. r'· NFlWARK POST .1 TWO PH. 0 ES ,----Fl6791 AND l 6151 0 l TEN:i~~RNEY I I P s t ------}

VOLUME XXVIII NEWARK, DELAWARE, THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1937 NUMBER 21 Four Generations At (lraduation Here C.M .A. STINE SHORT COURSE I REPRESENTS COUNTY II ROADS SYSTEM SAYSLIFE IS CLASSES FILL I OBSERVED FOR GREAT CAREER , COLLEGE CA~D IMPROVEMENTS Addressed 76 Graduates At Homemakers Replaced By Big Highway Commission Makes An nual Commencement . Group Of 4-H Members Aerial Survey Of Whole W. Malu8t, Exercises Tuesday At University Delaware Set-Up STUDENTS ALSO SPEAK REGISTRATION HEAVY TO VIEW RACE TRAVEL Ruth Sinclair And Yesterday, 101 Delaware home­ Capitol Trail Seen As Four­ Cooch, Honor Members makeI's packed their bags and left the university campus for their Lane Thoroughfare In Of Class Of 1937 homes, and immediately almost 200 Near Future "You ng men and young women­ 4-H Club members arrived in New­ State Highway Commissioners Jiving, wisely and kindly; living, de­ ark to take over the facilities for the Frank V. duPont, chairman, and A. cently and charitably; is living, the remainder of the week as the second Franklin Fadel', accompanied by W: greatest of all c a~' eers , " Charles annual Homemakers' ISnort Course Pl'. f1f..1ce: R~ER.SoI\J W. Mack, chief engineer, inade an /J . A. Stine, a vice-presIdent of the ended and the 19th annual 4-H Club aerial inspection of the public road du Pont Com pany told 76 g'l!aduates Short Course opened. A member of the Marshallton 4-H system in Delaware last Friday. and a capacity audience at the New­ The homemakers, who came to Club for seven years, Miss Anderson, Starting from the duPont airport, ward High School commencement ex­ Newark from all sections of the who is the daughter of Mrs. J. M. Mr. duPont and Mr. F adel' flew west ercises held Tuesday evening in the state, arrived last Sunday and im­ Anderson, will represent New Castle above Capitol Trail, circled over PENNA. au di torium. mediately started on an intensive County at the 11th annual National Newark, turned southeast to Bear Introducing the speaker, Carleton three-day course, in which they saw 4-H Club camp in Washington next and St. Georges, and thence to Dovel', E. Douglass, superintendent of the and heard of new and better ways to week. She has been president of her where Mr. Mack joined the party. Newark Public Schools, presented Dr. handle their tasks and how to bet­ club as well as vice-president and Captain R. L. Holliday, Mr. du Stine as a "neighbor," and "a friend ter utilize their spare time in re­ secretary - treasurer of the New Pont's private pilot, was in charge of young people. " " I have always creation and enjoyment. Of this Castle County Or der of the Links of of the flight. The trip was made in a been impl'es ed by the idealism of group, 23 were registered from New 4-H Clubs. Her project includes four-place Stinson plane. thi man," Mr. Douglass said. Castle County, 32 from Kent County, clothing and canning. She graduated Upon leaving Dover the inspectors and 46 from Sussex County. t his year from the Henry C. Conrad "Living As A Career" turned southeast to the coast, thence High School. to Lewes, Rehoboth and Bethany . peaking on " Living as a Career," County List Given Four generations of the Sheaffer family attended the graduation exe.r­ Beach; west over the extreme south­ DI·. Stine continued, "You , young Those registered from New Castle cises held this week at Newark High School. Seated is Mrs. B. F. Sheaffer, ern section of the state, then north folks, as you sit before me here this County were as follows: Mrs. S. H. 83 years old, of Witmere, Pa., while directly behind her stands her son, I. over Laurel and Seaford and back Carothers, Mrs. H erbert S. nrew, evening are like the sculptor who Newton Sheaffer, age 64, well known painting contractor of 75 E. Main Street. C. OF C. SPOTS to Dover. sit before t he formless block of Mr. Sheaffer's son, C. Harold Sheaffer, age 39, is pictured to the reader's Mrs. William F. Mink, Mrs. C. E. Meeting Is Held r ight, while his daughter, Doris, 17, faces the camera from t he left. Moore, Mrs. Frank Reynolds, Mrs. marble and sees in it the form and Following a two-hour meeting of J ohn Talley and Mrs. C. J. Vander- ROAD MARKERS outline and grace of the finished fig­ the commission, New Castle County's slice, Wilmington and suburban; Miss ure; you are like the a rtist as he two members r eturned to duPont FI'ances Conner and Miss Mabel Sal- Work Aided By Contribution hold s lhe poised brush in his h and Field, trailing the Delaware River· j tel', Oak Hill; Mrs. Mattie Gam, St. From AAA j Road Plans and beholds upon the white, un­ ANNUAL SWIM NEWARK MAN IS shore line to Wilmington. Georges ; Ml's. Edgar Hirsch, Elm- Are Discussed touched canvas the thrilling beauty of By using an ordinary r oad map as hurst; Mrs. J ohn T . Hopkins, and his fini shed pietul'e-Oh, youngsters, Prior to the open in g of Delaware a guide, Mr. Fadel' was introduced TESTS PASSED RADIO SPEAKER Mrs. Benjamin Moore, New Castle; how will you li ve? What is your Park, the N ewark Chamber of Com­ to the complete highway system in Mrs. Ruth Jolls, Mrs. J. L. Jones, philo.ophy of life. Does where you Red Cross Teachers Coach Arthur B. Eastman Spoke On merce will erect 26 road marker s as the exact manner in which it is pic­ li ve and what you own or how you Boys And Girls In The Navy In Address Under Mrs. Katherine Kane and Mrs. Flor- direction signs for motorists coming tured. live and whom you help make life Local Pools For Week D. A. R. Sponsorship ence MacInnes, Middletown; Mrs. here, President George F. J ackson re­ On opening day at Delaware P ark, worth living? George Knotts, Kenton; Mrs. John ported to ' the June meeting of the MI'. Fader, in company with Superin­ In answ l'S to t he query, "Is life A total of 208 boys r eceived swim- "The U. S. Navy in the Revolu- Lynch and Mrs. Kate H enley board of directors at Powell's Restau­ tendent C. C. Reynolds of the State worth living?" Dr. Stine stated, mi ng instructions at the Delaware t ion," was t he topic of a recent radio Daugherty, home demonstration l'ant Monday night. Part of the ex­ Police, will fly over all sections ad­ "Certainly t he answer is not to be College pool during t he annual New- address, g iven by Arthur B. East­ agent in New Castle County, New- pense for building and erectinl! the jacent to the track in order to ob- ark; Mrs. Robert Majors, MarshalI- signs was. defrayed by a found in externals. A materialistic ark Red Cross public school swimming man, of Newark, over Station WDEL, ve areaR of, P"" a' ~st traffic con­ J1hilo sophy spell s ruin and bitterness campaign which was held during the under the sponsorship of the Cooch's ton; and Miss Sara A. P ennington, contribution uf $25 made by the Wil- gestion c1'eated by motorists going t o fOl' man as well as for a nation." week of June 8-12. Of the 98 taking Bridge Chapter of the Daughters of Me rmaid. I' mington office of t he Automobile and from the races. "We are proud, even boastful, of the beginners' t est, 73 passed while 37 the American Revolution. Assigned To Rool11 s AS;i~i: t!~; l:fc eA:::~~r a ffic from the Based on this preliminary study, OUI' material progress, but civmza­ of the 55 candidates passed the swim- Navy Was Important emergency ch anges in the routing of The ~ -H Club members, who regi- south and west bei ng di verted .through lion and t he education of mankind, mel's' r equirements. Thirty-one of 55 . . traffic w ill likely be forthcoming, and ster ed 111 Wolf Hall yesterday, were Newark as the most direct r ou te to intimately connected each with the aspirants passed the life-saving quali- Mr. Eastman dl sc u ~se d the lmp ~r t- plans for f uture Toad needs in this fications. . I nee of our navy dUl'lng th~t perIOd, assigned to rooms in New Castle and the public entrance on Capitol Trail, other a they are, involve something section \vill be determined. despite the fact that we, w ith our Sussex H all s at the Women's College Delaware Park officials plan to place more proIounrll y important and sign­ 214· Girls Enrolled Additional Survey ificant than t he ability to fly, or to modern battleships, cruiser s, airplane and in H artel' Hall , where they will addit ional s igns neal' Elkton and Two hundred and fourteen g irls canier s and sea planes, are inclined li ve until the conclusion of the course R ising Sun as f m ther ,!ids to In addit ion to the aerial obser va­ talk around the earth to an audience were enrolJ ed in the course g iven at to smil e upon the sea constructions of Saturday. Wednesday af ternoon was motorists. tion of race track travel, the com­ of tens of m il lions of human beings. mi ssion will have men placed at the Women's College pool during the t hat t ime. However, the colonists, devoted to a get-acquainted party in Aid F und For Swimmers Dr. Stine point ed out the dictionary strategic points along l'oads leading same period. Forty of the 98 beginner s unable to build a fl eet due to lack of the Lounge, Old College, followed by The chamber voted $25 toward the definition of "civilizat ion" as "a con­ passed tests while t he same number finances, through "audacity and in­ to the park to count automobiles. dition of organization, enlightenment out of 86 met swim mer s r equirements. ( Continued on Page 6) maintenance f und bei ng raised for the While definite plans have not been and progress, r efin ement and culture E leven of the 30 enroll ed met t he life- genuity overcame insurmountable ob- Brock Is Visitor opening of the University of Delaware announced, the commission has list­ and drew attention to the antonyms; saving requirements. stacles and wrecked havoc among the I pool for the use of the local public ed four roads in the Newark vicinity ''barbarism, boorishness, coalrseness Instructions during t he campaign British merchantment . and their J . Spencer Brock, Phiadelphia, who during July and August. for rebuilding and improving. It is and rudeness." He then raised the were unde r t he direction of Arthur M'I smaller war. vessel durmg the fiv~ reorganized the Press of Kells follow­ Following t he disposal of routine t hought that route 273, from the g (Continued on Page 10) Potter, assisted by Oscar Lott, David ye~rs .precedm the t~;eaty of Ghent. ing t he death of Everett C. Johnson in business, a general discussion of the Newark Country Club to the Mary­ M. Reed, Jr., and Ralph O'Connell, . Wlt~?U.t a doubt, M.r . Eastman 1927, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. immediate industrial outlook a nd con­ land line, will be \videned by at least templated road plans being considered physical instructor at the Newark stated, It was the crY1l1g need of William S. Hamilton, 120 Kells Ave., two feet. Word from Baltimore in- [}o lored School by the State Highway Commission High School. our armies for munitions .and stores Tuesday. H e visited NewaTk for the (Continued on Page 2) Graduation Held Total boys' attendances during the that gave the first real Impetus to graduation of Miss Ann Hamilton took place. Weldon C. Waples was On Lawn Monday week were: beginners 400, swimmers our naval operators agail1st England. from the local high school. appointed to investigate road Improve­ Pins A nd Badges 225 and seni or life-saving 215 for a Washington, as soon as he was made Mr. Brock and Mr. Hamilton were ments said to be listed by the state. Closing exercises of the New Lon- gra~d total of 84 0. Girls' total attend- commander-in-chief, fitted out sev- associates at the Press of Kells before Awarded To Girl don Avenue colored school were held ances were: beginners 440, swimmers eral small s~ips to prey on the sup-I ~ h e latter joined the Newark Print- Mineola Council Celebrates Scouts Recently on the lawn of the institution on Mon- 400 and life-saving 130, for a grand (Contmued on Page 6) mg Company. 12th Anniversary With Fete Members of the Newark troop of day, June 14, at seven o'clock. total of 970. Five sessions were held. Carleton E. Douglass, superinten- (Continued on Page 4) Mineola Council, No. 17, Degree of girl scouts were presented badges and dent of ewa l'k schools, delivered t he A utomobile Manufacturers Offering Pocahontas, celebrated its twelfth pins recently by theil' leaders, the pl'inci pal address of the evening and Professor Rees Talks. anniversary on Wednesday evening of Misses Harriet Seeley, F rances ;Wil­ Dr. Felix S. Lagasse, of the Univer- To Newark Lions Club Awards To Grange Members In Tests last week with a covered dish super. son and Mrs. Pauline Ewing, at t he Lodge was called by Pocahontas final investiture service held at the sity of Delaware, presented the Amer- --- By Robert Yearsley iean Legion and Auxiliary awards for Professor Carl John Rees, head of night. This memorial is the farm Gertrude Williams with all officers on home of Mr. and Mrs. W. Frank the J. Alli son O'Daniel Post No. 10, the m athematics department at the Lecturer, Delaware State Grange owned by Brother Kelley, one of the their respective stumps. Following a Wilson. to Virginia Pennelton and James University of Delaware, spoke before There were never as many chal­ seven founders of our Order and is short business session, brief talks The following members received Bishop 'fhompson. Principal James M. t he weekly meeting of the Lions Club lenges f01' Grange usefulness and located in the State of Minnesota. were made by Mrs. Bertha McCall, of awards and badges: tenderfoot pins­ Ri chards expressed his r egret for not of Newark at the Newark Country activity a s at present, and I am glad Grange members were reminded that Waneta Council, Wilmington, who jn- J anice and Joyce Sweeney, Ann Baker, being returned to Newa1'k after nine Club Tuesday evening on "Mathe­ to announce that the Automobile Man- there will only be meetings once a stituted Mineola Council; Past Deputy Caroline Simons, Patsy Park and years of service here. matics, the Queen or Foundation ufacturers Association, through the month during the summer, making the CaITie Andrews, Past Deputy Laura Vera Gould; merit badges-Lois Mae Foul' students were graduated from Pillar of the Sciences." He was the Highway Education Board, is again next meeting fall on July 5. Robinson, and Deputy Great poca-I Tomhave, handicraft, laundress, swim- the senior high school, eight from guest of Daniel Stoll, chairman. conducting a Highway Essay Contest .hontas Bessie Hastings, all of Wil- ming; Melissa Baker, Dorothy Gregg, ~r . and M:ts. ~elbert Gooden re- mington; Past Deputy Chambers and Dorothy Hanson, Dorothy Simons, junior high and eight from grade President Joseph M. McVey offici at­ with the cooperation, support and ap­ celved congratulatlOn~ from Grangers Great Deputy Pocahontas Mrs. Sara Helen Wideman, Jane Brown, Florence eigh t. Vernon W. Brown, Jr., a senior ed. proval of the National Grange. a ~d we~'e presented WIth a lovely w~d- Croft, both of Leola Council, Corner Cranston and Lois Mae Tomhave, first at St. Augusti nes College, Raleigh, George M. Haney, chairman of the The 1936 contest was a great suc- ding gift. After the Grange meeting Ketch. aid; Julia Dutton, Ella Mae Maclary, . C., was present at the exercises. attendance committee, presented but- cess, and I hope that every Grange In a short program was presented ~y At the close of the meeting, Viola Barbara Ritz, Dorothy Simons and Al ice Wil so n is now a student at tons to four members of the club for Delaware will take part. All members members, ~ollowed by a talk and 11- Ewing, chairwoman of the social ac- Lois Mae Tomhave, dancing. Provident School for Nursing, Balti- not missing a meeting between Sep- in good standing of a subordinate more, and E rnest Stevenson received tember 14, 1936, and April 24 this Grange, who are not more than eight­ !~:~~~~t~v~~c~~r~~:r~:::~edL~~ ~~~ tivities, cut a large anniversary cake. First c~:;:t b~~~:SS ~:r:tspre se nted hi s master's degree at Bloomfield, year. The · honored members are: een years of age on A1jgust 2, 1987, morial Park. Variety Shower Given to Lois Mae Tomhave and Dorothy Indiana. George Danby, President McVey, A. are eligible to take part. The subject A Flag Day program featured the Simons by the troop committee. Graduates were as follows: Virginia E. Tomhave, secretary-treasurer, and is, "A Grange Program fo1' Highway meeting of Delaware Grange Monday Mrs. J. S. Sparks, S. College. Ave- The treasurer's report, as an- Pennelt?n, Naomi Lewis, Mab~l. Wil- Wayne C. Brewer, president-elect. Accident Prevention." Those interested night. Mrs. Lorraine Clark, Mrs. nue, entertained Thursday evemng at nounced by Mrs. Howard K. Preston, SOil , Ehzabeth Poy, Sarah Wllhams, Twenty-five dollars was donated to- should see their local lecturer, or my­ George Snyder, and Mrs. Edna Pord- a variety shower for Mrs. William B. troop committee financial advisor for Evelyn Watson, Rachel Bishop, Jam~s 'ward t he fund being raised for the self, for details. The closing date is ham gave readings. Mrs. Alvin Ruth Holton, who before her marriage was both troops, showed a balance of Thompson and Elwood Roy. support of the University of Dela- August 2, 1937. The first national presented a report on the Pomona Miss Freda L. Smith, daughter of $37.14 for Troop No. 8 and a balance R ~Ol1owing invocat ~on , pronounced ~y ware swimming pool, which will be prize is a trip to National Grange at meeting at Glasgow. Mrs. Kathryn Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Smith, of Kells of $51.81 for Troop No.4 . . Blackledge, MISS Mabel E. Wll- open to the local public this summer. Harrisburg with all expenses paid and Selby wHl be in charge of the Flora Avenue. Among those present were: Contributions have been made son. entertained with a piano solo after four cash prizes. There are also state meeting next Monday. Members are the Misses Helen Cronhardt, EIiza- throughout the year to the Red Cross whIch declamations were delivered by Flowen To Be Sold prizes. requested to bring a /lower arrange- beth Rose, Mary Wilson, Virginia relief fund, and Juliette low fund and James B. Thompson and Elwood Roy. ___ . Gift To Fund ment. The Grange went on record as Hurlock, Alice Cox, Marjorie Pierce, milk has been supplied for a needy Playlets and dances were also on the Ivy Crow Temple, No.4, Ladles of p.rogralll. Mr. Douglass presented cer- 'the Golden Eagle, will h?ld a fio~er Pencader Grange No. 60, decided to being in favor of a combination busi- Jean Barnes, Dorothy Mitchell, Mar- child. Plans are now being made for tificates and the Rev. Luther Smith sale at Fraternal Hall, Fnday evening give a donation to the Kelley Me­ ness session and field day at the next garet Shumar, Dorothy Crossgrove some new equipment, an over-night offered benediction. at 6.30 o'clock. morial Fund at the meeting Monday Pomona meeting. and Mrs. Gladys Carr. hike and a boat trip to Philadelphia. Thut'sday, June 17, 1931 ~_._ .' __ .-"-----.-- -"-.. ------,-,.-,,- ~ --...... IM PR OVED..... ~ M e1'n bet·s Expect 1 RENTAL SERVICE ._----- I Air Compre sor, wi th F ull E qllillment on Truck. Skilled UI;-IIFORM INTERNATION,i\L To A ttend Ocean 1 Furnished. Operato( City Bible Class UNDAY l TIle Story of tile . JAMES H. HUTCHISON CHOOl esson By M ~s . E."R.Broad'bent Dial Newark 4091 S Marsha ll ton, J une 16- everal mem­ By RE V. HAROLD L. LUNDQUiST. c-titatioaal eoavatioa 1 D ean of Ihe Moody Bible Institute bers of St. Barnabas' Church School of . @ Weslern Newspaper Union. arc plann ing to attend the annual of 1787 summel' chool of the Episcopa l Church to be held f rom June 27 to Lesson for June 20 J uly 2 at Ocean City, Md. The Rev. By RAYMOND PITCAIRN Where Hospitality A waits r ou M. W. Riker will be a mong those THE NEW JERSEY PLAN statements of the Convention was JOSEPH'S KINDNESS TO HIS During the period from June 14 then made by James Wilson, con­ KINDRED attending. HOB TEA ROOM, Inc Child Recovering to June 19 of the historiC year 1787, trastlng the two plans. It showed. members of the Constitutional Con- In part. that: LESSON TEXT-Genesls 46 :1·7. 28·30; 50: The e leven-month-old daughter of ventlon took part In ,a discussion The VirginIa Plan provIded for ARCADE 24·26. whIch had a profound Inlluence on two branches of the legIslature; the GOLDEN TE XT- And be ye kind one to MI'. and Mrs. Edward Czerne, who DELAWARE TRUST BUILDING was removed to the contagious unit the form and the future of our New Jersey Plan for only one. another, lenderhea rled, forgiving one an· government. Representation of the people at olher, even as God fo r Christ's sake hath of the Wilmington General Hospital WILMINGTON, DELAWARE forgiven you. Ephesians 4 :32. .Briefly they debated whether th large was the basIs of the VIrgInIa PRIMARY TOP IC-When J oseph Saw His last week when it was believed t ~ a t I n~w Con'stltutlon should assume, i~ Plan; the state legIslatures were the LUNCHEON 11 :30 to 2 :30 Falher Again. she was developing diphtheria, was JUNIOR TOPIC-Joseph Honoring His F a· returned to her home on Tuesday. The DINNER 5 :15 to 7 :30 ther. INTERMEDIATE AND SE NIOR TOPIC- child suffer ed a severe sor e throat and SUNDAY DINNER 1:30 to 7:00 KIndness In the F amily. her condition is now said to be much YOUNG P E OPLE AND ADULT TOP IC­ Mutual Helpfulness In the Family. improved. ~~~~:~~~ ~~~~~j)Jer. ~ $1.00 Mrs. Phoebe Hollett has moved to century and a half ago this week In suffrage by each " ., the red-brIck structure of Indepen- state In the New ' A happy ending-yes! Modern Marshallton from- Newark. ~ writers may look with disfavor on dence Hall-entered many famous Jersey sugges- ,,- Mrs. Mary Mackinson, who has been men. tlons._ Private Rooms for Parties it (and perhaps rightly so, fo r most a patient at the Wilmington General Among them were the calm and A sIngle Exec- of them write about life apart from Ho pital for the past five weeks, un­ deliberate James Madison, of Vlr- utlve was pro- fellowship with God) but to those glnla. who would later become our posed In the Vir- 10m .. Wi"o~ who trust God and who seek his derwent' an operation on Tuesday. fourth PresIdent; the flashing Alex- glnla Plan, a will, the story of life has a bright Robert McFarland, proprietor of a ander Hamilton. of New York, who plurality of Executives In the other. r.----.------.------.. -----.---...... and joyful conclus·ion. garage in Marshallton, fell Sunday became our first Secretary of the Under thl! VirginIa Plan the ma­ Treasury; and the brilliant lawyer, jorlty of the people of the United But someone m ay object that the and suffered a broken ankle. lesson for today closes with the last .James Wilson. of PennsylvanIa, who States would prevail; under the New Teachers of St. Barnabas' Church was to serve as one of the origInal Jersey Plan. a minorIty. NOTICE words of the book of Genesis, which schoo l, and the St . J a mes Church members of the United States SU-. The VirginIa Plan provIded for are "a coffi n in E gypt." Is that a schools, Stanton and Newport, wi ll preme Court. ratificatIon of the Constitution by happy ending? It is, because even Like Its predecessors, the debate the people; the New Jersey Plan for that fo9bidding emblem of dea th meet Friday night at the po me of was marked by an extraordinary ratification by legIslative authorIties. pointed in faith toward the day when Miss Margaret Morr is in Richa rdson Knowledge of history and of gov- There were other differences af­ THE ASSESSMENT God was to k eep his promise and Park. ernment on the part of delegates. fectlng the nature and extent of bring his people into the promised It has been computed that In the legislative authority, the federal Memorial Service discussions which occupied the early courts. etc., but these summarize land. Members of t he Mill Creek F ire Our lesson center s around the last weeks of the Convention, references what most delegates considered the of our patriarchs, Joseph, and his Co mpany a nd the ladies' auxiliary were made to the governments of more significant ones. will attend a memorial service for twenty-two nations. both ancient Still another set of proposals was kindness to his father a nd his fami­ and modern, evidencing a thorough offered In an address by Alexander The Council of Said Town Will Hold ly. The highest offi cial in the land tate fi remen and a uxiliar y members understanding of the problems and Hamilton. His suggestions Included of Egypt (save for Phar aoh him­ on Sunday night at the Dover M. E. mstltutlons of Greece. Rome, France. election of both the Chief Executive COURT OF APPEALS sell) proves his inherent greatness Church. The visitors wil meet at the England. Switzerland. Holland and and members ot the Senate "to serve by forgetting pos ition and power, Dover fire house at 7.30 o'clock. the then German states. during good behaviour." with powers At the Office of the Secretary of Council, The debate arose over the mtro- far beyond those contemplated in except as they enable him to be a MI'. and Mrs. Oll ie Price and their loving son a nd brother. We consider ductlon on June 15 of the "New either the Virginia or the New Jer­ 26 Academy Street, on his kindness as it is centered in h is son, Bobbie, of Bellemoor, were week­ Jersey Plan," by Willia m Paterson, sey Plan. Probably because of their end vi sitors of Mrs. Price's father, , delegate trom and later Governor of resemblance to monarchial forms ot devotion to God, s·hown fo rth in that state, as a substitute for the government, the Hamilton silgges­ MONDAY, JUNE 21, 1937 thoughtful provision for others, ex­ Geor ge McVey. earlier-discussed Virginia Plan. In tlons were neither referred to by p ressed in affectionate deeds, and George H usler was removed to t he contrast to the Virginia Plan. Pater- any commIttee nor considered by the F rom 1 to 6 o'clock P. M., D. S. T., when they shal! hear and determine as it imparted itself by faith to oth­ Wil mington General Hospital Sunday son 's proposals sustained the sover- Convention. appeals from the said assessment and make correc tions or ers. after he had suffered a stroke at hi s elgnty of the separate statcs to n. Finally the VirginIa Plan. the form addit ions to the same. I. Founded on Fellowship (Gen. degree which many delegates fc:: rcd clo~ cs t of the three to our present home. 46: 1-4) . would weaken rather than strengthen Constitution, was approved by the Per Order of Council, Jacob, having hear d from his sons Lawrence W. Broadbent, Jr., son of that Joseph was in Egypt, and hav­ Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence W. Broadbent, th~~r~a~~IOl~istort a n s regun1 as I ~~~n:!~~~t~J ~e t~~;i-t~~~ti~~or- C. VERNON STEELE, Secretary. ing thus learned of their treachery was honor guest at a family party one of the clearest and m c~ t S1J~c j \: c: I Next week-The American Spirit. and deceit, cam e at last to realize last Friday night in honor of hi s ======- ~~---~-----~-- - -~----~----~--- -~--- -~----~----~----~--. -~-- --~. - --~-- - -~-- --~-- - -~-- - --~.---~-.-- -~-",, ' that his beloved J oseph is alive. He third birthday anniversm·y. has been urged to-go to E gypt but About 50 chi ldren took part in Lhe he hesitates about leav ing Canaan. program Sunday ni g ht at the Mars­ the program were: Marguerite How sha ll he know whether to be­ ha ll ton M. E. Church celebrating Bailey and Mabel Bryan. Those who lieve in and respond to Joseph's in­ "Children's Day." The program was took part in the evening pageant vitation. He asks God, the One who were: Janet Carlin, May Trimble, is the joy and center of J oseph's a l'l'anged by Mrs. J . M. Kelso and Mrs. life, and of J acob's as well, and he Edna Ball Gilbert. Jeanne Lefev re, Dorothy Bryan, has his answer. Boy Scou t Meetin g Agnes E ll sworth, Gilbert Holton, Real family life and devotion cen­ Dorothy LefevTe, Gladys Bryan, A meetin g of Lhe Boy Scouts will ter arou nd a mutual fellowship with Mabel Bryan, Frances Phelps, Curtis be he ld F riday night at 8 o'clock in God. There may be little else to P helps, Harry Faulkner , Ruth t he parish house of St. Barnabas' P. share , but "little is much when Faulkner, Paul Bail ey, Roger God is in it." Has God been honored E. Church. Bail ey, Ralph Holton, Betty Mc­ in your home '! Has He been made MI'. and Mrs. Edward Coll ings, Har­ the center of fam ily life ? These are rington, wer e Saturday guests of h is Mi ll an, Alma Hendrickson and John vital questions. Bryan. . n. Evidenced by Thoughtfulness parents, the Rev. and Mrs. E. H . Co llins. Mrs. Charles Bailey was taken into (vv. 5-7). the church as a member and also J oseph had a rranged for Pharaoh Officers and teachers of St. Barna­ to send wagons to bring his aged bas' Church schoo l conducted a serv­ received t he rites of baptism. Sylvia father, the women, and the little ice at the Sunnybrook Cottage of Faye, daughter of Mr. and Mr s. ones. Brandywine Sanitorium on Sunday George Hendr ickson, was also baptiz­ Many m en in our day g lory in be­ after noo n. ed. ing " hard-boiled." In their relent­ less pursuit of fa me and riches they The Marsha ll to n Civics Club is re­ ignore and even tr ample on the questing t he State Highway Depart­ Roads System Observed m embers of their own families. ment to place traffic li ghts at the F or Improvements They are ashamed of the broken Capitol Trail and Newport Pike. inter­ bodies, the hum ble apparel, the un­ sect ion in Cranston Heights, and at (Continued from Page 1) educated speech of t heir parents, the Capitol Tra il and St. Barnabas' dicates that Maryland will widen the fearing lest their new-found friends hill interesection, Marsha ll ton. The sa me road from t he Delaware line in the circle of wealth and ' pos ition latter is particular ly needed since it m ay ridicule them . There is a crude to t he intersect ion wit h route 1 near but apt expr ession that describes is the schoo l crossing. Rising Sun. such persons as "stuffed shirts." New pla nks are bei ng la id on t he F our-lane travel is almost a c"er­ THRI III. Ma'nifested in Love (vv. 28-30). old Marsha llton bridge this week and t ainty on Capitol Trail f rom Newa rk - ...... Joseph kiss,ed his father whom he a road construction job is under way to Wilmi ngton, with work likely to had gone out to meet, and .held him in Cranston Heights from t he Ca pitol start as soon as f unds are avail abl e. close and wept for joy. Again he • TIME Tr a il in tersection to t he Cedars. A n ew road from Newark to Glas­ sl'owed his true greatness by being Mrs. E li zabeth M. Speakman has his natural self. gow, im provements on t he road to • CLOTHES We are not all demonstrative in returned to her home after a visit New Londo n and a modern bridge t~ showing our affection. F urthermore, wit h the Mi sses Marn e a nd Maud replace t he covered span on P aper • HEALTH we would not plead fo r m ore of that Clar k in Ocean City, N. J . Mill Road a re being considered by the sham public expression of affection The first quarterl y conference was comm issioners. which is so d istasteful to right-think­ conducted last Friday night in the .MONEY ing people. But may we not suggest Ma rshall ton M. E. Church by t he Rev. that there is room for improvement Walter E. Gunby. Ross and Schnitzer Plan in our loving consideration for our Arden Opening On July 6 You can now enjoy WHITER clothes at Greater kindr ed. Let us ask ourselves how Savings with an ABC Heavy - Duty Washer long it is since we did something LANDENBERG The Rob in Hood Theatre, Arden, to show t hat we really Jove our wi ll part the curtains for the summer Model 157, the WASHER that has "EverytlUng." mother, our father, or a faithJul By M1·S. J ohn J agger season on J ul y 6, it was announced wUe, son, or daughter? How long Equipped with ABC largest capacity porcelain tub is it since you wrote home to m oth­ Landenberg, J t1 ne 16-"Children's thi s week by co-n;tanagers Edwin Ross and ABC French Type Agitator washing principle, er, or went home to visit? a nd Robert C. Schni tzel', who will Day" was observed at Landenberg clothes are washed thoroughly clean at the top as IV. Imparted by Faith (50:24-26) . Church on Sunday morning a nti again direct the a ffairs of t he r ustic J acob had been gathered to his pl ayhouse fO I' the seventh season. evening. T he foll owing p rogram was well as at the bottom of the tub, in just a few min­ fa thers ; time had gone on its re­ The on ly organization of its kind in rendered in the morning: Prelude, lentless way, and J oseph is about to Delaware, the Robin Hood has de­ utes' time. So thoroughly does the ABC French J eanne Lefever ; "An Invitation " die. Wha t shall be the heritage to veloped, by means of stead y growth, Type Agitator washing principle wash your clothes his family? Money, property, posi­ Mi ldred Faulkner; exercise, Agn ~ s in to one of the oldest and best cstab­ tion? No; he leaves them something Elkworth wit h a g roup of the little that it is not necessary to hand rub even the roost li shed of . ummel' stock companies. infinitely more valuable-a forward­ children ; "Chr istmas," Helen looking fai th that will keep alive in Performances will be given fiv e n ights heavily soiled collars and cuffs. Everything in the their hear ts the e xpectation that Thomas ; "We Ar e Thankful" by six of the week, with a new production laundry can be safely washed in the ABC Washer· The World's Greatest W.sher V.1ue God will in due sea son bring them ~hi l ~re n ; "Advice::' R o b e~t McMilla n ; evcl'y Tuesday. into their own land. J oseph had T.hmgs We Do, by nme primary spent most of his years in Egypt, chIld ren; song, "When Jesus L ived" he h ad attained high pos ition and Gladys and Mabel Bryan ; "Fo ll o~ About 540 Stradivarius violi ns, 12 No Other Washer Has All These Exclusive Features great! honor , but he never lost h is the F lag," George H arkness; "Little violas a nd 50 cell os cxist: 1. ABC Large.t Capacity Porcelain Tub 6. ABC Large Ovenize Balloon Ro lls vision of the promised land. He W hi te D a~s i es," Aletha Talbert; "The - 7. ABC Instantaneous Touch Release impar ts to them by faith that hope. 2. ABC Exclusive French Type Agitator 8. ABC 8-Position Wringer Construction Gang," ,Bertram Owan T-h...... -:.. O-f.. - .. Hope Ralph Holton, Harry Faulkner; "A +1·-"-.. -~ R-nn·e· -~u·p· -:·~· -:~: -·ll 3. ABC Streamline 4-Sprlng Su.pen.ion Wringer 9 •. ABC Tub Cover Su.pension Ah, what thoughtfu l, loving pro­ Woman Named Damaris," Dorothy 4. ABC Finger-Tip Control 10. ABC Adjustable Legs vision God hath made for us in the Bryan ; "I Wonder Why," Harry gift of the angel of Hope I There is 5. ABC Finger-Touch Clothes Feeder 11. ABC Low Upkeep and Repair Cost F a ulkner; "On t he Mou ntain Top," Th AdM k I no path so d a rk but we m ay see the LaUl'a Lamborn; "Good Resolutions" glimm er of her shining wings, no I e ca emy ar et P uul Ba il ey, Emanual Harkins Asic for a free c:lemonstration . . . learn .bout ABC's Four. W.y Thrift ••• misfortune so heavy b ut her helpful a ~d UNDER THE John Bryan. hand is outstretched to us, and her M A NAG~1 E NT s..vJrursJn r~ Clothes... HH/tb anJ.Monu. s m ile s till r eady to cheer and en­ Also on the program was: "My OF courage us. Sermon," Curtis Phelps; "Christ and the Children," Doris Holton ' "Sum­ DANIEL NARDO The Natural Tone mer Days," Rogel' Bailey' H ilda p·To.Date Ready To Serve Peace is the natural tone of a Owen, Raymond Guffin ' Ruth well-regulated m ind at one with it­ Faulknel·. Others who took part in - .. PHONE 62 11 sell.-Humboldt. i ~:~:~~.~~~~.~~:~ 600 MARKET STREET, WILMINGTON June 17, 1937 Thul'Sday , THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE 8

~.: .:::=-'!jjZ== ALUMNI PRESIDENT day evening. The scholars of the prim­ A total of 20,581 students . from Supreme COUlt Justice Owen J. Glasgow. ary, junior and intermediate classes 1,107 high schools represen~ing every Roberts hands down decisions by 26 YEARS AGO took part in the pageant, "The Game and of Life." state participated in these competitive speaking them from memory rather IN REVIEW Cooch's Bridge The Ladies Aid Society will sel've a events, according to the National Live than reading them. Virginia baked ham supper in the I. Stock and Meat Board, sponsor of It is fallacy that bloodhounds are O. O. F. Hall on Saturday evening. June 12, 1912 By Mrs. J. Leslie Ford Dr. Jesse Selinkoff, accompanied by both contests. practically extinct. Glasgow, June 16- 0n Wednesday Dr. Irvin Klein of , at­ morning about five-thirty o'clock an ou ~m•• ·.".;·.""· tended the American Medical Associa­ ~ I r •. 'l'ho nHls Rctnrns explosion took place at the Vardaro tion convention held in Atlantic City Newark will be pleased to leam of Fireworks COl'poration, Glasgow, last week. . ,# the reeol'ery IIf Mr ~ . Ja?ob Thomas. which was felt for a radius of ten Enjoy City Comforts With Rural Life Miss Hettie ,Wilkins of Middletown Mrs, Thom:" hilS been Ill . for sO.me miles. Mrs. Bertha Mackey's r esidence was a week-end guest at the home of " : ~nma . Have your home electrified weeks at St, .Joseph's H ospital, Pill la­ _ ••,t. near the fireworks factory was badly Mr. and Mrs. Frank Elmer. delphia. A II hough she has not f ully damaged, along with the two build­ I -::.~'· Miss Rebecca Sayers of Newport And a Pressure Water System Installed recove red hrl' ~ trc ngt h, her ~ppear­ ings destroyed. Boards were strewn was a guest of Miss Mildl'ed Gebhart nnce at the " Id depot last evenlllg. was over both roads of the dual highway. PAUL GRIFFITH during the week-end. We Will Gladly Estimate On Your Needs the sou rce of mUC h. co ngratulatIOns. Personals /l cr childrcn and . f !'lends were there Named president of the Newark ea Miss Barbara E. Green, accom- Two Milton Entries Are d gave her a right royal welcome. High School Alumni Association at panied by her sixth grade pupils, R. F. TURNER an ~ I a s o nj c Omears Elected Winners In State Teat the annual banquet last Saturday spent Monday in Philadelphia, sight- OXFORD Phone 105 W PENNA. Hiram Lodge, A. F. and A. M., No. night, Griffith succeeds George Cleaver seeing. They were Florence Ford" --- 25, of CWf\rk, clecLed t~e following Price. Other officel's elected are Mrs. Elmer Steward, J ohn Sweetman, Clif- Joseph Thomas Winn and Beatrice offi cers l a ~t Monday evemng: Delena Ginther, vice president; Miss ford Lee. Wells, both of Milton, have been an- George L. Brooks, Master; W. M. Edna Chambers, recording secretary; Mr. and Mrs. Marion Harrison, of nounced as state champions in two cove rd ale, Sen io r Warden; Edward Miss Emma Beck, corresponding sec­ Philadelphia, spent Sunday with Mr: national contests for high school stu- IV. Gooch, Junio r Warden; Robert retary; and Mr. Albert Clark, tl'eas­ and Ml·S. W. C. Brooks. dents. Ga ll aher, Secretary; Dr. H. G. M. urer. The banquet was staged in the Mr. Linwood Conner and Miss Ruth Winn is a state winner in the second Kollock, Trea ·urer. Newark Methodist Episcopal Church Conner spent the week-end with national meat postel' contest and Miss Rev. GerhHrd J. Schilling, retumed dining hall and was featured by an friends in Bridgeton, N. J. Well s has been awarded first place in missionary from Boli vio, was present address by Carleton E. Douglass, Mr. and Mrs. James Lupton spent Delaware in the fourteenth national and presentcd Dr. W. J. Rowan, the superintendent of Newark schools. the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. meat essay contest. Committees of T1tiring ma stcr, with a past master's Harry Williams of Galena. prominent artists and home economics jewel. The Bible Class of Glasgow M. E. authorities selected the winners: WE \YO DER WHY? Church will meet at the home of Mr. 1::1======One of the strangest thing known CHRISTIANA and Mrs. Julian Laws on Tuesday evening, June 22. and mosL di ffi cult of explanation is By Mrs. Edna A. Dickey Ihat when the Delaware boys, raised The Ladies of Glasgow M. E. Christiana, June 16-Services at the Church will hold a bake on Saturay probably on turnip-greens and hogs Christiana M. E. Church next Sunday jowl go to college fO Ul' years, they afternoon at t he store of Mrs. will be, Sunday School at 10 o'clock, Chlotilda Dayett. nre of necpssity co mpelled to go out and morning worship at 11. Rev. of the Stale for the Seniol' banquet. MI'. and Mrs. George Cook and Mrs. Richard M. Green will deliver the Matilda Watt, of Philadelphia, spent IL shows how college improves a man sermon. Evening services will be dis­ -his tastes become-oh, it causes a Sunday with Mr. and Mrs George G. continued until the second Sunday of Brown. "wonder why" sor t of feeling. September. The . enio l' class holds its banquet Children's Day Planned at Atlantic City thi s year. The menu Crowd Attends Banquet Children's Day services were held will ill all probabili ty co me from A large crowd attend ed the banquet in the M. E . Church on Sunday eve­ of the Christiana M. E. Social last ning. Recitations, songs and scripture The ideal way to plan Delaware, parties, picnics and week­ Stra w Ride Wednesday evening. The ladies, losers verses were on the program. in a recently conducted membership end trips is by telephone. A 111 rry party of young people N ext Sunday evening Pencader Arrangements so made are . @l93 7A. n.Co. l'isited Brandywine Springs Friday drive, served. The regular business Presbyterian Church will observe meeting of the social followed the more accurate and com­ el'ening. The party included: Misses "Childl'en's Day." Mi ss Ruth Conner DON'T TAKE A CHANCE ON LOSING banquet. A pleasing program was plete-you have a chance your car's be8i Mary Ander son and Mabelle Pennock, is in charge of t he music. Mrs. J . performance and economy. Change to ATLANTIC ••• presented by the entertainment com­ Lesli e Ford will be in charge of reci- to "talk it over". Add to Dora La w, 'Marian Miller, Helen Mc­ and get "More Miles for Your Money." Atlantic Prod. mittee, composed of Mrs. George tations. your summer pleasures­ Neal , Elea nor Fadel', Myrtle Steele, I ucts proved what they can do when they kept six stock Mess r .. George Holton, Harry Green, Davis, Mrs. John Levey and Mrs. Nor­ Mrs. Norman Slack a nd young son' l have a telephone in your bert Cashell. The July meeting will John Wilson Slack, returned to their own home. The cost is small cars in new-car condition for 100,000 miles apiece. With. Knowles Bowen, Pa ul Lovett, Rodney out carboll removal. Without repairs to lubricated Millel' and Har vey Ferguson. be held out-of-door s. home on Sunday from the Wilmington -less than a dime a day. The preparatory class will meet on General Hospital. engine parts. Try them! PERSONALS Tuesday evening. Glasgow School and Welsh 'fract • 4IJI~ .. ~':IA~ LAJ. h,,.,.., .. WAw/~ ,. MI'. and [rs. Martin A. Ford and The fi rst and second quarterly con­ School both closed on Thursday. THE DIAMOND STATI TlUPHONI "w-. ,~ P'" 7""''' "_'--' ... th eir daughter , Bette, are vi sitors at ference of the Christiana - Salem Pi ~~hi c s G~ler c heldHin theDaftel'n0ton.. COMPANY • ..,:1.. _....: Maplehursl. charge will be held Tuesday evening, i e asgow ome emons ra t Ion The we k-end visitors at Maple­ July 13, at o'clock, in the Salem M. Club met at the hQm e of Mrs. Dela- hUI's t wei' MI'. and Mrs. Joseph Mc­ E. Church, with Dr. W. E. Gunby, Ki nn ey , MI'. J ohn Dougherty, and Mr. di st rict superin tendent, presiding. "Sa~rela dWri~t Making" 00 wa ~~~ys the subj aftHnoo~I:==ect. Mrs. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;~;;;;~;;~~;~~~~~~~;~ Althouse, of Philadelphia. A daily vacation Bible School will Wright and Mrs. Amanda Johnson ~ I i ss May Ruth, of Wilmington be conducted by the Rev .Richard M. wer e in charge. It was decided to hold spen Sunday with Mrs. Charles Wol­ Green in the Christiana-Salem Con­ a covered dish supper on the lawn at lasto n. solidated School, the last week of the home of Mr. and Mrs. J . Leslie MI'. and Ml" . Irving Hoffecker were June and the first week of July. A Ford in July. BRAYE SHERIFF PR.AISES unday guests of H a rvey Hoffecker ve l'y successful school was held last and fami ly. teal' a nd it is the desire of those in­ HOCKESSIN ~ l i ss Loui e McCaul ey visited hel' tere. ted that the some cooperation cou 'in, Robe rt Pott and famil y last exist t hi s year. By Mildred Gebhart HIS TRUSTY FORD Y-S wee k. "Children's Day" Held Hockessin , June 16- Commencement Mi ss Edith Deputy has r eturned to A very large crowd attended t he exercises were held in the auditol'ium her home after severa l weeks' visit "Children's Day" service held at the of the Hockessin Consolidated Schoo l with her grandparents at Harrington. Christiana M. E. Church last Sunday on June 9, at eight o'clock The pro­ ~ l l·. and Mr: . Joseph Brown enter­ evening. The foll owing beginners had gl'am was in charge ilf the principal, lained III I'. and Mrs. Joseph Brown, a part in the pl:ogram: Annis Cleaver, F. V. Mick, and was as follows : Jt-. , and child ren, Mr. James Brown Betty Ann Cleaves, Alice Morrison, "Double Eagle March" played by and am Gay lor, last Sunday Bett Kleiman, Dolores David, Ruth Hockessin-Yorklyn Community Or­ W. L. Fadel', of Pittsburgh, Pa., Ann Lockard, Alice Fay Lockard, chestra; invocation, Rev. Roderick pe nt the week end with G. F ader and Betty May Carey, J ean Elliott, Dwyer, of Wilmington; salutatory ad­ fam il y. Charles Burge,' George Jochen, Carl dl'ess, Elizabeth Hemsath; violin solo W. L. WI'ight, of Haddonfield, N. J., Stafford, Harold Vincent, Dona ld Vin­ by Jacob Brown; co mmencement ad­ I'i ited Newa rk r elatives last Sunday. cent, Jesse Sweetman, Nicky Vlasveld, dress by Dean George E. Dutton of Reverend Father Mealey and Father Billie Lebegern, Billie' Hawth01'l1e and the University of Delaware; presen­ Lynch, of Wilmington, were r ecent Wallace David. tation of certificates, Harry Russell; I'i itol's of Father Dougherty of St. The June meeting of the 4-H Club valedictory address given by Ether Paul 's of thi s town. of the Christiana School will be held Gacomelli ; benediction by Rev. Dwyer. ~l is s Juliette Gibson, of Philadel­ Friday evening, June 25, at 8 o'clock, E lizabeth Hemsath and Jacob phia, was the g uest of Mrs. R. A. standard t im e. The school closed last Brown were awarded the American IY hillingham this week. 'fhul'sday. Miss Rachel Phelps who Legion awards for being the pupils of MI·s. Rebecca Gi lpin spent the week had been l'eappointed as one of the the best standing in the class. end with Elkton friends, teachers for next year has r esigned to "Children's Day" Mrs. J ohn Bakel', of Harrington, accept a po: ition in Philadelphia. "Children's Day" was observed in Del., is th guest of L. B. J acobs and Mr '. Margaret Thornton, teacher of the Hoc kessin M. E. Church on Sun- family. the firs t and second gracies, will at­ Mi ss ~l a l · t ha rowe, of N ewark, has tend summcr school at the University hecn vi siting l'> liss Erma Lusby at the of Delaware. laltcl'" h0111e on Bow street, Elkton. MI'. and Mrs. William Menick, of Miss Mar~' Lovett, of N ewark, spent Newark, wer e g uests of MI'. A. H . . el'cral tlll\,S th is week with her friend Vincent a nd Mrs. Alma Ca nnon on M ISS E s th~l' Terrell of Elkton, Sunday. lI ul'\'cy Sleele and family, accom­ flnni "d hy Mi ss May Lovett, leave the "Breathing" s tee l wall s that defy lallel' part of the week ror a visit to quakes and corr osion a re the latest thcir old hOl11e at Adams, Mass. devclopment in the building industry.

Mrs. Leslie Moo re, and son, Ken­ Avoid brillia nt colors in It sun room. nard, and 11'.', B. C. Messick, vi sited fril'nd s in Coatesvi ll c last week. Mi Rs G"ac(' Spcnce iR visit ing Phila­ Receives Bonus delphia rri 'nci s. Mrs. I';clil h 1 ~ lIi ott and son: Jack, of Mi ss Sara A, P ennington, Me r­ This is a dramatic example he saf1~ak(' City, are visiting MI'. and maid reporter, has been awurc1 cd of Ford reliability and V-8 Mrs . .J ohn 1'; llioLI. thc first monthly bonus off er ed maximulD redonDance. You , Mrs. RUlh K. Fi. hcr is vi s iting her by this paper for xcell en y in Slstl'l' in W"st CI\ estor, Pa. may go through a lifetime of co.I'l'espond ence during Mny. driving without making sll ch MI'. lind Mrs ..Jam es Pennington are The purpose of thi s award a.gular Prlc. $1.65 I'is itin~ f!'i l'nds n a l' thei l' old home in an extreme demand on your each month is to develop the Sal. Price $1.25 Lanca ster ('"unl y, l'a. calibl'e of news printed and pre­ car. But an engine so skilfully Mis ~ Fun ni r Shapleigll is a guest of :ent to the readcrs the most designed, so well built, so fully Calcn lI ull. \\'c'I'nc rsville, Pa. intel'esling and ti mely itc>m s. You Save 40c ab1e to get the maximulU Palriotism I P oin ts taken into considera­ Profit hy thi ...... power out of elleh gnlloD of tion before malting the award .ons- in-Im\·, hl'!lthers-in-Iaw, unclos fuel, js able to meet ordinary are: news value, punctuation, /llId II /1/"/' fO,. 0/111''' anrl ('ouBin" of 1Ir 1' . Mu ssol ini served assignments for year on end. I'nlicnU y in 1I11' II'on l-linc trenches in spelling, neatness, legibility and FELTON -SIBLEY stylc. Easily and eeonomicalJy! Ethiopia. Whirh I' minds us what 1'\1'\1' ""PECr\).C;; Altnlcus Ward sa id during thc Civil Ol'l'cspondents from Newport, Take a ride in the Ford V-So ) , • • " ' " .I, "I" \ (J" .' ' IV ai'. on lhis suhject. "I'm fet' Ole hrisliana, Mcrmaid, Landen­ Find out why it's the qUlllity Clone," . uid A l'lemus. "and I won't berg, Stanton, Mar s ~ulll on, car in I.he low.price fi eld. ~t and fe r no KU ITender el' no back­ Glasgow, and H oc keSSi n arc THOMAS A. POliS down, By gum, 1 want this cruewel cligible for the bonus which will Newark SEI YOUR FORD DEALER I ~: al ' to go on if it lakes tho last rela- be pI' sen ted every month. Ask Us About Slain/en Paint Il'e my wife's got, ~======~I 4 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE

course at the Umverslty of Delaware beglOnlllg on Wednesday lind continu 28 GRADUATE Girl Scouts Like to COOK 109 until Saturday, comprise MalY I E Boyce, Margaret BlOwn, Ray Van FROM KREBS sant and Rlchald Ward ON THURSDAY H. B. Lynam Gives Diplomas To 13 Girls And 15 Boys; Operetta Is Presented OTHER ENTERTAINMENT By MISS Emma S Maclary Twenty eIght eighth gl ade stud ents 13 gnls and 15 boys wele glad uated flom the Hellllk J Krebs School at Newpott on Thul sday even 109 The PI esentatlOn of cel tlficates \\as made by H B Lynam plesldent of the boal d of tr ustees Present Operettl An opel etta "The Lass That Loved A Sallol" was pI esented undel the dllectlOn of MISS Sarah Goldstem \\Ith chlldlen flom the filst 0 seventh glades partlclpatlllg The pl ocesslOn al was played by the Klebs School 01 chestra undel the dll ectlOn of Chatles L Edwalds InvocatIOn was made by the Rev M W Rlkel and t he address of welcome by MI SS Ehz albeth Eckles A plano duet \\as Cow tes y COJls ollda ted Edison Co TllI ee Girl Scouts flam New YOlk presented by the 1\lIs es Vlldelma A L~[~;I~ca1 2\~~~e G~:\\lI~~~u t~o~l~ City are pIc tured during a cake-bak Saundels and Cmolyn Blomwell badges dUl lng 1936 and 71 500 Illg class at alaI ge e~ste l n utIlity Thele wele songs by t he eIghth glilde passed tests III the bom emalong co mpany "here they " ere sho" n membels a l eadmg by Thomas al ts accol d ng to an announ cement the latest featul es of a mo del n auto­ Mertes and a plano solo by MI SS made coinci den t" Ith tbe 20 tb annl matic gas la nge and tau ght to em vel sary of tbe fou ndIng of tbe 01 Thelma Green BenedICt IOn was PIO ganlzatlon ploy th e m08t up to tilt! minute bak nounced by the Rev J C McCoy and Plactlcal exp ellence ID domestic mg metbods the school olchestra played t he Ie III ts and sCIences IS one of tbe most Plannmg prepallDg and serving cesslOnal mal ch popu lar PUI suits of tbese gil Is of I efl esbments and tbe duties of a GIftS GIven teen age " ho choose theIr mdl vld hostess al e all palt of the broad ua l actiVIties flam tbe many in tJaltllng Gill Scouts l ecelve to fit Membels of the gradufJ.tmg class cluded In tbe national plogram them for [utUl e homemaking tasks pl esented D J Richey pllnclpal of t he school WIth a fountam pen and pencIl set as token of appl eClatIon of llls effol ts m then behalf The pre HOME EDUCATION sent atlOn was made by Samuel RIch eson MI RIchey expressed hI S ap "The ChIld's First School IS the Famliy"-Froebel ]ll eClatlOn of the gift commended Issued by the NatIOnal Kllldergarten ASSOCiatIOn 8 West 40th Street New YOI k CI ty These articles are appearlllg weekly m t hI S class on then lecord and urged our columns them to contmue then education m hIgh school and college If possIble J ean, stop bouncmg YO Ut ball' to bed so ead y? So that you may He commented that the Kl ebs School The mothel looked ovel her book a s glow to be strong and capable and had an average of 30 pel cent A she spoke the father flowned behmd brave hke the heroes' If the mnocent gl ades m then standm d tests gIven by hIS newspapel Then eIght yeal old the state w hde the avel age of schools daughter stopped and glanced fr:om 111 the state "as only 7 per cent A" one to the othel But no sooner had l atmgs so he was velY pr oud of t he the palents become absorbed III then lecold made h el e by the children leadlllg agam than 'Bounce bounce Ml RIchey commented that the \\ ent the bali' cenel y for the opel etta which was I told you to stop plaY in g here' plesented at the ciosmg plogram was the mothel s,lI d halpl~ Trammg To ObedIence the r esult of the ttammg the chll Well It'S lalnmg outS Id e ' ' Tralnmg to 111lphclt unquestIoned dlen h ad received 111 al t and they F md somethmg else to do" obedI ence Whv must I do thIs? made all scenelY fOl the play _ Also, J ean amused herself for a whIle Because I say so IS not satlsfactolY that the opel etta was the 1 esult of WI th a book and all plomlsed well The boy 01 gill blought up thI S way t hen musICal tr amll1g l ecelVed under However that tlouble orne ball soon IS usually easy to manage and often t he dllectlOn of MI SS Salah Gold began to bounce once mOle Slghmg II practices , el Y pleaslllg beha\ lOr stem the mother laId down hel book the habIts unt Il t hetJme co mes for hIm to fathel tossed h IS paper aSId e and went be -tus own mastel Then It I dI S AppreC IatIon Expressed out J ean had been allowed to SPoli i covel ed that he IS unfit for the task In c10smg MI RIchey explessed the evemng fOI hel pments-thlough On the othel hand, a chdd allowed to hI S apPleclatlOn of the v.onderful co lack of obedIence be dIsobedI ent to the PI mClple that operatIOn he had l ecelved f l am all People Donllnate HIm I he IS abl e to undel stand IS also III olgamzatlOns of the to\\n as well as can t undel stalld why J ohn lets dangel of an unsatlsfactol y adult f lom palents of the chIldren I people dam mate hun the way he Ih ood He IS apt to hve accOl ding to PupIls of the eIghth glade also d d fl t I hIS own selfi sh desn es l egal dless of PI esented MI SS Belle Chambel s sev S~:: klllgsa~f h:; g ~:w~e~;a so nWo~~: othel s What we need IS mtel!t gent enth glade t eacher at the school, WIth a nd hIS sIster SusIe seem to have no obedIence thIS can be developed It IS a gIft, the presentation bell1g made Wlll of thell own J ohn let that an attItude of mind that causes one by MI SS Jane Lmdsay pal tnel of hIS dI ctate all pohcle and to choose to do lIght because MI s Sar ah Goldstem was plesent­ deC Ide evelY Issue Dear me ! I have light andb_e_s_ t _____ ed WI t h a beautiful bouquet of flow enough lllltJatlve and determmatJon el s m recogmtIon of her efforts m why alen t my cht!dr en stlonger? STANTON the PI esentatlOn of the oper etta May It be that YO UI wt!1 was law Membels of the glllduatmg class to such an extent, wh en the chddren By MISS Emma S Maclary accompamed by Mr RIChey Mrs wele young that there was h ttle op Closlllg exel clses weI e held at the Mal galet Tmdall of Wlmmgton and POI tumty for t hem to develop lllltla Stanton School on Thursday evemng Mrs Ruby Portel of Sllvlew, also tlve? , asked hel fllend gently 'You Plans had been made to pI esent the members of the faculty left Monday always pllded YO UI self upon gettlllg mUSICal PI ogl am on the lawn ad mOlmng by bus fOI a two days stay Imphclt obedI ence I used to wondel m Washmgton how ) ou gamed such complete co n About 75 membel s, I epl esentmg hoi' the Jadles' auxl!talles of vanou file , I eel talllly dId mS lst on obedIence' compames thloughout New Castle When I gave III II uctlons they were County wel e guests of the Mmquas cal rled out and no questIOns were File Company Auxl!talY hele on asked Mine wel e t he best dlsclphned Wed nesday evemng MI S Nan Laws chlldl en In the commum ty I remem Woods, plesld ent nf the county a s bel when John \\ as a !tttle fell ow, I oClatlOn was m charge of the meet told hun one day to SIt pn a stool III Ing my 100m unt t! I saId he mIght go I There was SCllptUte l eadmg at fOlgot about hIm a nd went out He the opemng of the sessIOn by Mr s was stIll sIttIng thel e thl ee hOUI S Hot n chaplam, a nd a member of the la tel! I beheve If the house had 1I1dl Creek File Company AuxlhalY caught fil e he d stJiI have sat t hele Address of Welcome I ve always felt 011) about that day but It does how the boy kne\, how to The addl ess of welcome was made obey by Mrs W Jensen plesldent of t he • Ye but lOU see he continues to Ladles' Auxl!tary of the Mmquas obey now whIle othel command He Company, and MIS Woods, head of nevel developed mltlatlve, he learned wele presented Wlth whIte pocket the county group, 1 esponded only to obey" books by the elkhth grade pupIls MIS Edwm Huber of St LOUI S ObedIence Is Important MI S Jane Chambers III charge of the 1110 , was a guest, vlsltmg WIth n cafeterIa as well as Mr Gregg Ly member of the FIve Pomt Company How to secUle an obedIence that does not lead to sel vlhty IS an Impor nam caletaker at the school, lecelved MIS Woods announced a change 111 gIfts the date of the memollal sel vIce to tant consldelatlOn fOI evelY parent Pel fect attendance cel tlficates were be held by the State FIremen's As We do need to l endel obedIence, from plesented to thlee pupils by MISS LOla soclatJon The affall WIll be held on the vel y day of bll th to such l eqUIre LIttle ReCIpIents wele Gerald New June 20 at 7 30 standard tIme m the ments as legulal tllnes fO I feedmg comb fOUl th gl ade pupd, who has AsbulY !If E Church at Dover sleepmg and exelCl se But subnusslon been pel fect for four years, or ever Those attendmg wlll meet at the fire to customs held to be best by the race, slllce stal tmg to school, Robel t WII house, and ploceed to the church consldmatlOn fOl t he lights of others son, seventh grade, WIth an attend The aUluhary a SSOC iatIons Will also Older and cleanhness, should be ance record of three years Leha attend thiS sel vIce taught lather than commanded ObedIence to a palent s WIll, merely Lynam eIghth grade, who has a per Country Club Dance because It IS hI S WIll IS ummpOl tant, fect record of attendance for the past III fact, hm mful three years Charles StaIb and the Amba! adors As soon as a chI ld 1 able to under The personnel at the Stanton school a Wllmmgton orchestra, wdl furmsh stand reasons-and thIS IS Vel yearly WIll be the same for next year, as all musIc for a dance at the Newark --It IS wI se to encourage hun to seek members of the faculty contemplate Country Club on Satulday evenlllg reasons for those forms of behavlOr returmng here In the fall The aWalr, whIch r.tarts at 9 O'clock, that we deSIre In that way obedIence Members of the 4 H Club of Stan­ Wlll be mformal becomes mtelhgent "Why must I go ton School who wlil attend the short Th ursday, June 17, 1937 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE 5

Children's Day Is Tr.i·State Association Of Elks To A. Yes. If the Wyandottes are I IN MEMORIAM No one knows how much we miss her Marked A t !VI ermaid not yet infected with Chicken Pox, it In loving memory of OUI' deal' loved No one knows the tears we shed Meet Here Next fVeek; 2,500 Expected is possible to vaccinate them and thus l one, Estella H. Ely, who passed away But in heaven wo hope to mo t her Church On Sunday prevent spread of Chicken Pox amODIr two years ago today, June 17th, 1935. WhCl'e no fal'ewell tears arc shed. . Abou~ },500 ~~s .from lodges I EXALTED RULER I Sadly missed by husband and Ill' Miss, I;;:;A.- Pennington III t he 'Ill-State Assocl8tlon, Indepen- _ t h e ~. Vaccine fO.r this vaccination is In t he graveYal'd safely sle ping daughter. MCI:ll1uid, Junc lG-Mcmbers of Red dent Benevolent Protective Order of obtallled from pIgeons a~d can be Where the fl owers gently WHve, l' reck Presbyterian e hul'ch E lks of the Wodd, ar(l expected here purchased from commerCIal labol'a- Lies the one we loved 0 dearly A Chilelll1 flower grows in lava. tories. The feather follicle method I In her lonely silent grave. ' presented their annual "Chil­ for the 15th annual session starting 300,000 in U. S. live in trailers. ~c~~ l Friday. should be used in which a feather is I . dren', Day" jlrogram on Sunday be­ l'emoved from the leg of t he bird and IS he Will never be forgotten fore a hlrge all~ i c n ce. 'I'he welco ~ e Under a special committee headed . . Nevel' shall her memory f ade the vaccme pam ted on the spot where Sweetest thoughts will a lway~ linger There arc 450 pel'so ns to the addre~s wa.> given by 1,I,ttle MISS by Exalted Ruler Roland B. Wilson, the feather has been pulled. Around the grave whoro she is laid. square mile of Puerto Rico. E~t h cr Klni!". A pagea nt, Gateways t he ceremonies will start Sunday of the Bi bl!'," was presented by more morning with the registration of dele­ that flIt)'. 'j'hl' malll parts were llor­ gates. A memorial service will be held in St. John's A. U. M. P. Church !rayed b)' ~~ISS DOI'othy ~oo d~~ard ~,s at. foul' o'clock. Rev. S. C. Blackledge "Truth," J\1IS ' Doro thy Gass, Love; k I MilS Alic(' Yearsley, "Faith"; Miss Will preside, assisted by William S. Mildred 'frimble, "Light"; Miss hene Brice, Allan A. C. Griffit h, Ida Cum­ Gue t, "Victory"; Miss Rebecca Wood­ mings and the E lk s' choir. An educational meeting will be h eld Ji wal'd, IIS(I)'vi('c." in Mt. Zion U. A. M. E. Church at I \wards Made eight o'clock Sunday evening. Rev. ~ Nell' testaments for memory work L.uther F. Smith will be in ehal'ge, were Jlre~(' nled by the superintendent, aIded by Pearl Brown, Truly Hatchell, D. M. Buckingham to Sarah E lizabeth Joseph C. Parks and t he Elks' choir ROLAND B. WILSON Klair, JeH n A. Woodward, an!! Doro­ and glee club. Head of the Newark lodge, I. B. P. thy Ca ss. O. E. of W ., which will entertain the ~ublic Session Monday Althc meeting of the T hree-in:One annual four-day session of the tri­ ~, Homemakers' Club last Tlllp'sday, a Following a business session Mon­ state association starting on Sunday. I' salad demonstration was given by day morning, with l'epresentatives Mrs. Il oward Bradley and Mrs. Wil­ f l'Om Delaware, Maryland .and the mcr Hollingsworth. District of Colu mbia lodges and tem­ another business session will be held, Th e cluh \'oted to send its president, ples present, Mayor Frank Collins is followed by a juvenile hour at eleven. Mrs. John Lynch, to the Homemakers' scheduled to deliver an address of Close to 3,000 delegates are expect­ Short Course at the University of Del­ welcome before a public gathering in ed to march in the street parade at aware. Mrs. Robert Major, another the Pilgrim Baptist Church at eight 2.30 o'clock Tuesday. The convention club memue r, planned to also attend o'clock that night. ball will be held at nine o'clock that the course. Exalted Ruler Wilson will follow evening. Pet Show with an address, as will Daughter Ida Clyde Bishop, general chairman, and Harmony l'lmll school closed last Garrett. Responses will be' made by Charles Hayman, chairman of the Thursday with a pet show as t he W. S. Brice, E . Winchester, Edward co mmittee on arrangements, will con­ special i'eature of the a nnual picnic. W. Bundy and Margaret Bishop. duct the closi ng business session at During lhe program of sports, two On Tuesday morning at nine o'clock, nine o'clock Wednesday morning. team~, the "Heds" a nd the "Purples," ======competed in dodge ball, running races, and l'ope jumping contests. The THE ------"Reds" won 3 to 2. Prizes for pets were won by Alec Jarr II, Patricia Clancy, Irvin Van­ sa nt, Anna Vansant, Roland Tyler , Teresa Tylcr, James Vansant, Mildred • ) •.) ':., ~ . '. - '" • • . :"i ~ :...J t- •• - • ~ ...... ' • Fleming, i\1 ilbu l'll Anderson, and Mary I - Q C G d C I . Louise Jarrell. 1 • an 00 aves eB Ralsed On better to provide 45 pounds and thus Mi ss Elizabeth Dillon has been re- Pellets Or Calf Meal? insure the propel' building up of co l- appointed as the teacher at Harmony A. Yes. These materials contain onies in the spring. School for the 1937-38 term. food .that is probab~ satisfactory. Q. Bedbugs Have Been Bothering Celebrate Anniver sary However, any calf worth raising In A Tenant House For Years And Leola Council, No. 14, D. of P., at should be fed whole milk for at least We Seem Unable To Get Rid Of The Uni on, ce lebrated its sixteenth ann i- a month after birth and the change Pests. What Can We Do To Kill versa I')' on Monday night with a pub- from milk to pellets 01' calf meal Them? li c meeting. The guest of honm' was should be gradual, extending thl'ough A. When bedbugs have become Great Sachem Edward L. Brasur e, a week or more. well established in a house ordinary who was acco mpanied by Great Senior Q. What Is The Best Method Of co ntrol measures, such as t he use of Saga more J ohn B. Geary a nd Great Cleaning The Inside And Outside Of co mmercial fly sprays or kerosene, of­ Junior Sagamore Roland Parker. Porcelain 01' Enamel Finished Re- ten do not kill the bugs. The onl y Depu ty Great Pocahontas Bessie frigerators ? satisfactory way to become rid of Hastings of Wilmington, and Deputy A. A solution of soda in lukewarm them is to fumigate with the poison­ Great Pocahontas Sarah Croft were water is the most effective and de- ous cyanide gas. The special instruc­ also present a s were members of sirabl e cleaning agent to use. For tions which al'e necessary before at­ eleven tribes and eight councils. washing both the inside and outside of tempting to use this treatment may be Mrs. Catherine Co nnell was in the refrigerator, a soft cloth should obtained by writing to the Entomol­ charge of the following program: be used and care taken that no ogy Depal'tment, Agricultural Exten­ Piano solo by Mi ss Alberta Hodgson: abrasive 01' harsh material comes in sian Department, University of Dela- of Avondale, Pa.; tap walk by Gerald contact with t he finish. ware, Newark, Delaware. Gelston of Landenberg, tap dance by Q. What Is A Good Dairy Ration, Q. Why Is It That Insects Do Not Miss Marjorie J en kins of Avondale, Using Home Grown Feeds, Which Freeze In Winter ? reading, "Betsy Ross" by Miss Ada- Will Help Maintain Milk Production? A. Many insects do freeze and are line Hodgson of Avondale, tap solo A. Where a good legume hay is killed during cold weather. However, by Mark Jenkins of Avondale, read- available in sufficient quantities a sup .. if the cold kills a species of insects in ing, "Chewing Gum Romance" by plement consisting of one part by one stage of its development, over­ Miss Norma Small of Avondale, vocal weight of 32 per cent dairy feed and wintering is accompli shed in some HOUSANDS said that tires could not stand the terrific trio by Mi ss Margie J enkins, Miss two parts by weight of corn and cob other stage. Some insects are able to T grind. They said cars had been built with much Betty Jacobs and Mi ss Small, Hawai- meal will do very well. Where the endure freezing temperatures without greater speed, turns in the track had been repaved with ian qui tar selections by the Connell hay is not plentiful, a mixture of one being injured while others must bUl'­ granite· like surface, yet Wilbur Shaw drove to victory Si sters. part cotton seed meal, one part bran row in the ground or seck out some on Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires setting a new record Thi s counci l was instituted on June with four parts ground grain has been other protected place in which to '1f 113.58 miles per hour on one ofthe hottest days 1 , 1920, by Mrs. Hettie Selfies and satisfactory. Where soybeans are spend the winter. in the history of the Indianapolis track; Charles Co lman, both of Wilmington. available, they may be ground and Q. I Have Two Breeds Of Chickens Think of the terrific impact on these tires as the Given Scholarship substituted in the above formula for In My Flock, White Leghorns And cars roared into the treacherous turns and out again. Melvin Dempsey, of Corner Ketch, the cotton seed meal. . Wyandottes. The Leghorns Are In- T ons offorce straining, pulling, and twisting inside was awarded a scholarship to the 4-H Q. How Much Honey Should Be fected With Chicken Pox While The the tire, yet not Olle cord loosened, not one tread separated Club Short Coure opening tomorrow Left In A Honeybee Hive To Provide Wyandottes Are Not. Would It Be from the cord body-all because Gum-Dipping, the at the Un iversity of Delaware. He re- Wintet Food For The Colony? Possible To Vaccinate The Wyan- Firestone patented process, successfully counteracted ceived thi s award for judging' of A. At least 30 pounds of honey dottes And Prevent The Spread Of the internal friction and heat that ordinarily destroy cattl e. should be left for each colony. It is Chicken Pox Among Them ? tire life. You will never drive your car at these record­ A luncheo n served at the home of 1======breaking speeds, but for the safety of yourself and Mrs. A. B. Dennison at Avondale, was ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• family you need the safest, strongest and most enjoyed by the following guests last dependable tires. Come in today. Join the Firestone Thursday, Mrs. L. H. Pennington, SAVE A LIFE Campaign by e<;luipping your car with Mrs. Harvey Ball, Miss Clara D. a set of new Firestone Gum-DIpped Tires-the safest MOrri son, Miss Sara Pennington of tires that money can buy. Mermaid, Mrs. D. M. Buckingham and Mi ss Helen Thompson of Hockessin. DOl" RISI YOIR LIFE 01 THII WORI TlR~S No car owner i. going to risk his li£e and the lives of his Camp Otonka Ready For family knowingly on thin worn citeII Groups Of Vacationists Ca mp Otonka, the district of Dela­ ~are Y. W. C. A. camp at Dagsboro, IS receiving its final grooming for the season which opens on June 26. Registrations for the younger girls are fa st fi lling the camp to capacity, OUR BEST Dorothy D. Roberts, executice secre­ tary, anno unced fTom the Dover office this wee k. The senior hi gh group will arrive on -The "ery least that we can June 26, for a period of two To fulfill many requests, the do to show our appreciation f rom June 26 to July 10 has opened to the junior high girls of your patronage and con6- arc not able to attend later in the dence, is to make Sl1re that to the counselor staff in- iss \vilellyn Morelle, or Ar­ every day's senice to you is ~ """.':'..M<_ ""~,"I\, Va., for singing and nature El izabeth MacFat'land, of the best that we can give. who graduated from the -mc"ti~".";i •• unlvcl:sitv of Delaware this year, for Farmers TrUlt Company Twenty-fi ve ~s of t he Ladies SoCiety or the Newark M. E. Fader Motor Company attend · d the a nnual picnic Newark, D.laware at th home of Mrs. Eugene at Rehoboth Beach on ThuI'll­ Member Feder.' Deposit ....ar.nce Corpor.tion lh Mrs. Wivel is a former member Dial Newark 8181' 42 W. Main Street e local organization. I~ ...... ,.....,."""""""",",",",",",,",,",,"mmmmm~~r 1 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE 6 man, who carries the love interest tertainment and greetings were ex­ ...... ~ ...... opposite Ayres, Colin 'rapley, Vivi­ tended at a dinner-dance by Warren The Newark Post enne Osborne and Jed Prouty. Barbour, chairman of New Jersey SCREEN SNAPS Unemployment Commission and for­ Foundecl January 26, 1910, 'by the late ~erett C. JohuoD Juniors Nominate mer United States senatol'. Issued Every Thursday by the NEWARK POST, INC. By"SNAPPER" 'Vice-counselor Roger Dobston pl'e- Great Britain has the mORt com­ Locally and Independently Owned and Published 1._;,:_;;;,;-;:-;:-;:-;.;-;:-;.;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I sided over the meeting of the Amer­ plete records of the lives of its dis­ THE NEWARK POST Is Not Connected With Any Other Pcvper I , •••• " ••••• " ••••••••!!!!~ ican Flag Council No. 28, Jr. O. U. tinguished citizens. CIT Chain of Paper. A. M., held Monday night," A. Neal Printed at The Presl 01. Kells. State Theatre News Smythe, pUblicity chairman of that Accuracy in forecasts by the weath­ organization announced in an inter­ er bureau has taken a sharp upturn Newark, Delaware A motion picture within a motion view this week. in the past year. Telephones: Newark 6161 and 6791 picture was made on a sound stage within a sound stage on a film lot "Next Tuesday night we will have ------300,000 murderers are at large. EDITOR ...... •..... CHARLES H. RUTLEDGE within a film lot at Selznick Inter­ a hot dog roast at Brother Brown's national studios recently. plantation at Milford Cross Roads," rr======~ Entered as second-class matter at Newark, Delaware, Furthermore, it was a story within Mr. Smythe said. "On the following News Value under Act of March- 3, 1897. a story, with a cameraman being Tuesday, we will visit Middletown photographed by another cameraman, Council," he continued. Except for short stretches, Make all checks to The Newark Post and a prop crew being assisted by a "Bear these dates in mind and ______-:--:-----1 second prop crew, .on a set within a have never tried to live without swell the crowd," Mr. Smythe con­ news. I think I would prefer to The Subscription price of this paper is $1.60 per year in advance. set. cluded. live without meat. Yet I know Single copies 4 cents. It was all part of David O. Selz- many people who seldom glance -----:-:--,--,----=~~~_;_-:-~:_:_:__=_::;_;:_::-:=:_:::;_;::::4t;;;L: 1 nick's technicolor film, "A Star Is Good Food May Be We want and in1lite communicati01Ul, but the'/{ must .be rigned bll . ". Local Man Heads Body at anything in a newspaper ex­ writer'. na.m&--1tot for publication., but for our mformatunl. and prot.otum. Born," starring Janet Gaynor and cept the social notes or some Bad Food if Fredric March. Rees S. Jarmon, of Newark, was feature that has no news ele­ Not Prepared "A Star Is Born" features Adolphe evelted grand counselor of the New ment. They get along perfectly Properly JUNE 17, 1937 Menjou, May Robson, Andy Devine, Jersey and Delaware Jurisdiction, well, too, although conversation TRY OUR FOOD Lionel Stander and others. United Travelers of America, at the with them is often balked Usu­ HOW DICTATORS WORK Monday and Tuesday Whjch Has Satisfied organization's thirtieth annual ses­ ally they are frightful gossips, A Community News 'from Italy shows how the minds of. dictators work. To The tenderest romance of our time sion at Asbury Park, New Jersey re­ which indicates that they do not lives again on the screen when "Sev- cently. totally lack a news-interest.­ quote an A. P . dispatch of May 8, "Fascist Italy, angered by printed enth Heaven," the Twentieth Cen- The Wilmington Council was host William Feather. Ark Restaurant jeers at the prowess of Italian fighters in Spain, virtuaIly broke tury-Fox production of Austin to New Jersey guests at a recent en- HERMAN T. RENSHAW, Prop. off press relations wi th Great Britain today." An official order Strong's immortal love story, plays 73 E. Main Street recalled all Italian correspondents from London, and banned all this theatre these two days with Si­ but three English newspapers from Italy. mone Simon and James Stewart in •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 11~~~~~::~:: ~::::::~ the starring roles. Thus dictatorship achieves its ends by keeping its people in Adapted from the stage play pro- darkness, and shutting them away from any knowledge, any facts, duced and directed by John Golden, z;::sftftft ~~~~~~ B~ TTER . . ~~~~.~~~ . ~~!~~ any opinion which may suggest that the man or the party in "Seventh Heaven" re-crates for screen ~Vll Hamburg Steak, The Good Kind .. Ib 25c power is less than perfect. Under various dictatorships the right audiences that star -crossed pair of "-;'AAhA ~\.\\ Bacon, Best Quality .... Vz Ib Pkg. 21c to vote in free and honest elections has been taken from the Montmartre, Diane and Chico, two r "IP':~\\\\\w, Sllice Luncheon Meat and lovers who lift your heart to the Lunch Cheese ...... !4 Ib 12c people. The right of free speech has been taken from them. The stat.s. \\~\\ \'u Dried Beef ...... !4 Ib 12c right of free assembly has been taken from them. The right of Darryl F. Zanuck, vice-president in ~ This Store Closes Monday Evenings and Thursdays at 1 :OC P. M. Fri. & Sat. open trial by jury has been taken from them. The right of a free charge of production at Twentieth press has been taken from them. Century-Fox, chose Henry King, the Community Stores, Inc. oCr Between the United States and such tyranny stands the Academy prize-,vinner r esponsible for "Lloyds of London," to direct "Sev­ Dial Newark 561 Constituton- a living document. We must be continually on our enth Heaven." I •• S ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ guard lest, in our eagerness for seeming ad vantage, we unknow- P rominent featured player s are ~------, ingly sacrifice the liberties fo r which millions of men fought dur- .Jean Hersholt, Gregor y Ratoff, Gale ing centuries of bloody history. Sondergaar d, J . Edward Bromberg, Four Leas.es and One Sale Closed This Week ======:======IJ ohn Qu alen, Victor Kilian, Thomas By learning about brooding and rearing Beck, Sig Rumann and Mad y Chris- Editor's Mail Bag tians are in the film . BROWN AND MADDEN chi cks f rom F. H. Leuschner, ex- The latest issue of "The Mar ch of REAL ESTATE BROKERS tension poultryman. In the mean- Time" will be added to t he bill each (But the girls brought about some t ime, the girls, who were also divid- evening. For five Newark owners who know the importance of engaging an necessal'Y neck washing, too didn 't agent in renting and selling r eal estate. ed into two groups, wer e studying Wednesday and Thursday they?-Editor's Note. ) WHY? SO! better lighting under Mrs. Marion G. Three authors in search of a plot KA THARINE WILSON WILLIAMS Several of my f riends, who have Severance, Sussex County home dem- solve the myster y in "The Crime No­ Our Local Representative onstration agent, and Mi ss Ruth Min- body Saw," the screen treatment of been accllsed of graduating f rom our 102 EAST MAIN STREET DIAL 8211 local high school, asked whether they turn, home management specialist at the popular play by Ellery Qu een and should go to a co -ed coll ege. Never! the university, was leading a class in Lowell Brentano. I ~======~ What is it that impedes a majority "The 4-H .Girl in Her Home." The three are Lew Ayres, Benny I: of coll eges as educational institu­ Class Work Resumed Bakel' and Eugene Pallette. They are •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• tions ? Is it a poor f aculty? NeveI'I Class work was resumed after given twenty-foul' hours to deli ver a • i JANET Is it a lack of interest on the part of lunch, with the groups of boys and play for which they had already the student body? Certainly not! Is girls alternating in the work being .\ drawn several large advances, and the : GE,ORGE M. WILSON : GAYNOR it lack of funds, lack of support, lack studied, so that all the boys would day before the play is to go into pro­ • • PREDRIC of interest? Not at all! have the same opportunity to learn duction find s them still without an General Hauling • That which is impeding the pro­ of several phases of agriculture and idea. • MARC]l gress of these colleges today is co­ t he entire group of girls would bene- Others in the cast are Ruth Cole­ • Ashes and Rubbish Removed from Yards and Cellars at Reasonable : education! fit from additional instruction. ======ADOLPHE MENJOU Before the co-eds entered men were Again at four o'clock, the recreation Rates Newark Man Radio Speaker • 71>e Pint ModerR Piaure ;. wont to go there for an education. hOUI' was to begin. • The literary socieities flouri shed. Tonight's events will consist of a (Continued from Page 1) • ply vessel s which the British sent to DIAL NEWARK 3613 ADDRESS, 72 W. CLEVELAND AVE. : Ninety-nine per ce nt of every class surprise program, at which A. D. were Phi Betas and the other one was the aid of their besieged brothers in (Dad) Cobb, state 4-H Club leader Boston." • sick! Men talked in Greek, sang in and assistant director of extension, The success of the small vessels, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Latin, and gargled in French. Every will be in charge. In addition, E. manned by brave colonists, chief of man was a gentleman and a scholar. Paul Burkholder, supervisor of rural Today, women go there. Literary whom was John Paul Jones, in mak­ schools in Sussex County, will make societies languish. Phi Betas are only ing raids upon Britisp frigates and an address. men without sex appeal. Foreign lan­ merchant ships, r esulted in the ap­ Friday's program will be similar to guages are only spoken by foreigners. pointment of a marine committee by Thursday's, except that the boys will Some men are scholars still, perhaps, Congress. devote their morning hours to a study but no men are gentlemen. Value Recognized Who has done this ? Women, women of swine management, while the girls will learn the secrets of personality "As the war went on and con- I were made to be the CUI'se of man. gress began to realize more and more and charm from Miss Ruth Hoge­ They are ever with us from the cradle the value of a navy, not only in re­ land, beauty editor of Country Gen­ to the grave. 0, let there be four gards to the damage inflicted on the tleman. Friday afternoon, Miss years at least when you may enjoy enemy, but also as to the prizes cap­ Hogeland will talk to the entire short the c.ompany of men, unpainted by tured, more and larger ships were course group on "Social Graces and lipstick, ungassed by perfume-that built and near the close of the war, Popularity for Boys and Girls." is, except at vacation time. several 76-gun ships of this line were The Friday evening program is Don Cole. built." scheduled to include a style revue Perryville, Maryland. After pointing out the insignificant and the annual Link Membership and June 16, 1937. costs of building ships of that calibre Candle-Light Ceremony, led by Mr. to the money expended for a modem Short Course Claaaea Cobb. Saturday morning, after boat. Mr. Eastman revealed that an FiD College Card breakfast, the boys and girls will re­ act of Congress resolved the pay of tu rn to their homes. the commander-in-chief of this fleet (Continued from Palr8 1) Among the' leaders in charge of to be $126 per month. recreation in the two gymnasiums the various phases of the 4-H Club and swimming pools. Short Course are: William Miller, ======The first evening of the course in- music teacher, Milford Schools, in cluded a welcom to the university .charge of group singing; Leon extended by Dean C. A. McCue, group Buehler, Newark, in charge of re­ singing, and a travel talk by Russell creation, and assisted by Miss Vir­ Kincaid, Elkton, who has resided in ginia Wilson, Newark; Dr. C. R. South Africa, Australia and several Kase, Newark, in charge of drama­ Oriental countries. tics, to which will be devoted con- This morning, following breakfast siderable time; and Jack Lafferty, in Kent Hall, the boys and girls were Cheswold, a student at the univer­ divided for serious work. The boys sity and a fonner 4-H Club mem­ MERVIN S. DALE were split into two groups, one study- ber, who will be in charge of Vespers. JEWELER ing cattle management under Pro- Attending Short Course . fessor T. A. Baker, of the Animal lIays nnd girls a ttending the 1937 short DIAL 3221 NEWARK Industry Department, and the other ~~~ I:i~ ' ·D~ ~;~~~ ,E~~~n~ ~yJ~q t;t~~~c~~ ~:~w :

Those Sons and Daughters Who Passed Their School Grades Should Be Rewarded .... Something Suita hie from Our Stock of Bicycles, Wagons, T ennis Racquets, Fishing Tackle, Field Glasses, Wrist Watchel, Rifles·, Bedroom Radios Would Be Ideal--Try Jackson's Hardware Store First Thursday, June 17, 1937 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAWARE 7 :::::::::----_~~:::::·~ ======I Mr. and Mrs. Philip Cameli spent Jeanette, spent the week-end with Movie attendance i increasing. R K SOC I A L NOT E S the week-end in New York City. Miss Bessie Wingate, of FI('tcher Some scientists claim the Milky WANTED NE WA Mr. and Mrs. Hal'vey Boyce enter- Virginia. ' Way rotates as a unit around a cen- tained Mr. and Mrs. Gray Lomax and Dr. and Mrs. Ezra Crooks are en- tral point. To Lease ~::: :::: ::---.-.::.:::::::::::.. : .. : .. ::.-~ MI'. and Mrs. Raymond McMullen at cards Tuesday evening tertaining their daughter and grand- Peanuts-h-av-e-m-o-r-e-p~l\ ote in than FURNISHED HOUSE Robert B. Down es, of hapel Bobby, of Delmar, Del., were Sunday daughter from the south. meat. Mr~ C wi ih her duughter, Calar, guests of Miss Sarah E Potts E Mrs. Helen McGraw and Mr. Louis Will take short or one year ~ I~;s it;ng'~t the home of her parents, Main Street. ., . Jarmon attended the United Com- I i==~~~~~=~~:;:;=:;:;:;:;======~~ lease IS and Mrs. Ezra ~. Crooks. M~. M --- mercial Travelers Convention at As- I! DDor'II'nes is head l ib r a l'~a n at t he Um- r. and Mrs. J. C. Hastings and bury Park, New Jersey. h C hna daughter, Rachel Jane, have moved to . Colgate Specials Phone 6661 ~e rs iiY of Nori ~ . Sharpetown, Md., for the summer. "I rs. Wal ter R. powe l ~ is r e c~pe- Mr. John Ernest is entertaining his Tooth Powder I' H th H t I Miss Anne ~n, Kells Ave., mother from Sassafras, Maryland. rating ai the omepa I C OSPI a , LSi~~e t# G;i~~t 'llnl i\Jgio , where sh. e u,n, derwent the has entered Goldey Business College Mrs. Jennings Spal'ks gave a shower Ige 33e \V n I I d Wilmington. ' removal of h e l~ to~s ues ay. . on June 3 in honor of Miss Freda Anna Kruse Beauty Shoppe Smith. Those pl'esent were: Mrs. Els­ Mr and Mrs. Ralph O'Connell are ~ Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Ryan, Kells Cashmere Bouquet AEROGENE WAVE $10 .' .' relatives in Turtle Creek,) Ave., spent last week at Ocean City, w~rth Carr, Miss Alice Cox, Misses k IMaryland Ehzabeth and Dorothy Rose, Miss Soap 3 for lSe pa., for two wee s. . ___ Mary Wilson, Miss Jean Barns and Frederic Permanent Miss Virginia Hurlock. Dr. and M r s.~to l\ Daugherty, I' ~r. F. A. Wheeless, Orchard Road, i Palmolive Shaving Cream 60 W. Delaware Ave:, have remo,:,ed IS m New Orle~a business trip. Waves Be . La,rge Gi!,nt to their summer residence at Relst- Sunday guests at the home of Mr. Rev. J. L. Nichols returned on Tues- SIze "Ie6. t# Size 37e erno , Maryl_and. and Mrs. Robert Potts, E. Main St., day from the M. P. Conference held in $3.50 wo M Westminster, Md. $6.50 $5 Stricken late Sunday night, John were: 1' •• and :r.;trs. Raymond L. Vaseline Hair Tonic 142 E. Main Street Phone 3351 207 E Main St., was rushed Kramer, Philadelphia; Mr. and Mrs. . ~rs Walter Busby, of Atlantic City, lAIIGE the Wilmi ngton General Hospital E.d~ie L. Miller' and daughters, Vir- vIsited her niece, Mrs. Frank Ridge­ SIZE Open Evenings I obse rvation. He was brought to gmla and Barbara, West Chester; way, of Nottingham Road, last week. t~: Flower Hospital on Tuesday and Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Hammoc' wh ere he is being treated by Dr. E. and daughter, Mary Lynn, of EI Miss Mary Burnett is spending two BENJAMIN EUBANKS Earle Weggenman n for internal dis- Dorado, Arkansas. weeks at Rehoboth. Telephone-We Deliver JUST-ICE OF THE PEACE Mr. G. L. Medill, of York, Pa., Miss Mary Hayes, W. Delaware 581 2929 2914 AND ' visi.ted relatives in town Monday. A ve., has accepted a summer position 36 EAST MAIN ST. NEWARK NOTARY PUBLIC Newark as counselor at a girl's camp on Lake Mr. a~d Mrs. Daniel Haley, of I LICENSES OF ALL TYPES ISSUED visiting 4-H Club members at Huron, Michigan. Miss Hayes will Philadelphia, were recent visitors at ,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ LEGAL PAPERS EXECUTED College. She is in chal'ge leave the first of the week to take up ~:e~~:.e of Mrs. Doyle, of S. College 11 --.....- ...- ...... - ...... --- ...... - ...- ...... -- ················1 ~~::::::::::::::::::::~ Z SHOWS croquet. matches. I her new duties. DAILY 1 :30 P. M ..... James King, Philadelphia, a Renee Mae Rideout, daughter of Miss Dorothy Holton has returned INS U RAN C E Come In, See the New ':38 P. M I to her horne for the summer vacation. R. C. A. V I C TOR D. S. T: rehabilitation student here, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Rideout, E. Park local f riends this week. Place, had her tonsils removed a't the Mi ss Roberta Bland, a teacher in H d h R A D 10 Homeopathic Hospital, Wilmington, the Paulsboro Public Schools, is visit- ave you protecte your orne against , LEON A. POTTS Virginia Thomas, East New­ on Tuesday. ing her sister , Mrs. Earl Dawson. loss by fire or wind storm? , 44 E. MAIN ST. DIAL 3821 was graduated last iNeek , the Uni versity of Maryland, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Dameron and Mrs. John Frazier, of Philadelphia, Have you protected tihe contents of YOl:.Ir acc epted a po ition for the sum­ Mi ss Dorothy Dameron, E. Main St., has retul'ned to her horne after visit­ home against loss by fire? REAL ESTATE in the entomology laboratory at spent Tuesday in York. ing Mrs. Hurlock of S. Coll ege Ave- ! RENT - SELL , Univ rsity of Maryland. Mr. Ralph, Lewes, spent the week- nue. INSURANCE There is some form of Insurance to pro-· ALL FORMS end in Newark. Dr. and Mrs. A. J Mavromatis spent tect your particular need. Mrs. Clement Cannon and Mrs. Monday in New York City. I W. HARRY DAWSON : Notary Public Robert Strahorn, Lovett Ave., are Mrs. Chas. J ones is entertaining her Our Insurance Department is thoroughly ! 156 W. MAIN ST. PHONE 6661 and Mrs. Joshua R. Wood, visiting relatives in Massillon, Ohio. mother f rom near Dover. equipped to care for your Insurance needs. ! Ave., spent Sunday with Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Warner McNeal, S. Mrs. Ha1'1'Y Davis has r eturned af- CLASSIFIED Mrs. Alex Imhoff, Rending. Coll ege Ave., spent last week at Old tel' a stay in Atlantic City. May we be of service to you? 1 ADVERTISEMENTS !II'. and Mrs. Maurice Overly, Point Comfort, Virginia. Miss E sther Still is spending her ! Apartments, left Wednes- Mr. and Mrs. George L. Townsend, vacation in Rehoboth. FOR SALE fol' Daytona Beach, Fla., where III, and son, Bobby, of Kent Way; Newark Trust Company HARVESTING SUPPLIES-Binder will spend the summer. and Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Welles Mrs. J. H. Nichols entertain ed hel' twine, forks, hay r ope, blocks, etc., sixth grade schoo l girls on a trip to priced right. Buy your binder Casandra Strahorn, Philadel- and son, Roddy, of Mermaid, are Philadelphia Monday. Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation I twine early, great shortage this has rctul'l1ed home after spend- spending two weeks at Rehoboth. a.; .. ______J! season. J ackson's Hardware several days ...vith Mr. and Mrs. Miss Sarah E . Potts, E. Main St., The Ladies Aid Society of the New- StQre. 6-17-tf-c K. Strahorn, E. Main Street. ark M. E. Church spent Wednesday spent Tuesday in Philadelphia. Jast week in Rehoboth. BUILDING LOTS-Six ideal locations on Park Place and two on Kells Mrs. Paul MacM urray and young Neal and Oliver Suddard entertain- Ave. , near Women's College. Sewer, water, gas and electricity. Apply 77 E. Main St. 6,17,4t Yr. and Mrs. E ugene Thomas, who ~~~I~!sP;i~~~~~~~:aS.a~: I~~ ~i:i~~e~~:: ~~e~~e!~t~~~~O~t~!~.~eannt~):a;~~~~ :~ been visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Mrs. Louise Cunningham, Philadel- Monday. TURKEY HEN with 30 polts, and East Newark, have return- and turkeys and chickens. Phone to their home in Chicago. phia, spent several days this week The ladies of the Newark M. E. 4744. Mrs. J. D. Jaquette, Newark. with Mrs. Frederick Ritz, W. Park Church are holding a supper this 6,17,ltc Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Davis, Cleve- Place. evening on the lawn at the home of STOVE AND REFRIGERATOR-Gas Ave., attended the graduating Dorothy Simmons, E . Main St., en- Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dawson, West Main stove, fo ur burner with oven. Ice at Wil son College, Cham­ r efrigerator. Dial Newark 3373. tertailled Wednesday at a farewell Street. 6,17,ltp Pa., on Tuesday. Mr. party and luncheon for Julia Dutton, I Mrs. Mabel Hough and daughte; , sister, Betty, of Altoona, was W. Main Street. FERTILIZER-Reasonably priced for member of the graduating class. all types of crops. We are distribu· Mrs. Weldon C. Waples and daugh- I tors for the Virginia-Carolina !liss DOl'othy D. Damel;on, E. Main tel', Nancy, are spending several POCKET WATCH USED Chemical Corporation. Phone 8221. Jarmon and Moore, South College spent the week-end in Baltimore weeks at their cottage at Rehoboth. AS COMPASS ON OUTING Avenue. 2,ll,tfc guest of Miss Lillie Fry and Howard Fry. Mr. E . C. Byam, Amstel Ave., sail­ ed Saturday for France. A watch can be used as a compass. FOR RENT This is done in the following manner: Mr. Samuel E. Turner, E. Main APARTMENT-2 rooms, furnished. . has been transferred to the Phila- Dr. and Mrs. C. C. Palmer, W. Point the hour hand of the watch to 13 Choate Street. Call after 8 office of the Continental- Park Place, are visiting relatives in the sun, ~nd south is exactly halfway P. M. 6-17-tf-p Fibre Company. Ohio. between the hour hand and the XII Hartford agents are on the watch. APARTMENT-170 W. Main Street, Miss Jan' - -- . . Mr. and Mrs. George Buttles and 2nd floor, 3 rooms and bath, heat Ice Sargent, WellSVIlle, N. son of Fargo North Dakota are For example, assuming it is 9 0'- (oil burner). Gen'l Elec. refriger­ SP1nt se~eral days this week with visi~ing Dr. a~d Mrs. T. F. Manns, clock, point the hour hand (indicating easier to locate • • • ator, gas stove, shades, screens, etc. nn Ritz, W. Park Place. W. Park Place. . nine) to the sun, and the l?oint half­ Furnished or unfurnished. Call way betwene X and XI is due south; Newark 3975. 6-27-tfc On Tue s da~ Newark Girl Miss Ann Ritz, W. Park Place, ac­ or assume that it is 4 o'clock, point APARTMENT-Second floor. 69 W. the . hour hand to the sun and the HERE'S WHY took a boat trip to Philadel- companied by her nephew, Thomas Delawal'e Ave. 6,10,2t . They were accompanied by Ingham, and his friends, Carleton figures II indicate south. . Frank K. Simmons, Mrs. Robert Douglass, David Anderson and Wil­ Yon get something extra when we write you a policy WANTED 1111' S. lard Crater, left Wednesday morning Morris Ewing, and the 1:1!l=...,.=l!:..o=1..... =J!z.oo '=~=====...... ,=~=~== in the Hartford. But witlwut extra cost. WAITRESSES, must have experience. Frances Wilson, Dorothy to spend a we~k at Williamsville, ~ Call 2902. 6,17,ltc and Alice Sheldon. You get unusually quick service wherever you may GIRL OR WOMAN for general house­ and Mrs. Edward Krewatch M:~:sCh~::::: McMullen spent the R. T. JONES be. IT you remain in tills territory, of course call us work. Apply John Lawrence, Sr., Elk Mills, Md. Phone Elkton 349 W. children, Katherine, Thelma, and week-end in Selbyville. quneral Director i~ case of any need. 6,17,ltc IT you have an emergency while on tour, call EXPERIENCED COOK-Call 2958 Upholstering or apply at t he Ark Restaurant, Western Union and' ask for the name and address of 73 E. Main St., Newark. 6-17-lt-p Week-End Specials and Repair Work oj All Ki"dJ a nearby Hartford man. You'll get immediate service. ~tRLY JUNE PEAS ...... · ····· · ·2 Reg. Cans 17c by Experienad Mechanics MISCELLANEOUS W~UR ...... , .. , .... 5-1b Bag 29c; 12-1b Bag 55c Ali Work Guarantred PAPER hanging and painting. Esti­ C EATIES ... . . , ...... 2 Lg. Pkgs. 23c mates cheerfully given. Roland AUIl1PB ELL'S BEANS ...... 2 Reg. Cans ZOc F y Gibson, 41 Cleveland Ave., dial LL LINE OF MAJESTIC PICKLES AND RELISH w. Harry Dawson Newark 3364. 6,17,2t 14 VARIETIES ...... Lg. Jar 10c I 2 2 'Welt Matn Street 156 W. Main Street LOST SHORTY TWEED .. Newark. .. Phone 6661 148 E. MAIN STREET BIRD DOGS-Two Belgian Grifon Pktme 622I male and ~emale, grayish brown: WHERE SERVICE AND QUALITY ARE THE BYWORD reward. Dial Newark 3391. Phone 8091 We Deliver 6-17-1k --~ June Weddings Showers Gilts Select Practical Articles Such As a Useful Electrical Appliance, Some Fancy China, Glassware, Pyrexware, Kitchen Utensils, Chromeware and Other Appropriate Articles- All at Jackson's Hardware Store LOCAL ~ The Newark Post

8 THE NEWARK POST, NEWARK, DELAW AR~

ROAM IN' WITH STANTON COURSE DRA WS LEADERS ~-. _._.. --,.--- ~ RUTLEDGE Attempts Being Made T~ Arouse Feminine Interest In Tourney ------The Athlete L-..::..:.:....::..=..::.....----l. 1 Except for one fault, E. Victor RUSH FINISHING TOUCHES TO ANDERSON AND CONTEST DATE Armstrong, Newark's popular dis­ tributor of newspapers and periodicals, NEW PLANT AT DELA WARE PARK JEFFERS MOVE PUSHED UP TO ~a:ke_:p .pe~~c! Kent Handicap, $10,000 Test For Three Year Olds, Feautres TOWARD TITLE SUN. ]UNE2 one fly in the Opening Card On June 26; Burke And Turner ointment, so to Arrange Program; War Admiral Coming Former Advances To Quarter Opening of Delaware Park s peak, is the By "The Roamer" Finals In First Sixteen As Original Starting Date smiling gentle- I I Elkton Star Wins man's constant As workmen rush the finishing touches to the elaborate Makes Change desire to tell of Delaware Steeplechase and Race Association course at Stanton, TURNER SHAlTERS PAR GIRLS CROWN IS hi s p erform- prominent breeders and owners are already stabling valuable G. F. Anderson blasted his way into ances as a star I J 26 May Arouse Enough runner at Perki- mounts prior to ~he start of the 25-day meet on une. the quarter finals for the champion- In Town To Stage ship of the first sixteen golfers at the Affair omany,men Prep many these "THE ROAMER" Better Stables Listed Newark Country Club this week when For Women Exclusively years passed. While he has never said The program a1'l'anged by Edward he eliminated Bob Good, 4 and 3. C. By Ace eeds so, we have it fr om some of his Burke, who built the track at Havre Game Sunday H. J effers, Jr., of Elkton, took the In order to enco urage women closer f riend s that VIC has, on occa- de Grace and who has operated it for I measure of C. H. Hopkins, 1 up, on I --- ers, the tournament committee S f t . h that Huey Morris, president of the Tuesday to step I'nto the qual·ter finals sion, hinted that his proper name I a quarter 0 a cen UlY, IS suc Newark YellowJ'ackets , an- Mauri Rose, nation al automobile arkeshrdlu shrdlu sr dulhs ' Virgil. Due to his winning wa~s on the new COUl'se is attracting many of for the second sixteen title. racing champion, shown a bove, will the cindel'S-events that had r esIdents the better stables. Among the out fi ts pounced yesterday that a game Anderson entered t he second round ing plans for the sccond annual demonstrate t he skill, s peed and ARK POST tennis tourney, has of t he Perkiomen Valley greeting him already listed to race at Delaware had been al'l'anged for Sunday by outlasting Bob Lippincott, 1 up, in daring which won hi m the title when as "victol'''-we have been told that he Park are the Foxcatcher Farm, Mr. a t Continental Field between the a match t hat was close throughout. cided to hold a separate <> \' ~ ~ Earling, c aj <> II' ~ 0 A special invitation is issued team, .the Jack~ts should ha~:h fo~nd class B for $1,100 and class C for lenger, Don Jobes, Buddy Hornberger ;;~~~~:-N ;::"k ...... \ ~OI' ,Los t :'31j ~1~k;"a~, Ii ~ : ~ gA ~~~': s~rt~1 c ~ ~ ~ gg summer schoo l students and UDl"_;UUrts. by thiS time t at games WI ou a $1,000. and Stan Bailey. I ~osse tt-New a rk ...... 6 .750 ~~t."Jl~~n, p ; ~ ~ : ~ W;;:;:;:"~flf j ~ f 1g sity f.aculty m e~b e r s, .i n the hope pennant race as an attachment are The pari mutuel will prevail at Aiken, who was Biles' pitching ace ~ ~~ d~;:iI!E Ik~~~ .::::: :::: :: ~ :~ l: Fitzgerald, Ib 3 I III 0 Pelrillo, Ib 20 1 80 the list of entnes wII! swell to anything but profitable. The mere Delaware Park with the smallest in the t-season series again t Ne Pr yor- Chesa&eake City 4 .571 ~;~:~, rtf ~ g~ gg ~{ ~~:; a ~I~ . Zb ~ 1g ~ ~ precedented proportions. playing of exhibition tests week afteris "take" anywhere in the world and ark la~:sfall, saw little servi~e wi7h ~~~I~;~~N~w::kark. . ::::::::: : : ~ Perr y, c 3 0 I 4 2 Malin ski, 3b I 0 0 3 I It is being planned to we~k, regardless of opposing forces'h three per cent of it to the State. No Fordham this spring. The Kennett r~~k,;~~::N:w ~~k ': ::::::::::: ~ :m Totals 26 7 818 14 ~=:t~n,p 55 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ matches all day Sunday at looked upon as being pointless by t e profit is looked for or desired by the S b II a rt' t d Adam s Elkton 3 .333 Magee, p I 00 0 0 times in order to run the majority of fans. They like and will promoters of racing in Delaware. En- cu:;ve- h · 1S ma e 2.286 Totals 26 109 19 12 rounds off in speedy fash ion. qua.r~ ~ t l a~ Wiili n~o n - Ne';' ;~k ·:::: : :::: pay to see a race with something at t taO t f th bl' d th auspICIOUS ow In IS re urn to oca Myers-Newark ...... 2 .222 soEn-. rors : Conway. Whiteman, Malinski, Swan- . d P ge stake. Individual games mean nothing. er mmen or e pu IC an e circles on Monday night, however, BASEBALL STANDING r (Contmue on a As an example of how returns in- improvement of the breed of horses when he turned in a no-hit, nO-TUn Ne ...t.t!.~i1if!'.tul~"'" are the objectives as at Saratoga, game as Fairville handed Mt Cuba Continental 9, Jackson 's 0 (Forfeit) :~:!n!~r w:a!~: :as;!:~~t °V;:n::; Belmont Park, Arlington Park and a 9-0 reverse in a Del-Pen League fd~t~ ~~~!s ~:bC~r~in~~r~ina l . 3 when Milford, with one of the finest Hialeah. game at Mt. Cuba. The battle was StandiI1&' of the T\Vo:;' Lost Pel. ANNOUNCING teams on the peninsula, played to a Buick To Be Host limited to seven innings. fon~~~~~tal ...... ~ ~ : ~;~ A Change In Location scant crowd that grossed $39 here. WATCH "PHIL" YOUNGSTERS N:;; I~~ ~ : :.::::::::·.'.:::: : :::.:.:.:. :. 41 4 .sao On the same afternoon at Yorklyn, a T 0 Millions For Keep your eyes on your sights lev- 9 .111 OF Del-Pen League game with Hockessin Title Scrap Soon elled at five youngsters in the lineup Pl nye r . Tea!ATTING LEAc?E~~ R JI Pet. THE NEWARK LAUNDRY netted $49. Yet the latter opponents of the "Phillies"; Arnovich and Mar- ~;~r ; ~Oc~nj :·: ··N~· t, i :·:: ~ :~ ~ ~ :m do not stack up with Newark and Buick will be host to the nation at tin in the outfield; Brown, Young and Conway. COll I...... 8 22 8 II .500 FROM Milford when baseball ability is con- the championship Jim Braddock-Joe Scharein in the infield. The first two ~ d ~: ~ ~s o ~ . ~o 'C;;ni . " ::::::: ~ ~ : II : :;~ 131 E. MAIN STREET sidered. Louis fight to be held in Chicago, June are hitting close to .400 and the lat- ~ ~: ;o; . °j~~k~~·~ '~···"· · · · ~ ~ ~ ~ :m TO, The entire game was built around 22, according to George M. Haney, of ter three are glittering in the field. (' Kn otts . Ca rds 3 9 I 3 333 leagues and organizations. For New- the Wilmington Auto Sales Company, Fil7.gerald . C~ tTI .. ::::::: 7 21 I 5 :238 134 E. Main Street ark to think it can buck that idea is Buick dealers, who announced yester- MY KINGDOM FOR A HIT Ca nnoll . Jackson's ...... J 8 0 2 .250 THE SAME GOOD SERVICE AND REASO ABLE PR ICES ridiculous. day that the factory has signed con- Fred Tauby, recruit outfielder from Food is highest in New York City. R-W-R tracts for the broadeast of the event Texas has not made a hit in the Seen and Heard over a nation-wide NBC hookUp. Major Leagues as yet for the "Phil­ The spotted appearance of cars that "I received word Tuesday from W. lies." He has gone to bat 16 times are parked overnight on Amstel Ave- F. Hufstader, our general sales man­ and drawn the "collar." A few days nue is not created by drops of white- agel', that Buick again will sponsor Tennis FRANK C. MA YER ago he purchased a pac~age of hair­ wash . . . birds have been suffering the major fight broadcast of the year pins and sprinkled them around the Racquets Representing with diarrhea this spring. "If thi. as it sponsored the Baer-Louis and batter's box. keeps up, you'll have me believing Schmeling-Louis scraps last year and 1======that I was acttfally an athelete," WIUI year before," Mr. Haney said. "This is Restrung MILLARD F. DAVIS, Inc. Tom Pennock's modest remark when (Continued on Page 9) APPIJOII 831 MARKET ST. WILMINGTON, DE(.. presented. with a medal for being 0 ...... 0- LEO LASKARIS named the "most ootstaning athlete" 1======•• -.111 .• ,..... " JEWELRY ...... ,. 4t E. MAIN STREET DIAMONDS at the University of DelawAire. Ellis sey-Tunney fight, which he witnessed SAFE. SURE WATCHES Cullen, who pilots the Continental in Philadelphia, Cullen stated that he oll8.lPoTGUARANTEED ._ ...... 1, _ Dial Newark 3851 team, is constantly thinking of base- "certainly got wet in the Bel'enth ..II&U~~--.. Between 5 - 7 PHONE 'tJEWARK 3257 ball . . . in telling of the first Demp- I inning." RHODES DRUG STORE 9

Thomas has also scouted and de- STATE OF DELAWARE +1 M S P 0 ------+1 livered many other well known big CE R?-:Wfctr~"Oi~·'JI;JI~~'ION RT S Y E R 0 U T , league players. Among them were To All Whom Th.... Preocnts May Com., ~I Gree Un.: - • Vern Kennedy, at present a star right Where•• , It npl>cars to m y s"tiS£action by Contest Date Pushed By BILL McGOWAN handel' of the Chicago White Sox, duly authenticated record of the p1'oceedings of the voluntar y dissolut ion thereof, by the con­ Up to Sunday, June 27 American League Umpire "Mule" Haas, Johnny Marcum, Wally sent of a ll the stockhold ers deposhcd in my office. the - Moses, Doc Cramer, and the popular 11 IlI!Y DI S IT Co nponATION (Con~inued from Palre 8) Scouts-"Ivory Hunters" you th who made a hit with A's fol- (WESTEIIN) plans prOVIde for the playing off of lowers last season, Catcher Frank a corporati on of this State whose principal the semi final d fi I Each of the 16 major league base- 'The~~ dog follows thee fl1l' the crumbs in I office is situated at WI NER of the sec­ f II . - S ~n na rounds on the ball teams carry at least six experi- Hayes. No. tOO \Vest Tenth Street. NEW ARK POST to urna­ thy~a." in the cit y of \Vilmington. County of New Cas­ o owmg bun ay. Should this ar- enced men of the diamond on their During the winter months, Thomas JUNE tle, S tate of Delaware slated to take place in the very rangement e carried out, the tourney who is becoming nationally known as ll-The United Stat .. The Corporation Trust Company declared war aQCllnat being agent therein, and in charge thereof. future, wo uld .----;-:--:-:--; will be completed within a week. ::es ~~er S~c!~::' an after dinner speaker, represents u pon wholll procc:Js Ill ay be served. has COm ­ Great Britain. 1812. plied with the requirements of the Corpor:1.tion like scarchi~lg F~voritesh expected to line up for a commonly called Gulf Refining Company. His duties i ll-Maine .parated from La.ws of the S tate of Delaware. as contain ed 2101. J87, the proverbial cl'a~ I at t e championship include: "ivory hunters." are confined almost entirely to repre- '~ , . the stale of Massachu- in 1915. Section 1, to Section Chapter 65. of the Uevised S tatutes of 1915, as amended, in the hay­ Mc u ly, Jack Sinclair, Chauncey Some of the senting his firm at banquets. It .tta.I820. preliminary to the issuing of this Wheeless, Dr. Squire, Prof. Jones, Dr. A Lot of Cents fk!l or trying to IG-The IIrII patent on the CE RTIFrCATE OF DI SSOLUT TON C. R. Kase, Leo and Chris Lp.skaris, scouts are as- Here's one of Thoma's yarns. It is Now, therefore. I. CHARLES L, TERRY, JR .. find a grain of salt ~~sJ.'aa Issued to Secretary of State qf the State of Delaware, do Harold Tiffany, Bob Hancock, Elwood signed exclusive- in connection with one of hs scouting j :a hereby certHy that the B\lid corporation did on wit h your mono­ Miller, George Mix and Robert Daw- Iy to the small the on it m the 21-McCormIck obtained his twelfth day 01 June A. D, 1937 son. towns in search trips. ,~ linIt pa\entfor a reaptno file in the, office a duly executed and attested Ocean, of alent. One or He 'Was looking over an Indian ball ~ lI'.achlne.l834. conlent, in writing. to the dissolution of said the ab­ Etnry Fee Sman Corporation executed by all the s tockholders two are desig­ player in a far west town. Late in ~prlnllno office of the tho three"BILL" FLETCHER thereof, which said consent and the r ecords of An entry fee of fifty cents per per­ nated to cover the game, the Indian was called out Baltimore Federalist d. the p roceedings aforesaid, are now on file in is regrettable, ' the son in the singles and fifty cents per u lIIroyed bya mob. 1812. my offiCI! as provided by law. the college Bill McGowan on st'rikes by the umpire. The bases ~ In T ..tlmony Whe""", edge is no less sharp and team in the doubles will be charged to were loaded at the time. After the 2S-wtlllam Penn made his I have hereunto set my teams and high schools. They all take famous treaty with the hand and official seal, at racquet fans should be in ,for cover expenses. Tennis balls will be a turn looking over the minor lagues call of "strike three," the Indian hol~ . Indiana. 1683. Dover this twelfth day of furnished by the sponsors. lered and yelled about the decision' on d (OFFICIAL SEAL) June in the year 01 our real te nn is trea t, ill hope. of picking up another Ruth, 24-Jay·. Treaty with Lord one thousand nine C, RoY Donoho, ~Iue Hen ace who All persons wishing to take part in Cobb, or Walter Johnson. the third one. ~ Enoland ratII1ed by the hundred and thirty·seven_ the title 10 a hard-fought ~ Senate.1795. .""" CHARLES L. TERRY, JR. the tourney are asked to sign the A ' tip comes to a big league club The umpire stood for the protesting Secretary of Stnte with Fred Davies last year, official entry blank, and return it with owner or manager that concerns a player several minutes, then after ab le to defend his crowd. the entry f~es, to this paper, care of youthful prospect. Immediately the warning him, finally ejected him from Len Music Bought • Delaware star work in the Tennis Editor. All entries are sub­ STATE OF DELAWARE rookie is investigated. A scout is the game, adding a fine of $10. But More Is Heard Office of Secretary of State he expects to visit New­ ject to the approval of the tournament League rules prevented any player CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION dispatched to look him oved and make To All Wh_ Th... Pre.... 1e May C_., the week-ends a nd thus be committee. It is hoped to have umpires report. participating in another tame until Between the hours of 7 :30 and 10 Greetln.: appointed to see that matches are o'clock each evening, it is believed WhereaaJ It appears to my antiafaction by -'_~Il." . position to make an attempt at the fines were paid. The folowing day, duly authenticated record of the proceedings of off another leg on the trophy. run off according to schedule and to Evans Liked Feller as the terns took the field, and the im­ that there are 16,600,000 radio re­ the voluntary dissolution thereof, by the con 4 Many times it results in a wild sent of aU... the stockholders deposited in my and Dr. C. L. Day, 1936 remove the burden of close decisions pire was about ready to shout "pay ceiving sets in operation in the Unit­ office, the champions, are definitely out from the shoulders of the players goose chase on the part of the scout. ball," the Indian walked up to the ed Staes and 60,0~0,000 people are .GOOD NEIGHBOR LEAGUE. IN C, a corporation of this State whose principal the tourney. themselves. All participants are urged Then again, as in the case of the sen­ umpire and said, "Here's my fine listening. A few years ago there office is situated at , sational pitching find of 1936, Bob were 8,000,000 phonographs and a No. 100 West Tenth Street. ~-) to send in their entries before Satur­ Mister Umpire," as he rolled a thous­ in the city of Wilmington, County of New COlS ­ day, June 19, in order that players Feller, of the Cleveland Indians, the and pennies on the home plate. number of new records were bought tie, State of Delawa re ING OVER THE present crop may be properly seeded and final ar­ efforts and days of long travel are for each machine every month. To­ The Corporation Trust Company entered and expected Thinking Ahead! being agent therein,. and in cbarge thereof, to ra.ngements made for the opening not always in vain. Billy Evans, " Count 'em," piped the Indian. But day royalties from the sales of rec­ upon whom process may be served, has com­ like Chauncey (Sonny) plied with the requirements of the Corporation rounds. former business manager of the the umpire, willing to take his word ords have dropped to one-fortieth of Laws of the State of Delaware, as contained may have enough of what Indians, had received a tip from a in 1915. Section I , to 2101. Section 187, Chapter Three set matches will comprise the for the correct amount ,started pick­ what they previously were. 65 , of the Uevised Statutes of 1915, as ahleaded, to blast his way to the top of opening settos. Semi-final and final semi-pro umpire in Iowa about the kid ing up the penines by the handful. Once a popular song sold 1,760,000 In any case, the former pr e lir~ERfd,"rcY'AT~s'(\Fg Di~~3LUTTON matches in the men's tournament will Feller. Evans, very much interested "No, no, count 'em,-Big Chief copies, Now 100,000 is a heavy sale. of Delaware captain will Now. therelore. I, CHARLES L, TERRY, JR,. consist of the best three sets out of in the boy's strike out record, investi­ wants receipts." At one time 8,000 shops carried sheet Secretary of Sta te of the State of Delaware, do hereby certify that the said corpora tion did on plenty tough for the con­ five, while the women's contests will gated and learned that young Bob "It's tough enough to pick 'em up, music. Now there are hardly 1,200. the He was not entered last year. be three-set affairs all the way was pitching against first class ama­ let-alone counting 'em and giving you Yet folks here more music than ever filteent h day 01 June A, D, 1937 McCully can also be depended fi le in the office a dul y executed and attested through. tuer teams. Evans sent scout Cy a r eceipt, get out of here or I'll chase before. consent, in writing, to the dissolution of said to warm things uP a bit in the Slapnicka westward, to watch the Co rporation executed by a ll the s tockholders you out of the park," retorted the thereof, which said consent and the records of .. ,,"''''''' '- ,-, for the Newark tennis crowd. Buick To Be Host To youngster. Slapnicka saw the kid official. the proceedings aforesaid. are now on file in nemi ses cracked down on him work and immediately signed him to STATE OF DELAWARE my office as provided by Jaw. Millions For "Big Chief, he want r eceipt, some Office of Secretary of State In Testimony Whereof, year in th e semi-finals when he a contract. 'The r est is history, Feller CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION I ha ve hereunto set my day he die,-face St. Peter, who -will To All Whom These Presents May Come, hand and official seal, at defeated in a torrid five-set tilt (Continued from Page 8) proving to be the best pitching pos­ ask Big Chief if he was always honest. Greeting: Dover this fifteenth day Donoho. McCully's style, a pect to come. into the American Whereas, It appears to my satisfaction by (OFFICrAL SEAL) 01 June in th e yeaI' 01 our the 1937'5 'battle of the century' and St. Peter will want to know if fine was duly authenticated record of the proceedings of Lord one thousand nine slow drive, is bound 'to while everybody can't go to the r ing­ League since t he debut of Walter paid to umpire. Big Chief have no the voluntary dissolution thereof, by the con­ hundred and thirty-seven. trouble for many a would-bEl sent of all the stockholders deposited in m y CHARL ES L, TERny. JR, sid e, t he ringside will be brought by Johnson. time go all over hell looking for you offi ce, Secretary of S tatc ruler, He may not win, but Buick to millions of radi9 li steners all Ira Thomas-Ace Mi ster Umpire." in there most of t he way (we a co r po;;~i~~ ToTXt~RE~ t ~~~~h~~Y p,incipal ======over the country. The Philadelphia Athletics number '------office is situated at among their scouts, one of the /;Ices Just Fired No, 100 West 10th Street. CONNECTICUT TELEPHONE & ELECTRIC Interest Running High in the city of \Vilmington, County of New Ca s~ , CORPORATION of the profession. He is Ira Thomas, I - -- tic, S tate or Delaware CERTIFICATE OF REOUCATION OF "There is a lot of interest in the The Corporation Trust Company CAPITAL is Jumpin' who as a catcher back in the good old Boss: "Oscar, there will be a va- being agent therein, and in charge thereor, Connecticut Telephone & Electric Corporation, fight here," Mr. Haney continued, days handled t he shoots of Bender, cancy here soon and I'm thinking of upon whom process may be served, has corn· a corporation organized and existing under the who may 0 1' may not be plied with the requirements of the Corporation laws of the State of Delaware, hereby certifies "and it looks as though everyone who Plank and Coombs fOl: the White giving your twin' brothel' the job." Laws of the State of Delaware, as contained as follows: . Jack's execution and (I) That at a meeting of the board of direc­ has a radio will be sitting in front of Elephants. Thomas was known as a Oscar: "My twin brother?" in 1915. Section I. to 2101. Section 187, Chapter of shots is one of the 65 , of the Revised Statutes of 1915, as amended, tors of said corporation duly convened and it when the bell rings fOl: the first Il mart receiver in the big show. When Boss : "Yes, the one I saw watch- preliminary to the issuing of this held on the 18th day of 1\'farch, 1937, at 10 :00 town, bu t he faces two o'clock A. ~r., the following resolution was round of the big event. Whether the his playing days were over, Ira be- ing the ball game yesterday while CERTIFTCATE OF D1SS0LUTTON adopted : every match-a tricky Now, therefore. I. CHAR LES L , TERRY, JR., HE OLVEO, th:lt the capital of this fi g ht lasts one or fifteen rounds, Buick Secreta ry of State of the S tate of Delaware, do f•• p erament and a racquet wielder on came a scout for Connie Mack. One you were at your aunt's f uneral" corporation be reduced by reducing the wiII broadcast every detail of it, ar­ hereby certify that the said corporation did on cnpital represented by the outstanding of the net. He was of his first pick-ups developed into one Oscar: "Oh, yes, I remember; I'll the sha.res of common stock or no par va lue rangements having been made fOl' fourteenth day of J une A. D. 1937 of this corporatio l1, being the only out ­ of the greatest ball player s of all go hunt him up." fil e in the office a duly executed and attested n.1..;~ !r e m o'v e a fro m the 1936 champion- radio time to covel' every eventuality. outstanding s tock of this corporation, Donoho in a stTaight-set t ime, Al Simmons being the rookie he Boss : "Good, and don't 'come back consent. in wriling, to the dissolution of said from $699,800 to $294,320 so that each There will be a blow-by-blow descrip­ Corporation executed by a ll the stockholders outstanding share of no par common match. brought into the fold. until you find him." thereor, which said consent and the records of s tock of this corporation shall represent tion of the fi ght by one announcer and the proceedings arorcsaid, arc now on fi le in capital of $40.00 and by transferring the to reports, E I Miller, amount of $405,480 (being the amount of general description of the fighters, the In Testimony Whereof, and Bob Dawson are not my office as provided b y law. the reduction or the capital of this ringside and crowds by another." ;======::======~ I I have hcreunto set m y corporation) from the capital stock hand and official seal, at lightly when a look MI'. Haney said that the largest account to the capital surplus account oi into the future. The dope Dover this fourteenth day the corporation. radio hookup ever to broadcast a Fresh and (OFFIC IA L SEAL) of June in th e yea r 01 our (2) That the adoption of the foregoing resolu­ pickcd up is that the new­ Lord one thousand nine tion by the bo.., rd of directors was s upple ~ major fight will be employed by Buick. hundred and thirty-seven. mented, in accordance with the provisions of al'c plenty good and will have CHA RLES L , TERRY. JR. Secion 28 of t he General Corpora lion La w of This will consist of 125 stations of the Salt Water Secretar y or S tate the S tate of Delawa1'e, by the adoption of the \ . dcred before t he final die same resolution by the stockholders or said NBC's red and blue networks. corporation at a special meeting of the stock­ F- h-n T kle STATE OF DELAWARE holders or said corporntion held on the 2Jrd ~~ Jones Ranks High As IS I g ac I C ER~~ictT~OJ-rrIs'MWTION da&)o~~~~r;~I /~il eD ~ I~;~~S a~f5~~~'~~;t a~ d i~~ To AU Whom These Presents May Como, ADDED FEATURE to this year's Student And Athlete ~f\dthl~a~~ia ;~st~ lt ~i~~\~~r r~d~ ~e vtl~~d c~~ it~~l v~( will be the separate women's BAIT RODS FLY RODS w'i:~:.w'rt appears to my satislaction by this corp ration. (4) T hat snid specia l m cetin g or s tockholders which will be staged if the Robert Thomas Jones, Jr., son of $1.00 and up $2.00 and up ~h~y v~~~~~~:~caJi~so'i~W~ ~~e~~~I~r~e~~;g:o~~ was held punHl nnt to wniver of notice signed sex shows enough interest in the Mr .and Mrs. R. T. Jones. of 122 W. sent 01 all the stockholders deposited in my by the holders of all the shares or the corpora ­ tion setting forth that said reduction of capitnl to sign up. If carried out, it will Main Street, attained high scholastic Flies _ Plugs _ Leaders & Hooks and Lines offic~iHE INDEPENDENT STEAMSHIP wou ld be voted upon il t said special meeting, in fir st affair of its kind in the and athletic honors during his fil'St Ae Reasonable Prices a corporation 01 C~I~! P~i!~ whose principal accordance with the laws of the State of Dela­ year at Tome School, Port Deposit. office is sit uated at ware. fi I ~~l ;~d t ~!fc~~d~I:Ls ~~ rt~~~~t~e ~eib: i~~u t~l~~ to entel' is Miss Ann President of the 1936 graduating JOHN M. SINGLES in the city N,,'f' ~m%';t~~O&u~~~ee~1 New Cas· capita.l of this corporation will thereby be so reduced from $699,800 to $294,320, in the manner one of the greateest girl class at Newark High School, Jones tIe St atT h~ g~~~-::r~~tion Trust Company set forth above. turned out of Newark entered Tome last September. At the GUNS RIFLES AND AMMUNITION being agcnt therein, and in charge thereol, (6) That the assets of the corporation re­ maining "fter such reduction arc s ufficien t to Ann's capers on the graduation exercises Monday, he ,vas ' ~fl~d :nh~h~r~~~~ir~r::nt~e ofe~h:dCoh~~r~~k:~ bay any debts, the payment of which has not and hockey field are presented with a Cum Laude certifi- 151 E. MAIN STREET NEWARK, DELAWARE ~a~91 5~ 1 st:c~io~talt~ t~1 2g~ ~as~~i;0~\87~ng~~~~ )eiN ~r:rNiESSreVi1EdR~oO·F said Connecticut stand in g out in the minds cate for outstanding scholastic work, ter 65. 01 the Revised Statutes 01 1915, .. Telephone & Electric Corporation has caused this certificate to be executed by Hal. P. hi s marks for the year averaging be- Sports fans. A gold medal ':~~~~~~~~:::~~~:::~:::~:::~:::::::::~:::::::::~I amen~tRtf~~CJ\TE?' hFt~I~"t8t6TM~is Shearer, its presidentf and Thomas A. McGrath. be awarded Newark's queen of tween 80 and 90; and also received -:: Now. therelore, I. CHARLES L. TERRY, JR. , its secretag' and Its corporate seal to be certificates for varsity letters in foot- ~~;:b~a'!er~[f:t~:t o{h~h~a~da~~r~~fa~l~:did ~~ ~ONr:Jk"CTrCU(~ t~i E i~tI{o~if&?Erilb RIC COI!POIlATION, ~-) ball, baseball and basketball. He plans UNO OTHER TIRE CAN the lour teen th day 01 June A, D. 1937 fl y Hal p, Shearer to return to Tome in the fall. file in the office a duly execu ted and attested President AGAIN we fi nd it necessary to consent, in writing, to the dissolution of said Thomas A. rtfcGrath Corporation executed by all the stockholders Secretary our plea for volunteers who WILSON A BUSY MANAGER thereol, which said consent and the records 01 Corporate Seal to place a net in our hands the proceedings aforesaid, are now on aJe in 1929 In the three years that Jimmy Wil­ m y office as provided by law. D.; lawa.re in the tourney. . . . Len Fos­ In Testimony Whereof, Connccticut T elephone & Electric Corporation son has managed the "Phillies" he has I have hereunto set my is gracefull y bowing out of the played first base, second base and hand and official seal. at STATE OF CONNECTICUT J . this year with a claim of old Dover this fourteenth day COUNTY OF" NE\V HAVEN SS. caught behind the bat. He also be­ MATCH THIS (OFFlCrAL SEAr_) of June in the year 01 ou r , . . the 1936 tourney was a hum- Lord one thousand nine BE IT REMEMBERED, that on this 17th lieves he can pitch as well as some of far as tigQt matches were dHAWL~'t. ~i~hy~VlR: ~~ '¥.e~~a'i. An i~e~:3~, N~t~,Orn;' lIpu f}ji~ eiie~O:d 1~~==1R'~_a s the youngsters he has seen come up ARMORUBBER KELLY" . . both the singles and Secretary or S tate for the County and State aforesaid, HAL P . fin als were stretched a ll t he from the minor leagues. Wilson, in­ ======I ~H~~!~~~~ , C~~~~~~';fo~: ~ond~~)~~~:i ~e l ~fh~h; cidentally, is enjoying his best sea­ STATE OF DELAWARE tho limit of five sets . . . Dr. Office of Secretary of Stat. ;I~ d te wl~ic~el~~~~~~t'eJ h ~ h~orl~:~~~i~lg d~~~~ilfiec~t~~ son in five years at the bat, having T:rs~~~i~e;:~~t e~~~~ CERTIFICATE OF DISSOLUTION 'ms he 'll be "cannon fodder" To All WhGm The•• Presenta Ma" Como, :1~~ \V~~i J o J.rl~f ~~ r ~ol~:~ I~r,to a~e s ~~I~ h 'p;~~~lc~~: still hearing Dr. Squire's and made 7 hits in 18 times at bat. day from enthusiastic GreeUn.: duly executed 5:l id certifi cate before me and Kelly users. They say -Whereas, It appears to my satisfaction by acknowledged the said certificate to be his act cry of "old age" echoing CAMILLI'S HEADACHES dul y authenticated record of the proceedinga of and deed and the act and deed of said corpora ­ there's nothing like this the voluntary dissolution thereof. by the eon · tion: thilt the signatures of the said president , . , George Laskaris is great A rmorubber Tread! sent or aU the stockholders deposited in my and secretary of the said corporation to said to go places with a new After Dolph Camilli signed his office, the foregoin g certificate a re in the handwriting or That's because Armorub­ DOLAU MINTNG CORPORATION the said president and secretary of the said was the first to sign up for contract with the "Phillies" and start­ ber is a different kind of a corpora tion of this State whose prinoipal corporation, respectively, and that the scal office is situated at affixed to sa id certificate is the common or shindig so it looks li ke he's ed east by automobile he ran into rubber ••. tougher, No. 100 We.t Ten th Street, nothing except trouble. Going through harder, more wear-resis­ in the city or \Vilmington, County of New Cas cOFNor\VJTN~Sgr 'vtlrE~E'OF~t~onhave hereunto tant. Specially made for tIc, State of Delaware set my hand and seal or office the day and Wyoming he had t 0 blowouts. In The Corporation Trust Company yea r aforesaid. FERN L, DILGER Nebraska he burne out ~is bearings. today'lf cars I Take ad­ being agent therein, and in charge thereof. vantage of our prices. It's upon whom process may be served has eom~ Notary Public In Illinois he brok a piston and fi­ My cOITlln iuion ex-pires Feb. I, J9J8. good sense to Armorub­ ~!~8 w~tb t~~e S~~~:ir~fD"etl~:!r!~e a;o~~:i~~ d nally finished Ohio by buying ~~~~r; ' p~i6fi~r ber your wheels 110W ••• in 1915, Secti on 1, to 2101. Section 187, Chap· men and women entering ter 65 , of the Revised Statutes of 1915, as Meriden, Conn. rling world were children, a new car. and keep 'em that way! amen~thtfF~CJ\TE?' hOF th.5I ~"t8tMlo~i. OF FI C~T&;; ~.?c!R ~fkNv '6~E STATE in arms and t he subject KElLY-SPRINGFIELD TIRES Now, tbereIore, I, CHARLES L. TERRY, JR .. I, CHARLES lJo TE RRY. JR. , Secretary 01 lakcs us back to the heroic ~~~~~~'!.r~!I;t:~~to:h~h~a~~a~~rop~r~I~:aJi'j ~~ State 01 th e State 01 Delaware. DO HER EBY the town hero who mad\J a the CERT IFY that the above and loregoin ff is a fou rteenth day of June A. D. 1937 ~r~~~ a~fd cC.~ri~!1 cogr °lfh~er ~}~O~e tCT\e~Uc.r to l'OBc ue a child from fil e in the offiee a duly executed and attested TEI_ EPHON~ .." ~: I_ ECTRlC CORPOnA'. homc. His words, " It wasn't C~~~~~ti ~~ ':~~~~f~d tOb;h~lIdi~h~lu ~~:.sc ~~td:~~ TrON," as received and fi led in this office the anybody would have done the thereof, which laid consent and the recorda of X~h~~~ day of June, A. D . 19J7, at 11 o'clock ing if they loved kids like ~I; o"ffi~e~~ n;r~ vi~~deta;d!a~~e no.. OD file 10 ~~veT~~~:'~I!t~ ~,~ t ~~Eh~~~F~nJ brings up the question of In TeatlmOft,.. Whereof, official seal, at Dover, this eighth I h ave hereunto set m y day of June in the rear of our the subject's matel'l1al insLinct hand and official seal, at l~rd one thousand ntne hundred Dover this fourteenth day and tbirtY4seve:n through his visits to LES 01' ma Ybe it's the same (OFFICrAL SEAL) t,~dn c;,,:~ t~ho~::~dol nJ::~ (Slf~~~ed lor Re.;,'!r S~rJt~~,.R~ ' l~i~ . hundred and thirty-seven. June 7, 1937 lhat started him on the trips CHARLES L. TERR',,'. JR. Albert Stetser. Rocorder first place. 24 S. COLLEGE AVENUE NEWARK Secretar y of tste 6,IO,Jt MI'. an Mrs. Knowles R. Bowen, of OBITUARY Ipendence and patriotism; for these Cotton picking machines will pick Kennett Square, was flow er gil'i. ideals Rl'e part of the vital stuff of an acre of cotton hourly. Charles R. Talley, Jr., son of Mr. and FRANK A.GIFFORD living." I r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:;;:;;~~~~~ CAL END A R Mrs. Charles R. Talley, was the ring Frank A. Gifford, 64-year old In conclusion, Dr. Stine stated, I j OF bearer. farmer, died at the Temple Univer- "This business of Jiving, this op- HEATERLESS PERMANENT Regula r COMING EVENTS Mr. William Worrall, of Kennett sity Hospital on Saturday, June 12. portunity-actually, th~s opportunity - $7.00 __• __ ._._ Square, was best m~n.' and Messrs. J. ! Services were held from. his late home which is open to everyone of us, is ~ Special For Limited Time .••••--- .. ----.------.-.------... Samuel Taylor, WIlham F. Harlan, at Harmony, Delaware, conducted by not complex and intricate in its es.. $A Eu.ene Pennanenla June 16-17-Clean uP ' days. and H. Chandler Bernard, all of the Rev. Clyde M. Richabaugh, on sentials. The very cornerstone and (. ... ·9:·th::·.s·.t·.. .. .•. June 16-19-Eighth annual KeyVleti Kennett Square, and Mr. Gray Bowen Tuesday, June 15. Interment took bed rock of the structure is Christian 6Hth~;ol~::....L~~Dt:;;E';.::.....Nn;·,· ~S:> · Z2l··:·:· :·W··:·· ·~·.~:.:.A:.llmJ·U·.:~: .·y· .,:.::o:~:~:: .L ~ N. ...~ Square American Legion Page- Newman, brothel' of the bridegroom, place in White Clay Creek cemetery. character. To live simply, kindly, ant at Longwood Gardens. were u s ~.ers . . . ..' b humbly, unselfishly, and with ~ ~reat , Pb..,. 1-1114 N ineteenth annual 4-H Club The bIlde was given 111 maIlIage y The Sahara desert is moving south and all embracing charity-this 18 to F . D I 'P tWO - If T 1 h f b t h If '} I rat ~nou ~h~:ear!a~~5 g~~: g:~~~:~ n Notbi~;s'is ler~ ~~~ndOanrldy O,l Qua!1t, lll-... short course. her father. Mr. Paul . erl'Y, c lur~ at the rate 0 a ou a a ml e live successfully and happily," . b• prtc. rtd~ June 17-Strawberry festival and organist, played the wedding musIc. yearly. 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ffi~E~ chicken salad supper on grounds The altaI' was decor ted ,vith white Rev. Andrew W. Maye:, New~rk I. of White Clay Creek Presbyter- snapdragons and white gladioli. Natives of the Bugong Mountains P. E. Church, pronounced ~nvocatlO~. ian Church, conducted by Young The gown worn by the bride was of in Australia, relish butterflies as a The sa lutator~ and valedl~tory ~ - Peoples Society. I white net. Her veil was in cap effect. food. d~'e~seR were gIven by the ~bss:s Vlr- June 18-Flower sale at 6 :30 in front She ca1'1'ied a shower bouquet of white Its unlucky for Hindu wives to call gmJa. Cooch an~ Ruth Smclalr, . re- of Fraternal Hall, under spon- gardenias. their husbands by name. s~ectlve l y. National Honor. SocIety so rship of Ivy Crow Temple No. Miss Newman wore a gown of blue, ______pms were presented b~ Dr. H. V. 4 L G E starcher mal'quisette with leghorn hat King of Egypt is in his teens. Holloway, state supermtendent of June ' 19-N e ~ark Country Club trimmed in blue velvet. She carried a public instr uc ~ion and Robert S. dance. Charles Staib and his 01'- bouquet of talisman roses. C. M. A. Stine Says Gallaher, preSIdent of the Newark chestra. The bridesmaids wore gowns 0'£ Life is Great Career Board of Education, awarded di- June 25-July 3-Red Men's carnival yellow stal'ch marquisette, their hats plomas to the graduates. on Maxwell Lot, below N. H. S. were leghorn and also trimmed in blue (Continued from Page 1) Honor Roll Students on Academy Street. velvet. They carried bouquets- of question of how civilized the man is According to the announcement made by June 27-Second annual Newark African daisies and blue dephinium. who drives an automobile through ~li'e~i~~t: l~I~~~l~ ~gth~s 6~,~~~r~~ri' it,~ er:g~:i : Post tennis tourney opening. ~ollowing the ceremony, a r eception our cities disregarding the safety of tion 01 hl gh scholastic standing: fi rst honor was held at the home of the bride's others. E;I\~ h g r a~~n ; f;;n~n n~la~~~;':tr , ~;:':!~ :1~ CH:.~i parents. After a wedding trip north, Civilization? Johnston. Il ertha Pa""as. Ru,h inclair and Entomologist Is Mr. and Ml's. Newman will reside at "Is the h1gh school student educat- Elva Well s; grade II- Ellen Foster •. Eleanr Chevrolet Sport Sedan 916 Jefferson Street in Wilmington. ~~~~~;yR~~~lPbe\\h if~~i;;,olg~~nG·~ IO"I~~~ 't{~ r~ A warded Honors ed and civilized if barbarous in nngton. Vivian ~'lc~ l . ull en . Naudain Sla

F rom 1S~~931 to ~1933,~tr~~ Dr. Ri ce served l' d~ghl~~M~Crookshank, of ewa~drk, waM~s married~~rt ~wci~happiness ud~~in~~~~~and healthful occupation ,~,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ as an instructor in e n ~mology and to MI'. D. Randall Sprenkle, son of and the opportunities which have al- assistant entomologist for t he agricul - Mr. and Mrs. John R. Sprenkle, of ways been synonomous with Amer- R d M ' tural experiment station at t he uni- I Oxford, on Thursday, June 10, at the ican citizenship. e' en s versity of Idaho. In 1933 he received residence of the Rev. J ohn D. Tubbs, Looking Forward an aR!lointment a ~ university scholar pastor of Grace Pentecostal Church, "I am awaiting with the . keenest at OhiO State, whICh he filled for two of Newark. hope and ant icipation the apprecia- years. He also spent a year at Ohio The couple will take up residence t ion by t he young peo ple of today- State as a university fell ow while at Li ncoln, Pa. by you hi gh school graduates--of studying for hi s doctor's degree. patriotism expressed in servi ce to the During his tenure at Ohio State, Dr. HOLTON-SMITH state, and in unselfishness; of an ap- Rice was occupied ,vith research work Mr. and Mrs. William L. Smith, 32 preciation of the obligations of citi- CARNIVAL for t he Idaho and Delaware eXllel'i- Kells Avenue, announce the marriage ze nship in the Amer ican republic, and ment stations, and came to Newark of their daughter, Freda L. Smith to of loyalty to the ideals of self de- in April, 1936, in his present role. William B. Holton, son of Mr. and Unmarried, Dr. Rice resides at 27 lVII's. George Holton, formerly of ~;:~t~~;~~ ·'a~~d~~ s~:~\e~r;l:~~vn in Newark, now of Bolival', Pa., at Elk- ton, Md., on April 2, 1937. BELL'S JUNE 25th TO JULY 3rd Mr. and Mrs. Holton will move to Diner Moved To Kennett Bridgeville, Pa., where Mr. Holton is Lack of patronage has been ad- employed. Mrs. Holton graduated vanced as the reason for the closing from the Newark High Sc hool at the of the Newark Diner, which ceased co mmencement exercises on Tuesday. operations on June 7. The "cal''' was I =;;~;.t;;:.~I:==_= Maxwell Lot-Academy St. moved to Kennett Square yesterday, I where it will be operated under the Everingham management. Below Newark High School WEDDINGS EHART-HOLDEN Many local guests will attend the wedding Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock in Old Swedes' P. E. Church, Summer Clothes Must Wilmington, of Mi ss Grace Evangeline FREE .- FREE Holden, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. -SEDAN J ohn S. Holden, neal' Newark, and the Be Cleaned Oftener in Rev. Edward H. Ehart, Jr., of Mil~n, formerly of the Cedars. The bride­ 2~Door Plymouth Sedan will groom is the so n of Mr. and Mrs. Ed­ Order to Insure Fresh- ward H. Ehart. Mrs. War ren C. Holden, Valley be Given Away FREE on the Forge, Pa., sister-in-law of the bride, ness and Comfort for will ~ her matron of honor. Mr. You, too, can hat e Last Night of the Carnival Harry S. Bristow, Jr., cousin of the these profits by filling bridegroom, will be the best man and your bin w ith Old the Wearer...... the ushers wi ll be Messrs Thomas W. Company's Anthracite Richardson and Henri Woolen, both of at today's low prices, Marshallton. and realizing maxi­ We are Specializing Special Added Attractions Mi ss Holden has been a teacher at mum comfort, h ea!. in Flannels along with otlher the Oak Grove School. The Rev. Mr. and sec uri ty nex t Ehart is rector of St. John the Baptist winter. light materials that must be P. E. Church, Milton, and St George's TUESDAY and THURSDAY NIGHTI P. E. Church, Indian River. handled with care. Seersucker, NEWMAN-CLARKE Gabardine and Piques all re­ On Saturday afternoon, June 12, the ceive our special attention and wedding of Miss Ethel J. Clarke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis H. always come back to you GROUND PRIZE EVERY Clarke, of Hockessin, and Mr. J. laundered just the way you Knowles Newman, son of Mrs. Ma~1 \EVENING B. Newman, of Wilmington, took E. J. Hollingsworth Co. want them. place in the Cathedral Church of St. John. The Very Rev. Hiram R. Ben­ Lumber, Coal, Fuel Oil, Mill· I nett performed the ceremony. work, Building Materials, Miss Margaret E. Newman, sister Hardware, Paints, Glass, Pun for Everybody .... ---Bring the Family of the briegroom, was maid of honor. Fencing, Fertilizers, SAM BELL Miss Ruth Hitchens, of Milford, and Feeds, Etc. CLEANER AND DYER Miss Margaret Kitts, of Kennett PLENTY' OP PREij PARKING SPA Square, Pa., were bridesmaids. Newark, Delaware 20 ACADEMY STREET Mary Lou Bowen, small daughter of Phone 507 (Opposite Aetna Fire House) FRIGIDAIRE WITH THE MET R CUTS CURRENT COSTS .3 YEARS TO PAY 44 E. MAIN ST. (Graduate Electrical Engineer)