Ford Dealers Itink

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Ford Dealers Itink Eichtl CRASfFOKI) <>"..!.) ClfflZKN AND ClIUON'IClX—Tflt'KSDAV, JI'NE IS. 1?C1 Mrs. Julius. Canjitlpsi; safety nnd health, -Mrs., Edward Coiinell; Sherman PTA Announces •<fiiolariihip. Mrs. Theodore Was- Deft 2 Wim Coveted Trophy Legal Notices Kbziar: first vict'-pri'Sidtnt,- Mrs. Den 2 ofCjub Pjick 103 was win- . Pack Chairman Edgar Browtrlfce" •arns, Executive Board '.•education, Mrs. Ellinge; ways and ner^of tile S. K.-ThompSonrtrophx presented gifts to Cubmaster Lin-- .... .. ... "«r\ , . ;iu-ans.;'jita.. Joseph , KunU, and presented anually'to the den earn- gerfeldt and Assistant.Cubmaster ?-'" n p: c«fj? NFORD' • NOTICE Of HEARING ;' ,. ••Mrs. Robert (ji-inisKnw.-'iiroyianVci'i.-iiirnan fo!' the-ShLTtsiis Juaior i-(-.i:m representative, Mrs. Lloyd ing the 'most points. ;duriiig the WilliaWi R^'Dnncan, who,are re- Bbard or^rAdJuMmljr School PTA,; has Sfk'ClL-d "Ymi ;ind Your Child" as .the l::ci~i.- for S Ruch. year for attendance and achieve- tiring, in ?efcbgnition of their work Npiicc ii hereby.-yiucn that tHe Board 1 for the pasH three years. A gift o/^Cdjuntmcnt IZoningi '6t~t)ie.LT<^wn?hip next year's plroarams. '_•'••. The officers are:'President, Mrs. merit awards. ttt Cranford, • N, J., :in the C*ounty of The firstassociation mceiinK'"!**• Ko.ziar; first vice .president, Mrs. vThe presentation was matie re- .was al^o, presented to. Mr. Brown- Union, will hold a public* hearing on .. firs Ht r lee, in recognition of his "services • " "Monday. June 26, 19iil October. 2 ill 8:15 pliij. will by . social- -worker, "will" discuss '•Kuniz; steoncl vlfie-pr-esideht. cently, at the anfiual fathcr-and- ut 8:1S I'Tl. Iprcvaillnc tlmcl, at. ttie called "You * nnd -Voiir Child''.- 1 dyring the past. year. Municipal Building, corm'r of North Ave- GIFT SUGGESTIONS nd; doss PoaUfie i-s a.nci t'r.t" chilti Uibor ~ :\~ Tru Mrs. Grimshaw; third^yiee-prosi- sqn dinner in fellowship Hall of Teaciiers." A social hour has .been The new cubmaster, Everett nue and Aldt-n Sirct,-t, Cranford. M. J., to At CnatotA. N. 3. officers will te '.n^t^ rient. Burton Mandell;. recording the FirsJJPresbyteria.n Church by consider: . - • '• . : JERSEY, THURSDAY, JUNE 22, planned' following ..-the business 1 Yackcr. a; West Point graduate ol, LXVHlr No- 22, • 4 Sections; 24 Pages n mi-etinfis ijfc open •tcrv'tary, "Sirs*"Carl Ward; cor •Roderick ~W.~""Smith, honorary 8/61 .^Application? o£ George, S. Xorner meeting to give pari-nti and :-o the n-spontling 'secretaryj Mrs. 'Fred- nnd former den dad, was intro- for a variance to .er.ect y iitockiide fence. ic- and. ruUl-HYid'osted' chairman and a vice-chairman of (! feet hliih from the back <Jf the" holiic- teachers ailropportunity-to become t'rick^Jjuiusak; and treasurer; Mrs ducedi. The new pack chairman, to the Koutherly &tde. line and th(An aion£ . acquainted. > ik'ce.-kurily mL'i'r.btr.<_ Region II. , will be Robert Walters arid- the as- the southerly side line.to the re.ir prop- to Mrs7 Koziar," MrsT Pollack and erty line at 'J'.IG Walnut Avenue, Block 64, Citizen and Ghronicje ToRStudents u-iid. - "__ - - •» Announcement was made of a sistant' pack, chairman will "be %'Lot. .11. '.. '•'.'" hrehis at Brjmkside (> al "Mrs. Ward' wiH' serve 5>s delegates -<^t. the tlin,o and plnce nbove stated ousies on iciyH"' 1 new memorial trophy, the S. E. Robert Turadian. • .p.m. will fo'Stifru- a Kxecutivo boord ir.L'oims? ''••••i\ to the Cranford Board of "Parent- " -In recognition of.their services all inU-nitccl p:irtie-i Mr. InvJUjd to b« Contest be held at the school iX 1:30 p.m. Hume'trophy,'to be presented an- present ^w.heii full opportunity^"" to be by the Little ' TheHtre^prou Tciic'hcr Organizations. nually "in 'March to the den sub-to the pack, corsages were |pre^ heard will be given to them.' ' judges commented that "the $86,059 oi> Scj-itumbt-r 13. Qc'u.'bt-r 3:1. N'o- By-order: otest The- Cra'nl6"r.d'^.Citizen and ' East • OrdnKf lullowoc sented to Mrs. Robert B. Winkcl, 4_Robert Cohen andt Kathleen^Vicse received $50 bonds given by 0 vl-mbe'r 27. February 3, March 5 mitting the best den project* in BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT Chronicle • will receive a. second Citizen and * Chronicle, is a neat cussipn period lecl^by -Dr dinner chairman: Mrs. Ridgely C. •. ^ Uobert I- Clurtfi, Jr. |Tlic Board of. Edueatioiaf came lip a'gaihst one feo*? problem, as 1 and A"p.nl i). '. the. handicraft exhibit. The tro- an"d well printed newspaper." '., theLions Club to the top students "in academic standing in. this year ? ._ EcyjH-.. psychologist -;il Former Resident Folk, assistant dinner chairman; '"*•-,. Chairman Ints iii 1hjB Brookside School district submitted a t»etiiioi> ojjjocuiig•) place national award ' for Excel- In their, general comments on '."StiitiCoU'eso', Union. The jwujjranr Mf>. ThiHxlnre Komarl" J^'.-M- phy was presented by friends in Siimner B. Swettwr ^.. jlence -in Typography^~toilight_ at grkduating class at tho annual awards assembly Monday morning^at '.;' . Mrs. LJnger,fcildt, awards chair- Secretary '. '• •.•:••• ' »—••• litfedlstricting'of fifth arid\i*th jjracTe students,-.to .JJlbowingdale this division, Hhe fudges stated: ! ncies anno:.inced . ippoir.Ki'n: ai memory of the late.Samuel E. Dated: June 7,' 10(11 . • , Cranto'rd "High Schoo,l. ' The awards: were -presented-by the Rev.Dr. For " is'sponsored by (he Union Cnuiuy th* ™6th annual convention of the' Receives Degree Hume, father j>i assistant •• Pen man, and Mrs; James P. Sommer- Adv. Yen: 811.22 "~ J _jB-15 nue Schoo.Lat a meeting, JVIonckiy nightr. - ^•"This~was-a—supoiiot-jJtoUp.of " MentaT Health, Association . ville, publicity chairm:in." Mrs. fcek the 'board ainnounbtd the ihi£t of 47 children (one National Editorial Association in newspapers^' 'Reflecting' excellent Albert Allinger. -' \. -.-, . :" '•',' . -t" - The 1961 campaign goal of tftg Cranfbrd- United Fund is "You . and Your Child's Social Mrs. Stanley 'G. Matthews of Dad'Elliot Hiime and grandfath- he^ The Bausch and Lorabsicienco plaque for the top science student Auditors* Mrs.- Harold Tr<:n:; William. Ridley will —serve, as TOWNSHIP OF CRANFORD. •ahd one 6th grade ta'-Bloom- Salt Lake City, Utah. The news- taste in ne,ws, feature, ediior'ial $86 059. This figure was announced today by the budget Activities" Will be explored, at budget. MrV Jiihii K. KHUKJR; Ciucapo, 111. formerly of Cranfard, er of Cub Scout John Hume, who arid advertising material.. Type n the-graduating Class..was' pre- awards chairman and Mrs. Wil- ^'rsjiVord, S'^xc Jcrn«y :':'7,i^ , Lle S(J*i*ol.to alleviate over- paper also will gef~an honorable •••8:15—|J.m. Decembl-i; -V" when Uen 1< uisl-iiii«n. andiV-laws. \!:-s iV:l'received';- i bachelor of avis degree was interested in the handicraft . • "' '. ' I'ruputicd • • '•' -.• •' sej'c'ctton's in" test/ instances were ientcd-to Robert Cohen by_Court- committee-chairrnah.^Atba S. Taytor. The totahwill be distrir- liam " MeGonagil, publicity, next '-'.• OUblMAN'CE NO, tll-U-. bding at Brookside'School, For mention citation in the General Haddoc|t,_rijjyttoi- of the, UmoiT ij;,in .Suani work of the cubs. and Daley and' the Mathematics •}',i-A Thursday froni-ISewark State year. "~ " ' '. • AN ORDINANCE REGULATING TKAF ' past two years two sixth Bdard Makes Excellence category. well adapted. Jtnsido pages were ljuted among'12 member agencies. Last year> goal wa6 County'"Psychiatric C'linic-, - spunks j M\-*. .John WihriEvYhis'year of the new tro-. F1C AND 'AMBN'DIIiC - AND SUPPLE attractive and' well balanced. S«c- Association of America award to Co'leHc, Union; ~ • A team known ' as 'The Bat- its-from-th&,Broo)tside district :_ _2,0p!iL.in.eivspprjl!'rs_. wcre. 274 Receive ^rm diitiittf—trntl ffliitrt,--yu-irrh-:—-• i Mrs' Harold. Trent';- ph.v iti Don 12,c which exhibited tions, including sports, socieiy"and' he studentrwhonnished-first in a $70,000 for-43-agenaeS. Sherman PYA will have if joint j child. Mrs. Don;ild \'j Watching the presentation wits lapboardsHaU t'' .handicraft _dis- tons" and Arnold Peterson cnteY- 0 OF THE IBM . CO&E OK GENERAL • beeri housed at Cleveland rtlic'> varioiis "divisions 1 Scouts, Attifirican.-Recl^l, tnined • with feats of magic. Mr. ORDINANCES.:.:. jor School. This space will not .<2-,.lhe NEA's'iS'fil Better' News- agriculture were attractively illus- :ompetitive exaniination "went to v pici-tinR with Cleveland PTA -at j i,,nan. Mrs^ Ko/iar. Mrs. Mattheus's husband, the Rev. pla.v_ in March". The lapboards • BE IT OKDA1NED "by the ' Township p£pSr Contest. A total of 0G win-trated." - """'" •• Villlam Knox. This award was Cross and Girl Scouts have Cleve.and School at 8:15 p.m., Feb-i • HospiUiW-ly and atter.dar.re, M:s." were made for the Children's Duncah, was toastmnstbr. Committee o( the 'Town>hlp of Craii-] vailable in the fall. Matthews of GboVge Williams jord: ' '.. '.''"• "' ' I petition with 153 names op-. ners were selected, representing In the Gener'al Excellence cate- presented byXJliver West, : ruary-'jl) in a Founders" Day ob-1 Richard Schoonover and Mrs. Jo- Country Home, Mountainside. • - Other honored guests were tht; ippomtments been assigned the , largest ' 'go, 111. The Mat- SectltTiv 1.- NOA person- shull piirk • a •pcf" thrr change. was' submitted E°ory for weekly newspapers from The ' American Association. ..of 500 Await •scrviin'te. '" I sejih' Masino; mtprnntmn:;! reia- A plaque wns presented Xt\ Rev. Dr. Robert G. Longaker, the vi'hiclt on Arlington Hoad. between North as shares of the fupdC 20.50, thew's ^ayc residents of Crnnford Avenue and Hamilton Avenfte- In excess jHton Greltzer of 40 West Hol- "thirty teachers were appointed j ""the^Ci.tizen - nnd Chronicle 4,000 to 6,000 'circulation,-- NexV ;eachers of Spanish ahd Portu- A film and discussion of ."Your | tions, Mr.-.
Recommended publications
  • Online Versions of the Handouts Have Color Images & Hot Urls September
    Online versions of the Handouts have color images & hot urls September 6, 2016 (XXXIII:2) http://csac.buffalo.edu/goldenrodhandouts.html Sam Wood, A NIGHT AT THE OPERA (1935, 96 min) DIRECTED BY Sam Wood and Edmund Goulding (uncredited) WRITING BY George S. Kaufman (screenplay), Morrie Ryskind (screenplay), James Kevin McGuinness (from a story by), Buster Keaton (uncredited), Al Boasberg (additional dialogue), Bert Kalmar (draft, uncredited), George Oppenheimer (uncredited), Robert Pirosh (draft, uncredited), Harry Ruby (draft uncredited), George Seaton (draft uncredited) and Carey Wilson (uncredited) PRODUCED BY Irving Thalberg MUSIC Herbert Stothart CINEMATOGRAPHY Merritt B. Gerstad FILM EDITING William LeVanway ART DIRECTION Cedric Gibbons STUNTS Chuck Hamilton WHISTLE DOUBLE Enrico Ricardi CAST Groucho Marx…Otis B. Driftwood Chico Marx…Fiorello Marx Brothers, A Night at the Opera (1935) and A Day at the Harpo Marx…Tomasso Races (1937) that his career picked up again. Looking at the Kitty Carlisle…Rosa finished product, it is hard to reconcile the statement from Allan Jones…Ricardo Groucho Marx who found the director "rigid and humorless". Walter Woolf King…Lassparri Wood was vociferously right-wing in his personal views and this Sig Ruman… Gottlieb would not have sat well with the famous comedian. Wood Margaret Dumont…Mrs. Claypool directed 11 actors in Oscar-nominated performances: Robert Edward Keane…Captain Donat, Greer Garson, Martha Scott, Ginger Rogers, Charles Robert Emmett O'Connor…Henderson Coburn, Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright, Katina Paxinou, Akim Tamiroff, Ingrid Bergman and Flora Robson. Donat, Paxinou and SAM WOOD (b. July 10, 1883 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania—d. Rogers all won Oscars. Late in his life, he served as the President September 22, 1949, age 66, in Hollywood, Los Angeles, of the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American California), after a two-year apprenticeship under Cecil B.
    [Show full text]
  • CATALOGX 87.Pdf
    E R T A N M E N T BIG NEWS, fRANIINSTBN, TIIE RDT•m VEIIIII (1831) BLACDAWK MOVESI \ Big news and good news for our many customers nationwide! Blackhawk Films, for years based in Davenport, Iowa is heading west to Hollywood. Effective September 18, 1987, Blackhawk Films moved its operations closer to the heart of the industry. The new facilities mean faster response and even more personal attention given to filling your orders. The most outstanding new feature that goes with the move is the extension of phone service to 24 hours a day, every day of the year. At Blackhawk Films, we keep trying to find new ways to retain our customers and give you the kind of service you deserve ... the best. You can see that effort most clearly in this catalog's selection of collectable entertainment. Just looking through our exclusive LANDMARKS IN ENTERTAINMENT Section gives you a taste of the kinds of special videocassettes we have to offer. Not just entertaining features, Blackhawk strives to select high-quality, important work that is valuable entertainment. Titles like the original FRANKENSTEIN, TOP HAT, DIRECTOR: James Whales PRODUCER: Carl Laemmle Jr. MAKE-UP: Jack Pierce CAST: Boris Ka.rfoff. Colin MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON, Clive, Mae Clarke, Edward Van Sloan, John Boles, Marilyn Harris and Dwight Frye SONS OF THE DESERT and the rest read like a roll call of the greatest films from For the first time in 50 years, this classic adaptation of Mary Shelly's novel can be seen the way its Hollywood's heyday.
    [Show full text]
  • January 1984)
    University of New Orleans ScholarWorks@UNO Wavelength Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies 1-1984 Wavelength (January 1984) Connie Atkinson University of New Orleans Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uno.edu/wavelength Recommended Citation Wavelength (January 1984) 39 https://scholarworks.uno.edu/wavelength/39 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies at ScholarWorks@UNO. It has been accepted for inclusion in Wavelength by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UNO. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ORLEANS '84 World's Fair: 'The Most Exciting Plate In The World' Trash Movies As Art Movies Theatre Art& Music Rolling Listings With Shirley and Lee Thoroughly Modem Marsalis BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE PAID ALEXANDRIA, LA PERMIT N0.88 utauelenglh ISSUE N0.39 • JANUARY 1984 ISSN 0741·2460 ''I 'm not sure, but I'm almost positive, that all music came from New Orleans. '' -Ernie K-Doe, 1979 Cover photo by Michael P. Smith t table of contents What a Year!!! Features -------• World's Fair by Bunny Matthews ............ 14 You're gonna need Wavelength in 1984 Shirley Goodman by Almost Slim . ........... 16 Naughty Marietta New Orleans knows how to party, but this by Don Lee Keith . .. .. .... .. 19 year, we're really going to show our Ellis Marsalis With all the thousands of events to by Yorke Corbin . 21 from, you're going to need us more Spirit World ever, so you won't miss one minute of the by rico .. .... ...... .. ... ... 23 fun. Departments----- January News .. ...... ... ......... 4 AND IF YOU SUBSCRIBE NOW, Golden Moments by Almost Slim .
    [Show full text]
  • For Give Flowers!
    ^•f.*.',/., .'•/ ; -••'.?'' •""'. ••'-.•.".'"''.:;':.; ",': '•.:''"'?'^v^^.^oVV!';:'''.;-.^'!''":'"•"'• ' •••• ' . r • . ' :••••..;:. v ••'••• ' •'"•• -' .'.•••.••• v:v:;*» O ...:' •:. • .-•'• : .-, :.-•••,••. ••-•, •' •V'WM •a- ^^ THE CRANFORD CITIZEN AMP »rr. in Community Church, Mrs- DorreU former menial hospital patients in grants of almost $10,000 for psy- is superintendent of the cradle roll the state, free hospital service chiatric clinic treatment service, Mrs. Dorrell department and a member of the At IWf-W«y Marie which has provided treatment foras well as broad progress in pre- First Aid Squad Commission' for Education and the GARWOOD ^- Work on re-six Union County citizens enabling ventive education and improved A Commission on Missions and placement.of tone chests in the them to return to useful lives inlegislation in the field of mental Ambulance Fund E V: 111 New Jobs Christian World Relations,. organ at Garwood Presbyterian their communities promptly, and health. KENILWORTH — Mrs. Edward Mrs. DorrelTs activities are not Church has progressed to a point Dorrell of 324 Coolidge drive, new limited to church work. She b al- which will permit use of the GARWOOD president of the Women's Society so program chairman for the Ken- orfcan for lister services, it was CRANFORD KENILWORTH for Christian Service of Commun- ilworth Parent-Teacher Associa- reported by the Rev. Eric S. Kenilworth Public Schools ity Methodist Church, has been ap- tion. Her daughter. June, is a stu- Toucher, pastor. Vol. UTO No. U. Cntcred at accond claia mall nutter at pointed recording secretary for the dent at McKinley School. CRANFORD, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1957 - tha Pott OWce at Crantord. N. J. 3 Sections, 24 Pagesr— 10c WSCS district office of the Newark Assisted by men of the church, Report Variety oi Activities Conference.
    [Show full text]
  • Seafarers' Services
    ~')uC.4TIO, ~ MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND TRUSTEES 200 I YEAR IN REVIEW i SEAMEN'S CHURCH INSTITUTE HELPS THE HEROES AT GROUND ZERO CENTER FOR MARITIME EDUCATION CENTER FOR SEAFARERS' SERVICES CENTER FOR SEAFARERS' RIGHTS THE WATER STREET GALLERY ~LOO UT Front CDtIn': E--o -.. (jTtJrn Ie/!) Ene K l.amvn. lit I' Exe(unw Volume 94. Number 2 Of/ICC {ITT !he CenlCT far MIITltnne Ed,/! IInm, The LJokDl41 Is puhli hed <ju.trterly. and /Jomiruck F<"ITaTO, Assisltlnl [Q !he Bwlding Manage at S( I' NY HeOOqlUlTleTs. prepar!! Copyright 2002. the amen' Church In. mute "I saft" helmel\ for reS04t uoorken at Ground Zero ew York New Jerse . All fight reserved. Ii-Z--===::==:===::=== ill S&i_=: MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN AND EX ECUTIVE DIRECTOR MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR.MAN Any institution that is 168 years old and does not from time-ta-time reevaluate its mission, programs, staffing, financials, and future usefulness can inadvertently slip into a culture of simply accepting the status quo. At the Seamen's Church Institute, the status quo is not good enough. What we have successfully accomplished is satisfying, but our culture very much includes expanding programmatic successes. That is why an SCI committee underwent a comprehensive year-long Strategic Planning review. The Committee studied what our needs might be 10 years out It also attempted to evaluate the changing needs of those we serve during that same period. Not much stays exactly the same for 10 years . We focused on what can be expected to change, internally and externally, and how we should position the Institute to meet these changes.
    [Show full text]
  • The Billboard 1918-10-12: Vol 30 Iss 41
    NOTICE TO READER: WImb jon nadins thU mao<lnr ptac* • le tump tax this noUrt. mail the BtcaalM. and It will be piao^ Is the bandt et our Mddlm or taikm dntinad to prnreed oter-ara* Me eraum'. Na addrtta—A. S. BURLEM>.V, P»tiiia«t«r General. Published .weekly at Cincinnati. O. Subscription, $3.00 per year. Entered as second-class mail matter, June 4, 1897, at Post Office, Cincinnati, under act of March 3, 1879. mv THE DOMINANT NOTE IN THEAmCAL JOURNALISM THIS ISSUE CONTAINS 26 PER CENT ADVERTISING AND 74 PER CENT READING MATTER I ‘‘The American People are with you.” —General Pershing to our soldiers. And General Pershing was right. The American People ARE “WITH” the boys over there. Their unanimity, solidarity, concurrence and agreement are wonderful. All classes have done nobly in the Fourth Liberty Loan drive, but one of them, showfolk, has been extra fine. Showfolk—and by showfolk we mean not only the actors, actresses, managers and agents, but the Chautauqua talent, the professional entertainers of all sorts, the platform speakers, and last but not least, THE SPLENDID FOUR-MINUTE MEN, who have labored valiantly in our movies and theaters side by side with the people thereof for so long now that they also belong— are 100% loyal. They have not only home the burdens of war as philosophically, accepted the draft as cheer¬ fully, paid their taxes as willingly, lent of their means to the government as eagerly and cut down on the use of food as uncomplainingly as have other classes, but they have given of their time and services so bountifully, so exuberantly and so lavishly that they have completely distanced all emulators.
    [Show full text]
  • Thoughts for Hen for Astormy Day
    Stevens-Durye- a Automo- Gasoline Engines. biles. n If yoa ara loakiaf far a Gasolia. Eaaiae with few parta ana lata af aawar far us-to-aa-ta a little meaey, Partial asalriaa aa Automobile that writ or aall aa will maka taj-mi- la tripa wil! da wall to aall a n Bee. ewtow E. N. E. N. Sipperley, Westport, Ct. le Sipperley, Westport, Ct. CONN., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1905. TEN PAGES. VOLUME XXVIII. NEWTOWN, NUMBER 52., The Busy Store 1 NO FEE "When Are You Coming In.' s. Keep Your GANGER Until Cured Co., J2ye Several Methods. Abundant References. Fairfield Ave. and middle St., on the Calendar A' r V "'i.e. :2, Successful In nearly all Chronio Diseases. A al . Consultation FREE. B idgeport, Conn And Your Dr.PAULNORWOOD, Thoughts on Wood Box TUMOR 81, Ansonia, Ct for Hen for Pi ruff's Store D. Thoughts DrJA. French,Assistant -- f-' "Tc The store is now to IK M ready 19 and come a youjll out all right in your New Year purchasing i Stormy Day. attend to your you don t put it off too long. Of course with our immense ftock 01 wears for to us NOW la CJ 1st .r 1 Professional Cards. We can help you save money if you come be- New Year by fitting you to a very fine suit of clothes, priced way Men and Boys low their values. Twenty-fiv- e different lines of W. J. Beecher, nghttul Wants. I I and our many things for 1a,Vc . Attorhky-at-La-w, breasted sack suits in this sale handsome V certain single or double 7 of getting what you waut, even at the last moment; but its Koorng 25 and 28, Sanford Bldg, Bridgeport.
    [Show full text]
  • The Billboard 1918-12-14: Vol 30 Iss 50
    IF YOU SEE IT IN BILLYBOY-BANK ON IT THIS ISSUE CONTAINS 27 PER CENT ADVERTISING AND 73 PER CENT READING MATTER |F YOU UPHOLD THE THEATER HONESTLY, LIBERALLY, FRANKLY, I AND WITH WISE DISCRIMINATION, THE STAGE WILL UPHOLD IN I FUTURE, AS IT HAS IN THE PAST, THE LITERATURE, THE MANNERS, THE MORALS, THE FAME AND THE GENIUS OF OUR COUNTRY. —HENRY IRVING Great words. ' And, though addressed to the British public, worthy of the deepest and most serious con¬ sideration by peoples of every nationality. Especially should the American public give thought to them. For of all institutions the theater is the most democratic. It is inherently and essentially so. Its existence—its very life—are dependent upon the masses. Every time that it essays to address or appeal to the classes or any special portions or part of the public it fails. Its art must always be that of the whole people, that of men and women, of children and adults, of rich people and poor folks, of the learned and the unlearned, the gay and the serious. Therefore Sir Henry’s words bear a peculiar and particular significance for Americans. The greatest Democracy in the world should manifest the greatest zeal in fostering, en¬ couraging and supporting the most democratic institution in the wor^d. There is food for thought in this, too, for the profession—the whole profession—for the stage is the stage no matter where or under what guise you find it. It may be harbored in a big or “little” house, it may be devoted to the legitimate or to musical comedy, burlesque or vaudeville, it may be the platform in a tent or merely the arena —yea, even the “nigger boards” therein—and it may be referred to as the screen, but for all that, if the entertainment brought to life upon its boards be the work of professional actors, actresses and artists, it is “the theater” within Sir Henry’s meaning.
    [Show full text]
  • Decried by Pareiita at Board Session
    •> • •-;'-. • •-"> •'}.• Setend Cliu tasUie PUd Vol..LXXI. No. 1. 3 Sections, 22 Pages €RANFORL\NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY; JAPTOAKT23, 1964 Cranford. H. J. : TEN CENTS1 Pageant Replacing town'Days' -' * • . t ' '. _'t . ' the Cranford Tercentenary Committee and the 'Commit- Decried by Pareiita tee for Educational and Cultural Advancement will join forces to present a Cranford Tercentenary Day in" early June, high- lighted by a historical pajeant entitled "Three Hundred Years of Crane's Ford.""The celebration will culminate CECA's year- At Board Session long effort to spotlight Cran-j -—___•-•„__—--L-+- The Board of-Education's decision to discontinue the fQrd's numerous educational i x- I ¥~l "JL-«. baccalaureate service starting iit June; drew the fire "of more than a dozen residents at a meeting of the board on Tuesday and cultural resources. LOCttl UOCtOr in Lincoln Scho.ol. •• ; . ... - The pageant, -co-sponsored ^ At the baccalatireate service, held each June on Sunday by the Tercentenary Commit- To Head State ! at the start of commencement tee, headed by ftr. Homer J. week exercises, local minis- -.. Hall; CECA, and the Cranford His- ters, on a rotating basis', offer torical Society, will replace the Academy Unit Shfyckhamer an inspirational talk for the annuaCECl SCranfor agreed -toDay. jois ncetebration with the. "Dr. Edward M. Coe of 217 Holly graduating seniors and their Tercentenary Committee for the street will be installed as presi- PltthstoSeek parents. celebration at -the request o/jUlfi dent of the New. Jersey Chapter of •Poor attendance' and a "Township Committee, which in- the American Academy of General "watered-down" service were the dicated it' would' make -its annual Practice as trie president's ball con- Second Term chief reasons prompting ••• the- appropriation for ' special events cludes" the chapter's l'2tn annual Finance Commissioner Farris S.
    [Show full text]
  • THE BOX OFFICE CHECK-UP of 1935
    1 to tell the world!* IN 1936 THE BOX OFFICE CHECK-UP of 1935 An annual produced by the combined editorial and statistical facilities of Motion Picture Herald and Motion Picture Daily devoted to the records and ratings of talent in motion pictures of the year. QUIGLEY PUBLISHING COMPANY THE PUBLIC'S MANDATE by MARTIN QUIGLEY 1 The Box Office Check-Up is intended to disclose guidance upon that single question which in the daily operations of the industry over- shadows all others; namely, the relative box office values of types and kinds of pictures and the personnel of production responsible for them. It is the form-sheet of the industry, depending upon past performances for future guidance. Judging what producers, types of pictures and personalities will do in the future must largely depend upon the record. The Box Office Check-Up is the record. Examination of the record this year and every year must inevitably dis- close much information of both arresting interest and also of genuine im- portance to the progress of the motion picture. It proves some conten- tions and disproves others. It is a source of enlightenment, the clarifying rays of which must be depended upon to light the road ahead. ^ Striking is the essential character of those pictures which month in and month out stand at the head of the list of Box Office Cham- pions. Since August, 1934, the following are among the subjects in this classification: "Treasure Island," "The Barretts of Wimpole Street," "Flirta- tion Walk," "David Copperfield," "Roberta," "Love Me Forever," "Curley
    [Show full text]
  • An Occupational Risk: What Every Police Agency Should Do to Prevent Suicide Among Its Officers
    CRITICAL ISSUES IN POLICING SERIES An Occupational Risk: What Every Police Agency Should Do To Prevent Suicide Among Its Officers CRITICAL ISSUES IN POLICING SERIES An Occupational Risk: What Every Police Agency Should Do To Prevent Suicide Among Its Officers October 2019 This publication was supported by the Motorola Solutions Foundation. The points of view expressed herein are the authors’ and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the Motorola Solutions Foundation or all Police Executive Research Forum members. Police Executive Research Forum, Washington, D.C. 20036 Copyright © 2019 by Police Executive Research Forum All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 978-1-934485-54-5 Graphic design by Dave Williams. Text photos by Matthew Bencivenga/NYPD. Contents Acknowledgments ...................................................... 1 Sidebar: The Impact of Organizational, Operational, Occupational, and Family Variables on Officer Suicide .... 23 Sidebar: Suicide Among Retired Officers .......................... 24 Executive Summary: We Need to Make Availability of Firearms ................................................... 25 the Prevention of Police Suicides a National Priority .....................................3 Warning Signs ....................................................................25 Turning Research into Action ..........................................26 Addressing the Crisis of Law Enforcement Suicide ........ 4 Sidebar: A Montréal Police Program Reduced What Research Can Tell Us about Law
    [Show full text]
  • An Occupational Risk: What Every Police Agency Should Do to Prevent Suicide Among Its Officers
    CRITICAL ISSUES IN POLICING SERIES An Occupational Risk: What Every Police Agency Should Do To Prevent Suicide Among Its Officers CRITICAL ISSUES IN POLICING SERIES An Occupational Risk: What Every Police Agency Should Do To Prevent Suicide Among Its Officers October 2019 This publication was supported by the Motorola Solutions Foundation. The points of view expressed herein are the authors’ and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the Motorola Solutions Foundation or all Police Executive Research Forum members. Police Executive Research Forum, Washington, D.C. 20036 Copyright © 2019 by Police Executive Research Forum All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 978-1-934485-54-5 Graphic design by Dave Williams. Text photos by Matthew Bencivenga/NYPD. Contents Acknowledgments ...................................................... 1 Sidebar: The Impact of Organizational, Operational, Occupational, and Family Variables on Officer Suicide .... 23 Sidebar: Suicide Among Retired Officers .......................... 24 Executive Summary: We Need to Make the Prevention of Police Suicides a Availability of Firearms ................................................... 25 National Priority .....................................3 Warning Signs ....................................................................25 Turning Research into Action ..........................................26 Addressing the Crisis of Law Enforcement Suicide ........4 Sidebar: A Montréal Police Program Reduced What Research Can Tell Us about Law Enforcement
    [Show full text]