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VOL. X, No.5
SWARTHMORE,
FEBRUARY 4, 1938
WILSON REGAINS
COUNCIL NAMES
TWIN FEATURE AT RUTH STATE
CHAMPIONSHIP
HOME & SCHOOL Ruth H. Wilson, of Ogden avenue, add- 2 FOR UBRARY
Parents 10 Hear Dr. Robert Bookhammer and Mrs. Dorothy
Waldo Phillips Next
Tuesday Evening
ed a gold loving cup to her collection of
table tennis trophies by winning the Pennsylvania State Open Tourname';t held
in the Commercial Museum, Philadelphia,
January V, 28 and 29 defeating Mrs.
Mae Spannaus, of New Rochelle, N. Y.,
in straight games. Mrs. Spannaus is rated about eighth among the best players
in this country.
Ruth is planning to play this month
in the Middle Atlantic States Tourney
at Baltimore and the Eastern Open
Tournament at \Vashington which will
be followed by the national meet in Phil adelphia in Marclt.
This is the third time Ruth, who is
olle of the youngest girl players in competition, has held the State championship
having won it in 1935 and 36 also.
• ••
Next Tuesday evening, February 10,
Swarthmore parents and teachers will
lay aside their moving picture emotions
long enough to consider a subject which
the Swarthmore Home & School Assodation believes to be of even greater urgency. According to this organization it
may be relatively easy to prevent dangerous commercial interests from invading
the peaceful Borough of Swarthmore but
to banish harmful personality tendencies
from among the lives of local children i,;
much more formidable and perhaps even
l~s~ understood by most Borough-loving
CitIzens.
"Exactly' Which Personality Traits Are
Dangerous" is the subject which will be
discussed at the February meeting of the
local Home & School by Dr. Robert
Bookhammer, of the Jefferson Hospital
staff and head of the Clinical Division Varied Program Presented by
of the State Hospital at Norristown. Such
Health and WeUare Departan intimate subject at the hands of a
men18 Tuesday
well known authority should prove of
The Health and Welfare chairmen,
unusual value and interest.
The second feature of next Tuesday ~rs. Edward Hopkins and Mrs. S. H.
emenway, presented three interesting
evening's meeting will be directed by Mrs.
Dorothy Waldo Phillips, well known psy- speakers at the meeting of the Wochologist and teen age expert. Mrs. m an's Club held on Tuesday, February
1
Phillips will tell parents and teachers . Taking for her subject "How to Grow
about her methods and the problems she Lovely, Growing Old", Mrs. John J. H.
has solved in helping students reach a Phillips, State Chairman of Health,
better understanding of themselves, their pleaded for better care of the human
friends and families. Her topic will be body, citing health as the first reelltitled "Emotional Education Dovetailed quisite of loveliness. She spoke parWith Academic Education." Mrs. Phillips ticularly of the strides made in cancer
will soon give her course to Swarthmore research during the year 1937, mentionstudents having conducted her llrelimin- ing the million dollar appropriation by
ary discussion on January 17-18.
Congress for the establishment of a
,..
National Cancer Center, and the Child's
L. W. V. TO BEAR
Foundation Fund at Yale made possi.
ROLLIN POSEY ble by two gifts amounting to ten mil!ioll do!iars.·
The Swarthmore League of Women
Mrs. Phillips contended that the eduVoters will hold its February )fleeting cational program concerning cancer
in Bond Hall on Wednesday, Febru- adopted by Women's Clubs had saved
ary 9, at 2 :30 P. M. Rollin B. Posey, hundreds of lives.
of Cornell avenue, will discuss "The
"To be lovely", said Mrs. Phillips," we
City Mll-nager Plan in Operation". Mr. must have health, be busy, have at
Posey is a graduate of the University least one hobby, be friendly and graof Kansas, and studied two years at the cious and worry less about growing old
Harvard School of Business Adminis- than how we are growing."
'rhe followl'ng poeln was used as all
tration. He was connected with the
to the talk'.
illtroductl'on
Cincinnati Bureau of Governmental Re"Let
us
grow
lov"ly growing old',
search for Years. He was then ReSo
many
fine'"
thl'ngs do',
search Director of the City of Hartford,
Conn. In the fall and winter oi 1936 and
L aces, and I'vory, alld gold,
And silks, need not be new',
1937 he was a member of the staff
And there is healing in old trees',
which made President Roosevelt's "FisOld streets a glamour hold.
cal Relation Survey". Following that
Why may not I, as well as these,
survey he was connected with J. L.
Jacobs & Company, a firm of consultGrow lovely, growing old."
Major G. B. Hickman, a member of
ants in the field of public administration.
Mr. Posey is now in the Institute of the Faculty of the Glen Mills School,
Local and State Government of the then spoke on "Crime Prevention". He
Wharton School of the University of said his work was fascinating, but not
Pennsylvania. His address will be most thrilling and that it would be worth
informing and he has declared himself while if one boy or girl could be saved.
willing to answer questions which may "Crime has its inception in juvenile delinquency," said Major Hickman, "Chilarise.
The meeting is in charge of the dren born of criminal parents are not
Chairman of Government and its Oper- necessarily criminals and statistics
prove that environment is the principal
ation, Mrs. Peter E. Told.
Mrs. Thomas H. Johnson, president factor in the lives of children."
The Probation and Parole Systems
of the Swarthmore League, wil! preside
and tea will be served after the meet- were discussed and the serious problems
involved if these systems were aboling.
The L. W. V. will hold a benefit Val- ished.
entine Party at the Woman's Club next
Carl Schmidt, new full-time Director
Friday afternoon, February 11, at 2 :30 of Recreation in Delaware County, was
P. M. Bridge games and refreshments illttodoced and wW ~ ilie ~ ~re
will be on the program.
Park System to be established in the
County which would provide playgrounds in needed places. Picnic spots
Alfred Hoadley Receives
are
to be selected and the natural beauAppointment
ties of the county are to be preserved.
(Colltillued on Paoe Four)
Alfred D. Hoadley, son of Mrs. George
A. Hoadley, of Walnut lane, who is
• • •
completing work for his masters degree
Canadian Ski Trip
at the University of Maryland has been
appointed as agronomist at the Maryland
For those interested in skiing, Mr.
State Agricultural Experiment Station at Raymond E. Wilson, of Ogden avenue,
College Park. }'[d. The appointment is is planning a group skiing trip to the
effectivc February L
Laurcntian Mountains, some 6S miles
• ••
north of Monreal, from February 18 to
Health Society in Annual
February 22, or until February 27, as
Meeting Next Thursday desired. The party will stop at a com.
fortable inn in Val Morin, Quebec.
The annual meetlOg and tea of the There will be instructions for novices
Community Healtl~ Society of Central under ideal conditions, where anyone
Delaware County wdl be held at 2 :3~ next from 16 to 60 can become acquainted
Thursday afternoon, February 10, 111 the with the technique of this exhilarating
Woman's Club House. It will be an open sport, which has became so popular
meeting to which all friends of the So- in the past few years. For experienced
ciety are invited.
skiers there will also be cross country
Mrs. T. Harry Brown, chairman of trips to several French villages in the
the afternoon's program, announces that vicinity. Mr. Wilson will be glad to
musicians' from the Elwyn School will explain details to anyone who might
entertain and there will be a speaker. like to join the group.
THREE SPEAKERS
AT WOMAN'S CLUB
.1.
'2.50 PER YEAR
MELODRAMA FOR
PLAYERS CLUB
Noman Thomas, Socialist party leader,
Norman Thomas Here
February 10
will speak on "Industrial Democracy"
.
Mrs•• ~assmore Cheyney and_ next Thursday afternoon, February 10, "Double Door," .Thriller ~ade
Wllliam R. Argyle Repreat 4 u'clock in the Friends' Meeting Famous by Sybil Thorndike,
sentatives on Board
House. All residents of the Borough are
Directed by Sam Evans For
invited to hear Mr. Thomas who is being
February Bill
At Wednesday e\'ening's session of
Borough Council Mrs. J. Passmore
Cheyney was reappointed to the Pub·
lic Library Board and William R. Argygle named in place of John E. Gensemer, who resigned after serving six
years, as the two representatives of
Council on the Board.
The petition of Dr. William E. Kistler
for a change in the zoning ordinance
to permit the sale of his lot adjacent
to Borough Hall as the site for a motion picture theatre was refused.
Dr. Franklin Gillespie, Borough
Health Officer, made a thorough report
on the health of the community. Out
of 187 contagious diseases here last
year 105 were chickenpox cases and
most of the others measles. Only two
cases of diphtheria have occurred during the past eight years. All stores
were reported' inspected, as well as all
clerks who handle food.
The State Plumbing Code was adopted as the Borough Code by passing
Ordinance No. 406.
There was a discussion of a zoning
ordinance change to take care of parking for any building which might require large gatherings. A committee
brought here under the auspices of the
Swarthmure College branch of the AmcrVariety is said to be the spice of life
ican Student Union.
and so for February, beginning Tuesday,
, ••
the 8th, and running through Saturday,
David Stockwell to Speak
the 12th, the Players Club of Swarthat Junior Club
more will present a melodrama and thril-
At 8 o'clock next Tuesday evening,
February 8, the Junior Woman's Club
will have David R. Stockwell, West
Chester antique collector ant! dealer, as
guest speaker. Mr. Stockwell's topic will
be "Philadelphia Chippendale Furniture'"
and he will an~wer questions on furniture, glass and silver. He is the author
of numerous articles for periodicals.
A cordial invitation is extended to
e\'eryune interested.
At a meeting of the literature section of the Swarthmore Junior Club
held at the home of Mrs. L. C. Hastings. on W est~ale a venue on. Tuesd~y
evelllng o.f tins "week AntOlllca F~I:-,banks reviewed Of Men and MUSIC,
by Deem~ Taylo~ and Rosamor,td ~ellburn. revIewed The Last Fhght by
AmTehha dEarhart. 't'
t'
f th
J . e Crlamba s~c. Ion11 meehlllg 10d f e
Ue
WundlOr d u
on~lIla! StCh e dW
~~
e nes ay evemng In
e
oman ~
Club House for the casting of a play
will be appointed to take care of the to be given in March was postponed
matter.
until the next everting.
Former Councilman J. Paul Brown
resigned as a member of the Central
~••
Delaware County Sewer Authority, of
which he was chairman, and Jacob F.
Meschter was appointed by council to
serve on the authority as a member in
his place.
•• •
Many Local Residents Enjoy In·
ler ill contrast to the comedies which have
been the rule for the past three productions.
"Double Dour," a thrilling and lurid
talc by llIizabeth McFadden, enjoyed long
runs in New York and other American
cities, and a most successful era in London where Dame Sybil Thorndike used
it as a vehicle for her magnificent dramatit talent. The London press acclaimed
her "Victoria Van Bret" as one of her
greatest interpretations.
This American play by an American
authoress is woven about Victoria Van
Bret, middle-aged and a spinster, the
eldest and head of a dying dynasty of
Van Brets in the old brown stone fronts
of Fifth Avenue. She rules her domain
with an iron will; none must come between her and that which she desires.
When someone finally does-but the Club
advises you to see the play; it is full of
b b'
d'"
a sor mg an gnppmg mterest.
.
The fact that Samuel Evans, Jr., IS
the director and producer gives advance
assurance to Swarthmore audiences of
an evening's skillful and entertaining
dramatization. A glance at the cast, chosen
and assigned with the utmost care, reveals additional guarantees of a worth
while and enjoyable performance. The
names of some of these players are beginning to stir us with a meaning akin
Charity Ball Tonight
teresting and Varied Program to that evoked by favorte performers on
a~d Report of Expenditure
theprofessio.nal stage.
The eighth annual Charity Ball given
of.. Sum Raised Last Year
Jean Mime will be seen in the clifficult
J.;y_ the Ha.1"!'lct.•<\Wsw(\rt~ ... Post, . AJ1jnr~...
."
," '~ .• - .. - ' .
-:-. and 'extaiiig' -i:ore"ol 'V'ict();'ici' Van Bi'et.......... "
can Legion, and Auxiliary will be held
Over ~ hun~red ,,:nd thirty. people 10- Mary Ryan O'Brien is Caroline, Victorin the Swarthmore Woman's Club House terested 10 the mfantJle. paralYSIS f~n~ ~at ia's sister. Margaret Latimer as Anne
this evening, Friday, February 4, at 9 down to' a B~nefit dmner at W~lttier Darrow has a part which exactly suits
o'clock.
Hou~e . last Friday. The sale of tickets her loveliness and J. Stanley Taylor is
• ••
was shg~~y large~ than last year, but handsumer than ever in the part of Rip
Expect Salvation Army Returns the ex~ertor donatlOlls were fewer. :r~e Van Bret. Charles Rickards will play Dr.'
Soon
?rst thmg on the program was th~ VISlt- John Sully, friend of Anne and Rip, and
mg Nurse report on the expenditure of Robert Greer will be seen as Mortimer
Mrs. George A. Hoadley, chait'man of 1 t
• $42
rtl
d'
h
d
S
as ye~r s
: 0 lope IC s .oes a!1 Neff, the Van Bret family counsel. Marwarth more in the annual Salvation f h
t
f
h d t
res al: vaca lo.ns were u~ms e . 0 tha Keighton is Avery, the Van Bret's
Army Maintenance Fund Dr:ve, reports th
r led h Id
f th local t
. ree c I!>~ .
c I ren 0
IS
I y. housekeeper, and Roland K. Harrison is
normal progress to date toward the $1000 Some cnttclsm has been heard because Telson their butler. Kate Ivans has the
goal set for this Borough. Mrs. Hoadley a severe pol'om ell'tl' case near by but
'
.
I.y
~.
. -,
part of Louise, a maid, and Lee Wilson
urges all workers to have their returns 0 ut51d
d
t
t
d
d
t
be
e
e our nursmg IS nc, .' no
n - plays William, a footman. Edward H.
complete and filed by next Monday so fit Under the Ie
centrahzed control
.
. . I 'W
Pyle, as Lambert, a detective, and John
that a report can be made next week.
of the F un d It IS t 0 be h op ed that money R. Brownell as Mr. Chase, fcom TifAnyone who has not been contacted is ca n now be spent t 0 thevery bes t a dvan- fany's, complete the cast.
asked to leave his or her contribution at t
The Swarthmorean office on Dartmouth age.
"Double Door" is a play which, it is
The program proceeded with most de. ed '11 d l' h
I
f d
avenue, across from Borough Hall.
Iightful music fronl Mrs. Robert E. Carels promls ,WI e Ig t any over 0 • ram.a.
A
I
d
be b
ed
• ••
whom !\lrs. Herbert F. Fraser kindly s usua , guest car s may
0 tam
111
Lemon
Auxiliary Next Thursday accompanied, and four dances by little a dvance f rom Buc h ner•s T oggery Shop,
eNena \Vhitaker which were enthusias- 8 Park avenue, Swarthmore, or at the
The monthly meeting of the American tically received. Then 'Dean R. Brimhall, clubhouse 0\1 the evenings of the perfonnLegion Auxiliary will be held in the of the Federal W. P. A. office, gave a ance.
Legion Room in Borough Hall next defense of Work Relief which some of
Thursday af~ernool1, February 10, at 2 :30 tIle audience felt completely satisfying
o'clock. Mrs. George Gillespie and Mrs. while others were much disappointed that Card Party Benefit
Walter Thorpe will be hostesses. All no time remained fo~ questioning and deOf Girl Scout House
Swarthmoreans who are eligible for mem- hate. Eric Biddle, at one time head of
bership in the Legion Auxiliary will be Relief in this state did his best, however,
To raise funds necessary for the mainmost welconle at the meeting.
to get at some of the issues.
tenance of the Girl Scout House on
Added to the membership list this year
The details of the dinner, cat~red by Cresson lane a card party will be held at
are Mrs. John Moore, Mrs. R. G. Wit- the Ingleneuk Tea House, were looked 8 :15 next Monday evening in the Woman, Mrs. Rex Gary, Mrs. Robina Ewing after by Mrs. H. A. Peirsol, Mrs. J. V. S. man's Club House. Not only does it reand Mrs. C. \V. McDowell.
Bishop and Mrs. S. M. Bryant.
quire considerable money for the upkeep
DINNER SWELLS
PARALYSIS FUND
I
I
.1.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ilieGhlSro~Hourewhichh~~ded
THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4
7 :15
9:00
P.
- Basketball
vs. Ridley Park .................... ' ........ H. S. Gym
P. M.
M.-Legion
Charity
Ball ........................ Woman·s Club House
7:45
P. M.-J. J's Meeting ........................... 600 North Chester Road
8 :15
P. M. - Girl Scout House Card
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6
MONDAY, FEBRUARY '1
Party .-••.••.•...•.••.... : • Woman's
Club
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8
10:00 A. M.-L. W. V. Study Group ..... _................. 600 Harvard Avenue
2 :30 P. M. - Stated Meeting .................................... Woman's Club
7:30 to 9:30 P. M.-Sproul Observatory Open to PubUc .... Swarthmore College
8:00 P. M. - Home & School Meeting ................ High School Auditorium
8:00 P. M.-Davld R. Stockwell. Speaker .............. Junior Woman's Club
8:15 P. M.-"Double Door........................................ Players Club
2:30
2 :30
3:00
7:00
8:15
8:30
P.
P.
P.
P.
P.
P.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9
M.-League of Women Voters .... Bond Memorial. Swarthmore COllege
M. - Methodist Women's Home Missionary Soclety ... 338 Park Avenue
M.-Klndergarten Mothers Meet .............. COllege Avenue School
M. - COngregational Dinner ........................... Trinity Church
M. - "Double Door" ...................................... Players Club
M.-Basketball VB. Stevens ....................... COllege Pield House
(J. V. game '1 P. M.)
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10
COmmunity Health Society
Woman's Club
2:30 P. M. - American Legion AuxUlary .......... Legion Room. Borough Hall
4:00 P. M.-Norman Thomas. A. S. U. SppAker ••••••• Friend!· Meeting House
8:15 P. M.-"Double Door........................................ Players Club
2:30
P. M.-Annual Meeting and
Tea,
so much to the pleasures and benefits of
Scouting in Swarthmore, but it is greatly
to be desired at this time to be able to
line the house against the weather, making
it comfortable for the girls in winter, and
to build an outdoor fireplace for cooking
I
purposes. The Girl Scout House Committee is planning next week's card party
and hopes to have the support of local
residents in maintaining this civic project.
Other Girl Scoul News
Troop 16 will hold its regular weekly
meeting tomorrow morning at 9 :30 in
the Girl Scout House.
Troop 2 will meet as usual at the Woman's Club House on Wednesday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
Last Saturday morning at the Girl
Scout House Troop 16 entertained
Troop 2 as its guests. The meeting be-
Igan
by playing some lively games, so
that the girls would get acquainted.
Later Irma Zimmer led the girls in
Scout songs. Both troops enjoyed the
combined meeting very much. The
leaders were Mrs. George Zinnner and
Mrs. Henry Hanzlik.
i
1
1
.1
,
~2__________________. -__________________.-~1~'H~E~S~W~AB~'f~BM~O~REAN~~~__________________- ,______ FEBRUARY~ 1938
Thr E
ts Friday morning. Mr•• YOUllg is now able
ee ngagemen to receive her friends at the hospital.
•••
Just A-nnounced
Mrs. Weston E. Fuller, of North ChesMiN "Betty" Bleasing will Wed
Saturday, February 12, in
Lo8 Angeles, Cal.
guests were: Billy Ziegeufus, ~hrnly
Maschal' Nancy and Charles Grier, Esther Rumsey, Diana and Penny Carlisle,
Valerie Worth, Marilyn Green, Patsy
teT road, left yesterday for a week's \'isit McKenna. Mary Elizabeth and Jimmy
to Old Point Clmfort, Va.
Logan, of Swartlunore; Patti Dewey and
Miss Eo B. Giltes:ie:of North Chester Ruth Vance Halloway, of Chester.
road, is enjoying a few weeks visit in
Mr. and Mrs.- n*avid S. Morse will
*••
Mr. and Mrs. Irving L. Reed, of New Bradenton, Fla.
York City. announce the engagement of Mr. T. Harry Brown, of Cornell avetheir daughter, Agnes, to Donald C. nue, left Tuesday night for a few days
Turner, SOil of Mr. and Mrs. J. Archer trip to \Villiamsburg, Va. He was the
Turner, of Harvard avenue, Swarthmore. guest of Mrs. Archibald McCrea, of Car-
Peter E. Told, Mrs. Luther M. Dimmitt
and Mrs. A. M. Bosshardt.
FOR ALL-ROUND
WI NTE R SAFETY
I , •
Birth
Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Glaesser, of
Aldan, Pa.) announce the birth of a
SOil, Allan, at the Delaware County
Hospital, on January 20. The baby is
entertain at a dinner preceding the Ameri- a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. George
can Legion Charity Ball this evening. at W. Glaesser, of Dartmouth avenue,
Swarthmore.
their home on Chester road.
Mrs. Roy C. Comley, of Swarthmore
• • t
avenue, will entertain at luncheon and
Young Republiean Dance
bridge today when guests will be memMarch 5
bers of a bridge club to which she belongs.
Sel of Four
The wedding will be in June.
lers Grove Williamsburg.
Mr. Turner, who is a graduate of
'
Swartlunore College is now with JohnsMiss Mary Pusey, of North Chester
A Young Republican Club dance will
Manville New York.
road, entertained a few friends informally
Mrs. Jonathan Prichard, of Michigan
he
held in the High School Gymnasium
at tea on Wednesday of tbis week.
avenue. will be hostess at luncheon and
,
bridge today to a bridge dub to which ou Saturday evening, March 5, from 9
Mr. and Mrs. \Viltiam R. Hunn, of
Mrs. L. A. Wctlaufer, of Cornell ave- she is a member.
ulltil I o'clock. Jan Savann's orcllCstra
Faraday Park, Ridley Township, all- nuc, entertained with a neighborhood tea
will furnish music and there will be a
Dounce the engagement of their daugh- on \Vednesday aftenJoon.
Mr. and Ahs. L. L. Hedgepeth, of Cor- featured exhibition.
ter, :Margaret Jenkins Hunn and Joseph
nell avenue. left Friday for a ten-day
Carey Richmond, daughter of Mr. and trip to Jacksonville, Fla.
Hinchliffe Perkins, Jr., son of Mr. and
Named Scott Paper Secretary
Mrs. Joseph H. Perkins, of Cedar lane. ,Mrs. Robert M. Richmond, of Amherst
The announcement was made at a avenue, will entertain in celebration of
Mr. and Mrs. Fred R. Wilson, of CorWilliam S. Campbell, of Wallingford,
square dance given in Aiiss HUl1ll's honor her sixth birthday tomorrow. Guests will nell avenue, will have as their overnight
has
been elected secretary of the Scott
by her aunt, Mrs. Joseph R. Karsner, at include Sally Alden, Donald Fetherolf, guests tonight and at the Charity Ball
Paper
Company to replace Ralph E.
her home, Hillcrest, in WesttowJl. Satur- Jane Allen, John H,3$sweiler, Nancy Mc- this evening Mr. and :\Irs. P. D. Van
Rhoads,
of North Princeton avenue,
day, January 29.
Curdy Betty Alln Furnas Dick McCray Mater, of Marlboro, N. J.
Swarthmore, who recently resigned as
Among those from Swarthmore and Barbara Soderbcr.g a.nd.Harold Ogram.
Mr. a.nd lirs. Henry I.. Hoot and chilan officer and director to the Company
vidnity who attended the square dance
d
D k
I
I It f Laf
were: Miss Irma Zimmer, Miss Eliza- JoseJJh H. Perkins, Jr., of Cedar lane, rell, ~c, He en am BI , 0
ayette because of ill health. Announcement was
beth Soule, Miss Katherine Armstrong, has resumed his studies at the University and ~rU1ceton avenues, returne~ S.atur- made late last week along with the adand Messrs. Robert Little, Edmund Soule, uf Delaware and e:\.pects to graduate this day mght from a several days tnp to vancement of two other senior officers
spring.
Washington and Virginia during which and the appointment of three new junior
John R. Brownell, Jr., and John Arm*
they visited Mr. and :Mrs. Henry Reid officers of the Company of which Thomas
Neal Durboraw, son of Mr. and Mrs. at Langley Field" Hampton, Va., where
strong, of Swarthmore; and l\iiss Rachel
B. McCabe. of North Chester road,
Merrill, of Rose Valley.
I. N. Uurboraw, of Haverford place, Mr. Reid is director of the National Ad- Swarthmore, is president.
Miss Huon is a graduate of Colling- was injured Tuesday as he was entering visory Committee for Aeronautics.
,
I
..
dale High School and The Pennsylvania the Swarthmore High School gym and
School of Horticulture for Women, Am- another boy pushing the door from the
Miss Nancy Hoot, of Lafayette avebier, Pa. Mr. Perkins, who is a graduate oPPOsite
"d
I'
'1 N eaI was carry- nue, will entertain after the Dancing Class Kindergarten Mother8
Sl e lit a penci
To Hear Mi88 Hardy
of Swarthmore High School, is complet- iug and drove it into his right leg. It tomorrow evening.
LldeD. to the Valee of Ftre.taa. . . . . ..7
iog courses for his degree, which because was necessary to probe for the lead
nen1D.n O'ftl' N. B. C. Becl Netwulri:
The kindergarten mothers are arrangof illness last May he was unable to com- IlOint and Sl)lillters to avoid likelihood of
Mrs. Sewell W. Hodge, of Ogden aveplete. at the University of Delaware.
nne, entertained at luncheon and bridge ing a meeting for Wednesday, February
RUSSELL'S SERVICE
infection rcsul!ing.
He is a member of the Honorary Society
..
yesterday when guests were members of 9, in the College avenue kindergarten
Dartmouth and Lafavette Aves.
Mrs. Charles Paxson, of Cedar lane, a bridge club to which she belongs and room at 3 o'clock. Miss Marjorie Hardy
of the Blue Key.
Telephone 440
is entertaining the Art Circle this after- included Mrs. Philip W. Kniskern, Mrs. of the Germantown Friends' School, witl
"We Don't Sen Can-We Service TbeJllft
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Costello, of Mich- noon.
Wayne Randall, Mrs. Wallace McCurdy, talk to the group on the subject of "Beigan and Milmont avenues, ha.ve annouced
Mrs. H. Bardwell Lincoln, Mrs. David ginning Reading." Miss Hardy is an exthe engagement of their daughter, JosArthur Edwin Bye, Jr. left Monday to Shaw, Mrs. T. Saulnier and Mrs. Her- pert in this field. The first grade mothers - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - of both schools are cordially invited to
ephine A. Costello, and Charles La Spada, return to Pennsylvania State College after schel G. Smith.
attend the meeting.
having spent tne mid-year vacation visit•
son of Anthony La Spada, of Chester.
HARRIET L. TREAT
iug his mother, Mrs. Arthur E. Bye, lJf
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bassett, of North
The committee of mothers in charge of
EJ&per' De.iBmnB and FillinB 01
The marriage of Elizabeth Ann Bless- Lafayette avenue.
Chester road, will entertain an evening this meeting is as follows: Mrs. George
Go",rq
*•
bridge club tomorrow evening.
Al1en, Mrs. 'C. W. Lukens, Mrs. Heston
R od H
ing, daughter of Mrs. Martha R. BlessMcCray, Mrs. Harold Ogram, Mrs.
em e ng
Mr. and Mrs. Percy G. Gilbert will
ing, of Elm avenue, to Alden Van Kirk,
At Home or by the Day
of Oakland, California, will be performed entertain at bridge this evening at their
George Logan, Grafton Carlisle, Adolph H. Phie1, Mrs. N. O. Pittenger
Harvard
Sw. 892
in Los Angeles, on Saturday, February home o!, Park avenue. Among their Clifford Rumsey left yesterday on a and Mrs. Jack Thompson.
12, Mi)!s Blessing is a graduate of guests wilt be Mr. and Mrs. James Homa- four-day training trip of the PennsylSwarthmore High School and Swarth- day, Mr. and Mrs..Ambrose Van Alen, vania National Guat'd, flying to Miami,
more College. She is a member of Kappa Mr. and Mrs. H. Lmdley Peel, Mr. and Fla., and back.
Kappa Gamma sorority. Mr. Van Kirk M~s. Peter E. Told, and Mr. and Mrs.
is a graduate of Leland Stanford Uni- :\lllton Bryant.
Mrs. Percy G. Gilbert, of Park avenue,
entertained the teachers of the Junior
versity and a member of Delta Upsilon
fraternity.
Mrs. Thomas Whitehair, of the Shirer Intermediate Department of the PresbyAfter their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Building, entertained a group of young terian Church, Tuesday, February 1.
Van Kirk will reside in Los Angeles guests at a party yesterday afternoon in Her guests included, Mrs. H. Lindley
where Mr. Van Kirk is connected with celebration of the first birthday anniver- Peel, Mrs. Ambrose Van Alcll, Mrs.
the Gliden Paint Company. The bride's sary of her daughter, uJodie." Among the
mother will visit them in Los Angeles in
THE HARVARD
the late spring.
***
***
***
*•*
***
***
-
,.t
*• •
,
,
,
.... *
**
On Our
I Budget Plan
*•
* .. *
*•
* .. ..
***
*•
* .. ..
*
* .. •
IThe
.,.* *
*••
OUR CASH PRICES
are DOWN
• • *
AIr. and Mrs. Walter Dickinson of
Mt. Holyoke place, will entertain' an
evening dessert~bridge club of ''''hich they
are members tomorrow evening.
• • *
Mrs. }.fartin B. Young, of Cornell
avenue, is recuperating nicely in the
Woman's Hospital of Philadelphia where
she underwent a major operation last
STANLEY
THEATRE
CHESTER, PA.
•
TEA.ROOM
Would you like to give a luncheon, a
tea party, or a dinner?
WE ARE PREPARED
TO SERYE YOU
Telephone Swarthmore 149 or 1395.
ask for Mia Patterson. She will give
you menus and prices.
Now Playing
(For One Week)
5c
"ROSAIJE"
with
NELSON EDDY
NOW I
in
-MANORFriday -
Saturday
Ronald Sinelair-Mickey Rooney
Judy Garlaud
"THOROUGHBREDS
DON'T CRY"
With C. Aubrey Smith
EXira
Robert Benchley
in
"Anita at the Movies"
and
FIRST RUN NEWS
Monday -
Tuesday
KAY FRANCIS
"FIRST LADY"
with
Preston Foster-Anita Louioe
Walter CollDoUy
Friday & Saturday - Feb. 4-5
Frank Lloyd'.
WELLS FARGO
wioh
JOEL McCREA
BOB BURNS
FRANCES DEE
Monday & Tuesday-Feb. 7-8
EBB·TIDE
Robert Louis Stevenson's Most
Amazing Adventure and Ro..
maiJ..ce in
Teclud~lor
FRANCES FARMER
RAY MlLLAND
Wednesday Only-Feb. !I
It Pa,.. to VI.lt the Manor
at 8:45 P. M.
MANHATTAN
MERRY-GO.ROVND
10 Die Stan and Five New
So...
mto
lIT
Subiect
to change
COAL
CO.
Main Office 4th & Allegheny Ave.
"CHECKERS"
MEDIA
Eal STOVE
M
•
THEATRE
Chester Pike
Prospect Park
Free Parking-Rear 0/ Thea're
per ton more
$1000
(Contlnw from PfJ{J8 OM)
A~ the conclusion of the program tea
was served. The host~sses were Mrs.
A. T. Eavenson and Mrs. F. A. Krafft.
Mrs. John Cornog and Mrs. J. Archer
Turner presided at the tea-table.
The Woman's Club Chorus has resumed rehearsals under the direction
of Henry Hotz and will meet at 10
o'clock on Monday mornings, February 7, 14, 21 and 28. Mrs. Lloyd Kauffman, chairman of the music section,
welcomes non-members of the Club
to joiu UpOIl payment of a small fee.
The regular stated meeting of the
CJub next Tuesday afternoon at 2:30
o'clock will have Mrs. Arthur E. Bye,
International Relations Department
chairman, in charge of the theme
"Modern 'rrends in the \Vorld Today."
. There will be a current events talk by
Dr. Michael Dorizas, of the Wharton
School of the University of Pennsylvania. Hostesses will be Mrs. George
Zimmer and Mrs. H. Lang. At the tea
table Mrs. Irvin MacElwee and Mrs.
l(alllh Little will preside.
Mrs. Roland G. E. Ullman, Swarthmore drama section chairman, and Mrs.
Oscar j. Gilcreest, of Sv.arthmorc, who
is chairman of drama for the Writers
Club of Delaware County, will attend a
meeting of drama chairmen next Monday morning at 10 o'clock in the SixtyNinth Street Municipal Building to plan
the program for the May Festival of
all the Delaware County Clubs.
a•
•
Christian Seien~ Church
IISpirit" is the subject of the LessonSermon in al1 Churches of Christ Scientist, on Sunday, February 6. Th~ Golden
Text is: "Grieve not the hoi S"
f
y
pmt a
God, whereby ye have sea.led unto the
day of redemption" (Ephesians 4:30).
• ••
Methodi8t Church Notes
This evening at 8 o'clock there will be
a regular business meeting of the official Church Board.
Sunday morning at 9 :45 o'clock
there will be the monthly missionary
program before the church school.
Sunday morning worship at 11 o'clock
will have as its theme "The Path of
Jesus".
'
1'he theme of evening worship at
7 :45 ·o'clock will be "Methodist Discipline".
The regular business meeting of the
Senior Epworth League will he held on
A.londay evening at 7:30 o'clock.
Wednesday afternoon·at 2.30 o'clock
the Women's Home Missionary Society
will meet at the home of Mrs. William
Hoffman, 338 Park avenue.
Thursday evening at 8 o'dock the
Prayer Meeting will continue its study
of the Gospel of St. Mark.
• ••
Trinity Church Note8
SAID THE GENERAL
Central American bandits recently
had good reason to gnash their strong
while molars. Thecause was a new use
found for old telephone directories.
It seems tbat certain railroad cars
although built of double steel plates:
were proving vulnerable to bullets
from the high.powered riDes of the
ooballeros of the plains. But someone discovered that when telephone
books were placed between theplat~
the death-dealing slugs stopped
among the Smiths and Joneses
causing a heavy loss in names but
not in lives.
I Caramba! said the bandit chief
as railroad officials made use of more
than two tons of telephone books.
Your telephone directory will probab1y never save a life, hut it can save
time and trouble every day. The
Cl888ified Business Section is a real
step and timesaverwhenyou'relook..
ing Cor something. And once you've
found tbe produet or service you
want, you can eave more steps and
more time byusing your telephone to
tJ'ansact the business. The Bell Tele..
phone Company of Pennsylvania.
The Young People's Fellowship wi11
m~et Sunday evemng at 6 ~'clock. This
will be the second of a series of lively
d'
.
"R I' .
d Y
.
ISCUS!IOnS on
e Iglon an
our Life
Work.
The Committee on Missions and
Bellevolences wi11 meet Sunday afternoon at 5 o'dock in the church study.
The Women's Association will meet
for an an-day nleeting Friday, February 11. beginning at 10 A. AI. Luncheon
is served at 1 P. M., and devotionals
will be conducted by Mrs. Thomas
Simpers. The regular businesf: meeting
will be held after the devotional service. Women of the church and congregation are cordially invited.
,
.
New Railway Expre88 Agent
John E. Yocum, formerly or the Ardmore agency, has replaced D. H. Eichman as agent of the Swarthmore agency
of the Railway Express at its new office
011 South Chester road. Mr. Eichman
who had been stationed at Swarthmore
since the local branch agency opened
here five years ago, has transferred to
Conshohocken.
I
I
"In Old Chieago" Coming Soon
!,'w
•••
The boys intra-mural basketball tourna~
ments, held at the high school gym every
~riday ~fter~ooll,. are proc.e~ding at a
hveJy clll) with stIff competition for the
leaders in both leagues. The National
league leaders arc the boys from Junior
I~ome room .209 led by John Ally." and
dose all theIr heels arc the combmed 5
or room 102 and 215 under the leadership
of
Jeff
Kirk
Wiggins.
In
A
.
I and Ford
h
d f
S the
r mencan t:ague t e ,un e eat<:<1
enior
OO~1 ~3,. last year 5 chan~p1on~, are
agam p
topic "Can We Be Christian?"
As part of the celebration of Bo
Scout Week Troop 2 and Troop 3 Bo~
Scouts of America will attend the worship service Sunday morning in a body.
The Boys Choir under the direction
of Benjamin L. Kneedler witt sing the
music for the morning worship on Sunday.
The CIlurc I1 C't'
I' CI ass for a II
I lzens lip
young people in the church school and
congregation ages 12 or over will begin
meeting this Sunday morning at the
regular class periods. Mr. Braun will
USES
SOAP
ORANGES
36 FOR 85e
JUMBO ORANGES
FROM FLORIDA
TREE.RIPE
NATURAL COWR
or Call Your Local Mason - Heflin Yard
A TUMBLERFUL
OF JUICE TO AN
ORANGE I
PHONE SWARTHMORE 6
'"
Iflfl(N 6ED"
AWNINGS-WINDOW SHADES·5I1PCOVERS
ll\lt't'
l\ ~ VENETIAN BLINDS, UPHOLSTERY
~ORRY, MADAM, WE DON'T
• PROSPECT PARK,PA.
HAVE ANOTHER!
t
JI'IlIlIfIlIlJ'U'1111
,
IT
Pollee
an
d F-' 'Co
ue
mpany New8
At 325 P. M. last Thursday afternoo)), January Z1, the Fire Company
was called to the Swarthmore College
pump house at the Crum Creek falls.
!he house, which also contains dwelllUg rooms for the attendant in charge
was badly damaged by the fire.
Last Friday at 1.15 P. M. a grass
fi~e at Plush Mill road and Baltimore
pIke and at 6.35 P. M. on Sunday a grass
fire at Chester and Providence roads
called out the local Fire Company.
A minor accident occurred at Yale
avenue and South Chester road on
Tuesday of tbis week at 4.50 P. M.,
v.:hen John
of Morton, stopped
hIS automobile at the stop sign on Yale
avenue and Walter T. Hines, of Norwood. who .was also proceeding east on
Yale, ran 1.nto the back of the Tuzza
car, damagtng the bumper.
On February 1 two motorists were
:ruzza.
I
Play
we
by porch.ling aD "AU
Riaka" Fur Floater policy written
through the dopendab1e Automobile
X...uraneo Company of HutforcI,
Co.....
PETER E. TOLD
417 Dartmouth Ave.
Swarthmore 1833
111·1~·II·d·fIlIll
. _·_~m'"
Ii7;;;.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Do Your Banking With
SWARTHMORE NATIONAL
,
Bauk and Trust Company
Member Federal Deposit Insuranee CorporadoD
I
NEBraska 9800
saM I - LE$H
Ba-
•••
To order, phone
PHONE RIDLEY PARK 600
arrested for not havl'ng the new ollic",'I
inspection sticker on their cars' H A.
Roubert, of Chester, and Cuthb~rt
t'
f M ed'la. 0 n J anuar v 30 Charles
lPPS, 0
E. White, of Chester, was Jarrested for
reckless driving and on the 28th Jule.
Divac, of Philadelphia, was apprehendA Christian FeUowship Dinner-Con- ed for improper passing.
ference and Entertainment for ThursGeorge Ashton, of Swedesboro, N. J.,
day Evening, February 24th, in the New who was recently arrested for motor
Borough Hal1 of Yeadon.
violation was fined $10•
The Conference is being sponsored
by the Delaware County Sabbath
School
Association
and
various
~h.urches • of different denominations
JOlll~ly. With the Christian Endeavor
SOCietIes, Baptist Union, Ep.worth
League, Lutheran League, Bible Classes
I
and ?ther religious groups. For this
~,
~ccaslon all denominational names and
,
hnes are to be forgotten in the com.
!Don purpose of the gathering, which
, I,
IS to secure better cooperation among
the Christian GrO\lps.
Wi1~iam T. Kerr, of Yeadon, General
Su~erllltendent of the Yeadon PresbyterIan Sunday School. has been named
as. General Chairman and he has appOlllted a General Committee of 50
CERT AINL Y is
.!mbracing all sections and creeds. '
alarming the weakness
G~orge C. Friend, of Yale avenue
Treasurer of the Delaware County Sab~
burglars have for expenbath School Association, is treasurer of
the Conference Committee.
sive furs.
I
study. Young people are cordiaUy in- 11 eatref on Thursday February 3rd, for
vited to this class.
!ee:e~ onna
d nces, with seats selling 8
s In a vance. • I I
The Church Hour N
ill b
ursery morning
w
e
held from IJ to 12 on Sunday
Co_ty S. S. CoDferenre
for children ages I to 7.
at Yeadon
"In Old Chicago," Darryl F. Zanuck's
Sunday marks the beginning of the
iii • ,
Rev. J. Jarden Guenther's ninth year as 20th Century-Fox Production, heralded
as the Greatest American Motion Picture
rector of Trinity Parish.
H. S. Ches8 Victory
Frederick A. Knapp, for five and a Ever Made, wi11 have its Philadelphia
The Swarthmore High School Chess half years organist and choirmaster, will premiere at the Erlanger Theatre, 21st
team, captained by Herb Gross won its return on Sunday morning to take charge and Market streets on Thursday evening,
third victory of the season on Friday, of the music. Mr. Knapp resigned two February 10th at 8 :45, and thereafter wi11
January 28, when it defeated the Glen-No, years ago on account of iHness and his be shown at a reserved seat policy with
shows daily, matinee at Z :45, even~
chess men i'-3. Point-scorers for thll many friends will be delighted to welmgs at 8:45! and on Saturdays and SunSwarthmore thinkers were Gross 2, Hop- come him back.
The Congregational Dinner WIll ·be days three times, presented at 3, 6, and 9.
kins 2, Henderson 2, and Lily 1.
• ••
held next Wednesday evening at 7 o'clock
The story, based on an original "We,
H. S. Basketball
ill the Assembly Room of the Church. the O'Leary's," by Niven Busch, and preThe committee has made every effort to pared for the screen by Lamar Trotti
send
an invitation to each member of and Sonya Levien, tells the tale of the
The Swarthmore High School hasketthe
Parish
and to all who make this their 1ive~ and loves of a mid-West pioneer
ball team improved its league standing
Church
home.
On account of the limited family, which is depicted with the Chicago
by romping over Prospect Park on the
seating
capacity
of the Assembly Room fire of .1871 as a dramatic background,
gym floor, by the score of 26 to 6 last
the
invitation
is
necessarily restricted to co-starflng Tyrone Power, Alice Faye,
Friday. It held undisputed possession of
adults.
sixth place until Tuesday, when it dropAmeche and Alice· Brady.
The dinner is being arranged by the Don
ped a 37 -2J decision at Eddystone, while
Darryl F. Zanuck, vice-president in
Darby won from· Prospect Park and Woman's Guild of which Mrs. C. A. charge of production at the 20th CenturyStern is president. Mrs. John E. Jeffords F?x Studios, has achieved a technique in
moved into a tie with the Garnet.
is chairman of the -dining room COnirnittee. tHe making of f'In Old Chicago" that' will
The JV's fortunes followed the VarM f's: Samuel Dyer Clyde is arranging d~finitely stamp him as the peer of al1
sity. They defeated the Prospect Park
a umslcal program to follow the dinner. picture producers, telling a poignant story
lV's 20 to 10 and lost to Eddystone by
There will be group singing and solos of love and hate, against a thrilling backa 17-14 count.
hy Mrs. C. F. Wolters and Mrs. Allen ground.
The girls' team defeated Lower Merion 'V. Carpenter. The men of the choi~
. Other members of the supporting cast
29 to 16, Tuesday, while the boys' team will sing a nnmber of popular songs.
l!lc1ude
Andy Devine, Tom Brown, Phylwere dropping their hattles with F.ddylis
Brooks,
Sidney Blackmer, Brian Donstone.
Preshyterian Church Notes
l~vy, and many others. The picture was
directed by Henry King, with Kenneth
Intra·Mnral Basketball
Sunday morning at 11 o'clock the
Rev. David Braun will preach on the MacGowan as associate producer.
ason Heflin
ELEANOR POWELL
JANE WITHERS
Now you can buy
a ton of Famous
Reading Anthracite
(Laundered Coal) the
best of the better
coal for only
I•
Three Speak~fs
At Woman's Club
__________- ,______lFE~B!RU~AR~Y~~~1~938~
:[:~1~'H~B~SW~AB~'~IBM~:O~REAN~~~~~~~
teach the class which will meet ea-h
T'ck
iI
the end of the season !llay-off wiU he.
held het ween the t wo Ieague Ieaders the
winner of which wiU meet the "faculty
champions" in
"battle of the ages."
CARRY, THAT BRAND-
Beechnnt
LEGS OF GENUINE
COFFEE ........... 29c lb.
LAMB
25c
lb.
Annt Jemima PANCAKE
.
FOUR .. _ ........ 2 for 25c Rib
LAMB CHOPS ...... 29c lb.
White Rose Pure Sap
Fresh Gronnd
MAPLE SYRUP ...... qt. 75c HAMBURG, 25c 1b--3 Ib8. 69c
Rold Gold
TURKEYS
Small
Young
Tender Hen
PRETZELS . Full lb. ean 29c
=~ Turkeys-35c lb.
Sunsweet PRUNES
POT ROAST~Bonel~=s8=----~
Large 2 lb. box _ .... _ ... 19c Tender, Juicy . __ .... 29c lb.
Snnshine AS80rted Fancy
Stewing
COOKIES ........ pkg. 25c CmCKENS .... _.. . 33c lb.
MIND,
IOY~i~VTOWILL
liN
HAVE A
Ii
THI NG
EVERY DAY
YOU'RE SA1'ISFII[D'~"
KUPPING~~S
PURE ~
SPRINGFIELD WATER
,
~
)
YOU~"LI'I'I)-.'
I KNOW
"ITROl FOOD MARKET ...·
THEY ARE DEPENDABLE
AND THE 'SERVICE, qUALlTV
PRICES AR~ ALWAY$
\,
,,
THE SWARTHMOREAN
FEBRUARY 4, 1938
expended by the film industry. know it is
The EtIOlUlion
• .
Dear Editor:
. .
1 do not oft~n inflict r~lUscence~::
-
.;
0/ TOICIn MljIBIlng
1. attended the one which ~as h.eld in being done to please, educate and enterSwarthmore last wek. Evolution e~ldentlY
tain. Too, we all know the government
had acted in reverse, for the meetlUg w.as
•• nstrosity" and it was a great tnlS- has instigated the services of Will Hays,
:ak:~O place it on uexhibition:" I s~l1 that we may not become besmirched.
Historical films are bound to please
not dwell upOn it. but shall say m passmg
and
refresh our memories, the musical
that the meeting was disgraceful.
are a tonic and news reels arc full
films
How strange it seems that forty years
of
information
to any group, DO matter
ago people knew more about the purpose
are beautiful in color. and. ex~enslon of
the word of fancy and Imagmahon, normal to a child's mind.
Why should we .refus.: to accept. the
universally enjoyed mventlon of our !Imes
by forming o,inions without sound Judgment?
-
..
COMPLETE
FOOD MARKET
8ETTERFOOD
FOR THE TA8LE
le=-uJ:DIJU
9
TH
ANNIVERSARY
;he
** *
MARTEL'S PRIME RIBS
Rilt
lb.
ZSc
cr\
I
TENDER JUICY CLUB STEAKS ........ lb. 49c
I
I
t
CHURCH N EW
S
8W 'D'THMOD~ P..,.-aB~..._~
.n.a.:\O
. . ; , 1 ' .-,
'"""""..,........~.
that a Town Meetmg 1S. a plac~ where New Jersey may and may not have been
serious problems are s~nou.ly dIScussed. caused by Illovies. At Iea.t the uuiversal
There were no bombastic attempts on the
.
t b laid at their door
d
t f
their depreSSion canno
e
'\
part of ,the emagogues 0 orce.
There are many residents of Swarthopinions upon the assembled multitude,
h h ' no access to neighbor.h
·d t d n "rail more W 0 a\c
I
no attempt by elt ~r SI e 0 0 a y
.
S
e of us have perplexroading." Each side listened Quietly, rl!- hood mo\vI les. tOOlsolve 'orne o£ us are
• 1
It h th ing l)ro) ems 0
,
spectful~y and attentive y to a t at
e tired allel uneasy with responsibilities and
other slde had to say.
d musical movie helps one to relax
Oh yes, then aSdllow, tl.1e rc IWI etre thl.ott·le :n~CX:taJ't anew with clearness of mind
over-zealous crusa ers, Wit lI a 00 I e .
res~ect or t lelr ar .erles, \\ 0
We who are aware of the tremendous
eXCited, £thereby
causmg
concern
among
t of energy thought and money
I'
tProbably
'
'h they
became
friends and relatives.
felt. amoun
•
however. that if they were stricken witn
Bev. David Braun.
SUNDAY
9:45 A.M.-Sunday School.
9'45 A. M. - Bible ClasSeS.
11:00 A.M.-J4omlng worship. Mr. Braun
will preach on, "Can We Be
Christle.u?·'
8:00 P. laL- Young People's Fellowship.
THE RELIGIOUS SOCIET2 OF FBJBNDS
SUNDAY
9'45 A M - Adult ClaSS. Dr. Robert C.
.
. . .:~~
9:45A.IL-Flrst
Day~~Of=~!'J:l1~~
SchooL
lege, will
lead
the dlseusslon
on "Shall the People Vote on
the War Question?"
11:00 A.M.-Meeting for Worship In the apoplexy. it would be worth it to die deMeeting House.
fending the cause.
9'30 A M. to
3:30
P.
M.
Sewtng
and
To make a I ong story sort,
WEDNESDAY
h ·It was a
quUtlng ·In Whittier House. Box luncheon. real "Town Meeting," with no show at
All are c:ordlal1y Invtted.
any time o£ discourtesy; no verbal javelins
.~. ~
Chester Road and College Avenue
y
=
~
:v:
c1e.1J'
and .... Uae P=::+-8 ----.
•
Legs 01 Lamb.
2,Sclb.
anniIf vours is a lamb loving family - then a leg of lamb at this low
that
what-to-have-for~dinner
problem.
ver·sary price - will solve
ASK FOR OUR CIRCULAR FOR COMPLETE SPECIALS
A BIRTHDAY GIFI'
of a basket of toys to all children, Saturday~ February 5th~ when
aCMmpanied by their paren18.
:n;d~V~I~m~.~~::=::~~::::~~~:::::::::::::::~~~:::::::::::~~l
were hurled at the merchants. for one
of the unwritten laws of that day wa~
Rev. J. J&rd.en ~=!;. S.T.M... Rector loyalty to those who made life pleasant
8:00 A. Y. - Holy communion.
and comfortable for liS.
9:45 A. M. - sunday School and Blble
As a result of the meeting, the town
11:00 A. JI. Prayer and Sermon. in due time became the proud possessor
•
Mr. Guenther ",W preach.
of the ··Water Works" and when I wa.s
IIB'l'BODIST BPlSCOPAL CIIUBCB
there some twenty years later, the oldest
CJlar8Dee P. Carter. A.B.} BD.,)(ID1at;er inhahitant, who had so valiantly led the
11:45 A. M. _ Ch~oo1.
forces against the project, proudly re11:00 A.M.-Morntng WorahlP.
tated the detaUs of the "dedication." It
'T~4S P.I[. - BveD1D8 Worablp.
\\-as his favorite story.
PIBST CBUBOII OF CBBIBT. SCIBNTIST.
The years have passed, forty of them, to
OP 8WAB'l'BKOBB
Park Avenue below Banard
be eXact, since that historic Town Meet11:00 A. JL - Bunda,. Sdiool.
ing. I have lived "here, there and every11:>~~
=~~Week. 8 where," with never another opportun!ty
p. m. pe'dlTi~room opeD.
~c\~ to attend one. Consequently, I was 10IIUld h dQa 1 to" . ,
tensely interested to see just what Evolu~t.n oordlal17 IDvt~. to _~4 '\he tion of Town Meeting had produced, so
=lng
****
Hunger-K.'lling Meats at Economy Prices
THA,. WAS A
HUNGER.-KILLI
ROAST.
WASN'T IT?
AN D SO EASY
ON THE.
BUDG-E.T. TOO.
r----------~-~
MEAL TIME IS A FINE TIM£
SINCEYOU SlARTEDTRADI
MAI)"JE['S
I"..
THE SWARTBMOREAN
5
or recent will agree all were settled toad leading from tho Springfield and Darb, area. and extending to and connecting with borough or with any stream or water
Uphold. PubUe Meeling
to S3mue) G. LevI.' Mm. In the lIne
f or the best .'except the first one and that. Road
course within the Umlta of said Borough,
of land late of Theodore Hawkllllll, them)!! the howse .sewer.
The Editort
came up too late to change the situation. along the middle of 88id Road and by Auid
17. HOUSE-SEWER. The house-sewer 18
3. To make cr cause to be made, either
,
•
lalld North lour deP"l."Ctt. fifteen minutes Ea.et
part of the main drain or sewer ex.. directly or Indirectly. any connection with
The Swarthmorean:
I am sorry some complain of our lack olle hwuired and sixteen feet and ftUy.four that
tending from a point five feet outsl
.
.
. . . .
othcr lund late or Benjamin T. Longstrelb to Its connection with pubUc sewer, prl· by theCouncll.
Borough Secretary under the regunews In the New York Times on Sun- meetmg. The vote did show It the latter lhenC6 alollK the MlllII6 North alx&,y·three de. vate sewer or CEl88-pool.
lations ot this ordinance. In the form
day about our local controversy reprint- but had the meeting so desired to affirm glees twenty·onu minutes Eaat olDe huodrcd
adopted by the Borough Council.
•
•
•
•
and l'igblY'l!even and eight hWldred and &eV·
18. 8IZB AND LENGTH. The given called in your issue. I also wish to disagree, the apphcatlOn It would and could not be euty.ft,·e IbouBalldtha feet to a stake thence ber or sIZe of pipe 18 the nominal Internal
Section 12. STORM- WATER DRAINS.
I'th some o( your unknown contributors' so named It was a Town Meeting of 8tlll by sa'd LoliiorStreth'lI land South twenty· diameter, except tbat brass pipe Is mea- DRAINAGE OF YARDS. AREAS. AND
w
.
!:liz degrecs. thirty-nine minutes East one hun. sured by Its outelde diameter. The devel- ROOFS. All roofs and. paved areas, ya.rdIJ,
who seek to quarrel with the Swarthmore the Swarthmore people, owners and ten- dred feet 10 a alake In ~he line of land of oped length of a pipe is Its length along COurt6, and courtyards shall be drained
way of handling a vital question If they ants to uive to council an idea of the Hannah P. Levla and Slaten, thence along the center line or pIpe and flttings.
Into the storm·water sewerage sYBtem and
•
'D'
the aame South aiXty·three del'f'CC8. t"'enll'
not Into sanitary &ewers.
live with Us longer they will see other sentiment regarding the only Question be- one minutes We8t two hUIU)rl.'
19. DEAD END. A dead end 1$ a branch
andthe
Heven
twenty·flve
tboUsands
feet leading from a soU. waste, vent. house
Section 13. .MAINTENANCE. It shall be
sue h probi ems come up. S orne 0 £ us h ave £ore them-"Sha II th e M ee t'109 approve to
"Ial'ehundred
of beginning.
Contalnipl'
oue-half
drain, or house sewer. which Is terminated the duty of the owners of every property
been here long enough, maybe too long, the request of the applicant to modify of un 3Cn!.
at a developed cUstonce of 2 feet or more which has connection with the pubUc
by meaJUi of a cap, plug, or other fitting sewer to maintain such connection at all
to attend theSe meetings to get a village the zoning ordinance to allow a Picturc IDillrovcmenls (.'(JDldat of t",o 8tOry brick not
used for admItting water to the pipe.
times in good condItion. free from obstrucsentiment.
Theatre to be erected on a certain lot?" house. :.!ix30 feet; porch front; frame addi·
tion and leakage.
Section
5.
GENERAL
REOULATIONS.
·b
tlon. 10d6 leet; tramo tool shed, Ux~O feet;
The first, in my experience, was the
What facts did your other contrl utors chh:kllll houae, 10xl0 feet; outbuilding. 5xU GRADES OF HORIZONTAL PIPING AND
Section 14. DEFECTIVE FIXTURES. AU
ELEVATIONS OF FIXIURES. All hori- Installed fixtures found defectiVe or In an
Princeton avenue Tunnel-a makeshift want? I. too. would have liked --t~ know fcet: frame garage. Od8 feet.
zontal piping shall be run in practical unsanu.ary condition shall be repaired,
then and no better today. The town meet- the price to be paid, the original cost to Sold liS the property of John Duus and John alignment and at a uniform grade of not renovated, repJaced, or removed. by the
less than one-quarter of an Inch per foot. owner within thirty (30) days after wrltten
ing was convinced that the councilmanic the owner, area, the prospect of resisting DU8h.
and shall be supported. or anchored at In· notice from the proper administratIve
advocates of the present structure was not Sunday perfonnances, now approved by EDWARD llcLAUGHLlN. Atty.
tervals not to exceed. 10 feet. All stacks authorIties.
shall be supported at their bases and all
working for the best interests of the bor- the State Law. and maybe others had
Section 15. TEMPORARY TOILET FANo. 050 pipes shall be rIgidly .secured. No 1lx.ture
ough and the candidates were elected to similar Questions but all these were ex- Fieri Fa<.iua
shall be Installed at such an elevation that CILITIES. Suitable tollet facilities shall
the point of overflow of the flxture is be provided for the use of workmen durstay at home. The next was to support traneous. The question was shalt wc apDerember Term, 1937
lower than the top of the house sewer Ing the construction of any buUdlng, or
or condemn the school board in the build- prove or disapprove. The meeting decided
trap
vent. unless approved by the Borough otner undertaking requiring continuous
Lot wilh im119. N. E. s. Ardmore Ave.,
CoUncil or Ita dUly authorized agent who work. These toilet facUlties sOall be main.
ing of the High School Auditorium. The and by no uncertain vote. I should have Lansdowne Dora. Del. Co .. Pa.• 266 ft. S. E. may
direct a check valve be Installed be- tained In a sanitary condition, and be subfrom S. E. 8. :Mai-~hall Rd. 27 ft. by 00.::13 n.
next the Rutgers avenue School site and liked to have heard some able brief 011
tweeo the fixture and the hOlJse drain or Ject to approval by tile Borough Secretary.
or other approved device tor Uftthe alleged devious way the site was se- behalf of the application but nothing Impruvcnlclltlt colisist of two I!lory I15tU(;CO aIngpump
sewage into the pUblic .sewer be proSection 18. FILING AND INSPECTION
hou~'. IMx:J3 (eet; lIorch rrout; tltut.'CO garage.
vided.
cured. Then the support or lack of it tow forceful camt: out although our new Presi. Uxl!:' tect.
FEE. The Plumber shall pay to tt>.e Borough Secretary for the use at the Borough
ward the ()urchase of a piece of land from dent of council called for affirmative arCO""'o v. Go•• tz
Section 6. QUALITY AND WEIGHTS OF at the time plaQS are filed. a fil1ng and in·
•
St,h1 11-':1 the IJrOJ>crly o r . .
..
MATERIALS.
All
moterla18
used.
In
any
the college for room to erect and to build gument more than once. I wonder If all ami }o'llIre)lt'C V. Goetz.
spectlon fee which shall be computed as
drainage or plumbing system or part there- follows;
the High School Gym.
our people know our councilmen serve H L FUSSELL Attorney.
ot shall be free from defeets and shall conform in aU respects to the plumbing laws
For each plan approved .............. 12.03
All these issues were sharp. sentiment without pay, devote many nights and . .
.
of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvanlft ac.d
WILLIAM
W McKIM, Sheriff.
For each rtxture Installed or reset .... , .50
high on both sides- yet settled in the some full days in our service. Some then
.
11 not therein specifled to the latest standards of the American Society for Testing
Section 17. SEW;ER ENTRANCE FEE.
Old Swarthmore way by Public Meetings. ask them to spend more time to dig up
Materials or such other standards as Bar. The plumber shall pay to the Borough SecIn the main I think the present resident the facts. That is not thc duty of the
BOROUGH OF SWARTHMORE
ough Councll may designate.
retary for the use of the Borough at the
tlme appl1catlon is made for permission to
of Swarthmore, whether of long stand- judge. It is the duty of the advocates or
ORDINANCE NO. 406
Section 'T. LIGHTING OF FIXTURES. connec!; with the ·publlc sewer, the sum 01
lawyers on each side of the issue.
An ordinance regUlating plumbing, bouse
I
All trapped plumbIng fixtures except those $3.50 for each connection.
and building drainage, ana the d1sposlt o~
only during dayJlght hours and placed
1. for one, wish to thank and congrat- or sewage. In me Borough of Hwartllmore, used
In well Hghted rooms or compartments
Section 18. PENALTIES. Any person or
.
establ1slllng
plumb1ng
and
drainage
rules
must; be provIded with direct artificial pel'6On~ who shall fall to comply with any
d regulations dennlng the powers of light.
u Iate M r. Hessenbruch for the fair way
of the provisions of thls ordinance. 6hol1
he handled that meeting and I hope many ~~rougn omcla.lB' In relatIon thdere
to. prod
be Hable, upon conViction for a first off ee8,
V1Cllng
for
permlts,
)lcenses
an
an
Section 8. TERMINALS ADJOINING fense. to a flne of not less than ten doUars
more can £eeI that way.
lor penalties In connection therewith, re. mGH
BUILDINGS. In the event that a ($10.00), nor exceeding fifty dollars ($50.00),
}. V. S. BISHOI'.
pealIng OrdlnaJ:.ce No. 164 and all other new building Is built higher than an exist- lor each and cveo:y aay, and for a seoond
, ••
ordinances Inconsistent herewith.
Ing buUdlng, the owner of the new bulld- oiiense In a like manner t.o a fine of not
lng shaU not locate windows w1thln 12
than twenty dolllU'B ($20.00) nor exJ. J's Hold Anuual Supper
The Council ot the Bowugh of Swarth- feet of any existing vent stack on the less
ceeding
one hundred dollars ($100.) for
more does ordaln.
lower bUilding unless the owner of suCh each and every day. and for a third ofnew bUIlding shall defray the expenses or lense, to a. like fine aa for a second otrense,
The annual SUI)per of the J. }.'s, held
Section 1. LEGISLATIVE AUTHORITY. sholl himself wlth the consent of such or
to imprisonment In the county ja11 for
That
pursuant
to
the
power
and
authority
owner make such new alteratIon a period not exceeding thirty days, or both,
I at the Vassar avenue home of Eliot granted by tbe General Borough Act of other
thereto as shall contorm wIth this ordI- 1n the discretion of the alderman. justice
Jeffords Sunday evening, January 23, was .&\'18.y 4. 192'1, P. L. 519 an~ Its amendments nance.
of the peace or magistrate. together with
ana
supplements,
and
In
general
further·
attended by nearly fifty members and
costa of prosecution In each case.
ance
01 the prOVIsions of tbe Act No. 44 of
It shall be the duty of the owner of the
friends.
March 31, 11137 P. L. 168. and Its amend· lower or eXisting bundlng to make such
Section 19. REPEAL OF PREVIOUS ORMrs. Harry MiUer, of Thayer road, ments and supplements pertaining to the alteration therein upon the receipt In ad- DINANCES. Ordinance 164, approved. and
registration or persons, t1rmS or corpom- vance of money or securIty therefor, sum- all ordinances or parts of ordInances Inwill speak to the girls at their next UODS engaged in the business of plwnblng cient for the purpose, from the owner of
consistent with the proVisions of this ormeeting, on Sunday evening, February or house drainage and prescribing certaIn the new or higher bulldlng or to permIt, dinance are hereby repealed.
rules and regulations for the construction at the election of the owner of the new or
at the homc of Betty Douglas, at of plumbing and house drainage, the fol- higher building, the making of such alter_
Passed this 2nd day of February. 1938.
Chester road and Swarthmore lowmg rules and regulations are hereby ation by the owner ot said new or higher
building.
T. E. HESSENBRUCH,
ordained.
avenue. Mrs. Miller is in charge of
President of Councll.
Section 2. STATE REGULATIONS INAttest:
the family from the local W,elfare CenSection
9. CONTROL OF SEWAGE AND
CORPORATED BY REFERENCE. All the
ELLIOTT RICHARDSON,
ter, which the J.J.'s have been assist- reguIl;I,tlons of the Act No. 44 of March 31, PUBLIC SEWERS. The Borough CouncIl
Borough Secretary.
or
U.s duly authorized agent shall bave the
100'1. P. L. 168 applicable to. Borough, to- power to stop and precent the discharge
ing.
gether with the regulations of the Depart- of sewage from any premises In the Bor· I Approved this 2nd day of February, 1938.
.11
ment of Health of tlie COmmonwealth of ough into or upon any public h1ghway,
Pennsylvania, as amended from time to stream, water course or putllc place, or
JOHN H. PITMAN,
Danciug Class Chaperons
tlIue. are hereby incorporated wlthLn the Into
Burgess
any
private
draIn,
cess-pool
or
private
provisions of this ordinance and shall sewer; and to order a connection to be
.~~~
Tomorrow evening the chaperons at apply to all plumbing and house and butld- made with the public sewer for the reBOROUOH OF SWARTHMORE
;:
~~============Ith,e-tneeting:s.,of the-' Swarthmore Dancing lQC". (lralnage .hereaf~r ~tall~d In the moval ot sewage from any, premises .when_
Borough of SWarthmore.
ever In the opinion of said Borough Coun~
BOARDING
Classes will he: eighth grade-Mr. and
ORDINANCE NO. 404
cll the pubUc Interest shall demand It, and
BOARDING - Convalescent. Aged. Invalld. Mrs. Raymond T. Bye. Mr. and Mrs. Section 3. FILING OF PLANS. Before it any person shall neglect or refuse to
Chronic. 24 hour nurse's service. Porches.
.At:. Ordinance appointing a plumbing
any portion of the plumbing system of any comply with the order ot said Borough
9\St aeJ'es ground. Telephone Media 'l9.
John F. Daley, Mr. and Mrs. Theophile bulldlng or property may bE! constructed, Council ail above stated, within thirty (30) Inspector, prescribing his duties, and fixIng
LOST
Saulnier, and Mr. and Mrs. Howell Lewis altered, replaced, or removed a plan must days from the service of notice thereof the hLs salary.
be provided accompanied by specifieatlons authorized agent of the said Borough
THE COUNCIL OF THE BOROUGH OF
L08''''';:;T''''Fu;::;I'I-:gro==wn~,~f;;:.~ma~lC::e-,.....
=".'"-=st..r'"lped=..-:ca=t.·1 Shay; tenth grade-Mr. and ~J rs. Waldo on blanks furnished by the Borough. Th~ Councll. shall have authority to enter upon SWA~THMORE
DOES ORDAIN:
shall
meet
the
requirements
of
the
Com
the
said
premises
with
bls
toolS
and
work~Re;;;w;,.;rd;;;.=T;;e;le~p;h;0~n;.~s;w;art:;;;hm;;0;r;e::;1;244;;.== I B. Davison, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. monwealth of Pennsylvania and this ord!- oen and prevent the disCharge of sewage
1. In accordance with Act No.
Bou,hall, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Smith. Jr.; nance and shall be placed on file with the as aforesaid or cause connection to be 44 SECTION
of the General Assembly, approved
Borough
Secretary.
made
with
the
public
sewer
or
both
and
and Mr. and Mrs. Allyn T. Sayre.
March 31, 1937. Elliott RichardSon is herethe cost thereof shall be collecUble by the by designated. and appointed as Plumbing
, I •
206 Harvard Ave. 8 rms., atone. frame, on
Section 4. DEFINITION OF TERMS.
Bo~ugh from the Gwoer or ownen; of said Inspector
of the Borough ot Swarthmore
OOxl'lO ft. lot. new 2-car garage. hardwood
Wins Major Porlion of Prizes
whose duty It shall be to supervise, super;
1. PLUMBING. The art of lnstalUng In premises, as provided by law.
floors. $'7500. FInanced.
Intend, and Inspect all plumbIng. house
Section 10. No owner shall permit, and and
Due to a misprint in last week's issue buJldings the pipes, fixtures. and other apbuilding drainage. In conformity with
paratus
for
bringing
In
the
water
supply
It
shall
be
the
duty
of
Borough
COUDcll
or
WM. S. BITI'LE
it was stated that Warren D. Johnson, and removing liquid and water-carried. Its duly authorized agent to stop and pre- the provisions of said Act and the ordl~
nances now enacted, or hereafter to be enSwarthmore Ill-J
vent. the disCharge Into the publ1c sewer. acted.
son of Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Johnson. of wastes.
of this Borough.
NOtarJ PubUc -lDsurance - Heal
2. PLUMBING SYSTEM. The plumbIng directly or Indirectly. of substances Hable
Amherst avenue, had for the third sucter to Injure the sewers or to obstruct the .How
SECTION 2. The salary of the sald
system ot a buUdlng Includes the wa
ot the sewage. and of any substances Which.. Plumbing
cessive year won a millor portion of prize supply
Inspector shall be $240.00 per
dlstrlbutlng pIpes; the fixtures and In Its opinIon are not suitable for trans. year,
payable monthly.
ribbons in the dressed turkey division at fixture traps; the soll. waste, and vent portation and disposal through the sewer
pipes; the house drain and house sewer; system.
SECTION 3. The said Elliott RichardModern, Central-baD house. Four bed- the Pennsylvania Farm Show. It was a the stonn water draInage; with thelr de·
son sholl serve in said capacity during the
vices, appurtenances, and connectlons all
Section
11. It shall be unlawful to do pleasure of Borough COuncil.
rooms, oil heat, beautiful garden. major portion of prizes which t11C Not- withIn
or adjacent to the buUding.
or cause to be done any ot the following
Owner leaving. Telephone Swarthmore tingh~m lJOultryman WOIl.
SECTION 4. All ordinances or parts of
3. WATER-SERVICE PIPE. The pipe acts, except as hereinafter provided, viz.:
ordinances Inconsistent herewith are to
176-J Saturday afternoon or Sun"ay.
1. To uncover the pUbliC sewer for any the extent of 8uch Inconsistency, hereby
Thursday Night Bridge Cluh from the water main to the building served purpose,
or to make connection thereWith,
4. WATER-DISTRIBUTING PIPES or to uncover or open any manhole, fiush- repealed.
Wiuners
Those
which
convey
water
from
the
lierv·
FOR RENT
tank. or any other appendage of the pubPassed this 3rd day of November A. D.
lic sewer, except with the written consent 193'1.
This Monday evening winners at ~he Ice pipe to the plumbing fixtures.
A modern second fioor apartment, comer Thursday Night Bridge Club's regular 5. PLUMBING FIXTURES. Are recep- of Borough CounCil or its duly authorized
HARRY L. MILLER.
agent. or to do or cause to be done any (Seal)
property. private entrance. Three large
President of Cauncll.
tacles
intended
to receive and dlscharse Injury ot any kind to any part of the pubAttest:
rooms. tlIed. bath. hard\Vood fioots. electrlo weekly meeting at the Strath Haven Inn any IIquld water or water carried wastes Hc sewer.
ELLIOTT RICHARDSON,
refrigerator, garage. Suitable for 2 adults. were: North and South-Mr. and Mrs. Into a drainage system or treatment works
Borough Secretary.
with
whlch
they
are connected.
$50 per month. Includfug everything.
2. To make or cause to be made for the
Maurice Griest. first; Andrew Robinson
removal
of
sewage,
bath
or
sink
drainage,
Approved
this
3rd
day
of November A. D.
6. TRAP A fitting or device so con- or liquids other than water, from any
Call Swarthmore l00I-W
and William Craemer. second; ~Irs. Wi!- structed
as to prevent the passage of air premises, any connections with the public 1937.
__________________.Iliam Soden and Mrs. Clarence Blye, or gas through a plpe wIthout materIally
JOHN H. PITMAN.
gutters or other storm water drains of the
Burgess.
third; East and \Vest-Mr. and Mrs. affecting the flow of sewage or waste water
through It.
Fred Wilson, first; Mrs. \Vil1iam Faison
7. TRAP SEAL. The vertical distance
and Mrs. N. W. Cady, second; 11r5. between
the crown weir and the dip of
Electrical Contractor
Richard Haig and Walter Dickinson. the trap.
third. Mrs. William Faison is the winner
8. VENT PIPE. Any plpe extending
Telephone Swarthmore 58
of the January tournament, having bad through the roof. provided to ventUate the
of piping, and to prevent trap sinumber of top boards during system
phonage and back pressure.
MRS. A. J. QUINBY & SON the greatest
month.
9. LOCAL VENTILATING PIPE. A pipe
.-OSBPH B. QUDlBY
Last week's winners of the Club were: through which foul air Is removed from
North and South-Mrs. Fred Wilson and a room or fixture.
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
\\'alter Dickinson, first; Mrs. Russell H. 10. SOIL PIPE. Any vertical line of pipe
BELL PHOIfB ,
Kent and W. W. Moss, second; Mrs. extending through the roof. receiving the
disCharge of one or more water-closets, with
Edith Paschall and Laurence Stabler, or without other fixtures.
Telephone Swarlhmore 114 or 130
third; East and West-Mrs. William 11. WASTE PIPE. Any pipe receiving
Faison and Mr. tinnard. first; Mrs. Ran9 A. M. to 12 noon
kin and Andrew Robinson, second; Mary water-closet.
Transportadon Provided
the dIscharge from any fixtures except
12. SAFE OR SPECIAL WASTE PIPE
_
Verlenden and }.faurice Griest, third.
MARGARET IVES HUNTER
Any waste pipe receiving the dlschaTge
505 S. Swarthmore Ave.
from any fixture or drainage appliance
wIth or without water supply. not conTe]ephone Swarthmore 790-M
SHERIFF SALES
nected directly with the drainage system.
Sh(>ri".s Offl('('. Cuurt Housc, ),(('dia. Penna.
13. MAIN. The main of any system of
Saturday, February 26. 1938
horizOntal, vertical. or continuous piping
is that part of such system which receives
Sponsored by Swarthmore L. w.
9 :30 A. M. Eastern Standard Time
the wastes, vent or back vents, from fiX·
Experts in the Making and Filling
ture outlets or traps, direct or through
branc;h pipes.
of Spectacles and Eye Glasses
FRIDAY,
WOMAN'S
FEBRUARY
CLUB11,
HOUSE
2130 P. M.
of
otherwise
or certified
atated
cheek
in
14. BRANCH. The branch of any sysCarda Games Refreshmenl8 Prizes
on
ten days. Other COD&
tem or piping Is that part of the system
which extends horizontally at a slight
Admiaion .5Ik
No. 894 grade, with or without lateral or vertical
1923 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia
extensions or vertical arms, from the maln
September Term, 1937
to receive fixture outlets not directly con6913 Market Street
Upper Darby, Pa.
nected to the main.
Benefit of Girl Seout House
thereon erect·
15. STACK. Stack" a general term. for
MONDAY FEBRUARY 7, 8:15 P. M.
Heigbts. any vertical line of soil. waste, or vent
JOSEPH E. HAINES
State of piping.
WOMAN'S CLUB HOUSE
described accord.
Preaidenl
Ing' to a
made by George L.
Ref....hmenlB
16. HOUSE DRAIN. That part of the
•• ~;;-;;;~r.~1886. as folloW8;- main horizontal drain and Its branChes InPennock.
AimiNioll . ....... SOc
Beginning
... be middle of tbe side the wa:tJ.s of the buUdtng, vault or
I
MART~L'S
whc::
I
Iiog
Disney has created the characters .of
Mickey Mouse and the Silly Symp~onles
my friends; It rea1l~ IS.~ tve~
sign
habit and .moreov~r, 15 Is:.l Pl:"se :ardon
.,
that one IS g~owmg o .
that it
PBTEB.E. TOLD
me this one ttme; .1 promise yOU
F. J. S.
SdlNr
witt not occur· agam..
t week, 1 of 'a "Town Meeting/, tbe etiquette of how cultured.
(at/orr Lcttrrs all Palle 5)
Since the Town M~tlDg las f em- a uTown Meeting" and so much more of
The childrens' pictures in which Mr.
ROSAUE DRYDEN
have flown on the magic carMpet ~ mheld courtesy kindness and consideration for
. lfowsElWaO
,
. 19381
ba k to another Town eetmg
Dry,
e
". the little town others, than they know In
none swarthmore ...
Z4 "long ago and far away. m
WINDAR.
8:Dtered ... second Clall Matter, .laDuaI'J'...; where I lived, as a child.
I I•
19%9 at ..e Post OSee at swartbDlore,
Life in the village had for many yea~s
Swarthmore b on the Map!
. . '.)111- tIut &ct or _
So 1178.
"pursued its uneventful way:'
su ~
Mira-Monte Hotel,
,~DAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1938
denly an enterprising and. mtrepl ~~u
127 S. El Molino Ave.,
from a nearby city, concelved ~e 1 ~
Pasadena, California.
of interviewing the more pr~re;sIW:t~; Dear Editor:
.
LETfERS TO THE EDITOR izens in regard to a Mumc pa s the 1\{y Swarthmorean of january ~ Just
project, which later became known a
arrived and naturally as an old resldent,
The oplulqlll ~d bela,f Me Ih~
Chesler Road at RUlgers Ave., Swarthmore, Pa.
of '&be·lndh'ldual wri~~~
"Water Wor~~." .,
s- I was deeply interested to. know what
Swartbmoreaa mUSt. be _.......
wrl
These pubhc-splnted townsmen po the vote would be concerllmg the proOlay be UJed if ,he ldeDt.U,. of t.hewU1 ' :
. .
ell as a great deal o£
ltI known w 'be Edit.or. Lellen
&ho
sessed VIsIon as w .
.
posed Theatre.
publlehed oDlJ' at. the ditereUOIl oJ
civic pride and they believed ~at It. was
Expecting to wait several days to
Edllor.
entirely possible for our qUiet Village hear about the decision, when I opened
to keep abreast of the times and still re- my evening "Pasadena ~tar News" I
.WaJIU CiliaIe.... to Contact
CELEBRATING NINE YEARS OF
main a thoroughly respectable and law- beheld the enclosed c1ippmg:
Council AboUl Lot
abiding community. As a result, there
Swarthmore, Pa., Jan. Z6.-(AP)
BETTER FOOD FOR THE T A.BLE
was more excitement than there h~d been
-This college town wants no moFRIDAY AND SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4th and 5th
'Tathe Editor of The Swartbmorc:'"n:.
since the Civil War; the foundatto?s of
vies within its limits. A ~ass meetCurrent agitation over the moving PI~- the town rocked and were practtcally
ing of townsmen so deCided by a
•
ar or can't come to the store, telephone us your order.
If you don t have.a c t Martel's is as satisfactory as a visit to the store.
:tu~theatre question has focussed pubbc torn asunder.
.
vote of 563 t? ~7. The. boro?gh
Te1ephol!e shoppmg a £ th
fine anniversary savings on no accountatte~uon on we vacant rark avenue JOt
The grey-beards shook their. ~leads
council had mdlcated It mlg~t
Don't tnlSS out on any 0
ese
between the Borough Hall and ~e Me~- dolefully i some of the younger ICdltt~el ns,
amend the zonihn g laws to permIt
save on quality foods.
.
d r
Phone your order the afternoon before for prompt early mornmg e Ivery.
odist Church, and brings to mmd W..t~l probably feeling that they wou. o~e
ercction of a t eatre.
.
So you see S.warthmorc 15 on. the
re newed force the possibility of acqulsl- caste" if they did not follow SUtt, did
SWARTHMORE 2100-MEDlA 900
· l·k .
map I I am sendmg word to PreSident
Th
tion of this tract by the BoJrough.
IS I eWISC.
d 1
h
.IS one of perlmps only two undeveloped
TI
roject was especially frowned and Mrs. Frank Ay e oUe, W 0 :rIe b p the older inhabitants, most of rived her~ Tue~day, for I know t ey
areas in the center of the village, and 15 upon Y
"The Order of the will be Vitally mterested.
tbe only one ideally located to. care !or whom lJe1o~ged to h"
d were entirely
The Aydelottes are beautifully dam ..
of
civic
activitIes
which
Saturday
Night
Bat.
~~
.
.
'1
d t the "Athenauem", the charmenlargement
the
. fi d ·th th primitive convemences ICI e a
1 .
is sure to come in the fut~re.
~:~~~he ha;1 for s~ many years completely ing, hospita~le Guest ~~:~~~ b~ ongmg:
The Fire Department Will need m~re fulfilled the needs of their ancestors.
to
.lns!lt~;d~:ot;e plans ~o spend
room to house its apparatus; !he Po ~ce
Far be it from me to say that there
r~s~.: at the famous Huntington
and Highway De'partments w~l1 requ~re were not many conscientious objectors; ri~~ar/ doing research work. Al,read.y
more space to house autom~tIVe equlp- it was believed by some, however, that they are charmed over Pasadena s c1~
ment· the Police and Executtve Depart- the objectiolls of many others were based
ate and beauty. For two months It
men~ will be lookng for larger quart~rs upon the fact that the sale of the land ~as been uJune in january:'. Mrs.
WE GIVE FIRST PLACE TO THIS SPECIAL
th
ears pass' the welfare and SOCIal would mean a profit to the owner and Thomas A. j cllkins, Mrs. BeatrIce Robas . e y
. ~ay well need to expand it was I'against their principles" to see inson and Miss Eudora :Magill are
servl~e agencies n' and the phenomenal a fellow-citizen (pardon the vernacular spending several months here. On Suna~ ~e f~~ °library will and should of a modern world) "get a break.': Of day Prof. J. Russel! Smith spent the
gro.
? d fie· t I All of these activities course I am sure such narrow-mmded day here with old fnends and attellde~
continue 10 e III e y.
. ' ,
da· tl e species
. d 'I t'
Mrs Smith JS
·th
t
h uld be at this location.
people do not exIst nowa ys • 1
.Jur Frlen s .L' ee mg.
'.
el er mus or s o . . •
.
£
bl
ttl d for the wmter at
Some day there will be need for facilities is ext1l1ct.
com orta y. se e
ter for Boy and Girl Scout
The battle raged; there were arguments Tuscan, A n z o n a . .
I
h ..
EVERYBODY WILL RECOGNIZE THIS AS
at t e C;IVld" c£en m time to time other needs for and again:;t, many of the latter prohAs Dr. Kistler's lot IS. so centrha.
troops, an ro
. .
have heard
ld't
t be a good Idea for t e.
THE BEST MEAT BllY IN TOWNI
for space will arise that are not even ably as asmme as some we
wou
I no
. I t
'th the \
,
recently. I distinctly recall, one octogen- Borough to purchase 1t a er.. WI
thought of now.
.,
rian redicted that the water tower, call- hope of erecting a Commumty H~!",:se,
Our present Borough Hall, 10 sptie of ad. Pth
d s "the stand pipe" would thus adding another charm to our
.,
fo ation which bas been e 10 Dse ay
,
h"
the mterlOr tran: rII.J: ,.
~
.-.. ti\re1ftb«r 'find ftbdH'nm fom.. I daresay beautiful Swart more.
.
ere those who prophesied that the
With best wlshes,
._" -. -. wrougmtMs JiI!t~ctty-a·thfh~. of fbtaUty, th
.'
f ' c beef goes below 29c a
and certainly will not be a JOY orever.
e~l:V of the youth of the community,
Anna T. Speak~al~.
It isn't often that alstdndmg
r~:li!
~eg~r~~y
3Sc a pound. Buy the
I believe it is the hope of many of our rno ld'
me inexplicable way, be corEditors Note :-The same chppmg
pound even on a sa e ay an 1 .
11 1
rice Everybody
"King of Roasts" for Sunday at thlS u!1usua y 0'Y p
. "b. lb. 29c.
citjzens~that one fine day we shall have wou 111 sO
was sent to us by a reader of the Januwill recognize this as the best meat buy m town. Flrat two n
a civic center in Swarthmore that de- rupted.
•
br feeling soared
7 Houston Post, at Houston,
'd that' adequate in size
Be that as It may, pu Ie
ary
serves 01:l.r pn e,
IS.
0 and it was all but necessary to call out Texas.
• I I
tor our ,:p~s, and that IS arranged~ the militia. Finally. in desperation. they
as to permit enlargement as our n s d .ded t hold a "Town Meeting" It
Champio .... Movie
d
eCI
0
"
expan .
took place in the village "Opera House
uTh
n me M r Editor:
.
I COin mend this matter to our citizens
and was a colossal event.
ey a ca ,
I·n reference to the public 1.l1eetl11g. of
for their earnest consideration with the
I
d th bl' d"
. f eeI- the lame,. the £ha t ant d e m
. I was Jalluary 25 in regard to the Ulstallahon
thought that they make known their
years
In splte 0 my en er
,
o£ a cinema theatre on Park avenue, m~y
ing to the members of Council. I am s~re allowed to attend and the meeting made I ask ·1£ the decision against the mov1.e
.
b bl partly
t hat if Council is made aware of consldh a deep impresslon on me, pro a Y
because of the increased auto traffic It
erable sentiment in fav~r of the B~~ because this was the first time in my
uld cause is supposed to make us feel
acquiring. this t.rac.t to Insure 0'p~o um y life that I had beo!n allowed to "stay up" wo
.
l' 1
I
for proper expansIOn of ou: CIVIC cente.r untit after eight o'clock.
that the present traffic IS myt uca or ess
when needed. the member.s of C.ouncll
At any rate. I have never forgotten it; haz.ardous?
I
FOR A GRAND DINNER EVERYBODY WILL ENJOYI
h h
1 e b
informed by many w 10
ree:f a movie in Swarthmore that
wilt attack the prnd°blem. ~It t ~I; ~~i the details are indelibly stamped upon.
tomary energy aWls. om,
m memory-the simple dignity of the 111 avo
d b
ood reasons
find a way at the proper brne to purchase y
h
'ded the serious faces of they were prevente
Y g
.
I
.
Ii·at b ur- man
w 0 presl
•
be'
rescnt at that meetmg.
the property Without undue nanci
"Th C
cil" who occupied the chairs from
mg p .
t
t d that the standl11g yotc was mos
e oun ,
h
I Boraug.
That will fairly melt in your mouth with its tenderness. Low anmversary
den to tIe
on the stage. There was an air of sup- con ~n
price.
===========E;,;;.=P=.=Y=l!R=K=>:=s·=1 pressed excitement, .for ~veryone realized un!;~:. depreciation of property values in
-
FEBRUARY 4, 1938
I
CLASSIFIED
I
==-=::-c=,
SALE
SALE OR RENT
,
..
A. Wayne Mosteller
BURGLARY INSURANCE
Rates Have Been Reduced
You can now secure a $500 blanket policy for $9
EDWARD L. NOYES
13 South Chester Road
NURSERY SCHOOL
I.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
J. E. LIME BURNER CO.
Dispensing Opticians
VALENTINE PARTY
v.
I;in;C~jofn~d~it~;i~on;·;;'r'~;;~~~:".~Bh
CARD PARTY
~~:r:~~:~~,i::~lt:~~o~r~p~i?e~"':~o~t~RTO~und ~th
- -
-
II!.________________________'""_________
~
THE
6
Capt. E. H. Van Patten, of Rut\!ers
a"enue will leave Sunday for Washmg·
ton. D: C., where he will remain for tw.o
weeks on official business. During hl~
absence his sister, Mrs. Charles Cuthbert, of Petersburg, Va., will be the
guest of Mrs. Van Patten.
• • E.
Mrs. •Ralph
Mr. and
Rhoads and
daughter, Phyllis, of Vale aven.ue, have
gone to Florida where they wtll s!~nd
four months.
•••
David Gilcreest, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar J, Gilcreest. of Harvard avenue,
is among about thirty students CO!I~ned
to
the infinnary at Carson Long Military
Mrs. Benjamin Collins, Mrs. Harold
Griffin, and Mrs. Jesse H. Holmes en- Institute, New Bloomfield, Pa., with light
tertained at a luncheon in honor of Mrs. cases of the measles.
H. A. Pcirsol Wednesday, FebruarY 2,
Miss Estelle Sinclaire, accompanied by
at Mrs. Holmes's home in Moylan.
her roommate, Miss Betty Frantz, of RoMrs. J. Wheeler Allison, of Rutgers anoke, Va., returned 'Vedn~sday from
avenue, will entertain at a luncheon at Sweetbriar College. Sweetbnar, Va. to
the lngleneuk to be followed by cards at remain until Sunday afternoon with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Doug'las Sinher home.
claire of Harvard avenue.
Mr: and Mrs. Sinclaire wilt entertain
Mr. and ~lrs. Wm. Sproul Lewis, 0 f
and
Mrs.
informally
in Miss Frantz's honor toSwarthmore avenue, and Mr.
morrow
evening
at the Arcadia Hotel,
Clark W. Davis, of Strath Haven avenue,
Philadelphia.
entertained at dinner at the Lewis's last
Saturday evening. Their guests included
Dean Harold E. B. Speight, of E1:u
1ft. and Mrs. Russell Whitc. Mr. and
Mrs. William Ward, both 01 Swarth- avenue, left Tuesday for a trip to Nashmore. and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wilson, ville Tenn. to represent Swarthmore
Co1J~ge at the inauguration of the new
of Doylcsford, Pa.
Chancellor of Vanderbilt University, and
Mrs. Carroll E. Robb. of Cornell ave- to visit other southern schools.
Dean Spdght made an address on
nue, entertained at luncheon before the
'Voman's Club meeting Monday, January "Dangers to Democracy Today" on the
Occasion of thc "Day of Democracy"
31.
spoJisured by the First Unitarian Church.
Amelia Van Patten, daughter of Capt. Philadelphia, last Sunday.
and ~trs. E. H. Van Patten, of Rutgers
On Monday of this weel::: he spoke be·
avenuc, will celebrate her ninth birth- fore the Woman's Club of Reading on
day Saturday afternoon when she will "\Vhat Are We Educating For?"
•••
•••
•••
• ••
• ••
• ••
•••
~~~~,
FEBRUARY
I
~eet
Miss Leanore Perkins, of Cedar lane,
Fortnighdy to
•
t rtained at luncheon last Saturday
Mrs. Horace Avery wtlt entertam
~~ I~onor of Mrs. Ralph V. Little, Jr., of the Fortnightly at her home on Ogden
K • klyn the fonner Miss Virginia Bas- avenUe on Monday, February 7th, at
If,
,n
seU
of Swarthmore. Other guests were.' z,JV
0 'Cl
ock.
Mi;s Caroline Warner, of Media: Miss Miss Josephine Beistle will re!iew th.e
Florence Hoadley, Miss Elizabeth Soule "The Citadel:', by A. J. Cronm. Th,s
and Mrs. A. G. McVay, of Swarthm?re. novel takes Its place amon~ the. best
and Miss Kathryn Price, of Walhng- fiction of today and th.e re~lew will no
doubt be one of the hIgh lights of the
ford•
• • •
year.
Mrs. A. B. Lawrence entertained at Mrs. Herbert Bassett will sketch her
luncheon last Thursday afternoon at her travels of last summer in England and
horne on Cornell avenue. Her gqests were Scotland.
Mrs. William D. Lewis, of Lansdowne;
Members will give reminiscences of
Mrs. P. A. Wilson, Mrs. Andrew .F. childhood.
Robinson, Mrs. George deForest, MISS
• I •
Isabelle Bronk. Mrs. Paul Freedley and Mary Bonsall Sends Peace
Mrs. Sargent Walter, of Swarthmore.
Petition to Washington
entertain the members of the third grade
of the Rutgers avenue school.
NEWS NOTES
SWARTBMOREAN
4. 1938
,
High School, urging the President to do
everything possible to keep the United
States out of war.
I assure you that the President is making every endeavor to promote good will
among the nations of the world.
Very truly yours,
For the Secretary of State;
r.ml n
FOR Y O U R .
NEW COURSE
RIIYmM
Boys and Girls from S to 10 years old
need well coordinated bodies, freedom
from self-consciousness, and a stimulus for musital and artistic expression.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
a six weeks' motor trip to Mexico. T~ey
will travel down the east coast of FI~rlda,
visit Mr. Sinclaire's brother and slsterin-law Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sinclaire,
who r~ently arrived from their home in
Paris to spend the winter in Palm Beach,
and proceed along the west coast to Mexico City.
I
***
Mrs. George
Mr. and
T. Ashton, of
Wallingford, were guests Monday evening at a musical giv.e~ by Professor and
Mrs. Safford, of Wllhams College. Professor Safford. i~ director of music and
organist of Wdhams College.
Last Wednesday
in New
York Mrs.
George
Taber Ashton,
of Wallingford,
was a luncheon guest of a pianist who
recently returned from a concert tour to
the Pacific Coast.
and Senior High Schools.
The petition read as follows: 'ITo the
President of the United States: We the
students of the Swarthmore High School
do not want war, as many other young
people do not. Since we will be the ones
to be involved, and to suffer, we want you
to think many times before you take
action that might lead to war."
Recently Mary received the following
reply from the Department of State: liThe
receipt is acknowledged, by reference
from the White House of a letter dated
December IS, 1937, si~ned by you and
your fellows students of the Swarthmore
Now
SUNNY SHADE SHOP
.:'H"H"H"H+I*H"'H"H+I~
II!!
SCHOOL OF MllSIC
Art AlIian
Swarthmore Branch
VioUn Lessons Given by Helen Behre
Piano and Group Lessons by Mable W. Fraser, Ellen Delaplaine
Swarthmore 1086-W
Catalosue
on Request
PenDfpaekar
1940
!=s:w:ar:t:hm::o:re:I:7:6::0::::::::::::::::::::::::~
I
GIANT
TIGER
•••
Mrs. j. O. Nesson. who lives with her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Philil) W. Kniskern, of Riverview road,
left january 27 to spend the rest of the,
winter in Orlando, Fla.
• ••
ONE TELEPHONE
call away from youl
The big problem of winter - k..plng warm with
small cost for 1i"le work-disappears when your
bin Is filled with Koppers Coke! Here's a fuel t"at
really saves you dollars and saves you steps. We
can recite many advantages of Koppers Coke, but
one ton will prove more than a t"ousand words!
Phone your order today and learn, first-hand, the
complete satisfaction that goes with the use of
this modern fuel.
HEAT REGULATOR
Autom.tlc."y operates furaace-dampers to maInfal. ev••• 6.0"6'.1 f."peraf.re day and nlg.f.
C•• be p.rc••sed aD eal, terms for less than 'Dc
• dav for oa. vear. Saves 'uel! Saves worl,
Meal. mare 6eat! A.i for demonslroflo••
Mr. and Mrs. Philip W. Kniskern, of
Riverview road, spent the week-end
fore last visiting friends in
.M rs. Kniskern remained until last Thursday.
•••
Swarthmore women
A group of
were
guests at a bridge l)arty given
nesday evening January 26, by Mrs. David
\Visdom at her horne in Springfield.
•••
Lawrence returned
12-1D Bag. • • ••• • •• •
UCO STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES
2-lb Jar
two weeks' business trip to Louisiana
and Texas.
•*•
DOLE PINEAPPLE
JUICE--Lg.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lueders, of
North Princeton avenue. entertained twel-I
ve guests at dinner followed by bridge
last Saturday evening.
• ••
Mrs. Andrew
Mr. ami
Robinson, of
Vassar avenue, entertained twelvc members of a local bridge group at dinner at
the 1l1gleneuk last Friday evening followed by bridge at the Robinson home.
•••
•••
Mr. and Mrs. William Gillis, Jr. and
infant, formerly of Virginia, have moved
into the former Floyd apartment in the
Durnall house at 239 Kenyon avenue.
Mr. Gillis is connected with the Philadelphia Electric plant in Morton, transfering from Washington, D. C.
MAIN OFFICE
FUEL OIL
&
Swarthmooe 19
24
-oz. can
RAISINS
II-oz. Pkg. • • . . • . . . . ..
Madonna Califomia
RIPE OUVES Tall Can
5
10
R1NSO-Lge. Pkg. 19c;
Small Pkg. . • • . . . • • . . .
WHEATIES
2 Reg. Size Pkgs •.•••
"The Breakfa8t Cereal"
KRE-MEL DESSERTS
Pkg. All Flavors. • • • •
2%
I-ID Can...........
"Vacuum Pack"
c
23
c
"'-======:r::::J[=C:=====::
10
c
Uco FRUITCOCKTAIL
Tall Can • . . • • . . • • . •
c
SPR Y-3-1b Can48c;35
2' I-ID cans..........
c
7
c
c
X, No.6
C
ueo OR DEL MONTE
BALTIMORE
10
Genuine Baby Spring
LEGS 0' LAMB-ID.
3Ie
23
C
(A Real Treat)
c
Stewing OYSTERS
Small size-doz.. • ••• . .•
PIKE AND
HIRST
5
C
AVE.
EAST LANSDOWNE
I I . II •• II'
Special Sale on Men's Suits Made to
Order, During Jan. & Feb. Only.
• From Woolens We Have in Stock
NO. II PARK AVENUE
SWARTHMORE, PA., FEBRUARY
FROUC AT CLUB
NEXT TUESDAY
TEA TO OPEN UNITED
PEACE CAMPAIGN MONDAY
Members to "Cireumnavigale
Globe" at Annual Event; Dr.
Micheal Dorizas Heard
at Last Meeting
will be launched in Swarthmore under
11, 1938
$2.50
FIRST PUBLIC FORUI\I
HERE NEXT THURSDAY
"Propaganda
and Modern Life" wilt
be the first topic on the spring program
The United Peace. Campaign for funds
the leadership of Miss Olive ....elca\'cs at
3 o·clock Monday afternoon, February
14, with a tea to be held at the home of
Mrs. Rohert C. Disque, 918 Strath HaYen
avenue. The speakers will be the Rev.
0., Tuesday, February 15. the Annual Dwid Braun, pastor of the Swarthmore
Frolic of the Woman's Club will be PresbYlerian Church, and Mrs. Philip
held. It will take the form of a mid- Jacob, district organizer of the Women's
winter cruise and passengers will cir- International League for Peace and Freecumnav;gate the globe.
durn.
Mrs. Claude Smith is acting as purOn Wednesday, February 16, there will
ser. Mrs. Roland G, E. Ullman, drama he a tea at the Belgravia Hotel, 1811
chairman, and Mrs. Lloyd Kauffman, Chestnut street, Philadelphia, at 3 o'clock One who neiler turned his back, but
music chairman, are in charge of the to launch the Pc.ce Chest Campaign in
marched breast forward,
program.
the Philadelphia area. Everyone interested Never doubted clouds would break,
Dr. Michael Dorizas, "f the Wharton in ,the drive is urged to attend both Never dreamed, though right were
School, UnivCI'"sity of PenJlsylvania, was meetings.
.
h
worste d-wrong Wall Id tnump,
the
principal
speaker
at
the
stated
meet·
r!"ld
"'e
fall
to
rise.
are
baffled
to
.
f th '"
'CI b I Id
'f
This is the sccond year that five lIation- ..
b
dlUg 0 F be vvoman
8 s u Ie on ues- a l and illternational I>cace organizations
etter.
ay, e ruary ..
Slccp to wake.
Dr. Dorizas. a world wide traveller. have combined.in the Philadelphia area
brought tv his audience an instructive to solicit fun']s for their work. In place
-Robert Browning.
and illuminating survey of conditions of the Emergency Peace Campaign which
in all parts of the world. He classed no longer exists, there has been recently
Italy, Germany and Japan as the "have- 'organized the Philadelphia Peace Council
not" nations, where the greater per· in which are representatives of one huncentage of the population must be sus-, dred church a ..1 peace groups. The other
tame
ucttve
areas. A Ii four orgalllzations
w IIIC
. d 011 sma II prod
'
"
. II compose th c
an example he cited Japan, wher~ Peace Chest arc the Women's I tlterna-I Co oper
F oun d a 1Ion
P resen t s
seventy million people must be fed on tional l.eague for Peace and Freedom, Choir in Program of Russian
twenty-two thousand square miles of the, National Council for Prevention of
Church Mnsic and Folk
territory.
War, the Pennsylvania Committee against
Songs
Soviet Russia, England, France and ~Iilitarislll in Education, and the Fellow-
RUSSIAN CHOm
AT COLLEGE FRI.
PER
$35
Phone Swarthmore 504
Iltlllll"IIIIIII"'IIII'11111111111111111111111111111111111.
YEAR
"DOUBLE DOOR"
THRILLS CROWD
of the Delaware County Public Forum'i
schcdull!d to be held ill the Swarthmore Involved Set and Period CosHigh School auditorium,' 1'hursday
tumes Add to Eerie Atmosnight, February 17, at 8 o'clock. This
phere of Successful
will begin a serics of Forum meetings
Melodrama
similar to the vcry interesting and challengi;lg program of last spring.
(By Mrs. W. M. Park, Chairman of
The leader of this Forum meeting
Publidty, Players Clob)
will be Dr. Hugh Carler, professor of
"Double Door", Elizabeth McFadSociology at the Wharton School, Uni- den's thrilling and exciting melodrama,
"ersity of Pennsylvania. Because of the opened at the Players Club on Tuesrestriction of funds a limited program day evening, February 8th to continue
is being undertaken this year and each evening through Saturday, the
Swarthmore is fortunate to be included. 12th. Samuel Evans, Jr., the producer
Many higher educational institutions and ,director, is to be very much conare cooperating in lending voluntary gratulated both on his choice of a play
aid to this "orthy program.
and on the selection of an admirable
TIle Dela,"are
COUllty
Forulns
are
cast. d'Following
onI the heeJs of three
'.
h'
under expericnced leadership. ueing d'
comet' les, It IS meIt'
odramath presents
'11
'tl a
headed again this year as last, by Dr. Iver IIlg c lange.
IS a
rl er WI 10 t I'm
s 'bl 't t'
f th
Carl G. Leech, County Superintendent u
po Sl e Sl ua Ions-some 0
em
of Schools, as local administrator for may lean slightly toward the improbDelaware county.
able, but none is impossible, and when
, ,
well played are entirely plausible.
Vesper Services Resumed
The story is woven about Victoria
Sunday
Van Bret, a middle-aged spinster, the
The Swarthmore College vesper ser- e\!destBand
0lf a dlYdingb dynasty of
.
,
.
an
re ts In t Ie 0
rown stooe
.
.
.
rOil
5
0
I
avenue.
vIces Will resume at 6 :45 P. M. tillS Sun- f
t
f F'fth
She ru Ies h er
I February
. . 13, 1Jl 'ClotillerF
'
WI'11 j noue mus t
day,
Memonal
dom a'10 WI'tl1 an Jron
.
W len the \V.llham J. Cooper
oundaholl come between her and that which she
a~d the muSIc department of the College desires. When the charming young
wdl present the Swarthmore College Or- wife of her half-brother finally does aschestra conducted by Pro lessor A. J. sert herself, Victoria locks her ,iii the
h~ad
:~~~~I.' ,~;',~ ~;~;:.::e~v~ici~~1~1~:J~~;:~
the United States with immense areas. ship of neconciliation.
The William J. Cooper Foundatiori
sfall'ellil!sYaVlmauolsttadnedadk.eeps her there until
few peopJe and great rcsources were
'The Swarthmore workers arc: I\fiss and the :Music Department of Swarth- C
N Z. B II
.
H d I
referred to as the "have" nations.
'
ollcerto
I o.
Olive
Cleaves, lofrs. Edward A. jenkins, more College present the Russian Ca- S
IN
3In.' A at .maJor,
(I t an e; Yes, the play is lurid, but most acThe situation in China and Japan
ymp IOny 0: III
lII!nor s
ceptably so, and while there is no place
was discussed and the Japanese were ,Miss Isabelle Bronk. Mrs. Philip Jewett, thedraI Choir of New York on Friday, n~ent), BorodUl; and Final from S'x for comedy in its lines, its absorbing
described as being pathologically pa- Mrs. John Howard Taylor, ~Irs. J. V. S. February 18. at 8:30 P. M. in Clothier pIeces for organ," Franck.
and grip~ing interest leaves the auditriolic, fearless of death because of the Bishop, Mrs. Agnes Haig Sheldon, Mrs. ~I emorial, on the College Campus. Any, ,
ence with a complete sense of the fitconditions under which they live. Dr. Arthur T. Bye. Mrs, S. Milton Bryant, one interested is welcome to attend.
ness of things, and quite content to see
Dorizas spoke of Communism and the Mrs. Robert C. Disque, Mrs. Roy Me- This is the special choir of His EminVictoria go suddenly and starkly mad,
fact that a wealthy country usually has Corkle. Mrs, Walter Rodman Shoemaker. ence The Metropolitan Theophilus,
while she inanely fondles a half-million
a democratic government, while a pOor ~frrs. ROYEP'BLilslgI~: :\1'lis~I:MarItha !ayFlor, ArchbisilOp of America and Canada.
dollar string of choicest pearls.
one is controlled by the Fascist. "The 1\' rs. H. '. . pelg It, 1\ rs. ..ewts 'us• The cast is uniformly good. Jeall
II 'I
I' k R
II{5, 'I
H owanI The Choir sings regularly at all serv- D
W• L uccoc k G nest 0 f I :Millle, well-known in other roles and to
United States would be Fascist too if sc
l.V rs.
r.· E
mory
H , 1\ rs. M'ranH eyno'1'11
'I
L
C
ices
in
thc
Russian
Cathedral
at
HousS
d
8 15 P •M• IHedgerow audiences. plays the diRkult
we did not have enough to cat."
opson,
rs.
arry ~\' I er, l.\ rs. . .
tu ent G.roup at.:
Sweden, N<\rway and Finland were Hastings. Miss Lillian Dixon Biddle Heg. ton St. in New York. It has been in
Sunday in Meehng House
part of Victoria Van Bret. This is the
mentioned as the r"(luntr:es jn tht' hest Mrs. Lewis Goodenough, Mrs. Roland. existence for eight or nine ,.'eal·s. alA
.. _ . T~
ipan whcnc;c originate mo.st .0£ the thriHs
condition today.
Pennock,
Edwin A. \'arnall.
is the nghtful successor of the choir
Dr. Emory W. Luccock, pastor of thel and the creeps. Mrs. Milne handles the
"All the problems of the world could Francis Harper, Mrs. Patrick Malin, and that used to sing in the big cathedral Commul)i(y Church of Shanghai, China, action and dialogue so deftly that you
he solved", said Dr. Dorizas, "by the Mrs. Carl Cleaves,
before its confiscation by the Bolshe- will deliver an address in the Friends' are permitted to escape none of these
Sermon on the Mount. To live and lct
' •
vists. The conductor of the choir is )'-lceting House on Sunday, February lJ, sensations.
live is not enough; we must live and
11 r. Simeon Andreyeff. who had hi,; at 8 :15 P. ,M. on the effects of the prcsLatimer is more than
help live."
training at the Cynodal School :n lIfos- ent Sino-Japanese war on Chinese edu- charming and beautiful in the part of
Mrs. Arthur Bye, chairman of Intercow during the best period (1905-1915). cational jnstitutiollS. At the invitation of Anne Darrow, the sister-in-law; she
national Relations, introduced the
'I'he program of the chorus will COIl- a group of Swarthmore College studentslgiVCS an artistic finish to her portrayal
speaker. The hostesses were Mrs.
sist in the hulk of religious music of he will he an unofficial representative of of the character that is genuinely proGeorge Zimmer and Mrs. H. Lang. Mrs. Exciting Play of Old Holland for the Russian chllrch, Ancient chants, and the National Emergency Committee for fessional in scope and feeling. Playing
Irvin MacElwee and Mrs. nalph Little
Players Clnb Juniors on Feboriginal compositions of Rimsky-Kor- Christian Colleges in China, which is opposite her as Rip Van Bret, her huswere at the tea table.
ruary 19, Direcled by
sakolT, 'fchaikowsky, Rachmaninofi', attempting to raise $250,000 for twelvc band and half.brother of Victoria, J.
interest is being shown by the
Barl.ara Dolman
Kastalsky, and Tchesnokoff. At the end of the largest missionary universities in Stanley 'faylor gives an extraordinarIllembers of the Woman's Club in the
of the religious program the choir, that that country.
iIy good acconnt of himself in the
purchase of new chairs for the Club
Next Saturday, February 19, The will be dressed in the ancient costumes
Of those dozen c"lIeges, eleven have longest and most exacting role he has
House. An initial Grder for fifty chair; Players Club will present for its Junior of the Russian choirs of the 17th cen- heen under fire, and many, their buildings played thus far.
has been given by the House chairman, !to[ embers Ilip a dramatization of the fa~ lury, will sing a few secular numbers wholly or partially destro,-",.I,
....u I,ave beell
!l.lary nyan O'Brien as Caro!ine, the
E. D. Branns. Two chairs have \'orite old story, "Hans Brinker. or the and folk-songs.
forced to move to other locations. This sweet and much domineered-over sisheen
no Silver Skates." Following "Jack's BeallThe choir consists of 33 voices, and [lind is designed to supplement the tre- Iter ofI Victoria,
sways Iyouh' at will with
I I donated 'by
11 bclub' lIIembers
I ' and
I
'.
H
( ou H morc WI
e gwell. t IS panned
excels particu1arly in its strong \\'0- mcndously decreased income of these in- ler C laractenzatlOn 0 t 1S part.
er
to have the new chairs in use at the stalk" and the Red Gate Shadow Play- lIIen's voices and the deep basses that stitutions and to aid those students who yersatility is truly remarkable.
Fortieth Anniversary ceIehration, March ers, this will he the third Junior pro- are so frequent among the Russians, are unable to mect the minimum expenses
Charles Rickards is the embodiment
15.
dllction this season. with one lIIore to
ch?ir is not a professional organ- of an education during war time.
of Dr.
Sulll." fflend of Anne :,"d
Mrs. Rola",] G. E. Ullman. Mrs. Har- come on April 23.
Izallon m so far as all its members have
Dr. Luccock is well qualified to speak n,P. playmg WIth excellent limsh;
old Calvert and Mrs, Stanley L. M acM any of you will remelllber the story I
work ?n weekdays and, on Ch!"a by virtue of over fifteen years secllling never t?
fro,!, his char.
Millan were guests in the box o[ the of Hans and Gretje Brinker. who can· partIcIpate", the chOIr on a practIcally o[ reSIdence there. first as a missionary acter tor an .nlStant, while Robert
president of the Philadelphia Music nol enter the great race because t(jey voluntary basis, yet finding time to of- under the Presbyterian Board and since Greer, as Morllmer Neff, the Van
Club on Tuesday afternoon of this week have only wooden skates, and arc too fic'"te at all the numerous services in 1928 as pastor of an international, inter- family
was a most effectlve
in the hall room of the Bellevue-Strat_ poor to huy better ones. Their father, the cathedral.
denominational church in Shanghai. He and convmclll.g advocate..
ford Hotel. Mrs. MacMillan's play, Raff Brinker. injured in a [all [rom the
Mr. Andreyeff is a conductor brought I is on Ic",'e o[ absence for the specific purMartha Kelghton, playmg the part
"Candle of Kerchief" was presented dyke, has heen able to rememher noth- up in the hest traditions of Russian pose of presenting China's needs to the, of Avery, the Van BreI's housekeepey,
as part of the Junior Program of the ing for ten years, I.ocked in his mem- choir-leading, and his performance IS American public, from the humanitarian, and Roland K .Harmon as Telsen, theIr
Club, which also in.e1uded dancing and ory is the secret of the mysterious gold of a high degree of excellence.
not [rom the political viewpoint,
bllt.ler, were m
parts
variety nnmbers. Julitta Powers, well watch and the lost thousand guldens.
whIch they handled WIth the utmost
known to lIIembers of the Players Club How good-hearted Peter and Hilda
precision of shade and understanding.
of Swarthmore, was in charge of the help the Brinkers in their misfortunes,
I Dorothy Brower was excellent in the
entire program and ,coached the play.
and how gruff old Doctor Boekman has
THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
,role of Louise. the maid, as was Clara
change
of
heart,
makes
a
thrilling.
i
ence G. Myers in the part of Lambert,
Yarn, Materials Needed For
story.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11
I a detective.
Needlework
You will recognize many of you:"
10;00 A. M. - Woman's Association All-Day Meeting .••... Presbyterian ChUrch
I To Lee Wilson was entrusted the
Thc next Needlework Guild Hour will friends in the cast. Stephcn Spencer
2:30
P.
M.
L.
W.
V.
Benefit
BrIdge
....................
Woman's
Club
House
Illart
of "'I'll'
8:00 P. M. - Cub Parents AssocIation Meeting ...••.... College Avenue SChool
vv lam, a footma", and he
be held at the home of ~Irs. John l\IcWiI- and Mary Ann Hook play Hans and I
8:15 P. M.-Open MeetIng. Vocational Conference .... Frlends· Meeting House
played it with such grace and feeling
8:15 P. M. - ·'Double Door" .....................•...............• PlaYers Club
as to reflect even greater credit on the
Iiams, 11 Benjamin West a\'enue, at 2 Gretje. The others are Charles Seymour,
Ruth
Servais,
Bonny
:Morse,
Dick
o'clock next :Monday afternoon, February
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12
almost unerring judgment of the cast1:15 P. M.-Open Meeting, Vocational Conference .... Friends· Meeting House
ing committee.
Davis, Jack Seymour, :Mariall Schattc,
8:15 P. M. - "Double Door" ...................................... Players Club
14.The sewing group is anxious to obtain and Laura Lee Hopkins. The adults in
8;30 P. M. - Basketball: Swarthmore vs. Lehigh .......... College Field House
Last, but by no means least, John R.
donations of yarn as the sUllpiy donated the cast arc Alexander Dryden, Ethel
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13
Brownell in the part of Mr. Chase.
S. Kauffman, John F. Spencer, and
3:00 P. M.-Lester C. Haworth addresses Young Friends ...... Whlttier House
from Tiffany's, demonstrated that even
by se\'eral yarn mills has been used al- Irma Keightoll. The play is under the
6:45 P.
M. -- Vesper
Service
,a
8:15
P. l\{.
Dr. Emory
W. .................................
Luccock. China ReHef speaker Clothier Memorial
, short role, in proper hands, can be
ready for the making of garments for direction of Barbara Dolman.
I
next fall's illgalhl'ring of the Guild. There' There will be two performances of'
Friends' Meeting Housel one of the cle\'erest bits of acting in
I\IONDAY. FEBRUARY 14
the whole play.
are lUauy mothers and shut-ins in thi:;; "Hans Brillker," at J:OO and at 8 :15.
2:00 P. M.-Needlework Guild Hour ..•..........•• l1 Benjamin West Avenue
..:.....:-..._,...._ _
2:30 P. M. - Woman's Aux1l1ary, Trlnlt:7 Church ................ Parlsh Home
section who have signified their willing- A limited number of adults will be ad.
3:00 P. M. - United Peace CampaIgn Tea ............ 918 Strath Haven Avenue
ness to knit articles if yarn is supplied. mitted with the younger children at the
Bridge Club Winners
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15
Since money given to the Needlework matinee. Older Juniors and other adults
10:00 A. M.-L. W. V. Study Group············ •.......... 600 Harvard Avenue'
I \Villners at last Monday evening's
Guild is used for garments needed by Ull- are requested to wait until the evening
2:30 P. M. - Annual ProllC ...............•.....••.••... , •.••... Woman's Club
.
f I Th
d
N' h
•
fortunates in Delaware Connty the· Guild performance.
7:00 P. M.-Buslness Association Meetlng·· ••...................... IngleneUk
Jmeetmg 0 tIe
urs ay Ig t Bndge
is not able to purchase such materials
8:30 P. M.-Slgma Xi Lecture .................. Blologlcal Laboratory. College
'ClUb at the Strath Haven Inn were:
, I •
and has been dependent upon the conWEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 16
North and South-Dr. and Mrs. John
tributions of generous residents and near2:30 P. M. - Presbyterian Women's Missionary Meetlng-603 University Place
A. :h,.{urphy tied Mr. and Mrs. Richard
3:00 P.
Appreciation
Hour········
.409 Elm
Carvell for first place', Mrs. W. Burton
by factories. Mrs. McWilliams will be Friendly Circle Next Thursday
8:30
P. M.-Muslc
M. - Basketball:
S~more
VB. P. M................
C••••....•. College
Fjeldavenue
House
glad to call for any odds and ends of
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 17
Richards and ),{rs. Edith Cuskaden,
yarns and materials. which can be made
At 2 o'clock next Thursday afternoon,
second·, Captain and Mrs. Charles Mor..
10:00 A. M. - Literature Sectton M eeting.......... ............. Woma 0's mub
2:00 P. M. - Friendly ClrCle Meeting .....; ...............•.....8 Park Avenue
rison, third; East and:- West-A. 11.
into suprisingly useful articles, if persons February 17, the regular monthly meetiug
of
the
Friendly
Circle
will
be
held
al
8'00
P
M
Presbyterian
Young
Woman
s
Guild
............
322
Park
Avenue
Robinson
and William Craemer, first "
having them wiH teicilhone her, Swarth8:00 P:
Public Porum. Dr. Hugh ca.rt.ier. leacfer, ••••••• K. S. Auditorium
more 83-W.
the home of Mrs. E. M. Buchner, 8 Park
Mr. and Mrs. H, Gilpin Brown, second;
aVenue.
L ______________________________-' Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Cramp, third.
n;?V~-
TO TELL CHINA'S
COLLEGE NEEDS
~.frs.'1
_ _ _ _ _ _. _
~fargarct
~Iuch
~Irs.
:I'I'~
hei~ ,ordin~ry
Jol~n
wavc~
c~unsel,
compl~mentary
CORN ON THE COB
Large Can ..•.••.•••
Kraft'. FAMOUS VELVEETA- 2 8-oz. pkgs.
Van Alen Bros.
.
VOL.
,
(Any Cut You Desire)
HARRIS & CO
Duell
"HANS BRINl7ER"
~
FOR JUNIORS
Del Monte COFFEE
c
Libby'. Seedless
Califomia GREEN
BROCCOU. Lg. bunch
..•.........•.•....•..
c
~:=====I:::J[[:J======:
Telephone Swarthmore 10412
A. HAUGER
4
6
f:~~~ ~~~. ~~ ~~~~ 19
CONSHOHOCKEN, PA.
Village Window Cleaner
25
1frs. Jolm B. Smith. of the Swarthmorc
Apartments, cntertained at luncheon Wednesday.
COAL
YE
45 c
Fancy Pack
Mr. A. B.
Sunday
his home on Cornell avenue after a
RAINEY-WOOD
COKE CO.
r.,.p.o •• yo"' local ••cAang. 61500 rao fol/ darg.1
or aoy a.f.orlHd dear.r
Pillabury'a Beat FLOUR
Fire Company
Dues
~Irs.
STORE BOvaS:
to 9 P.M.-Mon .• T~es. 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. Wed.
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Thurs.
9 A.M. to 10 P.M. FrI., Sat.
9 A.M.
Pay
Fire Company
figh~
$2.50 and $2.75
ORNSTEIN
•••
Saturdayentertained
evening when
their guests
were
avenue.
at dinner
and bridge
Dr. and AIrs. George L. Armitage, Dr.
and ,Mrs. Fred Faragher, Mr. and Mrs.
Roland Ullman, Mr. and Mrs. H. A
I Peirsol, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lang, Mr.
and Mrs. John C. Moore and Mr. and
~Irs. C. W. McDowell.
Formerly $3 and $4
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~
Mrs. Roy W. Delaplaine. of Cornell
avenue, spent the week-end visiting her
aunt, Mrs. Martha Falconer in New York
City. Mrs. Falconer was formerly superintendent at Sieighton Fanns near here,
and flOW lives in Buffalo, N. Y.
•
~h. and :Mrs. 1.• I.•... Nickerson,
of Park
LAMP SHADES
FEB 1 11938
I~A.
Pay
PJ~NT ~OFPA?
Chief, Division of European Affairs."
• • P. Yer kes, 0 f
Mary Bonsall , daughter 0(,~..
Rev. E. H. price
~issrate
Alice
special
half- '
Mr. and Mrs.• Earle
to Kraft
schoolgive~
children.
College
Princeton avenue, will entertain ~t dinner Bonsall, of Cornell. avenue, a senior. In Avenue Kindergarten Room -Thursand bridge for sixteen this evemng.
the Swarthmore HIgh School was m- days _ 3:00 to 4 :30. Call Locust 1045.
strumental in sending a petition to the
Advertisement
Mr. and
Mrs. will
Douglas
of by
President
United States
Harvard
avenue,
leave Sinc1aire,
Monday for
300 of of
her the
schoolmates
in the Jsigned
uDior
***
SWAI~THM[)J~E.
.
I
I'
I
II
»: -
I
B~et
1938
THE SWARTBMOREAN
a
L W. V. Hears Rollin Posey
Mr. and Mrs. William A. De Caindry,
of Haverford place, announce the birth
of a daughter, Mary Virginia, at the
Fitzgerald Mercy Hospital, February 2.
•••
eighth grade with a dessert party before
the dancing classes last Saturday even-
iug.
•
PETER E. TOLD
NOTHING BUT INSURA.NCE
417 DARTMOUTH AVE.
SWARTHMORE 1833
~.~.-------
attended the Fort .llyer Horse
Captain llorrison was in charge of
cadets from the Pennsylvania Military I
College, Chester, who were entered in
student jumping class and won the
ribbons both nights of the show.
• • •
Miss Louise Campion, of Lapidea ~"''''I
sa,'led Thursday of last week aboard
•d
h
'11'ss Lotta Johnson Balr, W osc
S. S. Borinnuen for Porto Rico. She
.U
"'t
to Dnnato Colafemina, of
return to this
country February 22.
IHalrv:ard avenue, Swarthmore, and "The
•
•
•
1~"~::li:I;~~~~~~'d;"
L'Ima, was announced
last
The condition of Mr. Edward
•
afternoon
at a tea glven
by
Legion Charity Ball last Friday evening included Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sheppard, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar J. GiIcreest,
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. McDowell, Mr.
and Mrs. John C. Moore, Dr. and Mrs.
W. F. Faragher, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Lang, an d M r. an d M r sI. .L·
Nickerson.
• • •
A t a ceremony performcd at 6
M"nday evening, February 7, in the
. copal Rectory, 011 North Chester ..,.told ~:;~ ~:~l~it:~a: :'ee~is s~!::I~I/ll
mother, ~frs. Laura Johnson Baird,
by the Rev. J. lardeD Guenther,
their home on Oberlin avenue. Miss
of Trinity Church, Swarthmore,
a\"cnue for the past month, shows
sister, Mrs. G. Witts Brodhead.
Elizabeth Irene Blounts, daughter of little improvemen!. • *
Mrs. ",raIler Means Reynolds, both
Mr.. and Mrs. John Joseph Blounts, of
S
h
.
'ded at the tea ta
Rose Valley, and Alfred C. Bair, Jr.,
Dorothy Dana, of Elm avenue,
wart more, preSl
son of Mrs. Alfred C. Bair, of Park entertain with dancing at her home {n.ml",e.
.
.. d 'In marCIa.
. ge At - 7 :30 until 9 :30 tomorrow
It is expecteJ that• the wedding win
avenue
were Jome
tendan~ were the brother and sister of lowing the meeting of the i?;:~o.~~~:~;:.I::: place next !'pnng.
the bride Stanley Blounts as best man class of the Swarthmore dancing
and Miss'Sarah Blounts, maid of honor.
The wedding was performed in the
Mr. and .Mrs. Edward D. Hitchcock
Exquisite Flowers and
presence of members ?f the. immediate have removed from 322 llaple avenue
an apartment at 306 South Chester
famities. After a weddlOg trip Mr. and
Plants for
Mrs. Bair will occupy an apartment on road.
Park avenue.
Dr. Luther M. Dimmitt, of S,~alrthmo,r!'1
Major ::Ind Mrs. D. G. Van De
IJlacc. returns today from a five
and children, formerly oi Harrisburg,
tour of colleges and universities
have moved into the Simmonds house
he has visited as Director of the D"oartNovelty Arrangements!
327 Vassar avenue.
ment of Student Aid and
Assorted Boxes CUi Flowers
Research of the Presbyterian Board
Mr. Joshua Christian's home roe,mIEducation. He has spent the 'current
Corsage. of Gardenias,
senior pupils of Swarthmore High School in Chicago attending the annual medingl
held a party la'it Saturday evening at the of the International Council of Religious
Orchids, Violel8, elc.
home of Elizabeth Bowditch on Elm Educaton at the Hotel Stevens, Chicago.
. avenue.
*• *
*• *
Insure Every Hazard
------..
• ••
*• •
.
fayette avenue, are receiving congratulations UI)Q1l the birth of a son, William
F. Lee, Jr., on Friday morning, February
4, in the Fitzgerald Mercy Hospital. Lansdowne. The baby is a grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. Morris M. Lee, of Princeton and
College avenues.
Mr. and Mrs. C. MacDonald Swan
Captain and Mrs .. Charles E. M'JrriisOiloi
entertained at their home oJD South Ches- of Swarthmore avenuc, returned
ter road preceding the American Legion Thursday -evening from \Vashington,
Charity Ball last Friday evening.
C. where they had spent four days
party at the Ingtcllcuk pri,or to .the
-
•
• • •
Malcom Hodge, of Strath Haven a.velnu",!
k I
were among those who entertained
Dr. and Mrs. George B. Sic e,
{ore the Charity Ban of the "'\rne",c
formally at dinner and cards last
• • •
urday evening.
• • •
A group which enjoyed a
1'11"-
•••
Mr. and Mrs. William F. Lee, o{ La-
Bair-Blounls Nuptials Performed
Kent Robb, of Cornell avenue, enteral Epillcopal R.,.,lory Lasl
about twenty classmates of
tained.
Monday Evening
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Harvey,
Columbia avenue, and Mr. and Mrs.
TlIII BWUTlIMOllllAJf,INC.
Valentine Gifts!
Mr. and Mr!i. H. W. Brinkmann now
have with them at their home on Walnut
lane thejr newly adopted six weeks' old
daughter, Betsy Jane. Mrs. Brinkmann
is the daughter of Mrs. F. '·L. Kellogg,
of the Strath Haven Inn.
Leuer From Madame
Chiang Kai-She1c
Methodilll Church Notes
GIVE HER A PRAcnCAL
ANDWVELY
VALENTINE!
""
~~~~~
From
,vc< 1JtYt
EXTRA POWER
BATTERY
FEBRUARY
14th
8 Park Avenue
Swarthmore 240
Hosiery, Accessories, Lingerie
That
Valentine
""7'
BUCHNER'S
OUAUTY WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE
MUST BE MAILED ............
TOMORROW
Most unuual Se and
IOc Valentines
See our miniature
vase. of dainty
MARTEL'S
BETTER FOOD'FOR THE TAlLE
FIo.......
The
Hollyhock
Shop
-
~Ei
COMPLETE
FOOD MARKET
RUSSELL'S SERVICE
Chesler Road al Rutgers Ave., Swarthmore, Pa.
Dartmouth and Lafavette Ava.
SWARTHMORE 2100-MEDIA 900
Telephone 440
Park Avenue
~
News!
"w. DoD.'t Sell Can-W. 8ernee Them"
••*
·...
Mrs. Rex Gary, of Yale avenue, entertained at a small tea on Monday aftcmoon
of this week.
·.
..
Janice Wherry, of Cedar lane, who
has had the mumps, and her sisters, Evelyn, ·Rosalie and Elaine, who have been
quarantined with her, expect to return
to school today or early next week.
·..
Laura Lee Hopkins, of Crest lane, entertained classmates of the seventh grade
at a supper party last Friday afternoon
and evening.
THE
JUNIOR WOMAN'S CLUB
OF SWARTHMORE
Benefit
Mo~ie
Marot Flower
Shop
at
315 Dickinson Avenue
Media Theatre
Swarthmore 554
Monday, Feb. 210t
Give a Sweet Heart to your Sweetheart
A heart.shaped box filled with wonderfully
delieious candy is just the thing for a Valentine
gifl.
"QUEEN VICTORIA"
Thursday, Feb. 24th
"YOU'RE A.
SWEETHEART"
take a price drop
MARTEL'S SancJyCove EGGS
WHITMAN and GOBELIN
SOC to $5.00
Friday, Feb. 25th
"BAD BOY OF
BRIMSTONE"
To those of you who are not greatly concerned with Qual1tj, an eq Is an egg.
One visit to the Sandy Cove Farm. NOrtheast. Maryland. . . . • And seeing the new
Model Sclentlflc Indoor Poultry Fartn with Its batter of layers w1ll convince you
of the great dHrerencc· in so-called. fresh eggs.
MI£BAEL'S
College Pharmaeg
Tickets must be secured by
Feb_ 18th
2 Dozen 75c
On the Corner
Start. Today
Sonja Henie
Don Ameche
-MANOR-
"Happy Landing"
Ch..ter Pike
Prospect Park
Free Parking-Rear 01 Theatre
with
Friday and Saturday - Feb. 11 & 12
Added
WaIter Winchell, Simone Simon
Ben Bernie - Bert Labr
The March of Time
In
"Love and Hisses"
cussed "Inside Nazi Germany-193S"
Monday Only
Last opportunity to see the outstanding comedy hit of any year
Irene Dunne -
Cary Grant
MEDIA
"The A.wful Truth"
Last 2 Days-Friday-Saturday
" Mayerling"
Walter Winchell
Ben Bernie
Simone Simon
Charles Boyer, Danielle Darrieux
"Love and Hisses"
EXTRAI
"The Man Without A Country"
The famous Edward. Everett Hale
classic brl1UantIy interpreted by John
Lltel in the leading role, in 3-ColOr
Teclmlcolor.
Tuesday Only
starriDg
French dialogue with Bnglish titles
Wednesda1 Only
to visit the Manor
at 8:45 P. M.
A picture which the management Is
It payS
delighted and proud to present
"You're Only
Y oltng Once"
with
Lewis Stone - Cecila Parker
....d
And Fint Run Ne... 1
Miokey Rooney
Monday-Tueoday
Thursday and Frtday-Fe1l. 17 ,. 18
Charles Boyer
.Claudette Colbert
"Tovarich"
Clandette Colbert, CharI.. Boyer
In
"Tovarich"
S~ Sa_cloy, Februoly 19
~~HIJBIUCANB~~
300,000 MILES!
One morning more than thirty yean
ago, a yOWlg man drove a horse and
huggy out of the stahle. It was his
first morning on a new job and he
drove through the city streets slowly
and carefully. He was considerate of
the rights and safety of others-it
was a part ofhis new job.
In the p.58ing ye..... his horse ....d
buggy was replaced by a motorcycle
which, in turn, gave way to a motor
car. The young man's territory
became larger, the business grew
and he beeame busier, but he always
drove with the same care and oon..
sideration. He has driven night and
day over storm. .. ewept, ice-coated
highways. He has driven for count..
less hours through the streets of an
ever-growing city. In thirty-cne years
he has driven well over 300,000 miles
-yet he's neve, been respomible for
an. aCJCident.
Recently the once young man was
honored for his splendid driving
record. So were more than 450 of
. his fellow telephone employ... who
have opel'ated Bell vehicles more
tIum teD. years without an accident.
They're charter members of the recently- organized Bell Telephone
Hundred ThOUlltlDd Mile Club. They
have done and will continue to do
their part to male the highways
. ufe. The BeD Telephone Company
alPennsylvania.
THE HOOP SKIRT AND BUSTLE ERA OF POULTRY RAISING is still found Oil
Volenline'.
Day
Monday
Feb. 14
PHONE
857
THEATRE
Jean Uerahoh, Ethel Merman,
Cesar Romero, Raymond Scott
Quintet, Leah Ray
ThIs issue includes the much dis-
Place Your Order Now
for Delivery on
"Off(""
{"_CIl'(
l\
many farms where chickens roam the disease infested ranges. eat Insects. and
table scraps, and develop under the most unsanitary conditions. Eggs Ite- in nests
continuously warmed by a. succession of laying hens where they lose vitamin
content and span eMUy. You'd be horrified 11 you knew the ute history of those
"fresh"' eggs you've been buying, with pathetfe trustfulness, from your huckster..
farmer.
.
CHURCH NEWS
MARTEL'S AWNIN6J'WINOOW SHADES·jLlPCOVERS
l~UL(\ ~ VENETIAN BLINDS, UPHOLSTERY
PHONE R.IDLEY PARK 600 - PROSPECT PARK.PA.
11"5 "THIRTY M1Nl)1"ES
PAST "THEATER ,IME
"'OW. 'fOURE ALWAYS
LATE - Wl-IY '(OU WERF
EVE'" LATE FOR
........ WIOtIltOI
n= '(OU ASK
ME
1 WASN'T
LATE EM0V411!
Bu, ~ON'' WORR'(.
I''''' "eveR LA,E
1"0 TAJ<[ AOVANTA<:.E
"TI-l< FINE SElYICE
OI'I'EREOSY
KUPPINGE!:S
MARY ANN. YOU
A FINE TABLE.
Synonymous with Fine Eating
THE WAY
KEEP A MAN
SO I'VE FOUND OUT,
WITH THE AID OF MY
COOK BOOK.
MARTEL'S
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
.'
FEBRUARY lI,
=2____________________. -______________.______~-TH~~E~S~W~AR~'~11Dd~~0~RE==AN~_,--------------------._,------~FEBRUARY 11, 1938
Barbara Na!'oll :lmi Margaret Shel}Entertained Before liard,
both of Swarthmurc, will cntertain
at dil1lll'l' ott thl' Ing,lcnelik this Saturday
Charity Ball, Friday l'\'l'nil1g priur to the IIIcetillg uf dancing
Bair-Blounts Nnl,lials Perlormed
at EI,iscol'al Rectory Lust
Monday Evening
das~c~.
BETROTHAL ANNOUNCED
• • *
~ll'.
).Ir. ami
,
{aYl-t'" a\'l'lltll', arc rCl'ch'ing l'()llgratula~
llr~. ),Iurris ),1. Lee, of Pdlu:chm and
Colh.-gc i1\'ClIl1CS.
*• •
S\\311
I
and ~Irs. \Villiam F. I.c(", of I..a-I
I
Captain and ~I rs. Charles E. ~\lurrisoll,
at their h0111e ull South Chesof S"arthmoH' ~n ...·II1H.', n ..'turm.'(1 ta!:lt
ter road prl're
Ch
,lHelutnl
Iltl' 1-'(11 t .:\IYl·r lJOI'SC Shuw.
A group which l'njoYl'd a dinner
Captain
:\lorri"tJll
was in chargc of four
party at the lngll'ncuk prior to till'
radl't~
from
the
PCI11l!'yl\'ania 1Jilitary
Lcgil.lJl Charity Ball last Frid:l), e\'CIll'ollt-gl·.
Che~lt:r, who w .... r .... ent .... rcd in the
iug il1c1uded ~I r. ami ),1 rs. Rohert Sheppard. ~1r. and :\lr~, O~caf J. Gilcreest. ... tl1dl·tJt jUlI1ping class ami WOII the blue
)'Ir. and :\lrs. C. \V. )'IcDo\\ell, )[r, rihboll!, hoth night-. uf thc show.
and :\lrs. Jt)hll C. )'loore, Dr. and :\lrs.
~Ii!' .. Luuise Campion. of Lal'idea Ilill~,
\Y. F. Faragher, )'1r. ilnd )'Irs. Fred".aill'd
Tlull'sliay of last week ahoard thc
erick Lang, and )'lr. alld )'lrs. I. L,
S. S. Borin(jw.:n for Porto H.ico. Shc will
:\{iss Lotta Johll~nll Baird, whose
KkkcrsOlI.
.. * *
fl'lum to thi~ ctllliltry February 22.
engngcJI1l'nl to I)onato Colaremina, of
At a cerelllony l)l'1'iol'1111'd at () o'clock
11:tr\'ard a\·CIHle. Swarthmore, and "The
)'Ionday c\'ening, Febrllal Y 7, ill the EI)isThe l'OlIditioll uf ,:\1 L Edward Elmslie Vineyard." Lima. was announced last
I.;opal H.ectory, on Xurth Chc",t...-r road, I'ylt-. who ha:- hl't'll ~eriollsly ill of a Sunda\' aftt'rtlOClIl at a tea gi\'en by
by the- H.e-\·, J. Jardell Gl1l'nth ...·r. redllr h::lrl ('ondiLioll at hi~ home 011 Vas~ar her tII~thl'r. ~I rs. Lanra Joill1son Baird,
of Trinity Church, SW;ll'tlullun'. )'li~ ... ;1\('1111 .... for 111 ...· pa~1 lIIul1th. shows \'Cry al th .... ir hOllll' 011 Oh ...·rlin an'nue. :Miss
Elizabeth Ircne Bloun1", daughter of little illlprOH'l1ll'lIt.
Baird's !'islL'r, ~II'''', (;. \Vills Brodhead.
),11' • .ami ~ln;. John Joseph Blounts, of
amI :\Irs, \\'alt"'r }.rl';tns Reynolds, both
Rose \'alley, amI Alire,1 C. Hair, Jr.,
Dorothy l)al1,l, of Elm an'nUe. will of S"arthmorc. pfl'"ided at the tea tason of )lrs. Alfred C. Hair, of Park Il'lltl'rtail1 \\ ith dancing at her home from hIe.
avenue, wefl' joined in lIlarria~e, .:\t- 7 :3f.1 until 9 :3(1 .tolllorrow CVl'llillg, folIt is l·X))(."ctt d that the wcdding will
tendans werc the brother and sister of I.,wlng tlil' IJIl'e!lIlg- of the introductory take plan' next "pring.
the bridc, Stanley lJlounts as best man da:-." of the SW:lI·thnll)n· dancing cJa!'sl'S.lr~.........................................................................................................~
and Miss Sarah Blounts, maid of honor.
• *
II
The wedding was perfl'rmcd in the
~I r. aud ),1 r .... E.lward D. Ilitcheock
prcscnce of nH'lIlhers oi the immediate han' rClllu\'{.'d from 322 ~la)Jlc avcnue
Exquisite Flowers and
families, After a wedding' trip ~lr.
Mrs, Bair "ill occupy all apartment Oil road.
Park a\,cnue.
I Jr, Luther ).I. I )illllllitl. oi Swarthmore
Major and :\lrs. IJ. G, Vall Dc HoI.! plan.. rl'tuJ'lb today frolll a five wcek
alld childrl'lI, iorllleriy of Hanisburg, Pa"
IUlir of t'olll'gl'~ and universitics which
havc mo\'ed into the ~illlmoll(ls house at
he ha~ vi~ih:d iI~ I )ircctur of the Dcp;trtNm'elty Arrangements!
327 Vassar a\'Cllue,
lI1ent of Student Aid and Educational
Assortcd Boxes Cut Flowers
Rt'~l'arrh of thc Prcsbyterian Board of
)'lr. Joshua Christian's hOlllc room EdlU'ation. lIe has slIcnt the cltrrent wt'ek
Corsages of Garllenias,
senior pupils of Swarthmore Iligh School in Chie.lgo attending the annual meeting
hcld a party last Saturday c\'t.'lIing at the
Orchids, Violets, etc.
of tht' Jnkmational Council of Ucligious
home uf Elizabdh Howditrh Ull Elm blueatoll at the Ilutel Ste\·ens. Chicago.
a\'cnlle.
entt'rt~lillcd
•••
•
n,
),1 r. and ),1 rs. II. \V. Brinkmann now
ha\'C with tltl'lIl at their home on \Valnut
lane their nl'wly adoptcd six wecks' old
of the Strath Havcn hill.
---~
---------.,.-
• • *
** •
Valentine Gifts!
* * *
EXTRA POWER
BATTERY
That
Valentine
*•*
Janice 'Vherry, of Cedar lane, \\ ho
has had the 1ll1llllPS, and hcr sistl'l' ..... E\'e-I
Iyn, Rosali ....
to schoul today or l'arly lIext \\'l'l'k
al
315 Dickinson Avenue
Media Theatre
SwarlhlUort' 554
Monday, Feb. 21st
• • *
Lanra Lee J lupkill~, oi Cn.':-.t lam', entertained classlllates Ilf th .... ~l·\·ellth grade
at a supper party la~t Friday afternoon
and eYcning.
Benefit Movie
Marot Flowet·
Shop
Thursday, Fcb. 24th
1\105t unusual 5c and
IOe Valcntines
See our miniature
vu~cs of dainty
The
Hollyhock
Shop
RUSSELL'S SERVICE
Dartmouth and Lafavette Aves.
Telephone 440
Park Avenue
"We Don', Sell Cars-We Service Them'"
Give a Sweet Heart to your Sweetheart
WHITMAN and GOBELIN
50c to $5.00
-MANOR-
"Happy Landing"
Chester Pike
IIcrshoh, EIIICI Mcrman,
CeS;lr Romero, Ha)- mont! S('oll
Quintet, Lenh Ruy
}'rldal' and Saturday -
The March of Time
MEDIA
"Love (flul Hisses"
l\hmday Only
I.ast o{)portunity to see the out.
standmg comedy hit of any year
Jr('llc Dunne - Carv GraUl
"The Awlul Trllth"
Tuesday Only
"hlayerli"g"
l ..ast 2 Du)s-I"ritlay-Snturday
Walter Winchell
Ben Bernie
Simone Shuon
"Love and Hisses"
EXTRA!
"Tile .1Ian n/illwUI ., Counlry"
The famous E(h\,lrd Everett Hole
classic brilliantly Interpreted by John
Lltel In the lending role, in 3-Color
Ter.hnlcolor.
Ami I,'irst nun Ncws!
)Ionday-Tucsday
Charles Boyer
Claudette Colbert
"Tovarich"
J1 alelltillf~'S
Day
Starring
Churle!>i Boyer, DnnicIlc Darricux
French dialogue with Epglish tit1es
WedneSday Only
pays to visit the l\lanor
at 8:45 P. i\1.
pic,ture whieh the management is
delighted and proud to present
It
A
"}'Oil ,rf~ 0 " I y
Young O"e,,"
with
I.t·"i~ Stone - Cecil a Parkcr
and
~Iickey Rooney
Thursday and FridaY-Feb, 17 & 18
(;Iaudette Colberl, Charles Boycr
In
~~TovariclJ."
Starting Saturday, February 19
··'llJIlIlICANE~~
PHOi'rIo;
857
One morning more than thi.ty years
ago~ a )'oung Ulall drove oil horse and
huggy Ollt of the stahle. It was his
first morni1lg on a new joh and he
d.-ove thnmgll the city sireets slowly
and carefully. lIe" as cOllsiticrate of
the righls and safety of others-it
was a Imrl of his new job.
In the passing years, his horse and
huggy was replaced by a U1otoreyde
which, in turn, gave way to a motor
car. The young man's territory
became larger~ the husiness grew
aod he hecame busier, lmt he always
drovc will. the same care and consideration, lIe has driven night and
day over slonn-swept, ice.coated
highways. lie has driven for countless hours through the streets of an
ever-growing city. In thirty.one years
he bas driven well over 300,000 miles
-yet he~s netICr been responsible Jar
an accidenl.
Recently the once young man was
bonored for his splendid driving
record. So wcre more than 450 of
his fellow telephone employees who
have operated Dell vehiclcs more
than ten years wilhout an accident.
They're charter members of the recently-organized Bell Telephone
Hundred Thollsand Mile Club. They
have done and will ("ontinne to do
their part to make the highways
safe. The Dell Telephone Company
of Pennsylvania.
tak~
a price drop
MARTEL'S SandyCove EGGS
==================1
iJloll/l"y
Feb. 14
300,000 MILES!
9:45
11:00
A.M.-~~ndny Prayer
School and
andSermon.
Blble hc
heldat \Vcuncs
16, at 2:.10
A,M,-M~'iOg
I~. ~1.
the home ofFebruary
~Irs. Paul
n. \Vil-
.
Mr. Guenther wlll preach.
7.00 P. M.-Y, P. F, (Parish House).
AWNINGf, WINDOW SHADES, SUP (f)VfRS
~ VENETIAN BLlNDS·UPHOLfTERY
PHONE RIDLEY PARK 600 - PROSPECT PARK,PA.
)lOW, 'tOURE ALWAYS
LATE· WHY YOU WERF
EVEN LATE s:'OR
~'tOIIR
WEODl"OI
1 WASN'T
LATE EIIOUGH!
RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
SUNDAY
9:45 A, M.-First Day School.
9:45 A.M.-Adult Class. Rabbi Herman
E. Elsenberg. of Chester, will
speak on "The Synagogue in
the Past and Present."
11:00 A.M.-Meeting for Worship 1n the
Meeting House.
WEDNESDAY
~~3? A, M. to ~:30 P . .M.-Sewing and
~f. !~ge~~~I~:~tt~~:Q~use- Box luncllCou,I
THE
"0
PP( N(j Ell"
n
n
IF ,(OU ASK ME
i Dozen 75c
Valentine's Day
14
I
IT5 ,HIRTY M1NU,E5
PAST lHEA,ER ,IME
H EGGS
•••
»,
IJllace Your Order Now
for Dclivery on
0/ Theatre
Feb, 11 &. 12
\Valler U'inl'hell, Simone Simon
Bell Bernie - Bert Lahr
In
This issue includes the much dis-
cussed "Inside Nazi Germany-1938"
On the Corner
Prospect Pork
Free I'nrking-Rear
Added
. -
THEATRE
with
JCl.ln
MICHAEL'S
College PI,a,.",aC'1
~---~~-~~I------~
~
Sonja Henie
Don AUleche
News!
I
"BAD BOY 0[0'
BRIlIfSTONE"
SIarl,'i TOlIa),
I
E'I
1""ri(Jay, Feb. 25th
Feb. 18.h
e,achl:~~~~~~~~~:::::~~~~~::::~~~~~::::::::~
II .
F10wers
"}'OU'RE A
SWEETHEART"
'ril'kets must be secured by
BueHNER'S
M4RTJ:L'S
TO~IORROW
A heart·shaped box filled with wonderfully
delicious candy i. just the thing lor a Valentine
gilt,
"QUEEN VICTORIA"
..
I
""r-,'>' MUST BE MAILED
TilE
JUNIOR WOMAN'S CLUB
OF SWARTHMORE
•
PETER E. TOl.D
V A LENTINE!
* ••
Mrs. I~ex Gary, of Yale ,WeIlUl', entertained at a ~lllall tl'a on ).Ionrlay aiternoon
uf Ihis wcek.
Insure Every Hazard
'I
* • ..
*
-
.
L
•••
* • •
shoes were blood-smeared when I
L. W. V. Hears Rollin P08ey I~: hd~1 un the 19th ?t 9:3~ I': "I. in the! he nH)kl'd hy SOlUe of thl' Sl'tHitS. The
walked through there.
'1'1 11.' 1·'c...,ruary
I . '
That is why I am asking you today
lIIel'tl1lg uf the Swarth- C,lrlI Sl'fHlt I·louse. J'.ach gIrl IS to hrillgJ I)rel)ar.atioll of this l11l'al will 1'1I.'.I,lc .'o"le
morc
League
of
\Volllell
Voler
.. I -II tOtl s. :11111 suaI' tt, do soap l·arving:. E\'cry- of the J.:irls to rUlllph.,te thdr lJIerit haclgc
-you and all your fricnds and countryTHE SWARTHMOREllN, INC,
.
Il
I
'I
··1
11
II
IV
~
\\as
l~ .asked to stay for lolldl whkh will in l'oukillg.
PubUsher
lIlen :-Hell) us stop this war.
111
Oll( ..\ cmona
.a
cclllcsday, 1'!c
1.'1>-{ •OIlC
_____________________________________
,
,
Affectionately yours,
rllary 9.
!I
(Signed) Mayli1lg Soong Chiang,
PETER E_ TOLD
The president :\1 rs. Thomas Juhnson
(Madame Chiang Kai-shck)" anllounced thal thl're would Ix: a joiut
Edilor
JIIt'cting with tlu.! Swarthmore \Voman':,!
Christian Science Church
ROSALIE DRYDEN
Club
011 February 1.2 at which time ~lrs.
News Editor
J.
O.
Hopwood wuuld sl)cak 011 Currcnt
"sour' is the subject of the Lesson- I.cgislatioll.
Phone Swarthmore 900
Sermon in all Churches uf Christ, ScientEDtered as Second Class Matter, January 24,
~Irs. J. Paul Browll announccd thel
ist,
UII Sunday, February 13. 'rhe Golden
1929. at the Post OIDce at Swarthmore, Pa.,
Valentine
llarty of the Ll'ague to he held
under the Act of March 3, 1819.
Texl is: "~Iy soul shall he joyful in
Oil February 11 to. rai!>c fl1l1(~s ior thel
the Lord: it shall rejoice in his sahaNOTHING BUT INSURANCE
\\ork thc Le
1938
I tion" (Psalms 35 :9).
)'lrs. Peter E. Told ~Iltroduced the
417 DARTI\IOUTH AVE,
speaker
of
the
afternoun,
Dr.
{{dUin
Leiter From lIf"dame
I\lethodist Church Notes
SWARTHMORE 1833
Posey. Dr. PUSl'Y :-.puke on "The Cit\'
Chiang Kai-Sl.ek
Sunday Illuming at JO (/clock, Dr. ':\ianagt'r Plan in Ol)eration:' He ga\'~
The Swarthmorc:lIt is illdebtcd to H. :\Ifred \\'illiams will address thc lUelll. a hi~to~)' 0,( the pia II and ~hl'll. I'roceedl'dll~..............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................''''
Lindley Peel, of Columbia avcnue, for bers of the h!.uulIu Tahle )'lcl1's Bihle to outllllc Its ~ctul' ~"J(I gl\'e Ib advant-I
agl',:: ami dislti\,antages. This 1)lan proGIVE HER A PRACTICAL
pcrmi!:lsiol1 to rel)rillt thc following let- Class,
\'~des
for
two
I)o:-.iliulls
at
tlte
head
of
al
During
the
1II0rning
worshil)
Hugh
ter which was writtcn by Madame
AND LOVELY
Chiang Kai-shck to a group of hcr BOlJlh.::r will playa \'iulill ~ulo and a ... sist l'Ity-the olle :, .:\Iilyor whu is the pol.
Wellesley classmates, among them Mr. the Sellior Choir 111 the renditiun of iliciall ami ceremonial head and thel
other the ")'lallagcr" who is head of the
Pccl's sister,
its anthem.
Frolll
"Head{IUarters of the Gcneralissimo
E\'enillg worship, at 7 :45 o'c1o!;k, will :Hh~li.lIistratiOl" :tnd h~l~ llothing tu do with
J)ulthcs.
IIc
IS
aPJlo~lltcd.
I~y
Cuuncil
and
I
Nanking, Novcmber 7, 1937.
'
have as its guest speaker H.c\'. Harold
1I~lIally Sl'rn's 3n Illdehmte tcrm. This
It was a grC
).ro\'icil's for it 1IIi.1Il tl'aillcd in city!
your joint ll1t'ssage writtcn at the
110nday c\'cning at 8 o'clock there
8 Park A "enue
Swarthmore 240
administration
who Ita:' timc to work it
IUllch which Leonard Hso address cd, will he a church school Board meeting
The lettcr brought me right back to at the home of ~liss Eleanor Shilln, 314 Illlt "ithont cerclllllllial distractioll. Tile
Hosiery, Accessories, Lillgerie
"City .:\Ianagl.'r plan" is siml,l!.!r ami decollcge days-happicr days thall those I.afayeuc a\·elllie.
wc arc living now in China.
Polly Huot was hostess Monday L:\'CI1lines thl'alld
authurity
dearly-of
persoll more
working
under it. A
We did not want this war aud tried iug to the cabinet of the Epworlh League hUH'au
our best to prevcnt it. nut it has becn which held its n'gular monthly mecting discl1s ... iull followcd Dr. I'osc\"s talk. )'lrs.
OUALITY WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE
forced Upon us and, now that it has at her homc at the corner of Princclon J:KIJUc~te thclI.~p(l~e :-ohor.!), ~Il the United
CampaIgn Willdl IS abullt to descend Ull
becn started, we have to fight it to a and Lafayette avenues,
Swarthmorc. Tea was scn'ed,
finish. Our national existence is at
I I •
I ••
stake. Thc whole country realizes it
Trinity
Church
Notes
Sigma
Xi
Lecture
and stands united behind the Government. We do not know how long we
\\,ith an asscmbly ruolll and guod spirits ..On TlIcsda~', Fehr~lary .15th, a Sigma!
will be ablc to resist, though every I)uth o\'crflowing tile Congregational Din-I XI le.eture. Will. be gl\,cn til the Edward
soldier is ready to die at his post, and lIer, Oil \Vcdncsdav night was a grcat ~Iartlll BIOlogical Laboratory at 8:301
evcry farmer to hold out.
~ucccss. It lIlal'ked - the sixth anni\'ersarv
)1. b.r Dr. Peter \'an de Kamp, DirccThc rest of the world is slowly real- of the t1se of the new church huilding. tor ol ~hc Spn:t.11 (JhSl·~'\'atory. SW:lrthCheSler Road at Rutgers A "e., Swarthmore, Pa.
izing that China is fighting 1I0t only The musical program included a dramahc 1I10re. Colkgt'. I he suhJcct of Dr. \'an
her own hattlc, hut their hattlc as well, reading by Dr. Lucius Rogers Shero, en. d~ .1"111I1::s talk will he "The In\'i:ooibk
SWARTIIMOItE 2100 - llEDIA 900
If Japan should conquer China, no one titled "The Selfish Giant," by Oscar Ll1Ivl.'rse,
, .
.
can predict where her ambitious leaders \\rilde, sct to music hy Lisa l.ehman1l. x.AII ~1I.elllh~I's .of the SOCIety of SIgma
will stop. They nre determincd to es- Sl'\'eral solos werc sling by Donato Cula-" I rt'sl
tnblish a continental empire. They are femilla. Both Dr. Shero and )'lr, Cola- ,,:lto,1l1ay he mten'sted arc cordially illexecuting their notorious Tanaka Plan
fl'mina were al"companied at the pianu by \ Itl'C to attl'lUl.
step by step. And Tanaka's ambition
-------.
••'100_----.lIrs_ Saillucl Dycr Clyde,
was the establishment of Japan's rul~
Girl
_
Scout
____
News
I
The Yuung People's Felluwshil) will
throughout thc world. 'Vith the worM
N <:xt \\' e<1l1e~day afternooll at .1 o'dm-k!
situation where it is at prcsent, with l1ieet in the Parish HOllse 011 Sunday
Tn)!!)) 2 will mcet ill thl' Cir1 Seout lltltl~l'l'
C\'cning at 7 o'clock.
the indifferellce of thc democratic
The Re\,. ). Jarden Gucnther and .:\[rs. on Cre~~oll lalll'. Patrol Stunl\' Pine will
Powers, Japan's aim-phantastic though
Guenthcr
havc im'ited the foreign stu- C1ltcrt'lin the other )J:.ltrols with a party.
it lIlay seem-call be attained.
dcnts and American students from abroad, ~Irs. Sal1lud \\'isdum. of Vassar avenue,
\Vhell I say "the rcst of the world",
who arc nnw at Swarthmorc Collcge, to has hecl( as~i ... tillg with thc work of
I do not mean the govcrnments, hUi
I
an "International SUIIIK'r" at the l{el"tor\' Troop 2.
the labor unions and private organizaon .sunday evening at 6 o'clock.
Troop 2 was n·))I·l·~t.'Iltcd hy :\[ rs.
tions who-up to now-are thc only
The \Voman's J\uxiliary will meet in U, I.a\\'!', ':\Ir!>i. Ilcllry J lallzlik, :\h'~, \V.
ones that have eXlended to our country
the
P
2
:30
u'clock.
tlte I rOOI) COlllmlttCl' :\:o;sOl'latltlll lIIeet- I
luctant to apply sanctions, so public
ing held Tue:-.fiay lIIurning at Six,,·· I
opinion demanded a boycott, Thc movcNinth :-;tret"t.
.
mcnt is spreading in all parts of thc
Prcsbyteriau Church Notes
There
will
he
!H) lIIeeting (Ii Troop 16
world, al1d the morc pcople adhere to it
tOl1l0rrow tin alTUl1l1t or the holi(I;l\. I,in-]
and refuse to buy, sell and transport
Sunday ).Iorning at 11 o'c1uck, the pascoin's
Birthday. :\ J'l'guJar mcctll;g- will]
Japanese goods, the more chalice there tor \Viii preadl on the suhject "In God
will be for this oloody war to terminat..::: \Vc Trllst."
at an early date.
Ill-, Emory \V. Luccock, D. I)., will
Thc elc\'cn of you can be a power hc the special speaker ior the mcn's class
in promoting China's calise in America. Sunday morning at I) :45 Dr. l.m:l:ock is
Pray for tis-yes, but at the sallie time, pastor of the comlllunity church of ShangTo those of you who are not greatly concerned with Quality, an egg 15 an egg.
One visit to the Sandy Co\'e Fa.rm, Northeast, Maryland, .. , And seeIng the new
do what you can to carryon the boy- hai, China, and has heen in the war zone
Model ScIentific Indoor Poultry Fa.rm with its batter of layers wlll convince you
of the great difference in so called fresh eggs.
cott movement.
until a few weeks .ago. :\11 mcn arc illI shall not tell you about thc horri. \'ited.
ble atrocities we have hecn witncssing
A play under the directiun of Charin our country for the past three les
~litchell and sllllnsored hy the
months. You wil1 ha\'c read about thcm church aid cOlllmittee will he gi\'en at
in the papers. I have seen thcm wjtlt th .... Players Club on Friday anu SaturTHE HOOP SKIRT AND BUSTLE ERA OF POULTRY RAISING Is still found on
my 0\\,11 e:!,cs, those terrihly manglcd day c\'enings, )larch IS and 19. Procel'ds
many farms where chickens roam the disease Infested ranges, eat Insects, and
table scraps. and develop under the most unsa.nitary conditions, Eggs He in nests
bodies, I have heard the children call will be uscd for church school rooms
Order Your Flowers Early
continuously warmed by n succession of laying hens where they lose vitamin
their dead parents, at Shanghai. 11)' and supplies. Tickets are ior sale and
content and spoil easily. You'd be horrified if )o·ou knew the life history of those
For
"fresh" eggs you've been buying, with pathetic trustfulness from your huckstercan he ohtaincd from )'Irs. ThOll,,!!> Jackfarmer.
'
~OI1, Swarthmore 1792, and ~lr:-;. Agnes
CHURCH NEWS
CONTRAST TillS llETIIOD WITH THE NEW SANDY COVE BATTERY
Sllcldl'n, S\\'artllIlU)re 585.
METIIOD ••• SEE AND TASTE TilE DIFFERENCE
SWARTHMORE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
C(lacll l\lark ).Iaclllto.-;h, of Swartl1l11tlre
February
Rev. DavId Braun, Minister
Colkgc, wilt sl)l.~ak to the yuung people,
In ? large .~mnilar,.. air conditioncd scienlifically cOlIslructed building,
SUNDAY
...
I
. I
9:45 A. M. _ Sunday School,
"llll{ ay Illg It, at G, 011 the topic "Religion
e([UII)I.cd Wllh Ihe best UPlmralllS Ihat ..... oderll research hilS produced
For :Mother, Wife or
9:45 A.M.-Bible Classes.
and Your I,ifc \Vork"
(~ny-old chieks rUI)il.lly grow In mat!.rity.i ... absohllely dean surroundings:
Cnged,
fre(~ from diseuse, fcd ~peclal 1I11xl.urC!!i, these chicks devclo(, into
11:00 A, M, -~i~fn~~:ac~O~~I~.I~'iJo~ra\V~
The \\'oman's Association lied:; ToSweetheart
lendcr~ full ~avnrcd birds, .Ierfcct for your lable. }'resh laid cggs roll
600 P M
~ust."
day, Friday, the lIth, iur :til all (lay
down Inlo Wlrt~ Iroughs where thc) cool l)rnlu'rh' and keel. their full
:
" - oung PeoJple's Fellowsbip.
Illeeting with IUIll'ilCOIl at 1 o'durk and
11u,\·or. Her luck c)f cxerdst~ ('nuble!'O the 11('11 to collt'cnlrah~ morc food
TRINITY CHURCH
dnotiunals at 2 o'do('k h·d I,,' )'lrs
\'ulnc in her egg which I1lCml~ \'itamin IHICkt,d Jolks and meaty albumin.
Protestant Episcopal
TI
."
,. '
. : ..
Baltimore Pike, Springfield
Chester Road aud College Avenue
101~I,b S,lInl~rs, 1 he regular Imsllless
E"cry ('gg i:-; of guarnntet'd ",eight, uufertile, .. ntl \\-huh'somc. Thcy arc
Rev. J. Jarden Guenther. S.T.M,. Rector meetIng \\'111 follow the dl'votiunals.
unexcelled for ("hildren, ("on\'alcsc('nts, fastidiulls folk, nnd house\'o'i,,'cs
Sw.urthmorc 450
who are shrewd judges of Ilualily.
8:00 A. M. _ HOl:~~~~unlon.
The \\' omall's :\1 issionary 11ecting will
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDA.Y A.T
SWARTHMORE, P ....
tiol!" UpOIl the hirth of a SOli, \ViIlialll!
F. I.l'l', Jr., 011 Friday lIIorning, February I
-I, ill the Fitzgcmld ltcrcy Hospital, l.all5-1
dO\\,IIl'. The haby is a grandson of ~Ir. and
* * *
unlay evening .
• • •
THE SWARTHMOREAN
TEE SWARTHMOREAN
~I r. and At rs. \Villium A. Dc CaindrY'1
of Haverford place, anllounce the birth
of a daughter, Mary Virginia, at the I
Fit;>:J{l'rald ". ercy Hospital, February 2.
Kcnt Roho, 01 Cornell an'IIU(.', clltcr·
tailled abuut twcnty c1assmatcs of the
l'ighth grade with a ,Icssert party befure
~Ir. and ~lr:.o. \\'i!liam );1. llan-cy, of thc dancing das:oo.... ~ last Saturday cven·
Columbia anllUl', allli 1\1r. ami ~lrs, D. ing,
~[:tlcoll1 Hodge, of Slrath Ila\'cll ;:n'l't1l1t'.
I Jr. anti :\ir.s, George B. Sickel, of
wcre among those who l'lltl'rtaillcd before the Charity BOlli oi the . \meri...-an Str.111l !layen ayellUe, entertained informally at (Iinllel' and canis last SatLegion last Friday c\el1ing-.
• * *
~jr:-.. C. ~lal'J)ollald
I
Births
1938
BUT ~ON'T WORRY,
I'M NEVER LATE
TO 1A~f. AOVAN1A<>E
FINE SElIYIC.E
OFFERED15Y
,HE
KUPPINGE.~:S
hams. 6().1 University place. De\'otionals
will he conducted hy ).Ir:-;. :\ Van Alell.
~r r~, Fn'dcrick.A Child will I)resellt a
. "
'lI~)k r~,~'lew of "\Vhat b This ~loslt'l1l
\\orld:
'1'1 v
1\'
,. .
le.l Ol11l?,
omall.s Gll1ld will lUeet,
Thllr~day, t'ehruary ]7, at ~ o'clock in
tl·
" .
I
le e\ellmg:-. at llc homc of llrs. J.
J h,ward Smith, 011 Park a\'Cllue. ),1 i':"
Cl'l)r~e )'Id-:e:I'~ \\i11 !t-d thl' dc\.c)ti"lh
:\!i~~ 1\(lclille Strou!>c \\ill re\il'\\' th~
I
I
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
hook ".:\Iccca and Beyond."
Clarence F. carter, A.B,. B.D., Minister
The Churdl Citizenship Class,l'olHlncted
SUNDAY
',by thc pastor will mect in thl' church
9:45 A. M. - ChUrch School.
11:00 A. M. _ Morning Worship.
i stll(Iy, Sunday llIorning at 10 :15.
7:45 P.M.-Evening Worship.
1
The Church School Nursery will he
PlRaT CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST'I' hdd fr.om II to 12 011 Sunday morning
SWARTHMORE
I for duldrC'Tl, ages olle to Se\'('ll E\,en-.
P sr kOAFvenue
below Harvard
' , .
..._
11:00 A. M:, _ Sunday School,
lone. IS tUntcd to a \'all himsel f of this
11:00 A, M. -Sunday Lesson-Sermon.
: scrVICl'.
.... \V
'G .
Wednesday eVening meeting each week 8' TI Y
p. m. Reading room open dally. except
IC
OUIl:-oman s 111M hcld a soc·
and hOUda" 1 to 4 P. Mo. Church, ml last e\'elHllg at 8 t,'c1ockk at the hOl11l'
AlfCare cordially 1nvlted to attend the I of )'frs. Horace Juhnson on ."\mherst
i avcnue,
services and use the Reading Room.
::ll
sun-I,
ALWINE'S
:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!:::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~::
____
~IARTEL'S
-
Synonymous wit" Fine Eating
MARY ANN. YOU
THE WAY
SET A FINE TABLE
KEEP A MAN
CONTENTED,MY
~~
SO I'VE FOUND OUT.
WITH THE AID OF MY
COOK BOOK,
MARTEL'S
FEBRUARY 11, 1938
THE SWARTBMOREAN
Trudy Enders, Katharine Downing, Ann
Myers, Laura Lee Hopkins, Helen Kraus,
Pauline Deacon and Shirley MacMillan.
• • •
•
Mr. and Mrs ..Charles Israel, of Prmceto~ ~venue, will leave t.omorro,,! for
MIamI, Fla. where they will reOlaln for
a week.
Mrs. J. Wheeier· Ailison, of Rutgers
,
W
avenue,
at luncheon,
ednesd
F bentertamed
9
ay, e ruary ' . • •
I
Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank MacElwee. of
Wilmington, Del.. are recovering from
pneumonia at the home of their son
and daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin R. MacElwee, of Holyoke place,
where they were staying during the
latter's trip to Florida. The younger
MacElwees just returned home SundFay • kMrM· .tMhalcIElwede'. MsistersW'
ran
J c e
an
n.
J
Uffem
I a n, of W,·Im·111gton, came t 0
Swarthmore to be with the patients.
NEWS NOTES
I , E G E STUDIESlv.n, Conn., will conduct the Round
C OI
_ L!
Table discussion of Interior DecoraDr" and Mrs" Arthur J, Jones, of
VOCATIONS tion; Miss Gladys Carlson, of Straw.
hridge and Clothier, has agreed to con- Dickinson avenue, spent last week·end
----ti-sider Department Store work; Miss itt Atlantic City, N. J.
• • •
Ontslantling Speakers in Varied Ruth Waldo, of rhe J. Walter Thom~Mrs. }. Warren Paxon, of Vassar
Fields Schedull' Two MeetSOli Advertising Firm, New York, will
•
0
• 'Publi
lead off the Roumi Table group on avenue, will have as her guests for
lugs pen
C
Advertising; Mrs. Mary C. Cookman, tunch preceding Mrs. Leonard C. AshNew York Manager of the Ladies' tion's concert next Wednesday,• Febru
M ..
011 Friday and Sat" day, Ffbruary 11 Home Journal, will discuss Publishing ary 16, Mrs. Harold Goodwln,
rs.
and 12, a Vocationa Conference for as a Career while Miss Alice Hughes, Joseph Perkins, Mrs. Arthur R. O.
Mrs. C. MacDonald Swan, of South
t he bene fit of the \ men students is Columnist, ~iIl consider the opportuni- Rcdgrave, Mrs. Jqseph Allison, Mrs.
Dwight Cooley, Mrs. Joseph Seal, and Chester road, entertained with luncheon
Mrs. ~h:ules ~vans. of Strath Haven
to he held at Swarth'lOre College. Fri- tics of Journalism; Miss Mary Pen- Mrs. George Ewing.
and. bridge, Monday, February 7.
~venue,
IS Impr~VIDg at her home followday evening at 8:1~ in the Meeting Ilington, of New York, will lead a group
Mrs. Harold Griffin will also enter• • •
mg her recent illness.
House, there will be a open meeting, at investigation of Scientific Work; Mjss
before the concert, at her home on
Mrs. Harold R. Goodwin, of Rose
• • •
which M iss Dorothy; timson, Dean of Grace Hayward. Placement Director of tain
Rutgers avenue. Her guests will in- Valley, entertained at a tea, Wednesday,
W. Yarnall Cleaver will return from
Goucher College, and' Miss Mary Tol. the Katharine Gibbs School in New elude: Mrs. Henry W. Linton, Mrs. February 9.
Perkiomen School this evening to spend
man, Placement Dirfctor of the Wo- York will direct the discussion of Sec- Henry A. Peirsol, Mrs. R. Chester
the week-end with his parents, Mr. and
mcn's
Educational, and
Industrial rctariat \Vork; and Mrs. Anna Erich- Spencer, Mrs. J. H. Hornaday, Mr~.
Dr.
A.
F,
Jackson
and
son,
John,
of
Mrs.
H. Paul Cleaver, of North Chester
sen, Catalogue Reviser of the New
Jacob F. Meschter, Mrs. J. Wheeler Park avenue, spent part of this week in road.
~;i~~U~f~~yB?;~~~~~s::~~,b~/l:~cSP;::e:~ York Public Library, will add her ex- Allisoll, Mrs. Arno Viehoever, Mrs. Spartansburg, S. C. where Dr. Jackson His ten-year-old sister, Carol, has been
cnd Employment Agency of Philadel- pericnce to the consideration of Li- George M. Ewing, Mrs. C. B. Camp- delivered a paper on Tuesday at the meet- ~onfined to bed by illness this week.
phia, will address the student body in- brary
Service.
• • •
A spccial
student committee consist- bell, Mrs. Sidney Johnson, and Mrs. ing of the Southern Society of Orthodonformally on the subject of Occupational ing of Seniors and Juniors under the Irvin R. McElwee.
tists. Dr. Jackson continued his trip to
Mr, and Mrs. Horace P. DeVoll are
t
t d
d
S auraya
Supply an d D eman,on
Florida where he will remain four weeks, expected to return tomorrow to their
V
.
lAd'
I :15 ill the Meeting Housc, Mrs. D. C. direction of the .ocahona. Visor
Nancy Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. stopping at Orlando. and John returned home in The Swarthmore after a month's
Prince, President of the Pennsylvania has uc-en at work smce Octo~er pl.an- \Yitliam Sproul Lewis, of Swarthmore home.
motor trip through Florida. .
Questionnaires
B rane I1 0 f tl Ie L eaguc 0 f \V omen V0 t - iling for the conference.
t
11 S nio
omen
erSt will speak to the Seniors and Ju- were se~lt out o. a
e r w
fourth grade
CotJege classmates
avenue school
at
will entertain
of the
.
t
d·
t " · tl C I from willch tabutahons were made con- avenue,
11I0rs a· ·a mller-mee mg
III
le
0 -.
.
f
h·
f
•
a
Valentine
party
tomorrow
afternoon.
"
0 ~ cernmg the occupatIOns 0 c Ie mterIegc d UHlig-room on C reatmg
ne scst
Onh
· 0 f th ese resuIt s th t:t c baSls
O wn C areer.
Mrs. Joseph Moran, of Kenyon ave'
round-table program has been arrangnue,
will entertain on Valentine evenRound-table discussion groups have ed. And individual interviews with Mis5
ing.
he en planned for Saturday morning and Tolman have been scheduled for those
afternoon on fields of work interesting women "\,,·hose interests are too special:M.iss Mary Francis Dimmitt. oi
to college graduates. Miss Amy Philips, ized to be included.
Swarthmore
Place, celebrated her twelfth
of the West Chester Friends School,
In order that the discussion may be
Miss Ruth V/auger, of the South Phil· as valuable and bcneficial as possible, birthday on February 2 by entertaining
adelphia High School for Girls, and the enrollment of the round tables has twelve of her friends at a supper party.
Miss M. Eunice Hilton, Dean of Syra- been limited. But all friends of the
),{r. A. Prescott \ViIIis, of Columbia
cuse University, will lead the Teaching College arc cordially invited to attend
avenue, was called to Avon Park, Florida,
and Deanship discussions; Miss He- either of the open meetings in the
by the serious illness of his father, Willaine Todd, of the Family Service So- Meeting H:o:;u:;s:.:e:;.'..........._ _
liam
E. Willis, who 51)Cnt the month of
ciety of Philadelphia, will direct the
October
111 Swarthmore with his son and
Social Service discussions; l\fiss Mary H. S. Basketeers at
family.
Tail of League
Elizabeth Pidgeon, from the \Vornen's
Bureau of the Department of Labor,
Mrs. S. T. Carpcnter, of North Chester
The High School basketeers lost two
at Washington, will discuss the Field
of Government Service j Miss Ruth morc games during the past week and road, was welcomed into the Delaware
Adams, Interior Furnishings, New Ha- arc now in a tie for last place in league County CoHege Women's Club when it
standing with Prospect Park and Darby, held its February meeting Tuesday even·
each team has lost eight and won two. ing, February 2, at the home of Mrs.
Buy Mason-Heflin's LAUNDERED
Tuesday, Glen-Nor topped the Garnet D. J. McLane, of Brookline.
coal and gel Famous Reading
30-24 Swarthmore played a steady game
Mrs. George L, Armitage entertained
Anthracite - all coal. Prompt
l,;ut trailed from the first few minutes of informally at luncheon and bridge at her
the game. Ridley Park won a thriller, home on South Chester road, Tuesday,
delivery from a conveniently
last Friday. by scoring in thc cxtra per- February 8.
located yard.
iod, to finish ahead of a game team that
had llulled up and evened the count durMrs. Harold Griffin, of Rutgers aveing the final regular period.
nue, entertained at luncheon before the
Games, on February 11 with Darby meeting of the Woman's Club on Tuesand on February 15 with Collingdale day. February 8. Her guests included
EGG
will he played away.
COAL
CO.M rs. Elwood )..{. Rowand, Mrs. Ben·
STOVE
•
jamin W. Collins. Mrs. Arthur R~ RedMain Office 41h & Allegheny Ave.
Mothers Consider
Cash Price
gra\'e, Mrs. Charles Israel, Mrs. Alfred
To order, phone
Reading Problems Gary White, all of Swarthmore, Mrs.
Miss Marjorie Hardy, Princil>31 of Leslie M. Clarke, of Springfield, and Mrs.
the Kindergalten and Primary Depart- Benjamin J. Cook, of Rutledge.
ments of the Germantown Friends School
Alice Putnam, •of *Maple
* avenue, enterOr call your Local Mason-Heflin Yard
·discussed "Reading" with the Kinder- tained with a dinner pitrty last Saturday
garten Mothers of Swarthmore Wed- evening in celebration of her twelfth
Phone Swarthmore 6
nesday aftemoon. The program was ar- birthday. After dinner the party attended
ranged by Mrs. Charles W. Lukens.
a movie. Guests were Dorothy Shaw,
,M::;
*• •
,
*••
• *•
:=================================
*••
***
*••
•••
*••
**•
The Best of the Better
Coal for only
• ••
5C more
•••
Mason Heflin
NUT
NEBraska 9800
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Look the world
over for fuelsKOPPERS COKE
;s tops!
Regardless of the kind of fuel
you're burning and the kind
of satisfaction that goes with
It. Koppers Colle will give you
a NEW IIlnd of heating satisfaction! Here's a fuel that's
scientifically manufactured
for ONE purpose - to heat
your home satisfactorily and
ecanomically. Light ••• clean
_ _ _ long burning _ _ _ easy
banking_ Koppers Coke (the
fuel ,hat hardly leaves any
ashes at aliI) will give you
tons of heating comfort you
never dreamed possible_
Phone your order today.
jl>PPERS
-~Q~J
RAINEY-WOOD COKE CO.
MAIN OFfiCE
c......."......
'01..._
r'" ...... ox' .. 61_
r.. toII ......' ,
.. _ •• r...bIo~ - . .
I
.'
'.
tween
early pictured
teachingthe
of reading
in the
Missher
Hardy
difference
befirst grade twenty years ago and her
reading methods today. "Then. the children sat in rows a!ld read quickly in turn
out of the same readers. Now it is known
that children vary in their reading abilities and interests. Educational trends
have led away from assignment reading,
and they focus on "reading ideas"-not
words. "The true reading test is not the
test of reading ability. but a child's U11constmincd home behavior toward books."
Miss Margaret Price said that years
ago a Kindergarten was not concerned
with reading. but now its chief Concern
is to prepare for reading. Reading preparedness consists in giving living experiences since the wider his experience in
understanding his world, the greater is
the child's capacity for learning to read.
It is better for a llarcnt not to help
a child learn to read if the attitude is
difficult and even though a smal1 child
wants to read before he has reached the
usual reading time, he should not be encouraged to do so ulltil we know that
he has reached the mental testing age of
six years and six months, she declared.
"It is far more imtlOrtant that he has
achieved fine dcvelopment in his large
m~scle~ and that he is socially at ease
With IllS playmates. than it is to force
early reading before his eye muscles are
ready for it."
:-liss j·la""y was particularly inlerestelt
in the corrective reading in a class roOm
ior those who might have difficulties.
({("Illcdial reading must he d()ne with a
child alone, she said, but a child who
has, !1tissed some of the early reading
tl"aJl1l1lg. can usual!y go back to early,
easy, primer material and be brought up
to his reading level. She also spoke of
"Reading Clinics for High Schools" that
are hecoming popular. uA certain grade
does 1I0t mean that children in that grade
ha\'e reached the same reading level. They
vary widely."
•••
Dr. and Mrs. \Villiam T. Johnson, of
Ogden avenue, will entertain an evening brid~e club to which they belong,
this evemng.
s
THE SWARTBMOREAN
FEBRUARY 11, 1938
Sold as the prope-rt7 of John H. Kramer. I"rees tWeDt;,-·one mlnutel Baal one hundred
Mrs. Ashton will follow with two piano IHoes parallel ...ith the aaJd HaTe. Street. one
mortg'83or and :Maurice H. Mal.lncer, real aDd elJ'hU'·aeyen and eiJ:b1 hundred &Dd MY·
4th Grade Mothers Find
"t·
"Ra
od ' B ' "
d,hundred and tweRt7·.e11: feet. Bounded Eut· owner.
enly·ftye thousahdlhs feet to a .&aIle tbeDce
composl Ions.
ps y In
mmor an wardly by landa belonain8' to Prank Szcur·
'Reading' Is Not So Simple "Rapsody
.HU by aaid Lonptretb'l land South twent;,-"
in G minor,"
I' 0 .... k1 and James L. PloszaJ. Southwardly b7
eJI: deJ)'ee8. thirt,·nlne minute. Eaat ODe bun·
" 'L earmng
.
t
d'·
I
"M"
I· d" .,\ S
F· Id"
d lands belongjng' to Stlt KmU and wife. and HAROLD L. l:RVIN. Attorney.
dred feel to a alalte in the Une o( JaDd of
0 rea
IS not mere Y
mile Ie •
n ummer 'Ie s, an WestwanUy by land" belonrJn8' to Joaeph Fld7k
IIBllnah P. Levi. and Sisten. thence a1onl"
something to be accomplished in the "Sappic Ode," three Brahms songs for' and wile.
WILLIAM W. McKIM, Sheriff.
the 8ame South als:t7·three depoee.. twent,-·
first grade and let alone." The thirty- a contralto voice, will be sUllg hy Mrs.
Improvementa cvnalllt of two .t01'7 brick =========;;;,;;;;;;;:;;,,;;;;;;;;;;= one minutes West two hundred. fol'l7·aeven
Bnd seven hundred t.wenl,·ftve thouaanda feet
fivc fourth grade mothers and teach- Robert E. Carels.
store .ntI houllt!. 2UI:50 feet: one ltor)' frame
SHERIFF SALES
to the place of beginnill&". Contalnlnl" onl)obalf
'd
1"h
I
..
addlUvn ~Ox~o fl'et· brick g8l'age 20...21 feet
crs Wh () atten d east
d I
week s We I1("S".
esc so os will be followed by a
•
,
•
. Sh('rirf'M omcp. Court Houee. Media. Penna. of Bn acre.
day afternoon meeting
at
the
Crest
I groUI) of waltz songs for two l)ian05 ami
Suld
JUt
·the
I,rol.erty
of
Michael
Mamebln
Jmprovemen18 conll18t of (wo .lory brick
'\
T W C
and Petro Lema. mortgagors and the said
Saturday. February 26. 1938
Iane Ilome 0 f n rs.
houge. 24x30 leet: purcb front; (rame addI·
.
.
rossen, a vocal quartet. Mrs., ptabler, Mrs. C..arels, Petro Lema, alld Annie Mamcblil. WilUam
Hon. JOzllj feel: ·(rame tool abed. 91:20 feet;
found out that "all of us vary in our Mrs. MacMillan and Mrs. Jackson com- Mamchin. Nicholaa Mamroin, .Iohn MlUllchln.
0::10 A. M. Eastern Stalldanl Time
chicken house. 101:10 feet.; outbuildln ... 6zU
.
b"I··
d·
d
.
d
d
.
IOlga
Manwhln
and
Walter
Mamchtn
real
OWIl
rea d mg a Iity an It oes not epen pose the quartet while Mrs. Hunt and.en.
'CondiUoU8: 121;0.00 eBl:lh or (milled check feel; frame garate. 9xl8 feet..
I th
b ' ht
t I" M
A h
·11
.
I
at time of lIale (\\nlc8tII otberwille Ilated in
on W Ie er we areI very
rig or no .
rs. s tOil WI preSide at the piano,.
I WM.. n. HARVE y , Attorney.
adverUl'emellU balance III ten d ....
Sold us the proJ)f'rt, of John Bnus and John
I •
M
dll
_ s. OIher .-no
.
BUsh.
<-ht
p
.
.
.
.
rs. Hunt and Mrs. Ashton will then I
t OilS un day ot sate.
M rs. ~ on re&en~
ff' "
H d
No. 894 EDWARD MeLAUGHLlN. Atty.
No. 17 Fil·rl F8('las
B ahm R ....:tal 0 er vanatlons on a ay en theme for u,,·arl. Facias
8
"".
two pianos.
_ _ _ _r_
December Term, 1937
September Term. 1937
No. 6&0
Fieri Facias
W
The IJrogram will be concJud(d by
All that certain lot or piece of ground ...ith
ednesday afternoon, February 16, groUI) singing of some of BTah~'s
All that certain lot or piece ot land, with tbe buihUngs and Improvementl thereon ereel.·
Deeeqi~r Tern" 1937
Mrs. Leonard C. Ashton will present a
ar- the buildings and Improvements therel>n erect· ed, situate In tbe Borough of Clifton Belchtl.
concert at her home on Elm avenue.
rangements of folk• Itunes.
situate
Southerly
side of Broadway in the Counl)' of Delaware and State of
Lot with imps. N. E. I. Ardmore Ave.•
•
Avellue.
at on
·the the
dl8tanre
or flfty
teet measured Pellllll)·lvania. bounded and deacribed M'COnI· Lansdowne
Boro., Del. Co .. Pa.• 266 ft. S. E.
The program, consisting entirely or
WC8twanlly from ChertY Street. in the Bor· ,Ug"
to u survey th('reof made by George L. from S. E. s. Mart!hall Rd. 27 Ii. by 99.33 ft.
Bralnns' COffiI>OS;fiolls,
was presented
County
Gugh
or Clifton
Heh:bts,
in the Cowlty
of PelUlo,";k. in November. 1886, as fol!ows:...
M Republican Club in
Delaware
and Slate
of Pennsylvania.
Conialn·
Beginning" at a stake In -the middle of the
Impro'·emente !ionsl.t of t.wo story stucco
earlier in the winter at the Chester Cenonthly Meeting
tlllr in Iront meuured thence Westwardly along road leading from t.he Spring-field and Darby houst·. 18x3a leet: poreb front' stu<..'CO garale
tury Club. Mrs. Ashton, who has long
the said Broadway Avenue. twent)'"·ftve feet Road to Samuel G. Levis' Milly In the Hne \UX18 feet.
'
,
Following a tour of inspection of the nnd extending of that width in lel1l0h or of land late of Theodore Hawkins thenoe
been known for her interest in classical C
.
.
depth Southwardly bet...een parallel IInell at along the middle or said Road a!ld 'by said
Sold as the property of Charles V, Goetz
music will be assisted at the piano by QUilty Juvel111e D.etentlon ~orne in rlg-ht 8ngles to the 8ald Broadway Avenue one land North four degrees. fifteen mlllu!.eB Eal.t and Florence V Goetz
,
Chester, by approxJrnately thIrty wo- hundretl flfteen feet to lands of the Media one hundred and sixteen feet and fifty.four
..
Mrs. Everett L. Hunt and vocally by
I •
•
Title and Trust Co. Bounded on the East and hundredths of a foot to a stake a eorner of H. L. FUSSELL, Attorney.
Mr R be tEe I M
Sta I M
men, a reso utlOl1 commendlOg the or-IWest. by lands of Amelia F. Manhml. Being other land late of Benjamin T. Lonptreth
.5. 0 r
. are s, rs.
n ey .L ac- der, cleanliness and sympathetic, com. known and designated 08 Lot No. 170 on Plan thence along the 83JD.e North "lxl7·throo de·
WILLIAM W. McKIM. Sheriff.
MIlian, Mrs. Thomas Jackson, of pctcnt s p rv's'on g'
th
I'ld
of Cherry Grove, dated May 22. 1923, and reSwarthmore, and Mrs. Laurence J.
.
u e I liven
e ell ren vi~>d August lao 192:J, and revIsed April 30,
~ bl
f W II" f d
there, was adopted by the Womens Re- 19_6.
~ta
.
M er,o
St bl a lUg'11or if
f pu brIcan CI u b 0 f D eIaware County at I Under and Bubject to certain restrictions as
• rs.
a er WI
0 • er a .group .0 its
meeting in Strath Haven Inn, rcoonled in Deed Book No. 564, Page &12 &c.,
Brahms songs for a lugh vOIce wIndt Swarthmore on TI r d
Feb
and aillo Under and subject t.o certain rights
will include "0 Would 1 Knew Where 3.
•
lU say,
ruary nal.
~~d I,rlvll~es
as recorded in Deed Book No.
page 3.n. Itc.
Lies
theDWay,"
Mrs. J. O. Hopwood ' wh a cond uc ted
C
' f f ""At Times
I "1'1 MySThoughts
d
"
Together with t.he right of way over a
ome
n mg, ant
le
an man. the tour, said that the need seems strh, 01 land three and one-half feet in width
to be for a State institution for men- of
the Westerly part 01 premises next adjoin·
ing on the East, extending from 8ald Broadtally deficient children, if} as much as wny Ayenue Southwardly ,t.o the rear of the
Penn hurst and Laurelton are crowded the
premises.
subjec;!t to a 8imlJar right to
ownersand
ot premises neJrt ac.ljOining of t.he
beyond capacity.
East to use Ii IItrlp of land three and one·half
Having seen conditions at first hand, I(oct In width over the Ewrlerly part of the
Community
r.~~~~[j~~~ the women feel that the Home in Ches- eaid
premises
hereby
conveyed.
extending
from
t.he
Broadway A,·enue to "he rear of said
Deposilor
~t:~r.:~~~~
to
8UD- I ter a
p t 0 b e a dequate at t h e logetiu'r
premises; making
a.nd thea seven
Bald two
of land
Garage
pears
feet striP8
wide driveway
Borrower
conservati.ve present time for ,he purpose for which which is to be used in common by the owners,
driveway and passageway for pleasure vehicles
it exists-the
temporary
housing
of for
tenants
and occupiers
of said subject
premiseson8JIthe
a
children
who have
rUIl afoul
of the
all times
hereafter forever,
law. u11til such time as their cases may cUluers
Ilar~ 01 the abutting owners. ·tenants and oeto a. proportionate part or .hare of
b e hear d , usually several days at most. the expenl>e of maintaining and keeping' the
Committee chairmell made depart. Bllid hereinbefore mentioned driveway in good
·
h
f
order and repair at all Umes hereafter forStockholder
men t a I repor t s d urmg t e a ternoon ever.
session. Mrs. Alexander Ewing and
~~;~~~~[[::::::::::: 'I
Improvements
(.'Onslalleet:
of two
st.ory
atooe and
1" rs. Homer K. Emmons reported the stu~o
house. loxa:J
Jlorch
front.
aims' and activities of the Young Reeach of these five group. of
Sold as tbe property of WillllLDl SingleY.
pu bl Icans.
mortgagor IUld Penn Building and LoaD AS80'
FOR SALE
people, this Bank has an imporFOR SALE-Young white rats. Make good
Mrs. Bessie Everett stressed the fact eiation. teal owner.
SlUff
pets. 50 cents each. Telephone Bwarth- that the womens job is to build up the HOWARD M. LUTZ, Attorney.
tant obligation. In setting our course of
more 315·W.
Republican party, see that everyone
daily action, we adhere closely to those
No. 316
is registered by April 16th, the final Levari Facias
date, and to send to Harrisburg, five
principles of sound banking which will best serve
June Term. 1037
All that certain lot or pieee of !rI'ound with
all the people in all these groups. And, in tum, each
the mee8ullge or t('nement thereon erected sit·
the Bor- uate 011 the Southwest side of Drexel Avenue
gronp repays the bank with confidence and c0Chamber, (fifty feet wide) at tho distance of three
on March hundred
and sixty· five teet Southeastward
operation-the foundations upon which our conthe Southeast side of St.ate Road (fifty
wide) in Upper Darby Townshtp, County
tinued growth and prosperity must be ~,.., ,. ,..
Delaware, State of Pennsylvania beingLote Nos. 808·800 on Plan or Drexel
Company; eontaining In front or
the said Drexel Avenue sixty feet
BOARDING - Convalescent. Aged. lDvaUd.
of tha.t width in JenK'th or depth
Chronic. 24 hour nunse'8 service. PorcheS.
bet ween parallel lines at right
D\li: acres ground. Telephone Media. '19.
said Drexel Avenue, one hun·
BOARDING
twenty·five feet.
Under and subject to eertain conditlonB and
restrictions.
Improvements conmst 01 three story slone
Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
stucco house, 18x30 feet; one story stucco
I~'i~"!;';':-DX12
feet: two story stucco addition,
stucco garab"C, Ox18 feet.
I
led.
CLASSIFIED
~
i
l
i~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~!1
I
:
OUR GUIDING
Sta~f{"'::>
To
l~~~~~~~~~~~~
SWARTHMORE NATIONAL BANK
AND TRUST CO.
FOUND-Near station, an oblong gray sIlk
searl. Call Swarthmore 335-M after 7 P,M.
RENT - AS OF MARCH lat
garage .............. ·.·.······
1 rooms, garage ...••.•............ ······
8 rooms ........................... , ... .
Apartment. 2 bedrooJllS ............... .
6 rooms.
WM.
S. BITl'LE
Swarthmore l11-J
Notary
PubUc -Insurance - Real Blta..
FOR SALE
12c
23c lb.
Carrier
(Over I lb.)
STRINGLESS GREEN
or WAX BEANS,
Tender young oues at a
bargain price!
Iceberg
LETTUCE ... hd.
5c
24 FOR 25c
Juicy
Tender, Yonng
FLORIDA ORANGES
LEGS OF GENUINE
At a real special priceBuy a dollar's worth and
save!
SPRING LAMB
Featured at the lowest Juicy Sunkist
price in years!
LEMONS doz.
23c
1937 Plymouth 4-dr. Touring Sedan,
first class condition, one owner, fully
guarantted.
IM...,SURE YOU'LL
THIS BRAND
... ~~~=
AS WELL- /'
=====;S;;H;;E;;:R:;IF;::F~.A~LE~S;:;;;;;;;;;;
Sheriff's Office, Court House, Media, Penna.
RADIO
REPAIRS
Tubes-Washing Machines-Cleaners
-INSTALLATIONSSWARTHMORE ELECTRIC SHOP
Park and Dartmonth Aves.
__
~~
____....:._....:.=-=--=.:...__
HARRIET L. TREAT
Expel"
DelJigning and Filling
GO",1Q
0/
September Term. 1037
certain brif'k store ami dwelling
lot or piel.'C of land situate on the south"ide 01 Second street at the distance of
leet measured Ell8twardLV Irom the
I "o~",!~,a".'I:~.comer
01 the said Second Street
and State of Pcnnsyl'n
8S No. 2625 West Second
I ~::::::
front on the said Second
I:
EB..!!twardly forty feet
ext.ending in
Southwardly between
All
that
~'!~~.;~~~:!:;tn~tbe City of Chester,
Remodeling
At Home or by the Day
Sw. 892
UPHOLSTERING
Furniture Restoring
Village Window Cleaner
REALLY, MADGE, IT'S TH E
FINEST GROCERY
-_THIS TOWN
RICHARDSON,
Borough Secretary.
3t-2-11
YE
A GROCER WHO
TRIES TO GIVE
'Mr~jOTT
the right to reo
Saturday, :March 5, 1938
HANNUM & WAITE
9::10 A. M. Eastern Standard Time
$2IiO.OO Cash or certitled eheck
Swarthmore, Pa. at CondUions:
Phone 1250
time of sale (unlesl> otberwlse slated in
ad\'ertisempnl), bnlanoo in ten dQl.'s. Other
1896 conditionK on day of sale.
CALL
ELECTRICAl.
No. 878.
Levari Faeias
The Harvard
IF THERE'S ANYTHING
MAKES ME MAD, IT'S
The successful
as required
by
tt~i~~~~::~:hundred
dollars
~
A. HAUGER
Swarthmore 19
A. Wayne Mosteller
Eledrieal COnlraeror
Telephone Swarthmore
MRS. A. J. QUINBY &:
58
SON
•
In AIl lIs Branches
A
N
Y
W
B
E
R
E"
The Whale Family
Profits by Mo tTler's
NEW Gas Rangel
A
N
Y
T
I
M
E
This and many other suburban families find it pays in many ways to
replace the old, tired-ont, hit-anti-miss gas range with ·0 brand new
Quality. Mother has more fun cooking- never worries about results.
And the whole family profits by grand tasting food.
Quality Gas Ranges are styled to bring color and beanty to the kitchen.
They're constrncted for cooking ease and no feature is more appreciated
than automatic oven lighting. Model pictured costs $18.50 cash. Slightly
higher on bndget plan-$2 down, 2 years to pay.
Prices Subject to Change Without Notice
.OSBl'B B. ClVDIBI
FRED J. HARLEY
PUILADEtPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Call Swarthmore 1441
At Our Subnrban Stores
MD~.~IL-
________________
~
r.r
THE SWARTBMOREAN
6
CUB PARENTS
ASSOC. FORMED
CHARITY BALL
ley, Mr. and Mrs. Frank R. Morey, Mr.
BRILLIANT SUCCESS and Mrs. John H. Pitman, Mrs. Thomas
S. Safford, Mrs. E. A. Stockton, Mr. and
Last Friday night one hundred and Mrs. Elric J. Sproat, Dr. and Mrs.
thirty people danced in the Woman's Club George Peirce Warren, Mr. and Mrs.
Meeting ToniPt to Complete House to the music by the Mazda Lane Alfred Gary White, Mr. and Mrs. ,:-.
Orchestld on the occasion of the annual Prescott Willis and Mr. and Mrs. Edw1I1
Detailed Plans for Iudi
Charity Ball of the American Legion and A. Yarnall.
vidual Dem
On Wednesday evening, Feoruary 2,
the scheduled meeting 01 parents interested in planning for a Cub Pack was held
at the High School. An enthusiastic group
organized as the Swarthmore Cub Parents Association under the guidance of
John Foster and Dr. Oscar S. Nelson
of the Boy Scouts of America.
Officers elected were chainnan, Duncan
L. Foster, of North Chester road, and
secretary, Mrs. Harold March, of West
House, North Chester road.
This meeting was the first of a series
which will be held by the Association, to
receive new members whose sons are
eligible for the Cub Pack, an" to take
the various steI)S for thorough organizatioll. The next meeting will be held this
Friday, February 11, at 8 o'clock at the
College avenue school building. Reports
will be made of the various neighborhood
groups forming into individual dens of
five to ten or more boys. The election
of the supervising den lJarent, and the
leadership of the boy scout for each
den's weekly meeting will be discussed
and planned. Booklets giving achievement
suggestions for each grade of Cub can
be prdered, and act;vities for the first
meetings of the dens planned.
Any parents of interested boys nine and
ten years old are welcome.
Speaker8 For Adult ClaN and
Young Friends
Auxiliary. This year's dance was the
most successlul one as yet planned, due
to Mrs. J. Paul· Brown's management.
Under a ceiJing of festooned red, white
and blue paller strips and with lights
veiled in blue and decorated with hanging
gold stars, a patriotic atmosl)here was
created through the chairmanship of
Mrs. C. \V. McDowell.
Refreshments of ice cream, coffee and
homemade cakes served during the intermission with Auxiliary members and
friends assisting Mrs. Rex Gary, were
followed by four final dances and generous encores. The dance cleared aIJI)roximately $]50 for philanthropic work and
appreciation is extended to all those who
helped to make this particular evening
a banner one in the Legion-Auxiliary
calendar.
- - -........- - -
DR BOOKHAMMER
'.. 'T HOME & SCHOOL
.
.n.
• •
Dorothy Waldo Phillip8. Al80
Guest Speaker on Educational
Program Tuesday
Dr. Robert Bookhammer, of the J.efferson Hospital and Head of the Clinical
Division of the State Hospital at Norristown told the parents of Swarthmore
"What Personality Traits are Dangerous?" at the meeting of the Home and
School Association Tuesday evening,
February 8, and Dorothy Waldo Phillips'
"Emotional Education Dovetailed with
Academic Educatioll, entertained them.
We are in metal health when we are
adjusted to the worM and to each other
with a maximum of efficiency, Dr. Bookhammer stated. \Ve arc what we an~,
because of our ·carly childhood, when
our personalities arc in the making; we
have only adjusted ourselves to a situation, when the result is satisfactory.
The Adult Class 01 the Swarthmore
Friends' M<''eting at 9:45 every Sunday
morning in the Meeting House, will con·
sider during the coming weeks, different
fomls of religion. Next Sunday, February 13, Rabbi Herman E. Eisenberg,
of Chester, wilt speak on liThe Synagogue in the Past and Present." All are
cordially invited to attend.
On Sunday afternoon, February 13,
at 3 o'clock in Whittier House, Lester
C. Haworth, of Wa1tingford, general secretary of the Philadelphia Y. M. C. A.,
will speak to the Young Friends' Group
and their friends on "The Age Long
Conflict." A cordial invitation is extended
to young l)Cople in the commu;;ity to cottle
to this meeting and to remain for a cup
of tea and social hour.
•
Give Free Lecture8 at Academy
The sixth in a series of ten free Monuay evening lectures on the "Natural
Sciences and Their Applications" sponsored by the Ludwick Institute at the
Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, will be delivered at 8:15 P. M.
next Monday, February 14, by Dr. Francis Harper, of the Academy. Dr. Harper
who Jives at South Chester road and Yale
avenue, Swarthmore, will speak 011 "Frog
:Musicians" telling of vocal and other
habits of frogs and toa_ds of the eastern
United States and illustrating his lecture
with lantern slides.
Patrons and patronesses were: Mr. and
Mrs. Alhert Ainsworth, Mr. and Mrs,
Herbert T. Bassett, Mr. and Mrs. Thcodore W. Crosscn, ~[r. and Mrs. James
Bacon Douglas, Dr. and Mrs. Franklin
S. Gille.fI.ie, Mr. and Mrs. Harold G.
Griffin, Dr. and Mrs. J. Jarden Guenther,
Mr. and :Mrs. \ViIliam M. Haney, Mr.
Parents arc warned by Dr. Bookhamand Mrs. T. E. Hessenbruch, Mr. and mer to look out for incipient danger
Mrs. Sewell W. Hodge, Mr. and Mr!O. traits in their children's personalities;
Albert Sidney Johnson Dr. and Mrs. the quiet, daydreaming, sensitive, or irJohn A :Murphy, Mr. a;ld Mrs. Clarence ritable characteristics are the o~es that
G. Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Mc- lead to m~ntal trouble. He described the
Cabc, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander W. Mose-j healthy nunded person as one who gets
along well with many friends, has initiative, ambition, energy, and is alert
rather than preoccul)ied. We should be
concerned he said over the adolescent
who is emotional1y shut-in or over-confident since either one is a defense against
a feeling of inferiority and inadequacy.
Dr. Bookhammer stated that mental
illness is the next great American plague
to be coped with; we have tackled tuber-I
PRINTERS
culosis, we are now engaged in a fight
against venereal disease, but we are doPHOTO.LITHOGRAPHERS
ing little to l)revent the nearly 20,000
young
people now in mental hospitals
BOOKBINDERS
from getting there. "We spend over $300,000,000 a year on our mental hospitals.
There arc now more patients there than
in our tuberculosis sanitariums J
After outlining the various types of I
mental diseases. Dr, Bookhammer said
"CHESTER'S FASHION CORNER"
EDGMONT AVE.--SEVENTH & WELSH STREETS
A THRILLING EVENT
IN OUR DOWNSTAIRS STORE
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
(Feb. 11 aud 12)
I
I
I
-
-
WITH THIS COUPON -
YOU DEDUCT
%
I
I
I
I
L
OFF
YOUR PURCHASES IN OUR
CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT
-------
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
-I
GIRLS'
Dresses - Coats - Sweaters
Pajamas - Etc.
Suits - O'Coats - Knickers
Wash Suits - Shirts - Etc.
This reduetion means remarkable savings - espeeially
sinee we have already redueed hundreds of items.
YOU MUST BRING THIS COUPON
JUNIORS WILL SEE
PLAY TOMORROW
Feb., 1928
Stove
Nut
Pea
Buck
Feb., 1937
.$13.76
$11.00
.$13.32
$11.00
$ 9.50
.$10.43
$ 8.00
.$ 7.33
It Pays to Use Good Coal
Feb., 1938
$10.00
$10.00
$ 8.50
$ 7.75
Phone: Swarthmore 10412
hea1thY.l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIANT
TIGER
S.,ORB BOUBS:
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Mon., Tues. 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. Wed.
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Thurs.
9 A.M. to 10 P.M. FrI., Sat.
Specials For Week of February 10th to February 16th, Incluaive
Cereaota 'Not Bleached'
FLOUR-12 lb. bag-
45c
Full Standard
TOMATOES
BISQUICK
Large 40-oz. Package-
25c
CRISCO 2-1 lb. Cans
35c-3 lb. can ...... .
,,
Boy Scont New8
In observance of Boy Scout Week the
th,:" local Iroo~s 01 Boy Scouis placed
th;II'" annual displays in various shop
wmdows of the Borough early this week.
On Saturday 01 next week, February
19.
Troops
I, 2, and 3 will go on·a Valley
Forge
pilgrimage.
5
No. 2 can c
Del Monte GRAPEFRUlT-2 No. 2 can&--
Del Monte Sliced
PINEAPPLE ....... .
Del Monte California
SARDINES ........ ..
Libby's BABY FOODS
3 c~n8 . . . . . . . • . . . . .
Large No.
Large Oval Can-In Tomato Sauce
2~
Can
1
19c
Gibb's or UCO PORK
and BEANS ..... . . . ..
UCO Fancy PEANUT
BUTfER-16-oz. jar-
10c
Pure GRAPE JAM
2-lb. jar ........... .
It
Carefully Candled
EGGS Doz. in Cartons
22 c
Large No.
~U~S:~. ~~.~~.
It
10
I
Sno-White
CAUUFLOWER
Satisfy
121"2"c
YOUNG, WELL-TRIMMED
SHOULDERS PORK
(6 lb. Average) .. lb.
c
hd.14c
c
Can-In Tomato Sauce
Each and Every Egg Will
Sugar Cured-Cello. Wrapped
Sliced BACON
liz lb. pkg. .........
2~
I
I
It
Libby's Home Style
PICKI FS 2 16-oz. jars
Rich, Creamy, Wisconsin State No.1
Next week local merchants will
be asked to display in their windows posters of the United Campaign.
.
The Community Health Society, located in Borough Hall, is
one of the agencies operated
through the United Campaign
which opens its annual drive for
lunds March 1.
Tree-Ripened FLORIDA
GRAPEFRUIT-tO for
"Han8 Brinker" Presented at
Player8 Club; Many New
Aetor8 in Ca8t
29
'2.50 PER YEAR
School Half·Holiday
Tuesday
In observation of Washington's
Birthday holiday the Swarthmore
Schools will have a morning ses~
sion only, being closed in the after~1oon.
The Players Club curtain will rise tomorrow on this season's third production for the Junior Membership-Mary
Mapes Dodge's classic tale of old Hoiland, hHans Brinker, or the Silver 11.________________•11
CLUB WOMEN ON
"WORLD CRUISE"
Hilarity Reigned.Tuesday· a8
Members and Friends Packed
"Deck" of Club House in
Annual Frolic .
The Mid-Winter Cruise on the good
LEGION TO ENTERTAIN
S. S. Swarthmore terminated Tuesday
AT TRI·POST MEETING alternoon in the spirit 01 hilarity on which
it was launched to sail the seven sea!.
From the port holes, members and friends
Dr. Samuel C. Palmer, of the depart01
the Woman's Club gazed at the boundSkates."
W. I. L. Program Next
ment of biology of Swarthmore College,
less
blue of the oceanJ while from the
Under the direction of Barbara Dol·
Wednesday
was given a .banquet Satur~y evt;:ning,
deck,
characteristic scenes were enjoyed
man. "Hans Brinker" will bring to the
The Swarthmore branch of the Wo- February 12, 111 Bond MemOrial Hall by
in
each
country visited. The picturesque
stage ·many who, though well-known to mcn'"s International League for Peace the managers and ex-managers of college
officers and crew attended to the slightest
fellow Swarthmoreans, will be making and Freedom will hold \ts regular athletic teams. The occasion was the
wish of each passanger, making this quite
their debut as Players Club actors. One monthly meeting Wednesday afternoon, twenty-fifth anniversary of his service to
the most comfortable cruise ever enjoyed
of these, Stephen Spencer, will play Fehruary 23, at 2 :30 o'clock in Bond Swarthmore College as graduate manager.
by the assembled multitude.
The group presented him with a golf bag
Hans, a poor Dutch boy whose father ?l.Iemorial, Swarthmore College.
Stopping first at San Pedro, the port
The program will include a play, "No and clubs, an inscribed scroll, and a
h~s fallen from a dyke ten years beof Los Angeles, several world famous
fore and lain helpless ever since. His Banners Flying", presented hy the pain!ing. ~here were seventy guests prespersonages joined the party, much to the
devoted sister, Gretje, will be played drama section of the Woman's Club ent mcludmg members of the faculty and
gratification of Cruise Director (Mrs. Wilunder the direction of Mrs. Roland G. their invitcd guests. Dr. Palmer is shown
liam E.) Kistler. Mae West (Mrs. John
by Mary Ann Hook, also new to the
E. Ullman, and several piano selections above in a characteristic pose while reE. Michael), in all of her seductive
club, but experienced in plays else . . given by Miss Mary MacElree, of The producing in art one of the plant subbeauty.
turned the full force of her charms
where. Recruited from the stage crew Mary Lyon School.
jects which provide his hobby.
upon
Captain
(Mrs. Lloyd E.) Kauffman,
• I ,
to play Peter, a kindly friend of Hans,
Mrs. James Bacon, acting as hostess,
to
transfer
thein to the redofibtable
only
is Charles Seymour; and his brother, will be assisted by Mrs. Herbert T.
Flutist
at
Next
Vesper
Service
George Bernard Shaw (Mrs. Roland L.
Jack, will appear as Voostenvalbert Bassett and Mrs. Thomas L. Lueders.
Eaton) when he ascended the gang' plank.
I I •
Schimmelpennick, the jolly fat boy who
Sunday
evening
at
6
:45
o'clock,
the
Glamorous
Greta Garbo (Mrs. I. L.
J. J'8 to Spon80r Dorothy
was "knocked down by the smelt of a
Cooper Foundation and the music de- Nickerson) closely followed by Leopold
Waldo PhiIliP8
cheese."
partment 01 Swarthmore Col1ege will Stokowski (Mrs. T. Harry Brown)
Girls in the cast are Ruth Servais,
Mrs. Dorothy Waldo Phillips will ad- Mi88 Olive Cleaves, Chairman of present Rene Le Roy with his flute,
who plays Hilda, the Burgomaster's dress the J. J.'s and interested lriends Campaign Launched at a accompanied by Professor A. J. Swann escaped from too curious eyes as quickly
as lJossible.
.
daughter; Bonny Morse as Annie, her at 8 :15 Sunday evening, February 20, at
Special Meeting of the
in Clothier Memorial.
At
Honolulu,
two
native
maidens,
(Mrs.
companion; Marian Schaue and Laura the home 01 Elizabeth Bowditch, 607 Elm
W. I. L. on Monday
The program will include selections A. V. B. Orr a.nd Mrs. J. Paul Brown)
Lee Hopkins, who play Rychie and Ka- av:enue. The regular meeting of the J. J.'s
by Mozart, Gluck, Bach, Roussel, Wi- greeted the passengers with leis, dancing
trinka, two wealthy girls who look will be held at 7 :30 that evening at the
At a special meeting of the- Women's dor, Debussy, Honegger and Faure.
to the accompaniment of Hawaiian music.
clown with disdain on the poor Brin- Bowditch home. All are invited to hear International League for Peace and
• I •
Here Charles and Anne Lindbergh (Mrs.
kers. Dick Davis will be seen as Voost's Mrs. Phillips. There will be a small Freedom held last Monday afternoon,
Stanley MacMillan and Mrs. Alexander
English cousin, and Alben Eavenson charge for non-members to assist in de- February 14, at the home of Mrs. R. C. Young Republican8
Lackey) embarked, closely pursued by
Meet
On
23rd
as Carl, a rich boy who has no time fraying the expense of the speaker.
Disque, the campaign for funds of the
indefatigable news hawkS, whom they
for Hans and his family.
Sunday evening, February 6, the group United Peace Chest of Philadelphia
A general meeting of the Young Re· eluded to escape to their cabin never
Two -players familiar to club audi- heard Mrs. Harry Miller, of Thayer was launched. This drive is a combined
ences are Ethel S. Kauffman and Al- road, tell of the nearby family it is hclp- effort spon.sored. by six. organization.:; publican Club will be held at the Strath to appear again on deck. The D~kc and
Haven Inn next Wednesday evening, Duchess of Windsor (Mrs. W. H. Linton
exander Dryden, who take the parts of illg under her supervision. The meeting for Peace 111 Philadelphia.
February
23, at 8 o'clock. There will be and Mrs. C. MacDonald Swan) accolllHans' mother and father. Doctor Boeck- was held at the North Chester road home
Miss Olive Cleaves. chairman of the
an
opeQ
forum,
discussion pf the principles panied by much luggage, graciously joined
man, the ill-natured but famous physi- of Betty Douglas.
Chest for Swarthmore, opened the
cian whom Hans induces to aid his
meeting with a discussion of the ob~ 01 the Club and 01 the by-laws which the cruise.
,lather. _is . . played .by a n~~~c;omer, John
School Board· iii. Session
jeclives 01 the dri.e al
to workers.
Frank R. Morey, was appomted to
:Mrs. Phili Jacob of the Philadellighted the passengers with a Mexican
hoven, by Irma Keighton.
the Swarthmore
School at the
dance, part of which was danced within
The scene is the interior of the represent
•
• •
.
P h·13 0 ffi Ce 0PI th e W' omen '
s I n t erna- $875 Collected to Date by
Salvation Army Worker8 the con tines of the huge hat which she
Amencan
ASSOCIation
of ISchool
t·,onal Leag u,
e n ex t sece
k t h d recen t
Brinker cottage on the banks of a .
.
.. A
. C· AdmmI
canal near Amsterdam and the action IstratlOn ~eetmg III
t antic .tty rom world events, in their effect 'Upon the
had worn. Here, too, ·a stow-away made
Mrs. George A. Hoadley, local chair- her appearance none other than Sonja
takes place St. Nicholas Eve and the Febr~ary _7 to March 3. At the .regular foreign policy of the United States,
two days following. The scenery was 1t1eeu~g of the School Board last Mon- and in connection with the subject of man of the Salvation Army Drive, re- Henie (Mary Kistler) who appeared nonpainted by Helen Jacksoll.
day mght, February 1.4. .
armaments. Mrs. Jacob also gave all ported total contributions to date of calantly skating down the deck.
There will be two performances of
The ~oard heard With mterest a rep?rt interesting picture of the brilliant work $876.75 for Swarthmore at the report
A charming Arabian dance by N ena
"Hans Brinker" tomorrow, February cOllce~l1I~g the Safe~y. Patrol showmg being accomplished by the leaders of luncheon for Team Captains at the Whitaker gave the Oriental atmosphere
19, at 3:00 and 8:15 P. M. Adults are that It IS now funcuonmg helpfully.
the various Peace groups in Washing- Bellevue Stratford on Monday, Febru- for the trip through the Suez Canal, after
ary 14.
invited to attend, hut those who can arc
Permission was granted by the Board ton and elsewhere.
which natives from deepest Africa' deSwarthmore·s quota is $1000 and since
requested to wait until the evening ~o :Miss Lee Blu~din to use the gymnas- . The third speaker was the Rev.
picted the primitive tife of the Dark Conperformance, to avoid crowding in the IUm f~r her badmmton group on \rVednes- David Braun, who again reiterated his this amount already collected repre- tinent. The natives were Mrs. J. R. Kline,
sen!s only incomplete.' returns J Mrs.
afternoon.
d~y mght as well as on Tuesday amI strong conviction in the peaceful soluHoadley hopes that the entire amount Mrs. Charles S. Bolton and Mrs. S. M.
1 hursday.
tion of world problems, and encour·
will be reached by March 1. She al>' Viele, the intrepid explorer being Mrs.
•
I •
aged the Peace workers to pursue their
Cub Parents in Fnrther Meeting worthy cause as boldly as the lorces peals to anyone who has not been given J. Francis Taylor. The huge copper caula chance to contribute or who wishc:; dron into which the latter was popped
. A meeting of the Swarthmore Cub for rearmament pursue their objectives. to add to his previous contributions to was a newsworthy member of the tribe.
Parents Association was held at the Col• ,•
The CaptaiIl's table was the cynosure
leave that contribution at The Swarthlege avenue school al 8 o'clock Friday MRS. EDGAR J. mTCHNER· morcan office or The Swarthmore Na- of all eyes when the ship was· not in port.
evening, February II. Duncan G. Foster
Bank and Trust Company im- There the honored guests graciously reHears H. M. Crist, Adopts Bud· presided, and outlined l)rcceedings of the Mrs. Edgar J. Hitchner passed away tional
mediately,
so that the drive in SwarthM sponded to toasts, G. B. S., still instisting
Wednesday afternoon, February 16,
get, Order8 Sidewalks and
previous meeting in which the Association after several months illness at the home more can reach its quota promptly.
that "Life is but a brief torch.1t Mrs.
State Dog Catcher8
was formed and officers elected.
of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
, I •
John Stainton sang a theme song for
Mae West "She's more to be censored
Borough Council in routine sessio'n
Reports 011 organizing the various Dens and Mrs. Carl DeMoll, 221 Park ave- - MRS. FLORA HUMPHREY
which compose a Pack showed that much nue, Swarthmore. She was eighty-nine
than Pitied."
CORSON
Wednesday evening, February 16, heard progress IlaS been mad
e. A
s 50011B
as oy years old.
Sunny Italy entranced the passengers
the appeal of HalUy M. Crist. of The Scouts suitable and willing to serve as
Mrs. Hitchner had maintained her
Mrs. Flora Humphrey Corson died at from the first note of HSanta Lucia,"
Mary Lyon School. Inc., for a reduction Den Chiefs have been Ilrocured and train- home in Bridgeton, N. J., where she 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at 227 Park sung by Mrs. \Villiam G. McGlathery
on his sewer assessment on the property cd by John Foster, of the Boy Scouts was a member of the Second Presby- a\'enue where she made her home with to the last note of the accordians played
owned by the school on the west side oC of ~merica, the Dens wi1l be?in to hold terian Church, but had spent the her daughter, Mrs. Howard E. Young. by Edith Kniskern and Tommy MarHarvard avenue. The matter was taken their regular weekly meetmgs. Such winters in Swarthmore for the last Although in failing health of late she shall. The romance of Spain was relived
under advisement.
~C()lIts. wi1I be credited with this activity tcn years. She was born in Deerfield, had been bedfast only since last Saturday. through the beautiful dances of the counThe Budget for 1938 was adOI)tOO. An 111 their Scout work; at the same time N. J. Surviving besides Mrs. DeMoll Mrs. Corson had been able to come and try as interpreted by Alix Field Whiadditional 2 mills was levied on the they arc helping the younger groUI)S in is a son A. E. Hitchner of Los An· go comparatively freely despite her age, taker's, pupils, Dorothy \Vilson, Polly
Swarthmorean Estates llroI.erty.
their less highly skilled efforts.
geles, C~I., and five grandchildren.
eighty-seven years.
Hoot, and Genevieve Reavis. Mrs. G.
Sidewalks were ordered placed on those
The next meeting of the Cub Parcnts
Funeral services will be held from
Born in Athol Mass on February 2 Hurst Paul. was accompanist for the
prOllerties on Swarthmore avenue between Association will be held in the College her home in Bridgeton at 2 P. M. 1851 she married'James .J. Corson, Phila~ dances. ~rs;. C. F. Wolters sang "In
Yale and Benjamin West avenues and on ?,"cnue school at 7:30 Wednesday even- tomorrow, Saturday. Interment will be
delphia merchant, who died in 1909. In Old Ma~nd..
Benjamin \\'est· avenue from Swarth- mg, February 23.
in Overlook cemetery.
1911 Mrs. Corson came to Swarthmore.
Stoppmg m France was perhaps the
more avenue to meet the sidewalk n o w l r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , She was a member of the Colonial Chap- most momentous event o! the c:nt!re c,-:Uise
laid on Benjamin West. This was ordered
ter, Daughters of the American Revolu- for her~, that controverSIal pamttng The
as a safeguard to the Rutledge school
THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
tion and a descendant of Rev. James Bathers by Cezanne was brought 011
children. V"TPA labor will be furnished.
Humphrey Unitarian the first minister board, and the passengers were faced
Sidewalks were also ordered laid on
\,,;th the question "Arc we worth $110,in Athol ' M a s s '
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 18
7:15 P. M. - Basketball vs. Ridley Townshlp ......................... R. S. Gym
Fairview road from Cornell avenue to
.:
b:d
M
y
t
h
OOO.OO?"
Before the good S. S. SwarthS urvlVmg eSl es rs. oung are ree
8:30 P. M. - Russian Cathedral Choir •..•.••.••..•.•.....•. Clothler Memorlal
.
.
d t Ile globe, tbe
the present parking lot back of the Gash-j
dd
h
. u
w·n·
E CI more h a d circumnavIgate
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19
gran aug ters. J.urs.
I lam
.
Y- unanimous
decision was that "T.he
Stull garage.
~;oo P. M. - "Hans Brinker." Junior Play •..•.•..•.........•...•. Players Club
mer,
of
Faraday
Park;
Mrs.
Walter
S.
B
tl
"
t
l1 every penny. 'I
a
~er
-was
wor
n I"S
Burgess John H. Pitman brought the
:15 P. M. - ·'Hans Brinker," Junior Play .....•.••......•..••.... Players Club
F ar Iey, 0 I Langhorne; and Mrs. Norman St I
'I
'1·11
'I
G
Z··
an
ey
~\'
acJ.\
I
an,
.L\
rs.
eorge
Iffi~requellt requests made to Borough officSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20
H unter K eedy, 0 I B eaumont, T exas; an d me" Mrs D ·ght C I
'I
J
Ials for the freeing of motor law violators·
~,
.
WI
00 ey, .1\ rs.
oseph
~~~ P. M. - Vesper Service. Rene LeRoy, ftutlst ..•..•...•.. Clothier Memor1al
Ieve~ great-grandc h 1·ldren: A nna, H ow- Perk·,ns
Mrs
Fr
d
.
k
La
M·
C
e
tQ th,e attention of Council and stated
8;15 ~: ~: =iio::'~b':~aid(; Phiitij,;;· Adch·· ·cs·j: ·j'ii ·and·ftiee:'dsElm Avenue
rd FI
R h w·lr
J
d J h
,.
e eriC
ng,
rs
ut
fJf1T Blm Avenue
aCI '
OTa,Ed.th 'Sa' ,am
, r ·, anW 01 11 W. McDowell, Mrs. John C. Moore, Mrs:
that there is a standing order that all
ymer;
I J
ra, D orothy,
a ter J W Wa
P
M E H V
motor law violators must appear before
MONDAY. FBBIUJARY 21
and Helen Farley
.
.
rren axson,
rs. . . an
the magistrate. Practically every request
8:00 P. M. - Tn-Post Meeting •••.••••• American LegIon Room, Borough Ball
..
·11 be h Id t h
Patten, and Mrs. Arthur R. O. Redgrave
F
I
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22
unera serViCes WI
e
a er . ted th· I
. .
has come from non-residents of the
10:00 A M
L W
late home at 2 o'clock th,·s alternoon, aQ1ma
. ,IS amous pa~n~tng~
;
Borough in an attempt to bring political
. _. ,:. Study Group •.••••••••.••.•••••••.• 600 Barvar'd avenue
Th Sh
0 h tr M
Jacoh Mes2 :'...
30 P.....
.. - Womans Club ....t'IlS ...•••••••.•••••••.•...••.•..• C1ub House
F
·d
F
b
18
Th
R
CI·
t
e
'p
s
rc
es
a,
rs.
30 P M
SproUl Oboe nAtory open to v\sttorB ......................
" ....11_.
r1 ay, Adams,
e maryrector
• of ethe ev.
on chter,.l.
'frs '"
.pressure to bear.
7 . to 9.
' ...-.8
naltzell
Park m
Con'v. F... G-. S wann, and Mr:'t.
Council took up the dog nuisance prob·
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23
t·
I Ch ch I Ph·1 d I h· t Anthony Ventun"" played throughout
2.30
P M
W I L n---._
Bond "em~·'
~1lgrega
ur
0
I a e p la 0 the·
.. IarIy effective
.
lem and announced that the State will
•
•
• •
•
• c .......................... ~............
-"
..... _ . '-AI _ "
wh.lch 10na
Mrs Corson
belonged
w,·11 conJourney b u t was particu
7:30 P. ".-Cub Pack Parents Assoc. •••••••••••••••••• COUege A....ue School
. .
'
when led by St"'~kowsl, ·t I d th
sefid -dog catchers to the Borough to pick
8:00 P. M. _ Young RepubUcan Club Meettng ......•.......Stl'8tb. Haven Inn
duct the services. Interment will be in . . ' .
p aye
e
up any dog found running at large with- _ _ _ _ _ _...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.JI Mount Vernon cemetery Philadelphia. Fmmsh Nallonal anthem, near Land 01
_
f
(Collll..... oa PtztI_ 81a)
a 1938 license
his col/or.
The Harold Ainsworth Post, No. 427,
American Legion, wilt be host to the annual tri-post meeting held in Swarthmore
next Monday evening, February 21, at
8 o'clock. The other postsJ the Chester
City Post and the Ridley Park Post, also
play host once each season to the tripost gathering.
.
Alben T. Eavenson is chairman of the
committee arranging next week's meeting and announces that Claymo, professi~>Dal clay modeler of world renown,
Will entertain those present. 'There will
also be a motion picture and refreshments. All ex-service men are invited
to attend whether or not they are members of the Legion.
LOCAL PEACE
DRIVE OPENS
VAN ALEN BROS.
that
our concern
was Parenthood
to create is the
fun-Ioviug
children.
only profession which does not demand
a training, he declared, and it is hopeful
that so many are asking for it.
Parents should train without olaxing,
scolding, bribing or threatening, he continued, for these methods impair the mental health of the child. "Parental authority, to be respected, Jlms, be rrspcclab/e r'
he stated. Incompatibility of parents provides poor soil for child growth.
The subtle humor and rich literary
quality of Dr. Bookhammer's discussion
delighted the large audience of parents
who heard him, In closing, he reminded
them that "It seems to ::'e the inalienable
right of the adolescent to be worried about
and the fate of parents to worry about
him."
Something new has come to tOWIl in
lh~ person of .Dorothy Waldo Phillips,
\\"lth a fresh mllld for the adolescents of
Swarthmore. She spoke once in the High
School Assembly where she aroused such
enthusiasm that the high school students
voluntarily petitioned for her return to
discuss their problems with them. She
came to the Home and School meeting
to ten the parents first what she wants
to do with the young people.
She expressed her hopes that her discussions will "build a bridge over the
gulf between the generations" of parents
~nd youth and stated that "A growing
mtellect and a shrinking personality is
our greatest problem today."
The Youth Conference of which she
was Moderator recently at Harrisburg
brought out that we need emotional educat.ion along with intellectual education,
With great humor she told of the Dale
Carnegie stu~ents in New York; and the
pathos of highly educated people who
lac~ the ability to get along with others.
It IS her hope that such work as hers in
High Schools wilt give to youth what
th~ mature adult misses and wishes he
might have had to make him a successful personality. She aims to guide teenage yOllng people to know "How to win
parents
rather than demand
from
them." She amused her audience with
her talent for mimicry, reminding them
that the rest of nature is gradu.aI, "but \
adolescence comes very suddenly!"
DR. PALMER FETED
United Campaign P08ter8
Soon
Dance for Dancing Cla8s
The student committee for the Cruise
Dance arranged for tommortow evening's meeting of the senior group of the
Swarthmore Dancing Classes is as follows: George Collins, chairman; Mary
Christine Stericker, Ernest Lange, Ann
Lingle, Jim Gary, HIllyard Sweeney,
Robert Rowand, Ella Mae Beagle, and
Mary Bonsall.
Chaperons for the Cruise Dance will
be Mr. and Mrs. Roy Delaplaine, Mr.
and Mrs. B. W. Collins, Mr. and Mrs.
H. Webster Allyn and :Mr. and Mrs. E.
~L Rowand.
Seventh grade chaperons wilt be Mr.
and Mrs. Birney K. Morse, Mr. and Mrs.
H. Lindley Peel, Mrs. Hugh W. Do\Vniug, Mr. and Mrs. Allen L. Putnam and
Dr. and Mrs. James F. Bogardus.
Chaperons of the ninth grade class will
include Mr. and Mrs. Roy Delaplaine,
Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Collins, Mr. and
Mrs. Percy' Taylor and Mr. and Mrs.
George Gillespie.
Dues
SWARTHMORE, PA., FEBRUARY 18, 1938
VOL X, No.7
Compare These Cash Prices for
2000 Ibs. of Coal (carried in)
I'
BOYS'
UIBe
,
Duel
•
Cr •
·+-a;rire ec:;mpaD1
Fire CompaD1
Are You Looking for a BARGAIN'f
JOHN SPINCIB, INC.
8th STREET NEAR SPROUL, CHESTER, PA.
I •
Pay
.Another local man who is among those
delivering lectures in this series is Dr.
Francis W. Pennell, of Moylan, whose
lecture all January 31 was entitled "In
Search 01 Plants Along the Trail 01
l.ewis and Clark," and who wHl give the
tenth and last illustrated lecture of the
Sunday afternoon course at 2:30 P. M.
~Iarch 13, 011 "Wild Flowers of Spring
near Philadelphia." Dr. Pennell is also
connected with the Academy of Natural
Sciences.
"n~
;-.' \ ;,' ,?"
~ .... ~Pa1
FEBRUARY 11, 1938
.
•.•
••
I
I
.
,
COUNCIL VIEWS
BORO PROBLEMS
I
I
c
BALTIMORE PIKE AND HIRST AVE.
EAST LANSDOWNE __________
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J
'I
1:. 1
0"
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
...,
CHARITY BALL
IIt') :\otr .1I1d :\Jr ... 1 r IIIk I{ ~Ior(',. Mr I
CUB PARENTS
BRILLIAN1' SUCCESS lIul :\Irs Jullll II 1'111IJ.l1I :\Ir~ I
ASSOC• FORMED I I I rull} IIIglll
S,IT.."I ~Ir' I A SIulkl.. ~Ir 111(1
hllmln:d U1d
lInt J
Dr l1ul ~Ir..
Meeting Tonight to Coml.lete
J)ctuiled Pluns for Indi
'iduul Dens
)
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tilt.' ..dlt.'duluI11lt:t.'img of I' II I: lit ... IlItl.'rl'sl
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at tht.' IlIgh Sdluol \n l'lIthuSII . . IIC groUIJ
til gam.l.l'd I'" tlu: S\\ trthlllllit L lIh P IrI: Ills \s .. ooallOlI Ulldu till gUHilllle of
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ddl\ulIIg kdufCS 111 tillS .. t.:f1CS IS Dr
1I
I r.lIl(l' II
1'<1111<11 .. f ~I ..)I.U\ \\h""
I he \,luit II Ass of Ihe S\\ trlhmurt: In tun: 011 J.lIllt In ~ll \\.IS 4.'lltltlt.:d In
:\tr md Mrs I nllUl... :\lu..llIIg It l) -15 lHI \ SUmll\ I St. m.:h of PI.lllls Along the frail of
.IUII :\11..
\ III( rlllllg III Illl :\i{l.:illlg Iiolise \\111 f.:UIl It\\IS ~uHI Cldrk .1IId \\II~J \\111 gl'l tilt
11111 )'Ir ... 1(1\\111 .. ult.:r ~llInll~ Iht {Ollllllg \\Hk ... (htTat.'nt 1l'lIth IIId list 1I11I ...1I11t.'d Intun' of lilt,:
f n I IJ!,I~II' "
I S tllU I l\ I t.')
I ~tll1dl\ .tftt.:mooll lourst: It!. JU P:\I
0 rIll s o
.'itX
~llnh1'1I JI I011I I \ \ 11~1
J 10\\l'1 s of Spring:
rtl.1I \ Ii H Ihl)l IlullI.1ll J 1 Ist.'lIhag
• I)
I'
II
I
IIllr
II tlt.'JllIl
r
t.'ll1It
I'" ISO
of Clnstt.'1 \\111 sllt:lk un
Iht.' S\1I1 ltlllllt.'ded \\Ith tl1(,' \lul4.l11\ (If Nltural
gll .... Ut.' In till' 1'1 . . 1 .llId 1'1 t.'''llli
\11 1ft: SIIt.'IICt.' ..
ll)nhall, 11I\lIl'd to attt.'nd
If
•
1938
Speakers For Adult Clu88 and
Young Friends
hUIII.IS
lsi
n,
FEBRUARY
THE SWARTllMOREAN
6
I
DR. BOOKHAM1\IER
AT HOME & SCHOOL
~Ir
~Ir
I
PRINTERS
PHOTO-LITHOGRAPHERS
BOOKBINDERS
Pea
Blick
It
II
1
th
our t ( lilt
rn \\.... I tIl
rt.' tit: htIs11111\
tUIlIt 1(J\IlI~
llllhhlll
Irtllthol)(l
the
'~1~~;!Bii~~~~~~~~~~Z2!~~~~~~~~~~~~I~ I
__ ~
- -~--
"CHESTER'S FASHION CORNER"
[D!.MONI AVE -SEVEN1H &
WELSH STREEIS
A THRILLING EVENT
IN OUR DOWNSTAIRS STORE
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
(Feh. 11 ami 12)
-
I
I
I
II 1111 TillS COUPON -
YOU DEDUCT
%
I
I
I
I
OFF
YOUR PURCHASES IN OUR
CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT
L --------GIRLS'
Drl'~~I'''' -
COllI, - S"".III't·,
Pajllllllls - Elc.
BOYS'
Suits - O'COllts - Knickers
Waslt Suits - Sltirts - Etc.
Thu; rl fluctlon nlcans remarkable savmgs - cSllcclolI,;
~mce "c ho\c alread" reduced hundreds of items.
YOU MUST BRING TillS COUPON
-__
, , News
Boy Scout
allu~
I
3TORE HOURS
to 9 P 1\1 -::\Ion Tues 9 A 1\1 to 1 l' l\[ Wed
to 9 P i\l-Thurs
91\ l\I to 10 P 1\1 Fri, Sat
Specials For Week of February lOth to February 16th, Inclusive
BISQUICK
Large 40 oz Package- 25c
CRISCO 2-1 lb. Cans
350-31b can
TOMATOE~No
Can
II
LIbby's BABY FOODS
3 cans
Large Oval Can-In Tomato Sauce
Gtbb's or UCO PORK
and BEANS
Libby's Home Style
PICKLES--2 16 oz
I
arge No 2'
Can-In Tomato Sauce
Rich
Cream)
I
1
Carefully Candled
c
EGG~Doz 111 Cartons
Each and Jo ven Egg \\ III Sallsh
11
10
Sugar Cured-Cello \\rapped
Sliced BACON
Y2 Ib pkg
It
Pure GRAPE JAM
2-lb Jar
\llsconsm State No
MUENSTER CHEESE
Yz Ib
YOUNG
c
WELL-TRIl\tMED
SHOULDERS PORK 121
(bib Average)
lb
2c
:================~;:===============~
i
I
LEGION TO ENTERTAIN
AT TRI·POST MEETING
,LOCAL PEACE
I
DRIVE OPENS
S
..
I
,,
(,\1.:11111~ I llnUll\ 11 I)UIIlIll (. III tn
pn"1Ciul
n
11
UCO Fancy PEANUT
BUTTER-160z 1ar-
iL---------------~i
I ~f I 1 J 'I I
I
11111 t 1tlllJlui }lICIll:I.:(IIIl,., .. ot thl.' II' I" I( f.{ Ir f rite Iller, pal sse( a\\la6Y
e >nla r ).
I I I \~mllUcn I e( Ill'S( a,) I
Jlll\IJlhll1lltlll,...,llI\\JI(ltlt.'
IIS III lIe:.s at t IlC IlOm~
I
tl
r
.
.
l'\
cra
mont
Ioranu I Ill( I 0 11 Ill! ~ t.' Iet \l.:t I
\\ h
t) f
ht.'r son III la\\ alld daughtcr, 'I
.\ r
I'-til II b on 01 ~.l1l1zmg Ihl' \ II I lib I )t'I1-.
1::\1
C I D 11 II ??1 P k
S" lar
l'SI O -alr ave
B( I tJl1rih CUlIlIlll III routmt ~l;,;"'I)]) "Iudl lOIll\HI!'.l t I uk ... ho\\t:11 thlt lllu(hl"H
lIut:
\\art lmOrl'
Ie w's clg 1t ,} -11m'"
I(
I
I
I
I
e)lUlr)
I
Hlrt 1)1 ,.,It ...... ht . . hnll lI1ull.: \ .. "0111 h BtI\ \llrsO(
II
\\ e
I
lit:
II'''!: I I 01 1111<1\ :\\ Crbt t I IhL: :-o.t.l1h . . tI1tl!JIl mel \\IJll1Ig tl ~l'nl.: b
'I
td
Ilcr
_, rs 'I
r ttc IIncr II u lmam
anle
\Iln 1\011 SdlOol lilt 1111 I ]('dui.lloni !Jell Cillds h I\e hl't.'11 prtlltlrl' I U11 tr"n hOIHI.' 11\ Bndgl'loll ~ J. \\here she
on Ills st:\\er I"SI' . . slIIlnt on Ihl.' I)lO)ll:t"hll.'tl h\ John Io .. ler ollhl Bm Stout \\t!'. iI memher of the Second Presh~
0\\1\('1111\ the . . lh~II.1 t)11 thl' \\t.' .. t .. ule ~II ~JI \lIlelH I tht: 1)t.'II-. \\111 hl.:MllI t~1 helM tlilan Church, Imt had spcnt the
II In 1I d 1\('IIUl I hl Illltll r \\ ... t Ik'l:lIl tll'lr I 1.:J.!lIIII \\l'l'kh lIlll.:tmg..
SUl h I \\ IIItt; r:. III S\\ arthmore tor the last
lllldlr UI\I . . l'lIlent
I~l lIh \\!lll)l llllhtl.:d \\lIh tit ..... Ilt1\lt\ Illl \l'lrs She \\as horn 111 Decrfield.
Ihl' Butl"..,et fOI I~HX \\ '" uloptul \11 HI Iht.'11 S( lilt \\ Irk
It thl slTlll tlllll' :\ J SUr\l\lIIg besHll's ~Irs De),[oll
"ldllltJllti 2 1l1l1l~ \ \ b 1c\led 011 thl'!tlll\ tIl ht.'ll'lllg till \IHII,.,lr,.,f HII .. till . . I SOil A I liitchller oi los An
S\\ Irlhmoltlll Istltl''' I' ro llclh
Itllll Il ... 111,.,hh . . kllll:eldloit
Igl.:ll.:!'. <.: d, and Il\c gral1dc1l1ldrcn
Suil'\\ Ilk .. \\In' 111c\I.:It.'d pillul ~ 11 th 1-.1:
I h( \Il:\:t I1ltdl1l,., III tilt (ub P 1It:llb
I ulleral SCr\It.:es \\111 he held from
JlroJlcrltl.:~Oll S\\lrlhmerc "\;I1Ilt: hd\\t:t:111 \ .. ~~t.:ltll'll \\111 ht lI111 111 th~ lellt:~l hl.:f home 111 Bridgeton at 2 P 1\1
\ til.' lilt! BltlJl1llUI \\I.: . . t "l'nUl . . mel 1\1"t.'lllll slhool It 7 ~t1 \\l1111l dl\ I.:\tll IlltllOrrO\\ Slturda~ Intcrment \\111 be
BellJillllm \\ l~t l\ellut' Irolll S\\ Irlh I Ill,.., I dlfll 11 \
jill OHri(Klk nmetl'n.
more l\eIlUt.' to 1IlCl'1 the .. 1111.:\\ Ilk nU\\ I
I lid 011 Bt:llJa1l1111 \\ l'st 1111~ \\ Is tlrdtltl
I.... t . . lll.'gli tnl to thl.: l~utllCIgl.' sdlOol!
THE WEEK'S CALENDAR
thlldrl:lI \\ P\ Ilhol \\111 he fUfllIslml1
Slde\\alks \\crt llso oH\crl.'fl Iwl ull
FRID \Y FEBRUARY 18
J lInle\\ roul Irom lorlll'll 1\1.:1.111';.. I.
715 P M
~ Basketball \5 Ridley Township
H 5 Gym
the plesellllll.rklllH Ilt\lillk tIl thl (.l ... h
830P M ~RIIs.,;tan Cathedral Chair
Clothier Memorla.l
Stull glrlgt.'
S\TURDA\, FEBRUARY 19
Bl1I t.!l . . J 11m II 1'11111 III II II-hI till
3 00 P 1\1
HallS Brinker Junior Play
Players Club
8 15 P M
Halls Brinker JUflIor Play
Players Club
trl~lltl:llt ll'tIUl . . ts lIIull.: h I tlrlll"h
)llIl
,
SUND'
Ills lor the Irl't.'l11- 01 motor 11\\ \ l~)lat01 ~
l l:
FEBRUARY 20
"
645 P M _ Vesper Ser\lCC Rene LeRoy flutist
Clothier Memorial
10 the atll.!ntlon 01 COIlIllII L1ul "tltl.:l
730 PM - J JsMcet
607 Elm Avenue
thlt thl.:rc lS I stlluhllg ~1I(kr thlt 111
815 PM-Dorothy Waldo Phillips Addresses J Js and friends
607 Elm Avenue
I
lllut(1I i1\\ \1Ulatll1s Illu . . t IJlIH.' Ir hl'torl'
l\tONDAY. FEBRUARY 21
the magistrate Prlt.:lll1lh 1.!\.1.:f\ rUII1t: .. t
8 .JU
~ P M -Trl Post Meetlng
American Legion Room Borough Hall
It I" COIIIC from nOli re~tdt.'nh of lilt.'
I
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 22
tOlotl..,h HI .m lHl'mpt ttl In 111,.:: pohtH II
1000 A M
L W V Study Group
600 Harvard avenue
IHl'ssllfl' to hcar
230 P M - Womans Club Meeting
Club House
C
I
730 to 930 P M ~SproUl Observatory open to visitors
College
OUlIl! took lip Ihl.: dog 1ll1l""1ll' III oh
lun aud allllOUIICl:d that the Statt: \\111
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23
2 30 P M ~ W I L Program
Bond Memorial College
!'.cnd ,log (.ltdlers to tltl' Boro1tgh to 111lk
730 PM-Cub Pack Parents Assoc
College Avenue School
lip .,.\ (og
I
f Ol1IHI flmlll1l":: at Iar,.::e \\ Ith
800 P M
young Repub"'"n CI u b Mee 01 ng
5tra th Haven I nn
uut •a 1"38
I
I
II
..,
IcellSC 011 liS 1(1 Ilr
Hears H. M. Crist, Adol.ts Bud·
get, Orders Sidewalks and
Slate Dog Catchers
Del Monte Sliced
PINEAPPLE
Large No 21
IlOUIt
I
COUNCIL VIEWS
BORO PROBLEMS
u
Del Monte California
SARDINES
I hl' (olllltlUl1lh Iltalth So
cleh IllC lted 111 Borough Hall IS
01l1'
of the Igl.!l1t.:JI.:S opn Ited
till ollgh til( UllIt('(i LIlliI' ugn
\\ I11Ch opl'ns Its allntl t1 cirl\ c for
fUIH\s M lreh 1
•••
Full Standard
Del Monte GRAPE.
FRUlT-2 No 2 cans-
P 11gB
lIi1arity Reignml Tuesday as
Members and Friends Packed
"Deck" of Club House in
I
Annual Frolic
I \\
GIANT
TIGER
Cere.ota 'Not Bleached' 45
FLOUR-12 Ib bagc
111 ohscrv luon ur \Vashlllglu\l"
Ihrtlula) hohda\ the S\\arthmorc
Slhools \\111 ha\c a IllUrlllll,; Sl''''
s!tlll onl). hell1g closed 111 tl c after
,•
~--
9 A 1\1
9 \. l\J
Next \\el'k loe lllllt.'rchilnb \\111
he .Iskl.:d to tIl .... pl" 111 titl.:lr \\111
do\\ s postns of the U11Itl.!d C 1111
Sl;~.:sor
i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~~~~~:~~=::~~:~::~
I II lIlIIlI..., hl (1I.:lllr((1 md It I .... hOIKlnl \
I" Iltt ""UJIl \\ IIII h ell lS nol d('lll Iml
tl It so III 111\ Irl.' Isklllg Ie r II
I
l'lrcnt.... ... htmld trllll \\IIIHJUt (llxmg
"lolllm}!;" hnhl1l.., or 1111 l Itt.'l1lllg In coli
Immel ror thl.'~1.: 11Ilthod .. IIIIJlUl Ihc mell
Iii hI.' 11th III thl.: lllll
11\ to he resl'll.tul mlt~111 /j ~/,II'abll'
hl . . t IIltl IIIl:tJllIllltlhIIJt\ (II I'lrt.'nl pro
\ lilt: . . pOt I ~1111 lor dlll<1 gnl\\ th
I ht "uhtlt.' Itlmlol mel rH Ii htt.'1 II \
IJtl i1lh 01 Dr
HI okh 11ll1llt:r!'. (h .. tu .. sIlJll
tldl~1 It'cl tht.' III gt
llI
Iht.'1ll Ihlt II !'.tt.'lIb tel I.l: Ihl.: llltilllllhll.:
light )1 thl 1(1 11t: ..(cnt 10 Il \\~ n Ild 111 1111 I
Illd thl.: lilt Ilf Jlllllll .. tl \\ In
Ihemt
111111
SOllldllln~ ll~\\ h a.... l III~ It) ltl\\ll 1111
tht pt'hU1I 01 \) J( tl1\ \\ i1<10 Pilllhp . .
\\ Ilh I frt.'sh IIIl11d lUI tht' Hlull.: .. lulb till
S\\ Illitllhlrt:
Slil S)lllkl tllltC 111 till )11""it
SllHJll1 \ ... sll11hl\ \\ht.'n .. hl lIell1 ((I . . tHh
llllhn .. ll .. m tit It llil. lu,.,h ~l h 101 ~IU(llIlt....1
\tlUllll1lh JlI'I!lIOlltci Itr 111.:r Ittllill tn
e!J .. Clh.. Ihl.:lr IJI uhl1.:1Ils \\ Hh thlln Silt: I
l IlIIt to thl III IIll Iwl Sl hool IIInllll'
'I
t I tdl the JIll Ulb ill t \\ h It .. lit.' W I1tb
II d~ \\lth the \ Ollllg Jlltl}lh
1
Sill lxpn ...... I.:
(tI~SIIllS \\111
hl1licl I hn
III I \ tlth
md . . t It((i th I.t
\,...,rc \\ 111~
11Itdll:l I mil I .... lInnk1l1,..., ))t.'I!'.1 111111\ I'"
~ III ""Il ilt"t tlroblelll tnda) ,
I
Iht: \(llIth COIIIl'It.'ll(t.' ~II \\hlth . . li(
\\ l ..
~1{){lcrllol
Ilttlltl\ It IlanlshUlgIII I 11gllt out tillt \\l III:t.'d elllt)lIoll11 I:du I
(ItHIIl
Iiong \\ Hh I1ltdh l tual l'
<.: 1I1lt.: 'Ie studl.'nts 111 :"\('\\ \ ork mel thc
1 Itllo.. til Il1ghh t.'dmah:
11th': tht i1luht\ lo..,et along \\llh other ... I
It I .. IIt:r lUI)ll' thlt ~11t.:1t \\I.lk Is hl'rs 1111
111,...h SlllUol . . \\111 gl\e te. \011th \\hltl
tht.' lI1ttun Idult Illls .. es IIld \\I . . hl.: .. III
1I11glt ht\t.' hul t(1 IIIt\.;t.' hili I 1 . . lIlll .....
I11I pll . . j1l1111\ ~hl 11 Ill-. Ie 1!1lIdt tttl1 I
1",,1 \ 1111,..., III ~ III It k110\\ 110\\ I. \\ 111
I lthl.:r
th 111
Ikmllld
110m
Siu Itlll)-.t:d hl r i1Udlllll t.' \\ Ith I
hll lall.'nt 1111 IIlllllan nnumling t11tlll
.h II Ih, r,,' 01 111lure " gr "Illal
hm I
uhh . . HnH tomt: . . \cn suddt.:nh'
I
nl
CLUB WOMEN ON
"WORLD CRUISE"
School Half.Holiday
Tuesday
I
to Use Good
11111\
DR. P AUIER FETED
United CUlIlI.uign Posters
Soon
1he :\bd- \\ wter Cnn"'e on the good
S S\\urth1l1url.' tcrmUlIIl.'u I ue::.d I)
IltcrnUllll 111 the SPirit of 11I1 Int) t n \\ Inch
11 \\ 1<; IaundH:d to .. all the Sl'\CIl se 15
I he lIarotd Amsworth Pust ~l) -127 1 10m the Ilort holes, member:. and fnl'nds
p ,I 1111.: r 01 thl.' depart \llIl'flCan I eglOn, \\ III he host to the an
of the \Vuman S Club gazed at the hOllud
Skates
\Y. I. L. Program Next
IIIl'nt of Inolog\. oi S\\arthlllore <.:ullegl' nl1al tn !lost mel'll1lg held III S\\ arthmore
less hlue uf the OCl'aU \\Iuk rrulll thl.'
Under tht (hrectltlJl of B lrhar I Dol
\Vednesday
\\ I.. gJ\l'1I 1 hanquet S ,turd IV c\elllllg next :\Ionlia\ t:\l'lIIng Il'bruar) 21, at
deck charactcnsUt.: S(.:CI1I!S \Hre l'IIJo)e£!
111.111
Ifalls Brmker \\111 hrlllg 10 thl
I ht S" Irthmore hr I11ch of the \Vo- Il'hfl1ln 12 111 Bond ~ll'l11oflal I fall h) 8 0 duck 1 he othl'r posts the Chl'stl'l
.. t If.{l' nhlll\ \\ho though \\lll kllo\\1l to lIH:II" Intlrllltltm II Il'lg-lIt.' for Peace the IIIUlI",Cr ... l1ld ex mlllagers of college Cit v I'ost and thc l{ldle) Park Post also 111 I.:ach country \ ISltl:
officers and ere\\ Ittel1dl'u to the shghtt.':!t
fdhm S\\ lrtitmOrl.' Ill ... \\111 ht: III Iklllg l1Id I rl'UlllIH \\l1t hold liS rq~ular llhletJc tl'IIIl"
I he O(lISIOIl \\as the pia) host once l'ach st.'ason to the tn \\ Ish of I.! lch passangcr, 1111kmg tin:. tlUlIt
their dehut IS PIl)tr .... (Iuh Idnr .. Ont: monlhh Illtet11lg \\ ednesda\ 41hl'rnool1 I\HIII\ ftfth alllll\u ....an of Ills ... cr\lCl' to lIost gatltl'rmg
the most cumfOl table crlllsl' eHr l'IIJO) ed
of the . . l Stl.'phl'tl f;Pl.'tlltr \\111 I'IaJ I t hru In 23 II 2 30 0 dock III BOliO S" Irthmurl' College as graduate managu
Alhl'lI I I l\l'lISon IS dlalrlllan of thl'
h) thc as . . l.'mblt.'d multItude
IlillS I poor 1)lItlh ho\ \\hosl fatht.'1 ~It.'mun II S\\ Irthmofl' CoJlq~t.'
I he group presented hlill \\Ith a golf hag l'(J1lIllIlIlt.'l' arrangmg next \\ cl.:k's IIll' ... t
Stoll1l11lg hrsl tt S 111 P(:dro lhl' port
I he progr.tlll \\ III melude a pia). 1\0 Uld duh.. 111 IIlscrlhl'd .scroll and a mg and announccs that Claymo, profes- 01 Los An,.,t: les SC\ ('fal \\ or1d lamuus
h.,s fallell from I d) kt.' ICII \ t: Irs hI.:
prl'sentcd 1)\ the )ll1llt11l~ I hne ",t.'fC SCHilt) gucsts pre" Sional clay modeler of world renowII. ]It.:rsonagl'S JUllled the par" mudl to the
fore: IIld lUll helplt.' ... s t'\er ~lI1cl' III"; B 111111.'r.... I-hlllg
«Ir
1111
I
sntlOlI
of
the
\\ 0111 111 s Club t.'lIt 1I1dudlllri llIl'mhcrs of the facuIh and \\111 entertalll those present Thcre \\111 ~fiIUhc Ilion of Crttl:.e Dlfl'clor (~I rs \V II
dC\oted SIStl'f CrctJe \\111 he IJliI)l.'fl
t mll.'r tltt.' dJret.::tJoll of ),1 rs Roland G thl.:lr 111\ Ited gue ... t.. I)r Pill mer IS sho\\ n also bc a mollon picture and refresh ham I ) I,,:.ller :\Ilt.: \"l'st ()'Irs John
1)\ ),1 In Ann Book lIso II~\\ to tht.'
I LllllllIt Illd se\t:rll plmo scil'ctlons Ihme III 1 chlrlctenstlc 1)(J:!e \\lule re ments All ex scn Ice men arc IIIvlted I:
).ltchad), III all of he!. seduc1t\l'
duh hut l'xp~nl'llccd 111 pI.l\s dsl.:
gn III h) :\11 ........ ),1 an )'11c ~ Ifel.:, of '1 hc llrodut11lJ!," 111
turned the full turee of her ehilr11ls
\\ here Rl'crtuted from the st Ige crt,:\\ ),1 In 1 \\111 St.:hool
bers of the Legion
Jl.'cb \\ll1lh prmulc IllS hohh)
UfJ0tl
Captam
(~1 rs 110)<1 I: ) Kanffm III
10 pll) Pder a klluJl) Irlcml or 11 Ill'"
~
~I r ... J lilies P ICOII Ictmg as hostess
• •
Oil\.> to transfer them to the rnluubt Iblt:
h
Charles Se\ motlr .11Id IllS "rother, \\ III he 1:. . . lstl.'d In ).trs Herbcrt r
Flutist at Next Vesper Service (.l'urge Bern lid Sha\\ (~lrs I~ol uJ.(I I
J tek \\ III IJlpl.: Ir IS \ oostt 11\ a1hul I I. . set t l1Id ~I rs I hom IS I. Lueders
I Iton) \\ hell he a ..ct.'lUbl Ihl.' gang plank
Schllnmdpt:t1l1lCk th!; Joll\ i It hO\ \\lto
...
Sunday
evelllllg
at
645
o
dock,
thc
Glamurous
Greta ( .. Irbo (~b::. 1 I
J. J's to
Dorothy
\\ IS klloek('(1 dp\\n In the smell of I
Cooper
FOu1UI~llOn
and
the
musIC
de
Nlckl.'rsun)
dosl'ly fol1o\\e<1 h) leopold
Waldo Phillips
t:heest.'
partmcnt of Swarthmore Collegc \\111 Stok()\\skl ().trs
I
Harr) Uro\\n}
("ris III the (".lst .Ire l~uth Sl'f\aJs
),1 rs I)oroth) \\ lido Plulhps \\ III all I ~1i8S Olh e Cleaves, Chairman of present Rl.:llc Lc Roy With IllS nute t.'sl.llll'd It om too CUriOllS l'\ l';'; as II111ckh
\\ ho pl
II
,1.1lIghter Bonn) :\Iors{ .IS A IIIl1I.' her It H 15 Sumll\ ~\eIl1llg Idlruar) 20, at
III Clot Iller :Memonal
as ]lUSSI) l'
Special l\lecting of the
'rl
II
I d
I
\1 Honolulu, t\\O uatl\l' malden::. (:\lr s
comp lJ.IIOII ~1.lrJ.lll Slhatte lIul I lura the I 011lt.' ot I liz Ihl'th BO\Hhtdl 007 11m 1
'''. I. L. on l\-Ionday
Ie program WI mc u c se ecl10ns \ V II 0
I 'I
J I' I II
)
lee llopkltls \\ho pia) R\t.:hll' mel K I .IHlll!1.: J Itl' rl'~ttllr l1It'dmg of the J J s
b) :Mozart. Gluck Bach Roussel \:VI
rr am .\ rs
III
rO\\1l
•
'd F '
grl'l..:teu the lJasst.'lIgcrs \\ Ith 1l'IS d l1lcmg
tnnk I t\\U \\elltl" girls \\ho look \\111 ht: held It 7 lU Ihlt 1.:\t.'lII11J It the
\t a spnlal IIIl'ctlllg of the \Vomen· ... ( lor , D C IHISS)., H oncgger
all
aurc
to
the accOtnllamml.'lIt of lla\\ anan nll1"lt.:
do\\ 11 \\ It It Ibsda11l UIl the poor Brill
no\\(hllh h )ml \11 Ill' ItI\ltt.'d to hear Intt.'fllltlOllill Leaguc ior Peace and
llt.'re
Cit Irles amI Aline I IIldhergh (:\1 r:.
kt rs Dick Da\ls \\111 he sel.'l1 .IS Voost'i ),1 r.. 1'1IIIhp~
I hl'H \\111 he a small I rCl'ciom held last l\fonday aiternoon,
Stanlcy
::\lac:\lJllan and }'Ir.s \lexallder
Young Uepuhlicans
I ngilsh COUSJI), l1ld Albeit I 1\ l'lIsun
dlllgl.: for IIUIl IIIcmilt' I ~ to aSsist 111 (\t.' Fehruan 14 .tt the homc of Mrs R C
On
23rd
I
acke).
)
embarked, dosd) vur:.ucd 11\
.ts C Irl Inch ho\ \\ ho h IS no tlllle
[\Ieet
DIS(IUC, thc C ullpalgn for funds of the
Ir l\l1Ig the (:XPI.:IlSl' of thl.: .. pl'akl'r
mddallgablc
ne\\ s ha\\ b
\\ hom Ihc}
for Hans and IllS fanl1!)
SlImlt, C\l'llIltg IdmJal\ 6 thl.' group UlIIted Peace Chest of Phlladelphm
eluded
to
escape
to
their
cahill
n~\er
general
IIIl.!chuJ
of
the
)
oung
l{eA
1 \\0 pll)ers ianl1h.lr tn cluh alHhII.: anI ~Ir.. 1I1rn ).ltllt:r uf 1 ha\l'r \\.IS IlUllchl'd Ihls drl\e IS a combmeu
to
alJpear
ag
un
(11
deck
I
he
lJuke
and
puhllcan
Club
\\111
be
held
at
the
Strath
lllce ... Ire Lthcl S K lufTman .1IId \1- n Id tell 01 thl.: Ill.' Irll\ t l1Iuh It Is hdl' dTllrt "ponsond by SIX orgamzahon"
lJudIC,.,S
of
\Vmdsor
(Mrs
\V
II
I
J.llton
Ila\ell
Inn
lIext
\\
ednesdav
cvell1l1g
t:xandcr Dr)<1clt \\110 t Ikc thl P lrts of 11Ig multi hl'l .. uJ!en l"lon I he IlIIl'tl11g for Pl'lce 1Il Pluladclpl1l3
and ::\Irs C ~t IcDonald S\\ til) accolll
1-1.111S mother and fathcr Doctor Bocek \\ Is hd~1 It thl.: ~OI th Cht.:"lcr TO ul hOllle
:\11"'s Ollve Clcaves chairman of the Fehruar) 23 at 8 0 dock I here will he
p
IIl1C i b) much lu~gagl..: gl.KIOUsl) J01l1eJ.
III Ul the 11I·llaturcd hut famous ph)sl
of Pt.'tl\ Douglls
(Ilest for S\\arthmorl' opcned the
• ••
Imeetlllg \\ Ith a diSCUSSIOn of the ob of the Club and of the b~ la\\s winch the crUIse
fath(r IS p!a\(!d 1)\ a 1l{'\COIllt.'r lohn
1It.'1l d(H kelt 111 \le:.,;lul uorotlt \\ II
St:huol Buard In 5C8Kioll
rJLl...lheS of tl."" Jrn;.: "lIu \\1111 au VIC \\111 1 e lueSl'lItl:h .. t lOlt.' Illl.:l:tlllg
I Spl.'lIcl.!r 111(1 his .IS!,,, ... t lilt \ ollell
• •
SOli I l)llllli til \hx 11(:1<1 \VllItilkcr d
10 \\ orkers
I I l1Ik H )'lurc\ \\ IS tpPol1lted tu
hovtll 1)\ IfllIl Kl.:lghtoll
lighted til' I IS .. Il"'l'r . . \\Itll I ~ll'XI( II
)'Irs Philip Jacob of thc PllliadclI I It til'
I
.1" S \\art IIIIIOIl' S (100
5875
Collecled
10
Datc
by
ffi
f
1 hc SCl.!l1e IS the mterlOr of the Iqlrt.'st.'llt
dilllCt.'
part 01 \\ Inch \\as d 111(1:<1 \\ Ithm
pillol II lCC 0
the \Volllcn 5 Interna
Salvation Army Workers the cOl1fml.:s 01 the huge hit \\ 11Ich she
Bnllkcr cotl Ige 011 the 11 lIIks of a \11J.t:rll III \ .... (iltion 01 Sdlool \d1ll11l- tlOll d league, Ill'xt sketched recent
t.: 1II11 IIllr Amstt:niam .11Id Ihl let Ion I .. tr Ihun 1lltl'tlllg 11I \llillltl( Llt\ frolll
had \\om Here to:) I stU\\ a\\a\ milde
I thrUll' 2710 'I Wll l II Il,,, r"glll.r \\orid c\l'nt.s, 111 their effect upon the
11rs
Gcorge
A
HOildley.
local
chan
likes pi tt.:C St Nicholl 1 \ c lilt! thc
.\...
'- ..
•
Ion .gll polie) oi the Umted States.
hl'r appcarance IlOlle (thel th ltl S:"IIJ 1
I\\{) da)s foll0\\11lg Iht: SClnen \\ I~ 1Il~(tlll.., (It Iht.' Sllltil Ih lit! lIst ~Ielll and III conncctlon \\Itlt the subject of man of the Salvation Army Drlvc, rc HclUc (~lar) ".Istler) "It J appl'arl'd nOli
1I11l1ted In 1Ic1l.:n J IcksOll
tll\ lugllt Il'hmll\ 14
Irmal11l.'nts Mrs Jacob also ga\c all ported total contributions to date ot calami) skatmd do\\ n the deck
I here \\111 hl' t\\() perf()rllllllt:~:. 01
ll( BUild hI.: lid \\uh 1'Itl're.. 1 I reporl IIItul'stmg plcturc of the bnlhant work $87675 for S\\arthmore at the report
A eh IflllIng AralJlan d lIlce h... Neill
II1IIS Bflnker
tontnrnl\\
I (hru If) l( IIllllllllg til( Sall.:t\ Pttrol sho\\mg being accomphshed h~ the leaders of lunchcon for Team Capta1l1s at tho \\ Intakcl g 1\ t.: the Ollelltal atmosphere
Ie) It 3 (N) and 8 Fi P ),1 \dulb Ir thll It I" 110\\ IUlllll 1l1l1~ hdptnlh
Ithe \i1rJous Peace groups III \Vaslllllg- Belll'yue Stratford on Monda), Febru- for the tflP throl1gh Ihe SlIl.:Z Cililal IHcr
ary 14
111\ Itul to .ltlelld hut thosl.' \\ ho C 111 Ire
PlIllll . . . . U II \\ I.. grllltl(1 In the B(Jlnlltoll md clsc\\hcre
\\llIlh I Itl\es 110m clel.:pest \fnt.:a (ItS\\arthmorc's quota !.s $1000 and smCe
reflue ... te(1 to \\ lit Ulltil thl l.:\('nlllg to ~Ihs I t.'l I IUlHhn to l1-.t Ihl.: g\lIl11ls! 1 he third spcaker \\as the Rev
plcll.'d thl.: Ilrllllltl\e hIe of th~ lJark COil
perfurm llIce to l\ 01(1 c.:ro\\ dmg III 1h Itl1ll I~II hl.:r huhmntt)1l group 011 \\edul':' 1)1\1(1 Braun \\ho agam relteratcd Ins tll1~ amount alrca
Itter1l0011
cll\ IIIght IS \\ell I. . on IUI.:"cll\ 11ldl . . tnmg t.:onYlchon III the pcaceful solu~Ir!'. Chlril.:s S Boltoll lIlel ~lls S 11
Hoadley hopes that the entire amount
111111 .. 11 1\
tUHl of \\orld j)roh1ems
and l'llCour
'
\\ 111 he reachcd by 11arch I She ap \ H:k lhL: 1Il11 epal I:xplOll'r ht'1I1,., ).Ir:.
.
F
I
'I
.
Igcd
the
Peace
\\orkers
to
purslle
thClf
I P ..trt~l1ts.~ urller l' eehng \\orth). cause as hohll) a" the force::. pcals to anyone who has 1Iot been give II J I ranClS 1 a) Iur II c 1111...,1.' CI I pcr C'lUl
CII)
.1 chance to contnbute or \\ ho \\ Ishc:. dron mtll \\ hlt:h the Iitlel \\ I popped
\ IIlll till,.. ot thl.: S\\ II thm II I.: Cull I It r re.lrlll Iment Ilursul.' their obJl,;ctlvcs to add to ius prcvlOUS contnbutlOlls LO \\as a tlt.'\\:.\\ortln mcmber 01 thc trlhc
• I•
I II IIh \S"Olllholl \\ \-. hl'ld It tht: C II
I he C Ipt lin s 1 Ihle \\ i1.... the C) Ilosure
Ie 1\ c that contribution at The Swarth
k~, .\(1\11< "h,,01 .1 s .. \\as not 111 I.or t
VAN ALEN BROS.
I
8th STREET NEAR SPROUL, CHESTER, PA.
$ 9.50
$ 8.00
$2.50 PER YEAR
SWAU1I1JUORE, PA., FEBRUARY 18, 1938
morro\\ 011 thiS Sl' ISOIt S tll1rd prodttt
tum for thl' JUllIor ~[l'lIlbt.'fshlp-"I.lf\ 1
)'1'lI)l's Dodge s c1.ISSIl. t til' of old 1101
Illld
Hans Brll1kl'r or tht.' S.hl'r
$10.00
$10.00
$ 8.50
$ 7.75
$11.00
$11.00
Dues
I hI.! PI U l'rs Cluh curt 1II1 \\ III rlst.: 10-
,.',,1,.,
$13.76
$13.32
$10.43
$ 7.33
Dues
Players Club; Many New
Actors in Cast
Are Yon Looking for a
JOHN SPENCER, INC.
Fire Company
'''Huns Brinker" Presented
I
I
Fire Company
JUNIORS WILL SEE 1
PLAY TOMORROW!
III
~
Pay
VOL. X, No.7
lIIo<,;t stlln"siul (JIll I" Ht 1,111I1U.:ti elm
to ).Ir . . J PUll Hnmll ... 111 UI Igt.' lilt.' lit
L'I,1
I f f I 11" I I ",I ,1, I
tl a It:llIIg 0
t .. 110....
..
\ I I.'
, I •
.mel hhlt.' l' lilt: I stflP'" IIlti \\Hh h..,hls
HIit'd III him: uul dl.:t or Itt.'(1 \\ Ith h I1Iglllg t Dorothy 'Valdu Pllillitts Also
On Sunil l\ .Iftemooll 1 d)1 U In 11
,..,old sllr.. 1 pltflt til ltlllo"'l'hen.: \\ lsi (;UCl!!it Sltcakcr on Educutional I al 3 0 dock In \\ 11I1t11i lIoUse I 1.:",It.'r Cruisc Dance for Dancing Class
I
' l II.n\orth of \\ alhngfol d f·enl'r.tl sec
I
I
f
P rogranl 'I'UCS(uy
lohn I~!-Itu I1Id III O"'l.:lr S :\e!sulIll.:n:"nl
thnlU~h
thl t I til III II'" 1111 0
:\Ir .. l \\
:\h i)O\\dl
let II \ of 11\1.; 1'11I1.uklpllll \ "'" :\1 C \
I h~ .. tul1t.:nt lillllllllttt.'<.: for the <':rms!.'
of th(' BO\ SWills of \1I1!;flll
f I J IT \\111 !-Ipt.' tk to tilt: \oung 1 fllllds (.10111'
I 1'''lr 1"""11
f '" ,r,.m ".IT,,, 1,,1
I}I i
I
II
\
I}UHI.: .1rrl1l"ed f~lr tOlllllIOrrO\\ e\1'1I
"- t.'~
.. 1I
'- I
I (I
1.111( tlell Irll'lIts (111
II
~e IOIl~
..,
OOI(l'r .. t;1t:ltld "I:rl' lhllr1l1UI IJUllllII
II (I I
I
1IIItllIIelllICIe llkl'" .. t:I\t:(1 dl1f1l1 h thl.' mh,:1 lr . . llll 11~"'I)ltll lIullllul 01 Ill'
IIIU'lc
II
\
I I
I Im"s JIIt.'t.'iI11g: of the SlilIOI glOtil) of tht.'
"
It.''''ll 1~IU
11I(
"
011 III
llHl1 11I\llltlOllls l'xtt.'I1(t:d
,..,
I o .. I~r II f _,or I
'I
I
f
1111 .... 1 II
\\Ith \lI:\:lhu\ IIU':lIIhl'I'" IIId 1)1\1"'1011 01 tht.' StIle 110.... 1111 It l.,orns II
I
I
S\\ II tluwll I.' IJU1lmg lll ..... l" IS IS hll
"t.'ullin :\Ir.. II till Itl _, lit: I 0 \ \ l t
I
I
f S
I
() \OI11Ig: pt:op t.' m t Il' i.OIlIllIllIll \. to ttllllli
•
Ifrlt:lUl ... 11"\111"" :\Ir .. 'xx (,1I\ \\ 1.:1 t: 10\\11 totl thl.: )I III lib t
\\lrtl1lI0rl't tl
I
I
f
le\\s l,l.:llgl.: ColJlIl'" lh11l1l1111
)'lu\
111111"1.: :o\orth Chl.: .. tl:r ro ul
11011 \\t: I In I~ III ItI1 Ii tI Ultt.'s lIIel gt.'1l
\\ h It I u ...IJIllhh 1 r lIh Irl' IJ m,.,l'1 I 0 'f' tl.'.t
lis IIIl
l.'
mg
11Ilti
to
nlllll1l
Jr
I
t.:l1p
<.:hn
...
lllll'
Stt.'rI(kl.'r
i
rllt.'st
I
1I1"t:
IIIC l "0t.:l1
)(Jur
M AIIII
I
II
I lir .. t () f .1 "l'nI.:Slellt1Slm~lrl.:" Illl elllll.llillft.'ci 1\l11111X ~111'"
II liS l1It.'dmg \\Is ttt:
It till: I11l.:l.:tlllg tf thl.:
ollll: III'
Im,.,lt Jim (,In
11111\lnl S\\l.:ellt:\
I
\\Im:h \\1111.( hc:ld 1)\ tht: \s"mlliion to 1I1111d\ ~1:10 lor philmthrolHc \\ull Hul S(houl
\S"JlJltHII
Im .. c!"
t.'\l'lIl11 g 'l
•••
Rohl'lt i{(l\\allti 1111 )'11l' Pt.'lgll 111(1
rue,,1.: 1Il'\\ 11't.'lIIhl:r ... \\ho"l.' "'OIlS .,rclllPrtUltlon I. . lxtlilliu\ 10.,11 those \\ilOlI lhntlr) X 1I1(11)orctll\ \\ lid v Pilllhps'
•
),111\ Bon"'llI
...
t:11"1"11.'
[(Ir tht.' CuI, I u:1
lIld tel tikI.: ht'lpul hI 1II1\.;( Ihl
plrtlt.:l1iu e\llllllg, I moll mil Jdlllltl II 1'"\t.'I.lllt.'(\ \\lthlCnc Free Lcclurcs at Acatlcluyl (I 1 1\11.:1 (illS f (.r II u ( 1111"1: I) lIIt.:e ",II
Iht: \ trlOU" .. tt.'ps for Ihor ugh t I ... Hill: lI litII1\(1
I1l11tl
I/Ill III lht 1 1.:,...lon \uxJiII1 \ \l uh:llm I dill Itlon oltl.:rt
IIllt:d them
\I
I
Ill( slxlh III I .. erlt:s 01 It II Inl.: ~lulI 1),1
It.'
r .U\( I ~I IS R 0\ I JeI Ip I lllll ~I r
ilIOn I hI.' II('Xt lIIel'tllJlO \\IHIlt.' hdd IllIs
\\t
Ire
III lI1l'tal hl.:.1 th \\111.:11 \\e are I
I
11111 ~Ir . . B \\
COllills ).Ir lilt! )'lls
~,
I
II
I
I
I
t l\ e\ ell1l1g t:dm I.:S on the
;\;.Itur II
I rula\ I <.:l.nlln II II X tlllulk II the
1 Ilnllls IIHllltrcml ...... I' . . \\<.:rt.' )'lr Incl u JI1 ... 11.:1i tu thl' \\( I I lilt tu t.' IC I ut Il'l S
\\d,.,tt.'r \lhll mel :\Ir lIId ).lis I
S
lolltgt: .
l\l'lIllt'
.. \Iht:rl \111 \\tlrth
md ).11"1 I\\lIh.1 IIlIXIIlItlIll I l lliut 11(\I I)r Book I . . tlll.'!
ulItl
\,llltlllltiOIi
"thool blllllllw
~ pl.'lklrtsl
,
1 1\ Illu:llr
tIC \\1\ k
llstlltltt.' ItSiH)Jl
the ),1 Rm\ •111(1
\\111 hl'lIIuil: CJfthl' \Inotblllighhorhoud I IuiJnt I HI ttl ),11 lnd ).Ir ... Iht:o
IIIl11llr slttl'd
\\l III \\llt \\l' .Irl'
\~J(llm\ (f :\ltlllti SII s I'll I S Hl1th Miltit.' dllllt:IIIlS \\111 he ),11
I I tt.'lI
I .. tl I I( I lie II Cr I" III 'I
I I1m:s IIll 111 e 01 our llrh dllldhot) I \\ hell
group .. f~lrl1llllg 11\ I(J III( I1\1111
_\ r Ill( I 'I
_\ I....
815 I' 11 ~II I.111(1 ~Ir~ 131f111.:\ I, ~IIH~1' :\11 !lui .,Irs
I1\1.' I0 t 1.'11 ~r lII~lre IIms I IIl' lClJ(1I
I I
, 1'llOII I}elll,..,ll
I)r tIIll )'Irs Ir.Ulkllll Olll I I.:rs Illll1l1l" Irl 111 thl' IIllkmg \\ l IIl'Xt ~I()IHII\ It:hluln 14 h\ 1)1 Irlll II I IlIulll'\ I'eel :\Ir . . 1111,.,h \\ IJO\\II
I stlp~nl"lIIg (1.:11
I
I I ~ (~llh:::'\lll ~Ir L1ld :\.Ir ... Illroid G h lH (Jllh
\(1)u . . t(.(1 I lIl ..d\l.'sf to I Situ 1 Itls Ilupc:r of tht: \\1(11.:111\ 1)1 Illrl.lr IIIg )'Ir Iud :\Irs \11t:1I I Putllllll md
" f tl\
11Irt:lJt 11)( I lit:
I
tlOIl
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lUI
thl'
Il"U t 1<;; "i1l1s Iltor)
I
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I10\ sumt f or 1'1l11(.flOm
Ilut.'rslllJ
I I
II f
tIt.'
I}r I1l111r .. I Jlrdl'ltt.UI:Il111t.'r
\\hlll'\t.' .. ltS(Jllth(ht: .. tt.'1 fOld IIlti\,lcll>r 11111 ~Ir . . JII1H: .... I I,ogmtus
I a\('lltIt.' S\\lrthlll.n
~
\\1 II Spt.' 1k 011 I rug
den .. \Ht.:kh lIIectmg \\111 hl' eh"ctls~l.:dl)'lr IlId )'11" \\Jihllll:\1 IlllH\ \Ir
Plrt.'llbI In
\\l1l1lill\
IJr
Bookhllll
(I I 11K: rOil . . 01 tIt.'
I 1111\1 II I-trl( Il' l I I"S \\1 II
I
I
I
I
kl
I
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l
l'
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II
\(11.:
1
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ot
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lilt
lJ{
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r
.111(
WI "Ul1Jl'(
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t:t .. gl\lII.., It.:lllt.:\tllll.:llt 11111 )'Ir", I I 11l' ....l'nbrut.:h :\11 lilt! lIIel ttl ~IC'
~'lIt I,r I1Il lJll'nt (angl.'r :\llI''illllll'" 111,.,
f
I
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.. ug-f.,:estlon . . for t:ldl grult.' of Cuh t:Ul )'Ir .. Sl'\\lll \\ I lodge Mr 111<1 :\11
tilib III 1111:11 lillltlltlls pl'r"'onlhtll'S hlluls of frugs and toads of the eastern ~Ir uut :\Irs I: \\ Colhn .. :\Ir U1d
.\ r
Ill( I 'I
-, rs
hI.: urdt:red IIId 1c1I\HII.:S lor tltl.: f,r<;t \Ihtrl SHIIII.:\ luhl1-.011 Dr uul )'Irs tlll' I (Jlllt.'t d l\thlll1l11lg "'tl\slll\t.' or Ir LlIlled St Ill: ... ",,1 11111 I 1.1 I 1II~ IliS Ittiurt.' .,'I r.... I'en\ I .n I(It 1111 I 'I
l 1(lm \ \1111)111\ ).Ir 1Il
lIll'ctmgs ~If tht: (h:lIs plulIlt.:d
Ire
tilt.:
IJllt.'S
thltl\\lIh
Iwtt.'ln
shdes
(
(
II
I
I I
I
II
II
I
I
I
.l'orgl.' .. I t' . . \lIl'
\mpaft.'lltsofmtcrl.'tt:dhl)sl1ll1l' and l( :\I\t:r . . :\Ir IIHI:\lrs IlIIIIJlIsl~ )'It tl( hI lilt: lit I tlllllt.'
c(eslnlt.'(ltle
tcn \t.'.lrs (II Irl.: \\t.'k01l1l'
ILlht: ~II lIul :\Ir
\lcxuuil'r \\ :\Io"c II t: 11111\ II1111dtti Ilr~n .1 .... 0111.' \\hll gets
11011"" \\t.'11 \\.th 111111\
tflt'll(l . . hi::. III I
1IIItl\t.'
II1l1JltlU11 llltlr-,\
I1ld IS Iklt
BARGAIN~
r Itlll r III 11I pft.' U u]llt.'d \\ e should he I
Compare These Cash Prices for
COnllrlltti hI.' "1l~1 0\l'1 the adok"l'ellt
\\ 110 IS l:1II0tl '"llh
IIllI 111 or 0\ t:1 t()Jl
20()O Ibs. of Coal (cllrried ill)
fi(1t:llt s1II(1.: <.:lIhlr t III I. . I dl'll'lIsl' I~ 1I1lst I
1938
F,'b., 1928
Feb., 1937
I jl.:dll1~ 01 IIIIl'rienh 11)(1 IllHIt:qttlc\ I
!Jr BUllkh 1I1l1ll('1 st 111:(1 th It Il1l'llt til
SloVI'
111m
IS Ihl 1l1:\:t _n It \lIIl.'nl 1II pllgul'
Nut
t I hI.: to]ll.:ti \\Itll \\(' hl\l' tl(klnltubt.'f-'
tu\e"I" \\t.' lit: Hm englgl'd 111 I fight I
I,.., III1 .. t \ I.: lit: rl.: II t1ISl.1St.: hut \\e are do•
111,., 11lt!1: to prt:Hnt the lit.: 11 h
20 OliO
\~ illig 1Il'01'1t.' 110\\ 111 1I1l'lIt II hO"llIt.ll ..
PllYS
COlli
110111 gl.:tllig thlll
\\ I.: spl'nd mt'f $mO
O( 0 1l()11 1 \ l 11 I It Otll 1111: lit II hosplt It..
I ht:rt' If(' 1\ 1\\ III III.: P Illlllts Iilt.'H th 1ll
11\ 0111
tll111.'1 t.:uluS1 .. S lIllt lrJUIIlS'
Phone: SWllrthmore 10412
\ftt.'r I nlll1l1t1},: thl' \ IfiollS t)pes uf
IlIl.!ntll {llsl'I ... I .... Ilr BOlkhllUlIll'r <';11(1\
I
Pay
~
Tree-Ripened FLORIDA 29
In I hsen
of Bt \ Swut \\ eck thl'l
Sno-White
14
thnl' 1m II troops of Bm SUHI\s 1)land I
CAULIFLOWER
hd
c
GRAPEFRUIT-10 for
c
their annllal dlspla).... 111 \ an011:. shop
\\lIulo\b of the Borough l'lrh tl" ... \\eek I
On S .lunl1\ of ",xl ll"k [
19
I
r(
01'
.
.
1
2
anci
J
\\111
,go
nn
a
Valley
I
EAST LANSDOWNE
11 ur,.,t.: lul,.::nm 1ge
II.___________________
...;_..;;,;;;;..___________
J
\
I
-
...
tlOnal Bank and 'I rust Company 1111- I ht: I e the hOIlOI ed ,.,lIe::.b oraclol1sh rc
mediately, so that the drive 111 S\\arth ~ponded tn loa,..,b G b S sull IIlstJshtl,£
that lite b hut a hnci tort.:h
~fl s
more can reach Its quota promptly
•••
I I•• 51
If
a 11'''111
II
f r
0 I
1111 III .. mg
\" c so g 0
MRS. FLORA HUl\IPHREY
~Iae \\t.'sl She . . more to he censored
II
1'1 I
CORSON
mn I !.l'(
Sunn) Ital) l'l1trancl.:d the plssClIg
~ odock luesda) afternoon at 227 Park!sllllA 1)\ ~Ir . . \\lllm11l G :\lcGlalhel\
a\CI1l1C where she made hel home \\1\ h t O the lIst note 01 thl' actorchans pla)ctl
her daughter, ~lrs 110\\ Inl L \ ouug b\ I tilth J....llIskt.'1 n and IOllllll\ )'1ar
\lthough 1tl failing health of hae shcl shall Tie romance of SPillll "a~ Il'il\t.'d
had hecn hl'dfast alii) stnCC last Saturda) tluough the hmutltul dances (It Ihl' 1.'0\111
1~lrs Corson had heen able to UIllI.' and tn IS mterprded 1)\ \llx lll'id \\hl
Igo comparatl\e!) freely de:.}ute her agl' takers pupils Ollioth) \\!lsoB Polly
t.'lght) Sl'\en years
Illoot and Gellc\lc\e l{ea\ls llr~ G
Born 111 Athol, Mass on lebruary 2 llurst Paul "as accolllpamst for the
1851 she marrtl'dJamcsJ Corson Plula Idanccs }'Irs C 1 \\alters sllIg
In
dclpll1a mcrchant, \\lto died 111 1909 In Old ~ladnd
1911 ~lrs Corson camc to S\\artlIl110rt'
StopJl11lg III F allCI.' \\.1:. IIl'ritaps the
I She \\as a mcmber of the Colomal Chap most momentous e\('l1t of the l'lltlrc CnllSe
I tcr Daughters of thc Amencan Rl'\.olu for here that eontrt)\erslal pal1lhn~ 1 he
hon and I dcsccndant of Rev James Bathers 1)\ Cezanne \\as brought on
Humphre'-. Umtanan. the first munster board and Ihc pas engcI:. \\cre faced
....
I
I
\
S
111 \11,01 !\
'la''''
\\It 1 t e (tllCStlOIl
re \\e \\orth .,ItO
-""
I '
I"
I
00000 I Before the ~oo
_,I's
l.oung arc tlrec
II
I
~lrs \Vllham E CI morc lad clrcull1llil\lgiiteci the glohc the
I gl Ill( (3U,.., ltl'rS
' \ I ) S tlllilllllllOllS deCISIOn \\ 1'> th It
rhl'
lIll'r oi I arada) Park .\11 s
lill I
II I
1
I al Ie) ot I angh )rlll' and ~Irs ::\orm:J.n
at el
\\i1 \\Oltl l\tl\ 1"1111\ :\\r ...
Stilnll.:) ~lal ~llllan ~II;'; C.. 01 Ml Zim
Illl1lltcr l,ccti) of lll'alllllont 1 exas and mer ),1 rs
elc\l.:n greatgrandduldrcn {\Hlla 110\\ I'crkll
'11)\\I[~htICO{kllc\1 ).tr""IJosePCh
IS
_\ r!'. )'Irs
re(l'flC
lar<1 I lora, Ruth, \Vdham Jr and John \V ~rcDo\\ell
jolm C ang.\
lloore IS:\11"
CI)mcr, E
'I
E II \T
;urel1
axson ., IS..
11l
am I HI
e ell F ar Il'\
P
I 11
F
I
II b I Id al l,cr allen, all(
rs \rthur R 0 I~edgra\.t,;
uncra scnlCes \\1
e IC
I I
latc home at 2 oclock tillS afternoon
Ofanllultts
1 I
I b
18 TI
CI
lli'S rc lCS ra ., rs Jacoh ::\Ics
I fI( a),
c ruar)
~
Ie Rey
I1lton chtcr 'Irs \V F G S
I 'I
I Baltzcll Adams rector of the Park COil
\
\\ ann all( ., r"
I
I CI
I
f PI I d I I
t J ntholl) Ventumn [tla).cd throughout
grega lona
lUre 1 0
11 a c p na 0 th
I t
\\Inch llrs Corson belonged \\111 conc Journc) m \\as particularly cficch\e
It I) I. \ c (I tl Ie
duct the services I nterl1lCllt wdl be 111 \\hcll led 1)\ Sto"ko"sk,
..
FuulI!>h
NatIOnal
aJuh
....
n'
D".r
L ....1It I 0 f
:\(ounl Vernon cemcter,) , Pllliadclpilia
'(Conlmu£d on ..,
POD~ S,zj
l
I
an~lll;cl"SltllS
Jla~lltll1g
I~____________~____-.__----------------~~1~B~E~S~W~~~~~~~--~--~----------~____~FEBRUARY1~
Van Kirk-Blessing
~%.~:s~~~~e w;:~=/:!~';;;gth:t
'I
L
School
Hites Perf ormed "ary
YO.n
•.••
fr:~:'~:'n~' H~:'t!I,I;~i1ard·eteulphmiaed,IMII'8.
Snow
1938
BWABTUMOIIE, PA.
Birth
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Reeve Cam"
pion, of Rose Valley, have announced
the birth of a daughter on February
14 in the Fitzgerald Mercy Hospital,
Lansdowne. The baby is a grandchild
of Mr. and MrS. H. Clifford Campion, .
Jr., of Lapidea Hills.
- ••
ley, of Walnut lane, Swarthmore, will
be performed on Saturday, ~:larch 19.
Guests included former classmates of
the class of 1932, Swarthmore High
School.
Miss Florence Hoadley, of Walnut
lane, will entertain at teil tomorrow
afternoon in Miss Warner's honor.
*• *
Henrietta \Veber
• ••
Miss
returned
There will be a supper meeting of the
last week to resume her teaching dulie:sl Parent-Teacher Association at The
at the College avenue school after
School in Rose Valley this evening at
erat months' iilness. During her a~:~:~~:111 o'clock.
her sixth grade class had Mrs. I
* *
Coleman as substitute.
Mrs. Arthur W. Kent, of Benjamiu
• • •
\-Vest avenue, was the week·end guest
"1
d M
J h B d' h
of Mr. and Mrs. Ward D. Kerlin, of
Announcement has been made of the
l\' r. an
rs. 0 n
ow Itc ,
MC'orestown, N. J.
marriage of Miss Edith Daughett Lewis. of Elm avenue, had as their guests
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Hard. week-end their daughter, Mrs. Martha
* * *
Mansfield, and Miss Jean Murphy, both
Mr. and Mrs. Henry A. Peirsol, of
ing Lewis, of Norfolk, Va. and William of New York City.
L a fayet t e avenue, WI'11 en t er talO
' a t supWard Moss, Jr., of New York, son of
• • •
per in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Mr. and Mrs. William Ward Moss, of
Miss Nellie G. Collins, of Park
McCowan, of Banff. Canada, next
Yale avenue, Swarthmore, at Christ
who has been spending part of the
Th~rsday evening prece~iing. a lecture
St. Luke's Church. Norfolk, at 8 o'c1locl'l ter in Washington, D. C. has gone to which Mr. McCowan will gIVe before
Saturday evening, February 5.
Miami, Fla. for the month of February. the Rutledge Horticultural Society.
After a wedding trip in the south Mr.
* *
and Mrs. Moss will reside in Nl!w
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Wilson,
where Mr. Moss is practicing law.
Park and Michigan avenues, witl be
• • •
home tomorrow afternoon from 4 until
Mr. and Mrs. A. G. McVay, of North 6 o'clock.
Colton CbaUse and Crepe
Chester road; Miss Hannah Smith, of
* * *
Sizes 12 to 18
Wallingford Hills, and Mr. Joseph
Susan Wolters, of Cedar lane, a freshRedueed to
Youmans. of Elm avenue, will attend man at Rochester University, and Pristhe Alumnae dance of Miss IlIman~s cilia Clayden, of Westdale avenue, a
school tomorrow evening at the Belle- U niversity of Pennsylvania student, were
THREE DAYS ONLY
vue-Stratford H:te~, ;hiladelphia.
among those who attended the
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
Feb. 21
Feb. 22
Feb. 23
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ward, of carnival at Dartmouth College last weekStrath Haven avenue, left yesterday end.
KITTY McLEAN
to spend two weeks in Miami, Fla.
* •
1\h. and ~frs. Edward A. Jenkins,
104 Park Ave.
-
* • *
:
~
SALE DRESSES
ALICE KRAFT
RHYTHMIC DANCING
$2.95
*• •
*
Thursdays - CoUqe Avenue
Kindergarten Room.
Boy. and Gil''' - 4.10 year.
ADULT CLASS
Friday Mornings
10.00 A. M.
College Avenue
3,00 and 3.30 P. M.
Gymnasium
Miss Frances Fitts will entertain a North Chester road, left Tuesday to spe""I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
group of her friends at a party in cele- a week at 'Colton Manor, Atlantic City,
bration of her seventh birthday at her N. j.
•••
Mrs. Gerald Effing, of
formerly of Swarthmore, with the president of the Lancaster Woman's Club and
three other women from Lancaster cnter·
tained at luncheon at the Ingleneuk preceding the annual frolic at the
more Woman's Club on Tuesday
noon of this week.
•••
Miss Mary Kistler, of Park
had Miss Dorothy Hudson, of Chester,
-MANORTHEATRE
Prospecl Park
Chester Pike
Free Parking JOT Our
PalroR$ in Rear 0/ Themre
Frlday-L""t Dayl
Claudette Colbert
Charles Boyer
in
~~To,rARICD~~
Saturday, Monday and Tuesday
(Continuous show Tuesday,
Washinaton's Birthday, staJ1ia.
at I P. M.)
Half·Price School Rate
~\ , . \~\ii~tib.
home
on South Chester road tomorrow
afternoon.
For a Pleasant
George Washington's Birthday
Come to the Inn - Avoid tbe care and trouble of preparina a large
dinner at home. Let U8 8p.rve your family dinner
Held OVer
Sonja Denic -
Don Ameche
"Happy Landing"
with Jean Hersholt. Ethel Merman,
Cesar Romero, Raymond Scott QuIDtet, Leah Ray.
MEDIA
Frlday-Snturday
JACKIE C~OPER
in
"A BOY OF .
THE STREETS"
Awarded the Parents' Magazine
medal for the best piC::hlre of"
the month.
Extra!
"Inside Nazi Germany 1938"
in
The New March
of Time
Also First BUD News
Monday -
Tuesday
"The
"VICTORIA. THE
HURRICANE"
with'
GREAT"
Anna N""IIIe--AnIOD Wa!brook
DINING ROOM and TEA ROOM
TELEPHONE DETECTIVE I
Open from 1.00 to 8.00 P. M_
The 11:43 ground to a stop and a
young man ju.m~ to the station
platform. In leu than an hour his
brother was to wed and the youth
had traveled far to act al beet man.
He tipped the Red Cap and strode
into a teleJj~e booth to spread
the glad ti·
of hil arrival. But
alas, be Jack
a bit of information
-the name of his brother's hotel.
Nor did he know where the wedding
was to be.. Ah, hut he did know the
bride's name. Swiftly he thumbed
througb the Directory. He found the
number, but could get no anawer.
The wedding party had already
departed for the chUrch.
It was a sorely ~lexed young man
who confronted the station telephone
attendant with his problem. She
took it to heart and began to call aU
hOlels throu~hout the city. No ...
no ... no. "I m 80~. no one by thal
name is registered.' Then she got a
better' idea ~ •• the marria~e license
bureau- There a clerk formshed the
name of the cl~an and church.
A can revealed that brother was
still a bachelor-but DOt for long.
"Bey, tasir'
A detutive could not have done
,. beltel."wodt than tbatoperator.Such
young women. a1er~intelligent,eager'
to serve, I:ielp give America the finest,
f ..tes~ moet reliable telephone &erv·
iee in the worid. The Bell Telephone
~mpany of Pen~"lvania.
STRATH HAVEN INN
Swarthmore, Pa.
F. M. SCHEIBLEY, Management
"Mind" is the subj~ct of the Lesson·
Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, February 20. The
Golden Text is:· j!O Lord, how great
arc thy works I and thy thoughts are
very deep" (Psalms 9Z :5).
•••
Methodist Chureh Notes
Class of the Sunday School. Major van
de Boe served with the 80Sth Infantry
in the ~World War.. He w.as superintendent of the Sunday School and
leader of the Bible class in the parish
from which he ~nd his family have
recently come.
Miss Olive Cleaves ",ddressed the
Young People's Fellowship last Sunday evening. A vigorous discussion followed. The next meeting will be at
the Rectory on Sunday evening, February 27.
Twenty-seven College students, rep·
resenting twelve foreign countries
were the supper guests of the Rev.
and Mrs. J. Jarden Guenther last Sunday evening at the Rectory.
I
..
This evening will mark the ~~::~I:l~
of .the Annual Mid-winter E
League Institute. The meetings wHl be
... 11~ld at the Fletcher Methodist Epis.
copal Church at 54th and
streets, Philadelphia, and will extend
through tomorrow.
The Women's Foreign Missionary
Society will hold its monthly meeting
Wednesday afternoon at 2 :30 o'clock.
Next Friday evening, February 2~,
the church school \vill have ail indoor
picnic in the social hall. Various games
and contests have been arranged for
different age gro~ps. The "program,
which is to begin ilt 7 :30, will be concluded at 9 o'clock with refreshments.
Last Sunday evening Rev. Clarence
F. Carter, pastor of the Swarthmore
Methodist Episcopal church, filled the
pulpit 'of the Epworth Methodist Episcopal church at 56 Race street, Philadelphia. This service differed slightly
from the usual exchange service. Mr.
Carter had attended this· church as a
boy and his presence there was the occasion of many old pcquaintances renewed.
•
AWNINGf'WINDOW fH;lDE5'5L1P{OVERS
~ vENETIAN BLlNDf·UPHOLSTERY
SVC ... SEA'T5
iT cAN'TSE6
; 4
TMIHG~!
- PROSPECT PARK.PA.
ON ME "'''10
LAUGH WHEN
11'0-
YOU'LL
I
•
Tomorrow Evening's Chaperons
•
.. I.
:.::=-..,.•.---
MEVER MAva
A COMPIoAIMT
II' '
I)..... WITH
=
=::-~
Chester Road nod COllege Avenue
Rev. J. Jarden Ouenther. S.T.IL., Rector
SUNDAY
8:00 A. M. _ Boly communion.
9:45 A. M. - Sunda,. SChool and Bible
Class.
n:oo A. M. _ Morning Prayer and Sermon.
Mr. Guenther wlll preaCh.
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Clarence F. carter. A.B., B.D.• Mlnlster
SUNDAY
9:45 A. M. - Church School.
1~;~ ~::t
=
~~r::: ::::::,,~:
'PmsT CHURCH OP CBRIST. SCIBNTIST,
OP SWABTJUlORB
.
Park Avenuo below Harvard
:It:OO
M. -_ Sunday
Sunday School.
11:00 A.
A. N.
Lesson-8ermOD.
Wednesday ovenlng meeting eacb week, 8
~. =ad~:u= y~ f1~. ;Lc;e~h=
~ceiue cordially Invtted to attend tbe
eenteea and
UIl8
'the Bead'n. Boom.
This sign means that you can place complete con1idence in 1U
to give you factory-approved service on your car. It meana
that "We employ skilled mechanice-that "We have the tools and
equipment especially designed. for fast, efficient and economical
W"ork-and that we carry genuine parts for Chrysler and
Plymouth ears . . . . Drive in noW" for a free safety c:heck..up.
HANNUM & WAITE
YALE AYE. & CHESTER RD.
Swarthmore 1250
CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH
evening~'1~~:li~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iij
iugs of the Swarthmore Dancing
Chaperons
at tomorrow
will
be :--eighth
grade, Mr. and
Luther M. Dimmitt, Mr. and Mrs.
roll E. Robb, Dr. and Mrs. J. H()w,,,d
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hulme
Mr. and ~lrs. W. Henry Linton;
grade, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Kelly,
••
WEDNESDAY
9:30 A. Y. to 3:30 P. M. - Sewing and
qUUtlDg in Wblttler House. Box lunCheon.
All are ·cord.1a11, luvlted.
aUT
All RIGHT HONEY
JUST KEPAN
In the treasurer's report given at the
annual meeting of the Community
Health Society, the report was given
as audited, and in the absence of the
treasurer, no explanation was madoe
that the checks written to the Family
Service of Swarthmore and Vicinity
covered only a part of the year. Some
question was later raised and therefore the Health Sodely thought it
well to bring the matter to the attenlion 01 the public through The Swarthmorean.
On Sunday, February 20, promptly
9.45 A. M. the Adult Class of the
Swarthmore Friends' Meeting will be
addressed by the Right Reverend Mon·
signor Edward Hawks, rector of St. and Mrs. Walter ). Scott, JlJ!r. and
Joan of Arc's Catholic Church, Phila- J. H. Wilson and 1\Irs. D. A. Simpson.
delphia who will discuss the tenets of
Open Brownie Course Here
Roman Catholic Church and will be
glad to answer questions after his presentation of the subject. All are cordi- In,.F,.rkida y morning, February 25, will 1
ally invited to attend.
11
the beginning of a Brownie leaders' training course. The group, which
• I •
Sanford Bradby to Speak
is to be under the direction of Miss
At First Day School I Pauline Savage, of National Girl Scout
Headquarters. wi1t meet at 9 :30 a. m.
in the Woman's Club House.
Sanford P. Bradby, principal of the
The leaders of the present Brownie
Schofield School in Aiken, S. C., will
group hope that many of the mothers
address the First Day School and
of young children will become interother young members of the Swarthested
cnough in the course to take an
•
I
more Friends' Meeting at 9.45 A. 1\:1.
active part in the movement.
Sunday, February 20, on the developPresbyterian Chureh Notes
ment of colored education in the south. This Week'. Bridge Winners
On Sunday morning the Rev. David He will also show a moving picture deBraun will preach ou "Three Ways to picting this growth which he presented
Monday evening'"s winners at the
Pray".
at the Swarthmore Monthly Meeting I ~h~I~~dl~r~N:~ight Bridge Club meeting
The Young People's Fellowship will on Tuesday evening of this week. Col-I; the
Haven Inn were: North
meet Sunday at 6 P. M. in the Parish ored residents of the Borough are in- and South-Mrs. John llurphy and
·House.
vited to hear Mr. Bradby this Sunday Mrs. Maurice Griest, first; Mrs.
The Churdi Citizenship·· Class', COil·
. lace McCurdy and Richard Carvell,
ducted by Mr. Braull, will meet in the
• •
second; Walter Dickinson and Lawchurch study Sunday morning at 10 :15.
Fortnightly to Meet
rence Stabler, third; East and WestAll young people, aged 12 or over.
Mrs. William Faison and Mrs. Sewell
who are not now members of the
Mrs.]. V. S. Bishop will bee~~;~:;lj~~~~i~~.fi:~rst; Captain and Mrs. Charles
church, are invited iuto this class.
to the Fortnightly on Monday, F
second; :Mrs. Harry ArmiThe Church School Nursery for chil- 21, at 2:30 o'clock at her home on Ha,r-I tage and W. W. Moss, third.
dren of one to seven years of age will vard avenue.
• I
be held Sunday during the church hour.
Mrs. Herschel Smith will revvii:~e.~w~~:~;.~ Swarthmore Bridge Club Notes
You are invited to avail yourself of Walpole's latest novel uJohn C
this service.
Mrs. Smith will bring out the fact
On Wednesday, February 9, the S",arthThe Church Session will meet this Mr~ Walpole claims this book to be
more Bridge Club had a very interesting
evening at the home of J. Everton real biography of John Cornelius.
cvening with ten pairs pl~ying.
Ramsey. son North Chester Road, at 8
Mrs. James Bacon Douglas will give was ~ spread of eleven pomt~ be',,,.,e«"1
. o'clock.
two. very brief readings ·one entitled "The the lugh and low scores, averagmg s11ght·
A play under the direction of Charlcs Height of- Justice" and the other "How ly over one point difference
D. Mitchell and sponsored by the to Start Your Car."
pairs,
church' aid committee will be given
•.• ,
Mrs. John A. Murphy and
at the Players Club on Friday and Sat· Show Irene Higgins' Paintings Tomlinson were tied with Mrs. J. R.
urday evenings, March 18 and 19. Pro~
. at College
Rankin and J. Luckie for top score, with
ceeds will· be used for church school
Robert Knake and Peter Evans in third
rooms and supplies. Tickets are for
An exhibition of paintings by Irene position.
M. ·Higgins 'is being shown in Collec·
The Club was happy to have Mr. and
Hall, Swarthmore College, until Mrs. G. R. Henry, of Cedar lane, and
CHURCH NEWS
J\I,,,ch 2. The paintings arc. divided.ill Lawrence Stabler, of \Vallingford, pres. SWARTHMORE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH three groups: portraits, studies, and ent. Play is open to pairs every WednesRev. DaviCl Hraun, Mlntster
Balinese impressions.
day evening in the Borough Han and the
9:45 A. M. _sun~~~::OOI.
Miss Higgins was graduated from tht! Club will welcome all interested in du9:45 A.M.-Biblo IJlasses.
School of the Museum of Fine Arts of plicate contract.
11:00 A.M.-Morning WorsbJp. ~.
Boston. In 1931 she was awarded the
willPray."
preach on, "Three
0 n H onor L'1St at W'l
to
Paige Traveling Scholarship and spent
I son
6;00 P.'M.-You~ .people'S Fellowship.
one and a half years in the less travelPetra Lingle, daughter of Mr. and
THE RELIGIOUS SOCIETY OF FRIENDS ed· sections of Europe and of the Ori· Afrs. Roy P. Lingle, of Cornell avenue,
SUNDAY
SanJtonll ent painting each type in its distinctive is among the eighteen sophomores of
9:45 A. M·-~:Jby~::ea:e~OOl.
setting of costume. occupation and at· Wilson College. Chambersburg, Pa.,
9:45 A. M. - AdUlt Class. The RIght Rev- mosphere, in the technique most de- who have been named to the dean's
erend
Monslgnor
Edward
.
I
d
HawkS, rector of St. Joan of scriptive of the subject 10 co or an
honor list for the first semester of the
Arc's CatholiC Church. PhUa- movement.
current college year.
delphla, will discuss "The
- - _.....,~-Tenets of the Boman Catholic
Church."'
11:00 A. M. -.lI4eettng for worship in the
1l0PP(N
6£Ln0'(
II
r P~OOEY'
I •
To Address Friends' Adult Class
Meetlug House.
PHONE RIDLEY PARK 600
=--........,••---
Oversight at Meeting
I
For Coordination
CHILDREN'S CLASSES
,
Christian Scienee Chureh
RUSSELL'S rire$tone SERVICE
HOW ARE YOUR TIRES?
directors of the Family Society. Afterward the work of the team members will
Major DeGrover van de Boe has be discussed.
FRIDAY FE
DRIVE IN TODAY - OR CALL US
*
The purpose of· the Class is to redis-
====~,==B=R=-:U;"AR~Y~I;8;;.~1;9;;3;;8~=ltaken charge of the High School Bible
A set of Yir~$ione Spark Plugs is an investment in motoring joy
Phone 440
DARTMOUTH & LAFAYETfE AVES.
"We Don't Sell Cara - We Ser"ice Them"
SWARTHMORE, PA.
-
Phone Swarthmore 900
A meeting of the captains and members
of teams whieh will solicit locally for
United Campaign funds will be held at
the residence 01 Mr. and Mrs. Ellwood
B. Chapman, Harvard avenue, on Thursday evening, February 24, at 8 o'clock.
This meeting will be addressed brielly
by Owen B. Rhoads, Esq., well-known
Philadelphia attorney, who is one of the
the list signifies outstand· clan-cutting privileges. Miss Lingle
work throughout a sem- prepared for Wilson at Swarthmore {
ester and cntitles a girl to increased High School.
I
~:~:a~:~::~.LB;:O~ost~n~~~~~I~=~~£~~~~:lcover
the teachings of Jesus as prac..
under tho Ad of
tically applicable to present day life.
JUST LIKE PIANOS
MOTORS NEED TUNING TOO
*
.
,I.
The Rector's Bible Class will be resumed on Monday evening. ~:i~~~~:
will be held at the Rectory b
at 8 o'clock. The Sermon on the Mount
will be used as a basis of discussion.
ROSALIE DRYDEN
Meld Editor
* *
*
United Campaip Drive
Citation for
Organization Meeting iug academic
Trinity Chareh Notes
l'ETEB E; TOLD
Edllor
* .
•••
585)_
TBB BWARTHMOR£&Jf, INC.
Publllher
Mrs. Philip C. Snow. of Wallingford,
Dr. and Mrs. William Earl
• • •
was hostess to the members of Le Cerele
Open Doors, Park avenue,
Mrs. C. M. C. Lewis, of the Strath }o"rancais on Monday evening.
Caroline Warner Feted Beforfl the
teachers and girls of The Mary LY'OIIIHaven Inn, will be hostess to The SixMrs. A. M. Bosshardt gave a reading
Wedding Mareh 19; W. W. School at a buffet supper Sunday even·
at luncheon and bridge next Wed- from M. Gonzague Reynold illustrating
Moss Married in Norfolk
iog in acc::orciance with their annual eus-I nesday.
his descriptions of Switzerland with
Miss Elizabeth Ann Blessing and AI... tom.
• • •
grOUIJS or" Swiss-French and Swiss-Gerden Van Kirk were united in marriage
Mr. and Mrs. Eu:en: Seybold removed
Mrs. J. Harvey Whiteman, of The man songs. Mrs. Harry Johnson accomNew Century Club Speaker
on Saturday afternoon,
at last week from the Strath Haven
Swarthmore, entertained the Kn,ittingl panied at the piano.
3 o'clock in the Orange Grove
rth
Club on Monday of this week.
Mrs. Snow read a humorous selection Mrs. Harold March, of West House,
to an apartment •in •The
more.
Mrs. Whl'teman wl'll enterlal'n at
from Ch ristopher Morley's IOWagon.lits" on t h e S wart h more C 0 II ege campus,
House, Pasa d eDa, CaII'f•
• Swa
The bride, who is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Lawrence, of
February 25 at the House of
on crossing the French frontier. Among spoke at the Chester New Century Club
Mrs. Martha R. Blessing, of Elm ave .. Cornell avenue, will entertain at
Dames, Philadelphia.
the guests were M. and Mme. Jacques Tuesday afternoon, February 15. Hel'
nue, and the late Dr. George F. Bless .. and bridge tomorrow cvening~
• • •
Scherer recently arrived from Paris and subject was "The New Approach to Ining, formerly Dean of the Engineering
* • •
Mrs. L. E. Putnam and daughter,
M. and Mme. Paul Dugal and Mile.' Du- dividual Health."
School of Swarthmore College, wore
joseph Koch, of Swarthmore
lana Putnam, of Lafayette avenue,
gal, of Quebec.
- -...........
, --a brown crepe dress, trimmed in gold will entertain at dinner before the
in Washington, D. C. last week-end.
Rafael Drnian Somerville
,.,
embroidery and carried yellow roses. ruary 19 meeting of the S:warth,ma'rel
* *•
Guest Violinist
The Meeting House was decorated dancing classes.
Mrs. Walter R. Shoemaker, of RiverIn F. & M. Production
Somerville Forum of Swarthmore Colw
with acacia blooms. The ring used in
•
. road• was host ess t0 The E'ghts
~Irs. Edward * R.• Hopkh.s
and her view
lome
lege
will present Rafael Druian, violinist,
Frederick
Hazeltine,
of
Rutledge.
the ceremony was the wedding riug three daughters, Patricia, Maura, an,1
I unch eon and b rl'dge on T uesday, F°eb soloist
with the Philadelphia Orchestra
which had been used by Mrs. Van
8
wilt appear in a supporting role of the
Kirk"s great grandmother and mother. Dorothy Lee, of Harvard avenue, will ruary .
• •
Youth
Concerts
1937-38 season, at 8:15
forthcoming Green Room Club proleave Swarthmore February 19, to join
P.
M.
Thursday,
March J. in Clothier
Among the fifty guests who attended Mr. Hopkins and make their home in' Mrs. Hen~y A. Pelrs.oJ, of Lafayette duction. UPlayboy of the Western
Memorial.
He
has
been concert artist
the wedding were Mrs. W. W. Speak· Tryon, N. C. Mrs. Hopkins has been avenue, wdl entertam out-of-town World", at the Little Theater of Frankwith
the
PhiladellJhia
String Symphoni.
man, of Pasadena, formt:.rly of Swarth· Chairman of Health for the Woman's
at luncheon next Monday.
lin and Marshall College, Lancaster,
more, who spoke after the signing amI
• * •
etta
and
with
innumerous
concerts in
Pa. Mr. Hazeltine, who has long been
reading of the certificate, and Mrs. Club and very active in the work of
Cuba. His program will include Schulocal Health Center during the past
Mr. and Mrs. D. W. R. Morgatl active in ..college dramatics, is
Frank Aydelotte, who is spending sev- I w;n',or
returned Monday to their home on the part of "Shawn Kegh," in
mann's Sonata in A Minor. Bach's "ehaeral months in Pasadena with Dr. Ay* * •
Strath Haven avenue after a seventeen- John M. Synge play.
conne." SibeJius' Concerto in D Minor.
delotte and Mrs. George F. Howell, a
~Ir. and Mrs. John C. Foster, of Ard- day motor trip through Florida. They
cousin of Airs. Edward Jenkins anu more, will be at the home of Mrs. stopped five days at Florence Villa,
Mrs. Le Roy Mercer, both of Swarth- Foster's parcnts, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. the winter home of Mr. Malcolm H.
more.
Child, of Vassar avenue, until },{arch M~rrill and Mrs. Merrill, the former
Mr. and ~{rs. Van Kirk will rcsidf; I
I
'11
H
Mrs. Robert E. Sharpless, of Swarthat the El Patio Apartments, 2411 Gage
when t ley WI move to omestead,
avenue, Huntington Park. Calif.
Pa., near Pittsburgh. Mr. Foster, who mOre.
* •
has been field executive of the Dela·
Mr. and Mrs. H. Weston Cla!"ke, oi
Mrs. Charles Kane, of
ware and Montgomery Council of the
Yale avenue, will entertain with a Valentertained last Saturday afternoon at Boy Scouts of America, will be di- entine bridge party at their home
the home of her mother, Mrs. J. Wit· rector of scouting in the Homestead
'Let us tune up your car - then notice the differIiams, of Moylan, with a shower in district.
*
honor of Miss CaroJine Warner, daugh·
* *
ence in power, economy, and performance
ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Warner, of
A Valentine tea dance was held Monday
Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Jones, of
.
tl
I' I
h
i
'
Haverford
avenue,
will
entertain
at
ft
Media, whose marriage to Alfred D. a eruoon In le ug 1 SC 00 gymnasium
Idinn,,, tomorrow evening.
Hoadley, son of Mrs. George A. Hoad- for the benefit of the Girl Reserves.
*
sale and can be obtained from Mrs.
Thoma. Jackson (Swarthmore 1792)
and Mrs. Agne. Shelden (Swarthmo,"
THE SWARTBMOREAN
l'lIlII.IBRED EVERY FRIDAY D
BJ:'C:r!ie Franeafs
is recuperating at her home on Cnr·
avenue following her recent operation.
.1938
FEBRUARY
~at
IF WASHINGTON
AND LINCOLN HAD BEEN
LIVING DURING THE
SAME YEARS?
WHA.T would have happened
if the Nation's two greatest patriots had heen living and active
in politics at the same tune?
WouJd one of them have heen
left in obscurity and the other
heralded as the greatest presi.
dent ever, or would they' have
been similar to the Lewis and
Green of labor.rule fame?
THIS is hard to determine
• • but the Nation knows that
both of these men did much to
make this a great eountry • • •
they devoted their lives to the
people in whom they had faith.
It is an bonor for us to look up
at inspirational figures such as
Wasbington and Lineoln. It is
an honor for us to aim at tbeir
ideals.
MA.RTEL BROTHERS have
based their ideals of honesty,
dependability and faithful servo
ice on these two men.·We have
strived to make our store a store
where ideals lead the way to a
hetter, more prosl)erous Swarth.
nlore.
•
Mrs. MeKay at Legion Auxiliary
At the American Legion
meeting on Thursday afternoon of last
week a large group heard Mrs. j. McKay,
of Springfield, county pUblicity chainnan,
speak informally on interesting legislation favored by the Legion. She
that· each 'unit paying· a small· amount
into the state Legion treasury
feel satisfaction in knowing that
year $25,000 was given by the l.e,goon
for flood relief in the Unitcd States
$10,000 to child welfare while $3000
.x'~laini"gl
spent on radio programs ,-.
Legion activity.
A party for new members was planned
for the neXt meeting of the Auxiliary on
March 10. It was voted to send the adopt·
ed leper, Jimmy Goddard, at the Car.
H OSPI'tal'III La"
VI'11e M anne
UlSlana, candy
aQd cigarettes or other useful gifts
holiday. Annou~cement was .made of
County CnunClI Afternoon to occur I
March 9.
Conntry Fresh Vegetables • • . WE HAVE THEM
HM-M-M. THESE
VE6ETABLES ARE
OELItIOUS-
-- .. --_... ,.. - --~---------~---
.........
•
WHER.E DO
YOU GET THEM
IN WINTER?
MARTEL'S
THEY HAVE fRESH,
tRISP VEGETABLES
ALL YEAR. ROUND.
l
!
\
\
\,
FEBRUARY
THE
;.aA:lf'll.....
nI SOCIETY
IN ANNUAL MEET
Morton and Rutledge; tbe townships
01 Springfield and part 01 Ridley. The
is known as the Family Service of taking it over (or the College
Swarthmore and
The
untary. All children will come directly
to the High School Auditorium for the
afternoon programs. Parents may wi.h
to take their children to points of edu-
cational interest. Those who wish to
building. Parents are a,ked by the
February 21,
children individually or in groups
DCIJartment to keep dogs in the house to 4:30 o'clock_ These conferences will
the Franklin Museum or the Plane"An analysis of the \",'ork accomp- or on leash white children go to school. provid~ ~he opportunity of discussing tarium may secure special tickets from
At the annual meeting and tea of the fished by our nurses during the past
'I
• the child s development and problems the teachers or the school office at a
. 'Community Health Society of Central
f 74&) "
If you want to make your clll dren s in terms of his educational achievement
Delaware County held on Thursday af- year shows a total 0
,
VISits to school day rich in interest, the school social, emotional, mental, and phYSI'cal' reduction of IOc per ticket, making
1,455 patients. We arc stressing", con..
the cost of admission only ISc. Other
ternoon of last week in the Woman's tillued Mrs. Cuenco, "under the guid- urges every home to return the "Hobby growths. Because of the illness of two trips of interest might include a trip to
Club House, Mrs. Joseph Seal presided.
of physicians, health supervision Questionnaire" sent out by the office. teachers, the conferences will not
the Academy of NaturalSciencc;PhilaMrs, T. Harry Brown, chairman of ar- visits which enable the patient and his 'fhis wjt1 turn the possessions and abil- held with parents of children in Grades delphia Zoo; the Graphic Sketch Club;
"rangements, had planned an interest- or her family to gain practical informa ities of parents into real educational One, College Av~nue, and Three. Rut- University M~seum;: the Aquarium;
ing program. In observance of National tion in disease t)revention and health use for the schools. If the school has gers Avenue, untd a later date.
nearby farms,. airports, boats, docks,
Social Hygiene Day, a film, "For AU promotion.
on file the name of a Swarthmore resi0 n F'd
nay, F e b ruary 25t.
h
or h'k
1 es 10
• the country.
W
Our Sakes", was shown by Robert
.
d
I
"The monthly c IIi Id h eaIt I1 can I er- dent who owns a Inotion picture film of men t
ary c I
asse. 5, up
to an inclludlinlg
.
• I •
Bernhardt, Executive Secretary of the ences in 5(:VC11 centers Ilave b eell we II Denmark, when a class is studying 6th grad e. WI II b
d w hi
e I
c .ose
I.e
I'
throughout 11C
k
h'ld'II'
it If a t eaeh ers a tt en d t h e na t lonaI meebng'"
Fifth Grade Mothere Meet
Delaware County Tuberculosis Asso- '.I:te"d<:d
I year. Th e to- D
-,
ciation.
attendance at 70 sessions was 1.186.
enmar. your ~ I . w,,1 enJoy ,
. the Progressive Educational AssociaIntroducing this, Dr. Marika Lam·
"Although no toxoid clinics were stamp collector IS wtlhng to share hIS tion which will be held in New York
The Mothers group of the Rutgers
bichi, whose home is on Haverford held in our centers we cooperated with hobby with boys and girls of Swarth- Cit;.
avenue 5th grade will meet 011 Friday
avenue, gave a talk on Social Hygiene. the family physicians in our district in more, your child will benefit. FurtherActivities of educational value for the afternooll. February 18.' at the home
M iss Virginia Elliman, Director of the diphtheria iUl1llUltlZatlOIl
. .
program, more, our sc h 00I5 may b e abl e to have children have been planned for several of Mrs. W. H. Gehring at 605 UniverPublic Health Nursing, Southeastern
"Health education 111
. c h'ld
I
h eaIt h "pareut S prees,to orgamzmg
••
a II sort s of afternoons by the school. These are sity place.
er commumPennsylvania Chapter of the American conferences will be empIIaSlZe
. d'ID our I "n'wln-.I< fun, such as ot h
' sc h eduled to be held in the high school
Red
Cross,
discusscd
the
"Possibilitie-i
for Health Education in Child Health teaching program this year,
ties are doing around us. But t h e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "The part time school nursing service "Hobby Questionnaires must be reConferences."
~ I I was continued in the pu b lic schooIs ot turned soon."
The band from the Elwyn ,",C 100 ,
. under the direction of Miss Mildred Morton last year.
The Soccer Committee appointed
"Glasses have been provided by the
Sizer, played a number of selections.
Kiwanis Eye Clinic in Chester, anJ sists of Mr. Dwight Cooley. Mr.
The report of Mrs. Nellie P. Cuenco, through funds from the Junior Red Delaplaine, and Mr. James Douglas,
Supervising Nurse, covered a thirteen· Cross, for those whose parents are un' d h ere
A School Band
can b
e orgaOlze
month
period,
the fiscal
year.due to recent change in able to pay for glasses.
if parents will notify Mr. Robert Disque,
Mrs. Cucnco dwelt UllO n the im~ Mr. Frank Morey, or Mr. \VilIard T"m-I
Preceding the anJ1ual meeting t IIe
b
board of directors mct for a brief busiin health brought about y linson of their interest. The cost to
ness meeting, It was reported that 525
spent in summer camps by chil- and girls enrolled will be $5 for the in·
dren, and convalescent homes by adults.
'"visits had been made by the nurses
strument and instruction.
January.
•
·
( I urmg
A Committee to study the school needs
9th Grade Mothers Review
which could be met by finallcial contriMrs. Cuenco reported:
itA generaiized nursing service is of~
Physical Education Work butions from the parents, aside from the
I 1
ered to the Community covering an
area of fourteen square miles. ActiviThe second meeting of the Ninth Gra
It consists of Mr. Guenther Froebel, Mr.
health centers with follow up work in February 14, at the High School.
William Craemer, Mr. Frank Morey,
the homes; part time school Ilursing in I. lolewton Uurboraw, Jr., chairman
Mr. Willard Tomlinson, and Mrs. Theotwo schools; general health supervision the Group, I)resided. The subject "Athlet- dore W. Crossen, Mrs. Robert
to atl members of the families; assist- lcS for High School" was first presented and Mrs. Walter M. Reynolds.
Buy Mason-Heflin's LAUNDERED
I mOl C• Z'cge
I
Ilfus J d,'rector 01 the
Grade Study Groups have 'come alive
a nce at deliveries and general hedside by W'II'
nursing service.
Boys Physical Education Department.
coal and get Famous Reading
"The area covered includes the bor- He spoke of the High School program under the leadership of Mrs. J, B. Pope.
Anthracite - all coal. Prompt
oughs of Swarthmore, Ridley Park, for the boys which include both types of Reports showed that sometimes there are
physical cducation, the fonnal and the as many as sixty mothers at a single
delivery hom a conveniently
Best
natural. The School IJrogram includes meeting. Others showed nO more than
located yard.
regular gym work twice a week, an out- one or two mothers absent from the whole
door program which varies with the sea- group. One day this week. three mother's
took place in the school at the same
sons; interscholastic competition in foottall and basketball; and for those
time.
At the next Home and School m~t~
included in the varsity or
.
COAL
CO.
teams, an intramural program with
illg on :March 8th a motion picture
EGG
siQllal . il~ter~clu:~1;lstic class games.
will be shown-UThe Gift of Life," from
Main' Office 4th & Allegheny Ave. STOVE
)'liss Virginia. Allen, t)hysical
the American Social Hygiene Association
To order, phone
for girls, discussed posture and
in New York. This is a beautiful and
NUT Cash PrIce
strated correct, standing. walking
scientific film 011 the biology of sex and
sitting positions. She emphasized the
reproduction. suitable for adults and
portance of mental as well as
children. The speaker for the meeting
health on posture and fot best results witt be Dr, J. J. Waygood, Chief of the
Or call your Local Mason·Heflin Yard
felt that the home, class room teachers Psychiatric Clinic at the Children's Hosand physical education department should pitat. His subject will be "The Effect of
Phone Swarthmore 6
cooperate.
Parental Emotions on .Children.'·
Mrs. Coenco
vicinity.
ternoo~ 0 the week of
~xcept FrIday, from 12:30
ents, on eac a
agencies work in close cooperation.
M Heflin
ason
11';
.....
CLASSIFIED
"'==========
\
::-
FOR SALE
SALE OR RENT-Furntsbed or UDfurnished home on BUI. AttractIve grounds.
On bus lines, near College. OU heat,
swarthmore National Bank and Trust CompanY'. .. B • rt1I
FOR
FOR
B~ac
ce for quick sale. flrBt
class
low
upright
mahogany flnlah,
l082-W. conditions.piano.
excellent
Telephone
Swarthmore
•
When Koppers Coke is In your
there's always plenty
heat in your housel nls
filel 91..tao you more
(
:'heat for less money because
'It II scientifically manufac-
,tureet. It's light and clean. It
I
, ashes of all_ AND VERY ECO·
\
\ NOMICAL! Try one ton of thll
I,modern fuel and you'll say
ifarewell to that polar bear
:. .lIng In your hamel
.E»PPERS
r~Q~J
'~.WOOD
..AlII
"
\
.•
COKl, CO.
CiIf.ICI
·c............ 'a.
,
'\"~ ,.., ,.... '
.
"
"
'
,''''...........
f!o' - . ,
.,...,
......:'.
"\-'.....iIooiIiiIII......._
and college athletics. He
Swarthmore High School 011 its
program. The ideal program should
every hoy a chance to participate, "sports
for all," he said.
Everyone should learn one or
sports well, since athletics play an
portant part in co1lege life and
physica1ly inefficient so often become
I adicals
and debaters of the
groups, he advocated competitive
and advised as many sports in high SCIiIOO'
a~ facilities and leadcrshil. pennittf.'
in pcrsGllal grooming and pcrsonal living
with the ninth grade girls.
M iss Mary H. Oherlin spoke of
Hew controlct work in the Ancient
ture Course and of the use of the ucor.r,. I
and reference books to teach pupils
make the hest use of their time and books.
COI:l1rnittecs were appointed to arrange
for 11111th grade Museum parties. Tea was
served previous to the meeting, by Mrs.
Charles E. Morrison and her committee.
,
......
GOC)DNESS,LOOK
AT MRS. JONES
GOING AFTER
GROCERIES IN /
TH IS RAIN.
I~
.'<;:AN
PHONE MY ORDER
AND KNOW
IT
WILL BE' DEUVERED
PROMPTLY.
;
~------------------
COAL
&
FUEL OIL
•
AND WHEN I PHONE
I KNOW THAT EVERYTHING
IS JUST /JS FRESH AND
NICE AS IF I
OUT MYSELF
A modern four bedroom home. Tile .Notice
ZONING
ORDINANCE
NOTICE
Is hereby
given that
a publlC
b ath • oiI b urner, 1ol IIOx250, 2.car hearing will be held In CouneU Chamber.
garage. Wallin~ford. ,14,500.
Borough Hall, Swarthmore. Pa .. at 7:45
P. M •. Wednesday •. M&rcb 16, 193B. In conM. PARKER
nectlon with a pending proposal to amend
the Zoning ordlnance of 1928.
S warth more 42
It is proposed to amend said ordinance
to require private garage and parktng facil(off the public streets) In connection
1896 ltles
CALL
with any bunding, lot or premises hereafter erected or used. as a place of public
ELECTRICAL
entertatnment and amusement, or as
hotel. eating place, apartment house.
REPAIRS
RADIO
pubUc market.
'rubes-Washing Machines-Cleaners tlple dwellln8, orELLIOTr
RICHARDSON.
2t-2-lB
Borough secretary,
-INSTALLATIONSSWARTHMORE ELECTRIC SHOP
PROPOSAL
Park and Dartmouth Aves.
Sealed bids w11l be received 1:)y
ough ot Swarthmore In COuncll
Borough Hall. Swarthmore. Pa.. on
HARRIET L. TREAT
16. 1938 at 7 :45 P. M. for SUPPlying approxImately twelve hundred to seventeen hun~
E,,;perl De.igning and Fitting 01
dred tons of crushed rock In sizes rallKlng
GOUln.
from 2\fI:" to screenings.
Bids are to be strictly in accordance with
Remodeling
specLO.catlOns. a copy of which may be ob~l Home or by the Day
tained. without charge. from the underIn Councll Chamber. Pat"k Avenue.
The Harvard
Sw. 892 signed
Swarthmore. Pa. A certUled check for ODe
hundred dollars must accompany each bid,
The successful bidder must fUrnlSb bond
YE
as required. by the Borough COde.
The Borough reserves the right to reject
Village Window Cleaner any or aU bids.
25c lb.
First Ribs 29c lb.
Juicy Sunkist LEMONS
Doz. 19c
Lima Beans
23cc!!~r
Full Pods -
A. HAUGER
Swarthmore 19
Young, Tender
A. Wayne Mosteller
"'OUR
,.
, ..
.s ·COOKING.
~01\\~\l
Reduced for a Short Time
Ribs of Beef
F1'~h
n-t
e.
Prime
SCO'IT TISSUE, , , , , , , , , , , . ' .. , . ' , , ' ' ' .. ' , , , , ' , , , ,10 Rolls 67e
KRAFTS VELVEETA CHEESE" , " " '" ' , , " " "" y.. lb. pkg. 15e
IVORY SOAP - Med. Size, , , , . ' , , , , , , ' ' , , ' , , , , ' , , ,10 Cakes 55.
CAMPBELL'S TOMATO JUICE" " , , ' " , , , ' " " , ... ,.3 Cans 22e
GOLD MEDAL FLOUR"""""" " " " ,.' " .... 12 lb, Bag 4ge
GRANULATED SUGAR , , , , , ' , , , . ' ' , .. ' . , ' ........ 10 lb. Bag 4ge
CRISCO SHORTENING ' , , , , , , , ' , . ' ' , , . ' , , ' , , , . ' , , ,I lb. Can 18e
LIBBY'S PINEAPPLE JUICE, . ' .. ' ' , , , , ' , . ' , .. , ' ,6 No.2 Tins 69.
PILLSBURY'S PANCAKE FLOUR, , , , ' , , ' , , , ' " , ...... 2 pkgs. 17e
P. T. SYRUP,
,,,,,'
, , , ' , , ' ,Large 22·oz. Bottle 29.
1 tAE AN ELECTRIC RANGE
(;t:
6ET I CAN
"'~O A
""kG} FOOD HARKET .z,.
..
Writer. Clnb to Meet
The \Vriters Club of Delaware
. County will meet Tuesday morning
February 22, at 10 o'clock in the Muni~
cipal Building, Upper Darby Townshit). The program wi11 be based' on a
continued criticism of prose
scripts. Mrs. Bertha Godshall will discuss "Slanting your Writing for Pub~
lication."
.'
ii~ii~~~I~!~~~~~~I,!
j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MITRO
c~':';,~:~;~~:1
by
"Your Neighbor Says"
Ah, what a brave woman!
modem electric range turns out wonderfully tasting food • • . that electric
cooking is fast, easy ••• and CHEAP.
You can either buy on our easy deferred payment plan-or rent. Ask
for particulars on our easy rental
plan, oHered to our residential electric customers for limited time only.
Come in and see the new models I
Since time immemorial, long suHeriog
wives have heard-''if you could just
cook Ult:e my mother'l But it's plain
to be seen that the little lady above
is thoroughly fed up on the ugument •• , and she has her own pet
BOlulioD.
Far be it from us to predict, but
willing to go on record that the
_!lie
Eleetrical , Contractor
,
'
Telephone S.ra~";~re 58
"
MRS. A: J.' Q'vI'NBY '&
Van Alen Bros.
Telephone Swarthmore 104.12
,I
Lane produced intersect. the and Ilrlvlleges as recorded in Deed Book No the sa!"e South sixty-three degl'eeB. twenty·
n
side or Cobbs Street produ-.,
651' page a,'u " "c
'jone
minute"
Weat twenty·flve
two hundred.
fOI'Q"Jeve
u:u
and Meven
hundrell
thousands
teet.
,adth on Country
Together with the right of way over a to 'he place o[ begtnnilll:. ContainIng" olle·half
one· tenth feet and striJ. of land three and one·half feet in width of an a,cre,
•
length or depth of the Westerly part of premises next adJoinImprovementB (:onsIJlt 01 .two story brick
between parallel linea at ing on the East. extending from said Broad- house, 24:1::30 leet: porch lront: lrame addi.·
anglea to Country Club Lane one hun- way Avenue Southwardly .to tbe rear of the don, 10xlG feet; frame 1001 shed. 9][20 feet.:
Dr. Frank W. Parker, agronomist for
";;;;I.ej~I".,;ht feet. the Northwest line thereot premlsee, and subJect' to a similar r1sht to chicken house, 10xl0 feet: out.bullding, 5xO
DuPont Company, on "The Agricultural ~';
partly tbrough .the center of a certain the owners of premises next adjoininl' of the teet: frame gar-age, 9][18 feet.
wide driveway which is laid out. East to UIH! a striP 01 land three and one·hlllf
Problem"
opened
for theadjoining
benefit on
of these
premieea feet
over the Easterly part of the
roary
17. last evening, Thursday,
the premll!le8
the Northweat
conveyed. exlendJng lrom tho
Sold U8 the properly 01 John Brzus and John
e
o
n
ne
y
eet
Southwe!t
Avenue to ~he rear or sald Bush.
'he d plb 1 I . 1
-~;';;':-;i~~~~:~-:;;'~: '_. ,!,~I.e:~~er,'
the Southwest IIlde of Country Club Lane.
tbe stven
said two
01 land EDWA
feet s.rI..
wide driveway
D;;;';ln,'-;
lI.D McLAUGHI~IN, Att)".
and privilege 01 ·tbe aloresaid
occupiers 01 said premises as a Fieri Facias
...;...•.., .. " No. 656
and for a passageway and driveand pas&aceway for pleasure VebleleS!
•
I.
free and
common
Ulle.
to hereafter
In common
tbe owners,
'", ....'..with
tlmes the
hereafter,
forever.
In com.·
forever, by
subject.
on th~
.December Term 19a~_
~~~.i~~:;:i~~~~.;;,n-;.ownera.
tenants and occupiel'8
abutting' owners. ·tenants and OC,
f
...... ~"-ii0!\.8 \I
thereon 'and entltled to the
a proporifo':!ale part 01' share 01 ,Lot with imps. N. E. 8. Ardmore Ave.}
_•
expense of maintaining a!ld keeping tbe Lansdowne Bora.. Del. Co., Pa.. 268 ft. S. E.
o,ne,half
hereinbefore
drIveway
in,rood
Improvements consillt 01 two ••'dl
.~
and repair mentioned
at all times
herealter
for- from S. E. s. Marshall Rd. 27 n. by 09.33 It.
Improvements consist o' two slory stUCCO
story 8~ing-le house, 2lx32 feet:
hoUse, l8x33 leet.; purch front; stucco garage,
tached two·car garage.
Improvements consist of two story etone and OxI8 feet.
Sold ae tbe property of Charles J. Nolan stucco house, 15][33 feet: porch front,
Soltl as the property 01 Charles \'. Goetz
nnd Marion M. Nolan. mortgagors and OJl'a
Sold as the property 01 William Slngle7. and Florence V. Goel~.
Billings, real owner.
mortgagor and Penn Building and Loan Auo·
LOUIS A. BLOOM, At,torney.
clation, reBJ owner.
H. L. FUSSELL. AUorney,
WILLIAM W. McKIM. Sberif!.
WILLIAM W. McKIM. Sherift.
HOWARD ·M. LUTZ, AttOrney.
--'----_._--_.-_._-
).{ark Macintosh,
Del)artment
Fhysical
Education of
of the
Swarthmore
lege, sp~kc of the reiation 'of high school
,'
,. "500
~~I;~~eli~~!fii(f.~;: ,11:'·'~'!I>:.li'ln~'o.,r~n,bl,re
The gro.,p 01 S,"arll,mOre
alumni who have been meeting at the CoIlege every two weeks for dinner and an
economics discussion meeting series heard
,y
NEBras'ka 9800
"FAREWELL TO
THAT POLAR BEAR
FEELING!"
No. 318
I=================
\
The
of the Batter
Coal for only
Sc more
•Levari Pad..
8HBRlJI'lI' BALES
Renew
101
I.
~
Sporle
six of their mothers, Mrs. Paul WilJune Term. 1931
SherUr'. Olllce. CoW1 BOUie. lIedla. Penna,
Bei.,.g Dietributed liams, Mrs, Jonathan Prichard. Mrs.
During the past week, the College
Alfred H. Marsh, Mrs. George Dunn,
AU that oortaln lot or piece of lJI'ound with
Saturd.,.. Jlarch 6. 1038
the mellilual'e or tt"nemenl. thereon erected lit·
Delivery of the new Delaware County Mrs. David McCahan. and Mrs, Charles basketball team ran its string of vicuate on the South~. eBt lIide of Dres,,1 Aveuue
$1::10 A. )I. Eaetem Standard '11me
11I1Iy teet wide) at tho dietance of three
tclephone directory "began yest~rday
Andes, rode into Philadelphia. where tories to seven straight. It defeated
I5lx,y·Rvt" feet 8outheaetwal'd
I~!;O.OO C..b or certified ebeck hund..... and
(Thursday, February 17), and will
visited the old Broad Street sta- Stevens 48 to 20 on the 9th; Lehigh 42 at CondJtIOIl8:
time 4.11 l&Ie (unlrM otherwl., .tated In from the Southeaat Kide of State Road (fift,)'
linuc through Saturday~ Fehruary 19. .
and saw there an exhibition train to 31 on Ihe 12th, and Earlham 45 10 advertleemt'nt), balance In ten day... Olbef" teet wille) In Upper Darby TownsblP. COunty
of Delaware, Btate 01 Penm,.I'f'anla,. beI~
C'OOOltiOllM on d8¥ ot sale.
",as 811110ulIl'ed hy Herbert S,
:;howillg various types of Pennsylvania 39 on the 14th.
knowil lUI Lotl5 Nos. 808·80D on Plan or Drex.et
No. 878. Hill Realty Company; contalllhlC" In front. or
manager for the BeU TeI.ephol1e Company J.ailroad equipment which had been
The women's basketball team de- Levari Farias
breadth on the aaid Drexel Avt'!Due sixty feet
of Pennsylvania,
specially arranged for them by R. C.
and e][tendlng ot that width til lengtb or depth
September Term, 1937
leated New College of New York, Z4 to
Morse.
Vice
President
of
the
PennSoutbwetll\l,'urd betweell parallel Unea at right
• I •
at Swarthmore on the 12th.
All tbat certain brick store ••'d,d,!,'lU~1" BIIlt'll'lf to the Ilaid Dre][el Avenue. one hun·
sylvania Railroad. Mr. Morse is the uncle
Eleventh Grade'
or pleee of land situale
dr.i,"'~-; tlI't'd and twenty-live feel.
The swimming team was submerged
side of Second etred a& tbe
Pret!ente Program of David McCahan, one of the 2nd grade
by Delaware in the Taylor pool at
feet Pteaaured
Under and 8ubJed to certain condition, and
pupils.
restrictions.
Newark.
Delaware.
on
the
9th.
The
Monday, February 14, the eleventh The gnide returned to Swarthmore
count was Delaware 53, Swarthmore
Impro\'emenls consist of three Itor,. slone
graue American Culture Class of Swarth- for lunch and a discussion of
and ItUeco houfIC, 18][30 feet: one story stucco
Carroll
won
first
place
in
both
the
more· High School presented a program morning's visit. Afterwards the childaddition, lJx12 leet: two stu". Jltucco addition
3xD [(!et: stucco garage, 9][18 fP.et.
'
devoted to scenes from the life of Lin· ren enjoyed a birthday party given in 220 and 440 free style events, for th~
Sol') a8 the prollCrly o[ John H. Kramer.
only
first
places
won
by
the
Garnet.
coIn, aud singing by the Music C!ass and their classroom by David McCahan to
mOrll'ONrOr anll Ma.uriee H. Matsinger, real
owner.
by the Assembly. The scenes they depicted celebrate his eighth birthday. ...'
•
I
HARm.!) L. ERVIN. Attorne,-.
from Lincoln's life included: the call
I
I
of the nominating connnittee, a social
Girl Seout New8
Addrea8Ca .Lebanon Firemen
WILLIAM W. McKIM, Sheriff.
gathering
in
the
White
House,
and
the
1·
.
tl
be
01
, d
I L
I
h
omorrow mornlllg Ie mem rs
surrell cr 0
ee at a arm ouse near T
6
'11 ··t h CI t
Times I John Burris West, of Dickinson aveImllrovemenls consist of two slol')" brIck
Appomattox.
rOOI)
WI
vlSI ~ e
les er. ..
SHERIFF SALES
houl!e. 20zGO feel: one story frame
'1
I
,offices as a l)art of their study of Journal~ nue, was the speaker of the evening. &okUi,,'aud
•• 20:1:20 feet: brick garace, 20s.21 feet.
1 Ie cast was as fo lows; Mrs. L1ncoln,.
I
I J
I' 'I 't B d
Tuesday, before a meeting of Leb~
SherIO', Omce. Court House, Medlll, Penna.
s
be Ism or tle ourna.st J.'Wert age.
as the property of Michael )lameWn
G erllrul(I~ S CI10 b·mgcer '
J...tr. tone, Ro rt
The Girl Scout House is in u~~:~:I~a:n~o~nrd~county firemen. He told of fire andSoldPetro
Saturday, February 20, 1038
Lema, mOl'tgagors and the aald
V eat> a1l1e; Mr.
u ney, John Hayes;
d f
h
.
in industrial plants and the Petro Lema, IlIld Annie Mamchln, William
n::JO A. M. Eastern Standartl Time
Mr. Lincoln, Walter Jones; Susan, Eliz- nee 0 rugs, t e ones now.on Its keeu, IVi.' played by the local volunteer fire- Mamchln, Nicholas Mamehln • .John )lamchin,
011'0. MamchIn and Waner Mamchin. real own
abeth \Vhitaker; Mr. Tucker Hill ard are wo~n through and do httlet10,nllooel
Conditions: 1250.00 cash or eertiOed check
the cluldren warm underfoot.
man.
.
' - y
at lime 01 sale (ulilesa otberwlse stated 111
S weney; Mr. Prtce, James DaVIS; Mr,
I '
"d
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - WH. B. HARVEY, AUorneJ'.
advcrtisemenl) balance in ten days. Other con·
· d' R b rt CI
M M i t h J 1 contemp atmg castlllg aSI e one or more
ditlolls on day of sale.
H m,
0 e
ay;
r.
ae
n
as.
0 m
SHERIFF
SALES
'[
BI' S
1 M ' D' 9 x 12 foot carpets are assured the rugs
H orsey; !t
rs.
ow, ara 1
arle
ISbe grateI u II y received
.
I l' I
No. 804
Fieri Facias
'Iue' Mrs Otherl . E '
E t A would
at t Ie Itt e Sherln's Office. CourL House, Media. Penna.
No. 17
Ir,,..., Facias
' I' A' ICY"
umce • a on;
n white house on Cresson lane.
Seutember Term. 1037
Saturd8¥. March 12, 1038
O r d er
y,
rt
mr
0111115; Mr. Hay, Henry
L
I
'
d
I
d
L'
G
I
oca resl ents are a so rcqueste
mton;General
enera Meade,
Grant, William"
ThomasEvans;
Mar~ g? t h roug h t h'
0;30 A. M. Eastern Slo.ndard Time
DecembeE' Term, 1937
shalt;
elf a ld Kodak alb~ms
All that certain lot. OE' piece of 11'0und with
""lleral
Lee,
Stuart'
Jon'es.
Jllctures
of
the
un.
derpas.s
d,urmg
Conditions:
cash
or
certified
check
All
that
certain
lot
or
piece
of
land,
with
the
bulltllngs
thereon
erectv,
I
h hid
at time 01
otherwise 8t.aled in the buildings and improvement. t.hereon erect· ~. slmate
In anll
the improvements
Borough of Clifton
Heights,
I I •
process
0
construction
IC Girl
mc ~~e~:;~~ II :::~~;.:::
Jliluate
Soutberly
sidefeet
of Broadway
the Countybounded
of Delaware
and State
of
tool
house
from whichw the
an
in ten days. Other ed.
Avenue,
at on
the the
tUltance
of nf·ty
meaaured III
Pennsylvania,
and described
accord·
d A .
.
14Il.,.
WeetwardJ.y from Cherry Street. in tbe Bor- IIIit' to a. survey thpreo( made by George L.
2 o d G rad e I Dspec18 P • R. R. H
Train
ouse was evolve .
pictOrial
Facias
No. 380 ougb 01 Clifton Heights. in the County of Pennock, in November, 1888. as lollowa:of the house is being p!anncd in
Delaware and Stale of PeDDQ'lvania. Contain- Beginning at a stake in ,tb., middle of tbe
Tuesday, Februar,y IS, was a gala I
II' .
d
De
be ~
1937
In ... hi Iron. me.... _· .hence We,'ward'- a1o.g road leading Irom the Springfleld and Darb,.
cem r ....::rID.
....
W~Avenue, twen17-flve
AI
day for the pupils of the 2nd grade I lat a vISItors an Scouls may see
the
said Broadway
feet R 0 ad 1
0 S
amuet G . Le"
v s "'II
.... s In the llne
it has improved from its modest
All that certain lot or piece of 1P'0und with and ez.lendlnl' 01 that widt.h in length or of land late of Theodore B~wklD8, thence
of the Rutgers avenue school. On the A
. t
. II'
I'
w,'11
buildings and Improvemen18 thereon erect.- depth Southwardly between parallel Unes at alollg- the middle 01 said Road and by said
9 :21 A, M. train twenty-three ",h,ildlren, tty tnc ure 11.1 liS connec Ion
Situate at Manoa, In Haverlord Township, right anglell to the laid Broadway Avenue one land North four degrees. fUteen minutes East
...
gratefully received, carefully reproduced
County, Pennsylvania, and described hundred fifteen feet to lands of the :Media one hundred and sixteen feet and fifty·four
their teacher, Mrs. Benjamin Groff,
rdl
tal
I
i
Title and Trust Co. Bounded on 'the Eaet and hundredths uf a loot to a stue a corner 01
and returned to its owner. It may be sent ::: MI~fe:r'~~1' M!:a:~ :~:n::mo;!ie!id West by lands of Amelia F. Marshall. Being .obther I~~d lathe ut DenNJamln T. Long-streth
to The Swarthmorean office or to Mrs. Tingley
known
andGrove
deeignated
Lot. 22
No.1023
179 on
ence twenty·one
.... onl" t e minutes
same orlh
de~
a f l..iSurveyon,
t wit dated November IS, 1927 of
Cherry
dateda8M8,J'
andPlan
re- grees
Eastsixty-three
one hundred
Guenther Froebel, 425 North Swarth. s 0 owl!. a
:vised Auguat 13' 1923 and revised April 30 and eighty-seven ond eight hundred and IOV·
Reinl' Lot No. 48 on the said plan be- 10"0
,.
' euty-f1ve thousandth" feet to a &take thence
_
,. ,
~illlling at a point in the Southwest side ot ....
Is~1I1 by said Longstreth's land South twentymore avenue.
Country Club Lane at the dilJt.ance of one
Under and subject to cerlaln restrictions as I:! x degn~es. thlrty·nlne. minules EasL one hun·
take
Alumni Study Economics
hundred nineteen
three-tenths
feet sIde
South·
Deed and
Booksubject.
No. 664, Pap 612 lic.. 1dred feet to a !l
the Unet.hence
ot land
of
pointandwhere
South"'est
of \ re~;;~. inUnder
to certain rll'hts Hannah P. LeVIS andIII Slater8.
IIlong
'\f
The Swarthmore I;lementary Schools
hold the second lerie. 01 individual
b t
e ween t eaeh ers an d parh I f '
5
SWARTRMOREAN
Coll"lle
New Telephone Direetorietl
Attendance at these activities is vol-
and one part time nurse.
The Borough Council has approved
"The former Welfare Division 01 the School Salety Patrols for
and Tea in Woman'a Community Health Society has re, o"ntly
The eighth grade boys arc interested
CI'''b HOUBe; Thirteen.Month "
become a new lamily agency
THE
1938
FEBRUARY
School C o n f _ auditorium and children and parents
-N_t
eek
are cordially invitell to attend.
PARENT COMMIlTEES
APPOINTED FOR SCHOOL
staff consists of three full time nurses
Report Delivered by
1938
,
,
,
SON"
JOSl"'B'1I;
QUJNBY
.:
.
FUNERAL
tIIILL: PHOMB •
DIRECTORS'
IIDU. PoLl3t-2-111·
PBILADEL'B:I'A ELECTRIC COMPANY
"
.
""";,iff'.
tic.,..",;"
:1
.
THE
6
FEBRUARY
SWARTBMOREAN
NEWS NOTES
18, 1938
Ihere in Ihe capacily of physical educaOn Thursday evening of last week
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Zahn entertained tion instructor.
a duplicate bridge club, of which Mr.
Mrs. J. Burris West. of Dickinson
and Mrs. Wallace McCurdy, Mr. and
avenue,
spent Wednesday in Washington.
Mrs. David Shaw and Mr. and Mrs.
D. C. attending a meeting of the comPhilip Kniskern, of Swarthmore, are
mittee
planning the Provincial Conference
also members.
each
summer at Orkney SIJrings, Va.
held
• • •
Dr. and Mrs. William T. Johnson, of
Pauline Beatty t of Morton, wilt enterOgden avenue, entertained an evening tain Friday evening, February 25.
bridge club to which they belong last
Friday.
Marshall Schmidt, of Elm avenue, will
• • '*
entertain at a dessert-supper before the
Mr. Daniel Goodwin is recovering from
pneumonia with which he has been ill dancing classes Saturday evening.
h'
at IS home on Walnut lane for the past
Dorothy Lueders returned from West..
two weeks.
Edward Boyd and Mrs. Carroll Thayer
presiding at the tca table.
There will be a CQUllty trip to the
Acadcmy of Fine Arts Oil Exhibit at
Mr. and Mrs. Eric J. Monoghan, of
10:30 A. M. ncxt Friday, February 25. Park avenue, entertained at dinner lad
«('OIdimud /ro", Pao~ One)
All interestcd shouhl l'olllmunit-ate with Saturday evening in celebration of Mr.
lIome" hy Sihel1us. Mary Ann Hook,
Monoghan's birthday anniversary which
Mrs. Henry A. Pcirsol, of I.afayette avche observed Sunday. Guests were Mr.
who studies under Mrs. Whitaker, was
most effcl'tivc in ;t spirited Norwegian nue.
and Mrs. Harold McDowell, of Chester;
I I
P I.
I F'
D
t
t N O r . all(!" Mrs. Charles 1.... Fleming, Dr.
Officers, stewards, deck hands, galley 0 Ice ant Ire epar men
ewe and Mrs. Paul Bowers, Mr. and Mrs.
5Ia\'es, and ordinary seamcn received
.
.,
.'
Paul Heuser, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Harl1Iuch praise frum thc passengers upon
An IIlvestigahOl~ IS bCUlg cOJ~ducted kins and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jarrett, all
dcbarkatioll. Two uf the last classification, hy . county ~etcchves and. Sprlllgfieid
I 'I . IV'II Broo- pollce follOWing the fire wluch destroy- of Pennsgrove, N. J.; Mr. and Mrs. W.
·
(K at Ilryn S ImllCrs am .\ rs.
J s
d
1
b
fiJI d 'tl h
d A. W. Grier, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hilhead) gave a tap dance specialty, and the e ~d argblc darn I de fWI 1 I ay an lard, Dr. and Mrs. David Green and
.
f C
. cons) era y amage a arm louse on
aptam I .. lIlcO
.
I
S prl11g
' fi e Id ,as
I t S a t - "Ir. Walter Ballinger, of Salem, N. J.;
crcw, nnder the. IcadcrsluIJ 0.
• • •
town School last Saturday to visit her
II lJ,venue,
~~~fflTlan occa~IOII~"Yr 1~l)kC l~nt~1 SO~lg. urday afternoon. 'fhe Swarthmore Fire and ~Jr. and Mrs. Earl Ewen, of AUo- Mrs. Louis Caullon West, of Washing- parents. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Lued:'
ton, D. C., stopped last Saturday to visit ers, of North Princeton avenue. She was
. liS crew consll~te<1 0 k· ~s. CI"ld l~~ e~ Company was called to the sccne at way, N. J.
her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and accompanied by a classmate, Alice Perry,
Spcl1:er, .Mrs. 're( cnc ~'. 11 ..."
rs. 4.20 P. M. It is c1aimcd the fire broke
~. 1-. "'ollers, ~lrs. \~ll1mm G. Mc- out simultaneously in the barn and in
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bates, of Mrs. Alexander W. Moseley, of The of Westerly, R. I.
(:Ia~hery. ~Irs. I-larry ~hnl'r, ~lrs. JOllldl the house, although they are several \Vestdale avcnue, had as their guests Swarthmore, while en route to" Boston
* * •
Sta1l1ton, Mrs. Rmloll1h H. Banks, an hundred (eet apart. The property is now last week-end Mrs. Bates' cousins, Mr. to visit friends there.
Mr. E. Clayton Walton, of RiverM~~. LlOyd A. ).~cDo\\'eli.
.
ow lied by the Pennsylvania Company and Mrs. Prescott R. Andrews, of New
• • •
view road, and Mr. Taylor Rogers, of
~ 00 .mu.ch credit cannot hc~ gl~en to and in years past was used by the York City. Mr. and :Mrs. Bates enterMr. and Mrs. J. B. Pope, of Oberlin Swarthmore avenue, ·returned Tuesday
Chief J'.lIgllleer Mrs. Roland G. E. UII- Emmons Dairy.
tained at dinner in honor of Mr. and avenue, will have as their guest this night from a three weeks' trip to Flormall, the unseen officer who brought the
\VilJiam E. Joncs, of Chester, wa') Mrs. Andrews, Saturday evening, Feb- week-end Mrs. Pope's sister, Mrs. Doro- ida. Among other places they visited
cirl'ul11na\'i~ati~n of tl~c globe to such arrested for disregarding the safety ruary 12, when their guests were Mr. thy T. Dyer, dean of women at Bucknell Key West, Bradenton and Orlando.
h3 1))Y CUI!lIlTlatlOll. ASSisted hy that l1Ia5- lights at the railroad grade crossing and Mrs. Howard W. Newman. Jr., University, who will be en route to the
ter I)f make-up, Alexander Dryden, the 011 Fehruary 13 and will appear later.
I\lr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Lassiat, Miss National Dean's Conference in Atlantic
authenticity of the characters could 1I0t
Wesley Logan, of \Vilmington, ar- Verna Nickerson, Miss Margaret Dek- City, N. J.
he doubted.
rC'Soted on the 12th for thru traffic vio. natel who is a cousin of Mr. Bate:;
and a student at Swarthmore College.
Decoratiolls were in the efficient hands lation paid a fine.
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Ewing, of
uf Mrs. Benjamin Collins .uld ~lrs. H.
Haymond 'Veils, or Chcster, negro, Miss Deknatel's fiance. Mr. Herbert Dartmouth avenue, spent the past weekA. Peirsol. assisted by ~Irs. Harold Grif- arrested on the 10th for reckless driv- Hinman, and Mr. Charles Brooks.
end at Annapolis, Md., with their son,
tin, Mrs. \V. F. Faraghcr. ~lrs. J. \Varren ing, will appear for hearing later.
Mr. and Mrs. C. MacDonald Swan Midshipman Edwin Aiken. '\'hile there
Paxson, 1I.lrs. Joseph H. Perkins, and
Eugene 1... Smith and Joseph W. will entertain at bridge this evening at they attended a perfonnance of the play,
Mrs. A. R. 0 Redgravc. The student com· Fields, no home, were sentenccd to their t,ome on S. Chester road.
"Whistling in the Dark," given by the
mittee of the Cruise Dance coopcrated by thirty days each in the county prison
* * *
"Masqueraders," a dramatic club com·
making the back drol) and the festoolls. on vagral'cy charges on February 13.
Mr. and Mrs. ]. Passmore Cheyney, llOsed of cadets at the United States
The deck steward who endeared himself
H. A. Roubert, of ~hester. was fined of RUlgers avenue, will have as their Naval Academy.
to each and e\'ery passenger in !tl)ite of, $10 all thc 15th, havmg been arrested house guests for the week-end Miss
or pcrJla]lS because of, his omnipresence, February 1 for not having his official Lida Perine, of Orange, N. J. Mrs.
Miss Lee Blundin, of Dartmouth aveHBN fire make.
W
of Chester, appeared February 2 amI Perine with a lUllcheon at the Ingle· Thursday evening, February 10. Her
headlines it also
Dining rool11 steward Richardson was was filled for reckless driving 011 Janu- Ileuk, Saturday, February 19. Her guests included: Miss Elizabelh Flachmakes head
assisted bv gal1ey slaves ~larriott, Banta, ary~ 30.
"
guests will include Mrs. Herbert San- harth, Miss Lois Jack, and Messrs.
lJickinson', Frochd, Coolcy. \Vray, ami
Eugene CraIg, of Pros~ect Park, ar- ford, Mrs. ~iltiam Middleton Fine. Chades Daubert, George Hobson, Jr.,
if the victim ia
P;tXSOIl, as well as hy those able bodied rested February 13 for disorderly con- Mrs. Peter E. Told, and Mrs. Harold Charles Flachbarth and Charles Harris,
'I
G
duct
was
fined
$10.
G
Griffin.
all of Roxborough; and the Misses Mary
ConecIlY, 1\ rs. eorge
Dot
covered by
J0111
I
J. SIlev I'Ill, arrest c
d aI e
t last
.
• • •
seamen
Doreen ~'lc
,
~
Snyder and Mary Peckerman, o[ Swarthw
I
:\Ofc ,"cag.
Mrs.
Earl
Anderton,
Mrs.
A.
I
f
i
t
ffi
.
I
t'
D
d
1\1
A
h
J
J
I
.
mont 1 or t Iru ra c VIO a IOn was
r. an
rs.
rt ur • ones, 0 more.
insurance.
]. 1hller, ~frs. L. L. Hedgepeth, Mrs. filled on the 14th
Dickinson avenue, will leave Tuesday,
\\,ills Brodhead,. Kathryn Simpers and
A I1n3 1\
'I c Car tl1Y,. 0 f Ch es t er, was ar- February 22, fer Atlantic City, N. J.,
IlriDg your Fore ' - upto.t..
Mrs. Roy W. Harkness, of Rutgers
],!rs. Charles Kimmel.
rested early Sunday morning [or dis·
they will remain for a week
tbrouah the clep, d·M. Au-'>iJe
Purser ~Irs. Claude Smith reports that orderly conduct and discharged upon
Dr. Jones attends the meetings avenue, is spending several months visitJnouraaao Compeny of HadanI.
:1 suhstantial al110unt has heen addcd to the payment of ·costs.
o[ the National Vocational Guidance ing her mother, Mrs. Clara B. Zitt ill
CoJSQOCticat.
Miami, Fla.
fund for new chairs, all donations (or
The Fire Compauy responded to a Association.
which are wclcomed by Mrs. E. D. grass fire at 716 Harvard avenue at
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Moran, who have
:Mrs. Margaret Phillips, of Yale aveBraulls in honor of the Forthieth Anniver- 12.20 P. M. Tuesday of this week.
is spending the remainder of the been residing at the home of Mrs. Moran's
sary of the \VOInan's Cluh which will
mother, Mrs. H. J. Lumsden, of Kenyon
winter season in Orlando, Fla.
occur on March 15.
avenue,
left Swarthmore recently for the
Mothers Discuss Adolescent
417 Dartmouth Ave.
"Story of Geo. Washington"
Billy Froebel, of Swarthmore ave- Devereux Farm School outside of DownNext Week
nue, entertained a few friends at a ingtown, Pa. Mr. Moran will be employed
Swarthmore 1833
The fourth meeting of the year for the
Next Tuesday afternoon's meeting will
birthday supper Monday afternoon. It
Eighth
Grade
Mothers'
Group
was
held
he under the
Mrs. Guenther Froebel, of SwarthPeter E. ToM is chairman. ~frs. J. B. with "Building Up the Personality of the
Adolescent"
as
the
topic.
Mrs.
Gllenthel'
more
avenue entertained at luncheon
Hopwood will show a motion picture,
Froebel
slJoke
on
"The
Home
Lire
of
the
on
Thursday'
of last week in honor of
"Thc Story of Gcorge \Vashillgton" with
Adol~scent."
Mrs.
F.
T.
Flaherty
spoke
Mrs.
John
Lessens,
formerly a resident
musical accompaniment hy the courtesy
on
"Self-Expression"
and
Mrs.
Rohert
Swarthmore.
Guests
were a few
or the Philadelphia Electric Company. A
Spiller,
on
"Recrcation."
Mrs.
Raymond
intimate
friends
of
Mrs.
Lesselis,
who
discussion of national current C\'ellts will
Bye
is
I)r<'gram
chainnan
or
the
group
the
house
guest
of
Mr.
and
Mrs,
follow. Mrs. Edwin A. Yarnall and ~Irs.
8TOBB B01l88:
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Mon., Tues. 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. Wed.
H. Hopson will he hostesses with :\0 [ rs. which is headell hy ~lrs. Hans P. Neisser. Robert Haig, of Ogden avenue, leav·
ing Monday for her home in Boston.
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Thurs.
9 A.M. to 10 P.M. Fri., Sat.
Club Women on
"World Cruise"
•••
·...
•••
I
•••
* * *
•••
• • •
I
•••
W
achn--
pecially
fuil.,
•••
•••
• • •
•••
PETER E. TOLD
• • •
• ••
GIANT
TIGER
• • •
BETTER QUA.LlTY FOR LESS
.Eric J. ··~Monoghall, Jr. left Saturday
to return for the junior prom at Cornell
Unh'ersity where he is a SOIJhomore.
He had Silent a' week visiting his parents,
}..fr-: and Mrs: Eric ~Ionoghan, of Park
• * •
EDGMONT AVE. -
SEVENTH & WELSH STREETS
SWING INTO SPRING WITH
£ALCUTTA
PRINTS
That accent to beauty amI a.lds a
new practical service. .
"Dicky" .Bosshardt, of Park avenue,
cl1tert'ained a group of boys, classmates in
the Rutgers avenue school second grade,
iJ'l celebration or' his eig!lth birthday last
Friday evening.
Specials For Week of February
I
~!!!!!!!!!!!! lb.
•
•
Perspiration Resistant
Spot-Resistant
•
•
Water-Repellant
They're hard-to-mllss and slay cleaner and /resher •• longer r
Mary Alice West, of Dickinson avenue, entertained classmates o( the
second grade, Rutgers avenue school,
with a Valentine's party at her home
last Saturday afternoon.
• • •
Carter Davison celebrated his birthday anniversary last Saturday afterno'on by entertaining a group of boyo;
at his home on Harvard avenue.
SWARTHMORE NATIONAL
Bank and Trust Company
• • •
Mrs. Harry
• • •
'The new home of Mr. and Mrs. Wit·
G. Minich, of. <;hester, is under
at the corner of Univer·
place and Cornell avenue. George
1~~:~,es::~:I~a~'n~'d~eCompany expect to have
Ithe
spring.
Member Federal Depoait Inlurance Corporatioa.
!!!!!!~~
19
2 No. 2 cans. . . . . . . . .
I
c
I
Del Monte Early Garden 25
PEAS--2 No. 2 can&--
c
complete early in the
•••
Mrs. Horace
Mr. and
P. DeVoll reI h,rn,ed last 'week-end to their horne in
Swarthmore after a month's motor
through Florida.
Popular Brand
CLEANSER •.••• 3 cans5c
Seedless RAISINS
13
2 15-oz. pkgs. • • • • . . •
c
I
Libby's Dill or Sour
PICKLES ..•••• qt. jar
Gold M"edKITalCHBN TESTbEaDg" 23c
13
c
I
I
FLOUR ••••• 5 lb.
Del Monte Grapefruit
15
JUICE .... 2 No. 2 cans
c
···: I
Mrs. Dean Parker and son, Dean,
formerly of North Princeton avenue,
st()pj:.ed in' Swarthmore on a recent day
.
a brief visit to local friends. The
Parkers are now living in South OrI al1ge, N. J.
and
Vi. Scott, of
Stratll Hayen avenue, left last week
for a threc ,'veeks' trip to Florida.
Your Banking With
Inclusive
Del Monte CORN
DEL MONTE or SUN'MA.ID
Curtis, OJ1 Tuesday evening at the cor-II
inthian Yacht Club, Essington.
~{r.
Do
23rd,
• • •
~
Mr. and
K. Taft and
?.-I rs. Cornell Archbold, of the Elmore
apartments, Elm avenue, were among
the guests at a' f
dinner party given by
Mrs. Archbolds ather, . Samuel Philip
Stain-Resistant
Can Purchase
to February
Country GenUeman or Golden Balltam
c
Del Monte KERNEL21
ETIES 2 12-oz. cans
c
Whole Kernel Golden Bantam. Corn
• • •
Mrs. William
Calc.Lfla Prints
26
Beechnut
COFFEE •••••. Ib. can
% lb. Can FREE With Bach
17th
Early JUNE PEAS
5
N o. 2 can •••••••••••• c
~=====:J=:n:=r:=====:. L=====:J=][=I=====~
:'
Our
Famoua Golden
CEI ERY HEARTS-bu.
3 Stalks in Every Bunch
8
U. S. No. 1 (Large Slz&)
Pama. POTATOES
15 lb. bag (peck)....
c
TENDER -DELICIOUS
Fresh Wasbed Green
3
SPINACH ••.••••• .lb.
c
Rump or Round
STEAK .......... lb.
(One Price - None mgber)
A REAL TREAT
Young Stewing
CHICKENS ••••••• lb.
Genuine Shoulders
2t
SLICED WHitE sqUARB
AMERICAN
CHEESE-Sliced-lb.25c
O'LAMB ......... lb.
(WITH RACK)
\
2A'Ie
25
.;
It
38
BI~UR:0US DOUBLE BlCB
TUB BUITER •••• Ib.
BALTIMORE PIKE AND HIRST AVB.
EAST LANSDOWNE
c
Pay
Pay'
Fire Company
Fire Company
Dues
Duet
SWARTHMORE, PA., FEBRUARY
VOL X, No.8
WASHINGTON'S
BffiTHDAY BILL
III.....
J. O. Hopwood Gives Pro.
gram at Woman's Club; Motion Picture Review Next
Tuesday
'Vashington's Birthday was approl'riately celebrated at the Woman's Club
with the showing of the motion picture
"The Story
of was
George
The
guest
speaker
Mrs.Washington."
J. Osborne HopwoOd, county chainnan of citizenship.
Preview of
Children'.
Library Books
The Children's Committee of
the Swarthmore Public Library
Association invites all mothers
interested ill that. service of th!:..
Library to view the attractive
group of recently purchased juvenile books all Tuesday afternoon from 4 to 5 in the Library.
New books will be put in circulation at that time. Tea wi1l be
served, Mrs. Harold G. Griffin
pouring.
,
25, 1938
'2.50 PER YEAR
La8t Appeal, Goal.Not Reaelled COI.IEGETOHEAR
MARCH 1st SEES
Mrs. George A. Hoadley, of Walnul
RUSSIAN SUNDAY
CAMPAIGN OPEN lane,
reports a total of $926.75 in actual
Meetings to Plan Annual Drive
for Funds
Workers Hold Preliminary
With the launching of the United Cam~
paign on March 1 only a few days off,
.
tDhe hundreds of volunteer ,,:,orkers 111
elaware County are working under
"forced draught" in a supreme effort to
local contributions beyond any prevL..:..._-.-:__--,________..J send
ious total.
returns to. the Salvation Army Drive
in Swarthmore, of which she is chairman. Although three workers are late
making their returns, their calling list
IS small and it is expected even with
their additions there will be $6Q or
more required to reach the ~1000 goal.
Anyone who has not contrJbuted and
those who would like to make an additional donation in order to reach the
goal may leave money at The Swarthmorean Office or at the Swarthmort!
National Bank.
General Yokhontoll to Present
Russia's Attitude Toward the
Current Conftict in the
Flir East
Victor A. YokllOntoff will
Friends' Meeting House
;:,uuday, February 27. at 8 :15, on "The
Attitude ot the U~ S. S. R. towards the.
.i:'resent COIlJlict in the Far East."
General Yokhontoff's' official position
IS that of 1Illhtary attaclu! at the Russian .l!.mbassy in Tokyo. His btle was
earned, apparelllly, irom service m the
White ltusstan Army dunng the WarJd
War. Under Kerensky's regune, General
t okhontott became Assistant ::;ccretary of
\Var. Alter wluch he assumed his presCOlt posihon as military attache.
Leneral 'YokJ10ntott is an author, leeturer, and editor as well. In 1929, as
··
gues t sp eak er at t h
e .dlSutute
of lnternauona! Kelations at the University oi
;,o.Uthenl Calnorrua, he led a rOWld tc.ble
u
•••
L'__'
on ".,
...uo dern .1.\.us5Ia
ahu
t he ..."·ar ~L'
At tlte Insutute 01 PoBtics ill Williamstown Mass h took
h
rt' th
J'"
.,
e
ae ve pa 10 e
QlSCUSSIOIl of the problems of the Orient.
t1ls VIsit here is bCllig sponsored by the
l.ooper Foundation and U1e Internatioual
1
CI b
I'i.e allons
u.
•
-------General
speak ill the
Mrs. Hopwood -spoke of February as
Faced with a higher quota this year,
, I
the month of great American birthdays
the local volWlteers 111 Upper Darby,
since Longfellow, Lowell, Edison, LindSwarthmore and Lansdowne held three
ft
bergh, Alina Howard Shaw, Susan B.
major m.eetings this week at which the
Anthony, Lincoln and Washington were
seriousness of the crisis was thoroughly
.
all born ... this month.
Induction of Junior High School defined by campaign e,,:ecutives.
The motion picture dealt with the boyBoY.8 Held Thursday
They pointed to Ihe pyramiding of Philip AIden, Cub Ma8ter; Dun.
hood Iile of Washington as well as with
·.of Last Week
deficits, postponement· of badly needed can Foster, Chairman of Pack
his pioneer and Jlolitical life. The film
. H,'gl, repairs to buildings and equipment and
Committee
S evera I mem bers. 0 I Ihe J UUlor
'
.
.
was prepared for the two·hundredth an•
f i t. h
e rnountmg
demand for aid
front
dlSniversary of Washington's birth and was ~:~:Oyl ;:~~~II:=a~::r::rym:~~:~o~e !~: tl'e~sed families. Beyond this, tlley
On February 20 a meeting of those parpresented through the courtesy of the . d t'
f tl bo J Alfred A lada plaIDed, lay the greater danger that fatl- eots ill the Swarthmore Cub Parents
111 ue Ion 0
1e t
ys • b'l Club nspok
g , ure 0 f tI
Philadelphia Electric Company.
K
tA
le presentf
system 0 '
private p h'l
1 - Association who had been elected den
f II
e
°t
'
e
01'
Aller
anthropy
would
throw
this
burden
also
fathers was called in the home of Duncan
Mrs. Hopwood added gr(.atly to the o th,e I eyst.one IUSom
patr s.
f
aey
t
d' . •
'th
F
IN hC
d
e unclonso
program by her comments on the picture on
the installation a film was presented on upon ax-su[~porte msbtutlOns WI con- 'oster. 0 .J; ort
hester roo . The pur[
sequent 'soarIng of taxes to levels above pose was to fonn the Cub Pack Comand with her talk on national current
any reached heretofore.
mittee, which is the executive committee
events which followed the showing of sa ety.
The members of the Safety Patrol are:
I h
..
the film. She spoke of the Equal Rigths Captain,
Burton Peekerman; Lieuten~
Swartmllore workers met Thursday 0 t e organization. Duncan Foster was
Amendment, the Wages and Hours Bill,
' W' d I evening, February 24, at the home of unanimously elected chairman, and Henry
Timmy Mercer, Edd
.. te
111 e I;
the Increased Navy Bill, the McKellar ants:
Patrolmen: Ruso;ell Kneedler, Kent Robb, Ellwood B. Chapman, on Harvard ave- S. Davis unanimously elected secretaryI
I
Bill and other current legislation. She.: Jack Linlon; Bill Spiller, Stanley Bach- nue. They were addressed by Owen B. treasurer.
urged that individual letters be sent to man, Bob Gemmill, Roy Fah1, John Seth, Rhoades, of Newtown Square.
Those present, beside the newly elected
congressmen and senators .concerning John Jeffords, Steve Spencer, Marshall
At the Swarthmore meeting, Campaign officers were Herbert Ashton, Howard
these bills, stating that individual ,en- Schmidt, Paul Cleaver, and Nonnan executives pointed to the experiences of Hopson, Samul Raymond, Frank Freddorsement or disapproval was much more Hul
Ihe Family Service of Swarthmore and ericks, Philip M. Alden, and Lea P. V ·ed N d • '-N
b
mc.
Warner, deputy den father. Also present arl • ee y .......es. ear y to_ he
effective than that of a group.
guarded
are'
Col
Vicinity
as
typical
Qf
Ihe
"load"
carrl'ed
K
Ii
b
'
ons
be,'ng
Intersect,
.
were Mrs. Harold March, Association
e eved y PhIlanthropIC
"The time has passed when we can sa)
lege avenue schools-College avenUe at by virtually all of the 141 agencies which secretary, and John Foster of the Boy
Woman"s t;roup
we are not interested in public affairs," Princeton, College and Chestnut, Dart- will receive the funds raised by the cam.
Scouts of America.
said Mrs. Hopwood. "We should wake
mouth
and
Princeton,
Underpass
at
rail~ paIgn.
As Swarthmore needed a Cub M ster
Members of the Fl'iendly Circle met
up and live and defend the standards o[
road; Rutgers avenue
school-Rutger::t
\Vith
Federal
and
State
relief
provid.
II
'
a
at
the home of Mrs. E. M. Bucbner on
H
R
d
to supernse a the dens being formed
representative democracy."
avenue and Stratl1
aven, utgers an iug only the barest of qecessities, the a discussion was held of the duties en- .Park avenue last Thursday aiternoon
The proglam was arranged by Mrs. Westdale, Rutgers and Yale.
Swarthmore agency is compelled to give
ed'
l"ebruary 17.
'
h I '
tail ,and PhIlip M. AIden was unaniPeter E. Told, chairman of legislation. • Ch J'Idren are ur g ed. to a dhere to tel
supp en:e?tary relief to an average of mously elected to the post, with Samuel
It was decided to buy material for
The hostesses were Mrs. Edwin A. Yarn w hIghway safety rules.
2J famibes a month at an actual cash Raymond elected to serve as assi tant new aprons for the nurses of the Com;'
aU and Mrs. H. Hopson. Mrs. Edward
1. Cross streets only at corners. No outlay of $190 a month. In addition, it C b M . t
s
lUunity Health Society as' it is much
h ._
~oyd ,and .Mrs. ,Carroll" 1'ljayer werc.",,:at ja::.wa!king,. .
. ~ Is-.pr-o
.
~,..
L_
U .:.. -.as
er· . -•... L" . - - .. -.hf\O. b uYlDg..ready-made.a.,!:'C!"U~:
.
., ~_
l<.,lmg-o~.]:.(lr: ~f omIS-() I. ·
atd ·to.:.:-auvt.-t.
',,"::.1'
....\0,0:;---.._.~ '"
'. ~"'u..Gper.t
the' tea-table.
".
2. In going to and from school, cross at 80 other families.
twas. ~ported tllat seven dens have
A local dentist is doing work for a.
According to Miss Helen Muth, execu- bc: n orga!llzed to date,. and the com- boy in this district, charging only for
Mrs. Harold Goodwill, chairman oi protcctc(/ corllers, if at all possible, especmotion pictures, is desirous of a large ially: (a.). Those living west of Chester tive secretary of the Service, school case mJttee d~clded to recogmze .the ~ens by cost of materials. The Friendly Circle
attendance at the Club on Tuesday, road and north of College avenue, cross conferences, a new venture, are held with number 10 the ~rder ot their betng re- has donated food for the boy who has
March J. The film, "The March of Ihe only at Chester road and College avenue. the various schools in the district to aid ported to the ·secretaries. Some of these not bad an adequate diet, and is CODMovies" will be shown. This film shows Do lIot cross at Elm or Ogden. (b.) In the solution of children's difficuities. dens al~eady have J?rocured their Scouts tributing $5.71 more toward the dental
to serv~ as d~n chiefs, ao.d have begun work. tl'he sum of $7.25 was granted for
tne progress of the motion picture in- Those living north of Swarthmore ave"The principal and teachers 01 the by h0 Id mg tllelr fi rs t mee t mg.
. other patients who have received
SIX
dustry during the last thirty-five years. nlle, do not climb the bank of 201 Elm,
but
usc
the
crossing
at
the
corner
of
child,"
she
said.
"attend
the
conferences
Informal
discussions
were
held
on
such
care
by a local dentist.
Favorite stars of by-gone days will be
Two girls, 15 and 16 years old, are in
recalled to memory and scenes from some Swarthmore and Princeton avenues. (c.) which have been led uy the following questions as dues, ideal size for the dens,
of the first successful pictures are inc1ud· Those pupils attending Rutgers avenue doctors: Gerald Patterson, Arthur P. the ordering of books and uniforms. The need of glasses so a sum will be taken
ed in the production. Club members arc school and living north of Yale avenue, Noyes, O. Spurgeon English, Robert A. first general Pack meeting for Swarth- from the treasury to pay for these.
In tltis district there is an interest·
urged to he in their seats promptly at cross Yale only at Rutgers, not at other ~[atthews and Walter H. Livingston. more will be held in about a month the
"1t[uch medical service also is vol un· date to be decided later, with the 'boys ing sel£:5upporting Polish family. The
l ;30 P. M. as the program covcrs two and unguarded corners along the way.
3. Ride hicycles with great care: (a.) teered by Dr George B. Heckman, of and their parents participating.
father IS dead and the main wage
hours.
Never ride with more than one person Swarthmore. and Dr. Henry Picard, an
I
•
earner has only half-time work at pre011 a bicycle. (b.) Ride on the right side eye specialist, gives abundantly of his
ent. The Friendly Circle is helping the
VIRGINIA J. WALTER
lamily this month with a Ion of coal
Fourth Series Dance Tomorrow of the street. not in the middle. (c.) Ride time. Drs. F. A. Palman and H. P. Stamhl single file, not several abreast. (d.) ford provide the dental care."
Nearby is a girl of 19 with a small
Miss Virginia J. Walter, member of a baby and no money. The Friendly Circle
The fourth dance of the current sea- When riding after dark, always have
I
• ••
,f9aO~lilY which came to Swarthmore in the has allotted $1.56 a week for awhile,
son of the Swarthmore Series Dances front and rear lights.
•
•
•
H.
S.
Assembly
Hears
of
s, . passed away at 9 :30 last Saturday until the mother can leave the infant
will be held from 9 until 1 o'clock tomorning after a two week's iUness at the and find work.
morrow night, Saturday, February 26,
.
Ranching
home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Bates, $14.35 is to be given to the Commu..
Needlework Hour Next Monday
in the Swarthmore Woman's Club
The next Needlework Guild Hour will
Thomas Wright, of Bridgeton, N. J., 224 Haverford avenue, where she had nity Health Society to provide car..
House. Mr. and Mrs. Percival Armi"R
lived for the last twelve years She was fare for patients who can take them..
tage are in charge oi arrangements for be held at 2 o'clock Monday afternoon, spak e on
anching
in Arizona" at the seventy-two years old and suffered a selves to clinics.
·
ISh
I
A
this dance which is the last one of the February 28, at the home of Mrs. Frank H Igl C 00
ssembly on February 21. stroke two weeks ago.
Dresses, sizes 18 and 20, are requested
Th Ca
BI
season to be held in Swarthmore. The Lemon on Meadow lane.
e
sa
anca Ranch, where ]'fr.
f
In response to a recent appeal in thisl \\fright stayed, covers sixty thousand
Born in Philadelphia Miss Walter was orptw'?dyoung girls who need clothing.
closing dance of the series will be held
h
the daughter 01 Adam and Mary Walter.
reso enl Mrs. Arthur R. O. Redin a month or so at some nearby place. pal)Cr for (tonanons of yarn for those acres; on t e ranch are one hundred She was one of the earliest members of grave knows of a woman, with a boy
willing to knil for the Needlework Guild horses· and two thousand head of cattle. the Swarthmore Presbyterian Church of 11, who needs work. She is a trained
seyeral contributions have been gratew Mr. Wright described round-ups, ro· where [or many years she was active as sewer an~ a practical nurse.
Druian Gives Violin Reeital
.'ully received. It is hoped more will be deos, and Indian festivities which he at- a teacher in the Sunday School.
• •,
At Clothier Chapel, Thursday forthcoming.
tended
while
he
was
in
Arizona.
In
disA
.
M
d
N·
.
.
llIece, Mrs. Horace Dcrr, of Carlon ay
19ht 's W·mner&
• ••
cussmg these events he told of methods Isle. Pa.• and a nephew, Walter Elmer,
The Somerville Forum of Swarth1I.hs. William Faison and Mrs. Philip
more College presents Rafael Druiall, Swarthmore Club to Celebrate used. in roping and throwing cattle, of of Philadelphia, are the nearest relatives
Golden Anniversary
keepmg cattle from stampeding during surviving.
Kniskern wcre first, North and South,
violinist of Curtis Institute, and Eugene
Funeral services were conducted at the at the Strath Haven Inn Monday eventhc round-ups, of the food which is eaten
Helmer. accompanist, on Thursday,
Plans
for
a
gala
celebration
of
the
in
Arizona,
and
of
the
costumes
worn
by
Bates
home at 2 o'clock Tuesday after- ing when the regular weekly meeting of
March 3, at 8 :15 p. ITI. in Clothier
Golden
Anniyersary
of
the
Swarthmore
the
Indians.
noon
by
the Rev. David Braun, pastor the Thursday Night J;lridge Club was
Memorial Chapel.
Mr. Wright was educated at Prince- of the Swarthmore Presbyterian Church. held. Mr. and Mrs. C. K Swift were
Rafael Druian was born III Russi3;, Club of Philadelphia have been made.
Many residents of this Borough will ton University and at Cambridge Uni- Interment was in Eastlawll cemetery just st:cond and Mr. ·and Mrs: Richard Caralthough his home might well be called
outside Swarthmore.
vetI, third, North and South. East and
Cuba since he was brought there when be among the Swarthmore CotIege alumni versity, England.
only a year old. Although stm a young attending the fiftieth consecutive annuallr_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _L _______________~i West winners were: Mr. and Mrs. A. B.
Chapin, first; Mr. and Mrs. Fred WiJartist, he has given a number of con- hanqnet 01 the Club which will be held
at
the
Bellevue-Stratford
Hotel.
Philason,
second; and Mrs. A. L. Clayden
certs in Cuba, his first at the age of
delphia.
on
Saturday
evening,
February
THE
WEEK'S
CALENDAR
and
Mrs.
Arthur Robinson, third.
seven. Last year, ill addition to con·
certs with the Curtis Symphony Or- 26. George Clothier, '26, president of the
' ••
SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 2 6 '
2nd, 3rd Grade Mothers to Meet
chestra and other groups, he played Club, states that all "Swarthmoreans"
9:00 P. M.-Swarthmore Series Dance .................. Woman·s Club House
with members of the Philadelphia Sym- (men only) are invited and urged to at.
The second and third grade mothers
phon\' Orchestra in a concert at Robin tend, regardless of residence or memhcr-:
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27
.
I
CI
b
6:45 P. M. - Vesper Service ................................. Clothler Memorial
of
the College avenue school will meet
·
Hood Dell. He received the signal SI111) 111 t le
u.
8:15 P. M. -General Victor A. YOkhon~If, Speaker •.. Frlends' MeetIng House
for
tea and discussion at the home of
honor this year of being soloist at the
• • •
MONDAY. FEBRUARY 28
Mrs.
Clair Wilcox, 510 Ogden avenue
Youth Concerts of the Philadelphia
To Bring Mes88@:e From
2:00 P. M. - Needlework Gulld Hour ...... Urs. Lemon's home, Meadow Lane
at
3
o'clock Wednesday, March
Japanese
8:00 P. M.-Metb.odlSt Young Woman's Assoc. ............ 405 Haverford Place
Symphony Orchestra for Ihe 1937-38
Those
taking part in the discussion of
TUESDAY. MARCIl 1
season.
the
~opic,
"Manners, how can they be
2:JO P. M.-Motlon Picture Program .......................... Woman·s Club
The recital program is arranged in
Mrs. Theodore Walser, of Tokyo,
4:00 P. M. - Chlldren's Book Exhibit •••••••••••••••••••••••••• PUbUc Library
most
easily
acquired by our children?"
four groups: Group .1-Sonata in A
Japan, formerly of Schenectady, N. Y.,
will
be
Mrs.
W. R. Huey, Mrs. Dollev
WEDNESDAY,
MARCH
2:
minor. Opus 105, Schumann; Group 2will
speak at 2 dclock Friday afternoon,
1:00 P. M.-Ladlea' Aid Luncheon Meetlng ................ Methodlst Church
Bronk,
Mrs.
Henry
Hoot, 'Mrs. Wayne
Chaconne. Bach (for violin alone);
2:30 P. M.-Woman'8 QuUd of TrInity Cburch .................. Par1sh Bouse
March
II,
in
Ihe
Sunday
School
Room
Garrett
and
Mrs.
Robert
M. Richmond.
Group J-Concerto in D O1inor, Opus
THURSDAY, MARCIl 3
Swarthmore
Presbyterian
Church,
Mrs.
Charles
Russell
is
cbairman of
of
the
47, Sibetius; Group 4-Recitativo and
5:30 to '1:30 P. M:.~Chlcken DlDDer ................... Wealey A. M. B. Church
the
second
grade
mothers
and Mrs..
bringing
a
message
from
the
Japanese
8:15 P. Y.-Rafael Druian. vtollDlat •••••• ~ .................. Clothler Memorlal
Scherzo-caprice, Kreisler (for violin
Everett
L.
Hunt
leads
the
third
grade
of
the"
Borough
are
people.
All
residents
alone) ; Romance, Opus 3, Gliere;
L _______________________________ lI molbers.
invited
to
hear'
Mrs.
Walser.
Scherzo-Tarentella, Wieniawskt
SAFETY PATROL
MEMBERS, RULES
DEN F'" 'THERS
NAME OFFICERS
e:c-
FRIENDLY ClRfJ":
l"LAN:S WAlU'!'Y
I
••
.. ,
I
I
2:
THE
:&
---:-----
Mrs. Roy S. Latimer. of Park avenue. 's in charge of the cargo steamer, wa. ~Ii•• Mary .E. Minette. a si.ter of tbe
rta' ed t luncheon and bridge on the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. CaI- bride. wa. maId of honor. Her dres. was
~~ I~ a
vert Ports of call will include Japan and of blue net. over pink taffeta, made with
nes ay.
•
tht' . Pllilippine!l;. .
a full skirt, floor length, and she wore a
Mr. and Mrs.
H. Jessup, o~ Haver- Mrs. M'ld,oel S!. Ko:alenko. of R.ogers short pink ven, .pink slippers and pink
ford avenue, wtll have as their house
. "'
..
gloves. Her'bouquet was an old fashioned
Some Return to Visit Swarth·
e, Walhngford, IS lR New Smyrna, one of small pink rose buds and ageraguest this week-end Mrs. Rufus A .. Kingmore, Others Entertain
man, of Wallingford, Vt., who wIll ar- a.
*' • *'
tum.
SwarthmOreantl
rive today.
. '
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond H. Fellows.
R. A. ~angine. Jr., ?f Rutherford. N.
Mrs. Paul Alger, former!y of Swarth- Mr. and Mrs. Jessup Will. eote.rtaln at of Garrett avenue, s~t last 1;"riday. J., l~ cousin of the bride, acted as best
more, now a resident of Bndgeton, N. J., buffet supper Sunday eventng In Mrs. Saturday and Sunday m Washmgton, maA ·
.
.
.
.
with her daughter. Nancy, was the over- Kingman's honor.
O. C.
tI
reception follohwedl Immedflathely ba!tder
· ht'
t of Mr and Mrs Percy Gil•
*' *'
Ie ceremony at t e lome 0 t e n e.
:~ ~e~ k av_ on Thursday of . Mrs. R. Chester Spencer will enter- ·Mrs. Roland G, E. Ullman, of Har- Mr. and Mrs. Moyer left for a motor
I ,ok ar
tain at luncheon next Monday at her vanl avenue, entertained at IUllchCQil last trip and upon their return they will ocast wee Alger attended a bridge party home on Swarthmore avenue.
Thursday in honor of Mrs. Edward
cupy their newly furnished apartment at
· rs. by Mr and Mrs H. Wecton
.
*k" Of C
II
Hopkins, of Harvard avenue, who WIth 401 East Baltimore avenue, Media.
. '
Rosemarie Bene e, 0
orne avenue, h f ' l
ed t T
n N Clast
I I
given
Clarke of Yale avenue, Thursday even. d
u of girls classmates er ami y remov
0
ryo, . .
•
I h
f M
entertallle a gro P
,
S turday
B'~Ling and a lunchoon at t Ie orne 0
rs. f l '
d rade Rutgers Avenue a
.
........
.
d D F therolf of Park avenue, 0 t Ie s~on. g . '
.
.
• '! *'
Rlchm.on
• e.
;oU' other
ests School. 111 celebration of her eIghth
MISS Charlotte KUlzer, of St.. Pete~sMr. and Mrs. C. Clifford Barnes, of
on Fnday. Mrs. Fe~;be s Mr ~ F birthday last Saturday afternoon.
burg, Fla., spent the week-end wlth MISS Baltimore, Md., announce the· birth of a
were Mrs. Percy I rt,
s. . .
• • •
.
Mary Dingle, of 124 Park avenue.
son on Thursday February 17
Rassweiler and Mrs. E. C. Lappe.
Esther Worst celebrated her eighth
• • •
• • •
.
Mrs. Alger is expected
be in Swa~h- hirthday ~Iolld.y afternoon with a party
Mrs. E. A. Stockton. of the Stra.h
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Muska.. of
more today to attend a dessert-bndge: at her home on Cornell avenue.
Haven Inn, spellt the week-end and :Minneapolis, Minn., are being congratfoursome at the. home of Mrs. John E.
.• • •
. d Washington's birthday at the Chalfonte.Michael on Park avenue. Other m~mbcrs Mrs. Earle P. Yerkes ente.rdtame Haddon Hall, Atlantic City, N. J.
of the foursome are Mrs. Frederick B. twch'c guests at lUllcill.'Ol1. and bn ge at
*
STONE HOUSE
Calvert and Mrs. E. C. Lappe.
her home 011 South Prmceton avenue
Mr. George L. Earnshaw, of Stratll
• • •
on Thursday of last week.
Haven avenue, will leave March 2 for
SHOP
Mrs. Wales Buell, of Lyn~rook, I.... I.,
..
*
a ten-day fishing trip in Florida. He will
-YALE
&
HARVARD AVES-a . former resident of Swartl1more, was
Mrs. \Vdham E. ~.lIts, of Falls motor with New York friends to Homthe house guest of Mr. and ~[rs. John Church, Va., r~t~rned WIth her: SOil, Mr'losassa Springs, Fla.
C. Moore, of Vassar avenue, during last A. Prescott Wllhs, of Columbta avenue,
FOR ONE WEEK
week. Mrs. Roland L. Eaton and Mrs. on February 13 after the fune~al of .her
I I •
MAR,I-8
Moore entert~ined in honor of Mrs. husband which was conducted. I? Arhn~Moyer-Minette
Buell at lunchoon at the Ingleneuk on ton, Va. on February 12. She wtll remam
Handcraft Pottery
in Swarthmore for ~n indefinite time.
Miss Adelaide M. Minette, daughter
\Vednesday, February 16.
Delightful Lineus
*
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Minette, of
Mr. and Mrs. J. \Vilbur Hoff returned Dr. \VilIiam I. Hull, of Walnut lane, is Media, and Russell F. Moyer, of South
Colorful Woolens
last week-end to their home on North improving in the Presbyterian Hospital, Chester road, Swarthmore, son o£ Mrs.
&
Chester road after a two-week motor Philadelphia, where he was operated upon Sarah Moyer, of Allentown, were joined
Mexican Goods
trip through Florida. While in the south last Friday.
. in marriage at 3 o'clock Tuesday afterat
they were entertained by :Mrs. A. G.
* .* *
. noon, February 22, in the Church of the
'Thatcher, of South Chester road, at her Mr... Alfred. Gnffi!h ~cturned Fnday Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Clearance Prices
winter home in Miami, and by )'lrs. to her home 111 AmityvIlle, L. I. after in Media.
Rev. William J. Humes, assistant recSpencer Hurtt and Mrs. Frank N. Smith, spending ten. ~ys as the ~est. of llrs.
OPEN EVENINGS
fonnerly of Swarthmore. Mrs. Smith, John :Mc\Vdhams, of BcnJamm West tor at St. Thomas the Apostle Church,
__ I
Ivy Mills ncar Chester Heights perwho is spending the winter in Florida avenue.
with her mother, Mrs. AnnIe Thompson,
.'
formed the ceremony.
of Gloucester, Mass., is spending two :\Ir. and ),[rs.,1. V. S. Bishop, of Ha:The bride, who was given in marriage
weeks with. Mrs. Hurtt in Hollywood, v~rd avenue, wdl s~~d the ~eek-end 10 by her father, wore a gown of white
Fla.
New Yo~k and vlsltmg their son an.d cable net over white taffeta, made on
• • •
.
daughter-I1~-law, Mr. and Mrs. Eilts princess lines with a short train. Her
Dr. and Mrs. C. F. Rassweller, of Graham Btshop, of Cranford, N. J.
finger tip tulle veil was held in pi
•.•
' 1 1 " WIt h a '[ 'r"1
*B
ace
RIVervIew'd road,rtyWIthO entertam
f
C
II
by
a wreath
of lilies
of the valley and
.
.
h
or
.I.t rs.
.
I
arry
rown,
0
orne
ave.
~
.
dessert- br1 ge pa
15 evenmg III on
t
t0 Th e L't
I Group Iast gardemas . She earned a shower bouquet
. h
M
d M
nUe,was hosess
1te
f h'
o t Clr ovemtgBt.dguests, N rJ. afn
rls. Friday afternoon.
of bridal roses and lilies of the valley.
NOW!
Paul Alger, of n geton, . ., ormer y
Former Residents
Feature in News
.1.
*•
;-t
*' •
25, 1938
FEBRUARY
SWARTBMOBEAN
ulated upon the birth of .a son last Friday, February 18. It· is expected the baby
will be called Carl for his,pa'ernal grandrather. Mrs. Muskat is the former Miss
Frances Spencer, daughter of Mr. alkl
Mrs. R. Chester Spencer, of Swarthmore
avenue, Swarthmore.
Do You Know
ThtI8ure Cure rN
~
a ___
Call 440
•
",e.tone - ..-
on-
RUSSELL'S SERVICE
!l-
Dartmouth and Lafayette ..." ....
I
*
SECURITY
*
* ..
I
• • •
I
An JEtna Life
• *
.
.**
'
Income Policy
•
IS
and your family
,
* *
COME AND DANCE!
of Swarthmore.
*
11rs. Earle P. Yerkes. of Princeton
M
5 S Farley of Park avenue avenue, wilt leave. next Wednesday to
who r:;as heel~ living 'with her daughter: spend a wee.k at. the Chatfollte-H~ddoll Jan Savitt and his Top HaUers
Mrs. T. W. Price. ill Plainfield. N. J .• Hall,. ~tlan\lc CIty. N. J. Mr. 'erke, March 5-u'~h School G
I
· . T
f
Charlotte Amalia St. will Jum her for that week-end.
&>.'f'j
ym I
sal111g.
Swarthmore Young Repnblican
Thomas. Vlrgt.n Islands. U. S. A. aboard Mr. Frederick B. Calvert. of Park
Club
the. Furness Lmer S. S. Fort Towllslund and Michigan avenues. sailed Monday!
$2 00 D e l
which left New York on February 23. morning from Jersey City, N. ]. aboard
•
cer onp e
She is taking her grandson, Eugene S. the M. S. Summerville for a four months
No TIckets at Door
Farley, with her !lnd wit.1 visit an 0ld1tril) to improve his health. Captain Axil I Call Frank Lawrence, Sw. 2026
Swarthmorean, MISS Jesste L. Hoopes, Kalckenborne, of Oslo, Norway, who ~;;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;
IS
0:
.
•"°
I
III =========""''''''''''''''''=~ I
who Mrs.
expects
to return to Swarthmore ...
\\;ith
Farley.
~iiss
Dorothy ;p::lc:r, of Swarthmore
avenue, will remain until the end of
Ma'rch with' her hrothcr-in-Iaw and sister,
lfr: and Mrs. John B. Muskat, of Mimleapolis, Minn. whom she has been "\'isitjng since the first of the month.
* • *
,.
Mrs. T. Harry Brown, of Cornell avenue, left Monday to spend two days in
v.,r ashington, D. C.
WASHINGTON
M lD1 D I A
~
Friday -
Saturday
WALLACE BEERY
VIRGINIA BRUCE
l "The Bad Man of
Brimstone"
Extral FIRST RUN NEWS
- MAN 0
• • Protection
now - later a
•
Monday -
Tuesday
The B ••• Foreign Film of 1937
CHARLES BOYER
DANNIELLE DARRIEUX
"Mayerling"
Dia10gue in French with English
Ti.les
steady,
unfailing
income for life.
"CHARLIE CHAN
at
MONTE CARW"
•
with
Warner Oland7 Keye Luke, Virginia Field, Sidney Bladuner,
Harold Hoher
PETER E. TOLD
Srart. TUNda,.
A Spedal Request Enl'agement
Janet Gaynor - Fredri~ Mareh
417 Dartmouth Ave.
Swarthmore, Pa.
"A STAR IS BORN"
IIII;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~:::::::::::::
R -
THEATRE
Chesler Pike
Prollpeet Park
Free Parking lor Our
Patrom in Rear 0/ Theatre
INCOME TAX
An Internal Revenue Officer will be at this office
Friday aDd Saturday
"BAD MAN OF
BRIMSTONE"
during banking hours
MARCH 11
Wallace Beery - Virginia Bruce
Joseph Calleia - Lewill Stone
FRIDAY,
Guy Kibbe
SATURDAY.
Monday and Tuesda.y
CAROLE LOMBARD
FRED Ma~MURRAY
MARCH 12
to assist the residents of this vici!lity in the prepara-
Jobn Barrymore
"TRUE CONFESSION"
STARTS SATURDAY
guaranteed
security for you
* •
* * •
tion and filing of income tax returns for
1937.
Tax
may be paid to this officer.
with
Una Merkel- Edgar Kennedy
Wednesday Only
IT PAYS TO VISIT THE MANOR
Swarthmore National
Bank and Trust Co.
Thursday Only
Ray Milland
"WISE GIRL"
FRIDAY
The roaring story of the
II(JPPIN ULn
I"_c, 0'(
AWNINGS· WINDOW 5HAOES·5I1P(1)/!{R5
~ VENETIAN BLINDS' UPHOLSTERY
PHONE RIDLEY PARK 600 • PROSPECT PARt<..PA.
l\
HAVe: '(ou EVER
APPEA~ED
YlITMESS
8e:FO~E?
wi ••
.
~a.L
'UR1MORE
All. TAIlIROFF
liAR GOT GRAHAIIE
WAtHR' IRENUN
_ .... crC11 I. 1111I1I
,
AS A
INWHAT_-
6U\T!,
GO DOWN,.O
..
HANNUM
WAITE
.I.
MA_RIE~'S
===5==55 " .
::oC'li.55=5====
iitP-.".'
TA6LE~~iil~'~
a'
BETTER FOOD.
COMPLETE
SWARTHMORE 2100
===============
J. J's
CHURCH NEWS
9:45 A.M. -Sunday School BIld Bible
Claa.
11:00 A. M. - J40mblg Prayer and Sermon.
Mr. Guenther wtll preach.
7:00 P.M.-Y. P. P.
a~
Rectoq".
WEDNF3DAY
10:00 A. M. - Penttentlal Office and Holy
Communion.
8:00 P.M.-Litany and Meditation.
SWARTHMORE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Rev. David Braun. MlnIster
SUNDAY
9:45 A.M.-Sunday School.
9:45 A. M. - Bible Classe8.
11:00 A.M.-MOrning Worshlp. Mr. Braun
will preach on "The Question.'
6:00 P. M..- Young People·s FelloW8b1p.
STARTS
CHESTER
•
SUNDAY
Member 01 Federal Depo&i' lruurance Corpora'ion.
STANLEY
... 0
8:00 A. M. - "Holy communton.
_ _ _-:..
~T=8:45LM.'---
In
a_._.
Rev. J. Jarden Guenther. S.T.IL. ReCtor
Allen Jenkins
Miriam Hopkins -
nesses shown in clay were the three G. 0., organist and choir director of St. Alexander McCurdy. Jr.• who' Iii. pfa.yed
post commanders and Lincoln,
Paul"s Lutheran Church. Collingswood, at the Swarthmore vesper services for
~_ynm&y_
N. J. Miss Gegenheimer is a graduate the past several years. She will play a
IW&&fiDlOu, P&'
NeXt Sunday morning the Rev. David ington and Pershing.
Refreshments were served at the con· of Oherlin University and will be gradu- SymtH10ny of Viernc, a Pastorale hy
Braun will preach on the subject "The
elusion
of the. entertainment.
Question.."
ated from the Curtis Institute of Mu~ic, Hoger-Du Casse, ami l'omr.ositions of
• I •
The Young People will meet Sunday
Philadelphia, this year. She is a pupil of Bach and Schumanll this SUllUay.
Auxiliary
to
Memorize
Creed
PBTEB 8. TOLD
evening at (; o'clock. This i. the
B4IIor
of a series of discussions on "Re"Members of the Swarthmore Amerligion and Your Lif~ Work."
ican Legion Auxiliary are urged to
65 cents - CHICKEN DINNER - 65 cents
ROSALIE. DRYDEN
The Girls' Choir under the direction study the preamble to the Legion Aux·
WESLEY A.M.E. CHURCH THURSDAY, MARCH 3
. lfe1rI Bdltcw
of Mrs. James H. Hornaday will pre- iliary Constitution with the purpose
sent the music for the church service of memorizing it to be used in the
DINNER SERVED FROM 5:30 TO 7:30 P.M.
l'IlOlUl 8 _ _ lOt
~unday at 11 A. M.
.alute '0 the flag before each monthly
a
_
l
t
d
Claa
Matter.
lAlt1lU1
24,
All
b
f
th
h
h
d
or delitleTed to your home
- at
- tile Post omee at 8wartJullore, .....
mem ers 0
e c urc an con- nleetl·ng. It reads "For God and Coun18H.
uad._ the Act of March 3, 117'.
I glceg:ation are invited to the World's
we associate ourselves together for
PLEASE MAKE YOUR RESERVATION EARLY
.- .
.of Prayer to be held at the
following purposes: To uphold and
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1938
Friend,' Mee.ing on Friday. March 4. defend the COllstitution of .he Uni.ed
Telephone Sw. 2176 after 4:30 P. M.
at 2.30 P. M.
States of America i to maintain
World Day of Prayer March 4
Dean William H. Power•• of Syraorder; to foster and perpetuate .I'n;;;~~~~~:::::=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
cuse University, Syracuse, N. Y., wIll
hundred per cent Americanism; to
011 . the first Fdday in Lent the be the guest preacher Sunday morning I no'"e,," the memories and incidents of
World. Day of- Prayer, in which 'women March 6, at 11 A. ~{. Dr. Powers is
association during the Great \Var;
of all churches throughout the world Dean of the University Chapel and
inculcate a sense of individual obliparticipate annually, will be observed Chaplain in the University. A cordial in·
to the community, state and naunder the sponsorship of the Interde- vitatioll is extended to all to hear this
to comuat the autocracy of both
nominaiional .committee. of Swarth- distinguished lecturer and preacher. the classes and masses; to make right
· more. of whieh Mrs .. Richard Tunis is
The Church Citizenship Class Will the master of might; to promote peace
president. This year Friends" :h.leeting lIleet in the church study at 10.15 A. M. and goodwill on earth; to transmit to
wilL act as host and Mrs. Chester Rob- Sunday. Mr. Braun. will continue the posterity the principles of justice, free·
erts is in _charge of the program. All discussions of the church and the
and democracy; to participate in
women .are invited to attend the serv- Christian faith. All young people 12 or and contribute to the accomplishment
icc at 2.30 .P. ·.M. March 4. .
over who are not members of the of the aims and purposes of thc Am. I
•
i chun:h arc IUvited to become members erican Legion; to consecrate and sallt'the class.
tify our association by our devotion
Chri~tian Sciellce Chureh
The Church HOltr Nursery will meet to mutual helpfulness.
The next meeting will be held on
UChrist Jesus" is the subject of the Sunday from 11 to 12 o'clock. Parents
are
invited
to
bring
children
ages
1
to
the
afternoon of Thursday, March 10,
Lcsson-SernJOn in all Churches of Christ,
7
to
this
department
during
the
church
in
the
Legion Room in Borough Halt.;
Scientist. on Sunday February 27.
I I •
I
Golden Text is: "We preach not
Thill lip> m ..... that you can place complete con1idence in no
Studeut
Organist
for
Vespers
to give you factory..approvm service on your car. It: means
selves, but Christ } esus the Lor~; an~
that: we employ skilled. mechanic:e--that "We have the tools and
Methodist
Church
Notes
· ourselves your servants for Jesus sake
At the vesper service in Clothier }lemequipment: especially designed for fast, efficient and economical
(II Corin.bians 4:5).
orial at 6 :45 P. M. Sunday instead of
work--and that we. carry genuine parts for 'Chrysler and
Last evening, Thursday, members
, I I
Students'
Program
of
the
scheduled
Plymouth
cars . . . . Drive in now for a free safety check"up.
the Senior Choir enjoyed a Wash·
Adult Class to Hear Presbyterian ington's birthday party, in the Church chamber music there will be an organ
recital by Claribel Gegenheimer, F. A.
&
On Sunday, February ZI, the AdlultIUl~'" the leadership of Carl Behennaf·
F' d' 1{ e.
Tonight. Friday. at 7 :30 memIJers 0
TICKETS NOW ON SALE
YALE AVE. & CHESTER RD. Swarthmore 1250
Inn
· Class of the S~art . o~e 'nen s
e ~ the Church School will gather for an
for
ing will meet 111 Whltl1er House on the .
. . . I S ' I I II f h
"GOLD IN THE HILLS"
CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH
I. '45
A M J h lndoor plcmc m t Ie octa la 0 t e
or
. : 0. n ~hurch. Games and contests for all
_ College Campus at.:J.
"THE DEAD SISTER'S SECRET"
· Maxwell Adams, chalrma!1 of Umve.rstty
have been arranged by Virginia
Directed by Charles D. Mltehell
,Work for the PresbyterIan EducatIOnal
of the junior. department· Alice Sponsored by Presbyterian Church
Board, wil~ ~pc~~ on uPro.tes~nt :Evanof the primary department;
Aid Committee
PLAYERS CLUB HOUSE
gelical Rellgton. All arc mVlted to
Mrs. L. L. Hedgpeth, for adults; Mrs.
QUALITY WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE
MARCH 18, 19-AT 8:15 P. M.
tend.
Ralph Wentzel, for the older group; Tickets
$1.0& from Mrs. Thomas Jaekson
(8w. 1192)
• ••
Mrs. Lloyd E. Kauffman in charge
Buchner's (8W. 240)
Trinity Parish Notes
refreshments and Miss Eleanor
Mrs. Agnes Baig Sbeldon (8w. 585)
$hinn, superintendent of the
The Young People's Fellowship
3chool, as general chairman oi the
~
"~'+:~!J.._{,.
meet at the Rectory on Sunday ev.,nilngl event. RefreShments will be served at
7 o'clock.
P. M.
A most enthusiastic group met at the The pastor will visit the various
FOR THE
FOOD MARKET
_ Rectory last Monday evening as mem- Church School· classes this Sunday lo
bers of the Rector's Bible Class. Others enrol1 pupils who desire to join the
Che8ter Road at Rutgers Ave., Swarthmor~, Pa.
are cordially invited. to come on Monday
M"embership Class which when
5: e\·enings at 8 o'clock.
-"
i.
formed wil(· kHe&'··duHng the Church
•
/.;.~
Friday and Saturday, February 25th amI 26th
The Lenten schedule will begin on
School Hour.
,/
\Vednesday with the Penitential
At Junior Church this Sunday mornTelephone Shopping at Marlel's is as Satisfactory
and Holy Communion at 10
illg at 11 o'clock there will be a draTRAINED
TO
SERVE
as a J'isit 10 Ihe Slore
· and the Litany, with a Meditation
matization, "I'm Keeping Lent", preRev. ]. J. Guenther. a. 8 P. M.
by Polly and Nal1cy Hoot. EJA large, beavy ear ru.obed down upon
the treacherous curve. Too late the
will be no service Friday
Bernard, Helen Whitecar and Mayouthful driver appHed tbe brakesnext week but beginning March 11
Troxell. The object sermon theme
The car swerved, skidded on the
will be visiting preachers every
will be "Getting In!'
MAKE SUNDAY DINNER A LOOKED-FOR OCCASION
soft gravel shoulder and, rocking
evening. The Childrens' Lenten
At 8 o"clock next Monday evening the
crazily
~
cram.ed
into
a
roadside
tree.
will also begin on the 11th.
Young Woman's Association will hold
Every \Vednesday in Lent, beginr..ing a business and social meeting at the
Twotelepbone men, working nearby,
with Ash Wednesday, the women will home of Miss Caroline Evans, 405
were the first to reach the scene.
meet in the Parish House after the Church .. averford place. Mrs. L. L. HedgeQuieldy bu. earefully they Ii£1ed the
limp youth from th. wreck. While
Service for their Lenten sewing. Lun- peth is preslOcnt of this group.
someone telephoned (or an ambulance,
cheon will be .served after which there On VVednesday at 1 P. M. the Ladies
they workedoverthe severeiyinjured
will be leaders from the Diocesan Wo- Aid meets at the church for luncheon
victim. With swift, sure fingers they
man's Auxiliary to lead in a discussion and business meeting under the direcappHeda tourniquet to abadly gaahed
of the work of the Church in rural fields.
of Mrs. Frank \Vindell, president.
leg. Next they straightened and
Next Wednesday there will be the
All vouchers must be returned to the
bound a frac.ured arm.
not later than March 3 if proper
ular meeting of the Woman's Guild
2 :30 o'clock in the Parish House.
credit is to be given in the annual
La..... as th. youth w .. being lif.ed
into
the ambulance, the interne
IConference:..:r:.:e::co:::r;,;d;._ _ __
=
TRINlT'l' CHURCH
with
Hugh David -
I
SWARTBMOBEAN
Pre.byterian Cbnreh Notes
'111E. SWARTBMOREAN
Proteotant Ji;p1BcOpa!
Chester Road and COllege Avenue
There i. no charge for the service.
"THE OCTOPUS"
THE
1958
II
'0
*
FEBRIIMty
••
Question Mrs. Phillips
An interested group of J. ]:s met
day evening at the Elm avenue hOl110 I
of Elizabetll Bowditch and after the
ular meeting. heard Dorothy W,dd,,1
t'hil.ips who spoke on "Popularity" and
answered questions of a widely varied
nature.
The next meeting will be held on Sunday evening, March 6, when the J. J.'5
expect to have the Rev. J. Jarden Guenther, rector of Trinity Church, Swarthmore, as guest speaker.
•••
The Harold Ainsworth Post of the
American
Legion entertained The City
quUtlng In Whittier House. Box. luncheon.
Post
of
Chester
and the Ridley Park
All are cordially 1nvited.
Post
in
the
Legion
room at the BorYETHODIBT BPlSCOPAL CHUBCIl
ough Hall, Monday, February 21.
Clarence P. CaRer. A.B •• D.D., :MInister
8UNDAY
Post Commander, J. Paul Brown,
9:45 A.M.-Chutch ~ooL
I
presided.
Past Commander Alben Ea11:00 A. M..i..- Yorta1na: WoI8hlP.
venson was in charge of the meeting.
'1:45 P. M. - BveIflDa Worsb!p•
PIBST OHUBCH OF CBBIST. SCIBNTIST, Brief remarks were made by J. H.
OP SWABTBMORB
Graber and R. H. McCadden, com. Par~
Banard
manders' of City Post of Chester and
11:00 A. U. - 8wI Y School.
Ridley 'Park, respectively.
n:oo A. II. - Sun . y Lesson-Sermon.
Wednesday
meetlug _
-. S
Sport ·firms . were Shown by H. G.
p. m. Read'OI
open dallJ". escep\Swi- Straub, Of, the Champion Spark
days and hOllda
1 to 4 P. 11.. Cburdl
edl4ce.
..
Company and then Claymo entertailne
by modeling in clay. Among the 6keHI"91ca and U88 ·the P din_ Boom.
WEDNESDAY
9:30 A. M. to 3:30 P. M.-Sewlng and
Aiebelow
A practical course in First Aid ia •
part of the training given every
telephone plant man. So highly
esteemed is this course that the
Pennsylvania State Highway Police
frequently borrow instructors from
our First Aid Department to train
their own patrolmen. Nc. greate..
oomplimentcouldbepaid ...The Bell
TelephoneCompanyofPennsylvania.
MARTEL LEG OF
SPRING LAMB
LB;
25c~
\Ve know of 110 other meat that's so appet~z~ng this til!le of yeal" as
lamh . , . especial1y spring lamb - tender; JUICY at.ld Imldly flavored.
Put in the right company, say new potatoes and fresh peas for vegetahles and one of our layer cakes with ice cream for dessert and you'll
have a dinner that canOt be improved on.
Rib or Freneh Lamh ChOlls.
.Ih. 39c; Loin Chops lb. 45c
Ebbree Home Afire
About 10:30 Wednesday morning 01
this week the Swarthmore Fire Company was called out to assist the MeTHB RELIGIOUS BOCmrY OF FBJBNDS dia and South liedia "Companies at a
SUNDAY
fire in the third floor of the Wayland
9:45 A. M. -Fitst Day School. Sa.n1ord
H. Elsbrce home at Linden lane and
.
Bradby, speaker.
9:45 A.M.-AdUlt PlfW•. John MaXWel.l Avonbrook road, Wallingford Hills.
Aclams Villl speak on, "ProtI I •
estant Evangeitc&l Religion."
Legion
Holds
Tri.Post Meeting
11:00 A. M. - J4eetlJlg for Worship in the
Meeting House.
approached the telephone men.
Speaking with more emotion than
doctors uaually show. he said,
"You've done a splendid job. Your
knowledge of first aid probably saved
the lad~alife.
are Customers ••. and we krwwit/5
WELL.' OOl'T KNOW,.
YOU 00 YOUR SHOPPIHCi
MARTEL'S
FEBRUARY 25. 1938
THE SWARTBMOREAN
PARENT.TEACHERS
STILL A HOCKEY STAR
SPORTS REVIEW
COLUMN
"Lbtemn. In"
Coll"lle Buketball T _ in Tenth
Straight Win;' rugh Scbool
Still in Slump
OD
9th Grade Aedrilleo
Libby Garrett. Theo Hulme, Rosamond
Jones. Kay Kapelski. Dolores Lee. Win!Ired McDowell. Jane Messick. Barhara
Nason, Doris Plumb, Margaret Sheppard"
Phyllis Simpson. Joan Thatcher, Martha
Viele, Florence Whitsit, and Dorothy
Zensen are playing on the third and fourth
teal11s which compete with other schools.
Every girl has all opportunity to play
all an intramural team.
Mrs. Ira T. MacNutt, of J"qs J\ng1oles.
Cal .• has been the house gu!'USt of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert G. Erskine. 01 Elm
avenue, since Christmas. Mrs. M.acNutt
left Los Angeles in October to drive ....t
with a friend, and the intervening time
was spent in visiting friends at different
places en route.
In ninth grade a student has his first
opportunity to choose a course of study.
Although three courses of study are o£* * •
Swarthmore College ran its string of
fered in Swarthmore High School. the
Mrs. A. U. Fairbanks, of Nutley, N. J.,
straight basketball victories to ten durAcademic and Scientific courses parallel
returned to' Swarthmore to visit her
ing the I..st week. On the 16th. P. M. C.
I
•
one
another
in
this
grade.
daughters,
the Misses Antonica and Cam·
fell 41 to Zl; on the 19th Lafayette was
The Academic and Scientifc course in·
NEWS
NOTES.
iIla
Fairbanks,
of P~rk avenue, last
the victim by the count of 46 to 34 and
dudes:
English,
Civics
and
Ancient
IJisweek-end.
011 the 3Znd. Philadelphia College of
tory, Latin, French, or General Scien.ce;
Mrs. Paul Williams, Mrs. L. A. WetPhannacy was o"en... ~elmed to the tune
Algebra. Music and Art. Gym. Shop lauler and Mrs. Eo C. Lappe. of SwarthMr. and Mrs. Rolanll L. Eaton, of
of 66 to 28.
;
(Boys). Personal Regimen (Girls), and more, formed a committee responsible Dickinson and Yale avenues, will motor
The JV's defeated tIle P. M. C. JV's
2 study periods.
for a dance held last Saturday night in to Atlantic City. N. J. on Sunday to
on the 16th 43 to 39.;
The General course includes: English, the Rutledge Auditorium.
attend meetings of the National EducaThe College swimlt;ng team splashed
tional Association. Mrs. Eaton will reCivics,
General
Science,
Mathematics,
+
•
•
to victory over Lafayette on the 19th, Porter Waile, well known Swarthmore Gym, Shop (Boys), Personal Regimen
Ann Peck, a student at Westtown turn home Monday, Mr. Eaton remainby the count of 39-36. Swarthmore won aport. promoter, Wh08e speedy left (Girls), Music and Art (Elective), and Sc.hool. was. at h~r home o~ Yale avenue
ing away a day or two longer.
the relay which was the final and deciding defense came fealure8 the Swarthmore
tins week, 111 wl~h the gnp.
4 study periods.
* • •
event.
Hookey Club'. ConteBtB.
Although
the subjects be
listed
under
the
M r. and M rs..
~ J* W·a Iter Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. G. Warder Cresson, Jr.,
'd
t'
I
th
.
The women's hasketball team of
two head tugs appear
to
.
Swart11more College defeated Penn Hall
.1 en leab', e of P ark avenue WI'11 a tt end a M onte flew from Indianapolis, Ind. to spend
content
matter
10
the
vanoUs
su Jocts C I
I' I f "
d M
College 24 to 22 on the 19th.
Swartbmore Ice Hockey Squad .
cd d'ff
'tl'
d that boll
ar 0 party at t oe lorne 0 ."r. an
rs. last week-eud with Mr. and Mrs. G.
The high school team won one and
V8. Atlantic City
IS present d l .eren y !tl or ~r fit f 1 Richard Haight, of Lansdowne, tomorrow Warder Cresson, of Riverview road
droPllcd two games, winning from ColThe fur should fly at tbe Arena this ~roups ?Jay . enve ~~laxlmum ene' ad rom evening.
• • •
Hedda Gaede. daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
lingdale on the 15th, l7 to 19 and losing Friday February 25. at 9 P. M. when the lIlstr uCUo? gl,ven · 'Ias~ roo~. ~r1 (~:.rc
h
h
Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Gilbert, 01 Rich- W. R. Gaede. of arooklyn. N. Y., forto Ridley Township, 011 the 18th 47 to unde£e~ted Swarthmore Hockey Squad one our III engt S· l~ aJor sEu lle.cls C .. Ill,
·
C't
H
k
French,
General
Clence,
'ng
IS 1,
IVICS,
mond,
Va., were the week-end guests merly of Swarthmore, has returned to
17 and to Che5ter on the 2Znd, by a 31f I Atl t
meets .the Ph'l
power
oc ey
d Iu h" anA Ie t 1 yr Double
Math.) have c'Iasses f
our 'times a wee k . of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. the Bor~ugh and is. living with Mr. and
1.9 count. The JV's lost to Chester JV's, CI
th Study halls are under the supervision of and Mrs. Percy G. Gilbert, of Park Mrs. Richard Tums, of Princeton and
at the same time that the varsity dropped H Ubd m B'II' aOe p la3s500 mfa eu
ea er
I.
vel'
ans saw
e
I
avenue.'
Lafayette avenues, while pursuing her
their decision, by the score of 39 to 15. free-for-all at the last local game when a teac lcr. .
In
the
nlllth
grade
the
students
are
studies
with the seventh grade class here.
\Vesttown School defeated the girls' I
CI ub and tl Ie Camden . '
t Ie S wartIlmore
.
I
..
team of Swarthmore High School, on the P
.
th
fi t
ith the assistance given a Wider opportumty or partIclpaMrs. Mary Heivly Cunningham, formengums f rtehw s s.tWt rs
tion in extra curricular activities. Most erly of Williamsport, now living with
17th. by the score of 39 to 36.
l
o some 0
espec ao .
h'"
fh
. l'h h i
U
The Penll U. Club o£ the University of t e actlvltle~ 0 t e senior lIg sc o~ her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
I I
I·
"
I'
'n
t the P ngui are open to mnth grade students. ThiS Mrs. Alban E. Rogers, o£ Park avenue. is
I P
~I
I
C!U1sy
vallla
WI
t
m;e
i~ year there are nine members who, as the slowly recovering from a streptococcic
H. S. Girls' Basketball Review
l5 The ee
u ~ III an. opener a I :f'
fr wth result of tryouts, sing with the chorus: infection suffered early in the winter.
On Thursday, February '3, the High he Ice skatlng for tIe ans a tcr
e D oris
• La C k ey, L'IIL'109Ie, Rol-->
1 Ian
cliliU
fi I b II
School girls' basketball team traveled na
e.
Eaton. Jeffrey Kirk, James Jackson, Dick
:Mrs. Dana H. Bigelow, of Park aveto Haverford to administer a 24-16 de• I I
Brown, Hebertoll Butler, David Morgan nue, with her daughter, June, and Mrs.
feat to the home team. Sylvia Swann's Dr. Dozier at Rose Valley School and Leston Nickerson. The orchestra William R. Huey, o£ Henjamin West
17 points paved the way for the win.
claims Dick Delaplaine and Jeffrey Kirk. avenue, with her daughters, Jean and
The second team rolled up a 31-11
Dr. Paul Dozier, M. D. addressed an There is provision made for instruction Beth. leave today lor New York City
count against the Haverford rese{ves. interested group of parents at the school in instrumental music during school time. where they will attend the Interlaken
Telephone Swarthmore 10412
Scoring its sixth ~traight victory, the in R05~ Valleyd,. l~t Friday night on
Although there are no members of the Camp reunion at the Roosevelt Hotel on
.
"Remedial
Rea
mg.
.
th
d
th
I
ff
f
h
S warthmore sextet turned m a 24-19
H
d h' bel' I th t h I h II ml1
gra e on e regu ar sta 0 t e Saturday.
.
. '
i
e state
IS
Ie
a sc 00 s s ou ( ....... _ "
I'
kvictory over their arch-rival Glen-Nor be
'bl f
rt'
t
t
\.Nrnet., severa PCOP:IC are wor II1g
10
I
'S k"
responsl e or repo 109 0 paren 5 very hard to earn a place on the staff.
on F e I)ruarJ,',
. .~t
l?me.
' . 0d
0 yff at the end o£ the second grade any drop Anne Bonine, Ford Wiggins, and Jac..
S
th
S wa?n an d EIgU!
mJ
carne. 0
below average in reading ability,' that q uelinc \Valiers have contributed some
h onors WI th 12 3nd 8 pomt S . f thO
scormg
t ' died
u nt'l
respectively.'
I
IS repor IS
e ay
J th e th'rd
1
of the art work you may have seen. June
Once again the jay-vees came out on ,?r fourth gr~de or Jater .the tr~~ment Morrison and Doris Lackey have written
the long end of the score, topping the IS correspondmgly D1?re difficult.. Mo~t stories which appeared in the January
visitor's seconds, 35-25.
schools are not equipped for d,~gnoSJS issue. Two of our boys, J obn Schobinger
On February 17, the six-game win- but should talk each case over with the and lfilton Fussen, have aided materiaHy
ning streak was snapped at Westtown pa~ents al~d help to make c0!1tact for in operating the mimeograph.
by a speedy \Vesttown team, 39-36. In skdl~ assistance before the third grade Neal Durboraw. Charles Gillespie, Edspite o( a spirited last haH rally, the level.
..
..
\\'ard Mifflin and Edward Alston have
Garnet and White was set down to its
Dr. DOZier IS wor.kmg m the fields ~f been working with the ches~ club.
first defeat that proved to be thrilling neurology and psychiatry ~Ild me'~tal diS·
For the first time in their school life
to the very cnd. Captain oe.tty, Doug- order:s ,at t~.e Pen~sylvaDla In~htute of class officers, have been chosen. Problems
las and "Elgin" led the scoring with ~Iental HYgiene.
facing the group as a whole necessitate
I I I
this organization in addition to the horne
12 markers apiece.
The jay-vees turned back the West- Wesley A. M. E. Churcb Dinner room officers. For the first year the 101town second, 42-31.
lowing people were chosen as leaders:
The third team of Swarthmore High
Joseph Quinlan, Trustee of the Wesley
President, Gordon Douglas; Vice PresiSchool continued its winning streak A. M. E. Church. is in charge of arrange- dent, Dick BrowII: Secretary, Phyllis
011 Wednesday of last week by defeat· mcnts for the chicken dinner to he given Rhoads; Treasurer, Virginia Craemer.
ing Westtown. The fourth team was at the church Thursday night, March
The Junior Student Association, the
he Church
Stcwstu cut government b Q( Iy for t IIe seventh,
not so successfpl. hut put up a good •3 f ront 5 :30 to 7 :30 . T
i
d
fight, playing especially well in the last ards headed by John Pierce and the eighth, and ninth grades selects the presi·
('~f~er. k I
I
W'I'
Trustees headed by Joseph Quinlan are dent, vice president, and the treasurer
'Fls. welc t lie teams dl'l ay
Illllllg- ::'l!gagcd in a spirited contest to raise (rom the ninth grade. For the first semton onnell<
s at lome an lOpe to come ;'
~5 00. £01' the Bulldmg
. .
.
j
.
out
top.'
Fund. The dUlIler
Olester t IIe to II OWltlg
people served:
gIVen by the Trustees.
President, Alan Hall; Vice President,
8 I ,
G
Dick Brown; Treasurer, Virginia Crae-
•••
=================
• • *
• * *
1'1"===============-:1
COAL
&
•••
FUEL OIL
Van Alen Bros.
TO MEN WHO HATE TO
GET UP IN THE MORNING
I
I
liS
~lrs. Raymnnd E. \ViI5011, of Ogden
Mr. and Mrs. Roy J. Fahl. of Park mer.
During the second semester the students
avenue, will elHertain at tea this a£ter- avenue. wilt entertain tomorrow evening before the Series dance.
have chosen these people as leaders:
noon.
President, Ford Wiggins; Vice President, Alan Han: Treasurer, Virginia
Craemcr.
The Junior Cabinet, the executive committee o( the Junior Student Association,
(·(lnsists of the clmirman and one other
rf'llresentative from each home rOO111. The
nintll grade representatives for the first
st'meslcr were: Ford ·\ViggillS, Phyllis
,, .
Simvsol1, Jeffrey Kirk. Theodora Hulme,
Dick Brown and Jim Bowditch. New
representatives are heing chosen in the
\"arious rooms this week.
The Swarthmore High School athletic
program provides ample opportunity for
I a large numbel' of participants in the var·
iOlls activities. During the fait season
junior high hockey awards were earned
hy the £ollowing people: Anne Bonine,
Grace Brewster, Theo Hulme, Rosamond
Jones, Florence Whitsit, Joan Thatcher,
Libhy Garrett, Barbara Nason, Iris Quinlan. Phyllis Rhoads. Margaret Sheppard.
Buy Mason-Hellin's LAUNDEJlEI)
and Martha Raymond.
Those eanling Junior High Football
coal and get Famous Reading
awards were: Bob Bair, Stocky Comns,
Anthracite - all coal. Prompt
Anlold Chiquoine, Dick Brown. Bill
delivery from a conveniently
Brown, Heberton Butler, Alfred Johnson, Bob Roche, Page Bullock, George
located ·yard.
Earnshaw, Sam Mitchcll, Jim Bowditch.
During the winter season basketball
\ claims a great deal of attention. Every
boy has an opportunity to participate in
00
intramural competition. A group of boys
EGG
CO~L
from the ninth grade has been organized
STOVE
,
for interscholastic cprnpet.ion with
Malli Office 4th & Allegheny Ave.
Caslt, Price
Boothwyn. and Lansdowne.
I Springfield.
To order, phone
In this group are: Dick Brown, Bud
Eaton. Bob Bair. Charles Gillespie. Jeff\ rey ~irk, .P~ter Miller, Elliot Richardson,
Robm Wdhts. Page Bullock, Sam MitOr call
Local
chell. Ford Wiggins and Stocky Collins.
Jeffrey Kirk also plays with the junior
Pirone SwartlrmoN 6
'
varsity.
Grace Brewster, Virginia Craemer,
I
--
I
When your furnaclt is filled with Koppers Coke
you really can sleep later! This modern, scientific
fuel responds ta draft - instantly! In no time the
house Is warm as toast. And there are many other
advantages! Koppers Coke is economical to buy
-even more economical fo burn. Light and clean
••• long burning ••• hardly any ashes at all. It's
almost all pure fuell One ton of Koppers Coke
Phone your order taday!
Mason Heflin
RAINEY.WOOD
COKE CO~
co.
NUT
i'
MAIN
OFfiCE•
•
NEBraska 9800
~ason-Heflin Yard
OBDINANCII No. 408
____
'Thi!> is their opportunity to secure first'rhe \VOI1lCU'S RepUblican Club of hand accurate information.
Delaware County, Mrs. Jo"'eph HinkReservations for the luncheon must
5011, president, will hold its regular be made by 10 a. m .• March 2nd, with
monthly luncheon meeting all Thurs-, Mrs. Wm. C. Alexander, 305 N. Monday. March 3rd. at 1 o·c1ock. Strath' roe' St .• Media. Phone Med;a 1462.
Haven 11111. Swarthmore.
The program, in charge of :Mrs. AlexFOR RENT
ander ~WJl1g, club chairman o£ Young
1st floor apartment; 2 bedroome,
Republicans. who will IJresent :Mrs.
1 bath - SI00 per month,
Howard Stuckert, Jr., of Chestnut Hill,
chairman of the Young Republicans of
2nd Boor apartment; 2. bedPennsylvania
State Council.
Mrs.
room., 2 baths - S95.
Stuckert will have just returned from
Also several houses from SSO
a meeting in Chicago o£ Glenn Franks
to S150.
Committee, of which she is a member.
~he will discuss the "Republican Plat·
EDWARD L. NOYES
form from the National Outlook."
13 S. CHESTER ROAD
There will be a question box at the
Telephone Swarthmore 114
door. Members arc asked to bring
.
W1f. B. HARVEY. AttomQ'.
SHERIFI' SALES
Sherlff's Omce. Court Ho\18O. Media. Penna..
No. 1'7
I U,.. ••I Fada.
Satunla)·. llarch 12. lUBS
Derember Term. 1937
":30 A. lI. Rutern Standard Time
1bereon erectCunditlon.: 1250.00 caah or certified dleek
wUh
at lime of 1Iale (unlese otberw1ee Itated 10 ,:!Iiu,.."
ofland,
Broaolw07
feet meuured
adnrUaemeDt). balance in ten dR)'lI. Otbel'
",......ill
I. .be Bor·
conditions on dB7 of sale.
Coun17 01
No. 380
Conca1n.·
~~~fu:~~~~~~~:~~Of
.
,twen\7'
feel.
~~jt.~f~~1~f:~we
w~
"0.,
1
O:t
])e(!ember Term. 1937
All tha.t. eertain lot or pieoo of ground with
buUdlnn and improvements thereon eredSituale at Manoa. In Haverford ToWDIhiP.liii~~,i''';;Cig.;;;~
Pennsylvania. and deacribed I;
I:I~;.~,;:; County.
to a certain plan designated "..ieher
_".,i;,;:.-swTr~~act,~~ ::Manoa:·
made by OVer
and
11;
dated November
18. 1027
.•
Platforml~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~III~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~ I . 'j' •
or 'Ifor party
. management.
'11 I
'V 1
'1t C
d.." I·
written
suggestions
(orpresen
the
_, rs. c,wmg
WI a so
I
liam Kraft Jr., attorney 0 ..., e la, 80licitor to the Sheriff. 1'opic: "How
wt No. 4.6 on tbe said plan bepoln' In .be SoutbweflL side 01
Club Lane at tbe distanoo of one
nlineteen ami three·tenth. feet Soutll·
!m[f~j~f:' a IlOlnt where Soutbwest. Bide of
Lane produced Interaect. the
of Cobbs
Streeton produced.
in front
or breadtb
Countr7
twenty·nlne and one·tentb feet and
of thnt between
width inPdrallel
length or
deptb
line. at
Country Club Lane one bunNorthwellt Une thereof
,the cenl('r of a certain
whicb i8 laid out
for
of tbese premJlIe8
onfeet
the Soutbwest
Northwest
fm' the premises
deplb of
of the Southwe8t Bide
Club Lane.
:~~~~~~
Under anti subject to certain retllrlctlons as
reronled lin Deed Book No. 664. Pap 612 &c..
also Under and subject. to certain rirhtl
l)rlvUegea as recorded in Deed Book No.
can we encourage young l
Ilal"e 331. Ac.
to become Party Workers?"
maIntenance
of the places of amcsement
Q{ cUspl.9.y above enum.erated are
hereby
Together with tbe right. of W8.¥ over a
.Members are urged to bring their
problbited in the Boroug!l 01 Swarthmore
Itrip of land tbree and oue-halt tee.. In width
.' Jung Republican friends. Young l{eand.
the proper
:aorougn omcers are hereby
of the We8terly part of vremisea ~ adjoin·
directed
to take aU necessary steps to eninX' 011 the East. eztendlnl" from said Broad·
the prov18lons of this orcUnance.
WB7 Annue Soutbwardly to the rear of the
premi!les. and subject to a almilar ril"ht te,
SECTION 3: For each and. every vlolathe owner. of premtlJe8 next adjolnlag of the
tlon of the provisions of this ordlnance
Ealt to use :1 strip of land three and one·batf
'1~=foi~~~~~A:":t~~~~~ro~! the owner. gelleral manager. agen't, lessee.
feet in width over the Eaater17 pan 01 ,be
-:.;::": 'e
or
or other
occupant
of the bUild:~~~;':~~r. Avenue
conveyed.toextendlnJ'
from Ihe
ingtena.nt.
or premises
where
aucb violation
6hall
the rear of said
occur.
and
each
and
every
person
taking
tbe
said
two
drips
of land
FOR SALE
part
In or 88818t1ng In such vlolatolon shall
a
seven
feet
wide
drivew.,FOR SAlE Study desk an"'dC-::c"h"'a''''r:-.·"_=.:::r:-~"!,:!~d~.;l~.;,med guUty or a misdemeanor, punTogether with Ihe !ree and common Ule.
used in common by Ihe OWD8l'8.
alIte lamP; ten volumes "World. Book";
!I
eitber by B flne of not less t;han right. Uberty and IlrivUege of 4-be aforesaid I ~~:'?1~,: '::~~OCC1.&Pler8 of said premlaes aa 8
t.wen'ty VOlumes lnqU1l'er's "World's ureat~;;~e';;;;: m~re than tloo. for each. and every drl\,eW8Y lUI and for a pll88ageway and drive-II
PI18&ageway for pleasure vehicle.
est Llteratoure"; ru:t.een volumes InQ.ulrer·s
~i;!,!~~ ~
or by lmpr180nment of Dot less way at nil timefJ hereafter forever. in com·
hereafter forever. subject on Ihe
"Standard American EnCyClopedia." Call
I;;ii¥~r ~:;~ day nor more than thirty days. mUll with the uwners. tenanls and occuplen
abutting owners. tena.nta and ocII
or both. Such fi!lcs or penalties are of land boulldlnjr thereon and entitled to the cuplers
a proportionate pan or abare of
Swarthmore 1776.
collected as Uke tlnes and penalties u~ thereof.
the I!'X.I)8nlK! of maintaining and keepin, the
WAN'I'ED
now by law collectible.
said hereinbefore menUoned drivewlU' in "cod
Improveml'nl8
consist
of
two
and
one·half
order
and repair at all times hereafter for~
WANTED-We buy i'our dJscarded glaSB·
SEC1I'ION 4: All ordinances or parts of "ach,.. BhinKle hou.!le. 21x32 feet; porch: de· ever.
ware. d.Jshe8. otner mlBcellany InclutUng
and. clothing. Telephone Chester
hllO·I..':Ir IfBrage.
ordinances inconsistent herewith are. to I'
Improvcmenh consist of two stOry atone and
the extent of such lDcons1atency, hereby
Sold
as the prOIM!rty of Cbarles J. Nolan 8tUCCO houee. 15%33 feet; porcb fronl.
repealed.
Pa.&sed this 23rd day of February, A. D. Dnd Marion M. Nulan. mortg-ago'" and Olga
DJlUngs. real owner.
!~:Sfi0i.ld~;'~S the property of WllliBlll Sinlley.
1938.
T. E. HESSENBRUCB.
and ~nn BuUdlng and Loan A8IO'
President. LOUIS A. BLOOM. Attorney.
real owner.
Attest:
W]LLIAM
W.
1tfcKlM.
Sheriff.
LUTZ
_____
____
__
___
_ _ _ 1 HOWARD)[.
. AU orney.
ELLIOTr BICHARDSON.
S"""'taro.
,prov"d this 23rd day of February. A. Q.
SHERIFF SALES
No. 316
~ Levari Facias
JOHN H. PITMAN.
Sht'rin"~ Office. Court House. Media. Penna.
June Term. 1037
Blll'Bess.
Snturda.v. March 6. 1038
All that certain lot or piece of ground with'
ZONING ORDINANCE NOTICE
9 :30 A. M. Eastern Siandard Time
the messuage or tenement thereon erected alt·
Notice is hereby given that
011 tbe Southwest side of Drelr:el Avenue
hearing will be beld in COuncil Ci.WI
Conditiolls: $250.00 Cash or ftrtifted check I ;.;;;,;J.....i'~; wide) at the diatance of three
Borough Hall. swarthmore. Fa.•
at time of 8ale (ullle88 otherwlae IIta.&ed. In II
and sizty·Ave feet Southeastward
P. M. Wednesday. March 16. 1938. ;;"iO.~d advertisement), balance In ten days. other
the SoutheaM side of State Road (.8.fty
nectlon with a pending proposal to
conditions on day of sale.
feet wide) in Upper Darby Township, Count.J'
Delaware. State of PeDll8Ylv&n1a. beinlf
It is proposed to amend said ordinance Lc,·ari Facia8
No. 878.
Lola Nos. 80S·809 on Plan of Drexel
Ities
(off
the
publlc
streets)
in
connectton
]~~~~~~~,~cBompany:
containlnlf
fronLfeel
Dr
gellt.ember Term. 1037
the said Drexel
Avenuein sixty
the
ordlnancelot
of or
1928.
wltbZoning
any bulldlng,
prem1ses hereof tbat widtb in lenc-&h or dePth
\
to
require
private
garage
parklng
facilafter
erected
or used
as and
&. place
of pubUc
AU tbat c-ertaiu brick Btore and dwelling
parallel linea aL rll'ht
entertainment and amusement. or 88 a and lut or piece of land 81.tuate on tbe South·
,,"venue. oQe"buu:
hotel. eatlng place. aJi)artment bouse. mul· elly
or gecol'ld street at Ihe didaoce of
tiple dwelUnB. or' PUblic marlr:et~: '
,:, forly'8lde
feet measured Eastwardly from the
ELLIOTI' RICHARDSON.
Under and subject 10 certain condltionl and
corner of the 8a1d Second Street
2t-2-IS
Borough secretarY. SouthcWilterly
anti Haye8 Street in the City of Cheater. In restrictions.
the County ot: Delaware and State of Penna)'l.
Improvements conSIst of three story stone
vania and de8ignated as No. 2626 Weet Second
PROPOSAL
and slucco house. 18x30 feet; one story stucco
Street.
Containing
in
front
on
Ihe
aald
Second
BellIed bids wlll be received. by the Bor'
tbence Eaatwardly fortY feet addiUon. 9x12 feet: two stOry atulX'O addition.
ough of Swarthmore In COUncu Chamber. Street
ORDINANCE No. 40'1
1n depth Southwardly between 3xP feet: stucco garag-e. Ox:1S feet.
Borougb Hall. Swarthmore, PB.. on MarCh
Sold as the property of John H. Kramer,
with the said Hayes Street one
An Ordinance flldng the rate of taxation 16, 1938 at '1:45 P. M. for supplying approxand twentY'flil[ f~t. Bounded Eut· morlgN:'Or and MRUrice H. Matsinger. real
the yeaf 1938 for general Borough pur- Imately twelve hundred to seventeen hunFOUND-Last week. tiBer kitten, about for
by lands belonging to Frank Szcur· owner.
poses. for payment of interest on the debt dred tons of crushed rock in sizes ranging
three months old. 403 Mlehigan avenue. of
and Jllmes L, Ploszaj. Soutbwa.rdly blP"
the
Borough,
for
payments
luto the Sink- from 2~~" to screenings.
Telepbon.e~~thm~re 95-J.
belonging to Stif Kmit and wife. 8Dd HAROLD L. ER.V]N. Attorney.
Ing Fund as requlred by lti.w; for aiding In
Bids are to be strictly in accordance with
by lands belonging to Joseph Fidyk
the
maintenance
of
the
Free Library; for speclflcatlons. a copy of wbich may be obWILLIAM W. MeKlM. Sheriff.
RENT - AS OF MARCH lot
the levying of a ninth annual special tax tained, without charge, lrom the unde:r..
6 rooms, garale ...•.•.•••.•.•••• ··••••••
or assessment on a certain tract annexed to
"I rooms t garale ••.•••••...•.••.•.. ·••••
the Borough of Swarthmore by virtue of
---~--1--8 rooms ........................•......
Ord1Dance No. 310. approved November 21.
Apartment, 2 beclrooJD8 •......... ······
1929. known as the KIMMEL tract: for the
levying of an eighth annual special tax or
BSSessment on the tract annexed to the
Wl\I. S. BITTLE
Borough of Swarthmore by virtue of OtSWal'th~llore 111·J
dlnance No. 322. approved January 5, 1931,
Notan pubUc -IDsurance - Real Elate known as SWARTHMORE ESTATES.
518 VILLANOVA AVENUE
Be it orda.ined and enacted and it 1s
hereby ordained and enacted by the Coun. RlIlLEY TOWNSHIP
ell of the Borough of Swarthmore, Com·
14700--10% down
monwealth 01 Pennsylvania:
2~2 story clapboard hOU5e. Composition
SECTION I: That a tax be and the
roof. Seven rooms, bath, hot alr beat, 2·car
same Is hereby levied on all property
garage. Needs paint.
and occupations within the said Bor~
M;PARKER
ough. subject to taxation lor Borougb
purposes for the fiscal year 1938. as fol
23 S. ·Chester Rd.
Swar.hmore 42
lows:
Tax rate for general Borough pUrp05es
the sum of eight and one-quarter (8~'4.)
mUIs on each dollar of assessed valuation:
TaX rate for debt purposes the sum of
two (2) mnls on each dollar of assessed
405 MICmGAN AVENUE
valuation;
Telephone Swarthmore 2096-W
For other purposes as follows:
For aiding in the maintenance 01 a
PAUL A. STURGES
Free Library one·half (1,2) mlll on each
dollar of ~ed valuation;
Plumbing and Hearing
Malting a total rate for all Borough
31 President Avenue, Rutledge
and three-quarter
purposes of ten
Telephone Sw_ 1122
(10:}~) mUl8.
Formerly with Woodward. Jaekson & Black
SECTION 2: In addItion to the foreBest of all, it costs this fam91.
Without a doubt the Hettupsgoing taxes there shall be levied and asJOBBING A SPECIALTY
sessed agaInst all assessable property
and many of our customers Ill" .1
within the tract known as the Kimmel
Herbie and Hattie-led a miserable
1896
CALL
tract for the year 1938 a. ninth annual
special tax: or assessment at the rate of
less than they anticipated. ~'i' us~
ELECTRICAL
horne life last and Dlany preeeding
cne (1) mlll on each dollar of assessed
valuation, pursuant tq the provisions of
REPAIRS
RADIO
make a survey now and estimate
Ordinance No. 310, approved November
months
of
March.
Just
an
amateur
Tubes-Washing Machines-Cleaners
21, 1929, and ordinance No. 314, apthe eost to you. Choice of JanitroI,
proved Marcb. 24, 1930. for the purpose
-INSTALLATIONSat
furnace
stoking.
Herbie
had
the
of
reimbursing
the
Borough
of
swarthSWARTHMORE ELECTRIC SHOP
Welsbacb or Bryant Conversion
more for amounts expended In connecPark and Dartmouth Aves.
tion with the annexation of the tract In
bouse
eitber
bias
tingly
bot
or
shivquestion.
Burners at *195 eash - installed.
YE
eringly
eold.
And
Hattie
did
her
SECTION 3: In addition to the foreSlightly higher on budget plangoing taxes there shall be levied. and
assessed
against
all
assessable
property
share
of
kicking!
Like
liundrcds
of
Village Window Cleaner
3 years to pay. Also uk about our
within the tract known as the "Swarthmore Estates for the year 1938 an elghtb
A. HAUGER
other suburbanites, they solved
annual special tax or assessment at the
convenient monthly budget plan
rate of nine (9) mills on each dollar of
Swarthmore 19
assessed valuation. pursuant to the proon. operating a beater ••• and our
their entire heating problem with
vLsloM of Ordtnance No. 322. approved
Janu"",
5. 1931.
for the of
purpose
of
low combination gu ratel
automatic gas bouse heat.
'"
re1ml),\U'$i.ng
the' Borough
Swarthmore for amounts expel1tled In connection with the annexation of the tract In
Electrical Contractor
question.
.
...
I ".~::':~. and ~op_ th.. 16th day of
I
CLASSIFIED
i
_._-
I
~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~ :~~~fi~~~i~~~~~~il
~
!
........--..-.....-...-.-.-.----......
--
DRESSMAKING
(oal for only
~our
BOROUGH OP BWABTIIIlOBB
,
Women'li Republiean Club
Ill'UbliCaus have a mission to perform.
to Meet at Sarath Haven
They should be ce.uters of influence
Inn ThuI'IMlay to arouse interest in their communities.
SARA O. RAYMOND
will make you an enthusiastic user from now onl
$10
=..:. . :=.SW..:•...::AR=l-=.'BM=O:::REAN==.:..._._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _---.----------.----::S
2=5"'• . .::1:..:.9.=.38=-_ _ _--,-_ _ _ _ _ _ .______________ ..,.-_..:·1:::
...
w
The Best of the BeHer
5c more
FEBRU~.!
CONSHOHOCKEN, PA.
''''pto ••
OlIc••••
per.locot
e 6J500 I •• t ... e ••" . ,
or ._, .lIftorlnd d ....r
GAS HOUSE HEAT BROUGHT PEACE
A. WI,ayne Mosteller
aelepbone Swarthmore 58
II
~':-:M::;llt:S:-•.:A':-•.....,-J.-.,.·-C:Q"'UJNB-='--Y-&-S-O-N"/)III!PB B. QUINBY
,
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
BaLL PROD t
i
~
_0.
A. D. 1938.
T. HESSENBR="
Attest:
,
en .
t
E.
ELLIO'I"r mCHARIlSON.
secretarY.
Approved this 19th day of February. A.
1938_ ,
JOHN H. PITMAN.
I).
Burgess.
PHILA~ELPHIA ELECTRIC COMPANY
....t Our Suburban Stores. or ~ Your Plumbin6
or Heotins Contractor.
-
FEBRUARY 25, 1938
THE SWARTBMOREAN
6
but gave full value to each "Ya-Ya."
Lee· Hopkins as Katrinka,
JUNIORS ENJOY L;-.ura
Marian Schatte as Rychie and Alben
"HANS BRINKER" Eavenson as Carl played their unsym-
Adult8 Also Find Last SaturdaY'8
Produetion at Player8 Club
Entertaining
pathetic parts of critical rich children
strongly enough to present a foil for
the heroic characters.
The adult members of the cast were
equal ill the most part to their younge:
associates. Ethel S. Kauffman was
the bereft Mother Brinker, highly emotional, honest and industrious. John
Spencer's Doctor Boeckman was an interesting characterization of the irritable eccentric surgeon, drawing many
a chuckle as he gloated over his operations, but adequate to the tense, dramatic moment when by his skill he restores the Father's wits. Alexander Dryden's "Father" was creditable and
especially so in the difficult first act.
Irma Keighton played the minor role
of the Doctor's assistant, "Vollenhoven"
with finesse.
"Hans Brinker" was undoubtedly
Mrs. L. A. Wetlaufer, of Cornell avenue, was hostess to a IUllcheon and bridge
foursome on Wednesday.
• • •
Mrs. Ambrose Van Alen, of Park avenue, will entc>rtain at dessert-bridge ncxt
Friday afternoon, March 4.
• '*
*
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Lappe, of Yale
avenue, will entertain at dessert-bridge
community fails, no other can make up
for that lack," she saiet .,
"
tected community needs it as much as a
city school. There are many parents
who could not and would not give infOrll'ation themselves. The school gives
a scientific attitude toward the facts
of me. Dr. Florence Richards, of the
William Penn Girls High School, has
done it effectively for many years
through her child wdfare course. It
should be done quietly, by interested,
capable people.
.. A community should educate its
pa~ents as to how important this is to
dllldrcn. School boards act when parellts want s~hool subjects in schools.
Teachers' College at Columbia Universitl' gives courses on how to integrate
this subject into other school material."
Swarthmore WomeD E1ectecI
"Hans Brinker," this season's third
tomorrow evening.
• • •
production of the Players Club for its
Junior membership, played to a deMrs. William H. West, of North
lighted audience of children last SatPrinceton avenue, left Tuesday for,;)
urday afternoon and to an enthusiastic
week's visit with her sister, Mrs. F W
.
.
house of adults for whom the dramaHadley,
of
Scarsdale,
N.
Y.,
a
fomler
tization of Mary Mapes Dodge's old
resident of Swarthmore.
Holland classic resurrected youthful
* * •H. Reed, of Cor- Dr. Parker also spoke of the responmemories Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
The presentation was a credit
nell avenue, and Dr. and Mrs. Franklin sibility that churches are recognizing
throughout to the skilful and sympaGillespie, of South 'Chester road and Hal"- toward the young people they marry,
thetic direction of Barbara Dolman.
vard avenue, are among those who will and gave as one of the fincst books on
Dramatization .of familiar classics ar~
entertain bdore the Series Dance to- this subject: "Men, \Vomen, and God."
always threatened by !.I~e imaginary
"The matter of sex education is an
morrow evening.
concepts which they encounter in every
emergency measure today! If either the
• ••
audience. "Hans Brinker", set in the
church, the school, the home, or the
'
simple but effective scene created for p~~rt~m~t.h~~~n
it by Hl'Ien Jackson, heard against th!' raised the theatrical standard of the. MATERNAL HEALTH ASSOC.
clank of ice skates, enhanced by the Junior Membership of the Plilyers HJ:<.:ARS D1(. PARKER IN BOND
colorful Dutch costumcs, more than Club.
"Should Sex Education be Given in
satisfied the audicnce.
the Public Schools?" was the topic
The juvenile members of the cast set
which interested a large audience in
a new standard. Mary Ann Hook's
Bond Memorial, Swarthmore Collegc,
Gretje was adult in its shading, natwhere it was presented by Dr. Valeria
ural and appealing as a whole. She
Mr.
and
Mrs.
N.
P.
Vlachos,
of
314
Parker last Thursday afternoon, Febplayed a gentle role wit h distinction.
Park
avenue,
will
leave
next
Tuesday
ruary
17, before the Delaware County
making the most of every line. Stephen
to
occupy
an
allartment
in
Philadelphia,
Maternal
Health Association. Dr.
SI)enCer's Hans was a sinccre and satnear
Mr.
Vlachos
work
at
Temple
UniParker
is
a
noted authority on social
isfying interpretation, lending much to
he
is
professor
of
the
relationships.
For many years she has
versity
where
the play's success. Ruth Servais'
classics.
Their
son,
Nicholas,
Jr.,
a
sophotraveled
throughout
the United States
Hilda, whose friendship for the
more
at
Franklin
and
Marshall
College,
interesting
communities
in the need for
Brinkers proved important at crucial
sl:ent
the
week-end
and
Washington's
sex
education
to
be
given
by schools,
moments, was charming and convincbirthday
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Vlachos.
homes,
and
churches.
She
maintained
ing, while Bonny Morse's Annie was
that youth. suffers when anyone of
most effective when in a playful momen!
thesc three agencies fail, and claimed,
* * *
she accepted Gretje's dub of "godThe next meeting of the Poet's Circ1l! "In the early days it was thought that
mother" and pointed with her poker
will be held at the home of Mrs. James sex education belonged entirely in the
wand to the hidden treasure.
Cochrane on Plush Mill road, Walling- home. Alert parents said: 'But we have
Hans' friend, Peter, played by Charles
ford, at 3 o'clock next ~1:onday after- no training and no vocabulary to give
Seymour, was spontaneous and livel}'
noon.
Mrs. Robert Coates, of Harvard it. \V c depend on the schools to give
and Jack Seymour's Voostenvalbert
.lvenue, will review the most recent book it that.' Today, most material is given
Schimmelpennick provided a most acceptable comic relief. Dick Davis as by Edna S1. Vincent Millay, "Conversa- in family relationships courses. Young
tion at Midnight."
-people arc asking for it. One of the
Voost's English cousin had few lines,
best text-books written at the time of
·the war was: 'High Schools and Sex
Education,' by Siclonie Gruenberg.
Then it was discovered that high school
teaching came too late."
The whole matter of the contribution
of the elementary school was considered. Ten years ago a review of work
done in public schools was made. It is
said the best metho~ is to put nature
study in the first six grades.
It was brought out that there are
"Doing the Weekly Wash"
The new officers elected by the Delaware County Maternal J;Ieal,th Association include: President, Mrs. Arthur
Dana; Vice-President, Mrs. Louis N.
Robinson, olr Swarthl1lOrC'; Secre~ry,
Mrs. A. W. Warner, of Media; Membership Secretary, Mrs. E. p, Yerkes,
and Treasurer, Mrs. William Johnson,
both of Swarthmore.
.1.
Girl Scout New8
Fifteen members of Troop 2 went to
the Ice .Skating Aretta at Ardmore last
Saturday night. Miss •Gertrude Gold,
Delaware County Field Director, was at
the Troop. meeting held in the ·Woman's
Club House Wednesday afternoon. At
the regular Troop meeting last Wednesday Kathryn Philbrick and Barbara
Broadbent were invested. Patrol leaders
will meet in the Upper Darby Senior
High School tomorrow morning, Saturday, February 26, at 10 o'clock:"
.1'
NEWS NOTES
I
is undoubtedly the last remaining job of drudgery left
in some of our homes of today_ Modernize your
method of housework as you would modernize your
home. For a very small amount each week you can
send your wash to the
MEDIA LAUNDRY
Stop Our Driver or Call Media 174
"Serving Swarthmore Successfully Since 1900"
~~~=-~_~_;;;;._;;;;_;;;;_;;;;__ ;;;;___~~£__::. ~__~=======~~~~===~~~====~~
threewrongwa~W~9~ts~~~~ I~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
tion in the home: Postponement; "not
nice" attitude; angel or stork attitude.
Coming into every school arc children
badly handled at home. The exceptional parents are the ones who have
answered every question honestly. No
child is harmed by the true story of
birth. By the time he comes to school,
a child should find there the nature
study of birds, fishes, plants, and animals. Properly given dissection is valuable. High school electives are too late.
Recommended
booksChildren,
for the
home:
"Plant were
and two
Animal
How They Grow," by Ellen Torrell, and
"Growing Up," by de Schweinitz. The
first of these makes a much more interesting "reader" than the usual lower
grade reader. It \vas used in Connecticut schools fifteen years ago. Through
nature study- a v.:>cabulary is provided.
Children are full of interest. Before
adolescence the child should receive
knowledge of what is about to take
place, as he receives it much more
easily then than later. Fifteen years
old is too late. For this reason, the hygiene of adolescence should be given in
the junior high school.
Facts presented at the meeting
showed that before the World \Var,
Oregon's State Legislature appropriated $60,000 a year for sex education
in the schools, from the grammar grade,>
up. Due to a committee of citizens who
appeared before the school board in
Washington, D. C., sex education has
been taught there in the junior high
school for several years. The subject
should never be taught separately, but
must be put into school material in subjects already in the school. The pro-
UPHOLSTERING
Here is an interesting fact.
Scientific tests show that your
efficiency is related to the sugar
in your hlood. and that milksugar sustains your .energy
longer. A glassful of milk between meals supp~ie8 this
energy without upsetting your
diet •. Housework becomes.
easiell, afternoons enjoyable. .
You will like the creamy
flavor of Supplee Seal!l-est
Premier A Milk. Every quart
has a cup of cream. The purity
of this fine dairyoproduct is
guarded by the SEALTES'II
SYSTEM OF LAlIORATORY PROTEC-
Telephone Chester 2-5721
for courteous, dependable Sup-
TION.
plee service.
S'UPPLEE
WE ALSO SELL WALKER-GORDON MILK
STORR BOl.JBS:
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Mon" Tues. 9 A;M. to 1 P.M. Wed.
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Thurs.
9 A.M; to le·p.M. Fri., Sat.
Specials For Week of February 24th to March 2nd, Inclusive
•
Libby's CORNED BEEF
I
Reg. Size Can . . . . , . .
15
A
Y
W
H
E
R
Y
(HALVES ONLY)
UCO VACUUM PACK
Del Monte Asparagus
TIPS , ...... - ....•.
GOLDEN G.RANULES - 2 12-oz. Cans
PICNIC SIZE CAN
DiU or Sour PICKLES
NOODLES
Full Quart Jar. . • • • , • • ,
16-oz. Pkg,
I
Libby's PINEAPPLE
JUICE--T all Can . . .. ,.
MY-T -FINE Desserts
All Flavors •••. 3 Pkgs.
Hershey's Chocolate
SYRUP-2 16-0z. Cans
II
13
I
Hartley's Orange MARMALADE - 16-oz. Jar
e
Red Ripe Slicing
TOMATOES .... 2 lbs.
19
.,....... IDe
I
7c
UCO Fancy Melting
PEAS - .. ,2 No, 2 Cans
I---------------~~U~~-----------~
In All Its Branches
A
N
Del Monte PEACHES
Large No. 2 liz Can ..•
e
Furniture Restoring
E
PREMIER A MILK
GIANT
TIGER
I
(I
15
c
25\
l
Sunsweet PRUNES
2 lb. Package. . . . . . , _
c
19e
Full Pod
UMA BEANS -
2 lbs.
N
Genuine Spring
LEGS OF LAMB, .. lh.
T
I
M
E
FRED J. HARLEY
Call Swarthmore 1441
Solid Pound Print
\
BUTTER
... , .. , .lh.
33
c-
e
I
Candled EGGS in
CartOllS ••••..•. '. doz.
BALTIMORE PIKE AND HIRST AVE.
EAST LANSDOWNE
15c
23
c
21.\
INTENTIONAL SECOND EXPOSURE
6
THE SWARTHMOREAN
-I--O---R"···S- -E-'--N'-J"O'y---·-~Jl\t
- gave fun valuc to cach "Ya-Ya."
Laura Lee Hopkins as Katrinka,
JU"HANS BRINKER"" ).larian Schattc as Rychie and Albcn
Earl'nsoll as Carl playcd thcir uns)'m-
-
~lrs.
--- .....
FEBRUARY 25, 1938
----
.-- - - - -
\.. A. Wetlaufcr, of Corlll·\1 a\'C-1 tcctcd cOllllllunity nceds it as much as a cOllllllunity fails, no other can make up
nuc, \\'as ho~tess tu a lundll'oll al\ll hritlg.· city school. There arc many parents for that lack," shc said.
.
fuurson\\: oil
I who l'onltl 1I0t and would not givc inSwarthmore Women Elected
* * *
iormation thcmselves. The school gives
Thc ncw officcrs elccted by the Dc1apathctic parts of critical rich childrcn
~Irs. :\tlIhro~l' Van :\ll'II, of Park an'- a s~~cntilic attitude toward the facts \\'are County Maternal Health AssociastfOllgly l'l\(lllgh to prcsl'nt a foil for nile \\'ill cntertain at dessl·rt-hridgl.' lIl'xt of. "!l" Dr. !'Iorencl.' Richards, of the tion include: Presidcnt, Mrs. Arthur
Atlultt4 Alt40 Find Lut4t Saturday't4 tlH' heroic charactcrs.
Fri:lav aftcrnoon, :'Ilarch ~.
\V"hal~1 Pcnn ~irls High School, has Dana; Vicc-Prcsident, Mrs. I.ouis N.
Produt'lion at Players Club
Thc adult mcmbcrs of thc cast w e r e '
* * *
clone It efTectl\'c1y for many years /{ob;nsoll, of Swarthmorc; Secretary,
• I
. \. I through IIl'r child wclfarc coursc. It ~Jrs. A. W. Warner, of Media', },[emEntertaining
cllual
in
the
most
part
to
thcir
youngc:
~lr.
alld
~I
r~.
E.
C.
,appl·.
01
a l' should hc donc quietly. b,' intcrcstcd, I hcrshil) Secrctar.\', Mrs. E. P. Yerkes,
, J1
I' . k " I'
• tl'"
.
I' I I SKIT
'11'
,1,,·.··.·.·I·I-I,I·I··I··c
anti Trcasurer, ~lrs. \\,illiam Johnson,
, . ans )rlll ·cr. t liS Sl'aSOIl S lIru assoclatcs.
'.t IC ,.
au llIan was avcnUl', WI elllerlalll at
~-'.,. " " capahll' pl'ople.
J
production of Ihc Playcrs Cluh for ils thc hercft :'Ilothcr Brinker, highly elll- lomorrow c\'clling.
Junior IIIclllhnship, playcd to a de- otional, honcst and industrious. John
* * *
":\ eOllllllullil \' should educate its hoth of Swarthmorc.
lighted audil'nce of childrclI last . SatDoctor
/loceklllan
was
all t
in)lrs. \Vi\liam H. \Vest, of North dlil.lren.
pan'nts asSchool
to
important
this isI,arto
•
t' Spcllccr's
.
I
.'
f
l"
hoards
:ICt \"llell
Girl Scout
New8
un Iav a ftcrllooll all( I 10 an cnt I1IISIaS Ie terestlllg c laractCriZallOn 0 tiC Irrl - Princeton a\'cnuc, left TUl'sday ior ; ) '
hOUS'l' of adults for wh(llll thc drallla- ahle l'cccnlric surgcolI, drawing many week's visit \\'ilh hcr sisler, ~I rs. F. \\'. cnb want school suhjects in schools.
Fiftecn IIIcmhers of Trool' !. wellt to
.
f
I
'I
I) I '
II
I.
Tl'achers' (,·olll·gl.' at Columhia U lIi\'ertizath'"" ~ ary .\ apcs
01 gc s "( a chucklc :IS hc gloated ovcr liS oper- Iladll'Y, of S(ar~dalc, ~. '1'., a fonlll'r
thc ke Skatil'g .-\rcna at Ardmore last
I I011 a 1111 dassic rcsurn'ctcd youthful at ions. hut ;lIll'quatl' 10 tl.ll' tet.lsl·, dra- n.'sidl'llt of SwarthllloH'.
sity gi\'Cs l'onrscs on how to intcgrate Saturday night. ~Jiss Gertrnde Gold,
. '
k II I
this suhjcct into othcr school matcrial."
IIIl'mories Saturday cn·l11ug.
1 matic momcnt \\'hclI hy IllS S'I
Ie re* * *
Dc1awan' Coullty Field Dircctor, was at
Thl' pn'sl'ntation was a credit: ston's the Fathcr's wits. :\Iexauder Dry~Ir. :11111 :'Ilrs. I{ohcrt H. \{l'l'(I, oi Cor- /)1'. 1':\I'ker also spoke of the rcsllon- Ihc Trool' mccting held in the \\'oman';;
through"ut to thl' skilful and s),lIIpa-1 dl'lI's "Fathcr" was l'ft'ditablc and nell ilVCIIUC, al\(I I)r. al\(I )'lr:-. Franklin sihility that churchl's arc rccognizing' Club I·Jousl· \Ve!lncs!lay afternoon. At
tlll.tir din'ction oi Barhara Dolman.! l's)ll'cially so ill thc difticult first act. Gillcspil', of South (hl'stel' 1'001.1 aJl(I J 1011'- toward the young' pcople thcy marry, thc regular Troop mccting last \\'cdncsDramatizatioll oi familiar da~sics ar'.': Irllla Kl.ighton plaYl'd thl.' millor rok \'anl avcnuc, arc alllong tho,.e who will a III I ga\'e as one of thl' lincst books on
l',,"~el't> "·.I.lidt thl'Y ~ncol~.ntl'r ill. l'Vl.'ry with tinl'sse.
1I\0rro\\' e\Tlling.
"The mattlT (Ii sex l'ducatioll is an: wi\) mect in thc Ull)lCr Darhy Senior
audll'Ill'l'. Hans Brlllkl'r. set 111 the
"Hans Brinker" W;IS ullllouhtcdly
•••
l'lIIl'rgl'IlCY nll':tsun' today! If cithcr the: High Sfhool tomormw morning, Sat~impll' hltt dT(·ct in' SCl'nl' l'fl'atl.'!1 itlr I good l'ntertainnJl'nt. It should have
....
••
~ dlllrch, the school, the hOIllC, or the! Imlay, Fchmarv l(J. at )() o'doek.
it lIy Ildl'n Jackson, hcard against tlll'i raiscd the tht'atrical standard of the .l\IATEI{NAL ilEAL J. II ASSOC.
I '
l'!ank oi ire skatl's. l·nhanCl'.1 hy the I 11IIIillr ),1 t'lnlll'r:-hi" oi the Play.'r<; lI ..~AnS Dl(. PAItKEU IN BONn
--N-'"
\\'cdnc~lay.
\1
I
I
I
I.
h~w
I
I:
I'
l'I,loriul I )utch costllllH'S. 1II0rl' than: l·llth.
sati:-til'd thc altllil·nCl·.
I
• I •
TIlt' jItH'lIilt' \IIl'lIIhl'rs of thl' cast SCI.!
a IIl'W standard. ~I ary Ann II,H.k·,:
(~rl'ljl' was adult in its shading. nat· i
IIral a!HI al'lll'aling as a whok. Shc:
plaYl'.! a IH·ntlt- roll' with distinctioll,: ),11'. and )'Irs, X. P. Vlachos, uf 314
making t Ill' lIIo~t oi cn'ry JiIlC. Stl'phl'n : Park avcnltc. will Icavc ncxt TUl'sday
Spelll'l'r', Ilans was a sinCl're and sat- : to on'uJl\' an apartlllcnt in Philadelphia,
i,iyillg inll'fprl't atioll. lending milch to i ncar ~J r: \'Iadllls work at Tl'lIIplc Lllitill' play's SItCCl'SS. Rllth Sl'rvais' \'l'rsil\' when.' Ill' is proiessor of thc
Hilda. whosc
friendship for
the dassi~s. Their son. Xidtolas, Jr., a sophoBrinkl'fs pro\'Cd important at crucial lIIorc at Fraaklin a1\(1 :'Ilarshall Colkg~,
~t":ml·I.lt~,. was c1~armin~ ":'III~I C(~I~\'il~~~ \ s~:cnt the wcck-cJl(I a 1111 \Vashingtoll's
1I1g, ,dllll Bonll) )'Iorse s .\IIII1C \\.IS blrthda,' with ).Ir. aud )'Irs. Vlachos.
.
lIIost l,tT(·ctin· \\'hl:n ill a playfullllolll l' n : I
~hl' aCl'\'ptl'd Cn'tjl"S dllh of "god* * *
lIl(ltlll'r~ and pointl'd with Ill'r Jlokcr
Thl.' Ill'xl mceting oi the Pol't's Cirde
wall.1 tn the hi.lden trca~urc.
will he hl'11! at thl' h"III(' of )'Irs. Jallll'';
'Ialls' iril·lul. I'dl'f. plaYl·d hy Charles (ochrallc on Plush ).Iill road, \\'allingSeYlllour. w;'s sJlontam'ou~ and livcly' ionl. at 3 o'clock lIext ).[onday aftcralld Jack Sl'ymour's \'ollstcll\'alhert nOIlIl. llrs. Rohnt Coates, of Harvard
Schilllllldpl'lInil'k provided a 1II0st ac· n'('nuc, will rcview the 1110st reccnt hook
cl'ptahh' comic rdil'i. Dick Davis as! Ity Edlla St. Vinccnt ).Iillay. "Collversa\'oost's English cousin had few lines, tion at ~Iidllight.'·
NEWS NOTES
I
"Doing the Weekly W ash"
is undoubtedly the last remaining job of drudgery left
in some of our homes of today, Modernize your
method of housework as you would modernize your
home. For a very small amount each week you can
send your wash to the
MEDIA LAUNDRY
StO)>> Our Driver or Call Media 174
"Serving Swarthmore Successfully Since J900"
"Should Sl'X Education hc Civl.'lI in
thc Pllhlic Schools:-" was the tupic
whIch intcrcstcd a lar~e audiellce in
BOlld :'Ill'morial, Swarthmorc Cullege,
where it was prcsl'ntcd hy Dr. \'alcria
P"rkcr last Thursday a£\l.'rIlOOn, Feurllary Ii, beforc thl.' Dclawarc Coullty
),1 atcrnal
He'llth :\ssociatioll.
Dr.
Parkl'f is a noted authority 011 social
rclatillllships. FOI' many years she has
tr:l\'cled throughout the L'lIitcd States
interesting COllllllullitil.'s ill the lIecd ior
sex cducation to he gi\'en hy schuols,
hOIllCS, and dlllrchl·s. She maintained
that \'ollth slitTers whl.'n allY onc of
theSl' thn'l' agcllcics iail, ami c1aulled,
"III thc carly days it was thollght that
scx cducation hl'1ollgell clltirely in the
homc. Alert parl'nts said: 'I\ut wc ha,'e
110 training and n,l v(lcahlllal'y to gi\'e
it. \Vc Ill-pcnd on thl' schools to gi\'c
it that.' Today, 1II0st matl'l'ial is givcn
in family rdatillllships Cllllrscs. Young
pl'ople arc asking ior it. One oi the
hcst text-hooks writtl'lI at the time ui
the war was: '1ligh Schools alld Scx
Edllcation; hy Sidollie Grucnberg.
Thcn it was discovered that high school
tcachillg came too late."
Thc \\'holl~ mattcr of the eontrihution
oi the elelllcntary school was considercd. Ten years agll a l"l'yiew of work
done in puhlie schools was madc. It is
said the bcst methOlJ is to put naturc
study in the first six grades.
1t was brought out that thl.'rc are
three wrong ways to presell t scx cducation in thc home: Postponclllent; "not
nice" attitude; angcl or stork attitudc.
Coming intn e\'cry school arc childrcn
hadly handled ilt hOIllI:. The exccptional parents arc the OIll'S who ha\'c
answcred every qucstion honestly. No
child is harlllcd by the truc story of
birth. By the time he cUllles to school,
a child should filul there the naturc
stndy of hinls, fishes, plallts, and animals. Propcrly given dissect ion is valuable. High school electivcs arc too latc.
Rl'commCIHled wcre t\\'o books ior the
homc: "Plant and :\nimal Children,
How They Grow," hy Elkn Torrctl, and
"GI'I>\Yin~ Cp," by de Sclml'iuitz. The
lirst of t hesc makl:s a lIIuch more interesting "rcader" than the nsnal lower
grade \'l·ader. I t was u~ed in Connecticut schools tiih"'n years ago. Through
naturc stUlly a \'ocahulary is I'rtl\'i(II.'(1.
l'hihlrcll are iutl oi intl·rest. Bdllrc
adolesccnce the child shoul(1 rcceiYe
knowkd~c of what is ahout tn take
placc, as he rccl'i\'es it mUl'h \\lore
easily thell than later. Fiftl'l'u ,-ears
old is too late. For this rea sou, th~ 11\'~il'ne of adolcsccnce should be gi\'l'n 'in
the juuior high 5chool.
Fact s preSl'Il tcc! :i t the ml'l'! iug
sho\\'ed that bciorc the \\'orld \\'ar,
Orcgon's State Legislaturc appropriatl'd $(iO,OOn a year for Sl'X cducation
in the schools, irom till' ~r:lIl11nal' gr;)(h:s
n\>. Dne to a committl'e oi l~itizl'ns who
appcarcd hch)rc the school hoard in
\Vashingtou, D. C., Sl'X l'ducati(lu has
becn taught there in thc junior high
school for scveral years. Thc subjl'et
should nCYCI' he tanght seJlarall'ly, hnt
must he put into schod material in suh·
jects alreally ill the selwol. The pro-
..- --.-------
I
GIANT
TIGER
STORE HOURS:
9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-Mon., Tues. 9 A.1\I. to 1 P.M, Wed.
9 A.M. to 9 P.l\I.-Thurs.
9 A.1\I. to 10 P.M .•'ri., Sat.
Specials For Week of February 24th to March 2nd, Inclusive
Libby's CORNED BEEF
Reg. Size Can . . . . . . .
ME::
of this fine dairy.product is
guar(lc(l by the SJ.:AI.TES1'
SYSTK\I OF LA BORA TORY PnoTl-:C:TIO,",. Telephone Chesler 2-5721
for eourte()us, dependable Sup.
plee service.
SUPPLEE
W
H
E
R
E
PREMIER A MILK
WE ALSO SEll
WALKER·~ORDON
MILK
FRED
E
J. HARLEY
Call Swartbnlore 1441
NOODLES
Dill or Sour PICKLES
Full Quart Jar.
.... 10e
16-oz. Pkg.
II
II
7e
Libby's PINEAPPLE
JUICE-Tall Can. . . . ..
Hershey's Chocolate
SYRUP-2 J6-oz. Cans
UCO Fancy Melting
PEAS. . . . 2 No. 2 Cans
MY -T -FINE Desserts
All Flavors .... 3 Pkgs,
IJ
Hartley's Orange MARMALADE - 16-oz. Jar
19c
Sunsweet PRUNES
2 lb. Package .....
19 c
Full Pod
LIMA BEANS -
II
Red Ripe Slicing
TOMATOES .... 2 Ibs.
A
N
Y
T
I
M
u 1
II
In All Its B"aI,ches
N
Y
(UALVES ONLY)
GOLDEN GRANULES - 2 J 2-oz. Cans
PICNIC SIZE CAN
Furniture Restoring
A
Del Monte PEACHES
Large No. 2 Yz Can. ,
UCO VACUUM PACK
Del Monte Asparagus
TIPS ............ .
UPHOLSTERING
Herc is an illtCl'csting fact.
Sdcnlific l{'sts show that your
effieielH'v
• is rdated to the surrar
0
in yom' ]']0011, atul that milksugar sustains your energy
longer. A ~las!\ful of milk hetween meals su pplies this
enel'gy without upsetting your
diet. Housework hecomes
easier, afternoons enjoyable.
You will like the creamy
flavor of Supplee Sealtest
Premier A )1i1k. Every quart
has a eup of cream, The purity
15e
Ad'
\
w=.mm·
SHOULDERS
PORK ..... .
2 lbs.
15c
Genuine Spring
LEGS OF LAMB, .. lb.
23c
Candled EGGS in
Cartons ., ....... doz.
21 c
mE
BALTIMORE PIKE AND HIRST AVE.
EAST LANSDOWNE
I
I
The Swarthmorean, 1938-02
First published as The Swarthmorean in 1929, this newspaper continues to the present day.
1938-02
digitized microfilm
Film P398-P427
Digitization funding supplied by the Swarthmore Historical Society
1938 FEBRUARY.pdf