1939-08-24 - Hagaman Memorial Library
Transcription
1939-08-24 - Hagaman Memorial Library
•PWWWfW^^ -'*-•*• JS^OMT-:: A i-»--^ llngacdxi L i b r a t y Eoat Haven,CQBD r.^f-si&'.iiet y o u T H E MOVIE G U Y E D 1'Susan And God' NORTH BRANFORD Continued from page one Services in the local churches on grandmother, Mrs. Lois P. Dudley him. Susan is even less successful in filming of her now picture. She has trying to fix her own life. She at- Sunday will be— GOSSir FKOM IIOI-I-VWOOI): of Bare Plain. North Branford - Congregational WlUlnni Powell, proving t h a t work Chameleon eyes that change color, tempts to cure her husband of depending upon the color of the drunkenness without giving him the Church, Rev. Q. Dillard Lessiey, Michael Amatrudo will represent agrees with him, by displaying pastor, Mrs. Douglas B, Holablrd, gown she is wearing a t the time. one thing he noeds-her love and organist and choir director. Miss the North Branford Fire Department weight card from a penny machine at the business sessions of the State to follow workers on the "Another The 2nd big feature on this won companionship. But, more fortun Ethel Maynard, assistant. Morning Convention In Bridgeport on Fri E.MEKGENCV LANDING Thill Man" sot Qarbo startling derful hold over show Is "Miracles ate t h a n Irene, she sees the light, worship will be at 11 o'clock. day and Saturday. the entire Metro-Goldwyii-Mayer For Sale" with Robert Young and and rebuilds h e r marriage on a Zion Episcopal Church, Morning Miss Enid Wharton of Spring Glen more firm foundation lot by driving to work In a, new oar. Florence Rice, Emergency landings have been See You In The Movies But It proved to be Just a "loan" One reason for the phenomenal prayers will be read a t 10 o'clock, has been the house guest of her made by flyers under conditions Your Movie Ouyed while her own .sedan was being resuccess of this play Is t h a t it is the Roc. Francis J. Smith, Rector, Mrs. cousin,Miiis Jeannette Wharton of which have left the beholder paired Qeorge Murphy surprisperfect type of high comedy. It has Paul R, Hawkins, organist and choir Totoket Road. breathless, but few of them have ing everyone on Iho sot o f'.'Hcnry character, belcvable situations, and director. exceeded in dramatic thrills one Does Arizona", by conversing In Mrs. Nathan Rose, Mrs. Robert made by Lieut. L.M.H. Sanderson, honest drama, yet It sparkles conSt. Augustine's R. C. Church, Rev. Dudley, and Mrs. J o h n R. Merrlch of the U.S. Marines, who risked life Russlfin with Tenen Iloltz. Murphy tinually with wit and good humor. I t seem.s.learned to speak Russian The situations in which Susan in- William Brower, pastor, Mrs. Ed- were recent luncheon guests of Mrs. and limb to save his little singleyears ago for a vaudeville act, volves herself and her friends are ward Daly, organist and choir di- Alex Hart of Totoket Road. seater plane. serious, yet h e r antics are so amus rector, Mass will be celebrated at Neliion Eddy "up" on all of the 0:15 o'clock. While taking off on a return Miss Julia Dean Lessiey has been ing t h a t she keeps her audience latest gardening gadgets since spending two weeks a t Camp Claire flight from Philadelphia to quancontinually in a good mood, and landscaping h a s been started on his tlco,Va., 150 miles away, his landing The pulpit of the Congregational in Hamburg. frequently convulses them with new Brentwood home... Wallace The Mllford Drlvo-ln Theatre, gear struck some obstacle, and as Church was occupied by the Rev. Beery off on another fishing exped- Post Road and Cherry Street, Mil- laughter. And each of the other Harry Abbe of North Guilford Conhe climbed to a safe altitude he ition, this one to Fish Lake near ford, continues to arrange fine perfectly rounded characters con gregational Church, The Rev. G. The Kenwance Pongo club, of looked below to see t h e ground crew which Mrs. Carl Nagel is a member, tributes his or her share, be It comic Rlchllold, Utah Ann Morris lost Dillard Lessiey preached in North met a t the J-A-C cottage at Lan- signalling frantically. He realized beneath the Texas sombero, sent movie shows. People who are driv- or dramatic, to one of the most Quiiford. phler's Cove for a hamburg roast t h a t the wheels of his plane were her by fans from that state, The ing to this outdoor outo theatre beautifully constructed and written and social evening recently. Mrs, so badly damaged t h a t either to h a t was completely covered with from all parts of Connecticut have play t h a t the theater has seen in continue his flight or attempt a Members of the North Branford Nagel was hostess. signatures Dennis O'Kecfe homo been quite enthusiastic In com- recent years. landing would extremely hazardous. Volunteer Fire Department will parMiss Ralston and Miss Brian are ade In Bridgeport on next Saturday from the hcspllal and recuperating menting highly of the program at An ambulance and fire engine Miss Beverly Hart of New Haven from Injuries received In an aulo the Mllford Drive-ln Again this tremendously effective In the lead- and will be escorted by the North spent the week end with Mr. and dashed onto the field, but Sandercrash ..Ann Sothern spending week more fine pictures have been ing roles of Susan and Irene. They Branford Fife and Drum Corps. Mrs. William R. Wharton of Toto- son h a d no ntention of using his are perfect foils for each other. Miss every spare moment In search of booked In. ket Road. parachute to bail out. To the astonRalston Is an angelic blonde. Miss more antiques for her home Members of St. Augustine's Altar ishment of the watchers below he Eleanor Powell rehearsing dance | This Wednesday, Thursday, Frl- Brian a striking brunette. Miss Society served their annual midcontinued his flight southward. Mr. and Mrs. John Jamieson and routines with Fred Astalro In pre I day and Saturday nights, the well Ralston is naive, animated, bubbl- summer baked h a m supper In the Eventually he reached Aberdeen, daughters who have been visiting paratlori for the new "Broadway planned show has Claudetto Colbert ing with personality; Miss Brian Is North Branford Town Hall on WedMelody" production Clark Gable and all-star cast. In "Imitation of crisp, poised, and sophisticated. nesday evening. Mrs. James Walsh Mr. and Mrs. Earl Colter of Quarry Md., b u t by that time the wrecked Road have returned to their home gear, swinging like a pendulum, had Williams, lovely They arc alike only In their marvelattacking the various problems of Life." Warren was tlie general chairman and was so damaged his lower wing and the Roohelle Hudson, the in Imitable ous acting ability, which enables assisted by Mrs. Edward Daly as sup In Cohoes, N. Y. ranching with a vengeance. fuselage t h a t a crack-up was comedians. Ned Sparks and Henry t h e m to their very different roles per chairman, and a corps of workMr. and Mrs. John A. Hart have Imminent. The ship was being h a m Armetta, are In the supporting with an anqual degree of excellence. ers. Young ladles of the parish ser, DO YOU ICNOW: mered to pieces. He would have to *Tl)at Director Jack Conway Im- roles. Add to this splendid feature I t is really remarkable to see how ved as waitresses. Mrs. Vincent Matt I have arrived at their home on TotO' personated a hissing, coffoo pot off attraction the specially selested these two have done so much screen served at the cake table and Mrs. ket Road following their wedding land it or leave It. short subjects and the latest Un- work, have able to adapt themselves George Augur Sr. assisted by Mrs. trip. Mrs. Hart was formerly Miss Emergency messages had been stage In ''Lady of the Tropics. • Mary Louise Lytle of South Bend. flashed to all Army and Navy staT h a t Robert Taylor has ten sep- iversal News, a n d one can see to the exacting demands of the Joseph Krista was in charge of the Ind., and they were recently m a r - tions to the south to be on the lookarate kissing scenes with Hedy La- why autoist-theatregoers are "rav- stage They act, n o t like movie stars pie tabic. ried In Bernini Chapel at the Un- out for the stricken plane. A second Marr in "Lady of the Tropics" which ing" about t h e pleasing Mllford on exhibition, but like experienced iversity of Notre Dame. Mr. H a r t rescue was standing by at Aberdeen is Hold Over and Now Shov^lng at Drlve-In Theatte. actresses of the theatre. Carloton Dudley, Jr. of Trenton. graduated from t h e college last Army Air Corps field, with the t h e Loew Poll College Theatre for a Starting on Sunday night, and Mitchell Harris, who has built up New Jersey is the house guest of his June. motor wide open he circled the 2nd Big .Week, continuing Monday and Tuesday a tremendous following in this vicfield, dropping his money and his night,.will be Deanna Durbin In "3 Initywltli his comic roles, plays watch wrapped in a service cap— This should settle once and for Smart Oiris Grow Up'" with Nan "litraight" this week in the part of tied with his handkerchief. all the dispute over the color of Grey, Charles Winninger and Susan's husband, and shows what Then he glided over the shoreline lledy LaMarr's eyes. others. The singing juvenile movie he can do with a serious characteriand brought his crippled craft Persons who interview h e r oon- star again pleases in a smart zation. As a m a n who is fine and down on Chesapeak Bay with a tiniib to conflict on the color, some comedy, with good music, and strong, but continually fighting one splash, yet without injury to the say she has brown eyes. Others give screen story. A Walt Disney Car- weakness, alcohol, "Mitch" does an flyer or further damage to the lipr hazel eyes. She also h a s been toon, Edgar Kennedy comedy, and Impressive Job. Olive Warren ogain plane. Even when the rescue crew reported, to • have gray, green and the latest Universal News completes proves versatility by taking the part had shifted from fire engine and blue eyes. the bill, there is n o extra charge for of Susan's fifteen-year-old daughambulance to rowboat, and wanted They' are all correct. Ilcdy Ln- attending the movies in your car. ter with great c h a r and humor and to take him ashore h e refused to Marr actually has brown, hazel, Children under ten are admitted a little pathos. Others notable in leave util the salvaging of his gray, green and blue eyes, without charge. : ' advantage of the Company's offer the supporting cast are J e a n Piatt, airship was assured. . Miss LoMarr proved.It during the Elizabeth Stearns, and Alan Handto the colored employees of a free ley. Hardie Albright has directed Miss Ann and Roaerhary Plnkowpiece of land for a new house. i y • ii iiMV V M ^ p i ^ W W sky and Miss Mary Bellovlct are the production in his customary William plans to build a 22 foot The executive committee of the staying a t Indian Neck for the r e - smooth and skilful m a n n e r and square bungalow house In West End North Guilford P a r e n t Teacher AsPeter Wolf h a s designed the three mainder of the season. sociation met last night at the District and will s t a r t operations sets, which rae as beautiful ond as home of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Little 281 Main Bt,, E a s t Haven immediately. Good luck Williaml for the purpose of discussing plans Miss Evangeline Howe wiir return convincing as any he has done all Seventy three years ago today, as for a float lor the tercentenary p a r from Michigan to Indian Neck this year. Charles Paoileo of Dep. 11, spent I Sun., Jlon., Tues., Aufr. 20-2]-'22 week. Next week t h e Chapel Playhouse these notes go to press, a certain the week end at Old Orchard ade. will present t h e preview of a brand young man walked with a brisk step Robert Donat, Greer Garson in Bancroft Cate of Montowese St, new play. "She Didn't Know It Was to board the Shore Line train leav- Maine. He says "There was plenty Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wardle of I'GOODBYE MR. CHIPS' has returned from a vacation stay Loaded", prior to its Broadway ing frow New Haven for Branford. of pop corn and Rupperts on the Orange were recent visitors of Mr. beach, but he brought home only in Vermont. !-: ALSO ;-; opening. The s t a r s will be Louise I t was still early in t h e morning a mess of sand clams in bottles. and Mrs. Hawley Lincoln, Jr. of Piatt and Virginia Valll (Mrs. when the rattley, little train pulled Summer Island. "BLIND ALLEY" Jeanette Thompson of Short Charles Farrell). On Friday after- Into Branford, and the young man, ;-: WITH ;.i j , Beach has returned to h e r home For years the Goverment h a s had with lunch box in hand, and mornnoon, August 18th, a t 2:30 P.M., tOhestor Morria, Ralph Bellamy j | following a. visit with Mr. and Mrs. Charlotte BUchwald, the Chapel ing newspaper in pocket, walked to put lights and bouys on rocks in Mr. and Mrs. William Rice were Wllllnm Rice, of Montowese Street, Playhouse Playgoer, will interview unknowingly toward the goal of his the sound so people couldn't hit at Kingston, N. Y. over the week-; I Wed., Thurs.—Aug.-2i!.24 life's occupation. A small brick them. Now along comes A.G. God- end. Their daughter Phyllis returnEsther Ralston on Station WICC, Iverson Carter has returned from building, surrounded by a vastness ialls with his super speed boat and ed with them after a week's vaca [ A n n Sheridan, Diok Powell in a week at Roger's Lake. of green meadows met his eyes, hit so m a n y of them and breaks Hon. Mr. and Mrs. John Blondl of them up and levels them below the 'NAUGHTY BUT NICE' Charter Oak Avenue, East Haven a n d one can easily imagine why his water mark. Now boats can travel Bruce and Daivld Hopper, Mr. and are vacationing a t ;-: ALSO :-: Damarlcsotta concern, a t the moment was all over the sound without any dan "Carrie" went on a fishing trip reMrs. Walter Hoclzer and Mr. and Lake, Jefferson, Maine. how steady t h e Job was to be. But Preston Foster, Irene Hervoy in ger. The Government should pay cently for porgies and butter fish. Mrs. Warren Hopper are vacationsmoke was coming from t h e one, George spent considerable time A.G. for h i s services. ing at Bar Harbor, Maine. "Society Smugglers" lone chlmmey and t h e glistening fishing and came home with a nice Mr. and Mrs. Martin Felbel, of red face. It Is assumed that the sun Qeorge Street have returned from Branford" River in t h e distance Ladies Gift Nights "Crusher" Napoleon's car is given not only made his face red, but the looked friendly enough, and exactly Stroudsburg, Pa. a t seven thirty, Lester Nichols plenty of parking space down the tact t h a t he only caught three Fri., Silt.—Aug. 25-2G" Steel Foundry. His latest victim Is small fish (and one he hooked on Miss Julia Mooney of South Mon- found himself serving his first hour In a garage being repaired. "Crushthe side) helped a lot. He thinks P a t O'Brien, Wayne Morris in towese Street is visiting in Jackson of work with t h e M.I.F. by helping er's motto Is "They shall not pass." from now on when h e has an apHeights, L. I. as the guest of Mrs. Mr. E.C. Hammer stencil small kegs The KID from KOKOMO petite for fish he will go to the Jo.seph McHugh. of pipe fittings on the shipping George Shemouny spent the market instead. ;.; ALSO :-: room floor. • CLAUDETTE COLBERT week-end touring up state. Ap IN F A N N I E HURST'S IMMORTAL "SUDDEN MONEY" The events of today were not so proched about the trip George said Shorthand, Typewriting, BookFOR LOCAL NEWS Nvith Oharlio Rugglea "Imitation of Life" he enjoyed Chinatown in New York essentially different to the same • T • ri I" iir - 1 WITH keeping, Accounting, Bushiess READ THE Lester Nichols, for this very morn- where he watched t h e Chinese eat Administration, W A H n E N WlUt-IAM, ROCHULUE ,,,, Dictaphone, HUDSON. NED SPARKS. OTHERS 5^ ing, he started from his home, and Chop Suey. He also visited Pough- Comptometer, Day and Evening ALSO C A R T O O N N E W S Ctiiii. I'vcry NiKhi Il;ii BRANFORD REVIEW V keepsle. New York. went, with t h e same keen Interest, Sessions. Co-educatlonal. Enter STARTS AT 8.M, lASISHOWIIii« t o his goal of occupation. And one Jean Bartlett and Don Sawtelle at any time. may easily believe that, having con I'Vi., Silt.—August 18-1!) trlbuted greatly towards the build were seen conversing seriously In STONE COLLEGE Hollywood Vanity Woi'o ing of a greater bushlness, the app the Plant Yard. It may be that Jean 129 Temple St., New Haven T R E E TO T H E L A D I E S ' wants to dispose of his old crate reaching sight of a vastness of brick (.liiill'ord 'CLOUDS over EUROPE' Ti'leplioiie Cluiltord 415 buildings now. Instead of green via the cupola. Be cautious Don. On The Green Remember our Slogan. "We Make witli " L a u r e n c e Olivier" and meadows, gave him a sense of pride WEEK OF AUGUST 21—PRIOR TO B R O A D W A Y ] t h a t most of us will never know. the Best Fittings." Valerie Hobson ;-: ALSO ;-; But the question of the steadiness Anthony Domkoskl says the "STOLEN LIFE" of the job no longer troubles Mr. draught does not worry him a bit. with Elizabeth Bergner Nichols, we understand. He claims he will have potatoes as in the World Premiere of a New Comedy I n starting t h e seventy four years large as watermelons. The secret Sun., Moil., 'I'.ui'R., Aug. 20-21-22 of service In the M.I.F. Co. we of the thing Is this says Tony. "MAN ABOUT TOWN" FLAT WORK heartily congratulate Mr. Nichols, "When I plant my potatoes, I plant \vith J a c k Bonny, Dorothy and wish him the best of good an onion along side of each potato. LaMour, and Rochester WET WASH wishes. ;•; ALSO x The onion makes t h e potatoes eyes Eves, at 8:45, $1.30, 09c, 55c, tax inc. Mat. Wed. 2:30, 9Dc, 55c tax inc. Bulldog Drummond's the ground, SOFT DRY A recent visitor to the Plant had water moistening Until Sat, Aug. 19 - Esther Ralston & Mary Brian much favorable comment on the thereby assuring a large crop. Bride Deanna Durbin Picture W i l l Be Seen Soon Lester Nichols Completes 73rd Year At M. I. F. Capitol Theatre! Jl Pequot Theatre V. , „.,.,,^,,••,•,.,.,...' - I - ••••. • I - . f - ^ - . - •• 1 CHAPEL P L A Y H O U S E BRANFORD LAUNDRY Louise Piatt &. Virginia Valli DIES FOLLOWING BRIEF ILLNESS John Enlund died Monday afternoon at his home in Weir Street, following a Illness. He was born in Finland, September 1,1871, He came to Branford a t the age of 20 and had been a resident of this town since t h a t date. For many years he was an employe of the Malleable Iron Fittings Company, and a t the time of his retirement one year ago was one ot the oldest employes ol t h a t concern. He Is survived by his wife, Maria Nygard, four daughters, two sons and two grandchildren. Funeral services were held from the cortuary home of W. S. Clancy & Sons yesterday afternoon a t 2:30 with services in Tabor Lutheran Church a t 3. Interment was in Tabor Cemetery. Rev. A. T. Bergqulst officiated. Mrs. Ruth Linsley OUver contralto, the vocal soloist, rendered "The Old Rugged Cross" and "One Sweetly Solemn Thought" accompanied by Allen Llndberg, organist. The bearers were Charles Reynolds, Srick Smith, Walter and William Damberg, Axel Mickelson and Philip Weller. HANS E. OLASEN DIES AT HOME Funeral services for Hans Ernest Clasen, 85, of Paved Street were held Friday afternoon in Deep River, with the burial in Fountain Hill Cemetery of that town. Mr. Clasen died in his late home Wednesday afternoon following a long period of illness. Mr. Clasen was born in Germany and came to this country 53 years ago. For the past 34 years he was a resident of Branford where he engaged in the trade of painting. He is survived by his widow, three sons and several grandchildren. SUBSCRIBE TO THE . BRANFORD REVIEW tJCCE Roll devVlopcd ind 8 [lossy dectleidte piinls moiinled in alliacli<c pocket i l l i i n . : . eoliigcment coupons free. Ml for 25^. Pionpl QVEinlEhl SEKiCE. Qiialllir goaianlitd« money leliinded. PHOTO'EIECTRO'LAB.BOXSSI BRIDGEPORT, I Business Directory LOST — Chow Dog between BIomauguin and East Haven. Answers to the n a m e of Chang. Reward, return to 65 Henry Street, Momaugnln. FOR SALE—9 piece Maple Dlnine room set. Call a t 112 Montowese Street, Branford. 42 Inch sink and tub combinations ^29.95 complete. Toilet outfits complete fl2.95. Bath tubs $14.9«. Wall Basins $5.45. Conn. Plumbing a n d Heating Materials Co., 1730 State St., New Haven, Conn., Phone 6-0028. TYPEWRITERS — ALL MAKES New, Rebuilts, Rentals, Portables, Supplies Convenient Terms RELIANCE TYPEWRITER CO. C. B. GUY, Mgr. Telephone 7-2738 109 Crown Street, New Haven Four line ads inserted in the classified directory for .50c. Ads may be telephoned to Branford 400 or East Haven 4-0628. > INVITE YOUR FRIENDS TO CONNECTICUT "The a»ttf>a£/a*u/ "She Didn't Know It Was Loaded" ;•! WITH !-: J o h n Howard, Heather Angel Wi'd.,,TliHrs.—Aug, 2;!-24 Sapphire Tableware Nights L A R G E CAKE P L A T E "NANCY DREW TROUBLE SHOOTER" In the Suiumer Theatre Smash Hit *Susaiii Aiiid G o d ' INVITE YOUR FRIENDS TO CONNECTICUT vrith Bonita Granville and Fronldo Thomas i"! ALSO :-: Romance of the Redwoods ;-; WITH :•: \W*|\ • G O O D ROADS • HISTORIC VILLAGES ^ S ^ • PEACEFUL LAKES • SAFE BEACHES J e a n Parker, Charles Bickford new enamelled signs which have recently been posted over inspector's benches and other points of operations. The signs read "Weclaim that we make the best Fittings." Please help us prove our claim. Welcome back to work James Reilo, who h a s been recovering from a strain since Jmie 13th. Capt. George Marsh of the boat FINISHED WORK WHEN IN NEED OF WALLPAPER or PAINT CO. 93 Crown St., N e w Haven We are glad to announce tliat WUllam General Is the first to take "We Save You Money" A-i'-^i-»•*-«• ! " ^ e » J-^-A-A V.-*".-»v*-^*.* iX'A It::: .'' ':x • GOOD ROADS • HISTORIC VILLAGES e PEACEFUL LAKES • SAFE BEACHES BACHELOR SERVICE VISIT UNITED WALL PAPER THE BOlME NEWSPAPER IS A VITAL FORCE IN EVERT TOWN FOR LOCAL NEWS Tel. 572-2 — 572-3 READ THE B . W . Nelaon, P r o p , BRANFORD REVIEW PORTRAYING AS IT DOES LOCAL nAPPENINGS IN FAIHILIAR LANGUAGE tKlje Pranfortr BebieUi AND V O L . x n — N O , 20 Branford And East Haven Rotary Clubs Hear Walter D. Head, President of Rotary International Address Dinner-Meeting In West Haven. CaDtainDoolitHe | District Outing Harry B. Page Gives Testimony, Attracts Many Dies While On About Starlite ProminentGOP's Vacation Trip A transcript or the second testimony of the Starlite, near disaster win be forwarded to the national office of the U. S. Bureau ot Marine Inspection and Navigation, which will issue a decision in about a month. Until then Captain Arthur Nelson Doollttlo of Stony Creek has the authority to operate his craft. Rotarlans and Rotary Anns ot the Denying allegations of negligence 200th District gathered a t Wilcox's in connection with the capsizing of Restaurant ,West Haven ,Tuesday the cruiser Starlite off Stony Creek evening. early in the morning of July 30 and the Imperiling of 34 persons, Capt. International President, Walter Doolittle of Stony Creek yesterday D .Head of Montclair, N. J. was Tlie Annual 4-H Fair of the New afternoon was formall tried in the guest speaker . Twenty-six clubs comprise the Haven Country Farm Bureau com- office of the U. S. Steamboat I n federal 200th District of Rotary I n t e r n a - bined with farm and home exhibits spection Service in the tional with a total membership of and Field Day will be held Satur- building. Five witnesses presented in Capt. day, August 26 a t Woodbrldge cenabout 1,400. Rotary International, the organi- ter, and will include exhibits by the Doollttle's behalf gave their versions of t h e mlslmp and events transprization of which all Rotary Culbs are 4-H cloverettes of East Haven. ing before and after it .They de members, consists of 4,980 clubs, Much of the atmosphere of the fended the skipper's action at all with an approximate total mem- old time country fair wiU prevail times, and seemed agreed that his bership of 209,500 Rotarlans. with sheep, swine, poultry, and apslzlng was President Head, is leader of the dairy animals being shown by 4-H explanation of the entire group a n d brought to the boys and girls who have been carry- the correct one ,and t h a t the craft was not overloaded. West Haven dinner-meeting a mes- ing on projects during the year in Capt .Doolittle was represented sage for better business practices the management ot livestock. G a r a n d loftier ideals In business and den exhibits and flower exhibits by Attorney Edward L. Reynolds, professional Intercourse as repre- will likewise compete for the biggest sented in the Rotary motto "Serice and best. Girls adept with a needle Above Self". will exhibit their achievements in Those who attended from Bran- the form of dresses, h a t s and other ford were; Mr. and Mrs .T. Holmes garments a n d those with a bend for Bracken, Mr. a n d Mrs. B. L Barker, things t h a t tickle t h e palate will Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Cooke, Dr. show the best in the food line. a n d Mrs. Philip H. Geriach, Mr. and Even the men and women of our Mrs. Royal N. Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. William B. Hitchcock, Mr. and farm population will participate by Having shown himself outstandMrs. Manuel W. Kligerman, Mr. and demonstrating the work tliey are ing in his ability as a seaman secMrs. Clarence R. Lake, Mr. and Mrs. doing In • livestock Improvement, ond class, U. S. Navy, Robert MonMeyer Lcshlne, Mr. and Mrs. Emil producing food for the family, clo- roe Dudley has been selected from A. Nygard, Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Os- thing aind, In short, portraying the the ranks of Company Seventeen born, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Thwing, farm as t h e best place on earth to as its Honor Man. B o .has,been selected.ds^ a n , A P Mrs.Richard E. Hosley, Miss Betty live - TczeU«4^s&I3»born.ofAPIiui.Oci:harjd^{._atatttnB.i8ti „JQ.,.,pJslpolc. 4ju..thq pcenUccuClUet£Eeiil£)ttaiUlcetiiii$Iils morning; t h e Fair will bo the center Company. In addition to his ability L H. Bassett, Louis H. Mory, Walter H. Palmer, S. A. Petrillo, Dr. N. A. ot attraction. Following a basket from a military standpoint .Dudley lunch in t h e beautiful Woodbrldge has maintained interest in all of the S h a r p and C. Murray Upson. grove, contests of a different nature athletic activities of his Company Clarence Lake led the singing. Among those attending from the will take place. Those of particular and taken an active p a r t in them. His training completed he is East Haven club were; Mr. and Mrs. Interest will be bicycle race for girls Alfred Holcomb, Mr. and Mrs. Fred and boys; automobile race, the prize spending his graduation leave at the home of his mother, Mrs. Flora for which will go to the driver • Wolfe, Jr., Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Bishop, Mr. and Mrs. Prank C. Clan- showing the least amount of speed; Dudley, 112 Montowese Street. Upon his return to the Station cy, Leroy Perry, Mr. and Mrs. Wal- a girls ball game and a mens ball lace Coker, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sul- game featuring t h e youngsters Dudley hopes to be assigned to a livan, Dorothy Sullivan .Marie against the oldsters, will consume Cruiser where he will try to get Thorpe, Thomas Relliy, Mr. and a good portion of the afternoon. in the ordnance department as a Mrs. Dan Parillo, William Fager- The contest which will probably striker for gunner's mate. I n May 1936 he enlisted in the give the greatest thrill to the parstrom. ticipant and the greatest delight to Army and served until Oct. 26, 1038 the onlookers will be the pie eating when he was honorably discharged contest, pies to be made of the as a private llrst class. Most of his Army service was in the Hawaiian juiciest blueberries. The Fair and Field Day wlU be Islands, While there he quallfled as open to ail members and friends of expert gun commander 12 battery. the New Haven Country Farm Bureau. To Participate In 4-H Field Day Local Youth Distinguished As Honor Man Clinton Melons Are Being Sold In Local Store ROD-GUN OUTING All you can eat and drink —at t h e annual outing given by the North Branford Rod and Gun Club Sunday September 17 a t 10 a. m. a t Skeet Field. The committee is William Baldwin, Fred Sabine, George Sabine George DriscoU, Gene Rowley and William Selpold. — •f — BRANFORD — NORTH BRANFORD STONY CREEK — PINE ORCHARD SHORT BEACH — INDIAN NECK GRANNIS CORNER — MORRIS COVE — EAST HAVEN Branford, Connecticut, Thursday, Augnist 24, 1039 Rotarians, Rotary Anns Attend 200th District Meeting In West Haven The new Branford A .& P. Self Service Store features melons grown on a Clinton farm by W. A. Winthrow. Fifteen months ago Withrow a n d his wife came from Cheshire a n d purchased several acres of beautiful level land on the West Side of Glenwood Road in Clinton. From this land now about evey variety ot farm- garden produce m a y be seeri growing In a manner not famllair to the ordinary farmer. Musk-melons, cucumbers, sweet corn and other various vegetables have all been started under glass. During the strawberry and pea season Mr. Withrow has had as high as twelve working for him during the harvesting of these, although ordinarily at other seasons h e and his wife do all the work. He Is to try the cultavation of peaches soon on his farm which is called Walberta. The farm Is irrigated by means of a pumping station. At the extreme west end he h a s erected a poultry house and has 600 New Hampshire reds, harvesting eggs from them dally. Mr. Withrow is a frequent contributor to the Rural New Yorker a n d has written articles on strawberries and their culture, muskmellons and "Planning 1939 Crops at Walburta F a r m " among a number of other articles. He plans to have strawberries up to frost. EAST HAVEN NEWS THE HOME TOWN PAPER ITALIAN-AMERICAN CLUB FIELD DAY A clambake and outing will be given by tlio Republican organization of the 12th Dlsiriot on Sunday, at Upson's Grove, Boston Post Road. Otto Grossman, secretary of the State Shell Pish CommLsslon, will prepare the bake. Among those who intend to bo present are Benjamin Harwood, chairman of the State Central Committee, Attorney Gen oral Francis A. Pallotti, Lt. Governor James L. McConaughy, Senator John A. Danaher, U, S. Congress man B. J. Monkbvlcz, National Committeeman Samuel Prior aiid former Lt Gov. J. E.; Bralnard. The gathering wUl be held at 2 p. m. and tlie bake will be served a t 5 p m. 7; Funeral services for Harry B. Page, former East Haven lire chief who died suddenly Sunday evening in Ludlow Vermont, while on a vacation trip, win be hold this afternoon a t 2;30 nt the mortuary chapel 0 fCamcrlln & Roes In Wlillnoy Avenue, New Haven. The Rev. Darrow Williams ot Yale Divinity scliool who Is acting pastor of the Old Stone church during the absence of theRev. William H. Nicholas, will officiate, and interment will be in Green Lawn cemetery in Tyler St, Price Five Centa Chain Stores Alter Main Street Contour; Improvements Made Atlantic and Pacific Solf-Service Store Opens T o d a y New Location Being Made Ready For First National Stores, Incorporated. Chain stores are the center ot a t traction along Main Street today. With a completely trosh stock ot merchandise ot groceries, meats, tresh.fruits and vogotablos, the AtLast night members ot the fire department, over which i Mr. Page Branford's 16th annual Aquatic lantic and PaeitlO'Selt.Servlco Market opened this morning a t 216 was chief from 1002 until his •re- meet was held a t Branford Point Main Street . tirement in 1D30, wont to the mor- Harbor last Saturday afternoon unThis is a now wonderland of food tuary rooms in New Haven in a body. A largo delegation from the der the auspices ot the Branford values where you enter a turnstile, Are department In uniform and also Yacht Club and the Comumnlty push a roller bearing carrier to the various counters. Choose what you many from the town departments Council. will attend the services. Mr. Pago The following is a list of prize want and return to the clerk at the was long active in town affairs and winners: swimmnig' events, 100 counter who adds your list and hands you an adding machine comwas a t the time of his death a yards, men 18 years and over. Shea, putation ot the cost. member of the library board, He Dalhgard, Hugo. 100 yards, women Tho old store closed its doors last Monday night was an exciting was also an official of the Old Stone IB years and over Marjory Gesncr, occasion at the Chapel Playhouse Church. Besides his widow Marlon Miss Etzol; 100 yards, boy under 18 night but the entire personnel was in Guilford, for it saw the opening Llddeii Page, he leaves three sisters. years, Ray Sherman, J, Flanagan, on h a n d this moriiing at t,ho now; of a brand new comedy, "She Didn't Mrs. William G. Agnow, Mrs. Frank Bob Bradley; 100 yeards, girls under store ready for duty . > Ernest Bocbc is manager and Ho^ Know It was Lotided," by Hilde- E. Cornwall of Mllford, and Mrs. 18 years, Marjory Gesnor, Marjorle garde Dolson and Sylvia Harris, Rose Richards of New Haven, and Moran, Joan Simmons; 50 yards, ward Carlson, assistant manager. They are assisted by Burdotto Coif starring the well-known scheen two brothers, Robert and John boys under 10 years, Irving Smith, actresses Louise Piatt and Virginia Page of California. He was 60 years Buddy Smith, Crowley; BO, yards, burn, Mathow Bolanio, Robert Ciark, Valli. Movie scouts, celebrities, and old and an employe of Sargent & girls under 15 years Carlo Bradley, Louis Zursaky. William J, Hoolman Audrey McNamar, Dorothy Babcock is manager ot the moat department a capacity crowd of local residents Co. for 53 years. and has assisting him: Paul Spe|were there to see,this preview and Bearers will be: Ellsworth E. 60 yards, boys under 14 years, Joe vack, Vincent Gallna, George Flynn Judge what the play's chances will Cowles, Wallace S. Coker, Henry Brennan, John Relliy, Gorman; 50 be when it opens on Broadway in Monson, John Price, Augustus Mer- yards, girls under 12 years, "Sis" and Pat IIollls. Etzel, Nancy Bradley, Norma Kenny; First Nallonnl Lease tile fall. And their opinion seemed rill and Prank H.Rodneld. 2B yards, boys under 10 years, WesA lease has been tiled In the otunanimous—It will be one of the The flags on the firehouscs wore ton Simmons, Tony Llpkvloh, Joe floe ot the town clerk Irom this hits of the season. set a t half mast a t word of his Moran; 25 yeards, girls under' 10 O'Connor Realty Oo. to the First "She Didn't Know It Was Loaded" death. • years, Marilyn Dlnoen, Dorothy National Stores, Inc, ot property a t Is the story of Judy Holmes, an a t Potter, Beverly Dunn. 'MO Main Street, formerly Iho Park tractive twenty-two year old girl Theatre. jyho \ ^ t t t e s , a : b o o ^ i U e d I'Qet^ Boys—cross-haj-bor swlm,,Bvetctt Maotjehmun, ii'-Ray Wonop^^mmMil . ..^ho^Joaso. runs„Ioiufl,va.,y9ars . ; , The' slofc'" 'forpiefly"'dtfbUpfeti'1)y'' benefit of women the technique ot Slavln;' girls cross harbor swim getting men. To increase the book's Marjory Gesnor, Dorothy Babcock Paul Cipriani and adjoining the old sales, Judy's press agent publicizes canoe tllUng, 1st prize, Carl Bloom- theatre has bcoii edmpletoly demollslied to make way for tho First her as a glamor girl with dozens of Troop No. 1 B. S. A, of Short quist, Stanley Eveskeigee; 2nd prize, National. men in love with her. She becomes Beach spent the week In camp a t Harold Amroy and Robert MichaelI tls generally assumed that the famous, and the book becomes a Kempter's Farm, Foxon. They ar- son. building will bo used as a Self Sorbest-seller. But complications arise rived In camp a t 5:30 p. m. T h u r s o'olock. when her own m a n - a young archi- day with their pack rolls. Patrol tect who hates designing women— tents and kllclien camp was comobjects to the publicity and throws pletely set up by 8;00 p. m. Camp Judy over. A national magazine gets routine was malntanled from revwind of this, and it seems disaster- ely a t 7:30 to taps a t 10 p. m. Due ous, for how can the reading public to their knowledge ot scouting they accept Judy as an authority on how suffered no damage or discomfort to get your man when she cannot during the storm Saturday nigiit. get her own? Fortunately, however, The following boys attended the The marriage of MLss Sally DlckJudy has a very wise sister Alice, the camp: Patrol leaders, Jack and with her help and t h a t of the Barry, Luclen Clark. Ass't patrol iivion Stone, daughter ot Mr. and On Saturday, September 16 press agent, everything is finally leaders, Robt. Rowley, Robt. Shoe- Mrs. Edward Joslah Stone ot Indian George Doebrlck, general chairman worked out to the satisfaction of all maker, Charles Kyle and scouts Eu- Neck, and Allen Rogers Benner, 2d, has announced that the annual concerned. gene Reardon, Robert Poulton, Bud- son of Mrs. Richard Stanwood Ben- Foxon Fair will be held on the Foxdy Poulton, William Haydon, Eu- ner, and the late Doctor Benner ot on Community Center grounds. The Continued on page eight gene Fenn, Frank Dendas, William Springfield, took place Saturday af- Foxon Grange and the Community KeLsey, Billy Jackson, Edwin Bron- ternoon In the Sprlngflcld homo ot Center are sponsoring the event. .son, George Bronson, James Par- the bride's parents, A chlldrcns parade' led by tho Mrs. Lewis Carr Stone, sister-insons and Cliarles Talmadge, Jr., prize winning North Branford Fife law ot the bride, attended her as and Drum Corps will bo a feature Bugler matron of honor. Richard Stanwood The camp was supervised by Scout Benner was his brother's beat man. event. Master Albert Poulton and assistant Mrii. Benner Is a graduate of the So tar helping Mr. Doebrlck on The funeral of Mortimer Dewey S(;outmasler, Henry Howd. the Committee are G[adyfl Priest, Pine Manor Junior College In WeiStanley, Jr., of Elm Street, East Herbert Neubig, Mrs. Tower, RowIcsley, Mass., and is a member of land Hocthkiss, Henry Crosby, Sr., Haven, was held Sunday afternoon the Junior League. Mr. Benner is a Peter Damon, Harold Hall and Char at 2:30 from the Griswoid Colonial graduate ot the Phillips Academy^n Ics Gordon. Home, 09 South Main Street. Rev. Andover, Mass., and ot Havard UnErnest C. Carpenter, pastor ot the There will also bo a voriety of iversity where he was a member of Short Beach Union Chapel, officiasports and games, pony ride.?, AfriHasty Pudding. He is connected ted, and the burial was in Center can dodger, sale of fancy articles with the Gulf Oil Corporation. Af- and home cooked foods, etc. In the Cemetery. ter a wedding trip to Maine the The bearers were Bennett Hlbearly evening a home cooited supcouple will make their home in per will be served. In addition to bard of New Britain.Theodore A. St. Elizabeth's Church ot Short Springfield. Stanley of West Hartford, Clarence the regular exhibits three special exhibits arc being planned, one by Johnson and Roliln Bauer of Short Beach will hold the second of two the Foxon Homemaking group,,conBeach. The death of Mr. Stanley oc- summer festivals on the church sisting ot homecrafts, another by curred Friday in New Haven hospi- grounds tonight. Friday and Saturday evenings. The proceeds of the 4-H club girls, featuring flowtal, following a long illness. He was ers raised by members, arid the 35 years of age, . and was born in will be used for the benefit ot the third by the 4-H boys, consisting ot Nev(^ Britain, the son of Mr. and church. vegetables grown by members. There will be booths, games, Mrs. M. D. Stanley ot Short Beach. The Branford Service Battery Surviving him are his widow; one refreshments, music and entertaindaughter, Isabel, a son, Mortimer D. ment. No admission will bo charged 102d Field Artillery, In Piattsburgh, TEACHERS CALLED N. Y. for the past two weeks will 3rd; his parents, one brother, Wal- and everyone is welcomed. Public School teachers have been ter H. Stanley; and two sisters, Mrs. The general committee for the arrive Sunday morning In Branford. writes; "This Is called to it meeting Tuesday, SepRaymond V. Thomas of West Hart- festival includes William J. Ken- One member ford, and Mrs. Bennett H. Hibbard nedy, chairman, James Sullivan and some camp. For so many soldiers termber 5 In the high school at 10 concentrated in one area, I wonder over the week end. The trip will bo of New Britain. Charles Regan. sometimes how they can move' so The fall school term begins .Wedwell organzled' without conjestion nesday, September 6. ANNUAL OUTING JOHNSON-HAM William W. Ham of East Main and so little time. The Branford Rudolph Johnson is chairman of the annual outing of the Young Street announces the coming mar- Battery is doing a swell job with SECOND CRUISE Republican Club, on September 17, riage of his daughter, Lena Vir- high commendations from the reThe Branford Yacht Club wlU He will be assisted by Murray Up- ginia, to John Herman Johnson, Jr., gimental staff, good morale ,and hold Its second cruise of the season son, John Whltcomb, Dominic Bon- son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. high spirit. Branford should be over hte week end. The trip will bp tatlbus, John Donofrlo, and William Johnson of Palmer Road, on August proud." to Matlituck ,L. I. .,• 28 at 4 o'clock In the First C o n g r e -Idams. TAKE SCHOOL CENSUS gational Church. ENTERTAIN AT DINNER Mrs. Dagmar Applegate, Mrs. RoFIFE AND DRUIVI CORPS WIN TT" V Mr. and Mrs. Frank R. Williams, land Geier and Mrs. Flora GoldThe Stony Creek Fife and Drum BETROTHED Cedar Street, entertained Saturday smith have been :.appolntecl as taCorps won flrst prize for playing Mr. and Mrs. Mlcahcl.]^|Zlkas of night a t a dinner party a t Holly's and appearance a t the firemen's New Haven announce th^lerigagej kers of the school census. Barn for Miss Marjorle McCarthy annual field days In Bridgeport Sat- m e n t of their daughter, Heler),j to urday. The Corps accompanied the Mr. Charles Witkowskl of this place. Branford Grange 200 will hold a and Mr. Harold Herbert Orimths M. P. Rice and Headquarters Com- The marriage will take p l | c e Octo- Mystery Ride following the regular whose marriage will talce place Saturday In St. Mary's Rectory. pany. ber 14. ;<•' meeting in Svea Hall tonight. Aquatic Winners Are Announced Playhouse Show , Is Comedy Hit \l \ I At Foxon Farm Sally D. Stone Allen Benner Annual Foxon Are Married Fair W i l l Be September T6 i New Program Mortimer Stanley Is Organized Dies In Hospital For Teachers The first annual field day will bo sponsored August 27 by the ItalThe President of the four Conian-American Club at the clubhouse grounds, Beach Street, B r a n - necicut State Teachers Colleges announced today t h a t the adminisford. trative officers and faculties of the four colleges, conforming to the TROLLEYMAN INJURED policy adopted by the State Board of Education on June 7, are p r o A miniature hurricane hit here ceeding to reorganize the curSunday morning, ripping roofs and ricular program, to adjust the problowing over trees. fessorial staff, a n d to admit stuAt Brockett's Point a tree fell dents on a slightly different basis across the trolley tracks. for the coming year. Consistent As the flrst early morning trolley with the policy of the Board, the car came through it hit a fallen colleges will attempt to work out a tree. Several windows were broken program which will be primarily and a company employee on board for the purpose of supplying the assisted the Injured operator to the state with an adequate number of home of Mr. and Mrs. Carleton thoroughly trained teachers and, at Beals where he was given first aid. the same time, to utilize the college It is thought that the downpour to serve the wider needs in this prevented the operator from see- state. ing the fallen tree. The faculty committees have been appointed for the purpose of ANNUAL CLAMBAKE Eldorado Council 10, Knights of reoganizing the curricuiar proColumbus will hold its annual^ gram, which provide for general education for the first two years. clambake September 10 . The committee; Patrick H. Dunn, Curricuiar offerings for this period, chairman; John P. Zvonkovlc, Ed- there, will serve not only as a basis ward B. Lonergan, Frederick Houde, from which to build the professionJohn MoDermott, James C. Walsh al teacher-education program during the upper two years but will, at and Thomas E. Matthews. the same time, give a liberal educaAWARDED SIDEWALK CONTRACT tion which may be transferable to M. Giordano has been awarded other colleges; thus, students who the contract for a cement sidewalk wish to take a two-year program from the girls' entrance ot the high In t h e teachers colleges and then transfer to other Institutions may school to Eades Street. be able to do so. Those who meet A Swedish food sale will be spon- the rigid scholastic and personal sored by the Tabor Lutheran Church requirements and so desire will reCouncil Saturday a t 10 on the main in the teachers college for the Continuei on page three Green. Second Festival Begins Tonight At Short Beach Service Battery Returns Sunday < - i • * » ' - 4 1.fc• * •* * « ll .i^-^-j ^'^-i'V^-VV Page Two THE BRAWFORD REVIEW, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1939 owing to settlement of estates and i:;wiiii;aitgiaMW£:3jwi«.''riiiiwi"iiii'!r the desire of owners to sell their property t h a t stioh shore' fronts arc on the mark6't'. Now It towns like Ea.s«" H(!iv(iA"and "'Brahfbr'd UNION CHAPEL woiild each Vbar'set islde a'bmall Rev. E r r i e s t ' c . ' fcar^fcnter will sum for tlto piSrchftso of'Sudh [ProHappy Birthday to Lester Corning preach Su'iibaj ' motnlfiK a t ' l l l b ' o By K C. and N. II. C A R P E N T E H perty w h W lt"lS' brt' the' m'ai-ket; It of'Bfadlcy Avcliiic,' Short Beach on 6'cloci(!; ' S'lltoay "School'at 6:4S'; woilid not be long before the towns August 27 Ocorge Brown, Superintendent; woiiid own a considerable amount Special milSlc'by tlic c h b l t ' a t ' t h e BEA SIIOBK I'AKKS of shore front t h a t the public could And many ot them I IFormcr Lt. CHifrch St'fyice.' ' '"•'' ' ' I am hearltly In favor of the SUB use. It" might be so managed that Oovornor J. Edwin Bralnard, August It would yield some revenue to the gostlon recently made that an ef 27th. • • Miss Caroline Mason, of Clark fort be made to open more of the towns so t h a t In the long run the Avenue, h a s returned from a weekshore front to the general public, expense'would bo very small Monday, August 28th Is Barbara end trip to Portsmouth, N. H. The sea shore never gets any larger, I would Ijke to see public service Ann Male's birthday. •I but the people who want the use of organisations of vdrlous kinds take Leon Shorey Is making Improve' It eonstanlly ilictertscs. Now' I dd l i p t h l s ' l d e a and "sob what fcart'be Mrs. B. Helscr, Clark Ave., Short ments In his property In Clark Ave. not ot all blame the people who done 'to accomplish something of Bcadli celobrrited t h t Anniversary of own the shore for wlsjilng'Id'main- this klHrf, her IJIrth 6H Mbndfiy. •'' ' ' Josep|i Meshako Is Improving at tain some ' p r l v i c y ' l n ' ' the dse of h i s ' h o m e Iri'Alps Road. He la out Buch parks would add to the beau their o'tin property. They built their Monday was Ollbert Schnllt's 6f do'o'M'part b t ' t h e ' d a i ' . ' ' houaos there when conditions were ty of the towns, make the towns birthday. Ollbert lives In Clark Ave. qultff'different. 1 do not at all a d - more nttraotlve tp vlsltWa, make Short Beaeh. A family reunion supper was held vo'clite h n y conbemnatlon'dr con flho places fbi' publlt'biitlngs. It here Sunday evening with the folwould save unsoenVly'cfbwd(ng that flotation of such shore fronts Thnt';;,^-,™ Y n ^ o ^ ™ " ™ ' f ; ; , 7 j ; ; "t^;; Lillian Prombino who lives with lowing attending: Mr. and Mrs. Carl is not at all necessary. And with' gf,o,„^ ^„d ^ „ , „ j be. a source of en- Mr, dii'd iCtr*. Ralph Bttlter'of Tet-' brcenvall, Theodore Peterson, Mlertax conditions as In most towns I joymenj, and wholesome recreation hune' Mbu'se; tilaiW" Stt'eet, Shott rltt TaVlor,'kr; and Kirs.'Arnold J. do' no^ advise ahy e'xtcnslve eiipcn-i to a B f o a t r n a n y ' p e o p l c . (Jeailh, will be'io'year'^ old'Aug.'as'.- Peterson' dncl Arnold and Lebna (ies.-Thl.'i''ls n o t ' a t nil riecossary, Peterson of "Short Beach; Mr.'arid But It does happen frequently t h a t E. C. 0 . It's five birthdays Monday for Mrs.' At'thu'r "Ttters'fi'n of MUnsoll, Lot Broh'tian, Mdin Stredl, Short kass.,"Wr. and''Mrs.''Wank Seller, Beftcli.'••'•• •'• ' ' '• •• •'•'! Mrs.'Frank Seller.'Sr., Jean Seller of New I-l'aveli;'''Mr.' and Mrs/Ar'VId PeMary R|oliltolll who has been terson dhd' Miss 'fcanctte P'etersbh, summ'drln'g with M r . ' a n d ' Mrs. Leo 6t'Mlaml,'rti'."arid ' Mr. i n d Mrs. Brenhilii,"Sh'6rt'Beach was 10 ycari Joseph "Jbh'rison and famll'y Betty, old yesterday. " ' ' ' • ^ll'tjeh',' Kenhtjth'ahd'Warren of New All In The ; Work If < THE Plymouth Furniture Shops On The Miilfor(dl Tuiirepilke Between New Haven and :|\Iilforcl A birthday cake, August 31, for Arthur' rialldcn;'Short'Beach,' pINE FURNITURE Miss Elsie Forte ot Mill Road, North' Brdnford,' ^celebrated ' hbr blr'tliday' on Suh(3aj'.'''Sli8 'was'"a member ot a large dinner eatherlne lit hbr libme. ' ...(..... New Cold-Wall Frigidaire 11 •k SnVES FOODS' VITAL JUICES FROM DRYINQOUTI . i( cIl^CKS OOdn-AND-llAVOR TRANSFER OF FOOD I •k NO OTHER REFRmERATORLlKEITI • Here is nn'entirely new kltid orrefrlgcrntorl There's nothing else likc'ltl' ' ' < . f. . . See the "X-Rny" Proof of this sensutionnl new.discovpryl Sec how foods are saved from'drying out. See w l w you don't need food covers of^ttny kind! Only I'rit^idaire can give you this marvelous " C o l d - W a l l " Cooling. Sec it at once. A t our store. YXRAY"PROOFr IS. ! ^(oclcI Illustrated Cold;Wall 6-39 Lolu Domi Payments See'why Frigidaire'docs not depend only on "one-snot" cooling. Sec h o w sealed refrigerating coils behind the walls literally surroutid food with vital, protecting Cold. Sec how moisture-robbing aircurrents are ended, how food odor-and-flavor transfer is checked. See how L-rigidaire maintains uniform low temperatures and a5-100J( humidity. Easy SEE WHY VOU DON'T HAVE TO COVER FOODS! Monthly Tenns i^FRI6iPAIRE¥lifMETER-MISER GONNECTiCuf^JlGHT & POWER - - 1 Monlowc St. Phone 744 BrHi:f«nl BiGpEE'"""' "7th ANNUAL Northford Carnival I M I D D L E T O W N T U R N P I K E — R O U T E 15 1939 Piymoetli f^ Sedan | TOKG To Be Given Away September 4, 1939 Sail Mrs. John Foley ot East Haven sails t6mbrrOw for' P a n a m a and California. Supper Guests ' "Mr.' and Mrs. Harry McCoy and Ruth and Marlon McCoy were recefi't supper gufcsts of Mr. and Mrs, Henry Buckhalter ot North Haven. BINGO — PET SHOW — SIDESHOWS PRIZE AWAEDS—BAND CONCEET—DANCING Wiiliii'(la.v, .'Viifl. Uii—Hnxiiii; Sunday, AugiiKt 27—Chiklren's Piiriide Fri., Aufx. LT)—SUM.. SC|)1. :i—Fircwnrk.s .Sal. Srpl, 12t—Jfoii., Sept. 'I, iiftcrncions—Aiilii|Uo Aulii Rnens -f ' Wudiu'sdiiy, Auff. liO-Viiiideville .Suniliiy. Sept. ;i—Biiby Hliow Siilin-iliiy. Scpl. '2—Hatliiiig Mi'iiulios Mon.. Aiif?. 'J8—Pole Cliinbiii;; FEEE 'ADIWISSION and FEEE PAEKING For Entries Call Frank Armant, Branford 776-2 rjisfcsrii / Siipce 1897 Vernon Swift Is recovering from anUlriess """ '' ' " Mr. a n d Mrs. William Foley ot Phlladelphld'liave been visiting reI'dtlveis "here.' '' ' '" ''' will come to your home evfei-y day through THE CHRISTTIAN SCIENCE /ytONjTQ,^ Guests of Mr;' and Mrs. H. E. H, C o x ' d r e Mr. 'find 'Mrs.'Guy Albert of Drekel-Hill Pdl It recorda lor you the warld'a clean, conntnicllvorioInsR.The Uonftoi^ does nol-DXPloit orlmo or nenaatlon; neither dorti It Itiaore them, but dooli corroclively with theoi, Foaturcs tar busy men Rtid all Ih* {Aiiitly.JnGUtdUiK tho WeelcIy.MaBaBlne Bcotloii. HAVE SET A HIGHEE Anna and Helen' Pblrot, 400 Bradley Street,' East 'Haven have been in New Ybrk this 'week. While''there they attendott'the'Wdrld's Pdlr; FOR LOCAL NEWS ' • ' • RSADTHB BRANFORD REVIEW FallI 1-as Fasf]ions Water Is Not Distributiop G.JYiq On The Horizon Fattening P e l i c a c i e s To )nTh 102nd Infantry at Plattsburg, N. Y. Man can live without food, alBlack with bright sets the gaily Modest Budgets Building Inspector Frank Red- sophisticated pace of the early fall though uncomfortably, for some Miss Dorothy PurUy of Yonkcrs, field has Issued n building petmlt to fashions. N.r'Y.'ls'a'Buesl thls-wcekot Miss Francis Tesconl of'550 High "St. And In the matter ot fabrics, silk Shirley MncDowcU of French Ave. jersey and rayon crepe are In a The following attended the hot photofinish race for Ilrst place. Mrs. Lllla Lee LcSuer of Yonkers, dog roast Tuesday in Short Beach It is to be one ot the most InterN.'Y. Is'visiting Mrs. Lucy McLay. a t the home ot Mr. a n d Mrs. Aresting fashion seasons In years. thur Hiilldcn; Mrs. Stanley Brock- That much Is definitely established. Paul Balzer Is staying at Lcete's 'Dtt, 'Virginia and Bobby Brockett; Wlielhor the bustle is merely aii Island. Mrs. Irving Carlson, Betty Lou,' Rtiy early fash in tiic pan or whether it mond and Richard 'Carlson; Mrs. is here to stay for the fall and winMr. a n d Mrs. Clifford Fowler have Gordon Benson and h e r daughter, ter is still problematical. returned to,their home after a va- Linda . -. Many of the designers whose word cation a t Kclscy Point. is fashion law say that It Is. But a The marriage of Miss Anno Del- good many others whose Influence Miss Gertrude Dunn recently vis- monlco, soloist at St. Vincent de on fashion trends Is equally as Imited Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mana- Paul's Church, to Gerald L. Rowaii, portant predict that it-will be all flcld a t Indian Neck. • of 27 Shelton Avenue, New Haven, gone with the autumn leaves. Howtook place Monday morning at St. ever that may be, they all seem Mrs. Fred Polcger h a d among her 'Vincent do Paul's Church. The agreed that the prevailing silhouetguests at'. Clear I Lake lost Friday, Rev. William O'Brien officiated at te will be small waists, high busts Mrs, 1,-Thomas Pattcnberg of this the single ring ceremony. and with skirt fullness thrust to the •place. ', !• :•' ,1 ' • back. The funeral ot Mrs. Hcrmina A. Hals go to oil sorts of lengths as Week end guests a t Camp Nor- Johns, wife of Louis Johns, form- regards crowns but the majority erly of Edward Street, who died a t mahBi Lake Zoar -were Mr. and Mrs. seem content With small brims. Coy the home of her son, Cornelius R. feathers In dramatic color cascade Clifford DeWolfe. • of 25 Shoreham Road, Tuesday, will from wee little trleornes t h a t ai .' i ,M ,• ,.',', i be held from the funeral home ot ready beckon alluringly from Fifth Miss Alice Madden spent last w e e k ' a t Guilford-Lakes where she Norman 'V. Lamb, 309 Main Street Avenue windows. T\ne hood is still prominently in the picture and turwas''th^ guest of Mr.'and Mrs. Carl this afternoon at 2 o'clock. Besides her husband and son, she bans ot chiffon velvet in jewel colGarvin. '' Is survived by two other sons, Her- ors will give the necessary "umpii" Miss Dorothy Caswell took p a r t man of Prospect Road, and Louis A. to early fall outfits. in ithe' cblebratlgn of the tercenten- of Ellsworth Ave., New Haven, and tour grandchildren: Interment was a r y of' Mllford. • ' • at Beaverdale Memorial Park. >•'•. , i r i •.' ' 1 • Page Three Mr. "and Mrs. George W. Corey' Mrs. John Shea and family ot returned to Pawson Park following New'Haven will'pass the ilbxt'two a vacation at Jatfery, N. H. weeks at Hotbhkiss GroVe. time. Deprivation Irom water, howWith modern mass distribution of ever, ^ffeols him seriously after a The 30th anniversary field day Edward PC9I9 ot Norfolk, Va. Is short lime. While tills colorless liq- foodstuffs putting ' dellcaolcs troni and outing ot Live Oak' Camp,' 71)08 with Mr. arid Mrs. Irving Osborn ot all bver the world within rehoh 6f uid has no value which can be Modcrrf Woodmoh of Ambrlca will Stony Creek for the remainder of measured in calarlcs, ill tlie body's t h e ' average hdmcinakCr's' UUdgdt, b b h e l d Sundiiy at Double Bbnoh. iiugtist;' '•'" ' " ' » ' ' ' '• tissues contain It and it Is ail es- hot weather meals can be madb more zoslful by addition of some \insential p a r t of the blood and the Mrs.'James Jcnkln, ot Pawson Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Mulvey of usuill dish to which the family Is digestive Juices; ' ' '' Park has had Iwr granddaughter WatDi'bury are at Pa\yson Park tor not ordinarily accustomed. '" Food must be liquined before it visiting her, Mis'S'Harriet .fchkliis ot the next two weeks'. ' ' An attracilve saiad to serve witli can be absorbed. Sdine fiibds, or Malii' Street, East Haven. course, contalii enough' natural wa- cold meats consists of tomatobs Staying a t Lanphler's Cove Is Mr. ter to take care ot this. We iniist, stuffed with celery and a sinrill Mr, and Mrs. Charles Neely ot Wll B. Hammond ot Brooklyn, N. Y, however, add each 'day li goodly amount of finely chopiJed ohldn, tord'Roiid, Yiidinn'Neek had as their quantity of'liquid to reiiltice what theii topped with highly scaiibnort \Veelc '^erid' giibst, Mrs. Arliiur Morse mayonnaise on whlbh Is placed a Ml.ss Cecllc Jorips ot Springfield Is losl. ' ' teaspoonful ot caviar. Many foods 6t New' Haven.' GaVdbris, t : 1 wasAi vWltW VcKbirtly It Is hardly possible tor a person formerly regarded only as expch'at the Marie Cottage, Monmiiguin. In normal health to drink too much slve delicacies are now available' to Mr. and Mrs. John Burno ot water and a t this point I should almost everyone through the chain Stony Creek were in westerly R. I. Mrs. N. Hall of Cosoy Beach Is mention the fact t h a t the body n a - store type of marketing the world's SiVturday. ' ' on a trip to'Ohio.' turally regulates the amount t h a t produce; ' ' Is stored In the tissues. You mayi Another delicacy which mass John Jacobs, Indian Neck has his Mr, and Mrs. Walter Orltlln and drink Just as much water as you merchandising lias brought within slslbi- visiting him, Mrs. J, E, Wls- dauBhtfcrsf, Cdrol A h n , a n d Holim ot like and not bo obliged to worry reac'li of tne modest giooory bud- eiimnn'of Chorleslon S. 0, Hamden have rented a cpttogo at aijout its being a factor In'producget Is the anchovy. On a very hot Pawson Park for two weeks: ihg extra weight. I t is ri coihihbii night sc'vc eggs stuffed with anA guest at tlie homo ot Dr. and fallacy' to believe t h a t water li fatchoi>y paste with a platter of cold and Mrs: J'rank' Toblc, Sunset Beach tening! Actually It plays a p a r t ' i n Dr. and Mrs; P, L; Teall and son meat, garnished w i t h ' lettuce arid Is'Mr.'i. Hhzcl Burno ot Cambi'ldgo, John have returned to Hotohklss weight only' when salt is eatcii In slices ot'tomiilocs and w'atcli'hcd't Mass. Grove I after a' trip -to 'Mobibllbad overly large 'quantities: Bbtji salt jaded appetites pick up. Lake, Maine. • ' •. -. , 1,and water are necessary toi' body It Is no trick to pre pare tlie eggs. Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Converse efficiency. Select the number you think nec- and Miss Betty Converse qt Stony Ouests this week a t Pine Orchard l'inca|iplc And INIint Shcrbcrl essary and bdll' tVienv'hard.' Cut' In Crcbk' linvii 'r'ctufncd 'from' Nantu- wore Mr. a n d Mrs. Daniels Pl^Vbt 1 cup sugar two, remove the yolks and season cket wlicre they spent tho week end Scllenectadyl'Ni'Y. whostftyod With 2 cups water with salt, pajj'rlka, a'little prepared Ivir. and Mrs. J ' B i r n o y Tiittlo ot 1 cup chopped pineapple niVikard and ' add one tbaSpboii' bt Mr. and Mrs. Spencer -Miller ot Pino Orchard ' " Juice of two lemons ahcliovy iiasto' tor eVery'cBg yolki Haj'cocfc' Point attended li supbei' 1 teaspoon mint extract Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thomas and Put the mixture back Into tho halv- party Sunday' night at'EaatRlver. Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Bowden have Green coloring When "Drake Day" Is observed their family h a v e returned from a eci wliltes and garnish with a bit of moved frbin' stony Croofc"to East 2 egg whites ' ^ Saturday a t the World's Fair In vacation rln'New York State. • parsley. • Mr. and Mrs. Donald Miller arc Main Street , > 'tribute t c Col. Edward L. Drakes Boll sugar and water together 3 staying this'week with Mr. arid Mrs. I)y J a n e Fioyil Buck minutes. Cool, add pineapple, leMiss Betsy Slmonl of River St., who drilled the first oil well In this C H l ' T r y o h of HaScock" Point Mr. and Mrs. Richard McAdams of wlllTeturn soon from a v a c a t i o n a t country, the pioneers' granddaughmon juice, extract and coloring to Wiriloli'esteF, Mii&."ftro slopillVift" Ati August isn't a bit too early to lie- make a light gieen. Pour into freezter, IWIss Grace Drake, of 448 Thomp Crystal Bake,. Maine. Mr. and Mrs. Charles O'Connor Indian NeUk "•Wlth'iMiss''Bdfttrl((o sou Avenue, will bo among tlie hon gln to think abotil your room Intei-- er, pack with salt and ice, or place and Mrs. Walter J. Schold of East Critchloy ot New Roohello, N, Vs erlors for next winter. " ' Continued from Page p n o in refrigerator trays. Freeze until Miss Mario Anderson of Heming- ored guests. Haven were guests a t a beach p a r The furniture sales will be on a t almost solid. And well beaten egg Ther ceremony will be held in the way! Avenue:-is on a vacation trip upper two years of professional tea- t y last week at th'e homo bt Mr. and Eleanor and Harriet ,Mcarath ot Petroleum Building, where Miss the end o fthls month and If'yoii whites to mixture in freezer, stir cher education. to; Newoastle, N. 'H. Mrs. Walter'J-. Mollby :ot''Sllvcl> Striittord stayed 'a' =fOW' diiys this < j Drake, a native and Ifle-long res-l keep an astute eye open In'the fa- well. Pack and let stand a few nours Sands. •' '' ' . Although'a careful selective adweek with Mrs. R. C. Wakcman ttt brics departments yoii'll probably Mrs. W. A. Doum of Tyler Street ident of East Haven, was among flhd some'excellent buyjs there, too. hours, or remove shcrbert from trays mission program will continue, the Haycock Point. the guests In February, when t h e and stir' in ' beaten sherbet from final selection of candldatoa fof Is Ifl'.Vermont'for.a few'days. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Stoddard, structure was dedicated, and In ' E v e n t h o u g h you may 'hot' need trays until frozen. Serve garnished leaching will not be made iintll the Gulitpi'd Lakes have been cntertalnMrs. E. T. Monahan and Charles to furnish ah entire room or to Inwith siJi'lgs of mint. ' ' eiVd 'of"tlie" second year. Studoiits Ing'Mr. lind Mrs. Harmon Roller and Moriahan ot Storiy • Greek' attenddd Newcomers to East Haven are Mr. April, when it was completed. Colonel Drake drilled his well, on vest in 'any of the loirger pieces of Frozen Dried Beef Canape and Mrs: Alton Redman who come bntcrilig t'lie 'bdlloge tli'ls tall"are ohlldrCri, Ruth and Dick of Tlolch- the Condon-Scarinell wedding, Wedfurniture. It Is always smart to re-1-3 cup croairi ; here from Terhune Ave., Branford. August 2(3, 18'ia, in Tltusvllle, Pa. member t h a t foresightedn'efes Isl tlVc dcceptbd on' a ' pr'iib'atioriary' librlBdi kisS'Grdve.' ' nesday in New Haven. 1 tablespoon horseradish aiid final section for the teacher'better part of economy a n d to take '/a'apple scraped or grated A Booster card party Is planned stock ot the occasional pieces t h a t Catitaln Philip Tarbell of Chldsey trainlng will be made a t t h a t time. 12 slices dried beet Avenue and Lieut. Alexander Blr- for-tomorrow evening in the Brad- may add t h a t ' desired \ •Tlic following committee chairmen touch'of Hostesses gla'inour to your rooiti. rell lof-Klmberly Ave. are with the ford. M a n o r ' flreliouse. Whip cream;'add horseradish and have beeii selected to re-oxamlno '' will be Mrs. Frank M. Dooloy, Jr., •'Oecasiohal apple. Drop a teaspoontul into eacli tables'are always a aWd' reorganize" tlib cUrrlbUlar 'proand Mrs. A. L. Dobllttie.,'There will good IhVestinent rind tl'ie new oneS piece of beet.'Roll up and place In gram;',; ••' ' ' - ' V ' " • '':, : ' '"' be refreshments and door' prizes. > will do'all spi-ts' 6f iritbrcstlhg ttitetf^ llrcozlng trays 1 aiid - freeze several , ^HlstQiarT-:PrDtos3ot i ,Paullno Sch'-^ .-c-.*-' ' . " to' a furniture grouiilng. One pa'rti- hours. wartz NfcW' Haven' State'^ Teachers Robert Klrstein, son of Mr. and dularly attractive' type is the tatile College Mrs; A.,Klrstein a n d a cadet at tlie with the top of clear or colored lii'at'e Literature — Professor Catherine Untied States Coast Guard • A6- glass with a lilant 'hblder beneath f-Ceble'i'; Wllllmahtic ' - • ademy. New London has' returned A'table of this type bringS a'br'eath ' Siilj'ervlsor of ' Music—Mrs. Ruth of the out-of-doors i h t o ' t h e living from a cruise to South'America: P. DeViilafranca, Danbury rdomdurlrig the'months'wh'eh green Science—Professor ' Beiilah R. ""• Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mead of things are scarce. Conover, Danbury Bibs For Grown-itps Forbes Place- and children, Alan and ' A similar table Is that which has Training Schools—Director VVlllPaul ,were camping Ih Mass. during a plant Itolder infect Into the lop. Grown Up gals have' taken a tip lani p : Dyer, New Britain FOE PROMPT DELIVERY the week end. English and Speech—Professor These may be h a d in many sizes and from their very young sisters and brothers these, days and arii wear- Herbert G. Fowler, New Britain shapes.' • ••••••' .'.'•;• After 6 P. M : Call 7-2617 Foreign Language—Miss Allcq B, Trays with matching folding ing bibs^-but in a 'donslderable more Beryl Brown, Elsa Plerson, and glorified form I With high rteckilneS U:)7 01iiii)iuj)iS(;i'e(!l: Thompson, N e w ' H a v e n " ' ' ' ' ' " New Iltiveii Marjorlc Burgess .'were visitors a t stands are almost indispensable' in Mathematlcb—Professor Kenneth Lanphior's"Gove Tuesday evening. this day of Informal entertaining, becoming increa.singly important Jewelled bibs are a new trick to Fuller, New Britain i >,^ - , so it you haven't one already' this touch up a-formal suit for some spe Health and Physical E d u c a t i o n Ray Pratt, Bill Thompson, and is the month to keep an eye out'tor cial occasion. The bibs are made of Professor Catherine E. Colton, New those on sale. ' Howie Hansen'\vere camping In Before you s t a r t on your shopping tlexible strings of colored stones Britain Guilford on Saturday and Sundoy. tour, it would be a wise idea to take and tie around .the neck. {•hiiosophy—Professor R,L. Wample'r'. New Britain' • ' " ' ' ' Miss Dorothy Aspin of Thompson stock of the assets and liabilities of Inexpensive Travel Sets Arts and Crafts— Professor Avenue and MlsS Tina' Pagano ot each room and then let the August ' •' A flexible' ,'llttleti-avel' Wt t h a t Norma E. Cutts, Now Haven Gcrrlsh AventiB will vacation next furniture sales In your local storeshelp you to add whatever Is needed: will go Into its own box or can bb Industrial Arts—Professor Rayweek a t Block Island. ' ' INSTALL an electric range in your separated to fit into odd corners ot mond W. Phlpps, Now Britain "We have i! mdney-saving sni'your bag is practical and costs only 'A'rt—Pro'fes.'ior Natalie Wilkinson pi'ises for oiil,v readers of the Mr. Roy-Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. kitchen, flip a switch, set a dial,-and a dollah The kit ' consists of Ave New'Hav'eri ' '' ' "' Branford Review, 'i'o get Maurice' 'M." Sarasohn, Meri'ltt •'.' • " ' ' ," I ' , 1 ' .' ''iM c a s e s ' I n water-repellant hiolre'. these speciaLs all you need do Thompson, and Maurice J. Sarasohn the automatic electric clock will al;- . There Is one for soap and washcloth is visit our new K a s t Haven w e r e claming Iri" Sachem's ' Haed SERVED WITH SAUCE another for toothpaste and toothtend to your cooking while you'ife store, Plioiie 8-0]28, or ask yesterday. ' " "' ' ' ' brush, a third for cleansing tisP L A I N ; CUP'cA](c^s our route service m a n . Do so FRE:^ to do what you wish! before September 2iul. 'i'ou The girl who Is particular about sue, a fourth for general utility and Miss Katherine P a g a n o ot Gcrl^AKE FIK^E DESSERT a fifth for cigarette.?, or small gadmust a s l c for the " S u r p r i s e sunimei' daintiness v/Ul give rather rlsh'Avehue "will return h o m e ' t o gets. • S p e c i a l " to save. morrow after a summer vacation in more than ordinary thought to her A simple yet very tasty and inperfume and forswear the'lieavl'er Bulfalo, N : y . teresting dessert can ' be made by Lingerie Goes Demure scents during the hot months. Lingerie' is' getting mdlk demure sci'vlrig jiiain urifro.sted cup cakes Mr. and Mrs. George Crane Wood • Light flower scents are the best by'the minute. Many of the smarter with' such'sauces' as these: of Detroit, Michigan a n d ' M r . and possible ohoiee for summer: They ' Lemon Sauce shops are'featuring nighties of baMrs. Francis Wood of Cornwall are contribute vastly to t h a t impression 1 cup sugar tiste or nainsook trimmed with emof lettiiee-like freshness which evvisiting Mr. and "Mrs.' " Gdorge E. 3 e g g yoiicB ery smart girl cherishes when ther- broidery ruffles. Some even have Wood of'Forbes'Place. 1 tablespoon butter long sleeves : And slips of fine lawn mbmeters are- soaring.' '/j'cup boiling Water strung with pink and blue ribbons Ray Morgan, Maurice Sarasohn, • Among the' rteWand intriguing and trimmed with ruffles ot laco 3 tablesiioons lemon juice and Meyer Levlne of ' Main Street, scents -which you Undoubtedly will and' eyelet embroidery seem hero to '/z teaspoon grated lemon peel were in Eilenvliie, N.' Y. this Week. have no trouble in findirig'at your stay for awhile. ' Cream the butter and sugar tofavorite drug or department store gether iintlf soft' and fluffy;" add Mr. and Mrs. J. Rodonekl of East are apille blossom and plhk clover. wbll beaten egg yolkii and' pour tH6 For Informal Tables HaVcn was a guest last''week end of Both are products of well known boiling water into the mixture. cosmetics houses and both may be They Idokexactiy like the'big sticks friends at Manslleld Grove. Cook In a double boiler until thick, had' in bath powders, toilet * a t e r , j of red and white peppermint cantheri take off the Arc and, add ledles t h a t intrigued us when we were Stony Creek Fife and Drum Corps sachets and perfume.' mon'Juce'and'peel. Serve hot. " Apple -blossom is as deliclately six and they are grand for those ih-^ came In first i n ' t h e ' S e n i o r Ancient ' Orange' Sauce ' ' Class during the Firemen's Parade sweet and refreshing as the fresh formal table settings' which give % glass strdlndd orange Juice in'Bridgeport Saturday.' : • • • blossoms themselves and Is dell^hti zest to summer dining — the new Vi glass water ' ' ' fur for young girls. Pink clover Is a candles which a Fifth Avenue SpeJuice of Ml lemon gay, elusive s t e n t that is equally ciality shop • is featuring. The oiin2 tablespoons sugar good for older woman or debutante. |dles are nice and thick and the red 3 e'pg yolks' ' Among other good summer per- stripes are raised above the white Grated peel of I orange O P T i C I A N - S u c c e s s o r to Gillette fumes are those made from orange ones. They are Inex^ensivb , ' a n d Grated peel bt i lemon blossoms,; which have t h e heavy vastly gay. 220 Main St.' Bi'iinford Tcleplione 9.17 Beat sugar and egg yolks together fragrance of the real flowers, maguntil very. light. Put Into a pan the nolia, which was originated in New WE CAWY 'li"-' Alfred DeSantos, manager of the orange and lemon Juice, water and Orleans, and another made from meat deaprtmerit' a t ' t h e ' First Na•COMPLETE grated peel. Let boll I'mlniite) ari'd sweet grass and imported from Ja-^ tfo'riixi StoFes lias retutiiod to his pour over the yolks and sugar, beatLINE OF J-; '•" • ,'!> . T . ' ! •I-.-.,-! • malca. ' • • ' duties after ah Illness'of several itig'wcll. Put'lri a double'botlci-'and Greetltig Cards Tlien let B r a n f o r d ' s Leading Optician See Us pr Your Electric: ^pp^iance P,ea]|er week's; • ' " " ' " ' ' cook u'ritil the sauce tVilokens, stlrCamera Neeiis attend to your wants. All our lenses are irrouiKl right oii our own premises ; . . lirigT carefully'all the time. "' FOR_ LOCAL NEWS^ Wrtst Waidhes following faitlifulljV eacli detailed reMrs. Donald Hlgley and children, Fountain Pens quest of your Physician's prescription. READ THE BUile,' Windy'aii'd'I'Iioebe have' cbiiiMr. and Mrs: Fred Stiehl of DamPocket Watches Examinations Only By Appointment I lileted i- ViSIt with'Mrs.' S.'W.'Baid- berg' Place have returrieil frotn'a BRANFORD REVIEW iM'ri af IrofdhldGs 'GrtiV'e. ' ' • ' ' " vlfjit In Peoria,'ni. • " ' " ' ' ' " ' ' Your Home And Mine Relatives Th'e Rey. and Mrs. Harry A. G. Abbe"of 'North Glillford'have' rbtlifned 'trorri'a visit Wth relatives Iri'Mount'Vernon,'N;'Y. Just Arrived i Aug, 25 to S:ept» 4 N. Y Henry Murphy.has returned Irom Parents Charles Messner, our demon press man, will cielebi'ttte'dn'dther alittl-' a cruise on' his 'yabht, Treunbchaufl; •'•J^ohn'AIdon Birch ot Quakertown Pa.'ls sp'eridlng'twD w'eekS'iJ/|th his versary on Mohday, ' AiigUst 28' at Mr. and Mrs: Leo Brennan of parerits,''Mr. arid MrsI John -H. his h'bme In WeSt Main St'riJSt. ' '' Brehnah's Store rcoentiy'dlitbrtaln- Birch'Of Cedar'Street. ' ' dO'Mlss 'Ann Brennan'of Nbw"srork City dhd Mr. and Mi's. Lamontagub Roast 4 F.EW SUft(JESTipi!f§ and Frdhk'Tlerpey-of Haniden.-''" r t t l s s Vera Eyarts pf East Haven • Eitxal.-ThMrsda'y rMr. 'arid • Mrrf.' J u s - was-ii r'otcht^nd'M at a'tranWlurl: roifl^ThkMEii'MffiNtis '-tus" J; E c l s t e r a n d - • their two sons, r o a s t ' g l v e r t ' a t ' t d e t e ' s Island. Don • a n d ' J a c k i e of 'Auburn; N;''y. Fresh peaches, garden peas, to- were bailers. . . : -i matoes and cabbages will be excel- ' Mary 'Rlchltblll who h a s been a Entertain ccldnt iiidnu Items'durlnB the'iiext summer guest will leave soon to en- •'•G'uesls last week a t the home of tow weeks, so be sure to'dl'^ out'of t c r - t h e Chicago Acadbmy of Fine Mr. arid'Mrs. Herbert Ovialt was Mrs. Hestbr.' ' ' ' thb flies'all'of''yolii- reclp'es wHIcii Arts. ' '. - . ..• .1 make use of these It'emsi ' ' On Sunday other guests were WilBringing llieli' ' stl-eamllned sys- liam Brennan o'fAubufn;'N; y . with tem 'of'mass distribution Into Play his daughters Jean and Helen KEEP YOUR td'asslst'Iarmers wth bumper crops; ' Mr. and Mrs. Dick Oreenleaf and the' chain stores have' annoiihc'ed Jackie Greenleaf of West Haven alt h a t ohi'ons a n d rice, a s well ds the so visited the Brennan'S'this week. vtg'etabl'bs and''fruit a l r e a d y ' m e n These are hot, uncomfortable tl'6n^d,'wlll b'e prominently leatured Friends of Bobble Brennan will be days'.'EVen the open spaces'and the bn "their" list' of "special'Items tb'r 'shade"of'trees ' 'affo'rd' little relief sorry t o ' h e a l ' " t h a t he' out h i s ' a r m sevordl'week's. tfotri • the ex'desslve heat;, ' ' ' Monday Irtjurlng It 'seriously. ' Pfeclies.'bt course, make a grand Oh these dKys wh'eri humans sufs(ioftoake—either "the 'p'a'stry or'bls^ Mr. and Mrs. William Crulckshank fer so riiuch' ••froW'thd "Iriclemerit clilt 'varldty.' Aifid'cer'talnly'no sumWeath'ei-; l e f u s ' r i o t forget diir'pets mer Is'cbm'piete'wlth'out'd few ses- have beeri on a vacation trip to Al- a n d ' o t h e r animals. They, too, are lentown, Pa. ' • sions wltK'thfe'loe'cream froezbr tor susceptible to the unbearable weahomemade peach Ice'bream.' ' Mr. and Mrs. Leo Grimes will ther. There are almost endless salads Let us be sure to furnish them at move soon Into their new house In that'iJrte 'can a'dhlbve with' toma'tdes. all tlm^s wltli"plenty bf gbod'fr'esh, Clark 'Ave; '' ' '. ' " ' • " ' ' ' ' stuffed "arid baked foihdtoe's dlso cool' drinking water." Let us take nidke'li dbllfehtfuf lundhdori or supJames D. Nelson; Westwood Road theln'to t'hc'pleasaritest places posper dish. And If you want something Is iiiffbrlng trorii an lntect'6d''flri'g'er. sible. • vcry'sb'dcldl'ln' the w a y o r ' a r i ' a c Above all, let us not.leave them compaiilment 'to'th'e 'roast or chops Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Burdge and even' for a little while In tightly servo shredded ftabbagb"with a soiir closed automobiles with no ventllson' Brlice have 'returned fi'o'm the cream'dressing. Wbrlcl's'Pair''arid' llUri'tlrigtbrii'L.' r. atlbh, arid In'wriioh the'glass makes wiidi-e -tliey'' vrsfte'd-'Mri ' 'Burdge'S' t r i d ' h e a t nibst "Interise. •Unfortunabrblherl'Ben BUrdge. •"' - ' " ' ' tely, 'thoughtless' persons leave dogs ',11 !•.. '. s ; i ' „ • • ; • • •• to'suffer fo'r'hoiirs'uri'der these unIMrs. Louis Baehr, of Clark Ave- bearable condltlbris. ' • ' Let u s rdriifembdr' the animals and nuei'ls on 'a' trlp'*wlth''her'two s l i ter. She has visited Montreal' arid try to feeep' th'effii'a's weird's'ourselves cool a n d cb'rrifbrtabie. 'liet' u's give A son, P. Lcrby was born August will rdturri'Vla-Malonc'N; Yj'-' ' tli'dln 'the bare and-attention 'which 15 to Mr. and Mrs. P. Leroy O'Neal, 118 Henry Street,' E a k ' HaVeh. Mrs. Arnold Peterson Is In Gardiner tri'elr-loyalty anti'devotlo'n ib'erits:' O'Neal 'wos"Mlss '' Vfrglnid'MclJdy Mass; fdr a fe'\V'di'ys.' '•:••'••'•• Mrs. Earl Berger, Mrs: C. H. Hoogh before'her'matrlage."'"'" "'"" '" Paul Brown, an artist, and form- kirk and'^Ml^ Palth"''Hodghklrk''wl,ll lyir. and Mrs. Thomas Dalkln, 5 orlS''bf 'this pldee called this week return''tomorrow'firom ^irigstbri, R. Perkins St're'et, East' Haveril 'dn- a t the' hdm'd if'Mr. iih'd Mrs. Frank'- I. "\Vh'ere' they h'avebeen'atteri'dlng the 'Lecturer's' 'Cbrifercrice'bf New nouncc the birth of a son, Thomds lin'Burtlge'.'' • '*' ''' ' " ' " ' ' " Eriglarid'Granges. • Joseph Iri' PiVyslcldns and Surgens HospltUron'August Wth. '' "'" ' ' David Anderson of Walllngford Miss Edith Byram of Beacon, N. Y.'ls''the''"'feuest '"of Mrs. "Georg'e Marsh, Church Street;. '"' 1 HiUiii'diiy AncriHion Auj;. ;2(i—Tni]) Sliniiliiij,' ' Have Guests Mr. a h d ' M r s . Clayton Rider re cently had ai their' guests a t Wav erly Road, Mr^ knd Mrs. Everett Eaton and children 6f Bristol. ' • A Well Child Conference win be held rn"th6'Towiv Hall today. ' ^^!™!* i New Program , Maine Plcttsdnt.''" '•,'•'• • '' •'Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Burno ot stony 'Creek were in Hallowell, Loo C. Grimes has purchased the Maine, last week." ' Julld-C. Hlckox house, Cldrk-AVe. •' At Stony Creek Donald Knowlton Is convalescing Miss* Ilv'el^ii .Jenkins ot St. Louis, I n h U - h o m e fbllowlng an Illness in Is visiting Miss bllVe Pratt ot Stony New Ha'ven Hospital: ' "" Creek! ' ' THE WORLD'S GOOD NEWS The ChrUtlan Bolcnce Pubtlihlng Society One, Norivny Btrcet, ngston, Masiarhmttts Fleaiit enter my. •uburtptlon to-Tht .ChrUtinu Science Uonltor for » period of , . , - . , . - , , . . ( ., 1. year ft^.OO S monthi $0,00 S months $S.M 1 month ll.oo V Saturil»y • lAiUfl, iucludlnt'Mkgtiln» Beotlout X yeiir la.W, 8 luites 31s Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Russell and daughter, Rita, returned to New Haven yesterday after Visiting Mr. aiitl Mrs. Leo Grimes for several weeks. '•' Mrs. C. E. B. Dickenson of Indian plans to spent this *eek a t Lake ' ' ' •• Champlain',' New York ' Connie Erwin ot Walllngford has Lcona and Arnold Peterson, ot been 'staying a few daj's with' her ^Kort "Beaofi dttbhded'd' Ulrthda'y gra'ndfathbrj Mei'rltt BJ.-Tdylo'r.' party at ' "Chalkdt'• Beach Tuesday ftlVeil fo'r Loillsa'Bell'ii Odw iJf'Nb'wl^ Mrs. Selma Sandqulst ot Hollybcrgh,'N. Y.''a' ffan'net'li'esldent "bf wood; PId'. Is'this'season's gubst ot Short Beach, '' ' ' •' Mr; and Mrs: Ottb OlsoVi-df'Cdmp Mrs. Clarence E. Buoll of Harding Avenue'oh SUhddy wdS 70'ydirs'0ld'. &frF/f0mMm/&&'^& '•'' visited here "Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. 'William Crulckshank Trip a t Lanphler's Cove have been e n Mrs. George Bassett of Lanphler's Orectlngs to Charlotte Parclnskl tertaining Mrs. Nancy Rehkbp ot West Main Street bii Saturday;'AuCove h a s returned Irom ' a ' trip to Carbondalo, Pa. gust 20^11. • • " " • ' " " ''''•'•• '•' Montreal, Quebec. ' ' An Exclusive Display Of SAVINGS OF 25 & 30% Hdvon. ' THE.BRANFO.RP.BpyigW, yqPHiap^y, APQIIIgT 3f 19^g Miss Marie Tenoske of Indian Mr. and Mrs. Guy Barker of Mill Necli Avenue wlir enter the HosiM-j Plain have been In Vermont for tal training school in'September. two weeks. Happy Bjrthday VISIT I ' SAGAL-LOy f^OMOGFNIZEC) DIANA GpES TO TOWN „MILK „ ^'Cream In Every Drop" for Readers of the Branford Review LET FREEDOM RING! FJp,wer Perfumes Best In Summer '^llPe$tOt8C STANDARD Piico For 2 TIrei for Tk« 1!I Tiro yiT9$tone CHAMPION NcxI |Tire S0<s OitcounE YOU SAVE For 1 Tirol YOU SAVE f 40-211 1.50-211 $7.20 (.75.191 7.45 5.00-15 4.50-20 7.60 5.00.20 5.25-17. , 9.50 5.50-17 5.25-19 8.65 5.50-lB G;00.16 10.3S $10.80 53.60 5.2S-I71 5.50-17) $14.65 57.33 !$21.98 57.32 11.18 3.72 7.98 23.93 6.00-16, 15.95 7.97, 11.40 3.80 17.95 8.93 26.93 . 0^97 6.2S-I6. 14.25 4.75 19.35 9.68 29.03 9.47 4.32 6.50-16. 12.98 6.17 7.00-16, 21,95 10.98 32.93 10.97 15.53 Above Pricos liiclild« Your Old Tire—Otiier Sliei Proportionotely Low| A 50% DISCOUNT ALSO APPLiES TO TI^E PURCHASE OF Znd TIRE ON THE FOLLOWING; T1rg$tp:nCHI(3H SPEED II f » r 0 $ t O H f e CONVgY SRE Prico Prico No>l For Th» Tiro S O X . For I l i t Tiro Dllcounll 2 Tirol 4.75-19 5.00-19 1510.30 5.25-17 33.20 5.50-17 15.25-18 12.00 5.50-18 6.00-16 14.35 6.25-161 6.50.16 17,40 YOU SAVE PrIco Ni>l For Tho TlroSOiC 111 Tiro Dllcbunt ! PrIco For Tirol YOU SAVE 55.15 $15.45 55.15 4.40-211 4.50-21 4.75-191 6.60 5.00-19 6.60 19.80 6.00 15.25-17 6.00 18.00 5.50-17 7.18 21.53 7.17| 5.25-18 5.50-19 8.70 6.00.16 8.70 26.10 58.35 54.18 512.53 54.17 8.60 4.30 12.90 4.30 11.00 5.50 16.50 5.50! 10.00 5.00 15.00 5.0^ 5.98 L17.93 11.95 5.97 Above Prleei Include Your Old Tiro—Ofhor Sizes Proportlonoftfly Low FOR GREATEST SAFETY AND ECONOIVIY PUT A NEW TUBE I N EVERY NEW T l R E ;N0^'*IME^It^ii St* Pirtttone fires nude in the Virtitone Factory and ILxbihition Ifiii'/ditig at New York VTortdi Pair, Atw liiit the Firestone llxhihil ut the CoUen Gate International ExpotHion ^1 S.in Prana'sra UsItTt taihe I'oice of Flreitnnt with Kichjni Croots, Marsarel Speahi and the Firttlone Symphonr OrfitUf'ttUridtrdireCtion o/Al/redU^alientttiniMondaj e\tninss,Setionuide N.fl.C Red Nttuvrh CENTRAL GARAGE CS Main Street Phone S68 ';'imiTiriiiriiiiiiiili Hill Branford, Conn. ^^^^m Ph one 8-0123 or Save 10,*^ at 288" Main Bt, East 'Haven MAJESTIC LAyftiPRt B Low P'jrices -^ Easy 'Xci^xi^^^ ANAR ANDERSON Low Cookimg Hi Rate New Glasses? 831 l^ontoweao St. Phone 744 Branfprd, Conn, •.".ji^'yKW^^ >^M*''^:i^.t^.-:i.>t,ti->^ V* *»*« Pago Pour " ^ Tan • HITLER'S HATCHET M A N ! riitnbllshed 1D2S rubllslicd Every Thursilay At Brnnfnrd, Conn. by THE nilANFORD REVIEW, INC. 37 Rose Street vored land In God's Universe. Let us keep America Great. Let us keep America strong by keeping It dedicated t o ' t h e genuine principles of democracy. Only he Is a true American who believes In freedom tor all and who defend the sacred right of every human being and to remember Justice a n d tolerance-^thelr legacy to us. The Unknown Soldier may be a Jew. Millions have paid their respect to a fallen hero. Who was the U n known Soldier? Was he an Englishman, Irishman, German, Frenchman, Pole, Italian, Slav, Swede, Jap, Chinese? We do not know or we could not call him the Unknown Soldier. Was he yellow—white, black or red? We do not know or we could not call him the Unknown soldier. Was he a Protestant—a J e w — ^ a Catholic —-an atheist? We do not know and we do not care. All we know Is t h a t his bleeding, mangled body was picked up on the field of battle where he had died fighting for Old Olory. ....Address delivered belore the Dor-1 i will not here defend the Jews monl Rotary Cltib iii Dormont's against these silly ridiculous and Methodist Episcopal Church by the baseless charges. The Jews do not Rev, Father James R, Cox, Old St. need my defense. Rather, I would point out to my brother priest that Patrick's Catholic Church. In the early day of our Republic these Inflamma tory charges t h a t our fathers were guUded by the This Meeting represents the es he and the other potential fire greatest compass of all human phiMEYER LE8IIINE Publlshei ••ience of Democraoy-a Catholic; bmnds are making "today agaln-rt losophy—the Declaration of IndeALICE T. PETERSON Edltoi prlest-spcaklng In a protestant the Jews had their counterpart In pendence. It declared that all men Church-agalnst the persecution o f ' i h e wave of prejudice against the are created equal, that all men had Jews. I Catholics about ten years ago, when equal right t o life, liberty and Telephone Branford 400 Many, many times I have been intolerant groups whlapefed t h a t happiness. But propagandists are Sub.?crlptlon Rate: a.sked; "Why Is Father Coughllnlthe Pope was coming to take over trying to destroy the Bill of Rights $2.00 a Year, Pnyablo In Advancr permitted to make his radio the White Houst and the control by an Impudent appeal to bigotry. Advertising Rates. On Appltcatlor INFAMOUS DOCTRINE speeches In spite of protests from'millions of good folks believed this, I protest against this Infamous all sides?" The Catholic Church millions of good foks believed this, Fear not for America. We will Member Of docs not Interfere with the Ideas | iwould remind my brother priest doctrine of racialism. I denounce New England Press Assoolatlun and principles of her children so that the slmple-chlld-Uke mental- race prejudice. I condemn racial come out of this crisis and all humlong as they are not opposed to her aies of certain groups who can be persecutions. Above all, I cry out anity will be better for it. The Entered an second class matter. teachings In matters of faith and stayed and Incited today against against antl-Semltsm. It Is Immor- threat of NazKsm, Fascism, and October 18, 1028,;at the Post Otflcf morals. The attitude of the Church i the Jews, can ]u.st a s ea.'jlly be al. I t Is unChlrlsltlan. I t Is Un- Communism may yet serve Us well a t Branford, Cohn., under Act o> Is like that of the United States swayed tomorrow against t h e Aiticrlcan. Christ was a Jew and we, if i t moves t h e Idle brains of t h e March 3, 1807. Ooverment which guarantees to j catholics, and he, above all, as a His followers, must defend His nation to action, the idle money to productive work and tho idle workevery cltlzeii the right to life Itber- ] catholic Priest should be tho last people try and tho pursuit of happiness man to enc'ourago rabble-rousing As a Catholic Priest I am grieved ers into jobs of tl-adltlonal Amci"lxiiurBclay, AUffUst24, 1030 and guarantees free speech, free mob-ven geance and ma.ss-hysterla. and humiliated that another can standards of living. If economic press and free assemblage. It Is only Rather he should appeal tor peace Catholic Priest Is In the vanguard planning is t h e answer to unemthe preaching of the attempt to and order, for good-will and for co- I of this Bigot Brigade. He Is profan- ployment, American brains, money ovcrthrow our govenment by force operation a n d nelghborllness Ing his pulpit by preaching the and workers that Invent it in our OONaRATULATIONS that will bring action on the part of [among all of the religious groups'pagan doctrine of anil Semltlsm. factories will make it work in a big our authorities against ony person in America. I For my part, I choose today to cry way under Democracy—the form of Guilford unci Millorcl having free government which made or group, I We must hot forget t h a t we a r c , out agaln.st t h e sorry spectacle of America great and which, with lived for tliree oenturioH, have a The right of free.speech In the guranteed In this country com-j the Detroit priest, ordained to teach God's help, will be greater. licritflge n.s rich aH Now England United States of America Is regar-lpicte religious freedom of con-] the Love of God, engaged each SunNO DISTINCTION HERE ded so sacred t h a t a priest born un-1 science. A man may worship God | day over a radio hookup In parrotitself. AMERICANS DON'T BELIEVE IT der another flag Is permitted to call ] as he sees fit; It there be among ting poisonous Nazi propaganda, An American should know no dlsNow, three hunclred yonrs after Visitors to the New York W o r l d ' s P a i r cannot help but see the the President of the United States us any who do not believe In God!and huckstering the heresies of tinetlon of race, color or religion. n g r o u p of OnloniHts Kolooicd ' the Soviet KuHsian cxilihil there. T h e statue which towers over il;, t h a t of "a liar" and Is not jailed or t a k e n ' a n d are willing to accept the con-iHitler. A Catholic priest become a The United States of America h a s silo and founded the town; a tor- a worker holding the red star high over Jiis licad, is one of the tallest oft t h e air or silenced by the sequences of t h a t unbelief, under Storm-Trooper! A Coughlln become been made one under t h e Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood Church, or Sidle. President Roose-1 our American .system of religious a Hitler hatchet m a n ' coiilonary is being observed. things anywhere on the groiiii^ls. of Man. While assisting a t the bedThe event plnnuod will only be Hut if the propagandists for Communism took a little time o i l volt may have changed his attitude I freedom—they have t h a t right I n As a Catholic priest I protest side of hundreds of American boys against such degradation of Holy on a n Issue which probably a , o u r country, a man has as much a glance baelcward al t h e out- from their subversive activities and circulated a m o n g the Americans change of conditions made necess- right to be an agnostic, an Infidel, Orderes. As a CathoUc I fear the who had been wounded in action standing facts concerning llio set- who daily and nightly pass the Soviet exhibit, their faces would p r o ary. Father Coughlln, If my memory I a doubter, a Mohammedan, a hea consequences to my fellow Catholics In France during the World War tlement of the lowiiH, their history, bably be pretty glum after they heard the comments. F o r j'our aver- serves me right, promised a t o n e ' t h e n , a Protestant or a Jew as | In America from stirring up bigotry. and who were about to give up their growlli and development. , age Aiiicricnii is a pretty elcar-lioadod person about m a t t e r s like this, time' t h a t unless his Lemke Party Father Coughliln and I have to be j whether It be against Protestant, lives, I would end my ministrations by saying: "Buddy, Is there anyreceived nine million votes for Pres- Catholics. I Catholic, Jew or Negro—whether ii and ho isn't taken in long by surface appearances. AVo congratulate them. thing more I can do for you?" They ident, he would cease to broadcast Under our American system of be religious, racial, economic or Hero, at; least, is how the New Y o r k Kriquirer summarizes i t s They have 'reason to bo proud Father Coughlln is still on the air. political freedom, a man has the I Political. Bigotry is Irrational, un would look u p a t me and say: ' CATHOLICS NOT IN . ACCORD right to be a Socialist, a radical, a thinking. I t feels, it gropes in the "Podre, if I die, take m e back t o of the length and serenity of their feelings on the m a t t e r : God's country and tell m y mother I "I'liore could have been no ob.ieotion to a Bolshevist exhibit a t WITH HIM Republican or a Democrat or what- 'dark and travels in an ever wldenhistory. am proud and happy to .'give my the Now Yoi'k W o r l d ' s Fair if it told t h e t r u t h about Soviet Kussia. While as Catholics we can not do have you, yes, and even a Common- jing spiral. I t gathers In this group life for Old Glory." God's country Few towns have such imporluut anything to stop Father Coughlln, ist if he wishes to be, so long as and . and t h a t group, striking down the Indeed such an exhibit would hiivp bdenoxtromoly welcome. and Old Olory I—real American material to offer the IcgaV scholar, "I'ho Soviet exhibit at the Now Y o r k AVorld's F a i r is a colossal you may rest assured that all until the Supreme Court of the, Innocent along with the guilty. The sentiments of Patriotism. All of lis Catholic people and priests are not United States declares that t h e Jews today, t h e Catholics tomorrow, the historian, and the autirinurian. should pledge anew a sincere e n lie. I t reveals nothing of the bloody^purgb."), the deliberate slaying of In .sympathy or accord with him. Communist party is not lawful or and the Negro always. thusiastic allegiance to your flag Beyond question the 'arehitco- millions by the torture, of starvaticiji, the'jvholesale destruction of In my humble oplnlon'ihls attack constitutional parly. As a loyal American citizen I be- and my flag. liiral tiisiinelioU. pC the towns is churches a n d synagogues, the u n r e m i t t i n g w a r u p o n religion, t h e upon the Jews are abhorrent to But how can Jews be both Com lieve 11 to be my duty to protest ag- Your /lag and my flag, and how it. in its homes. I t is pleaBing to find tyrannic dictatorship exercised by a mere fraction in Ru.s.sia over t h e everyone who believes. In the F a t h - munlsts and International Bankers' alnst the artlvlties of any man, no details wiped wiped out by as- lives of the Russian people and the untiring efforts of the Red Nero erhood of God and the' Brotherhood a t o n e and the same time? flies today; I priest or layman, who Invades the bestos Bhingling or other modern of IhoKromlin to spread rovolutiou t h r o u g h o u t the globe, reducing all of Man. To my way of thinking. It Is If there are any Jewish bankers i United States of America with In your land and my land, and half very bad taste for a pi'lest, a man of there are a hundred times more pernicious Niizl propaganda to ac a world away! inoougruily. Tlioro IB a charm mankind tO;tholcVel of the savage mentality which actuates the ComGod, who preaches Wye of God 'and Irish Bankers, German, Bankers, compiish his ambllion to make or Rose-red and blood-red the stripes about these lovely old homes, rich | munist pultusi',' ' -, :.::•;':,•; ;^;.,';'-„,^!V- . , ! • • ' ' • ; • ; . . : ' , , love of- nelghborjtjj^'lther. dlngotly Polish , Bankers, ..Italian*^Bankers, break presidents. for-ever gleam. in romance, rich in history. and soul-white the Tlidfollowcrs of Genghis K h a n and the other liiiiss murderers who or ' irid'lreotly lostef' ifete on the since' when" Is'it a viblailon' of our Father Coughlln, I adjure you in Snow-white good forefathers' dream; A uoto\vorthyKbirlMay lias ar once overran i/uropo and Asia used to erect piles of h u m a n skulls to basis of race, color or religion. If Constitution and our bill of Rights the name of God, cease this bigotry 1 Father Coughlln is right then the A bigot wearing the robe of a Sky-blue and true-blue, with stars celebrate their triumphs. But Americans do not believe 1:1 monuments Ku Klux Klan is right i t the Ku to be a banker? rived. '', ' to gleam aright—. If there are any Jews who own Klansman Is infamous—a bigot such ns these. They like much hotter the S t a t u e of Ijibcrty, celebrating ku Klux Klan Is right about the newspapers, there are a hundred wearing the robe of a priest is des- The gloried guidon of the day, a Jews, it is also right about t h e times more Irish, Scotch, and what picable. You do not speak for the internal peace and peace with all nations. shelter through the flight. T h a t ' s why Americans d o n ' t take too kindly to the huge s t a t u e Catholics and colored people a n d ' not newspaper owners. The Hearsts j Catholic Church. You do not speak THANKSGIVING DAY a n d Patterson- ' for the Catholic Clergy. You do not at the World'.s" F a i r holding the blood-colored star. They have too Father Coughlln Iheifcby condemms Scrlpps-Howard Dog doys arc liero and now so clear a knowledge of what really lies behind it in terms of human s u f himself artd all that he represents. | McCormick newspaper, the largest! speak for the mlllons of Catholic Father Coughlln In one breath a c - ; and most Influential in America are! laity who wish to live in peace and much of the unusual is occurring fering and tlib loss of human liberties. cuses Jews of being Communists not owned by Jews. I harmony with their fellow ditizens that wo soarcoly'miss the ahsonee and In the next bankers. Some may .JEWS DO NOT CONTROL WEALTH (As a student of economics or as a of Congress. The heat, rather wide be one or the other, but how can The Jews do not control t h e political orator, you would be ignorBEAUTIFUL VISITORS International bonkers be Commun- wealth. I assure you t h a t the Mell- ed. Unfortunately, you speak as an spread drought, the continued furAMERICAN WOMEN'S FREEDOM ists? ons, Morgans, Rockefellers, and the Individual Catholic priest and a s I looked from my window ore in Europe, sun b u r n on the 'I'lie rccojit niuoty-lirst amiivcM'sary of llio first wouicn's right;s You cannot compare the Civil Fords, can buy and sell all the Jews such you command attention, and One morning In spring. vacationists, flat pocket boolts t h a t is tile sliame and the danger. And under the fir tree convention in the United Stales was observed as " W o m e n ' s l u d c - War in Spain with the persecution in the United States. after vacation trips, disheartened of the Jews throughout the world. Tho Jews do not dominate the You forgot the teaching of Christ pondcuoe Oa.v." I saw a strange thing. turkeys a n d ' w h a t h a v e y o u , leave Spaniards were fighting Spaniards The average Auicricaii woman, however, probabl.v passed it by and i t was their, country, their Govermeht of the Nation, state or —of tolerance and brotherhood. us in a oonsidorably perturbed city, there is only one Jew in the You are in effect anti-Catholic, as Twas an indigo bunting. state of mind. Thq events and af- without a n y siiocial recognition or obscrvanee. The woman of today— people and their concern. German President's cabinet. There is only well as anti-Semitic. So rare and so, blue; fairs now occurring rotlcot this. regardless whetlior she lives on a farm, keeps house, or worlis in a n or Italian troops who hated Jews one Jew on the Supreme Court. The danger to American demo- And the morn was so peaceful. did not kill or persecute any one in There are those, including Father cracy does not come from Communollico—will find i t hard to euvisage a d a y in wliioh women did n o t And the grass wet with dew. The President's nnoxpeotcd shiEtwanderers on the face of the earth, Couglin, who are claiming that the ism, but from Fascism,—and you ing of-Thank!igiv.iiig day, is about have the freedom to permit tlicir full partieipation in the world in that struggle. The Jews are a min- Jews dominate President Roosevelt know it. Communism is too abhor- I stood and I watched him, t h e most discussed item in current which Ave l i v e , The progress of iiulopondencc for women has k e p t ority in every p a r t of the world —the President who h a s been the rent to the American mind to be And did almost adore, . affairs. Naturally, the shift does a pace with tho material and industrial gro-»vlh of llie nation and they helpless many times and haled— greatest humanitarian to grace the accepted by Americans reared in And this bird of rare beauty have shared in the nation's progress and wrculth. they have no country—no—flag— White House, and who has rendered the traditions of relgious liberty. lot of things to a lot of people. The Was a guest at my door. Now t h a t women in other p a r t s of the woi'ld are losing their free- nobody to send protests for them, service to all cla.sses of people with- The real menace to America today d e p a r t m e n t stores en,ioying. the except friends under every flag in out regard to race, color or creed. les the attempt of the Coughlln It seemed a good omen, greatest benefit. Tliero noM' occurs dom and find their rights abrogated by dictatorial edicts and collec- every party of the world, who pity What a preposterous accusation. kind of alien propagandist, who A sign of new hope. growing interestjin a p e r m a n e n t tivism, tho American " W o n u u i ' s Independence D a y " should be ob- God's Chosen people, persecuted The Jews are good citizens. They wants to establish a fascist form of And I sang a t the task time f o r ' Thanksgiving, Sugges- served every dn,r. And it should take the form of a greater interest in because they try to overcome al- lielp to build up the communities government, by labelling i t AmerWith which I must cope. most unsurmountable obstacles and in which they live. They are hard icanism and coupling it with the tions are coming in from all sides. those things w h i c h safeguard tliat independence. prejudices and Intolerance of the Only as wiuncn help to preserve and slronglhcn the foundations achieve something. God helps them | working. Godfearing people. Their Next morn to my window Sorad would have Cliristiuas and I went once again, Thanksgiving combined. Another upon whicli the trccdo m of all of our people rests, only as thcv become for tliey are still His people. Jews I home life Is the most exemplary of new streamline Ku Klux Klan pro gram. We should all join in making idea is for the President to fixmore deeply interested in finding a solution to the the problems which r " " ™ ^ ^ ^^ '"*'''' ^^°''''' Remember' all people. They take care of their Democracy work better—as the best And there by the fir tree . Two birdies I knew parents. They educate their Thanksgiving,, (Ml his birthday., face the private enterprise system today—will tliev bo nbln in ,•A^„in "'^^ " ' ^ ^ ^"^"^ " ' ° blessing of God,aged defense against all isms. because they Chosen I children. •" " - • ' "'• " " ' d '0 'Ot'"'l.hpnn,isn H-iPV are nt-n still still His Hl.q Chnsnn r.hlldrfin. They Thev cooperate r-nf>no,-ntn in I,-, all nU tlieir iiKlepondenco, Consolidatiousr in Qovcrment arphilanthropic and charitable en Two birds of blue plumage, people, FALSE AMERICANISM In other countries, where these rights were uol guarded vigilantl.y, gue well for wise consolidation in With their neat little wives. It is false Americanism which If Father Coughlln were not a deavors. They a r e civil minded, women are now relegated to the kitolmn, tho field and the raising of priest and chose to attack Catholics They are patriotic. They are loyal to diserlminates against fellow-cltl Were hopping and feeding— other affairs, holidays included. oanuou fodder. on t h e strength of t h e Bogus' the land of their adoption. We have zens. I t is false patriotism which I A ioveiy surplso. One inoxouBiiblc rebel Would Knights of Columbus Oath, God, in Pittsburgh the Falk Ciinlo for persecutes on account of accident I called in my neighbor, of birth or choice of faith. help us^ Catholics. Yet Father the poor, made possible by a Jew. abolish Thanksgiving until ho has To m y soldiers a r e t h e real To thirll at the charm. a job, domestic'troubles are over young Abe Lincoln, storekeeper, t u r n s , w h e t h e r in tho flolds of Coughlln has produced forged doc- ' If we paint the whole Jewish slluments, misquotations and deliber-. uatlon with the paint of the so- Americans—the real patriots. They Stepped ever so softly. and there is something for which who is up to his neck in d e b t : health, recreation, coouomics, of ate misrepresentations as evidence called bad Jew, how can wo I donot preach bigotry and hatred, To cause no alarm. to give thbnkS;' The range of sug " W e l l , Abe—,iust bear in mind social, political, goverumontal, n - of his accusations against the Jews. {Catholics hope to escape the t a r ' Brotherhood was gained on our ternalional, indu.strial, literary or Only a Communist or Nazi Court, and feathers for the doings of Al j battlefields. Democracy was a c - But oh me, and oh my! gestions is wide and deep, inolud that there are always two professsoiontifie endeavor, conditions a r e wouid permit such so-called ovl-j Capone and Jimmy Hines or the I hieved where soldiers encamped, A stray cat crossed the grass ing the thought that the date fixed ions open t o people who fail a t rapidly changing under expand- dence as lie used to bolster Ills alibis mistakes of some of us clergymen? I Tolerance was found In the Nor saw she what I saw. b y tradition a n d observance be reeverything else; there's school ing scientific discoveries. T o d a y ' s for retailing alien propaganda. No- \ who am I or Father Coughlln to sit I trenches. Catholic, proleslants and But there's danger alasl tained as i t , s u i t e d everyone b u t teaching, a n d there's politics." l i e teacher is faced w i t h the profes- thing h e ever spoke or printed in Judgment and judge who is a | Jews fought and won the Revoluthe departmenji^storo owners. spoke for the 1830's, hut tho re- sional obligation of interpreting Justltled his easy generallzatons good Jew and who is a bad Jew?jtlon. They joined again to achieve Away flew the birdies. "Judge not that ye be not judged."]national unity In the World War. Nor did they return. mark still raises a laugh in the to boys and girls the coiuplcx lite and his wicked Innuendos. The victims of tyranny came t o ' They was no distinction of race or Fulfilled was their mission. 1930'8 The old idea of eduoatiou around them.-It is no longer possi- CHARGES ARE PARADOXICAL Though for them—I yearn. Tile, charges made against Jews America from the four corners of' creed In Flanders, In the Argonne. W H A T Y O U R , O H I L D GETS also fostered t h o notion t h a t ble for tho toaoher who accepts by Father Coughlln' are paradoxl I the earth. Broken in spirit, dwarfed, Catholics, Protestants and Jews loEducation is, the baekbone ofj leaching W a s a semi-froe servicp that challenge to be the limited cal. For instance: That most of t h e ' by hunger, driven by want, lured b y ' gelher and died together In France When danger is near us 'Twere better by far, any civilizatioii. And it can bo no to bo done in the spirit of tlio person ho or she -was even t w o Jews are' Communists; t h a t the hope, praying for peace, these exiles' for the same cause. I assisted a t Jews are responsible for the Russ- came to America—the only truly i the bedside of Jews There was no To lake our wings. stronger than the teaching person- missiouarywilli a very snudl sal- decades ago. And make for a star. ian Revolution and the subsequent tree land upon which the s uhaired n then. We did n o t ask a ncl which lias (he job of educating, ary. Toacliors renounced all things Laura W. Ayer. establishment of Soviet Russia; .shines. From ocean to ocean— man's religion. We united in a com;Upou the citizens of cacli com- worldl,v, including the dollars American Industry pays more to that t h e Jews are internationalists; 'America became the asylum for all mon cause, fighting for the commuuity falls, Iho ,rc.si)onsibility of which would have enabled tliem to government than to its millions of that t h e Jews a r e international oppressed. The feuds and prejudicesmon victory and praying to one The average stale relies on taxes Belting a level-'fur teacher's sal-' learn sonietUing of thut world a n d persons who are its owners. Latest bankers; that the-'Jews Influence of Europe faded from their minds. .God for peace. t h a t hit consumers for about twoavailable , figures oi\ all , corporunduly and thereby control the They set their hearts upon building | Let us carry these same practices aries which niust inevitably limit 'pass it on to their cljarges. ^ ' thirds its total lax receipts. In some ations-show $1.11 paid In cash>'t:o present admlnlstraUpii;' t h a t , the a great country. i;hey have sue- of tolerance and brotherhood dur- cases, taxes paid on t h e spot by that personnel,'':'.''., .-•'.•'>J >That "situation ,ifr'''fortun'i\tely (etieral, state and local governments Jews control the "^Vj^ewspapers the|ceeded. Every nation, every creed ing these trying times. Let every the consumer when he makes his 111 a current B r o a d w a y produo-.yielding u n d e r the Botion of time fot- ivqry dollar of stock-holder ear- radio and the theatres; t h a t t h e . h a s contributed to make America day be a Memorial Day—to remem purchases yield 80 to 90 per cent of (ion old Mculor Graham comforts aud change. Whichever way one nings. Jew wants a world war. ' o r e a t - t h o greatesl and most fa- her the deeds of these heroic dead all state revenues. Spencer have purchased a new 1939 Believe It or not, Don Sawtelle, Plymouth. The steel foundry boys are looking forward to getting free turned down the offer of Jean Bartletl's car for Its scrap Iron rides to the future outing. value because 11 is not old enough. Lieutnant Michael Amatrudo reServices in the local churches on To quote Don "Only ears manufacSunday will be— presented the North Branford Fire The Sportsman's Club held their tured previous to 1910 are free from Mass at 9:15 o'clock at St. Augus- Department at the business sessions third outing of tho year last Sat. alloyed steel parts and would make at Dom's grove. Quoits were enjoyed tine's R. C. Church, Rev. William on Friday. In the forenoon with the high hon- good scrap for our cupola and a s Brewer, pastor, Mrs. Edwrad Daly, ors going to Frank Woodford. Bob nearly as I can tell this car was organist and choir director. Three motor cases came up before Robinson and Mort Wall. This con- made Just a year or two after 1910". Morning worship a t 11 o'clock, t h e justice court on Monday night. test was followed by a very fine To bad Jean—No Salel North Branford Congregational • Daniel W. Evans of New York city, sheep bake. James F Toole of 81 Marvel Road, Church, Rev. O. Dlllard Lessley, jspeedlng; Frank Caruso of New HaMr. Agnew Is back on the job New Haven who passed away this pastor, Mrs. Douglas B. Holabird, ven, Violation of rules of the road; again after an absence of several week was a brother of tho late and Frank Kanowskl of New Havorganist and choir director, Miss Ethel Maynard, assistant. On Sun- |en speeding. Each man pleaded weeks, and wishes, through this Tiiomas J. Toole and the late Michday morning Mr. Eldrcdge Jones guilty to the charges and received column to express his sincere ael Toole of Branford. thanks to the foremen and cowill be at the organ and will render fines plus costs. workers for the many acts of kindTho S. N, E. Tolcplione Co. buildhis composition "The Lord's Prayer" which h a s received much favorable Rev. and Mrs.' Francis J. Smith ness shown him during ills illness. is being painted comment and has been given over were dinner guests of Rev. and Mrs. the radio. Mr. Clarke will be the I Donald Greene of Walllngford on soloist. •Wednesday evening NORTH BRANFORD Morning prayers a t 10 o'clock Zlon Episcopal Church, Rev. Francis J . Smith, Rector, Mrs. Paul R. Hawkins, organist and choir director. -J I I L3L lar4.H**«wii-Mi^»««»«°»*** - U . . . ^ . .,...^A.j^ ...til -I I ^,^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ggAg|gg| , X ^ . t - . - ^ . . ^.-.^.J-.-.-.-^-^-.,^.:^:^^ Miss Mildred Hunt of CHIT Street Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Baker spent last week In New Hampshire. and children of Hartford were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Shaw of Cliff Marsh, South Main St By Helen Shoemaker Street are ontortalnlng their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. George Shaw and daughter of Leroy Murray will return Sunday Washington, D. C. ^*u/ite'^ffM%i€4idi from a four day stay In Gardiner, Mass. VISITING FRIENDS Miss Theresa Ann Qoolowskl of Mr. William Hack and Mr. Bud Wset End Ave., loft this afternoon Hughes of Lebanon, Ponn. are for n four day stay n t Port Jefferguests a l the Holbrook cottage tor son, Long Island t o visit friends. THIS YEAR this week. While there she plans to visit the World's Fair. GOOD ROADS \.!h • Mr .and Mrs. Timothy Welsh and • S«IV BCACHtS ,^. son, George, of New Havou, are va- The Branford VKiltlng Nurses of.•PEACErUL LAKES \ •<' - . ? • ' • H I S T O R I C VILLAGES cationing a t tile home of Mr, and fices. South Main Street arc being Mrs .Albert Abcles, Moartow Street. renovated. Riverside N e w s CONNECTICUT iliftir NATIONAL STORES Mr. and Mrs. Burton Colter and family. Prank Haslett, Ralph Colter, Mr. and Mrs. Bueler and son attended the superintendent's outing at "Ye Castle I n n " at Cornfield Point on Sunday. September 2 h a s been the date Mrs. Lois P. Dudley is entertaining selected by the Zlon Parish Guild for their annual Labor Day food relatives from New Jersey a t her sale. I t will be held in the afternoon home In Bare Plain. on the lawn adjoining the church. Mr. and Mrs. Cavallere Forte enThe North Branford Fire Depart, tertained a t a large dinner party at ment was represented In the par- her home on Mill Road on Sunday. ade In Bridgeport on Saturday. Many farmers are cutting their Members who marched were Chief John Harligan, Captain Paul Boyce, sweet corn and putting It into their Lieutenant Michael Amatrudo, Sec- silos. The rain of the other evening retary-Treasurer Leslie Brindley, helped the late grass crops, but was Vincent Lupone, Joseph Buccelli too lale to help much with the Burton Colter Jr., Rollln 'Whitney, garden produce. Considerable damThomas Colter, G. Dlllard Lessley, age was done the tomato crop, bush els of fruit being cracked by the and Paul DeCunto. The group was led by the state rain. The yellow' turnip crop has champions. North Branford Fife suffered greatly due to the drought and Drum Corps who also was aw and it is estimated t h a t thousands arded first prize for best playing of bushels have been lost, as the junior aclent corps in line. They young plants could grow and i n received a big hand a s spectators some instances acres were harrowrecognized them as the group of ed under and rye sown. Orehardlsts which the World Champion Drum report small and less fruit than usual on their trees. mers were a pari. PILLSBURY'S FLOUR bag GOLD MEDAL FLOUR 24J£lb bag a O i iPF«NAST24Jslbr O ^ PASTRY \ s ^ ^ H . FAMI'.Y bag ^ J O C OLD HOMESTEAD «•<»<<%" POET'S CORNER ->l ' Page riv« T H E BRANFOKD R E V I E W , THUEBDAY, A U a U B T 24, 1030 BBANPORD R E V I E W , THUEBDAY, AUGUST 24, 1939 JOHN ENLUND Last Tuesday, the flag was a t half mast In honor of John Enlund whose death will be recorded in other columns. Forty seven years of honorable service to the M.I.F. bespeaks our admiration and fondness for John, and tor no one who had ever come Into his acquaintance, in those long years of molding, could have helped gaining a spiritual uplift from his ever cheerful countenance and his readiness to help his co-workers. and later on Dan Bandrift had charge and ably supervised the operations when molding machines became necessary for the larger running jobs. No. 3 was the old type hand-fired melting furnace, and aside from the physical endurance, stoking and proper trimming of the white hot flame, which was accomplished by long handled pokers, a high degree of skill and experience was required to produce the proper results. While eighteen tons of iron was considered a comfortable capacity for this furnace, very frequently i t ran on a melt as low a s ten tons, which range of capacity today would be considered a mere saucepanfull a s compared to the capacities of the more modern pulverized coal furnace which is mechanically flrcd. No. 3.furnace, if it had the powers of speech could have told a most harrowing tale of having been run down by a runaway fright car, for one morning when the melting was In progress, a car came bowling off from the end of the spur track and crashed through the foundry walls to end up solidly against Iron bound sides. No one was Injured, but the need of extensive repairs closed down that foundry for quite some weeks. Today No. 3 foundry is used for casting brass and aluminum and some parts of it is occupied for storage of scrap for steel melting. Coming to Branford, and to us, a t the age of nineteen, John worked steadl.'j' at molding until about three years ago, when he was transferred to a lighter occupation. On July 13th, of last year he was forced to retire on account of poor health. We shall miss John Enlund and his passing Is a sadness to us all. Last week old No. 3 Malleable furnace was finally demolished, after remaining unused since June 16, 1927 The old veteran was built and first fired in 1901, and the tall, square stack, whlph stlllstands was considered, a t t h e time, t o be of model proportions for perfect draft. The late John Nelson was the person who fired No. 3 for the first time, and George Marsh, who well remembers t h a t day when the first eighteen tons was poured and declared perfect Alfred Damberg was the first forman to over see, the , moldhag operations and the foundry Back in 1908, when the Steel Foundry was in i t s Infancy and when Mr. Jamison was working hard to have M.LF.'s name Identified with good steel castings, h e asked one good customer who built ships, to write him a testimonial The Steel castings purchased from M.I.F, are the best I've ever seen came the reply from the manager. Mr. Jamison later found t h a t the manager had been blind most of his life. Joe Ifkovlch has recently acqulr ed Jake Bauer's bee business with some of t h e surprises t h a t go with it. After close observation Joe discovered t h a t the bees did not get along very well, and now It Is Joe's opinion t h a t there are two kinds of bees In t h e hives, and while Joe h a s heard of Italian bees, he is now convinced t h a t some are Creation and some are Nazis. Joe, Jr. lends no help either in his fondness for throwing stones a t the hives Just before; Daddy comes home from work. . John Carlson J r . and Charles 77c 79c 24ii\bAQr bag * T j f ^ PLPRE LARD 't^f^ 2'*i15c CRiSCO-SPRY <Vn'l8c ?.?49c SLICED BACONsuT.s'-c%t,p°-'> 21c 25c POTATOES SPAM or 25c HORMEL'S SPICED HAM 28c BISQUICK IQc WHEATIES 23c UTTER 2 U' 29c 25c 10c MUSTARD 2 19c BRAN FLAKES CORN MEAL 2 15c ROOT BEER 6 25c GRAPE JUICE 2 25c PEAS GREEN GIAh 2 29c 19c FRUIT SYRUP K 45c LIPTON'S TEA U. S. N o . 1 GRADE 151b peck 12 oz can M a k e s Fluffy Biscuits 4 4 oz Pkg RIB ROAST HEAVY CORN-FED STEER BEEF LAMB LEGS FANCY TENDER LIGHT MEAT F I N AST 8 oz cans 2 1b )ar FINAST—PREPARED POST'S QUAKER HIRE'S 3 26 01 btis 2 5 c RED W I N G It bw 2 5 c 17 oz iar pkgs pkgs 12 oz btIs pint btIs 17 oz cans ZA-REX pint btl YELLOW LABEL HEINZ __^ FRESH CUCUMBER ORANGE JUICEl^llT3'can° 25c|LEMON JUICE LAVA SOAP CHIPSO SELOX 24 oz iar 19 TREE. o55S oz # » » . _ SWEET O cans . Z 3 C bar FLAKES or GRANULES ^ Q 2^PU'41C X pkgs 23c 23 LAMB FORES JINE 1939 SPRING ED AND ROLLED ;SIRED >b " • ^% { • ^ • ^ # LEAN ENDS MILDLY CURED CORNED BEEF pkg Apricots, Peaches, Cherries, i Pears, Fruit Cocktull, Pineapple Tidbits or Crushed < 25' 25 CHICKENS FRESH-TO BROIL or FRY 2'^ LB AVERAGE F r e s h F r u i t s and 25 Xiif^ninMefi GRAPES 3 ' 19c ORANGES 2 - 39c SEEDLESS FANCY CALIFORNIA CALIFORNIA MED SIZE BANANAS ' NCY RIPE 5 " " 2 5 c r 6 lbs 1 9 c APPLES GREEN PEAS FANCY IDAHO 2 " " 1 7 c CELERY RAISIN BREAD - 8c POTATO BREAD '«'"'^' ^lOc PARKERHOUSE ROLLS do. 9c ANGEL CAKE CUSTARD ».. 25c l l K l i N A T I O N A L STORES Page Six THE BHANFORD REVIEW, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1030 THE BRANFORD REVIEW, THURBDAY. AUGUST 2i, i030 LATEST SPORT NEWS Joseph M. Zaffino .-: Sporfs Editor Wrestling Basketball Hockey HowThe)#[stand AMDDLESEX LEAGUE Meriden St. Stans Here For League Oame W i t h Branford The highly-touted Hawks again scored another victory on a scratch SUNDAY RESULTS hit. Last Sunday the Red Men SoftBranford 2 Essex 1 ball team could not ^tand the terDeep River 4 Merlden 3 rific scoring onslaught Of the higliEast Hampton 14, Hlgganmu 3 flylng Hawks ahd so succumbed Mlddletown -Saybrrok (Rain) Valiantly-'2-0 (by the hair of tlielr feathers) after • playing Arte ball L Pet thiit had all the spectators on edge W East Hampton .. 14 3 .824 a t the Pale Pacb Pow -Wow. Mlddletown 3 13 .813 In the horseshoe contest, also Higganum 10 8 .625 staged at this particular event, the .... 8 8 .500 ringer chaihpions, Ted Mason and .... 6 11 .353 Charles' t r e e m , who coultl'rlng alBRANFORD .... 5 11 .313 most anything with htirns on It, .... 5 12 .294 worked up a sweat'to defeat thfe ,.,. 5 12 .204 Red' • Men Ringers 'two ' out of three games aiVd thereby taking GAMES SUNDAY again the proverbial'glory and at Merlden at'Branford ' t h e ' ' same time '' taking the War Deep River a't Essex Dance victory awa'y trohi the Pale Saybrook at Higganum ^acos^ ' ' Mlddletown a't East Hampton It seems that one of the Crows is letting out a sort of a weak squeak, calling Caw! Cawl Cawl to his' hairless-feathered Crowsi (but t h e " Ci'bws who seem to be In matliig time) do'h't seem to heed h i s ' maid'eri' call. Of course, ON this Is nothing to be alarmed about for this particular Crow, crows "Hawk'! Hawk! Hawk! betcha ' ya boots" By 'JOSEPH M. ZAFFINO Frank McGowan Praised Modern Prize Italian-American Moodus Club Ties Last Game Between Rules By Club Field Day Chester Held Idje By Jersey Observer Sports Ring Joseph T. Fusco Set For Aug. 27 By Wet Grounds Two Clubs This Season Writer, George Schreier To Be Hard Fought fiU .(ICcIilor's Note: Kvcry week In tills The first annual field day will bo Defeats Mlddlcncld. Mndl.snn And paper Joseph Fu.sco, cx-Uranford spon.<iorcd by the local Italian-AmOltl Lyme Also Victors In iioy, veteran of I h o l ' r h e Ring, will erican Club which promises to atShore Line League Kacc T h i n k s M c G o w a n W a s Greatest Defensive Outficlclcr liver Seen tlLscuss the ktinwlbdge bt prize track many thousands of people W h e n h i PdrfbrinctI K i H i s Heyday IiVthe IhtefiliUional L e a g u e ; fighting). from lOia. m. to O p . m., will be Moodus (Special).—Rain contrlv H a d C t t i l t ' T h t o W i h ^ Arni Ami Wrts Downrigiif Sniiirt Most of the rules today are thcie held on the clubhouse grounds on ed to Intcrftire with the closely telling a tighter what not to do. In!Beach Street, Sunday afternoon and bunched p e n n a n t contenders of the the state of New 'S'ork today a foul night. • • ' •' Shore Lino League last Sunday with G e o r g e Schreier, sports w r i t e r for the Jersey Observer of H0I50 does not disqualify a fighter sol Before the event opens at noon a t h e result today t h a t Chester and i«en, N . J. in his'daily c o l u m n , "Ciltting the C o r n e r s " goes on to say t h a t he loses the c o n t o s t i l t merely rival boocl tournament will be held, Moodus arcj again 'In a tie for top " J o e DiMii'g^fb of lilic Yiinkees now is tlie white haired hoy of base counts a another point '• against getting under way a t ' about 10 positions with ' only three more ball, Tris'S)3eakci:'s'alleged blast that he c o u l d ' n a m e 15 out/ielders him during the round In which the o'clock, with entries from various scheduled, and one tain date, to go. Chester held the advantage prior s u p e r i o r ' t b i D i M a g g i o bfouglit the latter m o r e j5ublicity tlian h e blow Is delivered. Here are some of sections of the state competing, with the rules against fouling. fine' prizes being awarded. to Sunday but rain forced postpone ever received bbfoi'6; Since'Bpeakirs • At around noontime the big affair I Hitting on opponent when he Is ment of the Gullford-Chcstcr game remarks If ho did utter them, the Will officially open with a full round while Moodus was ovcrcomnlg Mid getting up after being down. public prints have 'boon copiously ' 2 Hitting an opponent bolow the of athletic-events: Soft ball game,' dlflfleld 0 to 2 to tie Chester. Each laden with feats of DlMaggol. belt.'- ' • •' . ... . TJiroe-Logged Race;- Egg spoon of'these top teams has 12 wins to Taken on the basis of attack and ' 3 Holding an opponent or pur- Race; Sack, Pat'Men's Race, Hus- show for 18 games. Oullford Is In defense, DlMagglo -probably rates band and Wife Race, Shoe Race third place, a mere game behind posely maintaining a cll«ich. with t h e g:*oatest of'all time. We Contest, t h e deadlocked leaders. Completing 4 Slapping with the open hand, (children), Pie Eating wouldn't know because a few bf SUcker-Racoi Boccl Contest, Whoel- the first division l.s'Madison which, wrist or elbow. • those namedi came before our time. Deep River. (Special) .—The Deep 5 Holding with one hand and hit- biirrow Race (childrenI, Newspaper with nine victories and eight losses But based on 'defensive ability Blvor Queens overcame a throe-run ting with' the other. ' • Race, Greasy Pole Climb and track Is now to all Intends and purposes , alone we failed to find the name of deficit with a thrilling ninth-lnning 0 Wrestling or^ roughing on the and' field "eVertts. Individual leani outdistanced—unless there Is a mirJohnny Cbbnoy of the Boston Bees rally last • Sunday to defeat the ropes. wnlners'.wlll be awarded prlzeis, ' acle forthcoming. '' ' I ' among those selected. Nor did we Merden St. Stans by 4 to 3 score. 7 Falling down without being hit. The committee, Prbsldent, Saby Moodus and Chester have been notice the name of Frank (Beauty) Ellll Watklnson " opened the ninth (Taking a flop or a dive) j Deslderlo; 'Vloo-Presklont, Solly putting on a fine show all season, McGowan, Branford, o f ' t h e ' B a l t i With a single, Corlsoii'reached on a 8 Use of the pivot blow or rabbit Donadlo;' Secretary, Nunzlo Mar- with one team • leading this week, more Orioles thereon n6lder's chblcb 'hnd ' Eddie Olson punch. tone; Treasurer, Joseph CecoulU, one leading next week and several Even today, at the advanced age walloped o homer to score the two ' 10 Butting with the head, should- and ably assisted, report a record Sundays when ties developed. And of 40 or thereabouts, Coonoy reahead bf him. Stanley Waz follow- ors'or giving the knee. numbdr of tickets disposed of arid'always over t h e s e two teams has mains one'of t h e ' m o s t picturesque ed with a doublb and Harrjr PlcrII Not obeying the i-eferec after those wishing to attend this gala,hung the foreboding shadow of the outllelders 111 J h e game. He Is rhyson's single brought'home the ba- being wdrnod. " affair should obtain their ' t i c k e t s Guilford team which may yet prove thm personified.' Ploying the outcon. How a'FiglilcT Is Made to Tick from any Itallan-Ameriean' -lilub.to be'the dark horse, the one desfield Is second nature to him. Eric Carlson allowed Merlden 1 don't think' there is n fighter In member early. ' '—' " " Itlned to snatch the pennant In the But we think the greatest outfield The affair will start a t 10 a, m . ' m a d stretch race yet to come, er wo have ever seen (arid we WAtcK but eight hits while Aoc Kline was this world worth his salt t h a t would touched for 11, with S. Zajac's batdream' of going Into the ring withand continue to 0 p . m . ' ' J ' T h e r e - i s ' ' s o m e talk of playing cd Ty Cobb, Trls Speaker ond othe'r —rIdoublcheaders In the near future to great ones) was McQowan whert'he ting! featuring, t h e ' Merlden boy out 'the proper period of training even If his manager would lot him. LOCAL OUTBOARD CLUB take care of the games rained out performed In his heyday In the gijttlng three singles. If his lungs are to stand the comTO HOLD ANOTIIEK PICNIC|june 4 and Westbrook may play not International League. > Deep Klvcr Ab ll 110 bined destroying ' power of the only the scheduled game with MoO' I-Us misfortune was ho didn't hit SImth It 3 0 0 smoke tilled air of the Indoor arena The Branford Outboard Club will dus at Westbrook next Sunday but well enough,' ' otherwise he never H. Watklnson of and the gruelling punishment of the hold another social outing at Shumay also try to Include Middleflold would have been out of the majors. Mozzoccl 3b constant motlbn of"a prize fighter mack Island Sunday. ' T h e picnic to come down for a twin bill. Other McOowan could catch a fly ball, a' Haser, lb will consist ol^ hot'dogs, roast h a m must; developed a pair of belloWs teams may follow suit, although line drive and field a, balloon" the W; Watklnson ss t h a t Inhale and expel air with ease. burger, clam'chowder, watermelon, there is not as 'yet anything definground better than anybody we have Carlson^ P' etc. All members of the club are InIf his legs are to be able to keep ite. aoen, He had a. groat throwing arm Olson c from growing weary round after vited''to attend this''Social- get-to- ' In other games last Sunday Old and he.jWaS .downright smart. S. Waz ab gether and report a t the '6lub house L y b i e p u t on- a'.brave dls'play to roUttd.v to carry his torpo" forward He never played too deep In cen-|Plerson rf and backward, to help him charge Sunday morning"; at 10:So. knock off the boys from Salem, 13 ter field bocaUse he knew, that any forward and support the weight of to 6,- while Madison and Westbrook thing t h a t went over his head hoi '^o''"'^ • ^4 4 U 27 12 4 his body and falling arms, or to Paul BIrbarie, local outboard ra- engaged In a! thriller which closed could go back for and catch. And IMcridcn Ab ll po a dance nimbly' away In the fifteenth cing king, met with tough luck last In favor of the former by 3 to 2 In a sense he was Insurance for Jaklelo 2b .... 5 1 as well as the first round, or to Saturday a t Red Bank, N. J. and Westbrook charging the loss up to shortstdp and second base on balls Sokol .ss 4., 1 cushion the shook of a paralyzing so did not cop any first plaops Iri a' brace of errors upon which their thot would ordinarily fair for Texasij' W. 21ajac Ib-c .....5 I t h a t sends tremors to his knees, he the National-Sweepstakes Regatta. rivals were able to capitalize. leaguers. fl. Zajac lb e 5 0 must do something to strengthen Opposition runner, no matter, how Gormley c lb 4 1 his leg muscles and so as I said be daring, rarely risked scoring from Nesslng cf ., 4 1 foi-e; THE WORLD LOVES A second base on a hit to McOowan I wyspckl rf ... ....4 0 01 WINNER! . •! . In center. They kriow his arm was S. Zajac It 3 4 o| : deadly and his aim accurate. 0 Kline p 3 McOowan Is approximately 30 " Sacrifices; Smith. Left on bases, years of age today and he Is all Totals 38 3 8 24 7 1 Deep River 0; Merlden 10, Base on washed up although ho'still Is oh Deep River :000 000 004—'! balls—off Carlson 2, Kline 1. Struck the roster of the Baltimore Oriole?. Merlderi' 200 000 010—£ out by Carlson 4 Kline 7; Umpire, But It wasn't age that overtook him. Two base hits: Mozzoccl, Carlson, Hearne; Time of game 1 h r 50 min. Continued on Page Se\on Home runs; Olson Sokol Nesslng; Olson's Homer Wins Game For l^^ep ^ ^ r CluJD ?•> B R O W N I N G KING & CO. ALT Klarman Edges Borkouski In Close Fought Battle Winning By 2 To 1 Score Sacrjifi'ciiiig Oeir jEiraitire Stodk lily Reidjiiiiced Prices BUY YOTJR FA|:.L CLOTHES JJjrOW anti SAVE Klinky Fans U lisse.v Batters And Allows But T h r e e Scattered Hits—Hyleriski' Scores W i n n i n g Kiih 'In Eighth I n n i n g O n Stan .Snkolnwel-v'c L r,^.w. 1!!.. In 1- <" <"--'' . M c r i d c n H e r e Sunday Sokolowsky's o n g Fly Cent^rfield'- ) • , Harry H. Johnson $22.50 • Were $30 and p5 - 50 Were $35 and $40 'V'Crcoats fLYI-I^ONi; Gabardine Raincoats $.9.9§ Value $;5.pO. Western Auto Associate Store 130 I^A;:^ Slacks $3.95 yalue up to ^8.5p il No Charge For ^•Iterations 2 5 . t o 5 0 % p]pF On Haberdashery, Hats and Shoes Brov^ning King & Co. CHAP?LatHIGHSTS. ^^ggm NEW HAVEN COMMENT Local Ball Players Be Given Tryouts by Cardinal Farrn East Hampton Regains Middlesex Loop Lead By defeating Higganum Stride Past Miclilletown G i a n t s W l i o W e r e K e p t Idle Bv I n c l e m e n t •Weatliei-—Belltown B o m b e r s Smack Parm'elee Arid L. Nosal'Foi) 17 H i t s T o W i n Easily F r o m H i g g a n u m , 14 T o 3. ' SUITS W a l t e r ( K l i n k y ) Klarman's three-hit p e r f o r m a n c e enabled the Branford T o w n i e s to defeat the Essex Lillics last Sunday afternoon at H a m m e r Field by the score of 2 to 1, with Branford^ scoring in the fifth tr'ahie on a balk by 'Pitch- ' '-' or Borkowskl of Essex and In the Barba c ; ,..3 0 11 eighth Inhliig bring home home the Brannlgan rf ...2 deciding oountor after Stove Hylenskl reachdd"'first on an error. He Totals 31 3 27 0 4 wont to second on Mahan's sacrifice Essex Ab l l po hit, and tliih raced to third on a n jMuscollnl , cf ,4 , 0 5 other Essex error and sdored easily Pagano ss ..4 0 BOATS and SUPPLIES on a long fly Stanley Sokolowsky Nesto c ....... ..4 0 i'osi ]{(ia(l poled far Into deep centcrfleld I n - ' s i Bella 3b ... 15ran ford ..4' 2' to Muscollnl's hands. JNuhn lb ..4 0 Toleplione 540 The Essex LUlles score their lone W. JanoskI If ..4 0 tally In the sixth on a sIzzUng single Borkowskl p ..3' 1 by Sam Bella and and a Branford J. Bombacl rf ..3 FOR ALL COniPLKTE MIDDLESEX 0 error. Sam was the only man to 'Totals 33 3 24 12 LEAGtlE i l e x SdOltES READ' get two hits In the game. | Score by Innings " TllE'BKANFOliD REVIEW By winrilhg this contest Branford Branford- ...-..'......OOO 010 Olx—2 now h a s won five and lost 11, two .Essex ,000 > Opi 0(10-1 of the game Were lost by protestfof ' Sftcrlflcess, Mahan, Sokolowsky; the clubs' of the league because left on bases, Branford 3; Essex 3; Branford was playing with Nugent base on Ijalls—off Klarman 1. Bprwho t h e ' Preslde'rit of'tiife League kowskt'3;^sti'uck-oiit; by KlatmaA' l l ' Home Oiijhed hy said was not eligible. by Borkowskl 1; hit by pitcher, by STANLEY C. TOLMAN Uraiifurd Ab ll |io Umpire,] e Bo'rkowikr ''(Don'ofrloi; FISHING EQUIPMENT Tobln cf' 4 0 1 0 Scheer; time of game, 1 h r 45 iiiln.i GARDEN TOOLS Hylonskl 2b ., 3 1 1 0 AUTO SUPPLIES Mahan It ".'. .4' 0 1 0 Professional football has not BICYCLES, RADIOS Donofrlo 3b ... 4' 0 1 1 not been to sign a single player! PAINT, Etc. Sokolowsk^' ss 4' 0 2 2 from Harvard,' 'Vale, Princeton and I Ward lb .'.,....'.. ..3 Branford 1 10 1 bartniouth since the professional I 270 Muin'st. Kliu'mnu p n 0 0 0' 0 ibrisub \vri.s started, 'I Tel. 733 Locals Need Victory T o Increase L e a g u e Lead A n d T r y F o r First D i v i s i o n — K l a r m a n Expected T o Face Ace K l i n e Ii( Uc'al Pitching D u e l At H a m m e r Field—Contest Slated For 3:00 P. M . " ' A contest Sunday that will prove to be the best this season at H a m m e r Field is in store for all those w h o attend the MeridenISranford battle. Klinky K l a r m a n is expected to start for the T o w n ies w h i l e Ace K l i n c . ' S a i n t s best twirler, w i l l o p p o s e K l i n k y and siiould prove to be a whale of a pitcher's contest. A win for Briinford will put them up nearer the first division and a loss will knock Merlden down a few pegs. This contest will be the last between the two rival clubs this season, with but three remaining games on their schedule. So a- win- will help either team In the league Aspiring young ball players of standing, ' Last Sunday's result set the stage this section will be given an opportunity to determine whether or perfectly for the meeting of- the Belltown club and the - Giants, at not they have a future in profession al baseball when the St. Louis Car- Drury Field in East Hampton next dinal organization holds a try-out Sunday, and t h a t game may decide camp a t Roosevelt Park, Blackstone, the pennant—unless rain; should Mass. beginning • Monday Sept. 11. interfere—and It will make either The camp will last approximately a give East Hampton a better lead or Mlddletown a tie. At the present week'. The tryout camp was announced time the two teams are hi top place today by LoRoy A. Dlsslnger who with but half a game-separating scouts this section for the St^ Louis each other, the Belltowners credited Red Birds. Dissinger stated a number with 14 victories In 17 starts a-nd of other well-known Cardinal scouts the Giants with 13 wins In 17starts: will be assigned to the tryouts to No;- in a long time has there been pass Judgement on the players who such a close race and fans hope attend. The scouting personnel will t h a t ' t h e competition will remain as bo announced shortly he-sald. • • i- keen right'up'tO'the very last game On behalf of the'Cardinal'organ- o f ' t h e season Inisplte-of t h e outization, Disslngdr extended an'-In- comi''ot"Sunday's contest. MHIggavitation to boys between ' t h d agos num' win have to work liai-d to hold of 17 and 23,' who believe they have o n ' t o third place-While Saybropk the ability to play'ba'sebair profes- will'have'td.do-their utmost to hold sionally, to attend the camp. T o 're- on'tP'-fourth place. ceive tryouts, Dlsslnger said, boys '"Meriden's young peppy team will merely have t o present themselves find the Branford Townies this Sunat Roosevelt Park 'at'-9 o'clock the day a much h a r d e r club t o beat/and morning of Monday Sept. 11 bring- It'is most likely t h a t Branford-.wlfi ing their shoes, gloves and uniforms. win. Saybrook goes tb HIgganum The only requirements are t h a t out- and that should be a- contest lot of-town boys must finance their own many thrills. In; t h e remaining leatrips to Blackstone and their living gue conflict Deep. 'River will 'travel to Essex and fight it out for; last expenses while there. No fee is charged boys who at- place, as both teams are now tied tend. Troyouts, Dlsslnger explained for the cellar standing with each •: win probably entail a stay of three winning five and'losing 12.': or four days for out-of-town boys. Boys signed to contracts will bo reJack Nugent, Branford Bomber, funded their expenses incident to win box George Barry of Shelton attending the camp. In a light-heavyweight battle-on The Cardinal organization has Miiford's Tercentenary boxing show been conducting camps of this n a - | a t Walnut Beach Stadium o n Satture for several years and from each urday night;' Matchmaker A l Carcamp numerous boys have been oiy h a s announced today; The larsigned to professional contracts gest crowd of the season is expected to witne.ss the fistic battle, -'i ' ' Dissinger stated. East H a m p t o n ( S p e c i a l ) . — T h e Belltown Bombers set up a b a r r a g e of 17 bits off tbe c o m b i n e d offerings o f H a l Parelee, L e h y ' N o a s l ; and Louis Nosal last Sunday, to send t b e H i g g a n u m club back hpine with a 14 to3defeat faggedon-them.|_" '" ^ Ab The game was the final of three !"'s:sanuni h po 4 between the the two teams and tlic 1 3 Berehulskl 2b . 4 result placed East Hampton in the 4 league lead, the MlddletoWn Glarits, Holeneck rf S. Nosal c 4 being rained out in Saybroolc. 4 The hitting of Ben Phelps of the Bralnard cf Bombers featured the bllslierlng at- Lou Nosal 3b-p ....2 4 tack on the Higganum corps of hur- Baronl ss 3 iers, Big Ben h l t t l n g a homer, triple - Pol^omey l b and single, his home Coming; in the L. Nosal p-lb-3b 4 ...2 fourth with Ed Bransfleld on by^'"''"='<=^ P means of a pass; Phelps'triple In the I tsix drove in two iViore runs.| Totals .; ^i;33 3 6 24 8 1 Don Mack kept the visitors under East Hampton ..041 522 000—1^ control until the n i n t h when they Higganum '. ...'.000 000 003—3 escaped a shut-out by scoring three] „ ^, ''""'' runs, with Eddie' Nosal hitting a \ „ „ ° D f ' P. BransiBeid'; G three'base tilts'; round tripper.' Mack gave lip only '™.""',**™"^™; " i r e e o a s e nits; seven hits. hits. seven ' < -^ |BlsseU Phelps;'homfe-riinsrPhelps, h po East irampton Ab ^ C. Nosal; left on bases: E a s t H a m p P. Bransfleld'3b '..5 j | t o n 0, HIggy 2; Struck out by Mack T. Bransfleld cf ..3 -7, Parmelee 2, Lou Nosal 2- hits off Phelps lb ;.... 4 Len Nosal in 1 2-'3'in'nlh'gs'5; Farm'-' H. Bransfleld 2b ....4 elee in 2 hinlhgs '8'. Lciu-NoSal'1h"'4 Nelson ss - .......... 5 1-3 Innihgs4; h i t - b y pitcher' P a r i melee; passed balls E. N()sai2- tfmMack p 4 pires Muldbon and RobertsV time of Seckler If ....5 game 2 hr's; ' ' ;.;i... .. i ,«,. ... BIssell rf :. ..,.5 G. Wall c ....5 SUBSCRIBE TO THE Totals ...40 14 17 27 n 1 BRdNFPBD REVIEW Hawks Score Frank /v^cGowan ConUnued from sports p(.ge AnQther Hit, was Injuries. Beat Redskins I,•t In'1937 the Boos had McGowan SPORTS fSM • East Hampton was back on top of the Middlesex League pile today as a result 'of battering the Higganum cliib'by 14 to 3 ' while wot'grounds atrSaybrobk kdpt thi" Mldaielowii Giants',' erstwhlli; lehders,"idle for the day. "The leiid Is hdlf a garne In the winning column,'the'Belltown Bo'mbers, Wl-io ' really ' lived' up to their name Sunday, having played and won one more game than have tlie Giants." -' '" • '- . • ^ ' ' • « « « * The Belltowners will meet the Giants a i East; ' H a m p t o n ' Sunday. The greatest bi'owd' evb'r tb attend a bail 'gaini; there Is expected. The flvalry'betw'eeri'tlie two cliibs'ls intense and this'one game may settle the League p e n n a n t Walter (Klinky) Klarman won a contest Sunday which will not be protested, which makes Klinky feel happyi He boat Essex 2 to i, allow"•lhg"th'fe'e"hlts'"an"d' whizzing 11 via the strikeout route. Ernie Donofrlo played thlr'cl bafe'e' for' the 'Towrlles In 'place' 'of 'iphii Nugent,' •\/illahva star, and great friend 6'^ P e t e y N a Inib, Who' plays with' the New Haven Pros. Nugent Is barred'from playing in a n y more games this Season by President Paul Joyce, •*••• By the way speaking of John Nugent, who makes his home in town, is also o.uite a pugilistic'llfehtheavyweight. The other night in Hartford he won a decision and last week d t Milford,added mbre'vict'ory laurels to his already fistic honors. all set for an outflcld post when he unfortunately cracked his leg In spring training. It was a horrible blow to his hopes because It practically wrbtc flnls to his career, but he Vefus^a to' becbmU diseburagcd and cahib'back with the Buffalo Bisons late t h a t ' season to help the Bisons crash' the first division. ' They stlli discuss his' accomplishments in Buffalo.' His- unparalleled catches are spoken of with bated breath and; when some of the citizens whisper his name, they do so with awo. • " ' Bbauty McGowan, so named because' bf his handsome features, was one'of the greatest defensive oUtfleldbrs in our book and to leave him off any such list Is a mistake." sERviei Branford's New Beautiful A & P Self Service Store 216 M A I N STREET BRANFQRD .A&P Qiiiaiity M e a t De}?artmeet Specials" -|MM l i t East Haven Hav- e A Stsiediitig Offer Of ^100.do for a n y o n e who proves t h e Gas it- s-ells Is Not a First Grade Gas 7 GaL $1,00 This offer has been standing for over one year •without a single claim W H Y PAY MORE!! F R E E GAS ~ F R E E GAS KvtM'y purchaser I'eceivoK n mmibcred li(!ket. Kvpry Wediiesdiiy tlircc niinilu'rs siic (Innvn, Knch iiumiptM* is izaod t'ni* five j,'nll<tn.s of j;ji,s. Walcii Tor liic winning miuihcrs in our Htaliuii wiuili>\v. GUARANTEED PURE OIL 2 qts. 25c . , T . 1 ' t i. , , , h Boneless Dr. and Mrs. 'Vincent E. D. Bragg of Fresno, Calif, ore the guests for a fortnight of Mrs. Elon Bragg of East Main Street ^ ' lb. lb. 21< Swift's Prernjum. String H^'l Yqung. Fresh ^mht^ or. fryers lb, Mrs. David Maroney and daugii ter, 'Velma of East Main Street arc vacationing In New York State. Porterhouse — Short Sjrl.oja' — Q\ib£ Sunnyfield Sugar Cured Fresh Ground I ru Miss Betty Brayton of Oak Lawn, R. I. a'hd' Miss ' Holeii Hunter of Providence have been' spending a few days with' Miss RUth Barker of South 'Main'Street. ' ' Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ferguson have returned from a ' ti'lp to Maine.' Miss Betty Preller bf East Haven Is among the vacationers at Leote's Island " Miss Margaret Tucker of East Haven was a guest last Friday of Mr. and Mrs. S. S.'Bbrden a t Clear Lake. Mr, and Mrs. Paul Clifford of Main Street had as their guests the past two weekis; Mr.'arid Mrs. Albion W. BoWne of Fitchburg, Mass. John Peterson and his daughter, Miss I. Adella Peterson of Torliune Ave. are visiting iti Chicago. Mrs. William HInchey has returned from the Hospital of St. Raphael to her home in Chestnut Street. Granite Bay By Charlotte 'IToung Mr. and Mrs. John Fay of New I'ork are oecupying the Hlllman cottage -for t h e ' n e x t ' t h r e e weeks. VI : r Fresh F r u i t s a n d Vegetal)les U.S.NAI m*..Beck -13VA-1" Natiye ES doz. Calfernia 2 •> G N I Q N S Appr.p.>s. I Q doz. Pure Refined Q L E O hiUTLEY MILK 25c ..„ .. '. ,' • lb, 5<? h. bag 19c '2'fo49c Creamery Print LARD \U J | ^ c ,0., Se^yiess Persorvals Junction Short Beaoli'Koad and Hemingway Avenue •• « l c f i . l S t Steer Beef-TastY Mr. and Mrs, Abner Mclntyre of "The Belltown Bombers are very anxious to face (Shorty)BlllRogUs- Lake Zoar are entertaining Miss ki of the Mlddletown Giants next Lois Fessenden of'East Haven. Sunday. Roguskl made the Bombers look bad in- the first time lae faced them In Mlddletown; • - - ' ' 16 Hemingway Ayenue SELF SERVICE GAD-A-BOUTS Ben Phelps leads the Middlesex County League In home- runs. Mr. and Mrs. Myron Lelghton and He has hit seven this season. His The veteran Walter Brainerd, homer Sunday was the longest ever family of Park Place, East Haven are completing a vacation at Crycenter fielder o't the Hlggiinum seen at Drury field. stal La(:o, Maine. team, ln,1urod his knee In chasing a fly ball Sunday. He collided with Walter ZaJac returned to the Mrn. Hosmer Lane has returned to Charlie Todeschlnl. Merlden lineup Sunday. He caught and played at first base for the St. North Guilford after a week on Long Island. Eddle.Nosal Is.well satisfied with Stans. Eddie Gormley played first the Inflold of the Hlggy club, made aiid did the catching while ZaJac Mrs. Frank Ablondi of Stony up of rookies. "Watch them next was not In the Une-up. Creek has been 'bntertalnlng' Miss season," says Eddie. Louis Nosal Mary Sullivan of An'sonia who .started at third base, fln'ished SUBSCRIBE TO THE up on the mound. He allowed East Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Thatcher and Hampton four hits. BRANFORD REVIEW Miss Marion' T h a t c h e r ' a r e vacationing a t Lakevllle; ' ETHYL GAS vuuwumuuuafiBtucE By the way, speaking of the Mi's. W. E. Mumford of Rogers Hawks, one of the small fellows, (0 midget of some 260 lb. piece of Street was a week end guest of her humanity) comes around with an slstbrs In Providence, -R. I. old saying, that if ho should ever go a hunting, he would kill off the William E. Fagerstrom has reCi-ows, a dime a dozen. turned'from a six week's'course of study at Boston Unlvei'sity.Thiit may sound like a gag, but according to the best of testimony this story is of the- real McCoy varMrs. John Foley of East Haven iety. So, fair readers, IIT you should has returned from Southlligton perchance see tlie sun obscured, where she visited Mr. and Mrs. B some one of these hot days, dont, B. Sanford. by any means, be alarmed, for It will be Crow s feathers flying thick and Mr. and Mrs Wagner of Washingfast around these parts. •] ton,'D C; have been vWltlng Mr. and Everybody is asking for another Mrs. Adolph Pierson, Taylor Ave, ' • social get-together at the famous East Haven. Hawk's Nest, but according to the Chief Hawk, not many moons will Miss Janet McCarthy of Hartford come and go when the> time will be will'spend t h e " coming week With ripe for the Hav/ic to swope down her grandparents, Mr; and- Mrs. and snatch a well fattened- feath- Daniel J. McCarthy of Russell St. er bird in the still of the night, as the Hawks are noted for taking evRecent guests of friends In Cheserything and leave nothing. hire wfere Mr.'and -Mrs; Julius E. Hunting Interest has been revived Brooks, 83 Maln'Stroet/EastHaven. around the. Hawks camp, and the A reoent'vlsltor at Leote's Island rebirth hiis'brought about the fine sportsmanship by the organization was Mr. C. Lewis of East Haven. which will give a prize of $2.00 for any brother member who is able to Ml', and Mrs. John Kelley and kill one 'real hawk (maybe a crow)'. daughters, Catherine, ' R i t a and 'That's the latest news flash. Jean, and t h e l r s o n , John.'bf East Watch the bulletin board for fur- Haven have completed a two weeks vacation at Clear Lake. ther (de-tails.) The Krall Coal CQ. Pago Sovcii IH 7c 3 ib,s. 25c Whitehouse Evapora^t^,c( PILLSBURTs Best Flour ' il-il Z - ^ (Chileans 2 §.c 2AV2 lb. bag 7 7 c ,EDALl<itche.nJested,Flp.ur. F L O U R Su,nnyfielc| Family 24'/2 lb. bag^ 7 9 c 24'/2 (b,.'b,ag 5 5 c Pastry 4 9re S A L A D D r e s s i n g A m Pag^ RJC^I Crear^y Smooth 2 5 c Sunnyfield CORN FLAKES 3 8 oz. pkgs. 14c WHEATIES The Breakfast of Champions ..pkg. 106 Standard DILL PICKLES ;.'..'. qt. jar 10c Spkgs. JELL-0 DESSEETS .......; ' I4c" MY-T-FINE DESSEETS 2 p^gs.-9c SWANSDOWN CAKE FLOUE Ig-#&-22c SNO SHEEN CAKE FLOUE Ig. pkg. 22c BAKEE's COCOA:......:...: . 2 14 lb. tans 156 GEAHAM CEACKEES ....'...'^ lb. box 176 M A Z O L A OIL .............v. ; pit. candle BIG BOY TOMATO SOUP .'.. gi Can 9c Yukon Club GINGEE ALE 4 28 oz. bots. (coht.)' 29.0 SOFT TWIST BEEAD ....;........;;..; ...2 20 OZ.I'V'B; 15C CONDOE COFFEE, Vacuum Pack lb. tin 23c lOITA TOMATO JUICE 3 24 oz. cans 20c GEEEN GIANT PEAS .::...'..;..:.c'ah 14c DEL MAIZ NIBLETS 3 cans 29c PICED CAEEOTS ...: 2 cans 15c CAMPBELL'S TOMATO JUICE.... 2 14 oz. ca;ris 13c ANN PAGE KETCHUP '...;.....: 14 oz. bot, 12c ANN PAGE CIDEE VIN^GAE ..... qt. bqt. ],0^c kmi PAGE FEilNfcJH liEES^jrN,G. 80Z. jar 19,9 ilS^ tpjm JE.LLIE.S, "koh Kinds . ... 8oz. jar :(oc A & P MATGHIES, Double Dipped'... 6'zoxe's I8c PACIFIC TOILET T;t^S,UE ...!::..•;.... ....... 6.¥(illslgc 7.'6akes?$C KIEKl^((AN'^ BOEAZ ^OATP '3rolls25c' SCOTT PAPEE TOWELS .*•. 3 cakes" iYc WFteBUOY SOA? ll , a calces 17J3 LUX tOILET SOAP , 2 cakeis lie PALMQLIVJE SOAP oz.' c'arls 19c AiliiP,age'SPAGltETTI 315% L SUNNYFIELD WHEAT PUFFS 4 02. CisUo ^^g 4c SunriyfieUVRICE PUFFS. % 41/4 oz. Cello Bag 9c B &M BEANS ;-..r.;.>..;.52.-lg.'caiis^c F E I E W ' B BEANS. ;'. 2 Ig. canS25c CEABMiJAT ;;..'....'..:. , ..ND. »/^'can2ic P & q- NAPTHA SQAP .............;;.... 7 bars 23c CEtSCO and SPRy'..-...:....l lb. canl8c 3 lb.'Can 49c IVORY SOAP :.::..:. 3 Ig. cakes 25c' m!ed) cake Sc ANN PAGE BEAyg. •••: i...*:,''..^?,;'? I'HjVcahs'Uc- i*j I Eo a t Jfnvcn, fJoaa Page Eight THE BRANPORD REVIEW, THUR8DAY, AUOUBT 24, 1038 'n, of the Wagner Act Itself. T H E MOVIE G U Y E D P P ^ " Air Movies THE C O N S U M E R SPEAKS WASHINGTON \Prove Popular the standard of living. There is an to be one of the greater pictures of SNAPSHOTS HOMiVWOOD GOSSIP: NEEDUI)! A YOUNG old Chinese proverb to t h e effect Grocr Oarson adding Siamese the year. By JAMES PRESTON Hit A t M i l f o r d that "a little silver sticks to the DKMOCRATIO CLUB kittens to her menagerie of pets, The 2nd big hit on the same pro By HOWARD FATE - T • ' il • r I' 1 -I T n ff < fcir i-ilii-ial • When the significance of the steps taken In Washington last session are really thus placed clearly In perspective. It Is easy to see how absurd are tho claims of those who are screaming a challenge to business, ordering It to jbring about recovery in the five months between Congressional sessions. What confuses the spectators is this: Business Is expected to do something the challengers haven't been able to do In seven years! palm of the hand It passes through." For some time there h a s been a During the past when the RepubllCongress h a s gone home now, bag Young Republican Club In B r a n - oans have been in power they have and baggage, so those who make a ford. No group of young people have encouraged big business to let en-|j career of speculating on matters h a d the foresight to form a Young tirely too much sliver stick to their political are turning their eyes awDemocratic Club. Why? Such a club hands. So sticky were the hands of ay from Washington to find subjects is needed in this town espacially In business under Hoover t h a t compar- for discussion. But all the discusvie)v of the all-important 1B40 atively little was left to benefit the sion is still influenced by what h a p campaigns t h a t will soon get under low-Income classes. pened In the national capital before Coincidence Note: The printed tho boys packed up and left. way. volume of the 1040 Federal budget But when a president such as One question looms large In the weighs four pounds, seven ounces. Continued jrom page one Most of the time I have taken but Roosevelt discards this theory and The reason why this play Is so a passive Interest in political p a r - substitutes Instead a theory that a minds of both the public and polit- That volume represents what the certain to be successful In New York ties. This does not mean t h a t I have largo "trickle" to the masses Is nec- ical commentators: How substan- administration Is asking for to run government for a year. The Is that In all Its three acts there Is n o t been interested In social and essary to keep our economy going stantlally will Congressional action the never a dull momqnt. I t Is a coneconomic problems t h a t concern the he is, of course, criticised by big last session help business recovery? printed volume of the Federal tax Critics of Industry got in the first laws, which represents what the tinually delightful scramble . of well-beating of every man, women business intercfits. The New Deal lick by claiming that Congress had government collects to run the govcharming people doing funny and child. I have now,come to the is trying to increase purchasing things ranging from high to the conclusion t h a t the time has arriv- power by raising the Incomes of "accepted industry's challenge" by ernment for a. year, weighs only legislative changes throe pounds^ one ounce. broadest farce, but never verging on ed to actively support a political the lower half of our people. But making what Colncidentally, that is just'about the ridiculous or falling to make party, not In the hope of gaining business Is so impatient. I t knows and reforms it did accomplish, and sense with the play as a whole. With political favors but In the strong that' It will receive a great deal of that now responsibility for complete the difference between the amount and hasty recovery rests squoroly of money collected and the amount all Its riotous fun It Is well conThis Wednesday, Thursday, Fri- belief that active support of a polspent. structed, neatly put together by two day and Saturday the program In itical party Is a vital necessity In this money as fast a s the people on the shoulders of business. spend it. As the income of t h e massplaywrights who know their busin- eludes Irene Dunne a n d Douglas the crucial years to follow. If this argument was supposed to es rises the power of business over make an impression, it missed fire ess. Its comedy Is In character as F'alrbanks, J r . In t h e brilliant The parly t h a t I would support well as In situation, and gives the comedy hit, "Joy of Living", The Is the Democratic Party. I will a t - the masses declines. To Illustrate: rather badly. It was too easy to see THEY SAY, Look how the Administration had to the flaw In the argument that, afexpert Playhouse company a chance splendid supporting cast to the tempt to give my reasons for the 'In this time of subnormal econtight every step of t h e way to esexperimentation for some entertaining characteriza- stars include such notable comedi- support of a young democratic tablish wage and hour laws and the ter ten years of and tinkering with the economic ma omic activity. It Is of paramount tions. ans as Billy Gilbert, Waren Hymer, group as well as for the necessity of right of labor to bargain collectively. chlnery of the country on the part Importance to encourage business Louise Piatt, as Judy, proves t h a t Franklyn Pangborn, Eric Bloro, Guy continuing the present Roosevelt This was but one step in the Adof the politicians. Industry should and facilitate the exchange of goods a talent for light comedy Is among Kibboe, J o h n Qualeri and others. Administration for another term. ministration's program to raise the take heart the moment t h a t signs byllghtonlng rather than heightenher m a n y accomplishments. She is Also In t h e film are Lucille Ball, Here Is as good a place as any to average worker from the status of of a change for the better made ing the tax burden"—Non-Partisan say that I am not opposed on p r i n a far cry from the Intense Terry of Alice Brady, Frank Milan, Spencer a wage slave to one of a free In- their appearance. Business knows, Social Security Commission. "Stage Door" or the poetic Diane of Charters. On the same bill are also ciple to a third term for Roosevelt dividual. Big business loft to Itself from experience painfully gained, Seventh Heaven". The part of March of Time and the latest news. provided he decides to be a candi- always tries to get labor just as that a 'iot remains to be done to "Taxes are nothing more than a date. Furthermore, I will actively cheap a s It can and tries to get the put things back in good running natural and inevitable reflection of Judy, which requires a sense of Starting on Sunday night, and humor, lightness of touch, and u n - continuing Monday a n d Tuesday support Roosevelt or any liberal highest prices for the products of order. Congress has a lot more con- the spending for, which they prolimited energy Is just as much up nights, will be Charlies McCarthy Democratic candidate in the unfor- labor. Thus ^the moss of consumers structive work ahead of It next ses- vide the money. The cause is spendtunate event that Roosevelt does not her alley as anything else she h a s and Edgar Bergln, Adolphe Monjou choose to r u n . I do not foolishly say does not have enough purchasing sion if it really wants to be helpful. ing. The effect is taxes. If our vardone, she looks as pretty as a picous governmental bodies spend, and Andrea Leeds In "Letter of I n - t h a t Roosevelt's third term would power to buy back the goods It ture, and charmed the openlngthey have to tax accordingly, troduction," Also In the picture are be his first or second term because produces. Meantime, however, all Indicanlght audience completely. The New Deal, despite reactionary tions are that business management whether the taxes are collected now George Murphy. Rita Johnson, Eve all of his proposals were not ac Virginia Valll takes the Important Arden, beautiful Ann Sheridan, opposition, will succeed In falsing Is moving ahead to the best of its or postponed for payment by our oepted. Such a remark coming from part of Alice, Judy's sister and a d - and Ernest Cossart. purchasing power and lowering ability, grateful for the encourage- children and grandchildren"—Harry a high Administration official, visor, and makes It ono of the outprices so t h a t more people will ment t h a t the Senator and Repre- A. Bullls. though m e a n t well, did more h a r m Spencer Tracy, twice winner of standing things In the play. In conhave more of the good things in life. sentatives have afforded by their t h a n good. Everybody knows t h a t the Academy Awdrd, turns in a n - trast Judy's exuberance, her hiimor Unless this Is done we will lose our actions and attitudes. Among the Roosevelt h a s served two terms. other masterful performance as the Is of the dry variety, she comes out Democracy. We must face our ec- things t h a t are most heartening to During the past decade of the de daring reporter-explorer In "Stan- with screamingly funny remarks In onomic problems in the hero and Industry, and that came out of this Roll devtloped snl 8 (lossy iv.\\tiiii pression I have been an observer of, j ^ » M .,. ,^^ ley and Livingstone," whieh Is held her quiet way, and completely conyear's Washington legislative mill, all political parties. I have attended "T ?,"^ " ° ' ' ^ i " ' ' " " °" ""^^ "" tho defeat of tho spending bill, the ptinis inouoltd io allricltit pocket ilbom,: over and now showing at the Loew vulses t h e audience. I n her first cnlareemenl coupons tree, HII lor 25<. Prompt meetings of the various minor left- • false prosperity." Poll College for a 2nd Big Week. appearance In Guilford, she proves The Conneetlcut'Sportsmen's Ass- wing parties and am still unconvin- Because the New Deal Is doing tax revisions Incorporated In the oiiinitht SEiilci. Qmlity t o i ' i n l c t ' or moniy retunltil. Starred with him are Nancy Kelly, herself well equal to her famous Revenue Act of 1939, and social se- PHOTO-EIECTRO-LAB. BOX861 BRIDGEPORT, CONK. ociation I n c . will run their second ced that their radical programs just this Is the reason why the Richard Greene In t h e romantic husband, Charles Farrell, In acting annual field Trial, September 3 and would go very far In solving our 1 ^ " " ^ ^ 1 " " ^ " ' " " ^ town should curity reforms may be listed as parUs heading an outstanding cast ability and stage personality. „,ni,i„™,. iform their own organization to outstanding. 4, Labor Day. The Trial Is to be run problems. which Includes Walter Bronnan, "Guilford's Clark Gable", whom In East Hartford Meado\y, Station carry on the forward-looking pro, The collapse of the vast omnibus Charles Coburn, Sir Cedrlc HardTho Republican Party has served gram of Franklin D, Roosevelt, a spend-lend "white -rabbit" was wlcko, (as Livingstone) Henry Hull everyone knows by now Is Alan 27, Springfield Road. Trial Is to be In a useful capacity for many years. man of the people, a m a n by the cheering to business because It ser- LOST—between mail box. Main St. Handley, lives up to this title In h l s | and Henry Travors. run on liberated pheasants. Big I b u t alas, h a s failed to keep up with people, and a man for the people. and tclcphono company office, a attractive portrayal of the archived as a n indication t h a t Congress white cord, shopplne bag. Please /'Stnnley &.Llylngstono" promises tect. His artistic ability stands lilm course tor big going dogs. Tho trial I the times. Of all thq', political p a r - The time to form a Young Dem- no longer Intends to r u n down the will start Sunday, September 3, a t l t l e s the Ropubllcatj P a r t y h a s tho ocratic Club Is now. The place Is return to Branford Review Office in good stead, for he draws a pic7:30 A.M. with Membership shoot-|less convincing arguin^nts and pro- Brantord. The reason, to support a road with every spending program ture before the audience's very Ing dog. SHver trophies will be grams. There is but one party left— party t h a t faces Issues as they that is suggested. Business, which eyes! Mitchell Harris has nevbr bears so large a part of the nation's LOST — Chow Dos between Moawarded for first, second and third. the Democratic. arise—a party t h a t does not at, been so funny as In the p a r t of mauguin and East Haven. AnThe Democratic Party Is the only tempt to give gigantic business in, tax burden, hopes fervently that This will bo followed by Amateur Alice's stuffy husband, and Alexanthis particular action by Congress Is swers to the name of Chang. Rel281_Maln St,, E a s t Haven der Cross Is particularly good as the all ago stake. Dogs to bo handled by party t h a t moves forward with the terests the power of life a n d death the herald of a real economy drive ward, return to 65 Henry Street, amateur handlers. Chest of Silver times yet neither adopts a revolu dynamic press agent. The versatile nomaiignln. technique ,j,,ahead of the over the average American citizen. at the following session. to first; Silver Trophies to second tlonary NOTICE Ollvo Warren Is a siren this week, The tax revisions made this year FOR SALE—9 piece Maple Dining times nor follows a ' p a t h of reacand third. Watoli for announcement i n NEWEST MAKE-Tjr DEVICE and a very charming one. .Judges for Membership shooting tion that attempts to solve-machlne The a r t of make-up Is reaching were not all t h a t busines had hoped, Theatre Lobby on change of room set. Call a t 112 Montowese but they were a step in the right diHardle Albright, who had the t r e - dogs will be Frank Cleveland, East age problems with methods In voStreet, Branford. n Sohedulo for Labor Day such a high point of perfection rection. And tho amendments in mendous Job of directing a new Hartland, Connecticut, and Sam gue during the h a n d loom and I Week Only, that cosmeticians now analyze the social security requirements follow, play In one short week, has done an Green, Thompsonville, Connecticut. candle era. natural color of an Individual's ed fairly closely suggestions made [Sun., Mnn., Tuea., Aug, 27-28-29 amazing Job, and presented the The present Roosevelt AdminisMonday, September 4-Labor Day, 42 Inch sink a n d tub comblnaUons skin In order to find the combinaf S o n j a Henio, Tyrone Power in play after Its few rehearsals with will start off with the "Open tration h a s fearlessly and courag- tion of powder, rouge a n d lipstick by business long before the original f29.9S complete. Toilet ontflts bill was drafted, seemingly Indloat, no let-downs and no ragged edges. eously tackled problems concerning * I r v i n g Berlin's Derby". First prize will be a chest of Joe Marra, PInch-hlttIng for Poter sliver and 10% of entry fee. Silver t h e welfare of the nation. I t was which win achieve t h e most'glam- ing that. In matters which touch complete $12.95, Bath tubs $14.50. orous results tor the face. A new business so closely, the lawmakers "SECOND FIDDLE" Wolf, proves that he too Is an ex, Wall Basins $5.45. Conn. Plumbing trophies will be awarded second and Inevitable t h a t some toes have been device known as a spectro-dormas- might save many unfortunate er;-l ALSO :-: cellent scene designer. third. Judges for the Derby, Dr. trodden in the process. Tho day h a s rors it they listened to buslnessmens' a n d Heating Materials Co., 1730 Ohaa, Biolcford, J e a n P a r k e r in Next week the Chapel Playhouse Gaylord, Torrlngton, Conn, and definitely passed when lalssez faire cope Is used In this scientific analyy It reveals color gradations In advice a little more often. State St., New Haven, Conn, Eomance of the Redwoods win present Louise Groody, Elaine Charles Crocker, Windsor Locks, or a "let everything alone" policy,Is sis. the skin not perceptible under orBarrio, and Helen Twelvetrees In Conn. useful. Roosevelt has made strenPhone 6-0028. \Yoil.,Thnrs,—Aug. 30-31 dinary light. However, onob these It is, of course, evident to all un the racy New York comedy, "The The Derby will be followed by uous efforts to save business from subtle gradations are known tho Jean P a r k e r , J o h n n y Downs in Greeks Had a Word For It". It will biased observers that the failure of Its errors, a thankless job, but one "topon all ages stake". First prize. beauty specialist can work out an inI'TAEENTS on TRIAL" open on Monday, August 28 th. Congress to amend the Wagner LaChest of Silver value $80,00 a n d which has done much to preserve dividual make-up which Is said to bor Relations Act, in spite of over- TXFE^VBITERS — ALL MAKES !-! ALSO !-: New, RebuUts, Rentals, Portables, 10% of entry fee. Sliver trophies Democracy In a world where Dem- bring out the skn's best points. whelming public opinion favoring "My Wife's Relatives" Supplies for second and third. Judges Dr. ocracy Is rapidly disappearing. such changes, was a blow both to !-! WITH :-; To abolish the social reforms of Convenient Terms Ben Pennell, New London, Conn, an the doraacratlc process and to InMIDGET OVEN the past few years, as the RepubliQ|Jamo3, Lucille, Eussoll, Gleoson Harry Egan, Sprlngdale, Conn. prosperity. To be sure, a RELIANCE TYPEWRITER CO. Ladies Gift Nights The first Annual Field Trial In cans would undoubtedly do if elect ISVEESATILE dustrial committee has been appointed to C. B. GUY, Mgr. 1938 was one of the most success- ed In 1940 ,would lead to eventual {l^ri., Snt.—Sept. 1-2 investigate the Board Itself, but this Fascism. Why do I think so? Be Telephone 7-2738 ful trials in the state a n d this year A now midget oyen just now m a - investigation, 1 Richard Dix, J o a n Fontaine in while Important, 109 Crown Street, cause under a Republican AdminisNew Haven promises to be much larger. Roads l-.lMl'tll JlllK-f. llM. 1 .\ l A I "MAN of CONQUEST" tration big business would be given king Its appearance I n . stores does not remove the drawbacks to win be posted to Trial Grounds. throughout the country costs less employment involved in the defects Four line ads Inserted in the class;-! ALSO :-: IRENE DUNNE complete and free rein. A genej-al Doug Fairbanks, J r . in rise In prosperity would follow. The than two'dollars and is n o t the least ^ CODE of the STREETS': Ifled directory for .50c. Ads may be An ingenious German chemist much sought for "confidence" bit particular as to the type of stove Shorthand, Typewriting, BookI with " T h o Little Tough G u y s " : "JOY OF LIVING" keeping, Accounting, Business telephoned to Branford 400 or East who has made trees edible says the would return. And why isn't this with which it keeps company. CARTOON - NEWS - SHORTS Dictaphone, possibilities along this line are u n - just what we all want? We do want In other words the oven cooks just Administration, Haven 4-0628. Com. livi-ry Ninlit - lt.iiii nr Shine \ limited. Is it not possible that the It. But we want a stable and last- as fluffy biscuits and bakes just as Comptometer, Day a n d Evening good pies on oil, gas or electric sto Sessions. Co-edueatlonal. Knter holes might lend themselves readily ing prosperity which this wouldn't STARTS AT8..M LAST SHOW II DM. for doughnuts?. be. The Improved business condi- ves. The oven Is equipped with a at any time. plate with a guarantee tion t h a t would follow a Republican pyrex Hollywood Vanity W a r e STONE COLLEGE term would be a short-lived one against breakage a n d also has a F R E E TO T H E L A D I E S 129 Temple St., New Haven We would have a false prosperity, heat indicator. Vv\., Sal.—Aug. 25-'2ti Keep an eye out for one when you tluiU'oril 'rolcpiioiio Giiiirord 'llf) On Tho Orccn| an insecure security Preston Poster, Irono H e r v e y in A Republican prosperity will do go browsing around your own Week of August 28th to September 2nd favorite store. "Society Smugglers" more t h a n lull the country Into NOT ONE! NOT T W O ! ! B U T T H R E E STARS I! ;-: ALSO ;-. false security which will simply p u t Hlnchey has reJ e a n Pai-ker, J o h n n y Do^vns in off several years the basic problems Mrs. Willaim turned to her home from the hospiwe now are facing. A Republican "PARENTS on TRIAL" tal of St. Raphael. regime would apply superficial pa Sun., ]\Ion,, Tuos., A u g . 27-2,S-'-'i) tent medicines to a dangerously sick patient Instead of diagnosing the Many from here will go to Gull "Daughters Courageous" FLAT WORK disease a n d prescribing the proper ford to see the model of a salt box with J o h n Garfleld, Priscilla house, a display of the Guilford treatment as the New Deal is doing. Lane, Rosemaiy Lane, Lola Tercentenary which takes place WET WASH The nation's Ills are grave. Only Sept .1 to 4. L a n e aiid Gale Pago The Adventures of Throo " L a d i e s of Leisure' treatment t h a t get a t the" root of ;-: ALSO :•: SOFT DRY iSvcs. at 8:45, $1.30, 99c, 55c, tax inc. Mat. Wed. 2:30, 99c, 55c tax inc. the His will effect a permanent cure. "MAN OF CONQUEST" Mr. a n d Mi-s. Fred Mucaw of EasO G O O D ROADS Business has demonstrated t h a t it Until Sat,, Aug, 26 — "The Prior to Broadway play ton. P a . recently stayed with Mr. with Richard Dix, Gail P a t r i c k • HISTORIC VILLAGES is no longer able to keep Its house and Mrs Raymond Barnes. "SHE DIDN'T KNOW IT WAS LOADED" with a n d E d w a r d Ellis In order. If It h a d been able to • PEACEFUL LAKES LOUISE PLATT and VIRGINIA VALLI manage ins affairs.In the public InWi'il., Thurs.—-Aug. 30-.'!! FINISHED WORK • SAFE BEACHES terest there would not have been Sapphire Tableware Nights WHEN IN NEED OF much of a depression. The solution BACHELOR SERVICE 3 BERRIE DISHES and does not lie In handing back to busWALLPAPES 3-6 oz. GLASSES iness unUmlted power to repeat Its or PAINT own mistakes. "SUDDEN MONEY" VISIT FOR LOCAt, NEWS Anyone who Indulges In a little with Charlie Ruggles a n d UNITED WALL PAPER straight economic thinking would Marjorie Rambeau Tel. 672-2 — 572-3 know t h a t the Republican theory! READ THE i-l ALSO ;.; CO. ^ • GOOD ROADS • HISTORIC VILLAGES of aiding t h e "blg'fellow" and thus, 93 Crown St., New Haven "JUVENILE COURT" s^s • PEACEFUL LAKES • SAFE BEACHES B . W . N«l«on, Prop. let benefits trickle down to the] BRANFORD REVIEW with, P a u l Kelly, R i t a H a y w o r t h "We Save You Money" little m a n " Is Ineffective In raising \ Freddie Bartholomew holding a large San Francisco Fair audience spellbound with his talks on Amerl canlsm a n d ' t h e Boy Scouts. Rosalind Russell poslcarding • Irlends from 'her home in Water bury, Conn Robert Taylor celo brating his birthday with a party on the .set of "Remember" Eleanor Powell getting Albert Morin to rib Fred Astalro during rehearsals for the new film, "Broadway Mel ody of 1940.". ,. Lana Turner the Jlrst to send In her application for ' tickets to next season's football contests .Ann Rutherford arls Ing at six each morning In order to got In an hour of Ico-skatlng before reporting tor work at the studio ..Frank Morgan stocking his boat for a hunting trip to Alaska. He's planning to track down Kodlak bears,.......WalIaco Beery spend, Ing spare moments In his dark room developing candid camera shots taken by daughter Carol Ann.... Low Ayres still on the lookout for new gadgets for his amatour weather bureau.....,..jpanette MacDonald entertaining a t a reception for Lily Pons, Andre Kostelanotz and Dalles Frant?. ...Hedy LaMarr a dally vls. Itor at the hospital In which her husband, QeneMarkey, Is recovering, f r p m a n ; operation, .Ann ,SoIhern; and Franbhot" Tone starting work on their first co-starring film temporarily .titled " F a s t aiid Furious.!'....,.., Qeono Murphy recording the dally growth of hia son with a now candid camera. Myrna Loy busy In odd moments planting the many shrubs and bushes that she received as birthday gifts.. gram Is "Charlie Chan In Reno' with Sidney Toler, Phyllis Brooks and RIchardo Cortez, See You I n The Movies Your Movie Ouyed Playhouse Show Stars and more stars, and fine pictures all combine to make the Milford Drlve-ln Theatre, Post Road and Cherry Street, Milford—a popular rendezvous to enjoy the movies out-of-doors In automobiles. On warm nights when It's too warm to do much of anything, the evenings are made much more pleasan ter when people go to the movies out-ln-the open, where Mother Nature takes care of t h e cooling system. There Is no extra charge for sitting In your own car, and seeing and hearing the movies at the Drive -In. Continuous every night, rain or shine, autolst-theatregoers can come a n d go a t anytime they desire. Field Trial Set For Sept. 3, 4 I •! 11 y h" Business Directory Capitol Theatre Pequot Theatre CHAPEL P L A Y H O U S E Elaine Barrie Helen Twelvetrees Louise Groody "The Greeks Had" I Word For It" INVITE YOUR FRIENDS TO CONNECTICUT 4 BRANFORD LAUNDRY INVITE YOUR FRIENDS TO CONNECTICUT •! .1 THE HOftlE NEWSPAPER IS A VITAL FORCE IN EVERY TOWN PORraATING AS IT DOES LOCAL HAPPENINGS IN FAAinJAR LANGUAGE Wbt Pranfort l^ebietri AND VOL. XII—NO. 21 EAST HAVEN NEWS THE HOME TO^VN PAPER — •» — BRANFORC— NORTH BRANFORD STONY CREEK — PINE ORCHARD SHORT BEACH — INDIAN NECK GRANNIS CORNER — MORRIS COVE — EAST HAVEN Branford, Connecticut, Thursday, August 31, 1939 Price Five Cents Schools In Branford Schools Open Guilford Colony Bfd. Republicans Two-Day Sports Carnival September 6th Broadcast Plan To Attend Will Open Wednesday; In East Haven Radio Is Heard Mon. Bristol Outing Will Feature Road Race New Teachers Appointed Sanctioned By TheAA. U, High School Pupils Will Receive M a r t h a Deane Visits Guilford's A state-wide mectlnB of the ReInstructions Wednesday And publican Women of Connecticut Old Homes and Exhibits But T h u r s d a y in Auditorium will bo held tomorrow a t Lake CornPasses Up Ohookerberry Soda pounce In BrlstQl. Those attending Kindergarten And First Grade Pupils To Kegister Tues- East Haven High School seniors are n.sked to bring a box lunch. Martha Deane, favorite radio Governor Raymond Baldwin will William Paiiaroni of Branford Will Run For Short Beach day Afternoon—Faculty Will Meet Tuesday Morn win report In the auditorium at 9 broadcaster devoted the greater open the speaking program prompt1. m. September 6th to receive In Athletic Association—^National Champion of America, • p a r t of her radio ho\u' Monday to ing At High School. itructions. At 1:30 p. m. tho same ly at 2 o'clock. Other prominent Jean Berthelot Will Be On Hand. day, juniors will report in the aud- the Guilford Tercentenary. Republican guests will include SenWith her staff, she was conducted ator John A. Danaher, Benjamin itorium. Branford schools will open on Wednesday, September 6th. ChildThe following day, Thursday, through Guilford during the week- Harwood, chairman of tho RepubliAn elaborate program has been ren planning to enroll In KinderSeptember? all sophomores will re- end by Mrs. Nellie L. BuoU and can State Central Committee, Seoarranged by the Short Beach Athg a r t e n ' should go to the Harrison ceive instructions in the auditorium Curtiss Johnson' of the Shore Line retai'y of State Mrs. Sarah CrawTimes. letic Association for a two-day Avenue School after 2:30 on Tuesford, and Samuel P. Pryor of Stamat 9 A. M. Freshmen will report at She found Guilford exciting and ford. sports carnival to be hold a t the day afternoon for registration. 1:30 p. m. Sept. 7. spoke especially of the Charles Hubbeach next Sunday, and Monday., Those wishing transportation First graders are to report to Ail four classes will report FriThe star event will,be the a n n u - ' their respective public schools afday morning a t 8:30 In their home bard book "Old GftUford" and of the should get in touch with Mrs. Grace commemorative service which is to Hunter. Mrs. Cittrence Munger and al five mile road race starting a t ter 2:30 on Tuesday afternoon for Elaine Barrie a n d Helen Twelve- rooms. be held In the First Congregational registration. Under tho auspices of tho B r a n - 0 p. m. on Labor Day, Two new teachers have Joined the Meeting House on Sunday at 10 Mrs. Ernest Avorlll will attend. trees Contribute To Success This road race, sanctioned by t h e ford Garden Club "Farm and Home All other students will report to faculty. Robert Grace of New Brl a. m. During this service a group of Of Current Play Day" will bo held tomorrow, Sept. A, A. U. for the past two years h a s their schools on Wednesday a t tho tain has come to take charge of women, all dressed alike In Puritan attraotod some of the best runners • 1st In the Academy on the Green. usual hours. the industrial arts department, costume will come,Into the church This will take place of tho regular In the eojst Public School teachers have been Elaine Barrie and Helen Twelve ML'iS Eleanor Swanton of Stratford together and sit In tlie front pews, monthly mooting and the mooting Jean Berthelot, 20,000, meter. Nacalled to a meeting on Tuesday trees are the stars of the gay, risque Is to be ossociated with Miss Alice according to ancient custom. of tho Executive Board will be om- tional champion of America, h a s morning, Sept. 5 in the high school comedy, "The Greeks Had a Word Hall in the teaching of homemakitted,. Entries jnay bo made froni entered his application. The majority of those who will be a t 10 o'clock. They will meet with for It", by Zoo Aklns, at the Chapel Ing. i The Branford Rotary Club held 8:30 until 11 a. m. and it is hoped Runners who have registered havo Superintendent Raymond E. Pink- Playhouse in Guilford this week, Miss Grace Blanchard, who has In costume are direct descendants its annual ladles' night a t the Monthat there will bo many entries been asslgiied the following n u m This play, which r a n fpr over a year been a teacher in tho eighth grade of the early planters of .the town of h a m for general instructions. towese House last Monday ovonlng. from townspeople. There will bo a Guilford. bers; 1, Jean Berthelot; 2, William Elmer Worth h a s been appointed on Broadway, is making one of its at the high school annex, becomes She admired the museums and T. Holmes Bracken, club president door prize and prizes for all classes. Panaroni, Brantord, Shprt Beach French Instructor in the high first appearances In summer stock a member of the high school faculacted as toastmaster. The speakers Between 8 and 0 p. ni. there will Athletic Ass'n.; 3, James W. Bdtexpressed regret that she did not I t is the story of Jean, Polalre, school at a salary of $1,400. Mr. ty, assigned to teach English and liave the time, to visit all of the were Dist. Gov. Alvln C. Smith of be an auction to which the public tomloy, Storrs, Now Haven Harriers. Worth takes the place of Miss Ev- and Schatze, three ex-Follies girls, Continued on page two Milford, and Rev. George B. GilIs invited.' 4, Michael J. O'Hara, Aiislum,' A. Oi town's 118 old houses. She did howelyn Steucek who resigned to go to now retired from work and living In ever visit the Arcadian House where bert of MIddlotown, whose subject No admission will be charged. Tea Now York; B Jo Klolgerman, AnFrance to study this coming school the big city by the aid of their wits, was "Old Ideas for New Fogies." shim, A. C , New York; 0, '\yilliam Sam Chittenden gave shelter to year. their beauty, and their ability t o be will be served. Gannon, Anslum A. C. Now York; wanderers of Canada; the Black Frank V. Blgelow was the song leaThe Homo Economics Group, the The following is the report of a good company tor tired business House which isn't black a t all, and der, with Herbert Holman as ac- Brantord Grange and the 4-H Club 7, Sam W. Cutler, Anslum, A. 0. Now recent meeting of the Board of men-or any men. Their romantic companist. York; 8 Harvey Letchlnstein, Anwas escorted to Leete's Island and have been Invited to cooperate. entanglements are many; during Education; s l u h i A . C. Now York; 0, Daniel Sachem's Head. There were 08 persent, including The committee In charge Includes Hoffman, Anslumn A . C , Now York; Voted to buy a Are hose In main the course of the play they Include Having changed h e r name from the following: Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Mi'S. S. A. Griswold, chairman, Mrs. High School building that h a s rot- Boris Feldman, a famous pianist; Local Committee Will Sponsor Mary Margaret MoBrlde to Martha liam W. Seeley of Mount Vernon, Frcderiok Callin, Mrs. R. Earle 10, Jack Martin, UncaavlUo; I I , John Dey Emery, one of the ten richest ted and Is useless. Food Table A t Children's Deane, for radio purposes, she said New York; Mr. and Mrs. T. Holmes Beers, Mrs, Frank Stone, Mrs. Al- Ingoml North Brookflcld, Mass, Voted to pay bills in a m o u n t of men In the woirld; and his son Dey Center Fair she wished she nilght change again Bracken, Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Barker. don Hill, Mrs. J. Wesson Phelps, Weeklies People Club. Emery Jr., an attractive but worth$453.35 to an old Guilford name of Com- L. H. Bassett, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mrs. Raymond Van Wle, Mrs. Allen 12, Luciano Frank Bruncltl, New Voted to reappoint all clerks and less rich man's son. Their quarrels One of the outstanding features fort or Faithful. V. Blgelow, Dr. and Mrs. Dana L Nott, Mrs. M. D. Stanley, and Mrs Haven Harriers; 13, Leonard Grifare frequent; they quarrel over janitors. of t h e County fair to be given at fin, New Haven Harriers, 14, Jq}\n Miss Deane "passed u p " a chec- Blanchard, Mr. and Mrs. Fred P John McCabo young peyjOyer_ a string Voted to having butldlnei.conimltv BoriSi over ^ , , . .„ , I Children's Center, on , Saturday, kerberry soda._ BUckcr, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin BralnM. Robinson, West Haven; 15, Tlieo, ' ., „ tee. a p p B t e r t e l o r a 'B6SriJLvst>tgEqV.S». hWard;=Mr;iaftd Mrs.; JotiicE., BrainCarpenter, Jr. Post 00,., A..Jj^Melof'stoallng. ""••iBallet" But „h„ accuses D,.ni,«o» Polalre p^iofr» nf-»t»nn.,=. from the revue ' "Polar ' Commissioners t o secure Police pro she *«ja^*jt#*i4*iw)^ erd, Joseph B. Buza, Mr. and Mrs. tectlon for railroad bridge a t end they remain sucli good friends and Nights" whicli was present a t the Robert B. Gate, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nortii Melrose cjtib, Maldon, Mass; have so much fun together t h a t at of Bradley Street. Pine Orchard Yacht and Country G. Cooke, Dr. and Mrs. Philip H.. 17,'Russell Ooodolo, Hackonsaek; N. Voted to transfer Helen Purcell the end, as Jean Is about to m a r r y club Saturday night. It wU] be diGorlach, Mr. and Mrs. V. T, HamJ.; 18, Stanley Morrow, Melrose, Continued on page eight from Laurel Street School to grades rected by Miss Janet Fabian of mer, Jr., Mr. and Mrs Royal N. HarMass.; 10, Ralph Goodo, Jr. New 3 & 4 in Short Beach which were Wallingford and the dancers will be rison, Mr. and Mrs. Havens of London; 20, Walter A, Chllds, Spring made by Miss Lewln's resignation. the Misses Betty Jane Reeves of Evansvilie, Ind., Miss Rosemary field, Mass.; 21, Arthur M. Pflster, Voted to accept resignation of Pine Orchard, Betty Smith and — Hess. oLiig Island; 22, Russell Schulti!, Mr. Earl Messer who has accepted Mairan Farrol of New Haven, BonFuneral services for Mrs. Lillian Stonlngton Conn. 23 Frank WlaContinued on page eight a position in Bloomfleid, Conn, and ie Craig and Nancy Eggleston of At the regular Sunday morning Marlowe Dooley, wife of Frank M. trowskl, Now •Haven Harriers. voted not to refill his position. Pine Orchard. Miss Fabian will di- service last Sunday In the Church Dooley, Sr., of m Bradford Avenue, Other entries will bo assigned Voted to appoint Miss Barbara rect several other dances during the of Christ In Stony Creek, Rev. were licid Tuesday morning at 8:45 following numbers. Wing a t $1,300 t o position formerly fair and Jean and Barbara Delan- Kenneth Brookes paid tribute to from the funeral homo of Sisk BroPartial list of judges; James Cooheld by Miss Una Bangs. ey will give a n exhibition of Scot- Dr. Theodore A. Fischer In these ther, 128 Dwight Street, New Haven gan, William Burns, Vincent Barry, Voted to appoint Dorothy Carr at The marraige of Miss Marjorie tish dances during the afternoon. words: and a t 3 . Vincent do Paul's church Fred Tuttlo, Paul Barnott, Donald $850. to teach at Indian Neck School. Prances McCarthy, daughter of Mr. at 0:30 a requiem high mass was Charlotte William Webor, From the moment when t h e fair "I cannot allow August to slip by Voted to approve budget tor pre- and Mrs. Daniel J. McCarthy of opens at 11 a. m. until 0:30 p, colebroted. Mrs. Dooley Is survived without paying tribute to a dear Entries have not been closed a c sentation to Board of Finance. Russell Street, and Mr. Harold Grif- there will be constant entertain- friend of this Church who passed by her husband; one daughter, Voted: After conference by the fiths a n d the late Mrs. Griffiths of ment for tho fairgoers. An occor- away last September, Dr. Theodore Mrs. Frank J., McKoown of Osteen, cording to D. w . Owens, cha'rman, and may be given to him before Barring delays the last of the 12 N. C two sons, Frank M, Dooley, Board of Education with the Board West Haven, took place Saturday dian player, an organ grinder and Fischer. Dr. Fischer who for 32 Saturday. of Selectmen as requested by re- morning at 9. o'clock In St. Mary's his monkey, a Scottish piper, clowns years was the beloved pastor of the houses in the path of the now read Jr„ and John W. Dooley; five sisThere will be baseball games cent Town meeting, to get as soon Rectory. balloon men, pop-corn vendors and Unlyersalists Church New Haven through East Haven will set In place ters; three brothers and four grand as possible, at the request of the The bride was attended by her girls with gra-bags will circulate made Stony Creek his summer by the end of the week. children. Interment was In St. swimming events,, horooshoe pitchT ing, sailboat race.?, track events anil The transfer r ! the houses to Lawrence cemetery. New Haven. Board of Selectmen, definite s t a t e - sister. Miss Josephine McCarthy, as among the crowd. A Punch and homo. For a good many years he m e n t from tho State Board of Ed- maid of honor, Kenneth Griffiths Judy show, a puppet performance, preached in this church on one their new sites followed In rapid At tho conclu.slon of the mass tennis. succession and is .wla :n .-lave boon "Some Sweet Day" was sung. A delucation as to what tho State Board's of West Haven served as best m a n and pony rides will be provJded for Sunday in August. His many friends successfully handled Isig-iiy because School building code would allow the for his brother . egation from tho Ladles' auxiliary the children while Madame CIco, , Town to do to Canoe Brook School The bride wore a Moiyneaux gown Professor Lawlor and Queen Louise looked forward to his message each of a moving devtee devised by Mur- of tho D. A. V. of West Havon a t to p u t it back in use; also to get of blue chiffon velvet with short win practice the art of palmistry year knowing t h a t his words came rap Up.son, of Post Road, contractor. tended the funeral. this He abandoned the old method of preliminary sketches of each pos train, a n d a small matching velvet and card-reading for the grown- from God himself. When The bearers v/cre George Singer, slble alternative allowed and the hat trimmed with ostrich plumes, ups. A fashion show will take place church was without a minister Dr. timber rolling and setup a scheme Leslie Keegan, Clement Marjowo, Fischer performed many of the pascost thereof for later consideration She wore a corsage of white orchids. while tea is being served In the of wheel and track support which Cecil Marlowe, Fcllx Lynch and tolal duties, cheering the sick, per- has proved twice as speedy as tho William Lynch. as outlined by the resolution adoptThe maid of honor wore a Moiyn- Community Building. forming the marriage ceremony, be- older method. ed at the recent Special Town Meeteaux gown of Woodrose chiffon velMrs. Plerpont Warner Is chairman friending the bereaved, and assising. When the weight of the building vet and a small matching velvet h a t of the Branford committee's food ting a t the burial service. I daretrimmed with ostrich plumes. Her table. Mrs. Reeves is in charge of say that Stony Creek misses Dr. has been correctly distributed three The marriage of Miss Lena trucks are used to pull it to its corsage was of orchids. the doll carriage parade. Fischer as It misses no regular new site. Virginia Ham, daughter of Mr. Following the ceremony a recepminister for down through the years William W. Ham of Mill Plain, to By this plan the J, Russell Maction for the Immediate fanillies was he was always a friend in need." GIVE SHEEP BAKE Mr. John Herman Johnson, son of Arthur home, for Instance, was held in the Oasis. Receiving with The Young Republican Club will Mrs, Irwin B Morton and , Mrs. Mr. and Mrs, John H. Johnson of drawn about a half mile In two the bridal couple, Mrs. McCarthy give a Sheep Bake Sunday, SeptemATfEND WORLD'S FAIR Carl Monteiius were hostesses at a Palmer Road, was solohinized Sathours, furniture Intact. wore a dress of Blackberry crepe ber 17th a t Upson's Farm. This Is Salvatore Alturi of West End Except for minor plaster cracks Sliower Thursday evening In Mrs. urday afternoon at 4 o'clock in the wth matching h a t and corsage of the third annual outing and a stag Avenue, and Miss Adda Mansfield there were no mishaps. Oh, yes, Morton's home In Eades Street for First Congregational church; with orchids. Mrs. Griffiths wore navy affair. of New Haven, attended the New one workman was treated for a Mrs. Harold Smith of East Main tho Rev. B. Kenneth Anthony blue chiffon with corsage of orDn the committee Is Murray Up- York World's Fair last Saturday. Miss Jane Ballard Lang, daughStreet. officiating, A Progrum of bridal silver in his hand. chids. son, John Whitcomb, John Donoter of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison M. Guests included the Misses Janice music Included vocal' Selections' by When Mr. and Mrs. Griffiths left frlo, Jerry Knowlton, Larry Miller Lang of Seldon Avenue, Pine OrBlackstone Memorial Library will Miss Alice Warner. Miss Belle Loper Congregational Church school Cooke, June Cooke, Minerva Robintor a wedding trip to Nassau, the and Domonio Bontatlbus. chard, Branford, has been given a be closed on Labor Day ; son, Mary Carr, Miss Florence Gat- Slater, Organist, played the Wedwill resume classes Sept. 10. bride travelled In a dahlia wool suit two-year scholarship to Endlcott, eiy of Lowell, Mass., and the Mes- ding March by Lohengrin and tho with trimmings of silver fox, a m a t new junior college of liberal and dames Clare Potter. Abbie Aureil of Recessional by Mendelssohn. ching h a t and corsage of gardenias, vocational arts opening next monNewHaven, Edward Remer of New The bride was attended by her and black accessories. After Octoth, according to an announcement York Mrs. Lionel Rice, James Fisher sister, Mrs. Herbert R, Harrison, as ber 1 they will be a t home at 55 East J e n n i e Balloii A u t h o r of " S p a n i s h Daniels found It "witty, penetrating on scholarships made at the eolHoughton-Mifflin Company Will Harold Ennls, Burdette Hart, Edv/ln matron of honor, and Miss Calllsta Main Street , lege today. P r e l u d e " S p e n t Two Years Do- and vivid." Ralph Thompson called Publish Unique And Fascinat- Robinson, Harvey Roydon, Ray- V. Clancy as maid of, honor. BridesIt "quiet, acute, written with great ' The scholarship was awarded by mond Plnkham, and Janet Thomp maids were Mrs. Adolph M. Mlsching Extensive Research—Coning Book About Life a n d Time son. Individuality and distinction and a the college committee under the ler, sister of the bride, and,' Miss ferred With Surviving F r i e n d s joy to read." of Short Beach Poetess. chairmanship of Mrs. H. Gilbert Elsie Johnson, sister of the groom. I n England, H. M. Tomlinson, no Reynolds of Paducah, Ky. Mrs. Adolph M. Mischler served as best John E. Doughan, 130 Dwight On the publication of Jenny Bal- less, wrote of its "smooth magic"; sized work on the life and times of Reynolds Is the former Mrs. Grace Street, New Haven announces t h e man for Mr. Johnson. The ushers lou's first novel, "Spanish Prelude", of "the rare virtue, pity, that diMorrison Poole, p a s t president of Ella Wheeler Wilcox Short Beach's marriage of his granddaughter, were Arthur Johnson and Eugene T. the General Federation of Women's struck by a lightning bolt Robert tho product of one of Houghton rected it"; Its "low tones, yet so the "poetess of passion." Miss Mildred Ann Doughan to Mr. HylenskI of Branford, Frederick W. Mifflin Company's Literary Fellow- acute that you never miss an inflecClubs and a trustee of Endlcott. Attracted perhaps by the magOscor T. Johnson of this place. Bishop of Hartford and G. Phillips J. O'Neill, 20- years old Yale s t u - ships, the critics found It, In the tion." netism of contraries. Miss Ballou The new college to which Miss dent was Instantly kiiiedt'n the yard The wedding took place July 22 Pond of Terryvllle. Miss Nancy language of one of them, "so origAil of these qualities are found has carried on extensive research, In Norfolk, Vo, Lang goes is located on the sea- of his home, 42 First 4v^pue, MoMlschlor and Master William E. inal and so curiously fascinating again In Miss Baiiou's second pub- read hundreds Of unpublished letcoast about twenty miles north of mauguin, Friday morning., < Mischler, niece and nephew of ,the that it Is hard to communicate lished book, American Success ters, and conferred with scores of Boston and Is named for John En- The funeral was hefd Irorsi the Mr. and Mrs. Charles Messner of bride, were flower girl a n d ' r i n g " one's own sense of excitement." Le- Story. Miss Baiiou's greatest gift the poetess's surviving friends. Sho dlcott, first colonial governor to the M. F. Walker and Sons; home, New wis Gannett took a s h o t a t It in the is h e r a r t of surprising the reader. h a s produced a unln.ue and fascln- West Main Street are celebrating bearer. Massachusettes Bay. their eighth wedding anniversary Haven, Monday morninfriand was phrase "strange and beautiful I and certainly nothing could be | ating book B.?corted to the altar by i her followed by a solemn requjem mass book," backed u p by extensive quo- more surprising t h a n to find the) Miss Ballou was a resident hqre today. father, the bride wore.a gown of o r d e r of Rainbow, Branford As- in St. Vincent de Paul/#t!hurch. white taffeta, with sweetheart necktatlon. Carl Van Doren described it sensitive and subtle.reporter of the when she was Inspired to write the Mr. and Mrs.. W.' J. Babcock, of line, rcdingote skirt with long train, sembly win meet In Masonic Hail He was the only son of Mr. a n d as "sensitive, charming and touch- mood of pre-revolutlonary SpainIbook. Her husband's business took East Haven were in New York Sunnext Thursday evening. and petticoat of pleated lace rufMrs. Charles O'Neill. • ed frith subtle insight." J o n a t h a n ' s u d d e n l y turning up with a full' Continued on page eight day. Continued on page eight Guilford Offers Hollywood Stars In Gay Comedy Farm, Home Day W i l l Include Food Auction Branford Rotary Host To Ladies Branford Group To Give Revue Bridal Couple Will Live Here After Oct. 1st Lillian Doole Funeral Service Held Tuesday Rev. K. Brookes Pays A Tribute To Rev. Fischer Murray Upson Moves Houses To New Sites Miss Lena Ham Is Married Sat. To John Johnson Shower Given AtMorton Home Miss Jane Lang Will Soon Enter Junior College Writes Book On Ella Wheeler Wilcox Lightning Bolt Causes Death r