{ title: 'The Newark courier-gazette, the Marion enterprise. (Newark, N.Y.) 1941-1947, December 18, 1941, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074232/1941-12-18/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074232/1941-12-18/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074232/1941-12-18/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074232/1941-12-18/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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mo NEWARK COURIER-GAZETTE AND MARION ENTERPRISE. NEWARK. JN. Y.*, THURSDAY. DECEMBER 18, 1941, TELEPHONE 7]{j Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Dear of West Avenue will leave Fri day morning for x .Cleveland, Ohio, to visit her sister, Mrs, Donald Bieiscli. Mrs. Breiseh. and family will return to New ark With them Sunday to spend the- holidays. ! Miss Jeanne Parker, daugh- tei of Mr and Mrs. Carl Par ker of 608 Jefferson Ext., and Miss Grace Vary, daughter of Mi and Mrs Henry Vary .of 122 Willson s t , students at Rochester Athenaeum and Mechanic fnsfatute, wih return home this week for the Christ mas holidays. ■< Mrs Waltei Hallagan of West Maple Avenue enter tained hei bridge *cluh at a luncheon Tuesday at Wolf’s Tea Room. Mayor and Mrs. €. -H. Davis of High Street visited their daughter, Miss Eleanor Davis \ of New York City over the week-end. gptosign Richard J3. Chaffee ' o r the U.S.. Navy, who Is re covering froSn an operation, yisited relatives In Newark ■over* the' Week-end while on leave .from Norfolk, Va. Mr. -Chaffee Was accampanied by Mrs. Chaffee and son, Rich ard, Jr., who have beep vislt- . ing her parents, Dr. ahd Mrs. M. G. Brown, of Hampshire Road, Syracuse. They left Tuesday for .Norfolk where they will remain for Christmas Upless Ensign Chaffee is grant ed another leave. -• Mr. and-Mrs. Bernard Shu- felt Of Seigfist- St., Irene Be dette of Vienna St. and Jacob Burcroff of Port Gibson were . all Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Carp'enter and family of East Avenue. \ Stanton Eisenberg. son of Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Eisen- Avenue, wffi- return home this week-end for the holidays from Roehes- , ter Athenaeum and Mechanics Institute in Rochester. He is a junior in the Photographic Technology Department and ■ is a member o f the Camera Club. A . Mr. and Mrs. Leon Hall of Newark* are the parents of a daughter born December 15 at the Barber Hospital in Lyons. {Continued on Page Nine) Y o u n g e r S e t S i d e l i g h t s By POSEY EMERSON . • Laugh! We thought we’d liter ally pass away laughing atjbhe mock trial given by the Central School as an Exchange Assembly Friday morning. Tbe jury was chosen from our High Sehool and; of course its intellir’ genee was something to talk ■about. The Phelps School Band rendered some excellent selec tions and the Girls’ Quartet sang' some very nice songs for oui\ entertainment. To sum it all up, one might say it was pretty hoytoytoy! Isn’t ite.splendid that Ellen Young has won the D.A.R. award? Smooth work, Ellen, and congratulations! ph Bliss! Oh Bliss! There’s only one more day of school! Has. everyone written his letter, to Saint \Nick? And are you all saying your prayers on bended khee for plenty of skating dur ing the vacation? There’s one sure thing and it’s not such a bad idea, either, and .that is there’s going to' be ample time to cateh up on a little shut-eye. So, three cheers for the snooze-. stand, and a Merry Christmas to, everybody! , ' P. S. Some call it gossip, but f call it news! • Bud McFarland is a swell basketball player all right. You no doubt have noticed that just lately he’s improved^ in many . ways. Scoring five points in a game gives a guy a lot of pres tige. How about it, Bud? Seniors are stately creatures according to all good traditions. They are supposed to live in a land of their own making, where only Seniors dwell. Well, this is all true enough except 5 that Betty Allen and Kathleen Crouch do not live up to it. They.' are not only failing-to the flotsam and jetsam of life about them but they are aetu- ally-becoming a part of it. They seem to really enjoy a Wild time after school in Mrs Geary’s room mgking one grand rumpus. Drop in and jQin them some time! (If you’re not a Senior). Don Gariock and Eleanor •Woelfel have been hitting it high of late- Eleanor calls it the Essence of Peppermint, hut Don. just sighs one of those deep, deep sighs. F r e a k M i s h a p s D u r i n g Y e a r R i v a l W a c k y T a l e s Christmas Music To Be Presented ll Plans were mate for the an nual Girl- Scout Twelfth Night celebration to be held in Perkins \ Bark Jan. 6 , at the regular meet ing of the Girl Scout leaders last week Tuesday at the Commun ity Center. , - AH Girl Scouts are to assem ble at the park at 6:30 p. m. for the rites marking the end of the Christmas season. The three patrols of Troop 8 are making Christmas baskets to take to shut-ins. ' Girl Scout troops will go --caroling Monday night visiting shut-ins and others as is their ■custom. Troop IX held a Christmas party Wednesday afternoon at the Perkins School. The. third patrol entertained and gifts were exchanged. The Scouts vot ed to spend only five cents for ■heir t gifts and use the rest for a gift for’the toy shop.. Mrs, Ray Wilson will entertain . the Brownies . a t a Christmas paity next Tuesday at her home. i Earthworms to Acre * Charles Darwin, the- British naturalist, once estimated that theie were 53,600 earthworms to the'acre. ■Jefferson Own Architect Thomas Jeflerson was his oyvn architect for his home In Mon- ticello.- He also was the architect for many othey buildings. Annual Christmas program of piano pupils of Mrs. Chester Robb will- be presented by 53 young pianists at 4 p. m. this Saturday in the Methodist Church. The program will be composed of two paTts, the first including singing 'by a baby rhythm class, selections by the rhythm band, and several piano solos and the second part con sisting of a processional, girls trio, and group singing of carols. Vocal soloist for the pro gram will be- Leigh. Falkey of Phelps. Members of the -various units are as follows: Rhythm Band—Gail DuBois, Beverly Bu- shart, Nancy Tyner, Peter Nash, Peter Kaufman, Bobby Ham monds, Larry Hammonds, Bobby VerMeersch, Joe Wilcox; Baby Rhythm Class—Marcia Com-' stoek, Mary' Fortmifler, 'Sandra; Blair, Marcia Vanderbrook, Mary Mangan, Mary Lee Mc Clellan, Jane Baumgartner, Car ol Martin, Delores Vanderbilt, Nancy Robb. Piano soloists—Patti Bailey^ Margaret Scofield, Marian, Doris! and Edith Bauer, Joe DePolo, Shirley Hammonds, Patty Stew art, Eddie Baumgartner, Lynn, Carr, Patricia Smith, Mary, Bloomer, Lola Fortmiller, Su zanne Robb, Ivarene DeMay, Nancy St,ell, Betty Scheerens, .and Carolyn and Peggy Griffiths and Betty Waples of Palmyra and Phyllis Fra lick of Wolcott. Accompanists for the group, singing of carols Will include Kathleen CrouCh, Hans and Clara Spalteholz, Eleanor Wdel- fel, Grace Gianerico, Sarah Hair* lagan, Maftha Jolley, Nancy Knight, Margaret Goetzman, Barbara Fussell, -Maty Matthews, Laura Mae Yarborough, and Virginia Engleson. . By PAUL JONES . National- Safety Council With all the .'. criticism, acci dents are getting these days you, would think they would be- have. themselves. But they Sheepi right Qn brazenly happening,' and ip-vm ®o dut.-of itter way too get attention by uurtwg rirgey Sometimes the e s euk mr - haps ate tragc Som tnnes they’re not. But ucm them u up and ybu have g, toumpei ciop m ,'1641 ftp'prove 1 am* accidents have caught the sprat oi the times by going shshtay wacky. To wit: ■ Student Pilot Vietor Woodrick of Benton Harbor, Mi-eh., figured the jig was up when he was bounced out of toSs training plane as it hit,an air pocket 560 feet above East St. Louis, HI. He was- amazed and gratified to ■come ' down tampliink on the plane’s fuselage, near the tail: Digging his heels info the fabric and holding on for dear life,- he rode jockey-fashion—but back wards—to the .ground as the in structor did a neat bit of flying to land gently, In these days when there’s a 1 tax on most -everythingveveir a child dan get the idea. So when Dr. David E, GstlQr o f Richfield, Utah, treated a four-year-old bdy who had swallowed a penny,* the young patient coughed up' not- only the penny, but the tax' as well—a one-mill Utah token. L. T. Hill, a steeplejack, fell, 105 feet from a steeple atop a church in Ellsworth, Wis., and; landed on a cement walk. To the amazement of Dr. A. R. Aanes and Wilford Gorman, the town Undertaker, who drove up from opposite directions just as Hill fell, the sturdy steeplejack got up and started to walk \away. A thorough examination at a hos pital revealed nothing mqre serious than a? sqr-e thumb. The a projection lOjfeet below the ■perch, another 50 feet farther down and a slanting roof over a basement stairway. The chairman of a meeting of East St. Louis,' HI., retail furni ture, dealers banged his gavel vigorously to signify that a mo tion was before the house. The head of the gavel flew off and landed whack on the head of Jack Dougherty, a furniture salesman. The motion was car ried. So was Mr. Dougherty—to the hospital. Mrs. Paula Teutseh of Chieage- thinks automobiles are dandy for older folks who want a more sedate rite. For herself, she pre-, fers a motor scooter that has some zip to it. Mrs. T,, Who is 63, loved to putt-putt along hum ming the Hut But song. But one day the scooter developed toohome to the rear of - an ■iattdy^^rs, Tentsch’s wrist was the spooter was seuttolu$|J|^|rst. of all, police suggested, tt||tijlrs. T, cea-sS .to be a scooter‘/fefpfer. -Shucks! .• Frank Balente of Rochester, N. Y., iasteeMed.a f w ifer^ it lo n •this year,.but he- ■didn.%..:«^ioy himself.. As fir, .Baiuhiti^fiive ' Across an. -intersecfloh ‘he/ftwas struck stodttaheonsiy >%/.vfwo cars cofcfing; from ,oppte%'«reo- tions. One was driven b y /f e d Ghaiies, the other ' by. ffcpd's brother, David,- Hie' goose .dhpt down,by%,jK L. Barrett at Maxwell, Calif!.;. .no ■doubt would hav®. died ha|(per had it known that it.jfiugfifeted from the sky smack on Nimrod Barrett’s head -and -knockeddbim •cold. ■ Miss Wanda Adams of PJain- view, Tex., drove into a filling ■station too have her car seffjeed. She maneuvered it onto -fthe hydraulic hoist, which- an. at tendant immediately sent- -..sky ward, Miss Adams Ment ulong for the ride. She absent-aninded- ly decided to step out—and, did. No serious injuries. \ The tohem-e song of Jew y S tt- terman’s - automobile - wgs; • “I. Don't: ISamt to Set the Worid on. Dbe-*- 3 >.lfcust Want too SjSst . a Flame to My Parts.”' When. Mr. Putteiman, of Chicago, rtepped. on the starter one day, 'She jalopy caught fire, Engine Com pany 57 made a fast run gnd doused the flames. A week later the same thing happened,'/En gine Company 57 did its' Stuff again, but wearily. A month' later ' Mr. Putterman’s • father tried to start the car. Good ,old 57 responded, but this time.. the firemen were as put out as. the fire. So .Mr. Putterman took the blaze buggy to a garage; \ A mechanic, looking for the,'trou ble, tested the starter. Yep*—old 57 again ! \ if Epgine Company - 57 thought it had troubles/ it should have been at Qdon, Ind., when tbe 'farm home o f William Hackler . caught fire 28 distinct times in one day. One after an other, every part of the house burst into flames. First it was an upstairs window sill, iSirLa. downstairs window, then a calendar on the wall,. a pair' of overalls hanging on the door, a bedspread, a book in the desk drawer, a layer of paper between the springs and mattress -of a bed. The Odon fire department .worked hard and often, finally sent an S.O.S. too firemen\ ‘ in. nearby towns. .When the blazes eventually subsided, Mr. Hackler lor'e' down what was\ left of the house and found himself an other not quite so hotsy' totsy. One theory was that the Hackler . ^ ____ was in th? center of” d much scoot and slambanged in- | strong magnetic field where sta- - - Our Special - - Sc COPANA CIGARS Box of 50 $£.55 WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY $j_ PIPE You may buy tbe following tobaccos in pound cans for PRINCE ALBERT (P o u n d ) HALF & HALF Geo, Washington UNION LEADER All kinds of Boxed ’CIGARS in X-mas Wrapping. Ship Lantern Humidor — $ 1 Amity B i l l f o l d S e t s $ J tip Electric D r y S h a v e r s $ 0 . 9 5 u p IMPERIAL SMOKE SHOP Niek Critelli, Mgr. ' 153 E. UNION ST. Phone 720 NEWARK Christmas delivery when promised. No added charge; YOU WILL FIND THIS FRIENDLY STORE A HAVEN OF THRILLING GIFT SUGGESTIONS . , . LARGE OR SMALL TO MEET MODEST OR PACKED PURSES V . , HUNDREDS OF USEFUL, BEAUTIFUL, PRACTI CAL PIECES TO CHOOSE FROM t E. UNION ST, N E W A R K tic electricity prevailed. But rib - 1 body knows 1 fox sure. , blaaa which broke out in the home of Mr. ‘arid Mrs. William -Millei ui Athens, Ga, This fire turned\ in its own'alarih. Mr. and Mrs. Mihrn' were away,, but ihe flames .burned; a ball behind tfoe telephone and the instrtiment fell-to thp floor, knoekiri'g' the reeaivei- from the hook. Switch board Operator Alma Patrick saw the light flash on the .board,, heard the' crackle of the flames w e r the wire and. called the fire •department. . Western Union Messenger Vito de Giorgio of New York. City, walking home from work one' day, glanced up to see a tiny baby fall from the narrow ledge: of a second story -window- 15 feetr above. He dashed over and as sumed an alley-oop stance. The .next thing he knew, he had- a brig'hteyed baby in his arms. “Sign here, please,” said Mes- sefiger Vito as he delivered the; child to its grateful parents.. 1 Why not bake a good whole- grain, molasses-rich raised bread? Here is a recipe from tbe; New York State College of Home Economics: ttafeeil -Oatmeal Bread Mix 1 cup of rolled hats i/„ cun Of ,corn ______ 11/2 teaspoons oi salt 1 - tablespoon, of fat - - 2 dups of boiling water Let this staiid for on? hour. Then add: 1 yeast cake dissolved\ in i/a.eup of liflcew atm-water Add I 4 cup of molasses ^ ; 3 <cups of sifted plain or “enriched” flour 1 cup of rye flour Mix all these ingradlents well;. the- mixture will be somewhati moist and sticky. Cover thd bowl and let the mixture rise, ih a warm -place, untfl-it is dofflibte •in bulk. Mix if wieh. again, and put the dough into two greased loaf totos. Lfet it -ride untofl it doubles in side and . bake ®be, loaves in a hot oven, 450 degrees Fahrenheit, for about an .few . ■If a drier bread is preferred, use a little more flour and knead . — ____ A. suggested sehpol-lundh menu toriudes sandwlciiiss made Uf batmeal bread, one 'substoan- fial and one “sweet’-’ \one. A hard-icooked egg* arid oeleiy nflx- ’bure,, nsr baked Leans and toarash,; or peanut toutter make good fliE- ings. For fihe . sweet samdwidh, cream or cottage <dh:eese .and apple toutter, or. mashed Lamaafa' and -chopped nuts, or ©hopped apricots moistened 'Wiii - tehon juice, mgke'‘good fiilhng's.»-Wpfh dae ■ ■sandwirib'es.'-iparit few pieces o f celery dr a small jaa o f cabbage (Salad, milk cookies P E R C E S T R I N G S ” b y COLEMAN AL ■STORT 6 N 0 ^ f f i ' ' L| r CBlHiaW-f«niiture-154 W. Union« , the very spiBiifa o f it hrings a flood of happy memories. The breathless', aiitlciiparion, the secret preparations, the - raagianoe-af-ltemloEki- dtoetoi-mkle n f candlelight,-the jingle' of dSsbanto Whs . . , and tdaat wondrous ritual we know as '“ite ipentog-.df Jhe presents.’’ , ©ar 25 years, HoSmeyer’s has played Santa Claus at (this festival o f Menfflflaess. This year -again w-e bring you Leaaifty, and delight, wrapped up and tied with that very speeM Hoftaey.er-_gractousness that insures another mem- orable Gto'iStonas for you, your family and your friends. ■ L E N A M O F F M E Y E R ._ \The •Store -of Individuality” 132. SO, MAIN ST. NEWARK, NEW YORK. ■ ■ .fi- ■ ........... V v... - ^ ................ v. _s..v ; M U S T F O R C H R I S T M A S MARY LINCOLN CANDIES The-Gift Every body Enjoys! There’s cheer. and g o o d w i l l uy.A|..;iifqr every in a gift box V ' df -these famous bandies. 2 Lb. Box $1.10 i 3 tbs. - 1.65 S tbs. - 2.75 Whitman’s Candies are Always Welcome! On Christmas as on any other occasion, candy is al ways the perfect gift. 1 P o u n d . . . 2 P o u n d s . . 3 i / 2 P o u n d s . 1.5CT • 3 . 0 0 . 5 . 0 0 CIGARS a Gift Boxed 2 5 C i g a r s $ 1 . 1 9 5 0 C i g a r s 2 . 2 0 t f i # S m o k e s H e E n j o y s ! TOBACCOS Y e l l o B o l e $ 1 . 0 0 1 Lb. Gift Pkgs. Y e l l o B o l e Tmperiai> 1 . 5 0 P r i n c e A l b e r t iS M C D r . G r a b a w . ... . . . 1 . 5 0 V e l v e t - 69< from WILDHACK’S Cosmetic Bar E v e n i n g i n P a r i s - - 5 5 c t o F/nu de CologTie by ftoui^ois L e L o n g s T a i l s p i n E n s e m b l e - - $ 1 0 . 5 0 E l i z a b e t h A r d e n - - $ 1 . 2 5 t o fth i p tim w H TPFPfnnjp Y a r d l e y ’s M e n ’s $ 2 . 7 5 t o S b a v i n g S e t s $ 1 0 . 0 0 L e n t h e r i c - - Tweed Sets $2.75 to $10 PinkJParty Sets . . $1,75 to $8 C o t y - L ’O r i g a n S e t s $ 2 t o $ 5 . 7 5 OBBN \EVENINGS ' '. UNTIL •10:30 F O R M E N t tA Cornplet^ line of Shaving Cream and Lotions [VI WOO d I wr Y * \'^AftDLEY LE'NTjftERIC WBlSliEY OLD SPICE f <4^5 i m