direc­ Marr and Marian Wallace are on In the past. | pation. When ronnd worms occur tion of Miss Verna Robinson. the committee. Survivors in the Immediate family in children many mothers tu n te “This new Columbia film recently at Radio City Music Hall in New York, stars for the first time together, Cary Grant and Jean Arthur, both At a Student Council meeting held The Seniors are planning a class are: Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gray, 2d, of whom have been outstanding in recent Columbia pictures. Jean Arthur will be remembered for her work in “You Can't Take'It With You" and recently, it was voted to have a trip to be taken after graduation. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Oray and Dr. DcTrue’s E lix ir ; Cary Grant in last season’s “Holiday.'* “Only Angels Have Wings’’ set ag ainst a background of the South American Andes should prove one of the school banquet May 20 at the Bap­ Rehearsal ifar the [Senior class and Mrs. Howard Gray; grandchild­ THt TWJt FAMILY LAXATIVC J). outstanding pictures of the summer season. In addition to two s h o w v e ttin g there will be matinees every day at 240.—adv, 64* It tist C h urch . Ruth Starrett, Marie parts began Monday. ren, Carl Oray 3d, Gladys Gray Every-Other-Day Rockland Courier-Gazette, Tuesday, May 23, 1939 Page Five

STONINGTON D U TC H NECK caller Monday at Mrs Alice Field And Stream Ran Away From Home Creamer's. VINALHAVEN iMrs. Susie Sawyer of iPortland is Mr and Mrs Alfred Jackson and *a- POPEYE PLEASE NOTE Mrs. Celeste Winchenbaugh and With Ice Out Angler* Are Jeu Hirsch, Native of Rock­ visiting her Sisters, Mrs. Mabel Bil­ baby recently moved to their home lings and Mrs Edna Merrill. Miss Ada Winchenbaugh of Wollas­ MRS OSCAR C. LAN® Happy—What “Blackie” land, Now a Beachcomb­ here from Bath where they spent ton. Mass , were at their home he.e Miss Grace Faulklngham oi Ban­ Correspondent the winter months. over the weekend. Mi.". Wlnolwn- Learned er In Florida gor passed the weekend with friends Mr. and Mrs. Walter Richardson baugh returned tc Massachusetts Union Church Circle will meet Chief Warden Raymond Morse here. Sunday, but Mrs. Winchenbaugh re­ Now that I have returned to of Portland passed last weekend Thursday .There will be work on who knows every Inch of his vast Maine my thoughts often dwell on Mr. and Mrs. flR. E. Eaton of mained for a visit with her niece. with Mr and Mrs. Herbert Stahl. quilts In the afternoon, and supper Hancock county territory reports my chat with Jess Hirsch. who lives Rockland were recent vsitors at the Mrs. Ralph Benner. In Waldoboro, will be served at 5.30. the best fishing In years. More ) in Joyful solitude on a small, bush- home of (his mother, Mrs. Lois Rev. and Mrs. H. R. Winchen- returning home Wednesday. Capt and Mrs. Leroy 'Ames were than 100 landlocked salmon and ; grown Island In sunny Boca O lga Eaton. baugh of Rockland were visitors The marriage of Miss Joyce home from Camden for over Sun­ several dozen Chinooks were taken Bay Florida. Mrs. Helen Robbins Is visiting her Friday at Mrs. Therese Shuman'S. Creamer to Donald Genthner of day. from Green Lake. (Wednesday and The story of Jess Hirsch Is of in­ sister, Mrs. Muriel Parkhurst, In Mr and Mrs. Benjamin Gross and Broad Cove has been announced A large party accompanied the Jordan Pond on Mt. Desert Island terest to Maine {oiks for he was Unity. daughter Betty of Auburn were Mr. and Mrs. Genthner are now re­ High School baseball players to which has just been opened after born 90 years ago this coming May Mildred Wood is passing two guests Sunday of Mr Gross’s par­ siding in Bread Cove. Rockland Friday and saw them win a two year closed period yielded 142 15 in Rockland, the son of Oscar weeks' vacation with her parents, ents. Mr. and Mrs Edward Gross both games from Lincoln Academy. trout averaging two pounds each Hirsch, a Grand Banks fisherman, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wood. Edward Yore of Auburn was a Read Thp Courier-Gazette All patriotic orders are requested during the past three days. Forty His great-grandfather, Abraham Emma Gross, who has returned to meet at the Grand Army rooms to 50 trout and 20 salmon were tak­ Hirsch, was a soldier of the Revolu­ from a visit with her daughter In Fr.day to make wreaths for Mem­ en from Echo Lake near Southwest tionary War. Jess Hirsch ran away Bath, Is employed at the home oi orial Day. It will be an all day Harbor, Branch Pond and Molasses to sea when he was 14 years old, Mrs. Celeste Coombs. session. Pond are tolling plenty of anglers. shipping as cabin boy out of New Mrs. Alice Banks Is visiting her Dr Ralph Earle and Clarence The former offera brown trout, togue York on a sky-yarder bound for parents in Vinalhaven. Bennett, were In Southwest Harbor and saImon wlth mo6tly salmon in Australia. He never returned to Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hatch have the latter. Maine never married, and for near­ moved to the Thecdore Boyce house ' for over Sunday FIRST Morse says that anglers are miss­ ly 60 years roved the seven seas, Thes^kids must have eaten their spinach I They are actually pulling at Green Head. Mrs. Fred Greenlaw visited Fri­ ing plenty of bets by not taking encountering a var.ety of adven­ this 160-’ on locomotive along its track at Canton, Ohio. There is Mr. and Mrs. Merton Cleveland of day In (Rockland. more to the trick, however, than just spinach. The engine is equipped advantage of the hundreds of little tures. Sixteen years ago he was dis­ with a type of tapered roller bearing developed for railroads which Bangor have been visiting Mrs. Les­ The Knit-Wits were guests Tues­ fished and little known waters In charged from an oil tanker at Tam- makes the largest locomotive roll so freely that even “three kid-power” lie Stinson. | day night of Miss Doris Brown in his section. He offers a good tip pa and intrigued by Florida sun- is sufficient to move it with ease. Mrs. Annie Richardson passed North Haven In Hopkins Pond at Clifton near shine and prospects of an easy Mothers’ Day with her daughter, NATIONAL Mrs George Gray and daughter Bangor on the Airline Route. One living, he built a palm-thatched every man should ease up a bit at of Japan and on this occasion I Mrs. Sadie Powers, In Deer Isle. | Carrie returned Friday from Rock­ has to hike two miles to reach this hut on an Island In Boca-Ceiga bay. my age." was adrift with three others for Mrs. Lela Lufkin has moved to land. water but will be rewarded with an It was quite by accident that I "Wouldn't you like to see Rock­ two days in an open boat. We had the rent above T. H. Sturdee's store. M.ss Frances MacArthur returned abundance of trout and big ones came upon this island recluse from Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Harmon of Win­ land again?” I asked. no food or water, and were In bad Sunday to (Boston. too. Wednesday one angler took a the State of Maine. I was explor­ ter Harbor were recent guests ol “Yes. I would"’ he replied as he shape when rescued by a Japanese STORES Mrs. Raymond Webster and 4*4 and 5*4 pounder. The few ing the bay In a small boat equipped the Reuben Cousins. tamped some tobacco Into the bowl daughter Lois visited Friday In fishermen who know about this with a wheezy outboard motor when fishing schooner. I sailed on sev­ Virgil Rice and family have moved Rockland. pond have kept it a secret but I espied his hut nestling in a grove of his corncob, "but I have a pre­ eral English brigs, and cannot to the house recently occupied by Miss Mary Neilson returned Sat­ recommend It as something worth of palmetto trees on the island monition that I shall stay In Florida Mr and Mrs. Henry Smith B ia ZvetuftkiAf, and die right on this island. I sus­ praise too highly the treatment of urday from a few days visit with looking into. He says that there are Hirsch, very agile for his 90 years, Mr and Mrs. Hubert Kline have pect th at Rockland has changed so sailors on British ships. With the relatives In Rockland several boats available for hire was repairing a rowboat on a crude rented the Milton Allen house. much th a t I'd feel homesick to go decline of sail I went into steam, Mrs. Frank Haskell was a Rock­ • • • e landing that made off from a sandy Linnie. Edna. Fern and Marie Bil- ‘ back there. I have discovered that land visitor Friday. Inland Fisheries and Oame Com­ beach. His long white whiskers and for several years worked for the lings and Grace, Earle and Augusta In this life It is futile to live In the Mrs. Fred Mills and daughter missioner George J. Stobie states waved like a flag of truce in the Dollar line, visit ng all the impor­ Shephard were recent visitors in past. When one has made bis bed BARGAINS Barbara returned Friday from that his department will make a trade wind, and his gnarled fingers tant ports of the Far East. During Bangor. he should lie in it and be content. Rockland. study of the Narraguagus River In plied a saw with the vigor of a the last of my sea career I worked Mrs. Pearl Hutchinson has been “I ran away to sea from Rockland The Knit-Wits will meet tonight Washington and Hancock counties young man. Intrigued by this pic­ mostly on oil tankers." visiting her daughter Virginia Cole 76 years ago. and when I left that PRICES ROCKLAND AND CAMDEN STORES ONLY with Miss Erdine Calderwood this summer to weigh the possibili­ turesque old man and the semi- "How does it happen," I asked, at Sunset. Penobscot bay town was at the peak ties of developing It into a first class tropical setting. I slowed down the that you have arrived at the age Regina Weed was given a surprise | of the heyday of sail. My father I LB. Atlantic salmon stream. He claims outboard motor and drew up to the of 90 without acquiring a wife?" party Thursday night in honor of NORTH HAVEN was a Grand Banker and a severe It has all of the qualifications but landing. ’Ho! ho!" he guffawed behind his her 18th birthday. The evening was B u tte r BROOKSIDE ROLL 2 7 c disciplinarian as far as his family Mrs Eva Cooper has returned that improvements are needed. The When I told the old-timer that I voluminous beard, “so you want to spent in playing games. Guests j MED. were concerned. He was kind of having spent a few weeks with her Columbia and Machias Rivers are hailed from the State of Maine he pry into my private life?" were: Norma and Natalie Eaton.) cracked on religion and when he IIL N H E l.il SIZE DOZ. 2 1 c son in Needham Mass also believed good possibilities. was warm in his welcome and in­ 'Oh. I don't mind." he added, Mary Coombs. Alvin Lord. Douglass came home from voyages prayed ex­ Clinton Teele of Vinalhaven Is Washington county folks are much vited me ashore to chat about the "there Is nothing to conceal. I was Barbour, Alvin Cole, Herbert. Ev- j haustively at the table before every employed as boatman for Mrs. C. D. pleased with the results of the Pine Tree State. Seldom have I met too busy seeing the world to think erett and Frank Conary, Raymond I Bacon SLICED LB. 2 5 c meal. Sometimes his prayers would Norton. Dennys River development and a younger man at 90. His brown much about the ladies. During iny Haskell. Ruth Austin. Mary Billings. I run on for a half hour which was NEW John Beverage, young son of Mr. would like to see the other streams eyes fairly snapped with vitality school days in Rockland I was kind- David Sturdee, Frances Tracy, Win­ MILD pretty tough on us children. I re­ Cheese LB. 17c and Mrs. Albert Beverage hks re­ producing equally good catches. The and the part of his face that was of sweet on a little blue-eyed lass ifred Forsyth, and Richard Billings. call the Thanksgiving day just be­ NO. 2 turned from Knox Hospital where Narraguagus afford nearly 50 miles not covered by his voluminous named Nellie Green. Maybe if I fore I ran away from home. On Lewis Oray died May 17 after an he was a surgical patient. of water and enters the ocean at beard -was leathered by salty winds. hadn't run away to sea she and I illness of 13 months. He Is survived P ineapple TINS 2 5 c the table was a big turkey with all Mr and Mrs. Irven Stone and Milbrldge. H s shoulders carried no stoop of might have made a go of it and by his wife. Maisie: three sons, Nor­ 3 LB. • * • • of the flxin's. It made my mouth son, Douglas spent the weekend In age, and his legs were as limber as perhaps today I'd be a granddaddy man, Walter and Adrian; two The dates of the annual State of water just to look at that turkey. Crisco or Spry TIN 4 8 c Vinalhaven. those of a boy. He smoked a corn­ instead of a lonesome old sea dog brothers, James of this place, and Maine trap shoot to be held at We sat down to the table and father 1 LB. Phyllis Duncan passed the week­ cob pipe that was almot as black as without kith or kin. Once, years ago Asbury of New York city; and his Waterville this year have been set bowed his head and launched Into a end with her mother. Mrs Kath­ a stove. when I was young and hearty, I father. Abner Gray of Marblehead. Crisco or Spry TIN 17c for d Funeral services were held at the « • • • fhe whale swallowing Jonah. I Poynesian g.rl on the Isle of Samoa. LB turned Monday to New York me, "since I left the Maine coast, Congregational Church, Rev. Arthur FINE GRANULA1SD PAPER Although the rod and reel Is get­ thought that whale would never She was as dainty as an orchid and The annual alumni banquet will and I have never gone back there. I Rice officiating. S u g a r 1 0 BAG 4 8 c ting the big build-up as the sportiest finish swallowing and digesting a6 sweet as a violet, but I'm glad be held June 9 at the Haven's Inn. often long to see Maine before I Henry Smith died in the Bluehlll weapon for taking Maine* giant Jonah, and In the meantime my that I got over my Infatuation I PKG The tickets are on sale by the class die but I guess I never shall. I like Hospital May 12 after a short Ill­ B isquick 25c tuna the harpoon has plenty of sup­ the latter port I signed articles on cording secretary, Mrs Dorothy Grapefruit Juice 5c TIN ler’s live bait bucket. W hen morn­ 11c Blackie to reach Into the goldfish the skyyarder Myrtle bound with Howard; dorresponding secretary. - By ABNBR GORDON ing came the bucket was empty and bowl and catch the little fellows case oil for Sidney, Australia." Bertha Moody; treasurer, Evelyn *6 n TIN 13 oi Blackie was full. TINS T l( difficult at best to make palm with his paw. It seemed that Black- “For more than 40 years I sailed Danforth; music committee, Robert D o le ’s 23c 2 15c stick to glass. But painting a glass I on sailing vessels and made ten Cunningham; membership commit­ window or door, or a mirror for deco ♦SffetV c LGE ration, Is a simple matter If a few voyages around the world. I made tee, Myrtle Hemenway. A business Iv o r y S o a p 3 BARS 2 3 c pointers are observed. NEW, GREATER “STREAMLINE seven trips around Cape Hom and meeting and social Is planned for First be sure the surface Is dry visited most of the islands in the Wipe off foreign matter with dene the fourth Friday in each month P & G S o a p 3 BARS 1Oc lured alcohol. South Seas I have been wrecked The praire service will be each Sun­ Several thin coats of paint will ERA" FORESEEN three times, and once was adrift day at 6.30, preaching service at RICHMOND ROLLS prove better than one or two heavy seven days In an open boat In the 7.30 The Young People's service Toilet Tissue coats, as thick coats tend to peel off OVE may iaake thl world go 'round, but not fast enough to 6 15c Indian Ocean. There were six men next Sunday will be led by Donald glass. J satisfy science. Modem demands for speed continue to in­ Use a very thin mixture of white 1 in th at boat, including myself, and Cunningham. Confectioner’s Sugar 6c lead and turpentine, adding a pint crease and strfettblining grows Shore extreme, horsepowers greater, the first mate, and only the mate The Morning AfterTakintf of hard-drying varnish for each gal as science tacklM t M problem of m a k in g the wheeb turn faster. and myself survived. We were ton of turpentine. Correspondents and contributors The paint should be spread on rap Now,Now. with two WorldsWorld's Fairs Falra tow to< picked up by a Chinese Junk. I are asked to write on Only One Carters Little Liver Pills Campbell’s 'X ” 3 ks 19c Idly. And stippled immediately. It lead progress A handid and give an served for four years off the coast ‘ side of the paper such an effect It desired. Impetus to travel,; ariaaffierlca Question: How can I anchor a scheduled to snter a fled era Soda Crackers •» c. n ] 3 c steel fence poet (Irmly? , speed and cotolort In transporta­ Answer: Drive the spike end tion The neat few years, traak- through the bottom of a tin can. al portatloo men believe, will eurpaak anything we hake keen yht lb BY BURNING SLOWER THAN ANY OF THE 5 b < n w t! lowing the spike to protrude to the streamlined efficiency. Gotyee Plicei ate depth desired The can will act as a There will be kpectscnlsr de­ form into which cement Is poured velopments In design and passen OTHER OF THE LARGEST-SELI ING BRANDS Submerged, this form will act as ger comfort, but one of the lead­ Maxwell Mouse LB TIN 2 4 c anchor. ing roles In the coming transporta­ Question: How can stains be re tion revolution will be played by moved from plumbing fixtures? Is an obscure little gadget ho larger T E S T E D — S L O W E R A , Chase & Sanborn LB BAG 2O c there any way to eliminate them per­ than a spool. Without It, modern 25% manently? high-speed trains could scarcely Answer: Scour the fixtures several i LB funrtlon. It Is the medium on THAN THE AVERAGE _ Kybo Coffee BAGS timea with 60 per cent solution of hy which the spinning wheels of The Hot Box Era 2 3 7 c drochlorlc acid, being careful to flush travel progress actually turn. out the water Immediately after each A tiny tapered steel cylinder The roller bearing makes pos- I LB application. Rubber gloves should be only two laches long and cne and ble the 120-mlle speed* 'ol Ca m els g ive y o u the R ic h m o n d 3 RAGS 3 9 c worn, and the acid applied with s three quarters Inches In diameter streamlined train*, for which the XI brush. la the heart of a new roller bear­ friction bearing* now In general LGE To remove permanently the stains ing on wblcb glam strbamllnert uae on railroad* are Inadequate. SIZE caused by water pipe, the best way roll so easily tbat a single man Is Because roller bearings reduce EQUIVALENT OF Florida Oranges DOZ It to remove the pipe material caue able to pull a 100-ton locomotive friction to a nearly negligible lug the stains, and replace ft with s aluug Its track. Combined In a quantity, they permit trains to S/HOK0 material which will not ataln. t double-row series and held In travel at great speeds without Asparagus.™"^ EACH place by steel shells, the cylinders danger of "hot boxes" and conse­ C e c r / t f form a bearing strong enough to quent delay*. They also make pos­ support the enormous weight of a sible atari* and stops as smooth as Vinal Haven & Rockland steam engine end at the same time In any automobile, so that neck­ Dandelions 3u». 17c eliminate 77% of the friction breaking jolt* are eliminated. Steamboat Company which would normally retard the Despite tbelr tiny size, these ROCKLAND revolving axles. little cylinder* are so tough that Iceburg Lettuce 2.,^ 15c Eastern Standard Time The advaniagea of antl-frtctlon even the huge driving wheels of bearings, which mark the first enormous locomotives have Hills DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY fundamental Improvement In wearing effect on them. Although transportation since primitive man now used principally for tbe new Texas Onions M e Read Down Read Up invented the wheel, are only begin­ ■trearaliners, they are easily In­ YOUR A. M. P. M. ning to be applied to heavy con­ stalled on existing equipment, THE CIGARETTE OF Native Rhubarb) CHo ic e 5.30 Lv. Swan’s Island, Ar. 640 veyances. Although hn essential and It I* probable that before long 6.30 Lv. Stonington, Ar. 4.00 factor In tbe development of the thia new engineering Improvement 7.30 Lv. North Haven, Ar. 3.30 automobile, on railroad trains they will be added to moat trains now COSTLIER TOBACCOS Cabbage 0.15 Lv. Vinal Haven, Ar. 2.45 are still something oew. being In­ In operation as the railroads con­ 0.30 Ar. Rockland, Lv. 1.30 troduced for the Oral lime Scarcely tinue their m odernlaatloa pro* 122-tf «r*«* ______. . . ------PENNY FOR PENNY YOUR BEST CIQARETTE BUY — tUrten yssn ago. Page S ix Rockland Courier-Gazette, Tuesday, May 23,TI939 Every-Other-Day

y o u / i 400 large, cheery rooms with tub, A T T H F shower and circulating ice water. 'JUNCTION AIR-CONDITIONED DINING ROOMS.

Special 2 and 3-day all-expente loan— roomi, meals, ttcamboat tript, tight- '2O*2OA-I*IC*I6 teeing— all for $11.75 per person. i 138-2*3*30 ™ HDliL L. E. Witney, Managing Director 4KENMORE W ik-JU U £ a t f&istu.&'u. &< 60*72 I Ralph Carroll. Installation plans work in the Royal Arch degree. Re­ have not been completed. freshments will be served. All Royal In Everybody’s Column ? THOMASTON CAMDEN I Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Collins Arch Mascns arc invited. I ZTUAdvertisements Vvi I loClllCH to Inill thismi'1 columnvuiuniii notiiuv | I■ FOR SALE o ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft • • • • to exceed three lines inserted once for | . A (Helen Robinson) who have been i 25 cents, three times for 50 cents. Ad SHIRLEY T. WILLIAMS visiting relatives in town for a few GILBERT HARMON High School Follies I dltlonal lines five cents each for one GET your chicks last hatches com­ days are motoring back to their ■ time. 10 cents for three times. Five ing now DELAWARE FEED STORE. Correspondent Correspondent The nurd Annual Pollies will be 1 small words to a line. 70 Park St . Tel 616______58-61 z \ z \ Z \ home in Ventura. C alif. early in ZS Z \ S'* zs zs zs z \ xs zx zn xs presented at the Opera House PAIR work horses, harness, farm the week. Thursday mght. Tickets may be equipment, sled scoot, new milch Jersey Tel. 190 Telephone 713 row with calf for sale. ALFRED E The house built by Qen. Henry i obtained from students and may be STANDISH, South Waldoboro 59*61 Kncx on Wadsworth street is being exchanged for reserved seats at the ! LOST ANDFOUND ! The Oarden Club will meet C. Alvin Jagels of Boston was ICE boxes for sale, $5 to glO mcctric torn down. Visitors arc welcome Box Office beginning Tuesday rftIMITIVE MANS Il«*****»»*«***)l refrigerators $30 to $50 New Norge. Thursday at 3 o'clock at the home • • • • 6‘i C F $139 Electric washers. $15 to night at 7 o'clock. Final rehearsals CRUDE WHEEL IS S of Mrs Eliza Carleton. Miss Rita IEmily Jagels. ^«**«.*********lf $20 New Thor washer, ringer and ironer Party to Pastor are being held. The production is THE GREATEST INVENTION $54 95 For Iree demonstration call Smith will be the speaker. 768-R H E COOMBS. 64 Masonic St.. The Baptist vestry was the scene j Capt; William Stanley spent the under the capable direction of IN THE HISTORY OF Rockland ______60-62 The patriotic organizations a r e i f fl deUghWul surprUe 1)ftrty ten- weekend at his home in Wellesley. Misses Doris He3ld and June Cote TRANSPORTATION. : to let ; DRFSSED broilers tor sale 3‘,a to 4 invited to attend the Memorial Day dcred j ^ v jjr. p€rTon Friday night Mass. lb average. 30c lb BURTON WHiTK. and Milford Payson of the faculty. R F P city. Tel. 179-W______6f63 services at the Congregational ■ COTTAGE to let at Spruce Head near Mrs. Naoma Mayhew and son The program and those having salt water: three sleeping rooms, com­ KITCHE1N range, small size—A-l Con­ Church Sunday at 7.30. [Over 100 guests, members of the Dean, and Mrs. Helen Dean passed fortably furnished: new garage; very dition. Also an open Franklin stove. major parts: G*rl Quartet. Selma accessible, plentiy of land: shore prlv- i May be seen at 63 ORACE ST 61*63 Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pales of, parish and friends, attended the Saturday in Waterville. Heal. Lucille Connors. Elizabeth IN BEN HUR'S TIME MAN elege on both sides of Island: will rent CHERTtOI ET 1936 Standard business South Warren and Mr. and Mrs. affair which was capably managed for season or by month. TEX. 793-W coupe for sale. $325 Newly painted "Tailspin" with Alice Faye and Heal. Doris Moody; trio. Prances HAD REFINED HIS WHEEL A after 4 p m. 54-tf and reconditioned Write CHEVRO- Carl Chaples went to Portland Sat- by Mrs. Oliver Hahn. Mrs. Vernon. BIT BY USING GREASE TO LETT" care The Courier Gazette 61-63 Nancy Kelley will be shown Wed­ Nuccio, Bertha Packard. Phyliss APARTMENT to let. available about urday night. Mrs. Pales and M rs., Achorn. Mrs Norman Simmons. nesday and Thursday at the Arnold. REPUCE FRICTION AND June 1; four rooms and flush, wood SEASON Is late Good supply straw­ shed DELIA YORK Pleasant 8 t 61-tf berry plants. Order soon 75e for 100. Chaples to attend the reception to Mrs. Loring OtIT and Miss Harriette; Comique Theatre. Vocal solos. James Wentworth. MAKE IT TURN BETTER. $6 Tor 1.000 at farm Olencove W. C. the National President of the - Tillson. Andrew Stinson. Philip Wentworth. FIVE room upstairs tenement to let. LUFKIN R D Rockland. Tel. 44-3. American Legion Auxiliary. Following the arrival of the guest j The Methodist Ladies' Aid wil Glenn street. Flush, electric lights, 61*63 meet Wednesday at 2 o'clock with j Francis Peilerin. Alfred Knowlton, BUT THE FIRST FUNDAMENTAL garage Also two-room apartment to Chevrolet coach 1931 for sale, fair Mrs Ralph Tripp arrived home)of honor a short musical program let. Apply R P CONANT. 208 Camden condition, reasonable price. TEL. Miss Nettie Bean. Kenneth Goodman. Phyliss Leach. CHANGE SINCE THE WHEELS St. 60-62 Thomaston 51. 58*64 from New Haven, Conn., Friday i was presented, the first number Hazel Crooker. Ruth Bennett. John Miller has employment at ’ INVENTION CAME ONLY iO ROOM to let. at 55 Grace St TEL CHESTER white pigs for sale. gS each and Is guest of Mr. and Mrs. Her- being a piano duet. "The Jack • 258-R or 142 60-62 O W CARROLL, Rockville.______59-61 Haskell & Corthell's. Gloria Lundell. Constance Bowden. VEARS AGO-ANTI FRICTION bert Fales a few days before open- O'Lantarn." by Misses Glenice Ler- Phyliss Arnold and Phyliss Deane BEARINGS. TOOAy TAPERED STORE to let at 16 Main S t . Camden, HOWARD 17 strawberry plant* for Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Baker cf formerly occupied by A A P Apply sale. 6Oc per 100: $5 50 per 1000 Postage ,ng her own home for the summer, mond and Beverly Kirkpatrick Lois Accordion solo. Lee Bates. ROLLER BEARINGS MAKE HASKELL ti OORTHELL 61 63 extra CEDRIC NOYES. Union 58*61 New York City, who will occupy the Contract Club met Friday at the Hastings then played the piano solo, The various dances include: POSSIBLE THE HIGH SPEEDS OF FURNISHED house with garage to 40 FT. henhouse for sale: oil burner Hofer cottage later in the season, let. at 42 Union St . Camden. Inquire cookstove: tea tahjes and chairs; house heme of Mrs William Robinson in "Star of Hope, and as an encore. Military Tap: Elisha Richards, AUTOMOBILES, MOTORCrCLES 68 ORACE S T . Rockland 58«63 lots. MRS LAWSON. 93 Elm B t. Warren with .hree tables. High - Mountain Bell Schottische. Wil- were in town Saturday Mary Hatch. Antoinette' Arico, AIRPLANES ANO STREAM­ APARTMENT to let three rooms and Camden. 59-61 scores wore made bv MTs. James : llarn T. White, in behalf of the as- Mr. and Mrs Aldiverde Norton of LINED TRAINS. bath, furnished; newly renovated $4 ACCORDION for sale. used. 120 baas: Elizabeth Pitcher. Elvera Arico. week Inquire MIKE ARMATA The rofesslonal model "Capranl ” a $300 Creighton Mrs Blanche McIntyre . ambled group, presented a gift to Dark Harbor spent the weekend in Dorothy Hardy. Angelina Nuccio. Men's Shop, Main and Park S t . Rock­ nstrument for $95 beautiful tone, in town. land 58-63 rfect condition CHARLES A. LUN- substituting, and Mrs Robinson, iRcv Mr Perron Frances Arey. Marion Knight. TWO modem apartments at 241 ELLI Camden Tel 2502______60*62 Tne meeting this wefk will be he’d I Resuming the program, a trio, Rev and Mrs. W F Brown are , Phyliss Leach and Gwendolyn Mc­ Broadway to let. available about June TIP-cart. mowing machine, horse and 1; each has 7 rooms, bath steam heat harness for sale also two cottages for witn Mrs Harold Dana MlS5C" Olen«* Lerawnd, Beverly attending the Baptist State Conven­ Kay. and two-car garage L. A THURSTON sale or rent. Inquire at CRAWFORD , , . i . Kirkpatrick and Sally Gray, played Tel 1159 59-tf EARM. East Union______61*63 M r Richard O Elliot Is in Au-1 , „ „ . , tion being held this week in Dover- , Sailors' Hornpipe: Avery Smith. AT PARK THEATRE WEDNESDAY ...... u , The Home Guard This was fol- FOUR-room apartment 4o let at 48 GIRLS hicyote for sale, 28" wheel gusta today attending the annual Poxcroft Hilton Start. Andrew Stinson. Rob­ Grace St . alt modem; aduita only TEL lowed by a social evening including In good condition reasonable 6 STATE meeting of the Kennebec Valley Haskell and Cor tire! 1 have bought ert Merchant. Nancy Hobbs. Nalha- 133. 50-tf ST Tel 59C-M______ft *63 the singing of old songs with Mrs the Babb block on Main street re- j lie Smith. Marian McDermont and ( ANNE A N D FURNISHED apartment to let MRS 16 x4 6" MAHOGANY outboard runa­ Garden Clubs. Mrs. Elliot is chair­ A C. JONES 5 Talbot Ave . Tel 576 bout. like new, seats six fitted with 16 Blanche C Lermond at the piano 30-tf man of the State Nominating Com­ cently vacated by the A. & P store j Harriet Arnold. TH E BO YS hp Johnson outboard motor—good A buffet lunch was served, a huge Boys' musical comedy: Robert BY month or season, four-room fur­ for fresh or salt water service—LUy mittee. The executive committee of the nished camp; electricity, spring water, reasonable otter considered. Call and 1 birthdav cake bearing the inscrip- Anderson Howard Dearborn. Joseph In this scene from “Soio- near shore, eight miles from Thomas­ look It over— will sell with or without The Federated Circle will hold , tion . Happv Birthdav t0 Our p a ,, Chamber of Commerce meets Wed­ rity House." Anne Shirley ton TEL 188-4 or call South Cushing motor Flat bottom boat t-atler with a food and flower sale Saturday a f t- :tor .. and the handlw(>rk of Mri nesday night at 7.30 at the Elm Knight. Judson Manning. Aubrey Post Ofhee 60*65 hall and socket ear connections—good Connors. Lester Gross. Harry Hod­ presents favors to the lads condition $20 KNOX MARTNE EX­ ernoon at the vacant store owned o iiver Hahn, forming the center- street School Building HEATED furnished rooms and fur­ CHANGE 31 Bay View St Camden son and Wilfred Hobbs. who have been serenading nished apartment to let. FOSS HOUSE ■Maine______61-63 by J. Russell Davis, cn Main street, j piece around which the decorations Mrs F E. Waite of Adams. N TI Park St.. Tel. 330 46 tf Tango: Elizabeth Pitcher. Ruth the college bearding house FURNISHED apartment of three LARGE size round mahogany eHnlng Mrs. Alice Macgowan. Mrs Nina w:;re arranged. Pink, green and Y. Is guest of her sister. Mrs. J table with extension leaves and six Mathews. Marilyn Davis. Dorothy Miss Shirley is co-starrcJ rooms, suitable for couple: garage If Leach and Mrs Shirley Williams Whlte, with a dash cf yellow, were Hugh Montgomery for two weeks. with James Ellison in this desired Tel. 436-M. C A EMERY 49-tf chairs to match. Write P O BOX 68. Ke'.lar. Andrew Stinson. Elisha Camden. Me______61-03 are In charge. ] tde coiors used fOr the decorations. RKO Radic picture, which FTVE-room apartment to let at 56 Mr and Mrs. Charles Perry leave Richards. James Wentworth and Talbot Ave Inquire R H. BRITT. EIOHT cords of good cow dressing deals with the life of the City Building 52-tf for sale at your own price Wilmot Dew. of Damariscotta. ■ Masses of Jonquils surrounded the today for Annapolis where they will Francis peilerin. new students in a girls’ moved at once TEL 114-J 60-62 John Dow of University of Maine, birthday cake, which was flanked ROOMS to let at 15 Grove St. lei attend the Sradifation of their son of Lake: AJfred Knowl- college. 579-W. MRS FLORA COLLINS 52-tf 19-FT V-bottom boat for outboard and Miss Virginia Morse, of Port- on either side by pewter candle motor for sale RUFUS CASWELL Jft. Frank Cha1? Perry, from the U S ,cn Avery smith. Roland Marriner, FOUR-room apartment to let. all North Edgecomh R F D 58*61 land, were weekend guests of Mr sticks bearing pink candies with Naval Academy. modern Applv at CAMDE34 and Judson Manning. James Wentworth, ROCKLAND WATER CO . Tel. 934 52-tf PINE skiff* f0r sale $15 PACKARD'S and Mrs. Wilmot Dow. STORE at the Highlands. 60-62 I silver candelabra at each end of the Mrs Marie Gardiner la guest of Mary Bryant. Janet Ryder. Nancy■ Mrs. Allyne Peabody. with guests table. Streamers and rosettes of HAY for sale JAMBS SULLIVAN. ! her mother in Rochester. N H Hobbs. Ruth Bennett. Patricia Glen Cove 60*62 Mrs. Anne Spaulding and Mrs. Bes- pink and green were effectively used, M iss Eleanor McCobb. a member Hatch. NEW. light weight Storm King rub­ sic Sherman, of Wakefield Mass., and plates and napkin:, bore out ber boots for sale, special at $3.45 j of the staff at the Deaconess Hcspi- Waltz Clog: Bertha Packard. ; MISCELLANEOUS Mail orders filled McLAlN and Mrs Leila Smalley and Mrs. ' the general color scheme. Sand- i tai in Boston, recently visited Mr. Nina Start. Hazel Crooker. Phyliss 1 8TORE Rockland.______Harriet Whitney spent the week- wiches of pink and green added i and Mrs. Clayton McCobb. Leach: acrobatic: Dorethy Kellar. PAINTING, papering of all kinds: 1 STRAWBERRY plants for sale. How- plastering, brick, cement and rock | ard 17. 75c per 100; 500 or more. 65c end at the Peabody camp ' Mecca" their touch to the colorful scene Mrs. Philip Newbert cf Thomas- Nationalities: Hazel Crooker. work A. W. GRAY. 3 Adams Bt.. per 100 CLARENCE SPEAR. Warren. Rockland 52-tf in Cushing Mrs. Clara Wright ot At separate tables coffee and j ton spent Monday with her mother. Phyliss Leach. Marilyn Davis. Ma- I Tel 7-14.______59*61 cocoa were served Mrs. Lcrlng Orff. HAVE your floors sanded and ref In- The usual 11 high-grade, guaranteed Woolw.ch was a caller Sunday. 1 Mrs A F Sherman. ricn Knight Dorothy Kellar. James ished with Sealtlte scratch - proof, Willow Brook Dahlias will be sold by The W.C.T.U. meets Friday night Mrs. Norman Simmcns and M iss Mr and Mrs Frederick Schlpper Wentworth; Goofus: Marilyn Davis waterproof non-skid Leaves a velvet , Mrs E D PerrT the next house below Harriette Tillson pouring. Silver finish Rates reasonable New equip­ Willow Brook Farm on Route 105. IS with Mrs. Hopkins at the home of : of Bangor were weekend guests of and Elisha Richards. ment Includes electric sander. electric unlabelled for $1; six labelled for $1; Frank Lunt Georges street candelabra with green candles, and edger and new olectrlc steel wool | "Glads", mixed. 50 for $1 or smaller j Mrs. Schippers parents. Mr. and The above cast will be supported polishing machine R. L RICHARDS [ sizes 75 or 100 for $1; named varieties bouquets of jonquils and forsythia ; Mrs. Frank P Alexander. by a large chorus. Tel 952. at 25 Franklin St 60-62 5c each or 50c a dozen and up 58*66 Woman Commands Legion decorated these tables. attractive I The yacht Wildell with Capt i ------LAWNMOWERS called for. sharpened RECONDITIONED electric ranges for Election of officers in the Wll- with pewter service. and delivered. Prompt, dependable sale. $39 50 to $50 Installed (as per our Horace Leadbetter in command. Extensive alterations are nearing service Tel 791. CRIE HARDWARE regular policy), several to choose from: liams-Braz.cr Post. A. L. and Aux- A pleasing incident of the eve- CO.. Rockland 53-tf I Easy washers reconditioned, two with sailed Saturday for Larchmont. N 1 compietion on the Tibbetts build- CATERPILLARS — Don't burn your dryers, one with wringer CENTRAL iliary* has brought about a rather 1 ning was the presentation of a sec- Y. Fred Witherspoon and Burme I |ng Qn ELm street which wnl be trees, let us spray them; control guar­ *MAINE------POWER CO.— 447 ■- Main Bt. un que situation this year. For I ond birthday cake to Rev. Mr. Per- anteed M F ROB ARTS. Tree Expert Rockland 60-tl Commander of the Post. Mrs. Eu- j ron. by an eight-year-old boy. Young are members of the crew opened on Thursday as a new A & Co., Camden. Tel. 785 58-tl HORSE for sale, weight 1100. Mrs Robert R Smith. Miss Wini- p self.Berviee store. The old build- NEW York Tal’.or. Main St . corner JONE3 Owls Head nice Tolman Morse, a former Army Lloyd Miller. This cake was made | fred Burkett. Mrs. Harold Wilson. ; jng has been lengthened and wid- of Summer St Remodeling and alter­ FOUR 'home-built farm trsetors fo nurse, was chosen, while in the Aux­ ations of ladles and gents garmen's sale, sell cheap or exchange for stocl by Mrs. Nellie Ifemey. i Mrs. Blanche Bishop and Mrs , pnfd and has heen completely re- Suits made by measure. 48 tf iliary. her sister-in-law, Mrs. Sadie TOWLE'S OARAGE. Appleton, Tel W Louise Walker are attending the | dccorated. The street store is THURSDAY WATCHMAKER — Repairing watches, Appleton 9 24 00*6 Chaples was elected president. This clocks, antiques all kinds. Call and ARRIVING May 23 One carload How Crown Jewels Were Saved Grand Chapter of the Eastern Star deliver 6 ARTHUR MACOMBER. 23 tra good Iowa horses Prices reason I is the first instance of a woman be- closed.—adv. Amesbury St.. Rockland. Tel. 953 J According to an account written in Portland. and will trade for cattle. UBDN ccmlng commander of Williams- by Sir Walter ScotA. 1819, the crown 52-tf LUDWIO. Newcastle Misses Beda Emery and Camilla ROCKLAND Sanitary Service, depen­ Brazier Post. jewels of Scotland in 1652 were pre­ Th<- Electrical Testing Laborator­ USED one-horse disc, spring lx Emery left Sunday for a trip to the dable hauling of waste and ashes AR­ and plow for sale; also new lime a Mrs. Morse is the former Miss served from the English by the clev­ ies in New York have a machine THUR ADOLPHSEN. Tel 1399 56-tf World's Fair era. com planter and manure spn Eunice B Toiman of Rockland, and er scheme of a Mrs. Granger and which automatically translates a MEN OM at 40! Get Pep. New er's Fifteen horses—no sickness Lady Ogilvie, wife of the governor Paul Mullin of New Market. N H . Ostrex Tonic Tablets contain raw ovs- M BUROES-S Tel 17-3. Union 6 is a graduate cf the Maine General ter lnvlgoratorn and other stimulants of the castle where they were then has employment at the Meguntlcook piece ot mtnleral. animal or vege­ One dose starts new pep Carts little DRY hard wood per foot, fltked t Hospital. Portland. She enlisted cs Sawed. $1 15. long. $1.05. U B A C stored. Mrs. ' Granger passed Press. table matter into terms of the Call write C H MOOR Ac CO. 52*63 PERRY, Tel. 487. 3 an army nurse in 1918. at the height through the English lines with an Mrs. Fred R Rice, who has been | i-ngth of light waves refracted from Ladles -Jgellable hair goods s t Rock­ of the first influenza epidemic Dur-1 attendant carrying in her lap the land Hair Store. 24 Kim St. Mall orders in East Eddington at the home of it. By drawing a graph of these re- solicited. H. C. RHODES. Tel. 519-J. ing her service she was stationed at crown y rapped up in a bundle of 52 tf I Camp Upton. Debarkation 4 Long , clothes. Her servant carried, ap- hcr daughter. Mrs. A J .Larner for fr acted light waves, a complete WANTED _ 7 . _ . , ...... parently, a bundle of flax for her the past two months, has returned , chemical analysis of the sample is To encourage Storks £«*****•«*****£ Bcac . an m ai a ion , . iw spjnnjng which actually contained home. made in three minutes without the One way to encourage storks to RE.I IABLE man or woman for estab­ York. W alter Reed Hospital Wash- , thc gcepter and the sword. The lished Watkins route In Rockland. No Ralph Wilson, owner ol Whitehall aid of a chrtnist. It will trace one build a nest is to place an old cart­ capital n-eded Clrexl earnings to ington. and mobilized at the Letter- | English permitted the passage start Write J R WATKINS CO 232 Inn. has returned after spending the , three-millionth part of any material wheel on the top of a barn or dis­ man General Hospital, San Fran­ through the lines on representation used chimney, and on this lay a Johnson Ave.. Newark. N J. 61*tt winter in Florida. i in the sample. cisco. for service in Siberia, arriving that the women were to visit a rela­ loose bundle of twigs. Once a stork SIX or seven room house wanted, to Keystone Chapter, R AM., will I ------rent TEL 1241 M 61-63 at Vladivostok in December, 1919. tive. For many years the jewels has built a nest, year after year, it meet Wednesday, when there will be Read The Courier-Gazette HOUSEKEEPER wanted BOX 53. Following several months duty lay where they were buried, but will return to it, each time adding a New Harbor Cl *63 were removed to Edinburgh castle few sticks to the already unwieldy EXPERIENCED girl wanted for gen­ there, she was stationed In Manila in 1707. pile, advises a writer in London eral housework MRS ROGER D and later at Fort Mills, Corrcgidor. 8KILLINGS, 1059 Washington St., Bath. AT STRAND WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY Tit-Bits magazine. When winter ap­ Maine. '______jj-gt Philippines. Her last year as an proaches, storks migrate In their TWO experienced waitresses wanted Army nurse was completed at the MICKIE SAYS— thousands to Africa and India. In Good pay. SAUNDEJIS CABINS, or se< Letterman General, being honor­ SOME LIKE IT HOT” many parts of Africa they are eager­ Nate Saunders. Glen Cove. 59-6 r . ly awaited, as they feed on the COINS wanted Scarce dates In Pen­ ably discharged in 1922 On her nies Nickels. Dimes and Quarters. a l l l e t t e r s v j it m s t u f f myriads of locusts which, if un­ return to the East, she continued | Send 3c stamp for list and prices oatd FOR. -CUE PAPER. SHOULD 96 checked by man's cunning and na­ WILLIAM H KENWORTHY. Numisma­ tist. Waterville. Me. hor nursing career as a public SIGWEO, WOT TWAT WS’LL ture's greed, would strip whole dis­ Jp-tf health nurse in Auburn and North- PRlW r y e r . w a m e , b u t s o tricts bare of every leaf and blade bridige. Mass In 1930 she was mar­ w e WILL KWOW WHO THE Florence Rice and Dennis O ’Keefe in “ The Kid From Texas" of grass. The storks gorge them­ ried to Superintendent ol Schools. eOUCPUBirroR. IS» selves on the locusts, digest their ! REAL ESTATE • ALL PAPPPS HAVE THIS RULE R*-«-<*-»-e>********^ F. L. S. Morse of Thomaston. meal for an hour or so, then dis­ gorge a pellet of indigestible legs EtOHT-room house for sale; bath, Mrs. Chaples. Ihe new Auxiliary and wings. Immediately after which hard wood floors; garage; large comer president, has been a loyal member lot; $2,000; also 16-room house, large they start gorging again. garage, good location, will make four and worker in the Auxiliary the apartments or good rooming house priced very low to settle estate. L. A past eight years. She will be as­ THURSTON. Tel. 1159 S9-tf sisted by Mrs. Olive Fales, as senior Torture of the ‘Boot’ I have several splendid tarms for vice president. Mrs. Lilia Williams, According to the Encyclopedia at very low prices on Route 1 bet- Britannica, one of the most cele­ Camden and Waldoboro as well Junior vice president, Mrs. Helen ! number of bargain farms off Rou brated forms of torture employed in I have houses listed of all sizes Lynch, secretary. Miss Harriet Wil­ Scotland was the “boot," which prices. As a special I offer an 8-1 liams. treasurer. Mrs. Edith Clark, all modern cottage overlooking 5 comprised a long iron boot in which land harbor at an attractive price sergeant-at-arms. Mrs. Edna Smith, the foot was inserted, wedges then W BENNER, real estate, Tel. BOS-, chaplain. Mrs. Charlotte Gray, his­ being driven between the limb and North Main street. ESCAPE SEWEN-room house In Thomas! torian. and an executive board con­ the boot. This was not peculiar to Modern Conveniences. Oood locatl Scotland, for records are found in Price Reasonable. FRANK D. ELLP sisting of Mrs. Shirley T. Williams, Thomaston. si Are you letting business escape? Why nt»< do wlial other French criminal trials, and again in chairman. Mrs. Emma Kalloch and Ireland where in 1583 a priest named N. M Hannan farm for sale, one m Mrs Edna Young. alert Kneklanrl merrhants do—cateli more of it with The from Union Common on State ro Hurley was tortured in Dublin by Has s good bluebcrgy lot. M O. HA Other officers in Uie Legion Post C'oorier-UazeUe W ant Ads! It's a simple way to get more ■toasting his feet against the fire NAN. Tel 8 3. Union. so are: vice commander., Edward T. < ustomers at little cost. Tou'll be more than satisfied with hot boots." The same author­ HOUSE in central location. 9 roo with the rcoutts you get. Why not prove it for yourself! and bath; hot air heat, especially su Dornan. Fred Burnham adjutant. ity says that this species of torture able for renting rooms. Terms tf ( William B. D. Gray; finance officer, Even for ail admonition. Bob Hope swings that finger at Shirley Rous was employed not only for crime sired TEX. 1067-JK. but as an incident in religious per­ Harry Rtewart; sergeant-at-arms, in Farjinnunt’s swingy new comedy, “Some like It IIol.” Gene Kmp.i, CaU 770. A»k For An Ad-Taker! TWO-tenement house for sale secution, and sometimes by the no­ Mechanic St., In good crtndltlon-’ ] Orvel F. Williams; and chaplain. ace drummer, is co-starred with tlieni.—adv. Apply 33 Purchase St., 'T bility for their own gnds. 1194-W, te , Every-Other-Day* Rockland Courier-Gazette, Tuesday, May 23, 1939 Page Seven

Mr. and Mrs. W L. Gregory are SINGER-THOMAS MRS. HENRY EDWARDS EDWARDS-KENNEDY in Providence where their son is ROCKPORT graduating from the Providence The heme of Mr. and Mrs. E. M. News reached this city Sunday of This And That Mrs. Emily Kennedy was married Bible Institute. Lawrence, Pascal avenue, Rockport, the sudden death of Mrs Henry E. ft ft ft ft Saturday night to Luther C. Ed­ was the scene of a pretty wedding Edwards, a native of Rockland and , LIDA G. CHAMPNEY wards of Westbrook. The ceremony for many years a summer resident tock place at the bride's residence. ®SOC* ETY Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Rising of at high noon, Saturday, when Miss Correspondent Boston were guests over the week­ at Land's End, Ash Point. Mrs. Ed­ ft ft ft ft 92 Cedar street. Rev. Guy Wilson Helen Ruth Thomas of Lincoln, end of Mr. Rising's parents. wards was stricken last Thursday Tel. 2229 performing the double ring service. Mrs Jessie Kalloch, who has Neb., niece of Mrs. Lawrence, be­ and was taken to the Ford Hos­ A reception followed, intimate been seriously 111 In a Boston hos­ came the bride of John Singer cl pital in Detroit where she died frends attending, the couple then Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Stoddard spent Word has been received by D A Is Thomaston. The single ring cere­ Sunday morning. The funeral leaving on a wedding trip, destina­ pital, recuperating in that city the weekend with their daughter Whitmore of the death Friday at mony. with Rev. Donald F. Perron, services will be held this afternoon tion unannounced. and will return to her home on Mrs. William Parker In Easthamp- Lewiston of Mrs. Florent Whitmore, pastor of the Thomaston Baptist Spruce street the latter part of ton. Mass. at her late residence In Birming­ By K. S. F. widow of a former principal of the church, officiating, was performed ham, Michigan. MRS. S. II. C. BURGIN June. East Side Intermediate School in in front cf a large fireplace which Some local music lovers may be The deceased was born in Rock­ Rockport. Mr. Whitmore having was banked with evergreen and Austere, dignified, distinguished Mrs. S. H. C. Burgin, mother of Mrs. Mida Packard was hostess Interested in the fact that arrange­ land 74 years ago, as Mabel J., taught here about 45 years ago. flanked cn either side with pink Paderewski, the great and much Miller S. Burgin, formerly of this to Corner Club Friday afternoon. ments have been made for an un­ daughter of the late Joseph and The Community Singing Class snapdragons and forsythia. loved Polish pianist casts the magic city, died recently In Corpus I. J. Shuman, substituting for Mrs. usually interesting drawing card Emily (Spear, Abbott. Her father which has been meeting at the Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Stockton The bride, blonde and petite and spell of his genius over all who lov? Christi. Texas, where her husband Chorls Jenkins, won the honors. for the annual meeting of the was a prominent lime manufac­ Baptist vestry Saturday afternoons enroute from South Carolina to of unusual winsome personality, was turer, trader and shipowner. Her real music; 78 years old and still is pastor of the Methodist Churcn. Poetry Fellowship of Maine, which for several weeks for instruction Rumford, came to Rockland. Bat- Dr. and Mrs. Gilmore Soule spent will be held at Brunswick Saturday. charming in a blue traveling en­ mother died a year ago at the ag? with skilled limber fingers that A writer, scholar and lecturer, Mrs. ’ urday to be weekend guests of Mr under Miss Lotte McLaughlin will the weekend In Boston, attending This is to be Miss Theda Kenyon semble and carrying an arm bouquet of 101. a remarkable constitution charm the world. Burgin was married in 1916. when * and Mrs. Charles W. Morton of • • » « for the next two weeks meet at the she was appearing as a lecturer for the Red Sox-Detrolt Tigers baseball of Brooklyn, author of two books of pink larkspur and white swett having succumbed to an accident Broadway. Mr Stockton is to c on- vestry Saturday nights from 7 to the International Sunday School As­ game. and writer of the new long histori­ peas. Miss Mabelle S. Brown, aunt which hastened the end. Through an agreement of noted - duct a subscription campaign in 9 o'clock. sociation. and the Sunday School cal poem about the Massachusetts of the groom, was the bride's only After her marriage to Henry E. and accredited astronomers, each * Rumford and Skowhegan during The annual Memorial Sunday Board of the Church in North and Mr. and Mrs. Emily Coombs of Bay Colony and the time of Anne attendant. She was gowned in lilac Edwards. Jackson. Mich , became day begins at East Cape, the east­ t the summer. The winter left him service will be held next Sunday at South America Sh? graduated from Vinalhaven were weekend guests of Hutchinson. She has called it ensemble and wore pink roses and her home Later the family resid’d ernmost extremity of Siberia before looking and feeling fit. 11 o'clock at tlie Methodist Church, the Huntsville, Ala., Women's Col­ Mr. and Mrs. Horace Coombs "Scarlet Anne." Miss Kenyon white sweet peas. Mr. Singer chose for a time in Detroit, but the final It begins at any other place, a a a • the Baptist and Methodist lege at the age of 16, and entered into who has been active in the as his best man Wallace Campbell years of the deceased were spin*, in Mrs Almon Bird was elected a The Daughters of Founders of The night before Mothers Day, Church uniting and Rev. N. F. At­ a career of church and educational Poetry Society of America has of Augusta. The bride was given in Birmingham. Mich., occupying their t member of the work committee, at Patriots of America, will meet a Llmerock street woman saw a wood delivering the sermon. work. Her father led one of the first been in great demand to interpret marriage by her uncle, E. M. Law­ new residence. the annual meeting cf Chapin Class, Thursday in Bangor, the members man pilfering flowers from gar­ Winola, five-months old daughter Confederate regiments into the Civil this masterpiece which has received rence. Mr. and Mrs. Edwatds trav- last week, in place of Mrs. Elmer 8 to be guests of the president. Mrs dens. Not thinking until she had of Mr and Mrs. Joseph Gerrish, War. such warm commendation from the Preceding the ceremony William eled much, varying the com- Osla W. Look of Jonesport at a 1 passed what he was really up to, who has been critically ill Is some­ She later became dean of the Bird. critics. She reads in costume. T Smith. Jr., of Thomaston, sang forts of their mid-Western home o'clock luncheon to be given at the she did not report him. He was what improved. Huntsville College. She was a ver­ “Oh Premise Me" with Mrs. Ru,h with those of the tropical South­ Mrs. Ralph L. Wlggln. accompan­ Bangor House. Mrs. Evelyn Hix. picking the flowers and placing A busy period Is planned for the satile linquist. speaking French, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Burns of Lawrence Bird playing the accom­ land and the bracing atmos­ ied by Mrs Lee W. Walker of Thom­ Mrs Angelica Glover. Mrs Maybelle them in seme receptacle inside his Baptist Ladies' Circle when they Spanish, Italian and English. She Hanover, N . H.. were in the city paniment on a melodlon which was phere of their summer nome on the aston. motored to Auburn. Friday to Rose and Mrs. Maude Blodgett, the overcoat. Isn’t it sad to think that meet Wednesday at the vestry for had traveled extensively in Euro­ Saturday called by the illness of Mr a wedding gift to Mr. Lawrence's Maine coast, toward which their attend a dessert bridge at the home only members In this vicinity, will one who loves to watch flowers an all day session. pean countries. The burial was In Burns' father William Burns of great-grandmother from his great­ thoughts always turned In fact of Mrs Margaret Abbott Campbell, attend. blossom and works to have them, Byron Rider was at home from Corinth. Mlrs. Vinalhaven. whose death took place grandfather. Mrs. Bird also played they were to have started East to­ given for members of the Wheaton should not have the pleasure of Burdett College over tlie weekend Sheris survived by her husband, yesterday. Lohengrin's Wedding March for day College Club of Maine. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Bird went to picking thorn? Mr. and Mis. W. Lccman Oxton, two sons—Miller S. Burgin of Ban­ the bridal procession Mrs. Edwards was a graduate of Augusta. Monday on a business trip • • • • Mrs. Elsie Hawkins. Mrs Orra Burns gor and Rev. H. S. Burgin of Dallas. Mr. and Mrs. William T. Ellis of A rccepticn jtnd wedding breakfast Rockland High School. She was an Mrs. Minnie Rogers of Amesbury The boys at the High School and Mrs Nellie Staples went this Texas, and one daughter, Mrs. The Maine Oarden Clubs of the Wakefield. Mass., were recent over­ followed the ceremony. Assisting in avid reader, belonged to a number street will be hostess June 2 to the building have been doing some ex­ morning to Portland to attend James T. J3i itt of Kansas City. Mo. Medomak region, are meeting Wed­ night guests of Emery Ellis enroute receiving were the bride's mother of select social organizations. A Woman's Educational Club Mem­ cellent work cleaning weeds and Grand Chapter sessions of the East­ M.ller Burgin flew to Corpus nesday in Belfast. Those attend­ to Deer Isle to attend funeral serv­ wearing blue triple sheer with beautiful character found Its re­ bers will partake of box lunch at paper from the hedge and sweep­ ern Star. Christi two weeks ago. and Ws ar­ ing from the local club are Mrs ices for Allen T. Ellis. shoulder bouquet of pink roses; the ward in the many lasting friend­ 6 o'clock and coffee will be served ing walks all along the Lincoln Miss Marion Weidman and Mrs. rival there was a source of gTcat Louise Orbeton. Mrs. Ruth Elling- groom's mother wearing navy redia- ships which she formed in various Mrs. Ida Simmons will give mem­ street frontage. I thing these Mary Whitman left Monday for a happiness to the dying mother to wood. Mrs. Alice Jameson. Mrs Saunders' Cabins and Tea Room gote with American Beauty rests, parts of the country. bership reports. must have been Boy Scouts and I visit in Boston. Hiey were accom­ whom he was intensely devoted. Mattle Oardner. Miss Caroline will epen next Sunday, with Arthur and the bride's aunt. Mrs. Lawrence, Mrs Edwards is survived by her recommend for the Oirls some work panied as far as Bath by Mrs. Olive Jameson. Mrs. Leah Fuller. Mrs E. (Nate) Saunders in charge of the wearing pink triple sheer with talis­ husband, a daughter. Mrs. Rodney Don't forget the One Cent Sale. in the same spirit. To reciprocate Walker of Rockland. Miss Weld- Maude Blodgett. Mrs. Ida Dondls. tea room. Previous seasons have man roses. Weeks; a son. Abbott Edwards; and Wednesday. May 24 to May 27. at is a worthy desire. The city man expects to return Thursday. given Mr. Saunders a fine reputa­ Mrs. James Creighton of Thomas­ Sheldon s Drug Store. 444 Main St.. Mrs Kay Berry, Mrs. Beulah Allen five grandchildren. fathers will appreciate all this and • • • • Mrs. Julia Murray. Mrs Ruth Lev- tion as a caterer, and he is prepareJ ton poured coffee and Miss Oladys Rockland—adv. 60-62 respond with equal enthusiasm. “The Blur Pag" to live up to it. Blethen of Rockland served punch ensaler. Mrs W O Fuller. Mrs Helen Miss Burdell Strout is making ex­ • • • • The play "The Blue Bag" which Lamb. Mrs Bernice Havener. Mrs. which was made from orange blcs Mrs. Carrie Cassens of Camden cellent progress toward recovery Attorney Oeneral Frink Murphy, was postponed from last Friday Lilia Howes, Mrs. E F Berry’. Mrs som honey and the juices of seven AH Squared Up hr is a patient at Knox Hospital and following surgical treatment at one time Oovemor of Michigan and night, due fo the death of the school Elsa Sonntag and Mrs. Jane Beach tropical fruits sent from the Lau­ sympathizer in the sitdown strikes will welcome visitors Knox Hospital. band and orchestra leader. Clar­ rence's southern home for the oc Amerkm Hey Days! of that locality, said at the United ence Fish, will be presented Wed Mrs. Annie Thorndike is a patient casion. Mr. and Mrs. Herman R Win- Miss Louise McIntosh spent the Conference of Mayors recently. nesday night at Town hall at 8 at Knox Hospital The greom's gift to the bride was chenbaugh and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar weekend In Boston as the guest of "Americans use the word democ- o'cldck. a crystal pendant with diamond in­ cracy' so much that they have be­ A meeting of the A H. Newbert Crockett entertained at dinner last Miss Hannah Little. In live cast are Lyle Noyes. War­ set: to his best man. a traveling cans come a little numb to Its sig­ Association was held FTtday night night Miss Mary S Emery formeriv ren Barrows. Josephine Pitts. Phyl­ and to the soloist handkerchiefs Browne Club members wishing nificance." That Is exactly what I I In Temple hall. Picnic supper wa» of Washington. D. C. Miss Emerv lis Crockett. David Eaton. Frederick The bride's bouquet was thrown by transportation to the church supper thought of Governor Murphy In his served in charge of Mrs Florence who is in the Army Nurse Corps Cavanaugh. Blanche Collins, Orris her from tlie upper outdoor balcony at Wiley's Comer. 8t. George. weak-minded methods during those Philbrook. Mrs. Nellie Dow. Mrs has been transferred to San Fran­ Burns. Joyce Ingraham, Carolyn cisco. and is in this city on a and was caught by Mrs Harry Petta Hiursday night, will communicate strikes. Andrews, and Carroll Richards. Phosa Howard and Mrs. Milll? piece cf Camden. • « • • month's vacation. Other guesis with Mrs Charles Whitmore. 53 Ralph Marston is business mana Thomas. Beano and cards provided Policeman: I'm sorry, sir. but I were Mr and Mrs. Theodore Syl­ The bride is the daughter of Mrs Granite street. Hie husbands of ger; Helen O'Jala, advertising man­ diversion after a business session at Reuben Palmer and the late Reuben shall have to arrest you for being vester. the members arc Invited guests. ager; Howard Kimball, ticket man the meeung of June 16. member.-, drunk and incapable." Palmer of Lincoln. Neb. She is a ager; Norma Hoyle, prempter; have been invited to be guests of Mr. The Women's Auxiliary meets to­ Toper: "That’s all right, but Register of Deeds and Mrs Albert graduate of the Falls City (Neb > George Turner, stage manager, as­ and Mrs. Raymond Watts at their night at the home of Mrs. Joeephine send the other officer home with Winslow will quietly observe their High 8ohool and the University of sisted by Bernard Andrews; Edith Martin's Point cottage. golden wedding anniversary at their Nebraska and Kansas. At the for Rice. Maple street at 7 o'clock. me. I like him." • • • • Cavanaugh, costume manager; H. P Blodgett of the Central home on North Main street to­ mer she wen a scliolarship to the Doris Tominski and Katherine Tay­ morrow. University for being the mest out Edwin Libby Relief Corps will Be up in the morning early, just Maine office, was in Augusta Wed­ hold an all-day tacking Hiursday at the break of day. if you wish to lor. property managers; Helen Low­ nesday to attend a meeting of dis- standing student. She is a member ell. head usher; Maurice Carleton Richard S. Stoddard and bride of Alpha Lambda Delta Honorary Supper will be in charge of Mrs. really enjoy the bird songs. 1 trict managers. • • • • and William Knight, eletcriclans (Virginia Leach) gave a supper Sorority and was employed as ac Joseph Hamlin. An important busi­ ness meeting will be held at 7 30. Texas Is a great State for poli­ The condition of E. L. Brown a party at their home on Talbot countant of the Students' Union in avenue Saturday. The guests were: ticians and turkeys. In 1928 they patient of several weeks at Knox Nebraska University. Ralph Ulmer Camp and Auxiliary WEDNESDAY NIGHT Mt. and Mrs. George L. St. Clair. produced 3.285.000 birds. Cali­ Hospital, is much improved. Yes­ Mr. Singer is the sen of Mrs Ufl.W.V. will meet Wednesday Step out io square Capt. and Mrs John A Stevens and fornia came in second in pre luction $25— 2 $10, $5 terday he was sitting up. and he Charles W. and the late Charles night at 730. Legion hall. Com­ of these birds, with Minnesota third may be able to return home in a daughter Katherine, Mrs. Edna Singer of Thomastcn. He Is a Positively Given Away Leach, Msr. Wilbur S. Cross and mittees are asked to take reports. and Oklahoma fourth Main? is a mer colors in cool week. graduate of Thomaston High School cotton to tie in beautifully with ____ daughter. Alice and Mr. and Mrs. grand place for turkey? and I hope BLACKINGTON’S and Hebron Academy; attended Uni­ Mr. and Mrs. Toivo Hakala and this State will come in for notice 310 MAIN ST.. ROCKLAND your summer dresses. The thick Mr and Mrs. Frank Fullerton of Amory B Allen of Rockland, and crepe sole is a dream of comfort. versity of Main? for two years and Mr. and Mrs. Galon Dow and chil­ Dr. and Mrs Charles H. Leach of soon. Boston spent the weekend a t the then entered Bentley School of Ac­ dren motored to Cadillac Mountain • • • • ANNE Tenant's Harbor. SHOIS BLACKINGTON’S Fullerton home In South Thomas­ counting and Finance, from which Sunday. Ladies, your recip? book. will last SHIRLEY ton. Mr. Fullerton Ls in the employ he was graduated and Is now em­ JAMES ELLISON 31* MAIN ST.. ROCKLAND. ME, Mrs. Harland Rawley and M rs. longer and can be kept cleaner if of the Christian Science Publishing ployed as accountant for the Indem­ iHttra lib • *M> Edgar McBrine entertained last dorc Bird of Rockland, Capt. and the outside cover is painted with I M.IwrllW Co. nity Insurance Co. of North America Wednesday night at the formers Mrs. James Creighton. J. L. Packard, thin shellac. Any dirt can be wiped W ednesday-Thurtday in Boston He is affiliated with the home, the occasion being a dainty Mrs. Floyd Berry. Mrs. C. M. Wil­ off with a damp cloth. THURSDAY The eleventh birthday of Georgia Delta Tau Delta fraternity, a mem­ • • • • shower In honor of Mrs. Norman liams, Miss Harriet R. Williams, Helena Jackson, daughter of Mr. ber of the Thomaston Baptist Another hint—pour sort that has Connon Ouests were Mrs. Albert Edna F. Watts. Emma Stackpolv. and Mrs. George H. Jackson was Church and Masonic Order of fat on it through a cletli wrung out McIntosh. Mrs. Marcellus Condon. Helen Mills. Mrs. Ella Stackpo!". celebrated Friday at her home on Thomaston. in cold water, and there you are— EVERGREENS Mrs. Charles McIntosh. Mrs. Wil­ Martha J. Carter. Ardelle C. Maxey. Hall's lane. The refreshments fea­ The young ccuple left by motor with all the fat on th? cloth. liam Main. Miss Virginia Connon. Charles Stackpolc and Mildred D?ni- tured three birthday cakes made amid a shewer of confetti and a car • • • • For Mabie Lunt. Mbs Louise McIntosh mons of Thomaston. for the occasion by Mrs. Ella Beal which had been uniquely deccratcd “Riches scinctlines take unto and Mrs. Donald Anderson. Mrs. Helena Ramsdell and Mrs by their friends, for their new home themselves and fly away. What Jackson. The children spent the at 776 Beacon street, Boston. N e w U n der-arm kind o f , riches does that mean, afternoon happily with games and Out of town guests attending the Cream Deodorant Jimmy?" YOUR LAWN other diversions. The guests were: wedding were the groom's grandpar­ “Ostriches, I guers." Jennie Elliott. Virginia Parker, COMIQUE ents. Capt. and Mrs. John Brown of Helen Strout. Barbara Koster. Nor­ The tombstone to be erected near CAMDKN Thomaston. Miss Louise Tobey and Stops Perspiration ma Ramsdell. Pauline Beal. Freda Loubburg. N. S . for Major Israel Silsby’s Greenhouses William O'Brien of Portsmouth. N. Thompson. Robert Philbrook, Don­ Newton who was the higheift rank­ WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY H., M r. Charles Murray, Mrs. Cros­ ing New England officer to die dur­ 253 CAMDEN ST.. ROCKLAND ald Snowman. Junior Ramsdell by Carleton Bean, Mrs. Richard Children's Matinee 4 P. M. M A Y 24-25 ing the siege of Louisburg, will be Kenneth Chatto and Harold Axtell. Merrill. Mrs. Lewis A. Larson, M.'. TEL. 318-W of greatest interest to all the New­ TODAY Special guests were Georgia's teach­ and Mrs. Philip Jones of Bangor, Dr. er. Miss Margaret Buttomer. and “ TAILSPIN” tons of this country. FRANKIE THOMAS In 5«-M and Mrs. Harry Pettapiece of Cam­ Tommy Carter. • • a • “CODE OF THE STREETS" with den. Mr. and Mrs. Olenn A. Law­ It was th? brilliant Daniel Web­ Alice Faye, Nancy Kelly rence, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Lawrence, ster who gave this thought: “If Lawrence R. Cole. Mr. and Mrs. 1 . Docs not rot dresses— d<»cs we work upon marble, It will perish; Lloyd Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. Thec- not irritate skin. If we work upon brass, time will 2 . N o waiting to dry. Can be used right after shaving. efface It; if we rear temples, they 2 * Instantly stops perspiration for will crumble into dust; but if we Be Lovely . . . 1 to J days. Eemoves odor work upon immortal souls, we will from perspiration. engrave upon these tables some­ 4 . A pure white, greaseless, stain* (genuine £/nqravd To Look At less vanishing cream. thing which will brighten all NEW DRESSES 2 . A rr id has been aw ard ed the eternity." STATIONERY Approval Seal o f the American • • • a 1 . . . For Lasting Beauty Arriving Institute of Laundering, for "And what did you think of Xl Ika Uwaal i A being harmless to fabrics. Venice?" asked a neighbor. VlaMng Card* 15 MILLION |ars of Arrid "Venice? Venice? Did we go 100 paneled cards, choice of 4 Gilbert’s Famous have been told. Try a )at today! DAILY... there. Oeorge?" abee aid M etylee of angravtng, ELATE INCLUDED, only. .. 11 J* Individualized Oil George: "Don't you remember ARRID that we stopped there, but they h*d Wedding Announcement* A Few Cloth Coats HOd At all atorea aelNna toilet good* a flood, so we didn't leave the sta- or Invitation* 1 tion?" On while or Ivory hock wed PERMANENT SJM To Close Out • • • • ding a plate finish. Inetde and During the first four months of oulilde envelope*, and PLATE IN­ Easy to Care For— Gives You CLUDED ______Very Low Price 1939 the United States and Cana­ Lasting Luxurious Curls NOW PLAYING dian manufacturers sold 1,414.776 Social Stationery "LOVE AFFAIR" Don't Forge! To Put Your Furs In Our Advertising automobiles compared with a total Ipedal etylee for men and women. Storage A choioe cd lovely colon, mano- with Other Machine or Machineless , DELUXE—OIL of 906.475 In the corresponding Phone 540 For Complete Service grama and etylee of engraving, IRENE DUNNE PERMANENT Columns Are period last year. PLATE INCLUDED ...... CHARLES BOYER Permanents— ^*1, COMPLETE $2.00 • • • • *2.28. SLM * d ep. Lucien K. Green & Son the Doctors say that coronary artery diseases caused 25 percent more Business Stationery AND 800 buatneee cards or HammenslS BEAUTY Merchant’s deaths in the first three months of rC Burdell’s Dress Shop Bend letterhead*, PLATE W- SALON 1939 than in Uie same period of CLUDED. only------MX* GILH R]I J 16 SCHOOL ST., ROCKLAND, ME. ►El 1938 and this condition will prob­ Show Windows StrandShows Mat. 2.00. Err R4S.f t.«S . 375 MAIN STREET ROCKLAND, ME. P IIO N E 142 ably increase until depression days The Courier-Gazette Continuous Saturday 2.15 to 10.45 have ended. Page Eight Rockland Courier-Gazette, Tuesday, May 23, 1939 'Every-Other-Day Earlier And Better Nearing Completion A MAID CALLED MILLS HITCH HIKER pFR5onAUTiE5inniu5|r Necessity For Good Hofne A. Jay See June 17 Will See Deer lale- Gardens is Stressed By Whom You Will Take To Your Heart When She Talks I, A Jay See of Warren, South Sedgwick Bridge Ready About Household Matters ** VERNON DUKE, a a c a j . Farm Security Hope. Union and Knox County. For Travel Maine in general, do represent to This is the season when family Work on the Deer Isle-Sedgwick BROADCAST BY MARJORIE MILLS Dual Per tonality m Music gardens are receiving special at­ the officers and members of Nature Bridge is progressing most satisfac­ (Monday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday at 1.30 p. m over Stations ' A Crank Club, that I wish to be en­ WNAC, Boston: WTAO, Worcester; WCSH. Portland: WTIC, Hartford; tention from borrowers of the Farm torily and the Phoenix Bridge Co. WICC Bridgeport; WEAN, Providence; and WLBZ, Bangor). rolled as at least an associate, if Security Administration, according officials are confident that they will not an active member of said or­ | to Mrs. Harriet C. Worthing, home ganization (preferably exempt from have the structure completed b> Tlie gardeners Amounts to use must be determined One of the really worth-whhe management supervisor of the F S A. dues). June 17. rally round to­ by the number you are to serve. books to read is Carl Van Doren's j in Hancock. Knox and Waldo Coun- I feel qualified, as I have seen The steel floor sections are all in day with bright Ocean Spray C ran b erry Ginger "Benjamin Franklin ” It Is a labor ties. quite a lot of the most beautiful pla<* “nd the welding will he ideas that seem Relish of love, and the great American ' Emphasis upon the growing of State in the Union, I need not name pleted Friday ntjht. A temporary so good to us Two tablespoons candled ginger. ... , v, . abundant and well-diversified gar- 8-fcot plant roadway has been built comes to life in a biography to , , , 8 this State. I have seen its highest w e 'v e already 2 tablespoons orange rind. 1 can den crops in order to supply the elevation. Mt. Katahdln and have the entire length of the bridge for put some of Ocean Spray cranberry sauce. which tiie author has devoted off famUy [able wUh a ..,ong season„ the concrete transit mixers. These seen the bottom of its deepest lime them into prac­ Chcp candied ginger and cut and on fully 20 years I t is dra- Of fresh vegetables and fruits, with quarries which will probably never are on tlie joh and expected to begin tice. Did you orange rind In thin strips. (Use inatic. witty and revealing; a big enough produce left over to can pouring Saturday noon. The pour­ be seen again by any person now notice the good just the orange-colored portion of book but worth the time it takes to and store for the winter months. living. ing will start on the Deer Isle side. tip ln the the peel) rca(j ft I is fundamental to the “live at home • After a section is poured it will be As I am now an aged man. 64 "Gardener's As­ Break the Ocean Spray Cran­ • • • • J program of farm families receiving left to harden two and cne-half days this week, my step is shortening and sistant" column in the Ladles Home berry sauce with a fork and combine Containing approximately 1400 EB.A. rehabilitation loans, in the snappy expressive vernacular and the operation will be shifted to Journal? When thinning seedlings with the ginger and orange peel. questions and answers this first' "Every seed planted in the homo of the present life “I am slipping." ,he other sid« lhe brld««‘ pot up a few dozen in little pots Strawberry Hard Sauce qu.z book on food and drink, "The Sarden, by helping to reduce expen- But due to this slowing up I am the we‘ght distributed. Two shifs and then when those vacant Four tablespoons Land O lakes Wining and Dining Quiz." by Cora, dhures for the family table, repre-I now ^ ginnlng to use my eyes to a ar« working, from 6 a m to 6 p m spaces occur later ln your border butter. 1 cup confectioners sugar, Rose and Bob Brown (Appleton- sents a saving in the cash income. ,utt[e advantage as I now and will work Sundays when neces­ for one reason or another you'll white of 1 egg. 3 o r 4 tablespoons Century) provides sparkling enter- Mrs Worthing stated. ’This sav- must hold my gaze below the roofs sary to complete a peur. have a flock of little plants to HU strawberry pulp, (finely mashed), lainment and Is a comprehensive i°8 often releases hundreds of dol- j and mountain tops, more on the The painting contract is about f.0 them? Do you mourn over seed­ 3 or 4 drops almond extract. modern compendium of everything lars of a fatnl’ys income annually ground u I shamble along the percent completed. The first coat, lings yoi^ have to throw away too? Cream butter well and add sifted pertaining to the pleasures of th; for other farm needs But the fl- highway hoping igeneraly not in about 75 percent. The final coat of Eva Betterley in Melrose, Conn.. confectioners sugar. Then add the HEN Vladimir Dukelaky. Rus­ he ranged through Europe earning gastronome. The quiz groups are nancial consideration is not the vajn) jor a friend to bring his car green is being applied to the main wonders why some of us can't part a haphazard living as a pianist. Hit beaten white of egg and the straw­ sian-American composer of sym­ so arranged as to follow generally on,y one involved in this garden w a slop and open the door. I spans. This job will be completed with attic treasures, letters, clip­ phonies. ballets and other types first of American visit ln 1922. brought berry pulp. As much of the crushed W a variety of employment. Including the sequence of courses through an program; besides keeping food pur- take opportunity to give each abcut one week after the roadway pings and odds and ends of ac­ music In the larger forms, develops fruit as you like may be added, up au appetite for caviar, he consulti piano playing In a burlesque thea­ elaborate meal It is the book that chases at a minimum, an ample and au of tbe many, many, such is dene. cumulated possessions and other tre and writing music for a magi­ to the point where the acid of the Vernon Duke, popular songwriter, quiz-lovers and information seekers ®“PP»y °f home-grown produce friends who have _____thus assisted me, The sidewalk sections will be of women can march through the confldent of a friendly hearing. For cian’s act. Back in Europe In 1924, fruit begins to cause the fat to sepa­ he wrote aucceastul ballets for welcome and furnishes sprightly Plal'ned with reference to correct a rising vow of thanks plank and laid after the concrete is house and toss out all but non-es­ Dukelaky and Duke are the same rate. Add flavoring, mix carefully person' One wrltea for Carnegie Dlaglleff, famous Impresario ot the table talk idiet needs, helps to rehabilitate a m b (Chinese for take notice): done. This sidewalk will be about sentials without a qualm. Why do Russian ballst,- and then began | and chill well Serve on hot cot­ Hall and glory; the other writes 20 inches wide. you suppose that is? Being an in­ writing popular music for the Lou- it nnc n( 1 freduently in the future may make tage pudding for Tin Pan Alley and cash. Just off the press this month comically. We consider Tlie approach roads to the big curable border and appalled by the Duke's compositions, under hit don stage. Ha returned to America use of the highways. While on ln 1929. worked In a motion picture (Macmillan) a new and revised edi- i their greatest assets' bridge on Little Deer Isle received accumulation we're wondering if MENU Amerlcau name and his Russian lion of “Oolf: Its Rules and De- I The primary purpose of Farm Se- *Blk.S p*Thaps aboul designation, constitute Important studio In Long Island, and began the Anal coat of tar Tuesday, com­ Break fo a l visions." by Richard C. Francis. .curity's rehabilitation program is . h M ° U ° eac 10 traveled there's a psychological reason Hats In the records of the American writing for the New York stage. pleting the job which is receiving The laat Gerrlck Gaieties show. ------to make the borrowers self-reliant' * X “ n° Uce a lot ot The same lady suggests the gar­ Chilled Welch's Orape Juice Society of Composers. Authors and much commendation for the work Oatmeal Publishers, for Duke's becoming an 1930, Included four of his songs "Captain Horatio Homblower is and independent through education nnrt . ‘ng uman Flowers dens have a special place for "run­ Then he wrote for “Three's a performed by Contractor Cianchette. Popovers with Creamed Dried Beef American citizen made him eligible not only the choice of The Book-of- 85 wel1 as financial backing. Mrs ,h . * °n greens m thelr season ny" plants, things like Dusty miller, to Ita membership Here he rubs Crowd." "Americana." "Thumbs The causeway to Little Deer Isle has Up.** and "The Show la On.” the-Month Club in this country. Worthing pointed out. The role of J 1 eaVM ln spring and mint and bugle. If you have a tiny Toast elbowa with creators of all kinds of also been resurfaced and tarred, also garden, had you thought of planting Coffee successful music, from symphony to Meanwhile Vladimir Dukelaky, but it 4s also the choice of The Jthe Home Management Supervisor i niIP . U, ,aU UDln after subsidised by his alter ego. was Hardy s HUI. making a smooth road mint or bergamont or the other swing, who. like Duke, use the Book Society ln England and has th* development of this program \ nlri.„r ... i’um*ner- the "dead Lunch Society's machinery to protect their giving expression to bis artistic to the bridge from the main road — "spready" plants in bottomless kegs Vegetable Chowder performing rights from unlicensed aspirations lu two symphonies, a won for the author the award of is to assist the homemaker in draw- ' r 411 whiskey con- Deer Isle Mesenger. the Janies Talt Black Memorial lag up her home management plans emPt> ciBArette boxes set deep ln the earth? lettuce Sandwiches public performance for proflt piano concerto; the oratorio, "The .Performances of symphonic works End ot 8t Petersburg"; ballets, Prize for literature—a triple event to give advice on better family lit- ,AV„rc 'nute reniu‘