Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Courier-News from Bridgewater, New Jersey • Page 7
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Courier-News from Bridgewater, New Jersey • Page 7

Publication:
The Courier-Newsi
Location:
Bridgewater, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE SIXTEEN iilvieiidon PLAINFIELD, N. COURIER-NEWS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1940 Telephone riainfleld 6 8000 Bus Tour Planned Jury Panels Are Drawn Awards Won By Flowers Flemington There were 97 entries in the 4-H flower show at the Flemington Fair. County residents whose exhibits scored good or better were: Anita Foerster, Whitehouse Station, good on large zinnias, house plant, one-sided arrangement and arrangement using green and white; Leona Foerster, White-house Station, good on large flowering zinnias, house plant, center Sues Red Cross For 125 Damages Flemington A civil action complaint has been filed in Hunterdoa County District Court by Stanley Hall of Flemingtog. guardian for his daughter, Patricia Hall, to collect $125 allegedly due him from the Hunterdon County Chapter of the Red Cross.

The complaint states that tht money is due the Hall family for injuries suffered by Patricia Apr. 16, 1948, when the Red Cross car, in which she was a passenger, left the road and turned over in Routs 29 at Three Bridges. mm AMwk Church School Board Elects High Bridge The Methodist Church School Board was organized Tuesday night by the Board of Education at the church. Officers were named as follows: Chairman, the Rev. George M.

1 1 pastor; vicechairman, Harry F. Masser; secretary-treasurer. Miss Helen A. Crane; attendance secretary. Miss Marian Manning.

Mrs. Warren A. Bird-sail was named superintendent of the children's division; Harry Master, youth division; home nursery roll, Mrs. William II. Stires; primary-junior group, Mrs.

Muller. Promotion Sunday was set for Sept. 25 and Rally Day will be observed Oct. 2, when Bibles will be given to children promoted. Pins will be given for attendance.

Teachers were named as follows: Kindergarten Mrs. Howard Dalrymple Mrs. Harry Stein-kopf; primary; Mrs. Charles Johnson. Mrs.

James W. Alpaugh, Mrs. William Henry, Mrs. Norman Qucrry, Miss Dorothy VanNest; Mrs. Harold J.

Conover, Miss Lillian Thompson, Mrs. Eugene Hog-mark, Joseph Weitzell, Mrs. Jennie Johnson. Also, junior department Mrs. Barclay Jones, Mrs.

Carroll Se- -asii wim vms nrr ri mi -mmmmk Miller's Photo Service one a week to the publishers and syndicates. Her advice for success in the puzzling field is a vocabulary of 150,000 words, a dictionary, a Bible and several sets of good reference works plus the will to work. SHE PUZZLES PEOPLE Mrs. Wesley E. Schuyler of Park Flemington.

puzzles people by making crossword puzzles for newspapers and magazines. She began her unique vocation in the early 1930's and now sells puzzles at an average of Crossword Puzzle Making Proves-Interesting Work Flemington Grand and Petit Jury panels for the stated session beginning Sept. 13 were drawn yesterday in the courthouse by Hunterdon County Sheriff William M. Amerman before County Jucfje Wesley L. Lance, Jury Com mjssioner Alstyne B.

Dilts of Three Bridges and Deputy County Clerk John Brien. WiK Report Sept. 12 A Grand Jury panel of 35 names and a Petit Jury panel of 90 names were drawn. The Grand Jury panel has been summoned by Superior Court Judge Frank Cleery to appear at the courthouse Sept 12 at 2 p.m. The Grand Jury list is as follows: Joseph A.

Abel, grain broker, Lebanon RD; Dorothy Allen, housewife, Ringoes RD; Neva Bal-liet. housewife, Milford; Louise Bell, secretary, Flemington; Ruth Black, stenographer, Lebanon; George Conover, accountant, High Bridge; Floyd Crampton, merchant, Bloomsbury RD; Carrie Ellis, housewife, Milford; Mary L. Farrelly, housewife, Califon RD; Dorothy Fleck, housewife, High Bridge; Ralph Geist, merchant, Califon; Myrtle Haney, housewife, Frenchtown. Alio, LeRoy Heater, blacksmith, Flemington; Alice B. Hewitt, housewife, Stockton; Henrietta Hill, housewife, Flemington RD; Melvin Hockenbury, laborer, Flemington; Hazel S.

Holcombe, housewife. Lambertville RD; William Hrubas, carpenter. Three Bridges; John C. Huff, banking, Flemington RD; Ella Johnson, housewife, Lambertville; Hugh Kent, manager. High Bridge; Dorothy Opdyke, housewife, Flemington RD; Polly Resrdon.

writer, Califon RD; Htrold Rush, poultryman, Hampton RD. Also, Mary Scheetz, housewife, Lambertville; William S. Scheetz, postal clerk, Lambertville; Harry Seals, merchant, Annandale; Hannah Slack, housewife, Lambertville; Hugh M. Smith, real rstate, Lebanon RD; Nina Trainer, housewife. High Bridge; Herbert Tuxhorn, chauffeur.

West Portal; Gladys Voorhees', housewife, Ringoes; Marc Waldron merchant, Califon; Elizabeth Walton, housewife, High Bridge and Vincent Memehek garage owner, Ringoes. Petit Jury List The Petit Jury list includes the following: Annandale: Edward T. Astle, clerk; Henry Krohn, gardener; Eugene Reardon, machinist; Ethel Sherman, housewife. Annandale RD: Franklin V. De-Nyse.

assistant manager; Helen Frazee, -housewife. Califon: Paul B. Somers, insurance. Clinton: Estella Hall, housewife. Flemington: Louise Becker, housewife; Luther Beer, salesman; Jeanne Britton, at home; George Buikett, merchant; Edwin L.

Carter, salesman; -Shirley Carter, housewife; Fred V. D. Case, salesman; Standish Hartman, memorials; Amos meter man; Arthur S. Pinckney, executive; Elizabeth Rippert, housewife, Elizabeth Schenk, housewife; George K. Weller, banker.

Flemington RD: Charles Fraass, carpenter; Josephine Levergood, housewife; Lester Levergood, executive; Joseph Welsh, clerk. High Bridge: Lester S. Hunt, clerk: James Paxson, insurance; J. Frank Trimble, foundry worker. Lebanon: Edison Yawger, painter.

Lebanon RD: Frank Rose, car" I christ, Kenneth W. Perry, Mrs. Marriann VanNest, C. Joseph Masser, Miss Helen Hoffman, Mrs. Charles J.

Masser, Mrs. Harry F. Masser, Mrs. Emma Alpaugh, Mrs. Alfred A.

Robinson. Mrs. Chris Seal, Miss Eleanor Hogmark, Mrs. Paul Hankinson and Ralph W. Holjes.

Also, intermediates Miss Helen Crane, Mrs. Harriet Seal, Mrs. Charles A. Longley, Mrs. Robert A.

Carvatt, Eugene Hogmark; senior, Frank B. Hanson, Mrs. Anthony Tramula, Austin Seals; adult, Dennis D. Ward; reserve, Mrs. Helen Ackerman and John Williams.

Califon School Set to Open Califon The Califon Public School will open on Wednesday, Sept. 7 with Mrs. Beatrice Masser! of High Bridge, principal and teacher of kindergarten and lirst; grade; Mrs. Ruth Burd of Middle Valley, second and third grades; Mrs. Clarence Eckroth of High; Bridge, fourth and fifth grades: i Mrs.

Howard E. Getz of Califon, sixth, seventh and eighth grades. Miss Betty Cawley of Phillips- burg will supervise music in all grades one day each week. The parent should present to the teacher the birth certificate or other proof of age of child entering kindergarten. All children must be vaccinated or present a certificate from the doctor showing the child to be unable to be vaccinated.

piece of outdoor flowers and feather coxcomb; Freeman Learning, Whitehouse Station, good on blooms from any perennial; Judith Learning, Whitehouse Station, good on an arrangement using red, white and blue colors. Also, William Prostak, Round Valley, excellent on gladioli and sunflowers, very good on mari golds, petunias, house plant, cos mos asters, blooms from any per ennial, miniature bouquet, center piece of outdoor flowers and mixed bouquet of wild flowers, good on single spike of gladiolus, any other flowering annual, house plant, nasturtium, any other flow ering annual, roses, snapdragons, single spike dahlia, small dahlia, zinnias, centerpiece of outdoor flowers, arrangement of flowers using red, white and blue, one sided arrangement, arrangement of zinnias, phlox and a mixed bouquet of cultivated flowers. Also, Helen Prostak, Round Valley, very good on a container of gladioli, good on single spike gladiola and asters; Irvin Vlear-bone, Voorhees Corner, good on miniature bouquet; Joan Jurgen-son, Baptistown, very good on French marigold, snapdragons, single spike dahlia and large flowering zinnias, good on miniature bouquet, African marigolds, phlox, centerpiece of outdoor flowers, white bouquet, single spike gladiola, one-sided arrangement, con-tainer of gladioli, marigolds and asters. Also, Joann Cray, Dilts Corner, excellent on large zinnias, very good on arrangement vining green and white, good on arrangement of zinnias, mixed bouquet of cultivated flowers, cosmos, and any flowering annual; Joseph Little York, excellent on single spike gladiola, single rose arrangement of roses, pompom zinnias and another single rose; and Barbara Schick, Little York, excellent on single spike gladiola and pompom zinnias. Polio Program Set in Flcmiiiglon Flemington Several speakers will discuss the non-medical aspects of polio and give an educational outline of the disease, which thus far this season has shunned Hunterdon, at a public meeting to be.

held Sept. 21 at 8:15 p.m. at Flemington Legion Home. Legion Post, 159, and VFW Post, 7856, are working together in planning and sponsoring the program which is considered by the veterans units as a public service, in view of the impact of this year's polio attack. Dr.

William E. McCorkle of Ringoes, Hunterdon County physician, who is County chairman of the National Foundation of Infantile Paralysis, will be a speaker, as will a representative of the state unit of the polio foundation. According to the planning committee, a report by Dr. Hart E. Van Riper, medical director of the Foundation, a study of previous years show the peak may come between mid-August and mid-September but has never occurred before the second week in September.

Further plans for the program will be mapped by both local veterans units before the Sept. 21 public meeting. Grange to Hold Dance Lebanon Stanton Grange 148, will hold a dance tomorrow evening in the Grange Hall. Al To-bia's orchestra will play with Ed Porter calling for square dances. The committee includes Mr.

and Mrs. Dolson Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hartpence, Mr. and Mrs.

Alan Haver, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kampmeyer and Mr. and Mrs. William C.

T. Pape. I UUU1 if Make it a Rt. advantaae 3 i. By Poultry Group Flemington A tour in chartered buses from Flemington to Ocean County has been arranged by Hunterdon County Poultry Association in cooperation, with the Extension Service for Tuesday, Sept.

20. County poultrymen will have an opportunity to see all types of poultry house construction and latest equipment- The schedule will call for leaving Flemington Auction building at 8:30 a. m. and returning by 6 p. m.

Lebanon Home 145 Years Old Lebanon "Twin Brooks," the 145-year-old country home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Harcombe located between Lebanon and Stanton on rural route 1, is one of the oldest home in this community. Records now in possession of the owners date back to Jan. 1, 1804, when Morris Dilts and Mary, his wife, deeded the property to Tobias Hall.

At that time Clinton Township was a part of Lebanon Township. 3 Periods of Construction According to descendants of Mr. Hall, the present residence was constructed in three different periods. It is believed that the center portion was built around 1804. The original ceilings, flooring and fire place are still in use.

Ac cording to an executors' deed, a part of this property was transferred to Harbert Hall in 1943 when an addition was built to the west end of the house to accommodate his nine children. Mr. Hall who was a carpenter and cabinet maker, made the walnut stair railing by hand, which is still in use. Mr, Hall's work shop stood near the springhouse and his initials and date of 1869 are carved on the stone foundation. He died in 1890.

The next owners were John S. and Mary Jane Yorks who pur chased the property Apr. 1, 1891. Mr. Yorks also was a carpenter.

The family resided there until November, 1908 when it was sold to Emanuel and Louise Bjerre-gaard. On July 3, 1912, the place was transferred by them to Mrs. Blanche M. Anderson now of Lebanon. The Andersons lived there until 1922 when they sold it to John Gillio.

The present owners purchased it in November, 1937, from the Gillio family. After purchasing the property, Mr. and Mrs. Harcombe made extensive improvements and restored much of the original architectural designs. The entire seven-room house is furnished with early American antiques.

Twenty-eight colorful hooked rugs made by Mrs. Harcombe are scattered throughout the home. An unusual carpeting also made by Mrs. Harcombe covers the stairway. At the entrance is a Welcome mat, with each riser telling the story of the house.

Spring Feeds Pools A never-failing spring-well is piped under ground and forms a series of pools on the spacious lawn. Wild flowers and ferns of many species are blooming along the winding trails that lead through the wooded ravine. Mr. Harcombe is a retired chemical executive. He'and his wife are interested in the conservation of wild flowers and native plants.

Mrs. Harcombe is an active member, of the Community Garden Club of Hunterdon County, also the Westfield Garden Club. She is a known lecturer on wild flowers. The couple has a son residing in Chicago and a daughter of Mead-ville, Pa. Demonstration Set Flemington A demonstration on making of oatmeal cookies will be given at Flemington Fair tomorrow at 1:30 p.m.

on the demonstration platform next to the main agricultural tent. Joan Rosely and Katherine Brown, members of the Pattenburg 4-H Club, will offer the demonstration. The girls received an "excellent" rating on making of cookies at the recent County 4-H Demonstration Night contest at Grandview Grange hall. The demonstration will be a feature of the 4-H Day program at the Fair. "Lawn Week-end." Take of nature's own olantina LAWN SEED Sow this permanent type seed to fill in bare spots with luxuriant grass.

Use less because 3,000,000 viable seeds per pound. 1 lb 5 Spradr $9.95. PL 4-9137 EH EE DEEIVEIIY Annandale The Clinton Township Committee will meet Saturday at 2 p. rain the Municipal Building. Edward T.

Astle has returned to his duties in the freight claim office of the Jersey Central Railroad at Jersey City after an eight-day vacation. BEAR WHEEL FRAME STEERING ALIGNMENT WHEEL BALANCING By Bear Factory Trained Mechanic BUr.1PER-fo-BULlPER AUTO SERVICE HIGHWAY 29 and WATCHUNO AVE rNorth Plainfi.ld PL 4-2471' A LITTLE IS ONE OF THE BEST M- VESTMENTS VOU CAN MAKE. Treat your tr, shrubs and (own to bt in fertilizer, sprays and seed. Nationally recommended brands stock fr your selection. A visit will be well woh your while.

v3 cans ft fiir 3 ill MARKET PLAINFIELD PL 6-1711 A. M. 6.20 P. frMoy A. M.

M.j Sundoyt A. M. to I P. M. MONDAY 1 7 lip at ihe RICHMOND MARKET! BALBO f.59 OIL ii ones and if he is a "real fan" he has his reference library ready.

The local crossword maker has worn out several dictionaries by poring over them to locate the right combination of words to fill in the blocks in the puzzle construction. She also gives her Compton's Picture Dictionary, encyclopedias and a dictionary of obscure words a good going over each week. She says she has even amazed herself with the vocabulary she has acquired from memory while engaged in her work. Building Puzzle In building a puzzle she begins in the upper left-hand corner and proceeds by "blocks" from left to right across the approximate four levels of blocks to the lower right-hand corner. Sometimes the work progresses in easy stages and sometimes it bogs down with a row of consonants than can't be remedied.

Then Mrs. Schuyler says she tears out the offending block and starts over in that particular area. Sometimes it it put together in two hours and sometimes it takes two days. After it is completed, she makes a pen and ink layout on drawing paper, together with numbers in the upper left-hand corner of each letter square, shading the squares not used, in any haphazad geometric design that happens to be left over, types in the solutions on the puzzle and also prepares the smaller solution that we see as the answer appearing in the crossword columns the succeeding day or week. Then she mails it and sits back waiting for the payment check or rejection slip.

Fortunately for her, it has been more of the former lately. She also has worked the puzzles known as "daffies" which are taken from jingles, slang, nicknames, nursery rhymes, etc. but has never been too interested in this branch inf thf "art Rho ha rlnnp rrnirl- erable work in laying out designs where the unused squares form patterns suggestive of holidays, such as hearts for Sfr Valentine's Day, a cross for Easter, a turkey for Thanksgiving and numerals for the new year just piror to Jan. 1. At one time silhouettes of animals, heads of persons and other objects were inserted in the center of the layout and usually had no connection with the subject matter.

She was aided with these by her son, George, who is a commercial artist employed in New York City. They have passed the peak of popularity, however, judging by a rejection slip for seven which came back together a few months ago. Schuyler, who uses her maiden name, Olive Sipes Schuyler, in signing the puzzles, says she doesn't work other people's crosswords any more because she doesn't have time, what with housework and puzzle construes ion. She did compose a crossword poem which was recently published. She was a compositor at the Frenchtown Star, weekly newspaper operated for many years by her father, William II.

Sipes and later continued by her brother, Fred. The newspaper was sold a number of years ago. P.S. Mrs. Schuyler says the seven-letter word for "food fish" will probably be a nice three-vowel word like "pompano." About one-third of the continental United States is forest land.

LaPERLA PEPPERONI Italian Style Sausage Papers Granted For Pittstown Estate Flemington The will of Michael Sivon, late of Pittstown, who died Aug. 2, has been admitted for probate in the office of Hunterdon County Surrogate Inez P. Prall. Mrs. Mary Kondes Sivon, his widow, will receive $700 and any farm stock and equipment owned at the time of her husband's death.

The remainder of the estate is left to his father, Andrew Sivon of Carteret. Mrs. Sivon is named executrix according to the will dated Feb. 1, 1947. 4-II Exhibits Rate Hitf Flemington The 4 II Poultry Show at the Flemington Fair, although not as large as in previous years, has many exhibits of high quality.

Hunterdon members exhibits were rated as follows: Henry Desnos Cherryville, very good on trio of Cornish Rock broilers, a trio of Leghorn broilers, good plus each on Barred Rock pullet, trio of Red broilers and another entry of a Barred Rock pullet; Edlen MacNamara, Pittstown, very good on a trio ofj Black Leghorns, good on entry of a Rhode Island hen and a trio of Black Leghorns; Walter Loven-berg Stockton RD, very good on a sex-link pullet, good plus each on a sex-link cockerel and a sex-link pullet; Maurice Smith, Cherryville, good plus on two entries of Barred Rock pullets. Also, Henry Kuhl, Flemington, very good each on the entry of Light Brahma hen and the entry of Light Brahma cock; good plus on Light Brahma hen, Black Cochin cock, W'hite Leghorn pullet, sex-link pullet, good on Light Brahma cock, Black Cochin hen, Barred Rock pullet and sex-link pullet. A Barred Rock cock shown by Carl W. Pannicke of Passaic County was rated the best bird of the show. He was.

awarded 100 pounds of egg mash given by Ber-kaw and Mathews of Flemington. Lebanon 'l-II Club Itooth With Excellent Hating Flemington The Lebanon 4-II Dairy Club booth was given an excellent rating in the special booth displays at the 4-II Club show at the Flemington Fair. Other clubs which received ratings for their exhibits are as follows; Very good, Green Thumbs 4-II Garden Club of W'hitehouse and the County 4-H Sheep Club; good, Sergeantsvillc 411 Community Club, Mt. Airy 4 11 Dairy Club, Milford 4-H Dairy Club. Pleasant: Run 4-H Garden Club and Voor- hees Corner 4-H Club; and fair, Cushetunk 411 Dairy Club.

Lebanon The Lebanon Volunteer Company arranged Tuesday Fire eve- ning to attend Firemen's night at the Flemington Fair tomorrow eve-. ning. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L.

Cox of: Main St. and Mr. and Mrs. Leroyj MacPherson of Brunswick Ave. re-i turned yesterday from a vacation trip to Canada.

George N. Tine of Ridgew'ood is spending a month with hjs nephew and niece, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Snyder at Cush-Mont Farms. i The Lebanon Nursery will reopen Monday," Sept.

12. All children must be vaccinated. I TEL. PL 6-8073 per.ter; Vera M. Smith, housewife.

jpaper and sat back to see what Neshanic Station: Margueretei would happen. Flemington "What is a seven-letter word meaning good fish?" This and similar searching questions are often fired at Mrs. Wesley E. Schuyler of Park Ave. by neighbors and friends.

She is in a position tp know because for the past 16 years she has been a crossword puzzle maker. Have you often wondered, when you see a crossword puzzle in your newspaper or magazine, where it came from and how it got that way? Mrs. Schuyler will tell you for she has had hundreds of her puzzles printed in large city dailies, magazines and in crossword books. Easy to Solve She also will tell you how easy it is to solve them, once you. get really interested.

All you need, Mrs. Schuyler says, is a vocabulary of about 150,000 words, a good dictionary, a knowledge of Greek mythology, world history, familiarity with all the arts and crafts the world has ever known, right back into Bible times, a good set of encyclopedias and a will to work. Mrs. Schuyler says she first got interested in crossword puzzles in the early 1930s when she picked up a Sunday supplement puzzle, attempted to work it and found she knew the answers to only two or three of the 300 definitions, as the "across" and "down" questions are called in the trade. She then began getting familiar with the dictionary for the first time and after several months of practice began getting "completions." After the novelty of working the puzzles wore off, she began to consider how they are produced in the first place.

She took out pencil, ruler and paper and toyed with one of her own. After many attempts she mailed one lo the crossword editor of a New York daily news- Forgot to Send Solution In her excitement she forgot to send along the "solution" so back came the rejection slip with the notation "files overstocked." She tried again several times but with no results until finally in February of 1933 she concocted the idea of building a puzzle around a Washington's Birthday theme. The definitions had as many items connected with the life of the Revolutionary War general as possible and made a hit. The puzzle editor, in accepting the offering, commented there were "two errors" which were corrected. Mrs.

Schuyler then began again in earnest and by 1940 was selling her work at regular intervals which she has continued to the time. She is now averaging about one puzzle a week to vari- ous agencies ana svnaicaies, ana 4. still more or less of a hobby, although she says many puzzle mak- ers are gaining a living from their 23 letters square, she is paid about $20, with corresponding lower prices for smaller ones. Puzzle Requirements To classify a puzzle as "good," the local woman says, first of all, it must be interesting; that that take in sports, the news of the day, stage and screen personalities, etc. For instance, Aly Khan and Rita Hayworth, Dimaggio in sports, Gable's or Alan Ladd's first or last names, and even General Vaughn or "deep freezes." You can't rely too much on Greek mythology or small bones in the human skeleton when the average person is not familiar with them.

Another thing to be considered in making the puzzles is whether they will be printed on weekdays or Sundays. Weekday puzzles have to be small and fairly easy so that Pop can "work" most of it coming home from the office on the train bus and without aid of a die-Sunday's puzzle can be a HYGRADE BOLOGNA ALL BEEF WHITE HOSE PEAS TENDA BIG U.S. No. POTATOES SWIFT'S PREMIUM FRESH PORK Shouldesr Short housewife. Oldwick: Margaret Eick, housewife.

Pittstown: Clarence Sheppard, mechanic. Pittstown RD: Andrew Toth. mechanic. Readington: Fred Cole, sextcn. Ringoes: Myrtle Groff, housewife; Kenneth Polhemus, carpenter.

Three Bridges: Mildred Lane, secretary; Thelma Miller, housewife. Whitehouse: Raymond Plog, egg dealer; Victor Shaw, trucking. Whitehouse Station: Catharine Seigfried, housewife, and Edna Welsh, housewife. Hunterdon CHR Stations CIoel on Weekends Annandale The local passen- ger and freight station of the Jersey Centrail Railroad will be one ot eight small stations De tween Bloomsbury and Branch that will be closed on Sat-j urdays and Sundays when the i five-day work week for non-operating employes goes into effect today. The local station has not been open Sundays in many years.

Clarence Hoffman of Bloomsbury is the local passenger and freight agent. Other Jersey Central installations to go on the five-day week will include Bloomsbury, Ludlow, Hampton, Glen Gardner, Lebanon, Whitehouse and North Branch. Passengers boarding trains at these stations will buy tickets on the train. Califon WSCS of Fairmount Methodist Church will hold a food sale Monday Sept. 5 at 1 p.

m. at the Fair-mount Methodist Church lawn. Mrs. George Eh man and Mrs. Emmet! Lutes are chairmen.

The Califon Firemens Associa lion will hold a game party tfftrnV Shank 'season. Follow the easy SCOTTS PROGRAM. DANNY YACCARIIVO'S DIMM TURF BUILDER This complete grassfood quickly restores grass health, vigor and color. Use only 1 lb per 100 sq ft. 25 lbs feeds 50 ft by 50 ft for $2.50.

Feed 5000 sq ft for $3.95. Apply in iffy with NOW IS MUE TIME TO REPAIR YOUR DRIVEWAY BEAUTIFY WITI1 MACADAM YOU'LL BE AMAZED AT OUR LOW PRICES EXCAVATION and CICAIIING IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OF CRUSHED STONE CgAn.CBD HDDOBCD6lt PARK HARDWARE SUPER 307 RICHMOND ST. FREE DELIVERY STORE HOURS: Tuaiday thru Thor4oy. to 9 f. M.j Saturday A.

M. to 8 P. CLOSED EVERY 607 PARK AVE. Fit EE PAIIKEVC; 714 COOLIDGE STREET morrow at 8 p. m.

in Firemen's! puzzler as the fan then has more Hsil. ttime to do justice to the difficult.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Courier-News
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Courier-News Archive

Pages Available:
2,000,981
Years Available:
1884-2024